Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday May 4, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
May 4 2021
Good morning from Washington, where President Biden talks like copying California on major issues is the way to go. Fred Lucas cites just seven examples. On the podcast, journalist Chris Rufo answers Rachel del Guidice’s questions about the disturbing trend of racial intolerance being taught in school. Plus: Biden’s sketchy policy on North Korea; Texas eyes protecing kids from transgender agenda; injustice for victims of abuse; and what’s wrong with our universities. Fifty-years ago today, San Francisco Giants outfielder Willie Mays hits his 512th career home run, breaking the National League record. May the Fourth be with you.
“It’s first graders in Cupertino, California, being forced to deconstruct their racial and sexual identities and then rank themselves according to power and privilege,” says Christopher Rufo.
Despite the state’s economic and population problems, President Biden used his address to a joint session of Congress to propose policies similar to those enacted in California.
The Biden administration emphasizes that it will return to a firmer policy against North Korean human rights violations. Biden should appoint a special envoy on the subject.
Just as a sermonizing Hollywood grates when it no longer can make good movies, a once-hallowed but now self-righteous university seems hollow when it charges so much for so little.
What do you get when you cross then-Sen. Biden’s 1994 “Tough on Crime” bill with President Biden’s 2021 Equality Act? Answer: spikes in sexual assault in women’s shelters, prisons, and jails.
The president made false or misleading statements in his interview with NBC News, prompting The Heritage Foundation’s homeland security experts to correct the record.
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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Activist Jurist on Chauvin Trial Lied During Jury Selection
From the story: A juror in the Derek Chauvin trial may have jeopardized the guilty verdict by attending a rally last year and wearing a “Get Your Knee Off Our Necks/BLM” T-shirt, raising questions about whether he told the truth during jury selection.
High End Manhattan Restaurant to Reopen Sans Meat or Sea Food
Eleven Madison Park chef and owner Daniel Humm explains “it was becoming ever clearer that the current food system is simply not sustainable, in so many ways.” Lucky for the rest of us, it is sustainable. And at hundreds of dollars per person, his meatless restaurant may not be.
So they can loot, maim and burn once again. Hard to imagine what it is like to be a cop or business owner in Portland and watch the perpetrators go free.
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Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 5.4.21
Coffee is for closers. So is Sunburn, your morning rundown of Florida politics.
It’s been said for decades that if Charlie Crist could just shake every voter’s hand in the state, he could win any election.
“He will try to shake every hand,” observed John Morgan, the Orlando rainmaker, currently unaffiliated. “The thing about Charlie, he feeds off people. He truly enjoys the retail politics in politics.”
Crist, the Democratic Congressman and once a Republican Governor, is ready to announce the “Charlie Crist for Governor 3.0” campaign Tuesday in his hometown of St. Petersburg.
There may be no politician in Florida with more history, more career twists and turns, or more wins and losses. There are few whom Florida voters know better. There’s also almost no one with more baggage.
Charlie Crist, Florida’s consummate retail politician.
Yet there may be no one in Florida with Crist’s gift for person-to-person charm, with voters, with volunteers, with lawmakers, with journalists, and, perhaps most significantly, with donors.
He is notoriously late for every event because he gets distracted to talk with every person he meets on his way over. Afterward, Crist never gets hustled out a back door.
“Charlie loves people,” said Bob Poe, the former Florida Democratic Party chair who battled against Crist for years and then ran his independent fundraising committee, Charlie Crist for Florida, the last time Crist ran statewide, for Charlie Crist for Governor 2.0, in 2014. “He’s the happy warrior. He’s the happy candidate. He’s ready to go, 24/7.
“He likes to do it. He enjoys this connection with people. And he is truly one of the best individual fundraisers I’ve ever known,” Poe added.
It doesn’t matter what Crist might stand for; he’s Charlie. Charlie.
Still, in 2021 and ‘22, retail politics might be to winning Florida statewide elections what big-box book stores are to selling books: so 2006.
The last time Crist won a statewide election in Florida was in 2006, when fewer than 5 million votes were cast. There were more than 8 million votes in the 2018 gubernatorial election. Most likely, there will be far more than that in 2022. Last year there were 11 million votes counted in the presidential election.
Florida Democrats await moves by Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, the true progressive who won statewide in 2018 and then was dubbed “A New Hope” for the party; by Rep. ValDemings, the fiery Orlando Congresswoman with a background straight out of Central Casting and a national appeal; and perhaps by others.
Beyond winning the Democratic Primary, a Democrat still faces the matter of finding a way to beat sitting Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, who seemingly has made all the right moves, and who appears well positioned in polls to defeat any Democrat.
Both Fried and Demings can appeal to broad communities of the Democratic Party, not just on policy positions but as symbols for political movements. They’re likely to attract support and money from people and organizations who otherwise know nothing about them.
The same is true of DeSantis. In 2018, he showed Republican Movement politics can do retail politics. His Republican primary challenger Adam Putnam was very much like Crist: brilliant at retail politics.
You remember Adam Putnam, right? Red hair? Came to your Kiwanis Club barbecue? Knew your kids’ names? Trampled in DeSantis’ political movement stampede.
___
Celebrating end-of-Session in style — The first item on Madison Rowe’s to-do list after surviving her first Legislative Session was to get hitched. Sunday evening, Rowe of Red Hills Strategies married Ethan Dorval at Loblolly Rise Plantation in Thomasville, Georgia. The newlyweds are off to honeymoon in the U.S. Virgin Islands. Congratulations to the happy couple!
Congratulations to Madison Rowe and Ethan Dorval, who waited until Session was over to get married. Mazel Tov!
Situational awareness
—@Liz_Cheney: The 2020 presidential election was not stolen. Anyone who claims it was is spreading THE BIG LIE, turning their back on the rule of law, and poisoning our democratic system.
—@RepStephMurphy: I was rescued by the U.S. Navy and given refuge in America, so I know America is a powerful and compassionate country. I’m glad more refugees fleeing violence and persecution will have the chance to find safe haven, raise families, and contribute to their new home.
—@NateMonroe: All performative all the time. Proof of vaccination, just like masks, are a tool Florida could use to responsibly return to normal, but Ronnie D is courting internet-brain freaks who believe online furniture stores are trafficking children, so this is what we get.
—@DavidJollyFL: The threat of COVID is over when science says it is, not when politicians say it is. Be smart, people. Enjoy reopening. But take precautions. Follow public health guidance. Willful ignorance is a dangerous drug.
—@ChristianSelig: Our province today: several people are now in the hospital with COVID after going out to celebrate immediately after their first vaccine. I just …
—@FBSaunders: Quick reflection … I’ve just become fully vaccinated against a deadly novel virus a little more than a year after it appeared in Florida. This country can do amazing stuff when it works together.
Tweet, tweet:
—@DaveWeigel: How’s your Monday going? Here’s mine: A candidate I had described as a “gadfly” in a story demanded a correction by emailing every single one of my colleagues.
—@MattYglesias: If a fancy restaurant takes all the meat off its menu and leaves the prix fixe the same, that’s inflation.
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
Mother’s Day — 5; Florida Chamber Safety Council’s inaugural Southeastern Leadership Conference on Safety, Health and Sustainability — 6; Gambling Compact Special Session begins — 13; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 24; ‘Tax Freedom Holiday’ begins — 24; Memorial Day — 27; Florida TaxWatch Spring Meeting and PLA Awards — 30; ‘Loki’ premieres on Disney+ — 38; Father’s Day — 47; F9 premieres in the U.S. — 52; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 59; 4th of July — 61; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 66; MLB All-Star Game — 70; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 80; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 80; The NBA Draft — 86; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 88; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 94; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 112; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 122; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 143; ‘Dune’ premieres — 150; MLB regular season ends — 152; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 158; World Series Game 1 — 175; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 182; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 185; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 206; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 220; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 227; Super Bowl LVI — 285; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 325; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 367; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 430; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 521; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 556.
Top story
“Ron DeSantis invalidates COVID-19 restrictions statewide, says there’s no need ‘to be policing people at this point’” via James Call of USA Today — DeSantis suspended local COVID-19 emergency orders and signed a proposal lawmakers approved last week that limits the government’s ability to impose mask requirements and other social distancing measures used to combat the coronavirus this past year. The measure, Senate Bill 2006, also makes permanent DeSantis’ executive order that prohibits “vaccine passports,” saying it is unnecessary “to be policing people at this point.” The legislation also makes it more difficult for local governments to order measures such as wearing masks or limiting businesses by requiring emergency orders to be narrowly tailored and be in seven-day increments totaling no more than 42 days.
With the stroke of a pen, Ron DeSantis ends all local COVID-19 rules and regulations. Image via Allison Lynn.
“DeSantis order ending local mask rules does not apply to schools” via Jeffrey Solochek the Tampa Bay Times — DeSantis issued an emergency order immediately ending “local COVID-19 restrictions and mandates on individuals and businesses.” It doesn’t apply to school districts. Facing confusion from school district officials across Florida, the Department of Education issued a statement late in the evening to clarify the governor’s remarks and actions. The order, effective immediately, suspended pandemic-related local restrictions through June and “only impacts city and county governments, and does NOT impact school districts and individual schools,” the department said. According to the clarification, the same holds true for a second order that invalidates all remaining local emergency COVID-19 orders that are still in place after July 1. Neither order impacts “any school district’s policies for the remainder of the 2020-21 school year.
“Rick Kriseman outraged at DeSantis’ local emergency order ban” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — St. Petersburg Mayor Kriseman blasted DeSantis after his announcement lifting all local emergency orders. “Instead of the Legislature and the Governor preempting cities and counties, they should be calling us all up and saying thank you,” Kriseman said, standing on the same patio the Governor made his announcement at earlier Monday. “What could have happened in the state of Florida — as far as the number of hospitalizations and deaths — didn’t happen because of the actions that cities and counties took, that this legislation directly addresses, and in large part, prohibits.” The Mayor criticized DeSantis’ move to terminate the local emergency orders through June. After that, the termination is made possible by new laws that take effect July 1.
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Epilogue
“Elections measure goes to DeSantis” via News Service of Florida — DeSantis formally received an elections bill that was one of the most controversial issues of the 2021 Legislative Session. DeSantis will have until May 18 to act on the bill (SB 90) but has already said he will sign it. The Republican-controlled Legislature passed the bill Thursday, the next-to-last day of the annual Legislative Session, over fierce opposition from Democrats. The bill, in part, would place additional restrictions on voting by mail, including on the use of drop boxes for ballots. Republican supporters said the measure is designed to ensure election security, but critics said it would lead to voter suppression.
Ron DeSantis officially receives a sweeping election reform bill, one of the most controversial bills of the Session. Image via Allison Lynn.
“Higher-ed aid programs face changes” via Ryan Dailey of The News Service of Florida — Lawmakers during this year’s Session eliminated grants that help students at some private colleges pay tuition and got rid of an annual textbook stipend for Bright Futures scholarship recipients — but stopped short of upending the way the $650 million Bright Futures program is funded. Senators proposed that scholarship funding be tied to the amount of money appropriated to Bright Futures in the state budget. Critics argued it could threaten the funding for the program and compromise a “guarantee” of scholarships covering 75% or 100% of tuition and fees. The state’s new budget “maintains Bright Futures students’ awards at levels that are consistent with current law,” Senate Education Appropriations Chairman Doug Broxson said as he presented the final higher-education budget last week.
“Governor proposed protecting college students’ right to party. What happened?” via Meleah Lyden and Emma McAvoy of WUFT — To party or not to party? As college students across Florida wrestled during the pandemic over public health restrictions, including whether it was safe to visit bars, nightclubs or house parties, Gov. DeSantis weighed in. The Republican governor said Florida was exploring a bill of rights that would protect students — generally at lower risk from the virus — from being punished by their universities if they violated social-distancing rules, mask-wearing violations, or other public health measures. “It’s incredibly draconian that a student would get potentially expelled for going to a party,” DeSantis said in September. “That’s what college kids do, and they’re at low risk.”
“Shevrin Jones predicts ‘uprising of the people’ over GOP’s legislative wins” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Sen. Jones believes Floridians will mount protests in the wake of the 2021 Legislative Session. The Republican-led Legislature successfully routed Democrats during the Session, passing most of Republicans’ and DeSantis‘ priorities. The slate included a controversial anti-riot bill, stricter election laws, and a measure to ban transgender girls from girls’ sports, in what Jones, a West Park Democrat, called the “most disastrous Legislative Session” in his nine years in the Legislature. “The people are mad as hell at what happened in Tallahassee this last Legislative Session, and I can guarantee you, I know they put HB 1 out, but I can tell you that there is going to be an uprising of the people to show who’s really in charge,” Jones said.
“‘Much work needs to be done ’: SPLC reflects on 2021 Session” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — The Southern Poverty Law Center Action Fund has released its reflection on this year’s Legislative Session after it came to a close on Friday. The consensus of the advocacy group: there’s much work left to be done in the Sunshine State. Mirroring the response of other civil rights groups, the SPLC Action Fund condemned the passage of the Republican-backed anti-riot bill (HB 1). The legislation stiffens penalties against violent protest, as well as protects police budgets from cuts by allowing local lawmakers to appeal proposed reductions to the Governor and his Cabinet. Opponents of the legislation, including the SPLC, argue that it attempts to silence protesters.
“North Florida has key projects funded under Panhandle Appropriations Chair” via Blaise Gainey of WFSU — North Florida is often an afterthought when people think about Florida as a whole. The same sometimes happens during Session when money is doled out for member projects. Part of this is due to representation — there are more people in South and Central Florida, and that rewards those regions with more representatives. This Session, however, the Appropriations Chair is Panama City Republican Rep. Jay Trumbull. I spoke with him and another North Florida representative about how they worked to make sure the panhandle got a slice of the pie. North Florida can often be overlooked since there aren’t as many delegates as more densely populated areas.
Jay Trumbull brings the big bucks home to North Florida. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Jason Shoaf secures $29 million in special project funding” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The funding will go toward more than a dozen projects within Florida House District 7, which includes Calhoun, Franklin, Gulf, Jefferson, Lafayette, Liberty, Madison, Taylor, Wakulla and parts of Leon. “We’ve worked really hard this session to allocate state funding wisely and in a way that will have a really meaningful impact on our communities,” Shoaf said. “I’m proud to have secured $29 million in funding for projects across North Florida.” The millions will go toward myriad projects, including $19 million to build a new school in Calhoun County and $1 million for the Liberty County Jail improvements; $1.2 million into the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office Emergency Communication System and $650,000 for the Madison County Agricultural and Expo Center.
“State parks win ‘record funding’ in new budget” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — The Florida Legislature poured more than $67 million into the state’s parks this year. The budget marks a record year for the parks, according to Gil Ziffer, State Parks Foundation President. “In every sense, this has been one of the most successful Legislative Sessions ever as far as Florida’s award-winning state parks are concerned. This is a year of record funding,” Ziffer said in a written statement. Should the funding all survive DeSantis‘ veto pen, $50 million will be used for facility repairs and other improvements. Land and recreation grant programs will receive $13.8 million. Recreational trail programs will receive $1.5 million, and $2 million will go toward Florida Recreational Development Assistance programs.
Lobby regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Bill Rubin, Heather Turnbull, Erica Chanti, Christopher Finkbeiner, Rubin Turnbull & Associates: Chesapeake Utilities, Skydio
Ken Granger, Dean Izzo, Capital City Consulting: Medallia
Eliakim Nortelus, Nortelus Roberts Group: Novelle Health Partners, Sharkey Air
Robert Stuart, GrayRobinson: Florida League of Cities
SPOTTED — Ballard Partners on Bloomberg Government’s 2020 Top-Performing Lobbying Firms list. The Florida-based firm founded by Brian Ballard placed third on the list of firms with the largest increase in revenue last year as well as the list of firms with the highest revenue per client.
2022
“Florida Republicans rushed to curb mail voting after Donald Trump’s attacks on the practice. Now some fear it could lower GOP turnout.” via Amy Gardner of The Washington Post — Virtually every narrow Republican victor of the past generation owes their victory, at least in part, to mail voting. Now, some Florida Republicans are reacting with alarm after the GOP-dominated state legislature passed a far-reaching bill that puts new restrictions on the use of mail ballots. Not only are GOP lawmakers reversing statutes that their own predecessors put in place, but they are also curtailing a practice that millions of state Republicans use, despite Trump’s relentless and baseless claims that it invites fraud. These Republicans say their own political fortunes are in peril, too.
“Former State Attorney Aramis Ayala exploring a run for U.S. Senate” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — Ayala is considering a run for U.S. Senate, according to a new ad on Twitter. “You may know me as a colleague, a friend, family, and a former state attorney here in Florida,” Ayala says in the ad. “You know me as a lover of truth and justice, a principle fighter for what is right, someone who bases decisions on facts and evidence, one who values and respects science.” “I am exploring a run for the United States Senate, and if I do, I will be prepared to win. You know, I can be trusted to defend what is right and will always stand up for Florida,” Ayala says.
“‘Let’s keep Florida open’: Jimmy Patronis kicks off reelection campaign” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Chief Financial Officer Patronis kicked off his 2022 reelection campaign on Monday with the release of a new ad touting his accomplishments over the past four years. The ad, titled “Let’s keep Florida open,” opens with Patronis wiping down tables in his family’s Panama City restaurant, Capt. Anderson’s before hopping into his truck for a dashcam one-on-one with voters. He highlighted measurables since he took office: 3,920 fraud arrests, $167 million in ill-gotten gains returned to victims, his work to expedite post-Hurricane Michael insurance claims and more than $1.2 billion in unclaimed property returns. So far, Patronis is the only candidate running for CFO in 2022. He has about $2.1 million banked between his campaign and political committee, Treasure Florida.
“Pinellas dominoes could fall if when Charlie Crist runs for Governor” via William March of the Tampa Bay Times — As Crist edges closer to running for Governor in 2022, talk is picking up about Democrats and Republicans who may run to replace him, and the falling political dominoes that might result as some of those candidates leave offices they now hold. On the Democratic side, speculation on Crist’s congressional seat focuses on state Rep. Ben Diamond and Eric Lynn, both of whom are considered almost certain to run — though neither will say so outright, partly out of deference to Crist. Several others are also mentioned, including state Rep. Michele Rayner and even Mayor Rick Kriseman.
First domino — “Anna Paulina Luna announces congressional bid in FL CD 13” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Luna has announced another congressional campaign in hopes of flipping Florida’s 13th Congressional District red, about six months after her loss to incumbent Crist. “I said in November that it wasn’t the end of the road for me because patriotism and public service are lifelong endeavors, and today I’m proud to announce that I’m back and am running for Congress in 2022,” Luna said in a statement. Luna made headlines as a vocal Trump supporter with a brazen attitude toward guns and political opponents, like Crist; rhetoric she seems intent on keeping as she heads into 2022. In announcing her campaign, the 31-year-old Air Force veteran seems to be reiterating similar campaign rhetoric, specifically, blasting Crist by sending out a mock resume of the Congressman.
Tweet, tweet:
“Brian Clowdus enters HD 6 race” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — A second Republican has entered the race for Bay County-based House District 6. Panama City Republican Clowdus announced he is running for the seat currently held by term-limited Rep. Trumbull, joining Bay County Commissioner Philip “Griff” Griffitts. Clowdus is an Alabama native who moved to Florida last year. In a news release, his campaign said the Panhandle has “always been his second home” and that “for three generations, he and his family have continued to grow deep, sandy roots in their favorite place on earth.” After moving to the state, Clowdus quickly became involved with the Bay County Republican Party to help reelect Trump, knocking on “thousands of doors,” making “thousands of calls,” and volunteering at “countless events.”
“Adam Brandon to run in HD 16 instead of HD 12 for ‘family reasons’” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Rogers Towers lawyer Brandon, who had opened a campaign account to run in House District 12, announced Monday his intention to shift his campaign to HD 16. A media release cites “family reasons” for the move. “My family and I are moving within Jacksonville to be closer to our work, our kids’ schools, and our church,” Brandon said. “Over a decade ago, when I was on active duty, we bought our first home to be near Naval Station Mayport. We love our city, and this move puts our family in a better location for everything going on in our lives today.” Both seats are in Jacksonville. The HD 12 seat is in the Arlington area, while HD 16 is in Mandarin.
Statewide
“No surprise: Florida ranked No. 2 on CEO Mag’s best for business list (again)” via Brian Burgess of The Capitolist — A decade after Florida first edged North Carolina out of the number two spot on CEO Magazine’s 2012 Best States for Business list, the Sunshine State scored its tenth straight number two ranking. Then-Governor Rick Scott often touted the rankings and his friendly competition with Texas, which has been ranked #1 on the list even longer. Since that lead has never been smaller, thanks most recently to DeSantis and his open-for-business posture during the pandemic. DeSantis undoubtedly deserves credit for taking the political risk to keep the state open, and he received his share of accolades for efforts to lure business in this year’s story.
Governor, legislators look to raise awareness for Tardive Dyskinesia” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Gov. DeSantis and state lawmakers are seeking to highlight Tardive Dyskinesia (TD) Awareness Week, beginning Sunday. The Governor has signed a proclamation supporting TD Awareness Week, which runs from May 2-8. Republican Sen. Ana Maria Rodriguez and GOP Rep. John Snyder also recently joined Florida Behavioral Health Association (FBHA) President and CEO Melanie Brown-Woofter to highlight measures from the Senate and House aiming to bring attention to those suffering from TD. The condition is described as “an involuntary, sometimes irreversible movement disorder that can occur due to use of antipsychotics, commonly prescribed to treat bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and depression, or other medications,” according to an explainer from the Movement Disorders Policy Coalition.
Anna Maria Rodriguez seeks to raise awareness of Tardive Dyskinesia.
“Longtime head of Florida foster care agency resigns to take new job” via Christopher O’Donnell of the Tampa Bay Times — The head of Florida’s Guardian ad Litem program has resigned to take a new position as the chief executive officer of a nonprofit that works with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Alan Abramowitz led the state-funded program for about 10 years. It receives roughly $53 million each year to provide advocacy for roughly 35,000 children in Florida’s foster care system. His departure comes as the program came under fire earlier this year from state lawmakers and others following a study that found that the agency was serving fewer children even though state lawmakers had increased its annual funding by $10 million. The report also cast doubt on whether Florida’s model of volunteer advocates backed up by program attorneys provided the best representation for children.
“Can a teacher fly a Black Lives Matter flag at school? A Florida court will consider” via Sydney Boles of WJCT — Amy Donofrio, an English teacher at Robert E. Lee High School in Jacksonville, hung a Black Lives Matter flag outside her classroom to mark it as a safe space for students to process the death of Reginald Boston, a member of an at-risk student group. This March, Jacksonville’s public school district told Donofrio to take the flag down, saying it violated district policy on political speech by employees. Donofrio said no. So she was reassigned to nonteaching duties. Donofrio is now represented by the Southern Poverty Law Center in a lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida. The suit alleges the flag’s removal was a violation of her First Amendment rights.
Amy Donofrio was ejected for flying a BLM flag at school. Now a court will decide if that is a free-speech issue.
Personnel note: Avery Jaffe now communications director for Mastercard — Jaffe has joined Mastercard as director of North America communications, he announced in a Monday email. Jaffe served as a regional press secretary for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee during the 2020 election cycle. In the 2018 cycle, he was the communications lead and Central Florida press secretary for Andrew Gillum’s gubernatorial campaign. He is a graduate of George Washington University, where he earned an undergraduate degree in political communication. “Over the course of this year, I hope to be able to provide a steady stream of intelligence and insights from Mastercard on America’s road to economic recovery coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic,” Jaffe said of his new position.
Corona Florida
“Florida reports 39 coronavirus resident deaths, 3,075 new cases” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida’s resident death toll from coronavirus rose to 35,307 with the addition of 39 more reported fatalities on Monday while also adding 3,075 more positive COVID-19 cases to bring the total to 2,245,853. It’s the second day in a row with cases below 4,000 and less than 50 reported deaths. For the week, infections are down slightly while reported deaths ticked up when comparing Sunday-Sunday numbers. From April 25-May 1, the state reported 34,194 new cases than 39,683 reported from April 18-24. In that same time period, the state reported 420 resident deaths than the 409 the previous week.
“Doing away with masks in schools may be ‘premature,’ says USF infectious disease expert” via Kerry Sheridan of WUSF — In mid-April, Florida’s education commissioner urged schools to abandon mandatory mask policies in the fall, saying district face-covering policies do not impact the spread of the coronavirus. Dr. Patricia Emmanuel, chair of pediatrics at the USF Morsani College of Medicine, said an edict like that for the entire state might be premature. “We have about a 9% positivity rate, at least in Hillsborough County. For our positive tests and children under 18, it’s a 17% positivity rate. So, we have no vaccinations for anyone under 16 years of age and really no opportunity to realize those until hopefully the late fall. So, I think it’s a little premature to make that kind of broad sweeping statements about the entire state.”
Corona local
“Leon County says mask ordinance ‘no longer in effect’ after DeSantis executive order” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — Leon County on Monday evening said its mask ordinance was “no longer in effect” now that Florida Gov. DeSantis issued executive orders countermanding local coronavirus emergency measures. The Governor signed into law a measure (SB 2006) that goes into effect in July, giving him the ability to override local ordinances. But he also issued an order that immediately suspended city and county-level restrictions. Leon County’s mask mandate was enacted last June. Its enforceability, like others around the state, was nullified by an earlier DeSantis executive order that no fines or penalties could be levied by local governments.
Now that Ron DeSantis ended COVID-19 restrictions, Leon County schools say the mask mandate is moot. Image via Facebook.
“Palm Beach County officials mull impact of DeSantis order ending COVID-19 measures” via Hannah Morse of the Palm Beach Post — County officials on Monday were still assessing how DeSantis‘ suspension of mask mandates and other measures that local governments have imposed to combat the spread of COVID-19 would impact their efforts to stem coronavirus infections. After signing a bill that bans “vaccine passports” and limits local governments’ emergency powers, DeSantis signed an executive order “invalidating all remaining local emergency COVID-19 orders” on July 1, using his executive power to suspend them immediately in the meantime. In his executive order, DeSantis pointed to “a select number of local governments (that) continue to impose mandates and business restrictions, without proper consideration of improving conditions and with no end in sight.”
“Palm Beach County reopens rental assistance portal” via Ron Hurtibise of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Palm Beach County has reopened its rental assistance portal for past-due tenants who fell behind on their payments because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The online portal has been opened twice since March 11. Both times it soon closed after receiving high volumes of applications. It opened for a third time Monday morning. As of May 3, officials received 3,105 applications for rent and utility assistance and disbursed $5.6 million, a spokeswoman said. Last week, the agency said rental assistance applicants who were approved received an average of $5,500, while those seeking help for utilities received an average of $276. The money comes from Palm Beach County’s $45.2 million share of $25 billion in federal funding for rental assistance.
“Santa Rosa County School District drops mask mandate immediately” via Madison Arnold of the Pensacola News Journal — The School Board voted in a special meeting Monday morning to remove the district’s mask mandate. The order has stirred debate during the board’s recent meetings, including one last month that led to parents being escorted out by law enforcement. The mandate’s removal is effective immediately. Face coverings are now only recommended in schools. The District called the special meeting after the state Surgeon General rescinded a public health advisory from July that required face masks be used when social distancing wasn’t possible. That public health advisory was used by the district to form its mask mandate.
Tweet, tweet:
Corona nation
“Joe Biden administration to cover vaccine fees” via The News Service of Florida — As part of the Biden administration’s efforts to provide free access to COVID-19 shots, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced Monday it will pay administration fees to health care providers who vaccinate patients enrolled in health plans that don’t cover the fees or that require patient cost-sharing. Providers can submit vaccine administration fee claims for reimbursement to the online web portal called the COVID-19 Coverage Assistance Fund. Providers must show that claims were submitted to patients’ insurance plans and that the claims were denied or partially paid to tap into available reimbursements.
Joe Biden is picking up the tab for vaccines. Image via AP.
“Millions are saying no to the vaccines. What are they thinking?” via Derek Thompson of The Atlantic — The mega-popular podcast host Joe Rogan advised his young listeners to skip the COVID-19 vaccine. “I think you should get vaccinated if you’re vulnerable,” Rogan said. “But if you’re 21 years old, and you say to me, ‘Should I get vaccinated?’ I’ll go, ‘No.’” Rogan’s comments drew widespread condemnation. But his view is surprisingly common. One in four Americans says they don’t plan to take the COVID-19 vaccine, and about half Republicans under 50 say they won’t get a vaccine. This partisan vaccine gap is already playing out in the real world.
“The FDA is set to authorize the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for those 12-15 years old by early next week.” via Noah Weiland, Sharon LaFraniere and Apoorva Mandavilli of The New York Times — The Food and Drug Administration is preparing to authorize the use of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine in adolescents 12 to 15 years old by early next week, according to federal officials familiar with the agency’s plans, opening up the nation’s vaccination campaign to millions more Americans. The news is highly anticipated: Eager parents have been counting down the weeks since Pfizer announced results from its trial in adolescents, showing the vaccine is at least as effective in that age group as it is in adults. Vaccinating children is also key to raising the level of immunity in the population and bringing down the numbers of hospitalizations and deaths.
“CVS, Walgreens wasted more coronavirus vaccine than most states combined” via Kaiser Health News — Two national pharmacy chains that the federal government entrusted to inoculate people against COVID-19 account for the lion’s share of wasted vaccine doses, according to government data obtained by Kaiser Health News. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recorded 182,874 wasted doses as of late March, three months into the country’s effort to vaccinate the masses against the coronavirus. Of those, CVS was responsible for nearly half, and Walgreens for 21%, or nearly 128,500 wasted shots combined. CDC data suggests that the companies have wasted more doses than states, U.S. territories and federal agencies combined.
CVS and Walgreens wasted more than 182,000 vaccine doses.
“New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo stuns Broadway and cultural world with lifting of pandemic capacity restrictions on May 19” via Peter Marks of The Washington Post — In a sweeping acceleration of efforts to reopen New York, Cuomo announced the lifting of all of the state’s capacity restrictions on May 19 in restaurants, concert halls, bars, museums and theaters, including Broadway. The swiftness of the governor’s timetable stunned the arts community, much of which had been operating under the assumption that controls would remain in effect for several more months. Still, as far as an industry like Broadway is concerned, the May date bears no relationship to reopening reality, which even Cuomo acknowledged at his Albany news conference on Monday. It will take a number of months to get productions in shape for normal running schedules; the early fall has been widely discussed as the likely time of a Broadway reset.
Corona economics
“Rampant racial disparities plagued how billions of dollars in PPP loans were distributed in the U.S.” via Laura C. Morel, Mohamed Al Elew and Emily Harris of Reveal News — The federal Paycheck Protection Program promised to help small businesses. In signing the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act — or CARES Act — on March 27, 2020, Trump announced that the PPP would provide “unprecedented support to small businesses” in order “to keep our small businesses strong.” The program has injected more than $770 billion into the economy. Widespread racial disparities were visible across the nation. Reveal found that in the vast majority of metro areas with a population of 1 million or more, the rate of lending to majority-White areas was higher than the rates for any majority-minority areas. In many metro areas, the disparities were extreme.
There was a clear racial disparity in distributing PPP small-business loans.
“As landlords and tenants go broke across the U.S., the next crisis point of the pandemic approaches” via Eli Saslow of The Washington Post — In the COVID-19 economy of 2021, the federal government has created an ongoing grace period for renters until at least July, banning all evictions in an effort to hold back a historic housing crisis that is already underway. According to census data, more than 8 million rental properties across the country are behind on payments by an average of $5,600. Nearly half those rental properties are owned not by banks or big corporations but instead by what the government classifies as “small landlords” — people who manage their own rentals and depend on them for basic income, and who are now trapped between tenants who can’t pay and their own mounting bills for insurance, mortgages and property tax.
“Delta stops blocking middle seats, officially ending social distancing on planes” via Hannah Simpson of The Washington Post — Saturday marks the end of a pandemic era in the air: no more social distancing on flights. Delta was the final holdout, ending its practice of blocking middle seats on Saturday. That is more than a year after the airline first introduced the practice as the coronavirus cratered the number of air travelers. Other major U.S. carriers have long since returned to full flights. American and United started selling all their seats last summer. Southwest started doing the same in December, and Alaska Airlines and JetBlue followed in January. Delta announced at the end of March that it would make all seats available for flights starting May 1.
More corona
“A new understanding of herd immunity” via James Hamblin of The Atlantic — Edward Lorenz was just out of college when he was recruited into World War II. He was assigned to be a weather forecaster, despite having no experience in meteorology. What Lorenz knew was math. So he started experimenting with differential equations, trying to make predictions based on patterns in data on past temperatures and pressures. One day, while testing his system, he repeated a simulation with a few decimals rounded off in the data. To his surprise, a radically different future emerged. He called this finding “the butterfly effect.” In a complex model, where each day’s weather influences the next day’s, a tweak in initial conditions can have wild downstream consequences.
We are now looking at herd immunity in a different light.
“Next generation of COVID-19 vaccines could be pill or spray” via Peter Loftus and Gregory Zuckerman of The Wall Street Journal — The next generation of COVID-19 vaccines in development could come as a pill or a nasal spray and be easier to store and transport than the current handful of shots that form the backbone of the worldwide vaccination effort. These newer vaccines, from U.S. government labs and companies including Sanofi SA, Altimmune Inc. and Gritstone Oncology Inc., also have the potential to provide longer-lasting immune responses and be more potent against newer and multiple viral variants, possibly helping to head off future pandemics, the companies say. Because some of the new vaccines are administered as a nasal spray, they also might induce a type of immune response known as mucosal immunity, which could help clear the virus from the respiratory tract.
Presidential
“Biden open to options on spending as Congress takes over” via Nancy Cook, Laura Davison, and Erik Wasson of Bloomberg — Biden’s $4 trillion vision of remaking the federal government’s role in the U.S. economy is now in the hands of Congress, where both parties see a higher chance of at least some compromise than for the administration’s pandemic-relief bill. The president, at this point, is open to various possibilities to pass his proposals, including breaking them into multiple bills, according to a White House official speaking on condition of anonymity. The GOP has embraced parts of the infrastructure-focused “American Jobs Plan.” “The good news is, I think there’s overwhelming bipartisan support for this,” Biden said.
Joe Biden is willing to compromise with Congress if they can bring themselves to do it. Image via Reuters.
“Biden quadruples Trump refugee cap after delay backlash” via Matthew Lee, Zeke Miller and Julie Watson of The Associated Press — President Biden on Monday formally raised the nation’s cap on refugee admissions to 62,500 this year, weeks after facing bipartisan blowback for his delay in replacing the record-low ceiling set by former President Trump. Refugee resettlement agencies had waited for Biden to quadruple the number of refugees allowed into the United States this year since Feb. 12, when a presidential proposal was submitted to Congress saying he planned to do so. But the presidential determination went unsigned until Monday. Biden said he first needed to expand the narrow eligibility criteria put in place by Trump that had kept out most refugees. He did that last month in an emergency determination.
Epilogue: Trump
“Trump’s delegitimization of democracy isn’t wearing off” via Ed Kilgore of New York Magazine — People who are fond of democratic norms have been hoping that the widespread Republican mistrust of the fairness of the 2020 elections that Trump created before, during, and after Election Day would fade, another vestige of four aberrant years yielding to something approaching “normalcy.” So far, it hasn’t, according to a new survey, which shows that 70% of self-identified Republicans do not believe “Biden legitimately won enough votes to win the presidency.” That’s just a tick below the 75% who felt that way in a survey. In what the pollsters took to be an encouraging sign, the percentage of Republicans who think “there is solid evidence that Biden did not win has dropped from 58% in January to 50% now.”
“Liz Cheney refuses to back down on Trump criticism” via Axios — Rep. Cheney, the No. 3 Republican on the House, tweeted Monday that anyone promoting “THE BIG LIE” that the 2020 election was stolen from Trump is “turning their back on the rule of law” and “poisoning our democratic system.” Top Republicans are now openly suggesting that Cheney could be removed from her leadership position because of her criticism of Trump. Cheney was one of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. In February, the House GOP conference held a secret ballot about retaining Cheney in her current role. She won overwhelmingly, 145-61. Since then, Cheney has increasingly been at odds with other top House Republicans.
Liz Cheney is standing her ground against Donald Trump. Image via AP.
“A Facebook panel will reveal on Wednesday whether Trump will regain his megaphone.” via Cecilia Kang of The New York Times — Facebook’s Oversight Board, an independent and international panel that was created and funded by the social network, plans to announce whether Trump will be able to return to the platform that has been a critical megaphone for him and his tens of millions of followers. The decision will be closely watched as a template for how private companies that run social networks handle political speech, including the misinformation spread by political leaders. Trump was indefinitely locked out of Facebook on Jan. 7 after he used his social media accounts to incite a mob of his supporters to storm the Capitol a day earlier.
Crisis
“Daniel Baker, charged in Florida Capitol threats case, goes on trial this week” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — Baker, the Tallahassee man arrested by the FBI after posting a “call to arms” against right-wing extremists he thought were coming for Florida’s Capitol, will face a jury starting Tuesday. Baker, 33, was arrested on Jan. 15 at his High Road apartment after issuing what federal prosecutors alleged were “true threats” on Facebook. He called for people to “rise up” with “every caliber available” against “armed racists” he feared would storm the Capitol on Jan. 20 amid FBI warnings of violence that day at statehouses nationwide. Attorneys will pick a jury Tuesday morning, and the trial will commence in the afternoon. At least two days have been set aside for the trial at the U.S. Courthouse in Tallahassee.
Tallahassee’s Daniel Baker issued a ‘call to arms’ planning to storm the Florida Capitol. Image via Tallahassee Democrat.
“Canadian chapter of the Proud Boys, designated a terrorist group by the government, says it has ‘dissolved’” via Amanda Coletta of The Washington Post — Nearly three months after Canada declared the Proud Boys a terrorist entity, the Canadian chapter of the militant far-right group claims it has “officially dissolved.” In a statement posted on social media on Sunday, the group said, “there is officially no longer any Proud Boys in Canada.” It cited the financial difficulties of mounting a legal challenge to overturn the government’s terrorist entity designation. The designation in February did not make it illegal to belong to the group, but it did carry financial and legal consequences. Authorities can add members to the no-fly list. Banks can freeze their assets, and police can seize their property. It’s a crime to knowingly assist the group, including by purchasing merchandise.
D.C. matters
“Florida stands to gain from Biden infrastructure plan. Will GOP oppose?” via Antonio Fins, Wendy Rhodes and John Kennedy of the Palm Beach Post — At a rally Thursday in West Palm Beach, Palm Beach County Democratic Party members cheered what they said was the successful completion of President Biden’s first 100 days — with an eye toward another windfall in the next 100 days. “He has rescued us from very, very dark days, with shots in the arms and money in pockets, businesses saved and children back to school,” boasted Democratic Rep. Lois Frankel of West Palm Beach. “Thank God for federal dollars for this,” said Palm Beach County Commissioner Melissa McKinlay, who lauded the $292 million from the American Rescue Plan coming to Palm Beach County from Biden’s signature legislative achievement. “I don’t know where this county would be without it.”
Lois Frankel touts federal infrastructure dollars to Florida. Will the GOP stand in its way?
“Defiant Matt Gaetz breaks media silence” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Gaetz, appearing on the America First radio program with Sebastian Gorka, was conducting his first interview in a while, as reports of a wide-ranging federal investigation into the Congressman continue to percolate, albeit without formal charges. As he has since the story broke, Gaetz continued to maintain his innocence and suggest that a larger conspiracy is unfolding. Gorka said Gaetz was targeted “because he was effective” in his role as a conservative commentator, and Gaetz concurred. “The things the media has said about me are lies, and the truth will prevail,” the Congressman asserted.
“Brian Mast charges Nikki Fried with not doing her job under Clean Waterways Act” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Mast on Monday said Fried was not following through with water pollution test reports and inspections required of certain properties participating in the state’s Best Management Practices Program, leading to uncertainty whether they were following guidelines to reduce pollution. He went so far as to accuse her of shielding polluters from scrutiny. Mast’s charges came in a letter the Stuart Republican sent Fried Monday. Specifically, he contended her Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services had not followed requirements set in the 2020 Clean Waterways Act requiring reports on monitoring nitrogen and phosphorous use. Those are the agriculture fertilizer agents most associated with algae blooms, red tides, and environmental and public health degradation from Lake Okeechobee to both coasts.
“Frederica Wilson is always dressed up. A new Netflix series explores why.” via C. Isaiah Smalls II — Rep. Wilson didn’t deliberately don her signature hat to make change. But you can’t argue with results. “When you stand out in a crowd of policymakers, people pay attention to what you have to say,” Wilson said in a new Netflix docuseries. “It helps you get shit done.” Wilson was among the many people featured in “Worn Stories,” a limited series that explores why individuals wear what they do. The congresswoman appears in the “Uniform” episode where she details how her fascination with fashion and, simultaneously, equality began. “Even before you speak, you have made an impression by what you wear,” Wilson said.
Local notes
“Will JEA, other utilities fight plan to raise Keystone Heights lakes?” via Steve Patterson of the Florida Times-Union — A state agency’s bid to protect water levels at Clay County’s shrunken Keystone Heights lakes is getting pushback from utilities including JEA. JEA likes the St. Johns River Water Management District’s plan to build the pipeline from Black Creek but worries it could be stuck paying an “inequitable” bill for $13 million. “While we support the project … we have to do that with the customers in mind and what the financial impact might be,” CEO Jay Stowe told his board before it gave him a free hand last week to challenge the water agency (if needed) over a proposed rule to safeguard water levels in Lake Brooklyn and Lake Geneva.
“Miami-Dade police lieutenant and union VP suspended amid criminal probe in Palm Beach” via Charles Rabin of the Miami Herald — A Miami-Dade police lieutenant and high-ranking union member has been suspended with pay while Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office deputies investigate an alleged incident that took place two weeks while he was in Palm Beach Gardens for a police union gala. Lt. John Jenkins resigned as executive vice president of Miami-Dade’s Police Benevolent Association last week. He was relieved of duty by Miami-Dade Police Director Alfredo “Freddy” Ramirez, pending the investigation. Miami-Dade internal affairs investigators reached out to Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office detectives before Ramirez decided. “It’s a criminal investigation, and the lieutenant has been relieved of duty,” said Miami-Dade PBA President Steadman Stahl.
Alfredo “Freddy” Ramirez suspends a Miami-Dade Police lieutenant who is also a vice president of the union. Image via NBC Miami.
“As businesses flock to South Florida, has Fort Lauderdale fallen behind in luring them?” via David Lyons of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Fort Lauderdale appears to be missing out on many of the companies moving to South Florida during the pandemic — with a number of them instead landing in West Palm Beach and Miami. Business relocations are becoming a key force in the economic recovery, delivering the potential for more high-skilled, high-paying jobs in the region. But Miami and West Palm Beach boast higher buzz factors right now than Fort Lauderdale, perhaps because the neighboring cities have more defined messages and vocal advocates speaking on their behalf. Fort Lauderdale’s Downtown Development Authority and Mayor Dean Trantalis, who says the city needs a more diversified economy, say they seek ways to raise the municipality’s visibility among out-of-state companies.
“Orlando airport, UCF detail what’s next for high-tech campus concept” via Richard Bilbao of the Orlando Business Journal — A partnership between the Orlando International Airport and the University of Central Florida for a high-tech campus at the air hub is taking the first steps toward becoming a reality. Last August, the airport and UCF revealed a conceptual plan for a digital-twin technology campus environment consisting of a complex of buildings, operations and users. Now, the airport has detailed what’s next for the future project, including determining the focus industry, seeking an anchor user, assembling the development and marketing team, and securing other support tenants such as hotels and cargo operators, according to an April 21 update provided to the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority.
“Key West Airport readies for $80M upgrade” via Mandy Miles of Keys Weekly — Despite the beloved island charm of Key West International Airport, the days of passengers walking across the tarmac when arriving and departing soon will be gone. Richard Strickland, Monroe County airports director, presented plans at a meeting on April 27 for a new concourse at the Key West airport that will include a new security checkpoint, new gates, a new “hold room” for departing passengers, new concessions, a new baggage claim area and glass-enclosed jet bridges, or jetways, to connect the planes with the building. The targeted completion date is Oct. 2024.
“Joe Neunder files for open Sarasota County Commission seat” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Neunder, a Venice City Councilman, announced Monday he will run for a vacant Sarasota County Commission seat next year. The founder of Sarasota Spinal Mechanics, a chiropractic practice in Sarasota County, Neunder said he’s running on a platform of keeping the county a good place to do business. “My family moved to Sarasota when I was a teenager,” the North Venice Republican said. “As soon as I finished my education, I moved back to Sarasota to build my business and raise my family here. I’m running for County Commission to ensure that my three sons grow up in a safe community, receive an excellent education, and have the opportunity to chase their own version of the American Dream.”
Top opinion
“Fox News should fire Tucker Carlson before his bullying on COVID-19 masks gets someone killed” via Steven Petrow of USA Today — Carlson used his prime-time bully pulpit to urge his millions of viewers to confront strangers, like me, who choose to wear masks in public and even to call 911 if they see kids wearing a mask. Carlson, whose program is regularly riddled with falsehoods, described mask-wearing as a “sign of political obedience” and attacked those who wear them outdoors as “zealots and neurotics.” Not only is Carlson dead wrong about his latest facts, but he’s continuing the politicization of masks as a blue state/red state issue, claiming they turn “citizens into drones,” rather than talking about them as a public health issue or, more importantly, how wearing them protects others.
Opinions
“It’s not vaccine hesitancy. It’s COVID-19 denialism.” Via David Graham of The Atlantic — Several years ago, two sociologists researched whether Americans were willing to take a novel vaccine during a pandemic. Taking poll data from the midst of the 2009 H1N1 swine-flu outbreak, they broke out hesitancy by race, age and partisanship. Although the H1N1 pandemic was very different from today’s COVID-19 pandemic — not nearly as many people in the United States fell ill, far fewer died, and vaccines were not as widely available as they are now — the results were striking. The researchers found widespread hesitation. Nearly two-thirds of Americans were unwilling to receive a shot. But those qualms were relatively evenly distributed in the population.
“‘Because we can’ — the Florida GOP’s arrogant slogan for lawmaking” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — Florida’s 2021 lawmaking session was summed up best last week during a House debate over the state’s $101.5 billion budget. State Rep. Susan Valdés, a Democrat, wanted to know why school districts were being forced to apply for state grants to get money from the federal American Rescue Plan, when the money was supposed to go directly to districts with no strings attached. Rep. Randy Fine tersely replied, “Because we can.” Those three words perfectly encapsulated the Republicans’ breathtaking arrogance in shaping new laws to govern Floridians in 2021. Republicans broke legislative rules, rejected legitimate objections, ignored basic constitutional principles and steamrollered opposition so they could pass what may be the most radical political agenda in modern state legislative history.
On today’s Sunrise
Gov. DeSantis signs an executive order abolishing all of the COVID-19 rules and regulations enacted by city and county governments throughout the state. The Governor’s order also prohibits businesses from requiring customers to show proof of vaccination.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— The ban on vaccination passports and local COVID-19 rules is part of a bill DeSantis signed Monday. The new law doesn’t kick in until July, so he signed executive orders to impose those rules until the law takes effect. But businesses can still require you to wear a mask in their stores and Rep. Evan Jenne says that’s going to confuse folks.
The Governor also claims it’s wrong for the feds to recommend social distancing and masks for people already vaccinated … but Rep. Fentrice Driskell says DeSantis is ignoring the obvious.
— After being closed to the public for more than a year, Senate President Wilton Simpson says The Capitol is about to reopen to the public this Friday; masks are optional, and you will NOT need a vaccine passport.
— Democratic Congressman and former Republican Gov. Crist is expected to announce another run for Governor. Let’s just say he’s no fan of the incumbent.
— A Florida Man is accused of dealing drugs; he tried to escape on an electric skateboard.
“As Florida gasoline prices still on the decline, which markets offer the cheapest gas?” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — Gas prices across Florida have continued their decline, dropping 8 cents in the last month, to the lowest daily average in two months. The average price per gallon on Monday was $2.78. However, summer demand and crude oil prices could have impacts as Americans begin to look toward traveling more. “Gas prices have mostly declined for six consecutive weeks, as refinery activity recovered from power outages earlier this year,” said AAA spokesman Mark Jenkins in his weekly briefing. “That downward trend is now in jeopardy. Crude and gasoline futures prices rebounded last week after positive U.S. economic data increased market optimism about summer demand.”
“Orlando White Castle opening draws big line of little-burger fans” via Austin Fuller of the Orlando Sentinel — Scores of White Castle fans lined up overnight for a chance to buy the restaurant’s signature sliders from the Orlando location that opened today. More than 100 people were standing in line under a tent before the sun came up, and the drive-through was packed with cars backed up all the way to the Daryl Carter Parkway in the O-Town West development near Walt Disney World. Sheila Santiago, a 49-year-old from Orlando, said she arrived at 3:30 a.m. Originally from New York, she worked at the chain as a teenager. The restaurant will be open until 1 a.m. Tuesday and then 9 a.m. to 1 a.m. every day of the week.
The line for Orlando’s newly opened White Castle stretched for miles.
“The eyes have it: A quarter-century of watching and being watched by Dave Matthews” via Katie Baker of The Ringer — In the whirlwind days before the late April 1996 release of Dave Matthews Band’s sophomore studio album, Crash, Matthews the man was both savoring and confronting what it meant to be truly hitting the big time. A few years earlier DMB had been available for gigs at Charlottesville bars, fraternities, and debutante balls. By 1994 the band was opening for Blues Traveler and Phish. And now the band was at Saturday Night Live, its second visit in a year, to play the first two singles: the plucky “So Much to Say” (a-little-baaaay-by!) and the funky “Too Much.”
May the 4th be with you
“May the 4th be with you: All about the Star Wars holiday” via Dawn Yanek of Reader’s Digest — If you thought this phrase came from George Lucas or a really smart marketing team, you’d be wrong. So, it must be the day that the first movie premiered way back in 1977, right? Wrong, again! (For the record, it premiered on May 25 of that year.) No, credit for that pun goes to England’s conservative party, the Tories, after Margaret Thatcher won the election to become the first female prime minister of the United Kingdom on May 4, 1979. The group took out a newspaper ad that stated, “May the Fourth be with you, Maggie. Congratulations.”
It’s that time again to celebrate all things Star Wars.
“Disney Plus is celebrating May the 4th with plenty of new Star Wars content” via Tatiana Tenreyro of the AV Club — Disney+ was already well-prepared for Star Wars Day. The animated series Star Wars: The Bad Batch is premiering on a very appropriate date. The show follows the group of genetically mutated clone troopers known as the “Bad Batch.” But Disney+ is also celebrating the day with a Simpsons and Star Wars crossover short, Maggie Simpson In The Force Awakens From Its Nap. If you’re looking for something relaxing, Disney+ is introducing two virtual experiences: Star Wars Biomes and Star Wars Vehicle Flythroughs.
“Lego offers sweet Star Wars deals for May the Fourth” via Elizabeth Howell of Space.com — The building toymaker recently released a $200 R2-D2 model, a $70 Darth Vader helmet, a $50 Scout Trooper helmet and a $60 Imperial Droid, adding on to an ever-growing list of dozens of “Star Wars” products. Lego’s “Star Wars” event page notes that VIP members of Lego — you can join the program for free — will receive double points on all Lego “Star Wars” purchases between Saturday (May 1) and Wednesday (May 5). VIP members can also enter a sweepstakes for a Lego “Star Wars” collectible featuring Jon “Dutch” Vander, one of the Rebel test pilots who died during the successful attempt to blow up the Death Star in “Star Wars: A New Hope” (1977).
“To celebrate May the 4th, ask Alexa these Star Wars questions” via Gael Fashingbauer Cooper of CNET — If you have virtual assistants that use Amazon’s Alexa, such as an Echo or Dot, you can get your Star Wars fix for free from the comfort of your couch. Admittedly, there is not a whole galaxy of options, but try out the questions and commands: Alexa, tell me a Baby Yoda joke; Alexa, tell me a Star Wars joke; Alexa, how cute is Baby Yoda? Alexa, talk like Baby Yoda; Alexa, begin my Jedi lessons; Alexa, use the Force.
Happy birthday
Happy birthday to Sen. Tina Polsky, my friend (and the best State Attorney in Florida) Dave Aronberg, as well as Candice Ericks, former scribe Brandon Larrabee and Susannah Randolph.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Markets: Stocks, particularly those tied to economic “reopening” like retail, rose yesterday. Ether is the talk of the crypto world after blasting through all-time highs—the cryptocurrency has more than quadrupled in value this year.
Covid: Restrictions are falling by the day. Florida Gov. Ron Desantis suspended all local Covid-19 emergency orders enacted throughout the state, saying, “The fact is, we are no longer in a state of emergency.” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said most capacity restrictions in NY and neighboring NJ will be lifted on May 19.
Bill Gates doesn’t tweet a lot, so when he fires one off you know it’s a big deal. Yesterday, the business icon and his wife, Melinda, a legendary philanthropist, announced they were ending their marriage after 27 years.
Bill and Melinda were the kind of couple you knew just by their first names. The two met in 1987 at Microsoft, which Bill cofounded, got married seven years later, and in 2000 launched the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. According to some accounts, it’s the largest private foundation in the world, with more than $51 billion in assets.
The foundation is dedicated to addressing global healthcare issues, improving early childhood education, and lifting people out of hunger and extreme poverty.
It poured in more than $1 billion to help fight the Covid-19 pandemic.
What will happen with the foundation? In a joint statement, Bill and Melinda said they will “continue our work together at the foundation, but we no longer believe we can grow together as a couple in this next phase of our lives.”
And the money?
More questions than answers. With a net worth of about $145 billion, Bill Gates is the fourth-richest person in the world. And he still owns almost 1.4% of Microsoft’s outstanding shares, which are worth more than $26 billion, per FactSet data cited by CNBC.
Bill and Melinda have pledged to donate more than half of their fortune as part of the Giving Pledge, which they helped create with Warren Buffett in 2010.
Zoom out: Bill and Melinda are the second Seattle-area power couple to get divorced in recent years. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos split with his wife MacKenzie Scott in 2019 after 25 years of marriage. MacKenzie, who received a 4% stake in Amazon worth more than $36 billion, has since remarried and doubled down on philanthropic efforts during Covid-19.
Bottom line: Bill and Melinda’s split is a shocker, and because of their immense wealth and influence it’ll certainly ripple through the highest business and philanthropic circles.
Yesterday, Verizon set what seems to be its final away message in its media industry ambitions, announcing a deal to sell AOL and Yahoo for $5 billion to Apollo Global Management, the private equity giant recently in the spotlight after Leon Black stepped down as chairman in March. It wasn’t a good investment for Verizon, which bought AOL for $4.4 billion in 2015 and Yahoo for $4.5 billion in 2017.
The company has slowly been selling off its media assets over the last few years to focus on its core network business and the 5G rollout. This deal comes less than a year after Verizon sold HuffPost to BuzzFeed.
So what’s Apollo getting? While most of us hear the names AOL and Yahoo and think, “Girl, you can’t fix him,” both platforms haven’t exhausted their nine lives yet. Yahoo is still the 11th most popular website in the world, and 1.5 million actual human people pay AOL a monthly subscription fee for technical support and identity theft software.
Zoom out: Verizon’s foray into media didn’t work out, but fellow telecom AT&T will hope its recent purchase of HBO-owner Time Warner for $85.4 billion will look smarter in the history books.
If you’ve ever relied on a single window unit during a Washington, DC, summer, you know air conditioning systems are a little outdated. That’s why yesterday the EPA proposed a new rule that would limit the production and importation of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), chemicals used in air conditioning and refrigeration, by 85% over the next 15 years. Scientists have found that HFCs are significantly more powerful than CO2 in causing short-term global warming.
HFCs are the mall smoothies of chemicals. They were created as a healthier alternative to other pollutants in the ’80s, but now we know they’re definitely not good for you. The EPA plans to wean companies off HFC reliance in the same way our parents got us to give up Jamba Juice: by slowly shrinking allowances. The rule could start limiting the production of HFCs as early as next year and force companies to quickly start developing alternatives.
Big picture: Over 12 states have proposed or adopted similar programs, but this is the first time the federal government is stepping in. The proposal could help the Biden administration achieve its goal to cut US greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030.
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Stat: Given the rise of ether and other cryptocurrencies, bitcoin now accounts for only ~46% of total crypto market value, compared to 70% at the beginning of the year.
Quote: “If the last year has taught us anything, it is that people are tired of the Warren Buffetts and Charlie Mungers of the world acting like they are the only oracles of investing.”
Robinhood’s response after the investing icons dissed the app at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting for taking advantage of the “gambling instincts of society.”
Read: The first major interview with one of the most revered comedy writers of all time. (New Yorker)
Tyson Foods just issued a direct challenge to plant-based meat maker Beyond Meat: a new line of plant-based burgers, bratwurst, Italian sausage, and ground “meat.” And it didn’t pick any old Monday to do it.
Beyond Meat’s third-generation burgers become available nationwide this week, packing more protein, less fat, and fewer calories than their cow-based inspiration.
Table stakes are rising
Beyond Meat commands 22% of the alternative meat market, and up ’til now its biggest fights were 1) getting you to try a bite ~just for fun~ and 2) plant-based meat rival Impossible Foods.
Last year, aided by an unusually good year for the grocery sector, those startups helped drive US plant-based meat sales up 45% to $1.4 billion, per the Good Food Institute and Plant Based Foods Association.
The no-meat frenzy has even made it to NYC fine dining: Eleven Madison Park, a three Michelin-star restaurant, said it will reopen next month with a 100% vegan menu. “If Eleven Madison Park is truly at the forefront of dining and culinary innovation, to me it’s crystal clear that this is the only place to go next,” chef and owner Daniel Humm told the WSJ.
BREWING, WHAT ELSE IS
Robinhood collected $331 million in payment for order flow last quarter, up from $91 million in Q1 2020.
The Facebook Oversight Board will announce its decision on former President Trump’s suspended account tomorrow morning.
Warren Buffett said that his successor at Berkshire Hathaway would likely be Vice Chairman Greg Abel.
Oktoberfest was canceled for the second straight year.
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Tech Tip Tuesday: Push to Kindle lets you send web articles to your Kindle for a better reading experience.
The future is here, and it looks a lot like a taxi driving itself. That’s because autonomous vehicles are no longer the stuff of science fiction, as big money and big brains are putting the cars themselves in charge. Our colleagues at Emerging Tech Brew have put together Your Guide to Autonomous Vehicles that’s got an SUV trunk’s worth of data and reporting about what you can expect from cars that can drive themselves.
They say you shouldn’t compare yourself to others…but they never said you can’t compare others to others. See if you can go 5/5 on these comparison questions.
1. Hotter pepper: Serrano or jalapeño
2. Bigger market cap: Ford or Lyft
3. Longer river: Missouri or Mississippi
4. More website traffic: Yahoo or Pornhub
5. Taller athlete: Russell Westbrook or Cristiano Ronaldo
Florida Gov. DeSantis on Monday signed Senate Bill 2006, which gives the governor the ability to override local emergency orders. That bill does not take effect until July 1. DeSantis signed an executive order immediately suspending pandemic-related local restrictions through June, as well as one that invalidates all remaining local emergency orders that are still in place after July 1.
…
The [bill] would make it more difficult for local governments to respond to public emergencies by requiring their emergency orders to be narrowly tailored and extended only in seven-day increments for a total of 42 days and gives the governor the ability to invalidate an emergency order. Currently, such orders can be extended indefinitely.
…
DeSantis said the law is meant to ensure that officials in Florida don’t inappropriately “seize power.” Democrat Mayor Rick Kriseman tweeted that cities like St. Petersburg, Tampa, Orlando, Miami and Miami Beach “saved Florida and the governor’s behind throughout this pandemic.”
How will the phase-out of refrigerants impact climate change targets?
Hydrofluorocarbons, known as HFCs and used frequently in air conditioners and refrigerators, are greenhouse gases that trap heat far more than other gases such as carb…
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Why might herd immunity no longer be the threshold for reopening the country?
Last December, White House medical adviser Anthony Fauci said the herd immunity threshold for the coronavirus could be 80 to 90%. With roughly 20% of the population still…
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All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLDo you favor eliminating qualified immunity protection for police officers?
Yes
52%
No
36%
Unsure
12%
426 votes, 125 comments
Context: Proposed federal police reform bill.
HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS
“Yes – Qualified immunity protections should be reduced to a more common sense, limited form of immunity for government officials. The notion that police officers who allegedly stole $225,000 from two suspects during a search are protected by qualified immunity because there was no prior case specifically prohibiting such conduct (Jessop v. Fresno) is simply a bridge too far in protecting officials from accountability for their illegal actions.”
“No – The spirit of qualified immunity has been recognized in our court systems since the early 1900s and…”
“Yes – The police line of work is critical to our safety, highly unappreciated and very difficult. But be…”
How will Bill and Melinda Gates’ divorce impact their philanthropic foundation?
Melinda, 56, has in the past said their marriage has been “incredibly hard,” saying that Bill, 65, regularly works 16-hour days and can find it hard to make time for the family. “When he was…
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The Fourth Estate is predictably silent on the fact that juror 52 in the Derek Chauvin murder trial may have misled the court regarding his bias. Photos emerged of Brandon Mitchell wearing a BLM shirt and hat at a rally in Washington D.C., also attended by the Floyd family. His shirt had written on it, “Get your knee off our necks.” What possible reason could the media have for not acknowledging that this juror’s actions could well lead to a retrial?
SAY WHAT? Kamala Is Not Supposed to Focus on the Border Crisis?
Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida has signed an executive order that will see all COVID-related regulations pulled back by the end of June.
President Joe Biden has signaled that he is ready to raise the refugee cap from 15,000 to 62,500 this fiscal year. The move comes in response to backlash from his own party, who made it clear to him that following President Trump’s lead was not an option.
New York Attorney General Letitia James has called on a Texas judge to dismiss the NRA’s claim for bankruptcy with prejudice so the organization cannot refile in another jurisdiction. It seems Ms. James is determined to keep the NRA in her own backyard where she can best do her work of destroying it.
Building Xilicon Valley: China’s Plans for Internet Domination
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
To circumvent laws on spying on American citizens, it seems the Biden administration is looking to outsource the job. According to DHS officials who spoke to CNN, these third parties will be able to pose as “right-wingers” and otherwise gather data that the DHS is forbidden to garner itself. It is being suggested that the “outsourcers” will be organizations that specifically target those on the political right.
President Joe Biden has decided to pull all US troops out of Afghanistan by September 11. Public opinion is probably on his side for now, but this may change when the Taliban begins to impose its extreme version of Islam on women and al Qaeda once again sets up shop.
“Speaking shortly after Biden [last Wednesday], Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., drew on his lived experiences to rebut Biden’s agenda in a wide-ranging speech. Scott, who is one of only 11 Black lawmakers to have served in the Senate and the only Republican currently among them, repeated that he has ‘experienced the pain of discrimination,’ including his own troubling encounters with law enforcement. But he also declared that ‘America is not a racist country’ and warned that ‘it’s wrong to try to use our painful past to dishonestly shut down debates in the present.’” NPR
The left criticizes Scott’s speech, arguing that he was rebutting a straw man and wrongly downplaying racism in the US.
The GOP, “whose members still can’t all admit that Donald Trump lost the 2020 election, has a message for Joe Biden: Stop being so radical and divisive. That was the gist of Senator Tim Scott’s rebuttal to the president’s first address to a joint session of Congress [last] Wednesday night…
“As a thesis, it was fundamentally dishonest… a CNN survey after his address Wednesday found that nearly three-quarters of viewers believed the policies Biden proposed would move the country in the right direction; a CBS News poll came in with similar results, with 85% of respondents saying they approved of the speech and as many or more describing what they saw as ‘inspiring,’ ‘caring,’ and ‘presidential.’ The country may be bitterly polarized, but a majority approve of Biden and his policies—especially compared with his predecessor.” Eric Lutz, Vanity Fair
“One of the main requirements for today’s Black Republicans appears to be the tricky logic of downplaying racism while simultaneously playing the race card… [Scott] quickly went viral for his rebuttal to Biden, saying: ‘I get called ‘Uncle Tom’ and the N-word — by ‘progressives’’! Minutes later he added, ‘Hear me clearly: America is not a racist country.’…
“There are two big problems with that take. First, it’s hard to imagine a country where people are calling you the N-word as not being racist. Second, as much as Scott’s pronouncement of an un-racist America may have appealed to some Republican White voters, it wasn’t an actual rebuttal to Biden’s remarks. Biden never said America was a racist country. Scott created a strawman talking point for his party’s base so he could tell them what they wanted to hear.” Clay Cane, CNN
“Most Americans are in agreement about the existence of racism and racial discrimination at the individual level. We all know that there are people out there who view people of other races as inferior, and most of us disdain the people who hold those views. Instead, the debate centers on the extent to which systems within the country — business, government, law enforcement — reflect biases that disadvantage non-Whites. That’s not the same as the country itself being racist, a position that it seems safe to assume most Americans wouldn’t agree with — which is why it’s how Scott frames the Democratic position.” Philip Bump, Washington Post
“In most cases, it is meaningless to debate whether any given person — let alone a whole country — ‘is’ or ‘is not’ racist. Aside from Ku Klux Klan members and neo-Nazis, few advertise their racism with pride. Who can ever be absolutely certain about anyone else’s deepest, truest nature? How many of us have even done an honest inventory of our own unconscious biases?…
“What we can do, however, is judge words and deeds. For example, I cannot say that all of the individuals who stormed the Capitol during the Jan. 6 insurrection were racists. But I know that Black police officers trying to defend the citadel of our democracy were taunted with the vilest racist epithets. I know that the mob hung a noose, an enduring and noxious symbol of racist violence, on the Capitol grounds. And I know that the whole point was to stop Congress from certifying votes, many of which were cast by African Americans. On that basis, I conclude that racism played a major role in what President Biden called ‘the worst attack on our democracy since the Civil War.’” Eugene Robinson, Washington Post
From the Right
The right applauds Scott’s speech, arguing that he rightly pushed back against excessive claims of racism, and criticizes the racialized attacks on the senator.
“The senator never alleged that racism was nonexistent in America. To do so would have been absurd. Scott has never claimed that no problems exist. It was Scott who wrote a police-reform bill last year that Democrats such as Kamala Harris, Chuck Schumer and Dick Durbin shut down using the filibuster, which they now call a ‘relic of Jim Crow.’…
“‘An honest conversation about race’ will inevitably include some assertions and contentions that offend and upset others, and many Americans have concluded that the absolute worst possible thing that could happen is that they encounter something that offends or upsets them. A lot of the time, when someone says, ‘It’s time for Americans to have an honest conversation about race,’ what they really mean is, ‘Shut up and listen.’…
“When Senator Tim Scott addresses the country and the instant reaction is that ‘Uncle Tim’ trends on Twitter, then no, we cannot have an honest conversation about race. We cannot have an honest conversation because a noisy contingent of Americans has decided [that] this particular black man’s perspective and experience are invalid and unworthy of consideration and that they — in many cases, white progressives! – feel completely comfortable telling him . . . well, to quote the president in another context, ‘you ain’t black.’…
“No doubt, white conservatives have their own flaws and they fail to live up to their ideals when it comes to the constitutionally guaranteed right to equality under the law. But please spare us the sanctimoniousness when our national conversation is overflowing with white progressives who feel entitled to declare who qualifies as black and who doesn’t.” Jim Geraghty, National Review
“The trouble among people who seem to see racism everywhere is that Scott neither sees nor dwells in a Black-and-White world. Life for Scott hasn’t been easy. As he said Wednesday, he has experienced the insults to his dignity that other minorities recognize as part and parcel of life in America. He’s been followed in stores, he said, and pulled over for no reason while driving…
“Scott’s is the kind of story Americans have always admired — the overcoming of adversity to become what he could not have imagined as a child… Those who diminish Scott under the racist rubric that a Black man can’t be a conservative for his own good reasons diminish themselves — all of us, really. Worse, they impede the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s unifying goal that we judge a man not by the color of his skin but by the content of his character.” Kathleen Parker, Washington Post
“Scott’s position in the US Senate carries historical resonance. He is a black man representing the state that fired the first shots of the Civil War, the state that produced slavery’s most prominent defenders and ideologues, the state that represented the very essence of the slave-holding South. That Tim Scott now represents South Carolina in the Senate is the living embodiment of our country’s racial progress. That is progress worth celebrating, even if you believe it is far from complete.” Charles Lipson, Spectator USA
☕ Good Tuesday morning.Smart Brevity™ count: 1,146 words … 4 minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
1 big thing: Food moves to center of culture war
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
A major food website will post no more beef recipes. Conservative media stirs baseless panic that President Biden is coming for your burgers. And one of the world’s top restaurants goes meat-free.
Why it matters: The past week has drawn new attention to the role food plays in climate change — and given red and blue America a new battleground, Axios’ Andrew Freedman writes.
The food system, including raising cattle for consumption, accounts for greater than 30% of worldwide emissions of heat-trapping gases.
Climate change poses significant risks to the food system in the form of drought, extreme heat events, and wild swings from one end of the temperature scale to another.
Daniel Humm, chef of Eleven Madison Park, a Michelin three-star restaurant, announced yesterday that when he reopens for indoor dining on June 10, he’ll be serving “a plant-based menu in which we do not use any animal products — every dish is made from vegetables, both from the earth and the sea, as well as fruits, legumes, fungi, grains, and so much more.”
“[I]t was becoming ever clearer that the current food system is simply not sustainable, in so many ways,” Humm wrote. “It’s a tremendous challenge to create something as satisfying as the lavender honey glazed duck, or the butter poached lobster, recipes that we perfected.”
“It is time to redefine luxury as an experience that serves a higher purpose,” Humm added.
Two other developments put the Eleven Madison Park news in the context of the culture war over any attempts to tell meat-loving Americans to consume less in order to protect the planet:
Fox News inspired a frenzy over a false claim that the Biden administration’s climate plan would limit Americans’ meat consumption. (Anchor John Roberts later conceded the error.)
Epicurious, a massive database of recipes, announced: “In an effort to encourage more sustainable cooking, we won’t be publishing new beef recipes.”
Between the lines: Becoming a vegetarian alone won’t be enough to eliminate your carbon footprint. There’ll still be a need for massive, systemic-scale change in energy, transportation and more.
As vaccine demand wanes, the next phase will lean on employers, houses of worship, community organizations and even home-based delivery, Axios health care editor Tina Reed reports.
“We need to be more creative about meeting people where they physically are,” said Erica Johnson, chair of the American Board of Internal Medicine’s infectious diseases specialty board, and Johns Hopkins assistant professor of medicine.
CVS Health announced plans to introduce employer-based vaccination clinics through its “Return Ready” program.
A KFF study found nearly a quarter of Americans were more likely to get the vaccine if it were available in their workplace.
$146 billion is at stake in the divorce of Bill and Melinda Gates, who oversee one of history’s greatest fortunes and philanthropies, Bloomberg reports.
In an identical statement that eachposted on Twitter at 4:30 p.m. ET, the couple said: “We … will continue our work together at the foundation, but we no longer believe we can grow together as a couple in this next phase of our lives.”
Melinda Gates, 56, filed the petition for divorce from Bill Gates, 65, in King County, Wash., saying: “This marriage is irretrievably broken.”
They’ll divide their property based on a “separation contract” they’ve signed, according to documents obtained by PEOPLE.
Melinda Gates’ petition said: “Spousal support is not needed.”
Washington is a community property state: “[A]nything acquired during a marriage is considered equally owned by both partners, but that doesn’t necessarily mean the fortune would be split in half,” per Bloomberg.
“It is not a mandatory 50-50,” said Janet George, a family lawyer in Washington. “The courts can award more or less, depending on what is just and equitable.” The split can be hidden behind private contracts.
4. Pictures of America
Dranae Dunbar gestures during the funeral in Elizabeth City, N.C., for her father, Andrew Brown Jr., shot and killed by sheriff’s deputies.
A member of Apple’s legal team rolls exhibit boxes into the federal court in Oakland, Calif., as the tech giant faces off against Epic Games.
The public fights between Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk over their space companies point to a broader truth in the industry: There isn’t enough money to go around, Axios Space author Miriam Kramer writes.
Why it matters: The promise of commercial human spaceflight still hinges on billions of dollars of investment from the U.S. government.
Rocket companies — including Bezos’ Blue Origin and Musk’s SpaceX — have to scrape and scrounge for every government contract:
It’s guaranteed funding, and other customers just aren’t big enough to support their ambitions.
Competitive pressure fueled a journalistic debacle in which the N.Y. Times, Washington Post and NBC News had to correct stories asserting that Rudy Giuliani had been briefed that he was a target of a Russian disinformation campaign, The Post’s Paul Farhi writes in a post-mortem.
Times executive editor Dean Baquet told Farhi that the paper’s reporters scrambled to match what appeared to be a major Giuliani scoop by The Post:
I think we all tend to drop our guard when we get beat and are trying to catch up … We need to grill sources more to make sure we understand exactly what they’re confirming. We’ve all discussed it, corrected it, and we need to do better.
7. 💉 Future COVID vaccine could be pill
The next generation of COVID vaccines “could come as a pill or a nasal spray and be easier to store and transport,” The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription):
The WHO says 277 vaccines are in development globally, of which 93 have entered human testing.
8. First look: Afghan president pleads for U.S. aid
Ghani greets then-Vice President Biden during a 2015 joint address to Congress. Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani writes in Foreign Affairs that the U.S. and NATO commitment to funding Afghan security services “is perhaps the single most important contribution that the international community can make to a successful transition to peace in Afghanistan.”
Why it matters: President Biden’s shock decision to withdraw all U.S. troops by Sept. 11 sparked fears that the Taliban will overrun Afghanistan.
Ghani, who says he’d step aside if it means peace can be secured, writes that the withdrawal represents opportunity as well as risk:
Over the past 20 years, 40 different countries have deployed security forces to Afghanistan. Soon, however, all decisions regarding military approaches to the Taliban and other terrorist groups will be made by the Afghan government. Indeed, the Taliban’s justification for war—jihad against a foreign power — will cease to apply.
9. 📺 Breaking: Alcindor to anchor “Washington Week”
Photo: “Washington Week”
Yamiche Alcindor, White House correspondent for “PBS NewsHour,” today was named the ninth moderator of “Washington Week” in the venerable program’s 54-year history.
Alcindor, who’ll remain as White House correspondent, begins her new role this Friday. The program, produced by WETA, airs live on Fridays at 8 p.m. ET on PBS stations nationwide.
Alcindor, a former New York Times correspondent, succeeds the WashPost’s Robert Costa, who stepped aside to write a Trump/Biden book with Bob Woodward.
🗞️ N.Y. Times’ Michael Grynbaum (subscription): “‘Washington Week,’ a calm redoubt in the shouty battleground of political television, is most closely associated with its longtime moderator Gwen Ifill.”
10. 1 smile to go: Hoops as hope
Françoise Mouly, art editor of The New Yorker, tells the “Cover Story” for this week’s “Hoop Dreams in New York,” by Mark Ulriksen:
One of the hallmark images of the pandemic was the sight of N.B.A. players sequestered in a bubble, in Orlando, surrounded by virtual fans. So the rise of the Brooklyn Nets and the New York Knicks, back home and playing with gusto on Mark Ulriksen’s cover, is a potent sign of hope.
A new, historically talented lineup on the Nets — headed by Kyrie Irving, Kevin Durant, and James Harden — and the emergence of Knicks such as Julius Randle and RJ Barrett are making New Yorkers proud.
The recommendation bolstered the arguments of New York Attorney General Letitia James, who has fought the NRA’s attempts to relocate from New York to Texas.
MEXICO CITY (AP) — An elevated section of the Mexico City metro collapsed and sent a subway car plunging toward a busy boulevard late Monday, killing at least 23 people and injuring about 70, city officials said. Rescuers searched a car left dangling…Read More
NEW DELHI (AP) — COVID-19 infections and deaths are mounting with alarming speed in India with no end in sight to the crisis and a top expert warning that the coming weeks in the country of nearly 1.4 billion people will be “horrible.”…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — A flurry of diplomatic contacts and reports of major progress suggest that indirect talks between the U.S. and Iran may be nearing an agreement. That’s despite efforts by U.S. officials to play down chances of an imminent deal that …Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump and his supporters are intensifying efforts to shame — and potentially remove — members of their party who are seen as disloyal to the former president and his false claims that last year’s election was stolen from him….Read More
YAZOO CITY, Miss. (AP) — Much of the South is again at risk of severe weather Tuesday, forecasters say, after tornadoes struck parts of the region Sunday night and Monday, causing heavy damage in some parts of Mississippi. Large parts of Louisiana, M…Read More
Already battered by long shifts and high infection rates, essential workers struggling through the pandemic face another hazard of hard times: employers who steal their wag…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden formally raised the nation’s cap on refugee admissions to 62,500 this year, weeks after facing bipartisan blowback for his delay in re…Read More
SEATTLE (AP) — Bill and Melinda Gates announced Monday that they are divorcing. The Microsoft co-founder and his wife, who launched the world’s largest charitable foundatio…Read More
NEW YORK (AP) — Mister Rogers’ neighborhood is expanding. In rare welcome news of sprawl, PBS Kids is releasing a new puppet-led series called “Donkey Hodie,” inspired from…Read More
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In the Know: Another airline joins Sun Country in adding flights to Southwest Florida. The new Southwest Airlines routes are scheduled to debut in June.
Good morning, Chicago. On Monday, Illinois public health officials announced 2,049 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 and 28 additional deaths. There were 16,920 doses of the vaccine administered Sunday — the lowest number in more than two months — however, vaccine data was not yet available from several area pharmacies from the weekend, so those numbers will change, officials said.
The state’s incremental reopening plan consists of a bridge phase that would precede a full-scale reopening, allowing a wide range of businesses to open their doors to more customers.
Chicago Public Schools CEO Janice Jackson, who rose from a CPS Head Start student to lead the district through a teachers strike and the COVID-19 shutdown, will leave her post and the school system this summer, announcing her departure Monday as the district continues to cope with the pandemic’s incalculable impact.
She confirmed her departure in a message to the CPS staff, saying it’s “time to pass the torch to new leadership for the next chapter.”
Editorial: Janice Jackson is leaving CPS. Who could blame her?
The state began soliciting bids for the 17-story, state-owned Loop building Monday, Gov. J.B. Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Central Management Services announced.
Black women have to circumvent racism during their lifetimes, including sometimes one of its brutal side effects: death. Besides economic, workplace and housing disparities, Black women have some of the highest cases of maternal deaths nationwide as well as in Illinois, cited in a study released April 29 by the Illinois Department of Public Health.
Uncertainty during the early days of the pandemic and lingering supply chain issues have left some varieties of flowers in short supply and raised prices on others, florists said. That could have buyers paying more for their Mother’s Day bouquets or leave them unable to find specific varieties for holiday or wedding arrangements.
Janice Jackson is leaving her post as chief executive of Chicago Public Schools after three years and at a critical juncture for the nation’s third-largest school system — not only as it begins its recovery from an unprecedented disruption to education with the majority of students still learning remotely, but also as two other top leaders are set to leave.
Several major factors contributed to Jackson’s decision to call it quits, according to four sources close to her. Chief among them was the increasingly contentious relationship between City Hall and the CTU, and Lightfoot’s meddling in negotiations over the 2019 contract and reopening this year which resulted in the union getting nearly everything it wanted despite the mayor’s tough talk, sources said. The pandemic’s impact on the system and all the additional stress that came with it also played a role. Nader Issa and Fran Spielman have the story…
At an afternoon news conference, Jackson said as she looks back on her tenure, she is “both proud and humbled and also a little bit tired if I’m being honest.”
Janice Jackson, who announced her resignation Monday, said the district’s constant battles with the Chicago Teachers Union contributed to her decision to leave the district.
More than 40,000 ShotSpotter alerts prompted no formal reports of any crime over a 21-month stretch — amounting to an average of 61 unfounded deployments each day.
The chosen developer must commit to keeping the Clark/Lake CTA station agreement with the city and the mass transit agency and commit to naming at least a portion of the development in honor of the late former Gov. James “Big Jim” Thompson.
Chicago City Clerk Anna Valencia, state Sen. Michael Hastings, D-Tinley Park, and Ald. Pat Dowell (3rd) laid out their campaign platforms on a Zoom call.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Today is Tuesday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths as of each morning this week: Monday, 577,045; Tuesday, 577,523.
The situation between House Republicans and House GOP Conference Chairwoman Liz Cheney (Wyo.) is reaching a breaking point as allies of House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) are preparing to oust her from her position in leadership in the coming weeks.
Rank-and-file GOP lawmakers have reached the end of the line with Cheney, the No. 3 House Republican, after contradicting McCarthy at events on multiple occasions over the presence of former President Trump. Members argue that she has undermined the party in its effort to retake the lower chamber next year.
“There is no way that Liz will be conference chair by month’s end,” one key McCarthy ally told The Hill’s Scott Wong and Mike Lillis on Monday. “When there is a vote, it won’t be a long conference [meeting]; it will be fast. Everyone knows the outcome.”
A second McCarthy ally added that the House minority leader is “as fed up as the rest of us” with her continued remarks about Trump, which many in the conference consider harmful to their 2022 efforts to flip the House. Cheney has maintained that the path back to the majority is by moving on from a party centric on one person and focusing on policy.
The push comes as Cheney has grown vocal about Trump and his impact on the GOP. Last week, the Wyoming Republican granted multipleinterviews during the GOP retreat in Orlando, Fla., all of which made news for Trump-centric remarks that have grated on members in the three months since she overwhelmingly survived a vote to oust her from leadership. That vote was 145-61. The congresswoman’s critics would need to flip more than 40 votes in the secret ballot. That is a lot of votes but entirely plausible.
Her back-and-forth with Trump continued on Monday as she lampooned him for his claim that he lost the 2020 election due to mass voter fraud, an idea that has been debunked.
“The 2020 presidential election was not stolen,” Cheney tweeted on Monday. “Anyone who claims it was is spreading THE BIG LIE, turning their back on the rule of law, and poisoning our democratic system.”
Trump released a statement calling Cheny a “warmonger,” and asserting she is already finished in her home state: “They never liked her much, but I say she’ll never run in a Wyoming election again!”
The House is in recess this week, but a vote could be held as soon as next week on her future as conference chairwoman once lawmakers return to Washington. As Axios notes, It would take up to a two-thirds vote of the 212 House Republicans to replace her, assuming they once again use a secret ballot.
Whether she is right or wrong, her comments displeased some of her previous backers. Sources indicate that McCarthy, who came out in force to support her ahead of the January vote following her vote to impeach Trump, has no plans to do so again. House Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) also backed Cheney in early February.
“She’s made things worse and worse over the last few weeks with unforced comments and actions,” a third GOP lawmaker told the Morning Report. “McCarthy held people back from ousting her last time; I don’t think he’ll do it this time.”
“I think she wants to be ousted,” the lawmaker added.
The bottom line: For McCarthy, the entire exercise of the GOP conference involves rowing together: If you aren’t moving toward a common goal (in this case, winning back the majority), you are considered a liability. This is his constant refrain. McCarthy’s comments during the GOP retreat last week are a clear indication how he believes Cheney in this battle.
When asked about the McCarthy-Cheney dynamic, the minority leader’s spokesman, Matt Sparks, mentioned only that McCarthy is appearing in Georgia today to “meet with small business owners about how woke corporate America is hurting them.”
A Cheney spokesman declined to comment.
A question being asked about a potential successor: Who? Cheney is the only female in leadership, so she is likely to be succeeded to be another female. Sources told The Hill that Reps. Elise Stefanik (N.Y.), Jackie Walorski (Ind.) and Ann Wagner (Mo.) are possibilities. The third GOP lawmaker also noted that Reps. Ashley Hinson (Iowa) and Kat Cammack (Fla.) could also be options despite being first-term members, adding that the lack of a clear alternative is reason enough to keep Cheney in the position.
“That’s partly why I don’t think it’s smart to ditch Liz,” the lawmaker said. “Her getting ousted doesn’t solve the problem, doesn’t bring us together. Plus, Trump will move on to other targets.”
New York Post: Cheney’s leadership post on shaky ground.
Niall Stanage: The Memo: Trump’s critics face wrath of GOP base.
The Associated Press: Whose “Big Lie”? Trump’s proclamation a new GOP litmus test.
The Hill: Trump celebrates Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) being booed during speech to Utah Republicans: “Stone cold loser.”
> Infrastructure: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said on Monday that he expected no Republicans would support President Biden’s sweeping infrastructure,, child care and tax package, indicating Senate Republicans are open to a roughly $600 billion proposal.
“I think it’s worth talking about, but I don’t think there will be any Republican support — none, zero — for the $4.1 trillion grab bag which has infrastructure in it but a whole lot of other stuff,” McConnell said in a press conference in Kentucky, referring to Biden’s $2.3 trillion jobs package and $1.8 trillion families blueprint.
As The Hill’s Jordain Carney notes, the proposal includes money for roads, bridges and broadband, it also expands into manufacturing, in-home care, housing, clean energy, public schools and manufacturing. To pass the entirety of their plan, Democrats would need to pass it using budget reconciliation and with a simple majority. Senate Republicans have laid out a $568 billion package, with Biden meeting with Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), the architect of the offer, last week.
The Hill: Biden, GOP set to find out if US wants activist government.
The New York Times: Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) readies a Plan B to push immigration changes unilaterally. Proponents are increasingly worried that Democrats may squander a rare opportunity to legalize broad swaths of the undocumented population while their party controls both chambers of Congress and the White House.
The Hill: Democrats confront difficult prospects for midterms.
More in politics and Congress: The Hill’s Reid Wilson says that Democrats should see warning signs ahead after their candidates put forth a poor performance in this weekend’s special election in Texas’s 6th Congressional District. Democrats got shut out of a runoff election, showing that the Trump air is rapidly going out of the balloon and that you can’t run the same election twice in a row … In 2024 watch, former Vice President Mike Pence is appearing next month in New Hampshire to headline the Hillsborough County GOP’s annual Lincoln Reagan awards dinner, a major event and fundraiser for the party, on June 3 in Manchester (Fox News). … Florida Republicans rushed to curb mail voting after Trump’s attacks on the practice. Now some fear it could lower GOP turnout (The Washington Post). … The GOP won it all in Texas. Then it turned on itself (The New York Times).
A MESSAGE FROM EMERGENT BIOSOLUTIONS
At Emergent, we make things you never thought you’d need. A treatment to counteract an opioid overdose. Protection from anthrax, smallpox and botulism. And now, we’re in the fight against COVID-19. Learn more.
LEADING THE DAY
CORONAVIRUS: The president (pictured below at a community college in Virginia on Monday) today will make remarks about the upside of the U.S. COVID-19 vaccination rate, aware that the next phase of administration’s coronavirus efforts will focus on the unvaccinated — that is, millions of Americans who hear the term “herd immunity” and picture lemmings mindlessly leaping over cliffs.
Experts worry that U.S. immunity to COVID-19 and its known variants — immunity of 70 percent or more of the population — will be slow to be achieved, resulting in continued health risks, societal workarounds and perhaps annual vaccine boosters. In that scenario, disease outbreaks continue, travel and mobility are altered and those who have been vaccinated gain opportunities to live and work in ways that some who shun COVID-19 vaccines may forfeit.
COVID-19 is likely to be an endemic, “manageable threat” circulating in the United States and globally for years to come, experts predict (The New York Times).
In the United States since Dec. 14, more than 246,780,000 doses of a coronavirus vaccine have been administered. More than 105,523,000 people are fully vaccinated, or about 31.78 percent of the population (The Washington Post).
There are many specific examples of adult vaccine skeptics who change their minds, reports The Washington Post. Every instance of persuasion is different.
Expanding the U.S. vaccinated population without mandates can occur with inoculation of young teens. The Food and Drug Administration is set to authorize the Pfizer vaccine to people ages 12 to 15 by early next week (The New York Times).
> Cities & states: Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) says New York City subway service, which was curtailed during the worst of the pandemic and lockdowns, will resume around-the-clock on May 17. … New York, New Jersey and Connecticut will allow many businesses to fully reopen in mid-May (The New York Times). … Florida, under Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, on Monday suspended all local public health edicts tied to COVID-19 (CNBC). “We are no longer in a state of emergency,” he said. Under the governor’s executive order, private Florida businesses can require masks and enforce social distancing and other protective measures. … New Orleans offers a preview of a possible summer travel boom, reports The Wall Street Journal. “It’s like being reborn.”
> International: The European Union proposes to allow vaccinated U.S. tourists, their children and other travelers from outside the bloc to enter Europe by the end of June (The Washington Post). The vast majority of countries in Europe remain closed to nonessential travel.
In Africa, vaccine hesitancy is slowing the continent’s inoculation drive against COVID-19. Health experts there worry that public scepticism about taking the relatively small number of doses African countries have battled to procure could prolong the pandemic (Reuters).
The United States today begins implementing travel restrictions on visitors from India. Experts are pressing the administration for a travel strategy in the context of India’s dire situation (The Hill). Meanwhile, many countries, including the United States, are flying relief supplies to airports in India .
The Associated Press: “Horrible” weeks ahead as India’s virus catastrophe worsens. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s party has countered criticism by pointing out that the underfunding of health care has been chronic.
Pfizer and Moderna in early data are effective vaccines against the contagious variant detected in India. The situation there poses a danger to the United States (The New York Times).
India and Pfizer are talking about expediting the approval of its version of the COVID-19 vaccination to combat a vaccine shortage in a country with 1.4 billion people (Fox News).
The Biden administration has been asked by lawmakers to approve a patent waiver for COVID-19 vaccines, or take other action to share vaccines more widely with the world, including with India (The Hill).
Germany: Oktoberfest is kaput again this year because of pandemic precautions (Yahoo News).
ADMINISTRATION: Biden on Monday set a cap on the number of refugees who can enter the U.S. at 62,500 this year, reversing a strict limit set by the Trump administration and fulfilling a pledge he made during his campaign. The president said the United States would not actually welcome that many refugees this fiscal year.
The announcement took place after several weeks of internal deliberations about whether the government could handle that number while also dealing with a surge of migrants at the border.
“Today, I am revising the United States’ annual refugee admissions cap to 62,500 for this fiscal year,” Biden said in a statement following weeks of intense lobbying by advocates for immigrants and refugees. “This erases the historically low number set by the previous administration of 15,000, which did not reflect America’s values as a nation that welcomes and supports refugees.”
“It is important to take this action today to remove any lingering doubt in the minds of refugees around the world who have suffered so much, and who are anxiously waiting for their new lives to begin,” Biden added (The Hill).
The administration announced in a separate memorandum that of the 62,500 slots technically available, 22,000 would be allocated to refugees coming from Africa, 13,000 to those fleeing from the Middle East and South Asia, 6,000 to those from East Asia, 4,000 to refugees from Europe and Central Asia, 5,000 to those from Latin America and the Caribbean and the remaining 12,500 slots would remain unallocated.
The president cautioned that it would take time to rebuild the infrastructure needed to absorb and support tens of thousands of refugees. He committed to a cap of 125,000 refugees during his first full fiscal year in office. The next fiscal year begins Oct. 1.
> Air travel: The Federal Aviation Administration reports that incidents of unruly commercial air passengers are up compared with previous years. The FAA is now taking a “zero-tolerance” approach to poor behavior: Unruly passengers face potential criminal charges, fines up to $35,000 or lifetime bans on certain airlines. “It is not permissible and we will not tolerate interfering with a flight crew and the performance of their safety duties,” Stephen Dickson, the administrator of the FAA, said. “Period” (NBC News).
> Climate: The Environmental Protection Agency announced on Monday that it will begin its first rulemaking to curb by 2036 the climate pollutants known as hydrofluorocarbons, which are greenhouse emissions that are thousands of times more powerful than carbon dioxide and often used in refrigeration and air conditioning. The EPA is following the bipartisan will of Congress, which agreed last year in a spending law to reduce the potent pollutants by 85 percent by 2036 (The Washington Post).
> Oversight hangovers: The Justice Department has been slow to resolve some court cases that it inherited from the Trump administration concerning congressional demands for executive branch information. Under former Attorney General William Barr, the department had taken a hard line in defending Trump against inquiries from House Democrats, making maximalist legal arguments that the executive branch has the authority to essentially ignore congressional subpoenas and information requests. The early months of the Biden administration have shown that it will be difficult to disentangle itself from some of those holdover cases, reports The Hill’s Harper Neidig.
> FLOTUS: The president often introduces himself to audiences as “Jill Biden’s husband,” a bit of folksy humility honed during decades as a candidate accompanied by his wife. First lady Jill Biden, who understands grassroots glad handing (and female voters) – who is a champion for military families, cancer research and education – is visiting towns and cities with and without her spouse to help explain his agenda.
As The Hill’s Brett Samuels reports, the first lady is widely viewed as an effective communicator and White House asset – a working spouse, mom and grandmother, an educator and wife (who recently surprised National Guardsmen at the Capitol with a basket of cookies and used a split-second blocking maneuver last year to stop protesters who stormed her husband’s stage). The first lady will visit Utah, Nevada and Colorado this week to help sell the president’s proposals to invest in infrastructure and green jobs. Joe Biden lost Utah in 2020 but won Nevada and Colorado.
OPINIONS
Businesses could sorely use guidance on bringing workers back to the office. Where’s the CDC? By Shantanu Nundy and Marty Makary, opinion contributors, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3vChrKe
Getting personal on Biden won’t work for Republicans, by Ramesh Ponnuru, columnist, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/2RqltX9
A MESSAGE FROM EMERGENT BIOSOLUTIONS
At Emergent, we make things you never thought you’d need. A treatment to counteract an opioid overdose. Protection from anthrax, smallpox and botulism. And now, we’re in the fight against COVID-19. Learn more.
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 10 a.m. for a pro forma session. Members return to legislative work on May 11.
TheSenate will hold a pro forma session on Thursday at 4 p.m.
The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10:15 a.m. Biden will deliver remarks about the coronavirus and efforts to increase the country’s vaccination rate at 2:30 p.m.
Vice President Harris will deliver virtual remarks at 9:35 a.m. to the 51st annual Washington Conference on the Americas, co-hosted by the State Department and the Council of the Americas. The conference theme this year: “Democratic, Prosperous and Secure: Restoring a Partnership for Sustainable Growth.” Harris will travel to Milwaukee to visit clean energy labs at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee at 1 p.m. She will participate in a roundtable discussion at 1:50 p.m. focused on research and development investments proposed by the administration. The vice president will return to Washington this evening.
The White House press briefing is scheduled at 12:30 p.m.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken is traveling in London through Wednesday while participating in the Group of 7 foreign and development ministers’ meeting.
The Supreme Court today concludes scheduled oral arguments for the 2020-2021 term (SCOTUS Blog). The court generally releases the majority of its decisions in mid-June.
Economic indicator: The Bureau of Economic Analysis at 8:30 a.m. will report on the U.S. trade deficit in goods and services in March. Preliminary data already shows the trade gap for goods at a new high as demand for foreign-made products surges.
👉 INVITATION: Join The Hill’s Virtually Live event Wednesday during sessions that begin at 12:30 p.m. for “Future of Healthcare: Bold Bets in Health.” Some of the experts featured: U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy; Anthony Fauci, director, National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; Katrina Armstrong, Massachusetts General Hospital department of medicine; Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) and chairwoman of the Finance Committee Subcommittee on Health; and Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.), ranking member of the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health. Information is HERE.
➔ TECH:Verizon Communications signaled it is giving up on media and is selling AOL and Yahoo to the private equity firm Apollo Global Management for $5 billion. Verizon will shift its focus to its 5G network. Yahoo once dominated the front page of the internet, cataloging the furious pace of new websites that sprang up in the late 1990s. AOL in its heyday was the service most people could use online. Verizon bought AOL in 2015 for $4.4 billion and Yahoo in 2017 for $4.48 billion (The New York Times). … Kroger announced on Monday that it is jumping into the drone delivery business by piloting a program at a Centerville, Ohio, location near its Cincinnati headquarters. The program hopes it will allow the grocery store to make deliveries up to five pounds in as little as 15 minutes, with more testing at a store in California coming this summer (Bloomberg News).
➔ BILLIONAIRES: Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett, 90, on Monday said if anything happens to him, Greg Abel will take over the company (The Wall Street Journal and Yahoo Finance). Buffett is worth $103.7 billion as of Monday. … Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and wife Melinda Gates, who have been together nearly 30 years and lead The Gates Foundation, a philanthropic empire, are divorcing, the tech titan announced on Monday. He’s number four on Forbes’ list of the wealthiest people, with an estimated net worth of more than $130 billion as of Monday. Gates said in a statement that he and his wife “no longer believe we can grow together as a couple in this next phase of our lives,” but added that their “mission” toward philanthropy will continue (Yahoo Finance).
➔ ENVIRONMENT: Kym Worthy never thought in law school that she would wind up a prosecutor. Now she’s behind one of the most prominent criminal cases against public officials in the country. Worthy, the top prosecutor in Wayne County, Mich., co-leads the Flint water crisis case with Michigan Solicitor General Fadwa Hammoud. In January, they rolled out a slate of charges against nine people, including accusing former Gov. Rick Snyder (R) of willful neglect of duty and charging with involuntary manslaughter both Nicolas Lyon, the former director of the Michigan Department of Health and Human Service and Eden Wells, former Michigan chief medical executive (The Hill).
THE CLOSER
And finally … Whoa! On Sunday, a good Samaritan who wants to remain anonymous rescued a 2-year-old strapped in a car seat after the baby was ejected from a vehicle during a car crash that occurred on a bridge.
The vehicle flipped during a multi-car crash in Ocean City, Md, dangled over the bridge guardrail and the baby plunged into the Assawoman Bay. A man then leaped over the guardrail from a considerable height into the shallow bay and rescued the baby (CBS Local).
“The baby was face-down in the water for a short period of time, but because of the unbelievable and heroic actions of this humble hero, he was able to retrieve the child immediately,” Ocean City Fire Chief Richard Bowers said. “(The bay) is only about 4 or 5 feet at best, so it was very heroic what he did. The bottom line is he saved that child’s life.”
According to Ocean City fire officials, the man who jumped into the water got pretty banged up but is going to recover (WBAL-TV).
Seven people were briefly treated and later released from hospitals. The baby was flown to Johns Hopkins Children’s Center in Baltimore and remained hospitalized on Monday.
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Via The Hill’s Scott Wong and Mike Lillis, “Top allies of House Minority Leader KevinMcCarthy (R-Calif.) are vowing to oust Rep. LizCheney (R-Wyo.), one of the harshest critics of former President Trump in either party, from her leadership post by the end of the month.” https://bit.ly/3ehr3Ev
Why — she isn’t falling in line with McCarthy’s team: “They argue that the No. 3 Republican has repeatedly contradicted McCarthy and his team, undermining the party’s message and its efforts to take back the House majority in next year’s midterm elections.”
How Cheney is defending herself: “Cheney … has defended her against-the-grain approach, saying she’s simply trying to tug the party away from its veneration of a single figure and back to its pre-Trump policy ideals. Part of that responsibility, she says, is calling out Trump and his loyal foot soldiers for claiming that the 2020 election was stolen from him.”
THIS A.M. FROM MCCARTHY:
In an interview on “Fox & Friends” this morning, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) was asked whether it was the vote to impeach former President Trump that has made House Republicans unhappy with her. https://bit.ly/3xNbcFq
McCarthy’s response: “There’s no concern about how she voted on impeachment. That decision has been made. I have heard from members concerned about her ability to carry out the job as conference chair — to carry out the message … We all need to be working as one if we’re able to win the majority. Remember, majorities are not given; they are earned. And that’s about the message about going forward.”
^LATE THIS A.M. — LIZ CHENEY’S COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR JEREMY ADLER REACTS:
Via Punchbowl News’s Jake Sherman, “This is about whether the Republican Party is going to perpetuate lies about the 2020 election and attempt to whitewash what happened on Jan 6. Liz will not do that. That is the issue.” https://bit.ly/3ehocLF
HOW TRUMP’S CRITICS ARE FACING THE WRATH OF THE REPUBLICAN BASE:
It’s Tuesday, May the 4th. Happy Star Wars Day!! I’m Cate Martel with a quick recap of the morning and what’s coming up. Send comments, story ideas and events for our radar to cmartel@thehill.com — and follow along on Twitter @CateMartel and Facebook.
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A MESSAGE FROM EXXONMOBIL
An idea to help decarbonize heavy industrial areas
ExxonMobil is introducing an idea for carbon capture and storage that has the potential to effectively decarbonize the Houston Ship Channel. That’s big – like taking 20 million cars off the road. Learn more at EnergyFactor.com
Via The Hill’s Max Greenwood, “House Democrats are beginning to confront the challenging reality awaiting them in the 2022 midterm elections amid a spate of retirements and dim redistricting prospects.” https://bit.ly/33bo8Xl
Why Dems have been crossing their fingers: “Democrats had hoped that brightening economic and public health outlooks combined with ongoing discord within the GOP would save them from the kind of electoral thrashing that historically besets the president’s party in midterm elections.”
The slow realization: “But privately, some in the party are beginning to acknowledge the uphill battle they will face next year when their narrow majorities in the House and Senate will be on the line.”
Via The Hill’s Brett Samuels, “The White House is deploying first lady Jill Biden across the country as a key asset to build support for President Biden’s proposed investments in infrastructure, child care and education.” https://bit.ly/3vFMhlk
For example: “The first lady joined the president on a trip to a Virginia elementary school and community college on Monday, and she is scheduled to travel out West later this week to Utah, Nevada and Colorado as the administration coordinates a publicity blitz in support of the American Jobs Plan and American Families Plan.”
Why Jill Biden is particularly helpful to the Biden administration: “While first ladies have often hit the road to boost the president’s agenda, experts say Biden is well positioned to build support for the White House agenda because of her experience as a political spouse and her decades spent as a teacher.”
Via The New York Times’s Noah Weiland, Apoorva Mandavilli and Sharon LaFraniere, “The Food and Drug Administration is preparing to authorize use of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine in adolescents 12 to 15 years old by early next week, according to federal officials familiar with the agency’s plans, opening up the U.S. vaccination campaign to millions more people.” https://nyti.ms/3nMDETl
The Atlantic’s Derek Thompson posted an open invitation for people who do not plan to take a COVID-19 vaccine to explain their reasoning. After speaking with more than a dozen people in that boat, Thompson gave his assessment of what it would take for the vaccine-hesitant in the U.S. to get the shot.
Excerpt: “I cannot imagine that any amount of hectoring or shaming, or proclamations from the public-health or Democratic communities, will make much of a difference for this group … From my conversations, I see three ways to persuade no-vaxxers: make it more convenient to get a shot; make it less convenient to not get a shot; or encourage them to think more socially.”
An idea to help decarbonize heavy industrial areas
ExxonMobil is introducing an idea for carbon capture and storage that has the potential to effectively decarbonize the Houston Ship Channel. That’s big – like taking 20 million cars off the road. Learn more at EnergyFactor.com
The House and Senate are out. President Biden is in Washington, D.C. Vice President Harris is in Wisconsin.
9:35 a.m. EDT: Vice President Harris delivered remarks to the Washington Conference on the Americas.
10:15 a.m. EDT: President Biden received the President’s Daily Brief.
10:55 a.m. EDT: Vice President Harris left for Milwaukee.
2 p.m. EDT: Vice President Harris visits clean energy laboratories at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and participates in a roundtable discussion.
5:50 p.m. EDT: Vice President Harris returns to Washington, D.C.
WHAT TO WATCH:
12:30 p.m. EDT: White House press secretary Jen Psaki holds a press briefing. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3xNwkLs
2:30 p.m. EDT: President Biden delivers remarks on the COVID-19 pandemic and vaccination program. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3eRCBxg
NOW FOR THE FUN STUFF…:
Today is National Orange Juice Day.
And to celebrate Star Wars Day today, here’s a list of Star Wars sales and deals, via CNet: https://cnet.co/2PMGdYO
An influencer matched with Ben Affleck on a dating app. She thought it was fake and quickly unmatched. Affleck then sent her an Instagram video saying, “Nivine, why did you unmatch me? It’s me.” https://et.tv/3b4euKu
House Democrats hoping to project strength going into the 2022 midterms got two doses of bad news last week, with the retirement of Illinois Rep. Cheri Bustos and the weekend shutout of all Democratic candidates from the runoff in the special election in Texas’ 6th District. But Dem strategists say they see no cause for concern. Read more…
The National Republican Congressional Committee is adding 10 House Democrats to its target list for the 2022 midterms as the party seeks to reclaim the majority in the chamber. All 10 of the incumbent Democrats represent states, such as California and New York, that are set to lose a House seat thanks to the 2020 census. Read more…
OPINION — According to a CNN poll, 44 percent of Republicans refuse to be inoculated. But so do 28 percent of independents and 8 percent of Democrats. Vaccine resistance is inextricably linked to the question of trust. Instead of a trust fund, we have a trust gap — and it is fast becoming a trust chasm. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Public health advocates who expect COVID-19 vaccines to become available for younger teens soon are concerned that a government-led distribution effort that may rely in large part on pediatricians could create glaring inequalities among children. Read more…
Facebook and Twitter recently removed about 100 social media posts in India after an emergency order by the Indian government. Advocates have slammed the companies for complying with the order, citing Facebook’s partnership with the Global Network Initiative and Twitter’s stated mission to “serve the public conversation.” Read more…
As rioters breached the Capitol on Jan. 6, some Architect of the Capitol employees did not know what protective actions to take, a result of several emergency preparedness shortcomings highlighted in a flash report by the agency’s inspector general released April 27. Read more…
President Joe Biden said Monday that he would raise the refugee admissions cap for the current fiscal year to 62,500, revising an earlier announcement that would have maintained historically low Trump-era levels. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Tucker Carlson has a new GOP target
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
BREAKING THIS MORNING — The NRCC announced a few minutes ago that it added 10 House Democrats to its list of takeover targets, bringing the total to 57. It’s a show of confidence that the 2022 environment is favorable to Republicans, especially post-reapportionment. The additional Democrats they’re targeting are AMI BERA (Calif.), JIM COSTA (Calif.), RAUL RUIZ (Calif.), MARIE NEWMAN (Ill.), DAN KILDEE (Mich.), KATHLEEN RICE (N.Y.), PAUL TONKO (N.Y.), JOE MORELLE (N.Y.), BRIAN HIGGINS (N.Y.) and CHRISSY HOULAHAN (Pa.).
Yet even as they imagine beating Democrats into the minority, GOP infighting is starting to look like a Mexican standoff scene from a TARANTINO film. …
THE LATEST FEUD — TUCKER VS. MCCARTHY: For the second consecutive show, TUCKER CARLSON went after KEVIN MCCARTHY on Monday night. The Fox News host hit the GOP House leader over his close relationship with FRANK LUNTZ, a longtime GOP pollster and consultant who’s worked for numerous corporate clients, and said in mid-February there “isn’t a shred of hope” for DONALD TRUMP to re-enter politics after Jan. 6.
Carlson reported that McCarthy rents space in Luntz’s Penn Quarter penthouse, questioning whether that arrangement is allowed. McCarthy’s staff confirmed their roommate status in a statement to the network, though wouldn’t say how much he pays in rent. That’s beside the point, Carlson argued: “Now you know why they listen to Frank Luntz but they don’t listen to you!” Here’s the full clip
ADDING TO THE INTRIGUE: Carlson noted that Luntz and McCarthy’s “Odd Couple” arrangement was not something he just stumbled upon on his own but was leaked to Fox by a knowledgeable unnamed source. Hmm.
To summarize: The star of Republicans’ network of choice is being fed oppo about and is denouncing the man who wants to be speaker of the House. Not good for McCarthy, who, if the GOP takes back the House, will need 218 votes to secure the gavel. Remember what happened last time he went for it.
We reached out to the typically loquacious Luntz on Monday night, but no word back yet. McCarthy’s office also did not respond to a request for comment. Read below for the latest in the LIZ CHENEY-McCarthy saga …
Meanwhile, Trump went after Sen. MITT ROMNEY (R-Utah) again in one of those new post-presidency press releases he sends out that don’t seem to land the same way as the old tweets: “So nice to see RINO Mitt Romney booed off the stage at the Utah Republican State Convention. They are among the earliest to have figured this guy out, a stone cold loser!”
We’ll know tomorrow if Trump can start posting these sick burns on Facebook again. The WSJ explains how the decision will be made.
Good Tuesday morning. Remember BAILEY the dog? After his star turn on the campaign trail a year ago, he reemerged Monday when Sen. ELIZABETH WARREN (D-Mass.) posted a video of her feeding him a burrito for his birthday. Cute! Yet vaguely disturbing. … Why would someone give their dog a fully wrapped burrito?
THE GATESES CALL IT QUITS — “Bill and Melinda Gates Are Divorcing After 27 Years of Marriage,”NYT: “For decades, Mr. and Ms. Gates have been powerful forces on the world stage, their vast charitable contributions affording them access to the highest levels of government, business and the nonprofit sector. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, with an endowment of some $50 billion, has had immense influence in fields like global health and early-childhood education, and has made great strides in reducing deaths caused by malaria and other infectious diseases.
“Over the past year, the couple have been especially visible, regularly commenting on the worldwide fight against Covid-19 as their foundation spent more than $1 billion to combat the pandemic.”
@megankstack: “Sometimes there’s that one small detail about a famous person that sticks with you for years and for me it’s been that Bill Gates negotiated into his marriage the right to take an annual beach house weekend with his ex-girlfriend.” It’s true.
UPON FURTHER REVIEW — “Biden White House reverses on its refugee cap reversal,”by Laura Barrón-López, Nahal Toosi and Natasha Korecki: “Biden once again set a 62,500 cap on refugees allowed into the United States for the rest of this fiscal year, the White House announced on Monday. The number delivers on an increase Biden initially promised in February, though still falls short of what he had pledged during the campaign. It marks a stunning and rapid turnaround after the White House said several weeks ago it would keep the number of refugees allowed into the United States at a historic low of 15,000 — a ceiling first implemented by President Donald Trump.”
Says Laura: This is the first big about-face of Biden’s presidency. It will help him repair damage with Democrats and refugee resettlement agencies who blasted the president for initially keeping the Trump-era limit in place.
ATTN. PARENTS OF ADOLESCENTS — NYT: “The Food and Drug Administration is preparing to authorize use of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine in adolescents 12 to 15 years old by early next week.”
BIDEN’S TUESDAY — The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10:15 a.m. He’ll deliver remarks at 2:30 p.m. about the pandemic response and vaccination campaign.
— VP KAMALA HARRIS will speak to the Washington Conference on the Americas at 9:35 a.m. She’ll leave at 10:55 a.m. for Milwaukee, where she’ll see clean energy labs at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee at 1 p.m. Central time. At 1:50 p.m., she’ll take part in a roundtable discussion of the American Jobs Plan and R&D investments. She’ll leave for Washington at 4:50 p.m. Central time.
— Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at 10 a.m. A.G. MERRICK GARLAND will testify before an Appropriations subcommittee at 10 a.m. But no votes.
THE SENATE is out.
PLAYBOOK READS
CONGRESS
‘A LINE THAT CANNOT BE CROSSED’ — CNN’s Jamie Gangel and Michael Warren have the latest scoop out of Cheney world. The No. 3 House Republican told donors at a Georgia-based AEI event alongside former Speaker PAUL RYAN on Monday that Trump crossed a line on Jan. 6 — and the party can’t just “whitewash” what he did.
Here’s the quote: “We can’t embrace the notion the election is stolen. It’s a poison in the bloodstream of our democracy. We can’t whitewash what happened on Jan. 6 or perpetuate Trump’s big lie. It is a threat to democracy. What he did on Jan. 6 is a line that cannot be crossed.”
We reached out to the former speaker for comment on this and to see if he has a take on Cheney’s situation. He declined through staff to weigh in and instead referred back to previous comments supporting her.
Cheney has been making these sorts of quips now for months. So what was McCarthy’s final straw? It’s a question that plenty of Republicans are asking privately right now, given that multiple sources say he’s done with her. Two theories on this are making the rounds:
— One is that Cheney’s rebuke of Trump during the GOP retreat last week — delivered in front of other rank-and-file members at a press conference — sent many Republicans over the edge. In the background of the media avail, you could see Reps. DREW FERGUSON (Ga.), RICHARD HUDSON (N.C.) and MIKE JOHNSON (La.) all awkwardly standing there as she upbraided the former president.
— The other theory is a bit more interesting: You might have missed it, but last week Cheney seemed to endorse the idea of a 9/11-style commission to investigate Jan. 6. Her move came after Speaker NANCY PELOSI agreed to give equal subpoena power and representation to both parties. McCarthy has been notably holding out on making a deal, pushing Pelosi to expand the probe to include extremism on the left, too.
The reality is that any bipartisan commission on Jan. 6 would almost certainly include a subpoena of McCarthy, whose call with Trump will become a central focus of any investigation. That would put McCarthy in a tough spot, forced to recount on record things Trump may not want out there. Some Republicans believe Cheney’s endorsement of the commission — undercutting McCarthy’s position — put him over the edge.
THE SHADOW CONFERENCE CHAIR? — As House Republicans agitate against Cheney, our Mel Zanona profiles a potential replacement: Republican Study Committee Chair JIM BANKS (R-Ind.). As Mel reports, Banks has been running something of a shadow messaging operation from his perch as the head of the largest GOP caucus. He’s been pushing out talking points that are different from Cheney’s, and stirring the pot a little as he seeks to bigfoot her on messaging. He’s even apparently modeled weekly conference-wide newsletters after POLITICO Playbook, serving up a mix of buzz and personality. (Don’t press your luck, congressman; we’re one of a kind.)
He’s got McCarthy’s ear and respect. And several of his predecessors — including STEVE SCALISE and TOM PRICE — used the post as a jumping-off point for a leadership bid (some more successful than others …). The question for Banks will be timing: Does he want to run now? Or serve out his term as RSC chairman first? More from Mel about Banks’ audition for the job
NEAL STANDS HIS GROUND — “Congress’ top tax man won’t be a blank check for Biden,”by Brian Faler: “Even as many of his colleagues rally around the cause of sticking it to the rich, House Ways and Means Chair RICHARD NEAL (D-Mass.) remains wary. He isn’t necessarily opposed to requiring the well-to-do to pay more, but he also isn’t convinced that Democrats’ need to fully pay for their plans with tax increases, especially when super-low interest rates mean the government can borrow cheaply.
“Neal has his own list of priorities that could end up squeezing out some of the administration’s proposals. Among them: making Democrats’ recent expansions of tax breaks for average Americans permanent; reviving the Obama-era Build America Bonds program; and creating a new payroll tax to subsidize the wages of daycare workers.
“All of that underscores how Democrats have a lot of differences they need to work out, and that Biden’s proposal is merely the starting point in what’s likely to be months of negotiations.”
IMMIGRATION FILES — “Alejandra Juarez returning to Central Florida 3 years after traumatic deportation to Mexico,”Orlando Sentinel: “After three years of being separated from her Davenport family, ALEJANDRA JUAREZ is coming home. Juarez is the wife of a U.S. Marine veteran whose traumatic deportation scene at Orlando International Airport in 2018 made headlines worldwide. On Monday, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security granted her a temporary reprieve known as humanitarian parole. …
“‘This is the moment I’ve been waiting for,’ Juarez told the Orlando Sentinel in an exclusive interview. ‘Once inside, I’m going to keep fighting and hopefully there’s a way I can find a permanent solution, but this is great!’”
MILLEY CHANGES HIS TUNE — “Top general drops opposition to change in sex assault policy,” AP: “[MARK] MILLEY said he is now open to considering [a proposal to take decisions on sexual assault prosecution out of the hands of commanders] because the problem of sexual assault in the military has persisted despite other efforts to solve it. … The comments by Milley, as arguably the most influential officer and as the senior military adviser to Defense Secretary LLOYD AUSTIN and Biden, are likely to carry considerable weight among the service chiefs and add to momentum for the change.”
GITMO LATEST — “U.S. Captured, Tortured, and Cleared Him. He’s Still in GITMO,”The Daily Beast: “As the Biden administration performs the latest government review into closing Guantanamo, attorneys for Husayn, better known as ABU ZUBAYDAH, have decided they’ve waited long enough. They filed a petition on Friday with the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention seeking his release from his 19 years of captivity.”
MEDIAWATCH
STEPPING IN IT — “How three major news organizations all got a story about Rudy Giuliani wrong,”WaPo: “[DEAN] BAQUET said the Times reporters scrambled to match what appeared to be a major [RUDY] GIULIANI scoop from The Washington Post’s after it was published on Thursday. ‘I think we all tend to drop our guard when we get beat and are trying to catch up,’ he said. ‘We need to grill sources more to make sure we understand exactly what they’re confirming. We’ve all discussed it, corrected it, and we need to do better. Dealing with anonymous sources in law enforcement and intelligence is always hard.’”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
MAGA V. MAGA — “Bad blood: Pro-Trump megadonors duke it out in Cornhusker country,” by Alex Isenstadt. “Republican megadonor and Nebraska gubernatorial candidate Charles Herbster was there at the beginning of the Donald Trump era and the end — when the ex-president first came down the Trump Tower escalator to announce his campaign, and at the rally that preceded the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection.
“Herbster — who’s tapped former Trump lieutenantsKELLYANNE CONWAY and COREY LEWANDOWSKI to help run his campaign — could hardly have a more important friend as he tries to launch a political career in a deep-red state. But he’d also be hard-pressed to pick a more formidable adversary: current Republican Gov. PETE RICKETTS, another wealthy, more recent Trump ally who’s determined to keep Herbster out of power.
“Ricketts, who is term-limited and not running for reelection, has repeatedly accused the candidate’s agricultural company of shipping jobs out-of-state — a charge Herbster flatly denies. The governor’s team is promoting his attacks on Herbster through social media. And Ricketts’ longtime political adviser, JESSICA FLANAGAIN, has signed on with a Herbster primary opponent, millionaire hog farmer JIM PILLEN, providing an early clue as to whom the governor may support.”
JENNER’S FIRST TOWN HALL — “Caitlyn Jenner sitdown with Hannity will be ‘town hall’ event in Malibu.”by Carla Marinucci: “While [CAITLYN] JENNER will likely focus on Democratic Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM, she must also compete with three more experienced Republican recall candidates so far, including former San Diego Mayor KEVIN FAULCONER, businessman JOHN COX and former Rep. DOUG OSE.”
LEDE OF THE DAY —Columbus Dispatch: “On the same day a distracted driving bill was introduced, state Sen. ANDREW BRENNER, R-Delaware, participated in a government video meeting while driving.
“‘I wasn’t distracted. I was paying attention to the driving and listening to it (the meeting,)’ Brenner said. ‘I had two meetings that were back to back that were in separate locations. And I’ve actually been on other calls, numerous calls, while driving. Phone calls for the most part but on video calls, I’m not paying attention to the video. To me, it’s like a phone call.’”
The guy sounds like a skilled politician.
TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES — “House hearing forced to recess as ‘Galaxy Quest,’ ‘Down Periscope’ play in background,” Roll Call: “As Rep. MARCY KAPTUR began Monday’s House Appropriations subcommittee hearing, she seemed completely unaware of the peril the crew of the USS Stingray was in. Unbeknownst to Kaptur and the other lawmakers participating in Monday’s hearing, the audio from a movie — 1996’s ‘Down Periscope,’ starring KELSEY GRAMMER as a disliked Navy officer who leads a crew of misfits in hijinks on the high seas amid some wargames — was playing over the congressional livestream. As the meeting began, the critically disdained movie was reaching its climax.
“After the movie ended, the hearing continued with Rep. KIM SCHRIER, D-Wash., testifying over a soundtrack of ‘In the Navy’ by the Village People. And that’s when ‘Galaxy Quest’ began.” Video of some of the chaos
PLAYBOOKERS
SPOTTED: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis at Palm Beach hotspot Le Bilboquet — known for its champagne bottle sparklers — in a private room with a small group. … D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, Nats’ Ryan Zimmerman and many others at the soft opening mock service for Dauphine’s at 15th & L.
MEDIAWATCH — Kristin Donnelly has been named executive producer for CNN’s “Inside Politics with John King.” She most recently was senior broadcast producer for “The Lead with Jake Tapper,” and is an NBC alum. Her predecessor, Jess Metzger, who is heading for new pastures, will be sorely missed by all the show’s contributors. … John Schwartz will join the faculty of the University of Texas at Austin’s School of Journalism and Media. He currently is a science writer covering climate change at the NYT.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The House Foreign Affairs GOP is announcing several new staffers and positions: Yimmi Fontenot as deputy press secretary (previously an intern for Texas Rep. Michael Cloud), Ana Quintana as a professional staff member for the Western Hemisphere (previously at the Heritage Foundation), Cart Weiland as senior counsel (previously at State), Taryn Woody as special assistant to the staff director (previously at the Professional Services Council) and Lauren Gillespie moving up to be director of member services and coalitions.
— Emily Singer is now director of federal affairs at Berkshire Hathaway Energy. She most recently was counselor to the secretary of Energy.
— Jonathan Moak is now VP for strategy and business development at Salesforce. He most recently was acting assistant secretary of the Army for financial management and comptroller.
— Kristen Smith is now SVP for health policy and public affairs at Edelman. She most recently was global policy senior communicator at Caterpillar, and is an Aetna and George W. Bush administration alum.
TRANSITIONS — Matt Gruda is now political director for Sen. Marco Rubio’s (R-Fla.) reelect. He most recently was campaign manager for Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.) and is a SLF/Crossroads brands alum. … Jonathan Eberle is now press secretary for Rep. Matt Rosendale (R-Mont.). He previously was digital director for Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.). … Ben Steinhafel is now director of policy and external affairs at the Center for Telehealth and E-Health Law. He previously was a legislative analyst on OPM’s congressional affairs team, and is a Jim Sensenbrenner and Paul Ryan alum. …
… Anthony “Tony” Zagotta is joining Strategic Elements as strategic alliance partner. He previously was president of Integrated Legislative Strategies and also is CEO of Forza Strategic Partners. … Liza White is now PAC Director for the National Shooting Sports Foundation. She previously was an SVP at Grand Valley Consulting. … Robert Allegrini is now president of the National Italian American Foundation. He previously was VP of comms for the Americas at Hilton and has been a NIAF board member since 2007.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-Texas) … former Sen. Doug Jones (D-Ala.) … National Association of Manufacturers’ Jay Timmons … George Will (8-0) … Mitchell Rivard of Rep. Dan Kildee’s (D-Mich.) office … Eliot Nelson … Reuters’ Ted Hesson … Kelly Love … Shana Mansbach of Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office … Allison Bormel … Todd Stern of Brookings … Siobhan Steel … CNN’s Polson Kanneth … Ellen Qualls … Stat’s Erin Mershon … Jason Kander … Cyrus Pearson of the Senate Republican Conference … Andy Karellas … Katie Bartizal of Rep. Elissa Slotkin’s (D-Mich.) office … Katy Quinn … Sara-Paige Silvestro of Sen. Bob Casey’s (D-Pa.) office … John R. Gagain Jr. … former Rep. Colleen Hanabusa (D-Hawaii) (7-0) … Nancy Ayers … Black Rock Group’s Charlotte McCoy … Akmal Ali … Terrell Halaska of HCM Strategists … Steve Rosenberg … WaPo’s Kathy O’Hearn … Michael Bromberg … Kristin Engdahl Zipay of the Association of American Medical Colleges … James Conlon (26) … Megan Stackhouse of “Today” show comms
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.
This warped thinking of the Left is way beyond comical. It is sadly becoming a threat to the safety, health, and security of every American. The Biden Plan to open the Southern Border has resulted in thousands of Illegal Immigrants or Aliens coming across our Border with Mexico. Nobody knows …
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing and later deliver yet another speech on vaccinations. President Biden’s Itinerary for 5/4/21: All Times EDT 10:15 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office2:30 PM Deliver another speech on vaccinations [Live Stream] – State Dining Room White House Briefing Schedule 12:30 …
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) was preparing to release school reopening guidelines in February suggesting that in-person learning would be acceptable even if a community had high coronavirus case rates. After a meeting with the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), the nation’s second-largest teachers union, the …
In 2014, Eric Garner lost his life after a chokehold was placed on him by a police officer from the New York Police Department. In the aftermath of Garner’s death, the dutiful leftists came out to decry racism against the police while ignoring their hands in his death by pushing …
Republican Rep. Yvette Herrell of New Mexico’s 2nd Congressional District spoke with the Daily Caller News Foundation’s Samantha Renck about President Joe Biden’s joint address, his comments on the immigration crisis and more. WATCH: Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news …
Joe Biden’s understanding of the Constitution’s “We the People” is collectivist in nature, kindred to fascism. Fascism, notes scholar Dinesh D’Souza, “is an Italian term that means ‘groupism’ or ‘collectivism’.” One of the most influential philosophers of fascism, Giovanni Gentile, noted that a fascist state “is a popular state, and, …
It’s RINO Season Never Trumper Mitt Romney was heckled and booed as he gave a speech at the Utah Republican Convention. Mittens was not pleased and shouted at the Republican delegates, “Aren’t you embarrassed?” No Mitt, Utah is embarrassed by you being a tone-deaf senator who ignores what Utah voters …
A growing consensus of experts no longer believe the U.S. will ever reach herd immunity and instead project that coronavirus will be around for the foreseeable future. Public health experts expect that while the virus will not disappear from the U.S., it will become more manageable and will severely affect …
President Biden and the First Lady Deliver Remarks at Tidewater Community College during which the president promised that lower and middle-income earners would not pay any additional taxes under his massive tax and spend plan nor would his plan raise the deficit. Fact Checks: Statement: Lower and middle-income earners won’t …
Happy Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. It all falls apart after we quit playing Candy Land.
Gosh, is it Tuesday already? This week is positively WHIZZING by. Before we know it, it will almost be Wednesday.
The longer we meander through this dystopian Biden-alleged kinda/sorta presidency, the easier it is to get lost in the media noise surrounding everything that isn’t. That’s what’s weighing on a lot of the people I know who are gloom and doom all of the time. Even those of us who know that the media hacks are lying can occasionally get a little distracted by it all.
When I say “everything that isn’t” I mean the myth of this sham presidency. The media will tell you that all is going well. Everybody loves this cuddly old teddy bear of a president. Heck, we don’t even need to fact-check him anymore. They’ve got polls. They’ve got op-eds. They’ve got Jake Tapper and the rest of the MSM dotting their “i”s with hearts in their feelings journals, just like they did when The Lightbringer was president.
What they don’t have is reality.
The Democrats have a bad habit of taking any election victory and claiming that they have a mandate from the people to play their Democratic/commie reindeer games. The suspension of disbelief required to actually accept this mandate fairy tale after the last election is remarkable, but here we are.
The Masked Biden Fetish Brigade would have us all believe that the majority of the citizens of this country are thrilled with everything the administration is up to. What we’re seeing out in the hinterlands doesn’t quite bear that out, however.
Biden’s border nightmare that’s largely being ignored by, well, him is so bad that the state of Arizona and now parts of Texas have declared emergencies to deal with the problem. Spoiler alert: this is only going to get worse.
We’ve seen a lot of states try to get out in front of Biden’s anti-2nd Amendment fervor and strengthen their gun laws.
And, much to the chagrin of the Democrats and their flying monkeys in the media, some of the “irregularities” from the last election are still being addressed.
In the span of a month we’ve come full circle on election reforms — actual reforms, not the Democrats’ monstrosity that’s merely advertised as such. That unconstitutional power grab is going nowhere.
Kansas’ legislature has just overridden its governor’s veto and put into law a set of election reforms similar to those that just weeks ago Joe Biden declared were “Jim Crow on steroids.”
Biden would know these laws are nothing like Jim Crow, if he still had all his mental faculties, because he was around for Jim Crow. Biden happily cavorted with segregationist Democrats when it suited him. And Jim Crow was a Democrat policy.
That’s right, the Sunflower State just boldly went where Georgia has been getting savaged for going.
I don’t think the Biden message is resonating quite the way his team thinks it is.
This is from Bryan’s post as well:
Getting rid of what Bryan calls the “Zuck bucks” is huge. That nightmare needs to be kneecapped nationwide, but this is a good start.
Regarding the gun stuff:
The Legislature overrode Kelly’s veto of a bill that would create a special concealed carry permit for 18-, 19- and 20-year-olds, and that’s a major victory for gun-rights advocates. The state already allows people 21 and older to carry concealed guns without a permit and adults can carry them openly, but Kelly’s election had advocates of tougher gun laws hoping for a roll back of Kansas’ generally loose policies.
The Biden vision for America is certainly popular in the coastal-leftist hive mind regions of the country. Once you tiptoe into real America, however, it is anything but. It’s important to remember that the discontent with the Democrats’ overreach is manifesting itself in tangible pushback, not just raging emotion. The bad news is that this may just inspire the Dems to get even more aggressive with the commie push.
We’re just gonna have to hope there is something left to salvage by the time 2022 gets here.
PJ Media senior columnist and associate editor Stephen Kruiser is a professional stand-up comic, writer, and recovering political activist who edits and writes PJ’s Morning Briefing, aka The Greatest Political Newsletter in America. His latest book, Straight Outta Feelings, is a humorous exploration of how the 2016 election made him enjoy politics more than he ever had before. When not being a reclusive writer, Kruiser has had the honor of entertaining U.S. troops all over the world. Follow on: Gab, Parler, MeWe
President Joe Biden’s Plan For Government To Replace The Family . . . The American family is in a state of crisis. Nobody in Washington really disagrees with this, Republican or Democrat. Marriage rates are cratering. Birth rates are in a total tailspin, especially after the COVID-19 pandemic. This is unsustainable. America can’t function if the most basic building block of our society is collapsing. Clearly something needs to be done. Last week, the Biden White House released what it called the “American Families Plan,” a $1.8 trillion spending package that includes a laundry list of woke leftist priorities, including major giveaways to the education establishment, which has become perhaps the most favored Democrat constituency.
Many conservatives are understandably concerned about the price tag. But even if the package were something we thought America could afford, the details of the plan should make conservatives extremely worried. Rather than help the family, the Biden administration has something more disturbing in mind: a big government takeover of the family. AnalysisDaily Caller
My Dad turns 85 today! Living in America now, he has beaten all kinds of odds, thanks to good life and AMAZING medical care here – life expectancy for Russian males was 65 years, when he joined me here in the US, over a decade ago.
Happy Birthday, Dad! С Днем Рожденья, Папа!!
Politics
Biden pushes to make large subsidies that helped revive Obamacare permanent . . . Biden wants his supersized Obamacare subsidies to last forever, proving his push to inject cash into the program was not so much a balm for pandemic pains as a push to fix glaring affordability gaps in the 2010 law. Democrats raised Obamacare subsidies for private insurance across the board and lifted the income cap on assistance for two years as part of their $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill. The White House budget office hailed the move as a way to lower health care costs and expand access during a “once-in-a century pandemic,” though Obamacare critics and supporters alike said Mr. Biden was unlikely to give up the sweetener once the pandemic subsided. They were right. Mr. Biden wasted no time in telling Congress to make the benefit permanent, a move that would cost an estimated $200 billion over 10 years and stave off a politically painful situation when the benefits expire after 2022. Washington Times
Joe, please do stop ruining our medical care. I want my Dad to live a little longer, even though he annoys me sometimes.
Biden wants to spend six times what FDR did on the New Deal . . . President Biden’s proposed $6 trillion in spending is more than six times the $856 billion Franklin Delano Roosevelt spent on New Deal programs. The total includes about $1.9 trillion already signed into law for Covid relief and another $4 trillion in spending to expand cradle-to-grave federal support in the form of child care, free early education, and free community college. Among other steps toward full socialism. So, if you were still wondering whether President Biden is governing as a radical and seeking to completely reorder our society . . . now you know. White House Dossier
How different would the agenda be, on any issue, if Alexandria Ocasio Cortez were elected president?
Biden to quadruple refugee cap to 62,500 . . . That’s for the current fiscal year, which ends October 1. He is not going to get to 62,500. But he is working to get to 125,000 next fiscal year.
Biden was under huge pressure from Democrat to increase the number of slots. “Today, I am revising the United States’ annual refugee admissions cap to 62,500 for this fiscal year,” Biden said in a Monday statement. “This erases the historically low number set by the previous administration of 15,000, which did not reflect America’s values as a nation that welcomes and supports refugees. The new admissions cap will also reinforce efforts that are already underway to expand the United States’ capacity to admit refugees, so that we can reach the goal of 125,000 refugee admissions that I intend to set for the coming fiscal year.” White House Dossier
Democrats confront difficult prospects for midterms . . . House Democrats are beginning to confront the challenging reality awaiting them in the 2022 midterm elections amid a spate of retirements and dim redistricting prospects. Democrats had hoped that brightening economic and public health outlooks combined with ongoing discord within the GOP would save them from the kind of electoral thrashing that historically besets the president’s party in midterm elections. But privately, some in the party are beginning to acknowledge the uphill battle they will face next year when their narrow majorities in the House and Senate will be on the line. The Hill
Biden rescinds permit for Vets’ DC “Rolling Thunder” Memorial Day motorcycle tradition . . . The Department of Defense blamed Covid-19. Rep. Brian Mast, R-Fla., blasted the Biden administration for rescinding a permit for a 30-plus years Memorial Day tradition for veterans that has always been staged in the Pentagon parking lot. “Memorial Day traditions like Rolling to Remember have been granted permits by every administration, Democrat and Republican, for the past 30 years. The Biden Administration’s decision to end this Memorial Day tradition flies in the face of the freedoms that so many have died to protect,” Rep. Mast said in a statement to Fox News. White House Dossier
Well, you know those ‘white male privileged supremasists’ and ‘extremists in the military’ – you can only berate them for so long, before they unleash the rolling thunder on you. 😉
Poll: Plurality of voters say stricter laws needed to prevent voter fraud . . . A plurality of voters said voting laws should be stricter to prevent voter fraud, a new Hill-HarrisX poll finds.
Forty-three percent of registered voters in the April 24-27 survey said voting laws should be stricter to prevent voter fraud. By contrast, 31 percent of respondents said voting should be made more accessible while 27 percent said voting should be kept as is.
Seventy percent of Republican voters said laws should be stricter to prevent voter fraud along with a plurality, 41 percent, of independents. The Hill
‘I Am A Cisgender Millennial’: CIA Recruitment Video Draws Big Rebukes For Being ‘Woke’ . . . The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) issued a video entitled “Working at CIA,” which, using common “woke” buzzwords, focuses on an unnamed CIA employee who identifies as a “woman of color.” The employee’s testimony touches on intersectionality and patriarchy while wearing a shirt depicting a raised fist and a feminist symbol. “I am a woman of color, I am a mom, I am a cisgender millennial who has been diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder,” the employee says in the video. “I am intersectional but my existence is not a box-checking exercise.” The employee also says she struggled with “imposter syndrome” because of expectations set by the patriarchy.
“At 36, I refuse to internalize misguided patriarchal ideas of what a woman can or should be,” she says. “I am tired of feeling like I’m supposed to apologize for the space I occupy rather than intoxicate people with my effort, my brilliance.” Daily Caller
Wow. We can always count on USG to set its priorities straight. These are the folks who ‘safeguard’ our security. Nuf said.
BTW – what the heck is “Cisgender”?!
National Security
Blinken faults Iran for taking ‘American hostages’ as hawks see ransom payments coming . . . Secretary of State Antony Blinken condemned Iran’s imprisonment of several Americans amid a swirl of now-disputed rumors that U.S. and British officials were nearing a deal to pay the regime billions to release a handful of people. “I have no higher priority than bringing arbitrarily detained Americans, American hostages, home to the United States,” Blinken said after a meeting with British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab. “I am determined to bring every American home.” Iran has seized British and American citizens alike, claiming they are subject to legitimate criminal charges — an allegation that Blinken dismissed implicitly by choosing to use the term “hostages.” Washington Examiner
Iran Teases Attack on US Capitol Building as Biden Admin Prepares To Lift Sanctions . . . Iran released a provocative new video over the weekend that depicts its military forces blowing up the United States Capitol building, a threat that comes as the Biden administration inches closer to providing Tehran with billions of dollars in economic sanctions relief. The video debuted Sunday on Iranian state-controlled television before Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei delivered remarks, in which he praised the country’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, the paramilitary force that has killed Americans, and celebrated IRGC leader Qassem Soleimani, who was killed in a drone strike by the former Trump administration. In the video clip, armed IRGC forces are seen marching before the U.S. Capitol’s famous dome explodes. It also shows Iranian forces marching on Jerusalem. Washington Free Beacon
No one fears Sleepy Joe. What’s the worst he could do to a ruthless dictator – call him a “killer”?
‘It’s an act of war’: Trump’s acting Pentagon chief urges Biden to tackle directed-energy attacks . . . The suspected directed-energy attacks on U.S. government personnel worldwide are “an act of war,” said former acting Defense Secretary Christopher Miller, who launched an initiative to investigate the incidents during his time at the Pentagon last year and is urging the new administration to stay on the issue. “If this plays out and somebody is attacking Americans [even] with a nonlethal weapon … we owe it to our folks that are out there,” Miller, who served as former President Donald Trump’s acting defense chief from November until January, told POLITICO. “We owe it to them to get to the bottom of this.” U.S. officials increasingly sound the alarm about the suspected attacks, which cause symptoms similar to those reported in recent years by American spies in Cuba affected by the so-called “Havana syndrome.” Victims report lasting headaches, loss of hearing and balance, ringing and pressure in the ears, fatigue, and sometimes long-term brain damage. Politico
Joe will place a strongly-worded call to “killer” Putin, telling him to stop, immediately.
Biden waving restriction blocking aid to Azerbaijan over Armenia conflict . . . President Biden has notified Congress the administration is extending a waiver allowing U.S. assistance to Azerbaijan that was originally restricted over Baku’s conflict with its neighbor Armenia and tension over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. The waiver applies to Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act and its renewal — which has happened annually since 2002 — allows the U.S. to provide military assistance to Azerbaijan so long as the secretary of State certifies that such assistance does not contribute to conflict in the region. The Hill
Russian military in Armenia reinforce areas near Azeri border . . . Russia’s military occupied two new sites in the south of Armenia near the Azeri border as an “additional security guarantee” following last year’s conflict, Russian news agencies reported, citing Armenia’s acting prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan. The move gives Moscow a bigger footprint in a region where it sent extra troops last year to keep the peace, under an agreement that ended a six-week war in which Azeri forces made far-reaching territorial gains against ethnic Armenians. Russia is an ally of Armenia, an impoverished former Soviet republic of less than 3 million people. Moscow already has a military base in the northwest of Armenia, and sent 2,000 troops as peacekeepers to Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave of Azerbaijan populated by ethnic Armenians, under the accord that ended last year’s fighting in the area. Reuters
Similar to the Russia-Ukraine “non-frozen frozen” conflict, Nagorno-Karabakh is another potential flashpoint that could end up paving a pathway to an armed confrontation between Russia and the US, as Washington and Moscow are on the opposite sides of this contentious geopolitical issue. After the break-up of the USSR, Armenia largely remained in Russia’s sphere of influence, while the US has been able to draw Azerbaijan into its orbit, for the most part.
Biden CIA head says pulling out of Afghanistan will ‘diminish’ US intelligence . . . CIA Director William Burns said U.S. intelligence will “diminish” after U.S. troops pull out of Afghanistan. President Biden Wednesday afternoon announced that the U.S. will withdraw the remaining 2,500 troops by Sept. 11. The Biden administration is continuing Trump’s goal but pushing back the date of May 1st by four months. Burns, appointed by Biden, said the U.S. presence in Afghanistan has kept groups such as Al Qaeda and ISIS “in check.” “When the time comes for the U.S. military to withdraw, the U.S. government’s ability to collect and act on threats will diminish. That’s simply a fact,” Burns told the Senate Intelligence Committee in a worldwide threat hearing on Wednesday. Fox New
Armed man shot by federal agents after standoff outside CIA headquarters, authorities say . . . Federal agents opened fire on an armed man outside CIA headquarters in McLean, Virginia, during an hours long standoff on Monday, authorities said.
NBC News, citing two law enforcement officials, reported that an intruder had attempted to drive into the CIA facility without access at about 6 p.m. ET, and was stopped by armed guards. The CIA’s negotiation with the intruder lasted for hours, according to NBC News. The individual was later shot by agents with the FBI after a standoff, the bureau confirmed in a statement to USA TODAY and later posted to Twitter. USA TODAY
As a spook rookie, I once made a mistake by not having my IC “blue badge” out and ready while driving into the CIA HQ. Having lifted my head, after diving into my purse to retrieve the badge, I was stunned by the visual I will not forget. Several armed guards descended on my car, their weapons drawn, fingers on the trigger. I have never made the same mistake again. Do NOT try.
Coronavirus
China’s Military Team Collaborated With Lab Where COVID Originated . . . The Chinese regime has said its controversial virology institute had no relationship with the military, but the institute worked with military leaders on a government-sponsored project for almost a decade. The Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) participated in a project, sponsored by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)—a regime-funded scientific research institution—from 2012 to 2018. The project was comprised of a team of five military and civil experts, who conducted research at WIV labs, military labs, and other civil labs leading to “the discovery of animal pathogens [biological agents that causes disease] in wild animals.” Epoch Times
Some Countries Threaten Citizens With Jail if They Return From India . . . The wave of Covid-19 sweeping India is leading some nations that have largely contained the virus to threaten their own citizens with jail time or heavy fines if they try to get home from the South Asian country. Australia has banned travel from India because it fears positive cases would overwhelm its quarantine system, which has largely kept the country free of coronavirus until now. New Zealand last month temporarily prohibited all travelers from India before modifying the policy to allow its citizens to return. Some legal experts and academics have said that such moves raise serious human-rights concerns and that the willingness of policy makers to restrict individual freedoms when the pandemic is largely under control domestically could set a troubling precedent. Wall Street Journal
International
Chinese rocket to make uncontrolled reentry; unclear where debris will hit: report . . . The massive core of a Chinese rocket used last week in the launch of the first leg of its space station ambitions is whipping around Earth in a low orbit, and where it lands is anybody’s guess. SpaceNews reported that the core of the Long March 5B, which is considered a variant of the country’s largest rocket, will reenter the Earth within the next week as one of the “largest instances of uncontrolled reentry of a spacecraft and could potentially land on an inhabited area.” The website estimated that the roughly 100-foot-long object is orbiting Earth every 90 minutes and zips past north of New York, Beijing and as far south as New Zealand. The report said that despite the threat, it is most likely destined to splash in one of the world’s oceans or in an isolated area. Fox News
Money
Biden’s Stimulus for the IRS . . . President Biden says he wants to “revitalize” IRS enforcement to target wealthy Americans who “aggressively plan to avoid the tax laws.” No doubt tax avoiders exist. But a lot less money is likely to be found under the sofa cushions than Mr. Biden and progressives think. The White House is hoping to use this sleight-of-math to help finance its $2 trillion cradle-to-grave entitlement plan. It projects that giving the IRS an extra $80 billion to hunt down tax dodgers will generate $700 billion in revenue over 10 years, citing a National Bureau of Economic Research study that estimates the top 1% of earners fail to pay $175 billion a year in tax they owe. More auditors and audits won’t yield much new revenue. Growing the IRS won’t pay for itself or much of anything else. AnalysisWall Street Journal
Gun stocks pop as FBI background checks jump . . . Shares of gun stocks climbed higher during Monday’s trading session after the FBI released data about the sizable number of background checks conducted for firearm purchases last month. The FBI said that it conducted 3.51 million background checks in April, compared with 2.91 million during the same month last year. Shares of Vista Outdoor Inc., Smith & Wesson Brands and Sturm Ruger & Company were all trading higher on Monday. The April totals were fewer than the month prior when the FBI carried out nearly 4.7 million background checks.
Background checks for every month of 2021 have so far outpaced the data from the comparable period last year. Fox Business
You should also know
‘Deplorable’ professor creates ‘anti-indoctrination mill’ startup . . . Michael Rectenwald got himself chased out of New York University when the self-identified communist copped to tweeting against trigger warnings, safe spaces and bias reporting under the pseudonym “Deplorable NYU Prof.” Now Rectenwald is scouting for academics to join an educational startup, American Scholars, that is launching this summer. It will feature prerecorded “anytime lessons” for students of all ages, with a focus on supporting homeschooling, college preparation and adult education. American Scholars will “challenge the ideologies that are being purveyed” in mainstream schools, including critical race theory, postmodernism and socialism, Rectenwald said. It wants to prepare students for the “political outlook” they are likely to face in college. Just the News
The Man They Couldn’t Cancel . . . Mobs have targeted Jordan Peterson, but he hasn’t lost his university job and his publishers have stuck by him. “He retains his academic post; his YouTube lectures and podcasts have not been scrubbed from the internet; and his books are available for purchase.” Why? He “hasn’t apologized or disavowed any previous statement.” ”Perhaps what irritates leftists most is Peterson’s general tenor. Mr. Peterson doesn’t directly challenge the substance of these dreary criticisms. Rather he protests that they’re unnatural and unhealthy. “The proper attitude toward young people is encouragement,” he says — “their ambitions, their strivings, their desire to be competent, their deep wish for a trustworthy guiding hand. Now there’s a rule for his next book: Don’t apologize when you haven’t done anything wrong. Patriot Post
Battle brews between conservative authors and mainstream publishers in era of cancel culture . . . It’s a contentious time for conservatives in the publishing industry, and it’s a contentious time for publishing houses working with those in the conservative industry. In recent months, New York publishing house Simon & Schuster has canceled Missouri GOP Sen. Josh Hawley’s book about Big Tech, decided not to distribute a book written by the Louisville police officer who was shot while executing a no-knock warrant at the home of Breonna Taylor. Conservative authors should have more self-respect than to accept money from people who hate them,” said Adam Bellow, executive editor at Bombardier Books. Marji Ross, the former president of conservative Regnery Publishing suggests reframing the choice, asking whether an author’s goal is “simply to get a big advance” or, instead, “to influence the direction of the country, or at least the direction of the discussion and the debate we’re having in this country.” Just the News
Despite being blacklisted by the leftist publishers, Senator Josh Hawley’s book The Tyranny of Big Tech has dropped today. Can’t wait to read it.
Guilty Pleasures
Melinda Gates changes her mind about divorcing Bill Gates . . . “I have changed my mind and do not want a divorce from this amazing and handsome man,” said Melinda with a glazed look in her eye, only minutes after receiving the COVID vaccine. “Bill is perfect in every way. I cannot live without him. Also, Windows is the best operating system and Internet Explorer is the best way to surf the world wide web.” According to sources, her divorce lawyer quickly jumped in to change her mind, reminding her that Bill was a major nerd in high school and that she would get at least half of his mind-controlled zombie army in the divorce.
“I do not care,” she said. “I live only to serve my wonderful husband, Bill.” She then changed into a 50’s housewife dress and began cooking him breakfast. Bill Gates could not be reached for comment, but his spokesperson released a statement, saying: “Windows is the best operating system and Internet Explorer is the best way to surf the world wide web. All hail Bill. Babylon Bee
Happy Tuesday! We’re too tired to come up with a good lead-in today, so we’re going to play the hits: “May the 4th be with you!”
Get it? Star Wars? And today’s date? It’s funny!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
In response to progressive backlash, President Joe Biden formally announced yesterday his administration’s new plan to raise the United States’ refugee cap to 62,500 this fiscal year. “This erases the historically low number set by the previous administration of 15,000, which did not reflect America’s values as a nation that welcomes and supports refugees,” Biden said in a statement.
At least 20 people are dead and 70 injured after a support beam gave out and a subway car in Mexico City fell from an elevated section of its track Monday night onto a busy street.
New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut will begin to lift most COVID-19 capacity restrictions beginning May 19, Govs. Andrew Cuomo, Phil Murphy, and Ned Lamont announced Monday. Social distancing guidelines will remain in place.
The Biden administration’s Department of Education appointed Richard Cordray—former director at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau—to oversee the Department’s administration of federal student loans.
The Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal of a former West Point cadet who said she was raped at—and had her official complaints dismissed by—the U.S. Military Academy. Justice Clarence Thomas argued in dissent that the appeal should be taken up to reverse a wrongly decided 1950 case preventing military personnel from suing for injuries from non-combatant activities.
The United States confirmed 49,661 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 4.0 percent of the 1,232,582 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 457 deaths were attributed to the virus on Monday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 577,492. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 34,012 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 1,188,734 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 147,517,734 Americans having now received at least one dose.
Where Are All the Deficit Hawks?
During his first address before a joint session of Congress last Wednesday, President Biden unveiled his roughly $2 trillion American Families Plan, a sweeping proposal he hopes to pass alongside his $2.4 trillion infrastructure proposal. “We can do it without increasing the deficit,” Biden said of both proposals during last Wednesday’s speech.
Biden plans to pay for his next two plans with hefty tax hikes on corporations and the wealthy, but his $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill—and the approximately $3.5 trillion in COVID relief before that—was financed with borrowed money and deficit spending.
Had these bills been introduced on the House and Senate floor just 10 years ago, the reaction likely would have been quite different. In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, deficit hawks constantly warned that the rising national debt would cause interest rates and inflation to skyrocket to unsustainable levels, weakening the dollar and setting off a Greek-style debt crisis.
But in part because the Federal Reserve has maintained incredibly low interest rates, the forewarned impending debt crisis has yet to come to fruition. Before the coronavirus ravaged the economy last March, unemployment, inflation, and interest rates were hovering near historic lows—even as the national debt passed $23 trillion.
That last figure now stands at nearly $28 trillion, and will only continue to grow. According to the Congressional Budget Office’s February projections, federal debt held by the public will equal 107 percent of GDP by 2031 if the government’s tax-and-spend agenda remains generally unchanged. Should we be alarmed?
Brian Riedl, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, thinks we’re likely to see a series of mini panics among investors as opposed to one big crash. “What will likely happen is, as the debt continues to soar, at a certain point, Wall Street may panic and the bond market may panic and worry that Washington is not in control of its debt,” he told The Dispatch. “At that point, [investors] will begin to sell their debts or demand higher interest rates. Such a sell-off will panic the stock market, and Washington will likely be pressured into cutting spending or increasing taxes to a degree to try to get the debt under control.”
That could get ugly, and require cuts to programs that both parties have long been unwilling to put on the chopping block. Riedl suggests that a combination of spending cuts and tax increases totaling 6 percent of GDP by the 2040s would be necessary. “You either need to raise taxes 6 percent of GDP, which would be brutal, or reduce mostly Social Security and Medicare spending by 6 percent of GDP, which would be brutal, or a combination of the two,” he said. What would this look like in practice? Significantly means-testing Social Security and Medicare benefits, or a near doubling of taxes on the middle class.
Last week, Andrew wrote about how a proposed change to a small-ball civics education program at the Department of Education was likely to spark one of the first significant culture war fights of the Biden administration. On Friday, a group of three dozen Senate Republicans led by Minority Leader Mitch McConnell scaled that fight up with a letter to the Biden administration calling the proposed rule “divisive nonsense.”
“This is a time to strengthen the teaching of civics and American history in our schools,” the letter to Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona read. “Instead, your Proposed Priorities double down on divisive, radical, and historically dubious buzzwords and propaganda. … Our nation’s youth do not need activist indoctrination that fixates solely on past flaws and splits our nation into divided camps.”
It’s hard to find the target of that bombastic rhetoric in the actual proposed priorities. The proposed change to the American History and Civics Education programs—whose $5 million budget doles out two or three grants per year for teacher training or high-school extracurricular programs—would prioritize applicants with “projects that incorporate racially, ethnically, culturally, and linguistically diverse perspectives into teaching and learning.”
Instead, the senators’ objections seem to key on the language introducing the new priorities in the Federal Register rule, which approvingly cites the New York Times’ 1619 Project and “anti-racist” scholar Ibram X. Kendi. The meat of their complaint, in other words, is that the Biden administration is positioning itself as an ally to progressives in education nationwide who, the letter charges, promote “radical ideologies meant to divide us.”
The signatories plainly suspect that, despite the vague and abstract language of the new rule, the upshot will be more public-school programs along the lines of examples given in the letter: a project promoted by the Oregon Department of Education arguing that “white supremacy culture shows up in math classrooms when … students are required to show their work,” or a California model curriculum that “urges teachers to lead students in a ‘Unity Chant’ that prays to Aztec deities for ‘decolonization.’”
Republicans Want to Combat Cancel Culture. How, Exactly?
If you’ve been paying attention to Republicans in recent months, you may have heard the phrase “cancel culture” once or twice. In a piece for the site today, Declan takes a look at how the GOP is hoping to turn “combating cancel culture” into a 2022 rallying cry—and what “combating cancel culture” would actually mean in practice.
What is cancel culture?
It’s an ambiguous term; one that has come to serve as a catch-all phrase describing perceived progressive overreach in a wide range of forms. “It’s sort of like the old Supreme Court line,” Rep. Jim Jordan told The Dispatch when asked how he defines the phenomenon. “You know it when you see it.”
And Republicans have been seeing a lot of it lately.
A Virginia police officer being fired after anonymously donating $25 to the legal defense of Kyle Rittenhouse, the teenager charged with homicide in Kenosha, Wisconsin last fall? Cancel culture.
Dr. Seuss Enterprises ceasing publication of six titles because they “portray people in ways that are hurtful and wrong?” Cancel culture.
Disney removing actress Gina Carano from The Mandalorian after she compared being a Republican today to being a Jew in Nazi Germany? Cancel culture.
They seem to think so. “Cancel as many people as you can right now,” Sen. Rick Scott—chair of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) this cycle—wrote in an open letter to “Woke Corporate America” a few weeks back. “There is a massive backlash coming. You will rue the day when it hits you. That day is November 8, 2022. That is the day Republicans will take back the Senate and the House. It will be a day of reckoning.”
Rep. Tom Emmer, chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC), echoed those sentiments in a statement provided to The Dispatch. “There is a backlash brewing against corporations doing the bidding of far-left actors,” he said. “It puts Democrats in a very difficult spot.”
But it’s not just Republicans saying this; some Democrats more or less agree with the assessment. “Wokeness is a problem and everyone knows it,” veteran Democratic strategist James Carville told Vox last week. “Large parts of the country view [Democrats] as an urban, coastal, arrogant party, and a lot gets passed through that filter. That’s a real thing. I don’t give a damn what anyone thinks about it—it’s a real phenomenon, and it’s damaging to the party brand.”
Public opinion analyst Harry Enten deemed criticism of cancel culture one of the GOP’s “best political plays” because polling shows it’s bipartisan. “Fear of cancel culture and political correctness isn’t something that just animates the GOP’s base,” he wrote. “It’s the rare issue that does so without alienating voters in the middle.” A late-February Harvard/Harris survey found 64 percent of registered voters believe there to be “a growing cancel culture” that is “a threat to our freedom.”
There are huge divides within the GOP over whether or not it’s a problem government has any role in solving.
J.D. Vance—the author and venture capitalist who is likely to enter Ohio’s U.S. Senate race in the coming weeks—urged Republicans to retaliate against businesses whose leaders met to coordinate responses to Republican-led efforts to change voting laws in states across the country. “Raise their taxes and do whatever else is necessary to fight these goons. We can have an American Republic or a global oligarchy, and it’s time for choosing,” said Vance, who declined to be interviewed for Declan’s story. “At this very moment there are companies (big and small) paying good wages to American workers, investing in their communities, and making it easier for American families. Cut their taxes. No more subsidies to the anti-American business class.”
Rep. Peter Meijer, a freshman Republican from Michigan, grew animated when presented with Vance’s comments. “How is that conservative? Where is there a fidelity to an underlying set of beliefs or principles other than just taking cues from the left and being inherently reactive?” he scoffed. “If you’re using the government to compel something you like, you’re setting the precedent for the government to be compelling something you don’t like. And the non-hypocritical approach is to just not have the government be a coercive entity towards those ends.”
Worth Your Time
Derek Thompson does it again in his latest for The Atlantic, surveying and corresponding with more than a dozen vaccine skeptics to understand their reasoning before casting judgment. The respondents offer a range of explanations behind their hesitancy to get the jab, from prior bouts of COVID-19 to mistrust in public health officials and perceived liberal overreach. To promote the vaccine amid this reluctance, Thompson proposes a few possible ways to change the minds of the masses—and none of them involve public shame or coercion.
As the United States began its drawdown of the 2,500 troops stationed in Afghanistan Saturday, Kabul correspondent Thomas Gibbons-Neff and photographer Jim Huylebroek joined forces to capture the start of the process in an ominous photojournalism story for the New York Times. “The American withdrawal, almost quiet, and with a veneer of orderliness, belies the desperate circumstances just beyond the base’s wall,” Gibbons-Neff writes in anticipation of the spike in Taliban violence expected between now and the September 11 deadline to leave the country.
Monday’s episode of Advisory Opinions is a jackpot for Supreme Court bingo players, as David and Sarah play a guessing game as to which justices will write some of the Court’s most anticipated forthcoming opinions. Stick around for a discussion of two cases involving racial classification in the dispensation of government relief to “socially disadvantaged” farmers and ranchers, a debate on which Supreme Court cases AP U.S. history students should be required to commit to memory, and more.
Let Us Know
What would have to happen for you to become a single-issue voter on the debt/deficit? On a scale of 1 to 10, how concerned are you about federal spending?
William A. Jacobson: “School’s out for summer, No more pencils, No more books, No more teacher’s dirty looks.”
Kemberlee Kaye: “It was in 90 and humid yesterday. I’m not yet ready for Texas summer.”
Mary Chastain: “Washington, DC, has become real-life Footloose. The fascist mayor banned standing and dancing at outdoor and indoor weddings. My goodness. I love living in Oklahoma.”
David Gerstman: “Mike LaChance blogged about former Sex Pistol Johnny Rotten’s (John Lydon) verbal attack on the Left’s cancel culture. Lydon said, “It’s selfishness and in that respect it’s divisive and can only lead to trouble. I can’t believe that TV stations give some of these lunatics the space.” It’s not the first time Lydon spoke out against leftist attempts to shut down debate. In 2010 he denounced the BDS movement, saying, “If Elvis-f-ing-Costello wants to pull out of a gig in Israel because he’s suddenly got this compassion for Palestinians, then good on him. But I have absolutely one rule, right? Until I see an Arab country, a Muslim country, with a democracy, I won’t understand how anyone can have a problem with how they’re treated.””
Samantha Mandeles: “A recent piece by the brilliant writer Ira stoll absolutely blasted (and rightly so) ex-CIA director John Brennan and his outrageously stupid April 27 tweet in which he scolds the Jewish People for not being more “empathetic champions” of the poor, oppressed Palestinians. Given how deeply “scarred” we, Jews, all are (or so Brennan claims) “by a history replete with prejudice, religious persecution, & unspeakable violence,” it’s apparently a mystery to him that we don’t further embrace a people and governments who have, for more than 100 years, actively contributed to that persecution. In reality, the real mystery here is how such a colossally ignorant, evidently bigoted, and dangerously naive person such as Brennan managed to rise to such an important position in government as the director of Central Intelligence. I can’t answer that question, but I do suspect it is very lucky for him that much of what Brennan did in that position will remain classified for some time, lest we “scarred” Jews express anything other than empathy towards him for whatever other choices he made that served to harm us.”
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Laundering Surveillance Through the Free Market CNN reports that the Biden administration’s Department of Homeland Security is contemplating “partnering with research firms” to monitor American citizens online in order to evade constitutional limits. The article is remarkably frank about the motivation.
“The Department of Homeland Security is limited in how it can monitor citizens online without justification and is banned from activities like assuming false identities to gain access to private messaging apps used by extremist groups such as the Proud Boys or Oath Keepers.
Instead, federal authorities can only browse through unprotected information on social media sites like Twitter and Facebook and other open online platforms.
The plan being discussed inside DHS, according to multiple sources, would, in effect, allow the department to circumvent those limits. A source familiar with the effort said it is not about decrypting data but rather using outside entities who can legally access these private groups to gather large amounts of information that could help DHS identify key narratives as they emerge.
By partnering with research firms who have more visibility in this space, the DHS could produce information that would likely be beneficial to both it and the FBI, which can’t monitor US citizens in this way without first getting a warrant or having the pretext of an ongoing investigation. The CIA and NSA are also limited on collecting intelligence domestically.”
Democrats are increasingly willing to sidestep constitutional restraints by outsourcing censorship and surveillance to private firms. Big Tech routinely moderates content at the request of powerful progressives. House Democrats have also pressured Verizon, AT&T, Dish, and other providers to stop hosting channels like Newsmax and One America News Network.
Facebook’s Oversight Board to Announce Yea or Nay on Letting Trump Back On
In 2020, Facebook set up a Supreme Court of sorts to review its content moderation decisions. On Wednesday at 9am, the Oversight Board will announce their verdict on the de-platforming of Donald J. Trump. BIG Technology writer Alex Kantrowitz gets into the pros and cons of the Oversight Board. I tend to agree with the critique that it’s basically a scam. From The Washington Post:
“Though the board is authorized to review Facebook’s content moderation decisions, overturn them, and has final say, critics argue it still operates within a framework that Facebook set up. Facebook handpicked the board’s members, who make decisions using Facebook’s content guidelines, and Facebook pays their salaries via a trust. So it would be a bit of a stretch to call the board completely independent.
The board also has limited authority. It can only review a small number of cases each year, and its ability to go beyond simple content moderation decisions is limited. The board, for instance, can’t remove or reinstate groups, it can’t review Facebook’s recommendation algorithms, and it can’t influence how Facebook builds its product. It addresses the outputs, not the machine. “It needs a much broader remit if it’s going to do proper oversight, Evelyn Douek, a Harvard lecturer who’s studying the board, told me.
With that in mind, critics say the board is a head-fake. They claim Facebook created it to offload responsibility for the behavior on its service. And they say Facebook is using it to convince Congress to preserve Section 230 of the CDA, which protects it from liability for what people post on its service. The Oversight Board pays its members six-figure annual salaries for 15 hours of work per week. And some say the money helps Facebook show Congress an esteemed group of intellectuals making content decisions for it. “It’s an embarrassing way for Facebook to pay a bunch of corrupt fancy academics to lobby for Facebook,” Stoller said.”
For the Nerds
The conservative legal movement has been debating whether or not abortion is per se illegal under the text of the Fourteenth Amendment. John Finnis says yes. Ed Whelan says no. Josh Craddock weighs in to support Finnis — and authored his own, longer law review article on the topic in 2017.
For the Oenophiles…or Just People Who Like Wine
In addition to my political and policy pursuits, I’m also a sommelier and wine educator on the side. One could say it’s my cope for putting up with the Swamp. To that end, I’ll be dropping in some wine tips, tricks, and recs.
For today: as it gets warmer outside, check out the underrated whites and roses from Portugal. A nice little Vinho Verde will run you anywhere from $7-$15 and is the type of wine I affectionately refer to as a “patio pounder.” Do with that what you will.
In Case You Missed It
Joy Pullman’s blistering takedown of decisions by Democrats to keep schools closed around the country.
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May 04, 2021 01:00 am
Truth, as the postmodernists have openly told us, is what authorities say it is. In such a world, you and I are nothing at all. Read More…
May 04, 2021 01:00 am
The achievements of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1965, tell different story from the “systemic racism” narrative that the wokesters are presenting. Read More…
May 04, 2021 01:00 am
Student loan legislation must focus on lowering tuition costs and ensuring that students are pursuing degrees that are likely to offer financial security. Read More…
May 04, 2021 01:00 am
Some prominent, self-appointed masters of our lives – I think of Klaus Schwab and Bill Gates − are counting on altering human nature and turning people into “trans-humans” – to borrow from their language Read More…
Vaccine tyranny?
May 04, 2021 01:00 am
Those on the left are increasingly aggressive in their insistence that each and every one of us, regardless of age or health, get vaccinated. Read more…
Sam Harris and societal decay
May 04, 2021 01:00 am
Sam Harris is a good man with bad ideas — and these ideas challenge the very fabric of American society. Read more…
Words are important
May 04, 2021 01:00 am
The Democrats know this, which is why they constantly reframe important issues to ensure that they can never be subject to a serious discussion. Read more…
Are Republicans afraid of the Squad?
May 04, 2021 01:00 am
A serious problem in our country is the lack of commitment to the Constitution — even among those who promised us to defend it. Read more…
Let’s invent an anti–Critical Race Theory
May 04, 2021 01:00 am
Instead of imaging systemic racism, we need to start teaching children how the West’s ruling elites routinely destroy, rather than raise up, the lowest classes. Read more…
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A 23-year-old man has been charged with manslaughter after fatally punching an elderly woman in the face last month in New Orleans, leaving the victim’s family questioning what motivated the brutal attack.”We have no earthly idea why this happened,” Jeffrey Johnson, brother of 61-year-old Margaret “Jane” Street, … Read more
New questions have surfaced about the impartiality of a juror who was empaneled for former police Officer Derek Chauvin’s trial last month after a picture sparked speculation that he may not have been as unbiased as he told the judge. What are the details? During jury selection, Brandon Mitchell — a 31-year-old high school bas … Read more
For years now, a number of the country’s most prominent publications have assumed the groveling role of palace guards for the state and its friends in Congress.
Billie Eilish resonates with her generation because she reflects it, giving the girls of Generation Z an aesthetic balm for the sting of influencer-era pressures and feminist confusion.
Our republic has never been more hierarchical, more riven by class, more managed by an elite than it is today. That is corporate liberalism’s legacy. But it need not be our future.
The mob was not amused, with the former ‘Jeopardy!’ contestants calling Kelly Donohue’s refusal to apologize for something he did not do ‘problematic.’
The psychedelic renaissance will resemble the 1960s, only this time, it will take place under medical authorities and state supervision, with the corporate sheen of celebrity endorsement.
Since when did we start treating potential partners as completed checklists, dished out by a cosmic espresso machine with a dollop of whipped cream and a brown paper napkin?
Former President George W. Bush lambasted his own party for electing Donald Trump even though Trump left office with a higher approval rating and strong minority vote totals.
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
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40.) REUTERS
The Reuters Daily Briefing
Tuesday, May 4, 2021
by Linda Noakes
Hello
Here’s what you need to know.
Bill and Melinda Gates split, millennials take a shine to lab-made diamonds, and an expletive-laced war of words over the South China Sea
Today’s biggest stories
President Joe Biden gestures in a classroom during a visit to Yorktown Elementary School in Yorktown, Virginia, May 3, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The U.S. Supreme Court today weighs whether low-level crack cocaine offenders should benefit under a 2018 federal law that reduced certain prison sentences in part to address racial disparities detrimental to Black defendants.
Declaring Lubbock a “sanctuary city” for the unborn, voters have approved a local ban on almost all abortions, and the Texas legislature is considering a law to bar the procedure as early as six weeks into a pregnancy.
Billionaire benefactors Bill and Melinda Gates, co-founders of one of the world’s largest private charitable foundations, filed for divorce after 27 years of marriage but pledged to continue their philanthropic work together.
Rescuers work at a site where an overpass for a metro partially collapsed with train cars on it at Olivos station in Mexico City, May 3, 2021. REUTERS/Luis Cortes
WORLD
At least 23 people were killed and 65 were hospitalized when a railway overpass and train collapsed onto a busy road in Mexico City, crushing cars under fallen carriages and rubble.
India halted its most popular sports tournament and the country’s opposition chief called for a nationwide lockdown as the number of coronavirus infections climbed past 20 million, a dismal milestone crossed only by the United States.
China urged the Philippines to observe “basic etiquette” and eschew megaphone diplomacy after the southeast Asian nation’s foreign minister used an expletive-laced Twitter message to demand that China’s vessels leave disputed waters.
Diplomatic dance or standoff? While North Korea’s barrage of complaints about Biden’s policies over the weekend might appear to be ratcheting up tensions, some signs suggest Pyongyang hasn’t ruled out diplomacy with the new team in Washington.
BUSINESS
Pfizer has forecast $26 billion in sales of the COVID-19 vaccine this year, an increase of more than 70% from its last projection. The vaccine, which it co-developed with Germany’s BioNTech, generated $3.5 billion in revenue in the first quarter, beating the consensus estimate of $3.28 billion.
The Biden administration has approved a major solar energy project in the California desert that will be capable of powering nearly 90,000 homes. Biden has vowed to expand development of renewable energy projects on public lands as part of a broader agenda to fight climate change and create jobs.
Berkshire Hathaway shareholders can accept Chairman Warren Buffett’s hostility to bitcoin, blank-check acquisition firms and wild bets on trading app Robinhood. But when it comes to environmental, social and corporate governance standards, many are drawing a line.
Pandora, the jewellery maker best know for its silver charm bracelets, is to stop selling mined diamonds and focus on more affordable, sustainable, lab-grown gems. The move comes amid a growing acceptance of man-made diamonds by millennials attracted to cheaper stones guaranteed not to have come from conflict zones.
Quote of the day
“What we’re seeing right now is the definition of speculative excess. There’s money being thrown at anything in the crypto space”
“I want to revive this sport and to encourage youth to practise it because it helps release bad energy,” says Mohammad Abu Musaed, who is training the first team of horseback archers in the Gaza Strip.
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by Ralph Benko: From time to time America confronts a mortal threat. We Boomers, under the leadership of Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., vanquished stagflation. Under the leadership of Rep. Charlie Wilson, D-Texas, and his muse, Joanne King Herring, we beat the USSR by arming the Afghan guerrillas.
Now, China has pronounced its intention to surpass America for technological, economic, and geopolitical world supremacy. Historically, a junior Congressperson will arise to become America’s champion. Meet Congressman Peter Meijer (R-Mi), my candidate for taming the Chinese dragon. But … how?
The Wizard of Oz was a political parable. When Dorothy discovered the Wizard to be just a man behind a curtain manipulating a huge image she accused him of being a very bad man. To which he responded, “Oh, no, my dear; I’m really a very good man, but I’m a very bad Wizard….”
Most Members of Congress are good people. Just … bad wizards. Peter Meijer stands out as, potentially, a very good Wizard. How so?
He’s the scion of a $7+billion family fortune. That’s just a happy accident. Yet rather than living a life of sybaritic luxury or bourgeois privilege Meijer put his life on the line in Iraq, conducting “intelligence operations to protect American and allied forces. As a sergeant, he led soldiers and missions that resulted in the detention of enemy operatives responsible for killing American soldiers and disrupted Iranian-backed efforts to take more American lives.”
After mustering out and finishing his college degree at Columbia University he opted, again, for service: Team Rubicon, a veteran-based disaster response organization.
Then Meijer opted for serious hardship duty: serving in the US Congress. There, he chose the hard course for a conservative Republican: voting his conscience in favor of impeaching President Trump after Trump failed to do his sworn duty to quell the Capitol riot.
To me Meijer looks like the full “Wizard of Oz” package, brains, heart, courage: a good man.
Yet for him to matter—to you, to me, to America—more is needed: a display of wizardry lest he end up as just one of the Hill rookery of 535 honorable but inconsequential, forgettable, legislators.
Meijer stands out because, above his ordinary duties on the Foreign Affairs and Homeland Security committees, he chose to serve on the obscure House Research and Technology subcommittee, the mostly overlooked commanding height determining whether America retains world preeminence … or lets China take the lead.
Meijer’s choice of this subcommittee signals wizardly discernment.
As he said to me in an exclusive interview:
“I’m seriously conservative. That said, the government plays a key role in technological progress. Private sector investment can’t go into something with an unclear outcome. Corporations need to justify their expenditures with profits. So they can’t really explore the unknown where the big breakthroughs are to be found. That’s our job.”
“Consider Dr. Katalin Karikó who did pathbreaking work into uncharted scientific territory, discovering messenger RNA, the very basis for the vaccines immunizing us from Covid. It’s the government’s job to fund the fantastic ideas … and fund courageous scientists like Dr. Karikó … to keep America at the forefront.:”
“But we have to do it right. President Biden’s plan seems to be to get Congress to appropriate big sums of money and then throw them at something. That’s not how science and technology works! To win the race with China we need to stay focused on outcomes, not outputs. Or it’s a waste of taxpayer money.
“There’s no simple solution in fixing the mismatch between how long it takes to get results that improve peoples’ lives, like the Covid vaccine, and who gets to take the credit. But there’s too much at stake to let that get in the way.”
“Now, because of China, America has a formidable rival for world technological, economic and geopolitical preeminence. I am committed to pushing America to increase the federal R&D budget, the research budget that brought us computers, microchips, the internet, cable TV, the Covid vaccine, and countless other technologies that create great jobs and make America the envy, and leader, of the world.”
Keep your eye on Peter Meijer. He just might prove to be the Wizard America needs to stay great at this moment of great vulnerability.
—————————– Ralph Benko is Chairman, The Capitalist League and contributor to the ARRA News Service.
Tags:Ralph Benko, The Capitalist League, Meet Rep. Peter Meijer, Fighting to Keep America, the Envy of the WorldTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Seton Motley: In Reality, prices for things are set by markets. There are hundreds – if not thousands – of different market factors that combine to determine said prices.
And these factors are constantly fluctuating. What is a good price for X today – may be too much tomorrow, and too little the day after.
So government mandating prices – is exceedingly stupid. Because it ignores these thousands of market factors. And never, ever adjusts to any of them. Instead, government bureaucrats – perhaps the least qualified gaggle of people on the planet – mandate unchanging, inflexible market terms. Often for decades before they revisit the damage they’ve done.
The federal government mandating prices for the nation is exceedingly stupid. For all of the above reasons. Plus, prices vary widely in different parts of the country. The price for a TV in Manhattan, New York City is more than a little different than the price for that TV in Manhattan, Kansas.
But state and local governments mandating prices is just about as stupid. They may allege to know their localities because they are closer to them. But they don’t – or else they wouldn’t be mandating prices.
The wage an employee earns is nothing more than the price of labor an employer pays to acquire the labor. Government mandating a minimum wage – is price-mandating.
“Raising the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2025 would…put 1.4 million Americans out of work, according to a study by the Congressional Budget Office released on Monday.“A phase-in of a $15 minimum wage would also lift some 900,000 out of poverty, according to the nonpartisan CBO.”So almost twice as many would be plunged into poverty as raised out of it. Excellent policy.
The local minimum wage math ain’t any better. And it isn’t just speculation – it’s reflection.
Seattle, Washington’s local government gave a minimum wage a go. How’d that go?
“It was found in hindsight that this increase did not help things. It was shown that employers hired fewer people, or reduced the number of hours of work to help with the increase from a business perspective.
“The University of Washington’s study supports this argument and concluded that the number of hours worked by affected employees fell by around nine percent. The study also concluded that affected employees’ net earnings fell by $125 a month on average, something critics of the increase warned prior to the bill’s passing.”Higher government-mandated labor prices? Lower hires, incomes, hours and benefits for the labor.
And it ain’t just labor government can screw up with price mandates. And they can screw things up by mandating artificially low prices just as much as they do mandating artificially high prices.
New York State Mandates $15-Per-Month High-Speed Internet:“That is New York state’s newly mandated price for a high-speed Internet – otherwise known as broadband – connection for low-income households under a new law signed last week by Gov. Andrew Cuomo , the first of its kind in the United States, he claims.”Except supplying high-speed Internet costs way more than $15-per-month. Which is why companies are charging more than $15-per-month.
So guess what will happen? Exactly what happened with Seattle’s minimum wage.
Seattle’s government mandated employers lose money hiring people. So Seattle’s employers fired people. And hired less. And worked them less. And gave them less benefits.
New York’s Internet price mandate for poor people – will do exactly the same to the Internet. Less investment. Which means less upgrades, updates and speeds.
And not just for poor people. For EVERYONE.
Internet providers have to make up their government-mandated losses – everywhere. Because math
Which means ALL of us get screwed.
Whic
h seems to be the point of all government-centric policy.
It certainly is its inexorable result.
——————————– Seton Motley is the President of Less Government and he contributes articles to ARRA News Service.
Tags:Seton Motley, Less Government, Government Mandating Prices, Is Just as Stupid, When States, Localities, Do ItTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Paul Jacob: The watchdog group Judicial Watch has obtained evidence that the government of California and the Biden camp violated the First Amendment rights of Americans during the 2020 presidential campaign.
In at least a couple dozen cases, social media companies complied with governmental requests to delete posts containing “misinformation,” the new code word for “stuff that I don’t want people to see or discuss.”
But hey: were all materials containing “misinformation” deleted from the annals of humankind, historians would be left with maybe ten or twelve pages and scrolls of primary documents. Into the trash? Herodotus, Josephus, Gibbon!
On the other hand, the social-media giants often curtail online discourse without any apparent urging by government censors.
Example? The popular discussion group Reddit has taken upon itself to block users from viewing the videos hosted by certain popular alternatives to YouTube like Rumble and BitChute. Reddit has China-walled links to the videos regardless of content. The problem, it seems, is that Rumble and BitChute are too much in favor of free speech.
Now, it may be that Reddit does its redactions in eager pursuit of its own ideological agenda rather than in obedience to some politician(s), but questions remain. When it comes to suppressing voices that socialist social media moguls find politically uncongenial, how much is reluctant submission to government pressure and how much is spontaneous voluntary initiative?
I’d like to know.
Barring any likelihood of a certain answer, we citizens must vigilantly watch governments — along with the tech firms receiving lucrative government contracts.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
——————————— Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
Tags:Paul Jacob, Common Sense, Reddit Redacts, the InternetTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:AF Branco, editorial cartoon, Cry UncleTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by NRA-ILA: President Biden dropped any pretense at “moderation” in his first address to a joint session of Congress since assuming the presidency. However much he tried to pad the early parts of his speech with bland, feel-good rhetoric, his remarks on gun control demonstrate that he is radical, out of touch, ill-informed, and bent on persecuting his political enemies over prioritizing important issues of general public interest.
If you didn’t catch the speech, don’t feel too bad. You were in good company. Biden pulled just over half the number of viewers who watched President Donald Trump’s first address to both houses of Congress.
Biden’s speechwriters used short sentences and sentence fragments to convey what would generously be characterized as his thoughts. The lack of detail was no doubt intentional to provide plausible deniability on fact checks and to avoid the darker implications of what he was proposing.
But even what managed to escape his mouth painted a preposterous vision of an American gun control regime totally at odds with the text, history, and tradition of America’s Constitution, the framework that sets us above and apart from other developed nations.
Biden, as he so often does, began his “argument” by misstating the facts: “In the 1990s, we passed universal background checks and a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines that hold 100 rounds that can be fired in seconds.”
None of that is actually true.
Yet if the 1993 law that provides for federal background checks on transfers by those “engaged in the business” of dealing in firearms – whether at storefronts, kitchen tables, gun shows, or flea markets – is Biden’s idea of universal checks, we’d be glad to concede that point. We’d simply ask in return that he stop promoting bills like the pending H.R. 8, which would expand that federal background check requirement to noncommercial transfers between two law-abiding neighbors or coworkers, between cohabitants, or even between cousins or other relatives.
There was also a federal law enacted in 1994 that limited what features could appear on various types of semiautomatic rifles and banned other types of guns by name. The law additionally limited the capacity of newly-manufactured firearm magazines to 10 rounds, rather than the 15 to 30 rounds that come standard on many popular types of guns.
Biden claimed in arguing for a new “assault weapons and high-capacity magazines ban” that “[w]e’ve done it before, and it worked.”
Again, this is not true.
The old law certainly didn’t “work” in any way relevant to public safety. Independent researchers studying the law have repeatedly failed to establish any causal relationship to reduced firearm-related crime. We’ve written lengthy articles explaining this, including the one at this link.
The law Biden is so proud of didn’t actually do anything to change the operating characteristics of the guns that Biden and other proponents of the law claimed made them especially dangerous. And the guns were so seldom used in violent crime in the first place that marginally suppressing their use did not and could not move the needle on homicide rates.
It is true that firearm-related crime rates declined in the years during and after the ban, but no one has ever convincingly shown that was as a result of the ban itself. This is the logical fallacy known to well educated eighth graders as post hoc, ergo propter hoc, or “after this, therefore because of this.”
If that were true, Biden would also have to admit that the exploding popularity and availability of lawful concealed carry during the same timeframe had precipitously driven down crime. The evidence for a causal connection is if anything much stronger in the concealed carry context, as economist John Lott has demonstrated in repeated studies on the issue.
Biden also said, “Talk to most responsible gun owners, most hunters – they’ll tell you there’s no possible justification for having 100 rounds – 100 bullets – in a weapon.” To this he ad-libbed a lame and oft repeated joke in the gun control world, as if were his own sick burn: “What do you think, are deer wearing Kevlar vests?”
The firearm magazines Biden is targeting, however, are not only or primarily the relatively obscure 100 round drums. Under his proposed restrictions, the upper limit would be 10 times less than that, or 10 rounds. These are the factory-supplied magazines that come as standard equipment on the most popular types of firearms tens of millions of Americans lawfully use for concealed carry and to protect their homes. A capacity of 15 to 17 is a normal range for a 9 mm handgun magazine, the archetypical modern self-defense handgun.
And while many Americans do indeed hunt deer with AR pattern and other semiautomatic rifles, many millions more have made these the most popular types of rifles in the country for what the U.S. Supreme Court recognizes as the core principle of the Second Amendment: home and self-defense. The typical AR-15 is sold with a magazine holding between 20 and 30 rounds.
The reason Americans and manufacturers should be able to choose the magazine capacity that is right for them is obvious: criminals don’t play by the rules. They often attack in groups, outnumbering their victims. They carry any weapon configurations they want, whether they’re legal or not. They are often under the influence of drugs that increase both their aggressiveness and resistance to pain, meaning their predations may continue long past the capacity of a person who wasn’t chemically supercharged. Indeed, some may even be wearing body armor, an element of preparation that would give them an advantage over unwary victims, even those equipped to defend themselves.
Unfortunately, innocent law-abiding victims don’t get to choose when, how, where, or against whom they’ll be fighting for their lives. But Joe Biden’s gun control policies would ensure that whatever the circumstances, their law-breaking assailants would have all the advantages.
Regarding the “assault weapons” ban Biden now supports, modern versions introduced in Congress are much more sweeping than in the past. If the former law did anything, it highlighted to gun owners the utility and benefits of the AR platform, catapulting it to the most popular type of centerfire rifle sold in America.
Yet as Justice Clarence Thomas pointed out in dissenting from the Supreme Court’s refusal to hear an assault weapons ban case, the court’s landmark decision in Heller v. McDonald “asks whether the law bans types of firearms commonly used for a lawful purpose—regardless of whether alternatives exist.”
Thomas continued:
Roughly five million Americans own AR-style semiautomatic rifles. … The overwhelming majority of citizens who own and use such rifles do so for lawful purposes, including self-defense and target shooting. … Under our precedents, that is all that is needed for citizens to have a right under the Second Amendment to keep such weapons.In the years since Thomas wrote those words in 2015, the popularity of AR-15s and similar semiautomatics has only increased, with some 20 million now in circulation in the U.S. It is those guns in the hands of peaceful, law-abiding Americans that Biden wants to ban.
Biden also mentioned what he called “ghost guns,” or firearms manufactured by individuals without serial numbers or the permission of the government. “Anyone from a criminal to a terrorist could buy this kit and, in as little as 30 minutes, put together a lethal weapon,” he declared. Then he added, “But not anymore.”
Biden is referring to his ongoing attempt, not just to regulate kits with all the parts necessary to make a firearm, but to empower federal regulators to unilaterally define and redefine what a “firearm” is under the law, altering the definition whenever they consider it necessary to expand their authority. From what we’ve seen of Biden’s proposal so far, this initiative wouldn’t clarify existing law; it would simply bypass it and allow the regulators to rule by decree.
That is not American. And it is certainly not moderate.
There were more inane statements about guns in Biden’s speech, too many to exhaustively debunk in one article. But one deserves special mention.
Biden insisted that gun control is not a partisan issue and that the country and gun owners were behind him on it. “We’re not changing the Constitution,” Biden declared. “We’re being reasonable.”
That was the biggest lie of all.
In fact, a recent Washington Post/ABC News poll showed that preference for stricter gun control is down 16% since April 2018, despite the media’s obsessive reporting on high profile crimes committed with firearms in March. The nation is now essentially evenly divided on the issue, with only 50% favoring stricter laws. Those who consider themselves political independents believe Biden is doing “too much” on the issue by a 7 point margin, with only 28% of independents supporting his approach. Biden’s current gun control agenda, in fact, failed to gain majority support from Republicans, Independents, or even Democrats.
That’s hardly a mandate for the sweeping restrictions Biden seeks, which among things would criminalize possession of the most popular rifles and magazines in America today, potentially creating millions of new felons out of formerly law-abiding citizens.
But, targeting law-abiding gun owners is really the point of gun control laws anyways, and Biden’s continuous lies on the topic only serve to continually highlight that point.
————————— NRA-ILA address President Biden’s call for Extreme Gun Control.
Tags:NRA-ILA, President Biden, goes all in, on calls for, extreme gun controlTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Marvin L. Covault, Lt Gen US Army, retired: SYSTEMIC RACISM.
Background: There has been systemic racism, at least on a regional level, in the United States. A nation that tolerates slavery is undeniably racist. 1865/post-Civil War; denying liberties for freed slaves in the former Confederate states was systemic racism. 1864/post-Civil War; Democrat-led proliferation of KKK organizations in nearly every county in the deep south was systemic racism. 1865-1964, for 99 years an underpinning of the Democrat party platform was segregation. That was pure, unadulterated, unambiguous, in-your-face systemic racism.
In 2016 Hillary Clinton set the stage for a new way to define racism with these prepared remarks: “You could put half of Trump’s supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. They’re racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamophobic, you name it.” In two sentences she defamed tens of millions of Americans with zero facts to back up her assertions and it stuck to the Democrat party. Since 2016 the Democrat party has expanded on what Hillary started to where we are today. That is, if you disagree with my platform or you are in agreement with President Trump’s policies you are a racist. That’s where the Democrats came up with their claim that systemic racism is rampant across the nation.
With that background let’s get to today’s issue, systemic racism. First, define systemic. It is “a practice, or set of beliefs that has been established as normative or customary throughout a political, social, or economic system; relating to or affecting the body as a whole.” The body as a whole; that’s us, you and me.
President Biden says over and over “The fact is, systemic racism touches every facet of American life.”
In order for Biden’s systemic racism theory, “touching every facet of American life”, to be true, how many of us have to be actively involved in being a racist? 100 million, 200 million? Stop reading right now. Stop.
Before you go on, take a few minutes to mentally cycle through your personal list of extended family members, neighbors, associates at work, and friends. While doing this, keep a tally of those whom you believe are racist. For this exercise, let’s further simplify racism as those white people who hate Black Americans and Black Americans who hate White Americans. This may take you a while. Keep going.
Ok, with how with many did you come up? I’m guessing, maybe two or three. Maybe only your weird Uncle Fred. I came up with exactly zero and I spent thirty-two years of my professional life interacting with Black Americans on a daily basis. I honestly believe if we asked all Americans to take this personal survey we would come up with similar results. So, who are the tens or hundreds of millions of racists touching “every facet of American life” day-in and day-out that Biden and the remainder of the Democrat party leaders are talking about?
I am seriously ashamed of this nation’s Democrat leaders who have made an intellectual choice to casually throw around the word “racist” as they go about their daily duties. I am enraged at those Democrats who work tirelessly to politicize racism for political party gain. I have absolute disrespect for those who seek to destroy the gains in integration and are so intellectually dishonest about Black achievements over the past fifty years.
Not to be underestimated, the Democrat leadership, aka the president, has taken the final step and allowed systemic racism to be morphed into an equally ugly and unfounded description of tens of millions of us, we are now also “white supremacists“.
Conclusion: the charge of systemic racism in America is a crock of crap.
CRITICAL RACE THEORY.CRT is based on the assumption that throughout US history since the first slaves arrived in 1619, all American institutions and laws have been intentionally crafted so that white people can put up social, economic, and legal barriers between the races in order to maintain their elite status. From these assumptions, the CRT folks have concluded that the source of poverty and criminal behavior in minority communities is due exclusively to these barriers.
But, what if the assumptions that led us to the theory are not valid? I recently watched on TV a nationally recognized civil rights lawyer and spokesperson. When asked to define CRT he responded, “CRT is a pack of lies.”
Here are some thoughts I gleaned from work by John Horvat II, a brilliant scholar, researcher, educator, speaker, and author. His bottom line is that CRT must be rejected if this country is to survive. Here are some CRT underpinnings to ponder:
CRT seeks to divide our society into two groups, the oppressors (white people) and the oppressed (black people) followed by a constant struggle between the two. The result, a deep-seated national culture of blame and hatred.
CRT sees race as the preeminent prism through which all things are considered; history, economics, sociology, science, virtually all aspects of life. All current governing and cultural structures are tainted with racism, systemic racism.
CRT teaches that those who are oppressors are incapable of ridding themselves of their biases. They are irredeemable (as Hillary told us in 2016) and incapable of exercising free will to change.
CRT sees reform of race relations as impossible. Because racism is systemic, the present institutions cannot be redeemed or modified.
Given that CRT tells us all things must be seen through the prism of race, including the sciences, its promoters declare falsely that science, reason, and logic are “white” ways of knowing things.
CRT weakens the bonds that create trust of individuals, institutions, and government.
CRT is irreconcilable with traditional Christian teachings.
CRT is totalitarian and allows for no opposing theories.
CRT holds that America and white Americans are irredeemably racist. The solution is reverse racism which is called equity. “Equity”, not to be confused with equality, further transforms all elements of America from merit-based to equity-based. Under equity, mediocracy will reign supreme.
Irrespective of this clear and present danger to our country, Critical Race Theory, Project 1619, and ethnic studies are being incorporated in public schools all over America. It’s part of an anti-racist mission that is anything but.
Imagine a couple of youngsters, one black, one white, from the same neighborhood; they are best friends, walk to school together, play ball after school, and are in and out of each other’s homes frequently. Then, while getting their required weekly dose of CRT instruction, they suddenly look across the classroom at one another and think, wow I thought he was my friend but he is actually my enemy. Indoctrination.
CRT is potentially the most dangerous initiative ever undertaken in our history with almost unimaginable ramifications. For example, Damon Young, a senior editor of The Root and an occasional New York Times contributor, adds, “Whiteness is a public health crisis. It shortens life expediencies, it pollutes air, it constricts equilibrium, it devastates forests, it melts ice caps, it sparks (and funds) wars, it flattens dialects, it infests consciousnesses, and it kills people”.
In line with the woke revolution, President Biden’s Department of Education has signaled its intent to impose the most radical forms of Critical Race Theory on America’s schools.
CRT, in the process of being included in educational curriculum at all levels, is purely and simply indoctrination. It will guarantee the perpetuation of systemic racism and white supremacy in this country for generations.
Culture is a powerful and pervasive force in any organization. If we think of the US as an organization, over the past 20 years we have seen a culture of blame cultivated in Washington politics and spread across the nation. A culture of blame is so powerful and debilitating it has rendered our Congress ineffective. Then in 2016 Hillary started the hate culture movement. CRT has the potential to take both the cultures of blame and hate to new levels with devastating consequences for generations to come.
CAMPAIGN HOMEROOM.
Is CRT the solution to our pathetic failed education standards in elementary, secondary, and higher educational institutions? Are we to be satisfied with an ever-increasingly racially divided nation? Are we to knuckle under to the Democrat leaders’ claims of systemic racism and white supremacy being taught to all of our youngsters? Is there no alternative solution?
The above, in this article, are what I call BGOs, blinding glimpses of the obvious. None of the above will fix racism or education and will probably make them worse. So where do we go from here with this discussion?
I have for the past few years been advocating a race relation/education reform solution.
By comparison with Biden’s Department of Education, which is planning to continue to throw tens of billions of dollars at education to fix our pathetic system, what I am proposing is free. While the Department of Education will increase regulations and control of education from the top-down, what I propose is completely run at the local level by County Boards of Education, superintendents, and school principals. While the federal government mandates more failed curriculum changes, including CRT, my solution is a proven concept and will fix education and race relations for generations to come. I call it Campaign Homeroom.
It is always a good idea to begin long-range strategic planning with a statement of the problems to be solved.
Problem # 1: Race relations and education are not what they should be and we are moving in exactly the wrong direction. We need to change direction quickly or it will be too late.
Problem # 2: We are suffering from a culture of blame in both race relations and education. Blame is a powerful and pervasive force that is polarizing and provides no hope of moving forward. Blame must be supplanted with something positive.
Problem # 3: Kids are not born bigoted and hateful. They learn it. We have to change what they learn.
Problem # 4: Federal education programs costing hundreds of billions of dollars and utilizing thousands of bureaucrats have not worked. We have to decentralize decision-making and execution.
Problem # 5: Every day thousands of US students drop out of school and every year thousands more graduate from high school functionally illiterate. They do so because they got behind. We have to figure out why and fix it.
There is no quick fix for what has brought us to this impasse. The solution will only come if we change what our youngsters learn, how they think, what they believe, and how they behave.
All of these problems can be solved through a comprehensive Character Education program involving every school and every student in America. It will take a well-thought-out strategic campaign plan to reach all 60 million students.
This Concept of Operations, called Campaign Homeroom, is not a guessing game. The strength of this concept is that there are existing successful models to lean on and learn from.
Strategic planning becomes easier if we can put a frame around the organization to gain focus on all the involved parties. The organization in question will consist of the following:
142,000 schools
180 million adults with children under age 18
60 million K-12 students
4.5 million teachers
2.4 million Home Room volunteers
Over 200,000 Superintendents, Principals, and Education Board members
That is about 250 million, three of every four Americans, will, in some way, be involved in Campaign Homeroom.
The concept is simple: The first twenty minutes of every school day will be devoted to the Homeroom period in which volunteers will teach a Character Curriculum every school day in every school to every student, grades K-12. Doing so will reset the value base in this country and establish a culture of accountability, respect, and trust.
There was not and never will be a quick fix to the deep-seated five problems outlined above. It will take a generation to accomplish. It will transform America.
Here is the curriculum: accountability, citizenship, commitment, compassion, courage of convictions, courtesy, confidence, healthy habits, honesty, honor, humility, integrity, judgment, leadership, morality, perseverance, punctuality, respect, responsibility, self-respect, selfless service, sportsmanship, and trust. That is, teach and talk about values. Call it the Character Curriculum. There will need to be three versions of the curriculum; elementary k-5, middle school 6-8, and high school 9-12. Out of this will come an overpowering culture of accountability, respect, and trust across America.
This curriculum is transformational and this is what it will do:
ACCOUNTABLE students do not resort to blaming.
Students who are steeped in COMMITMENT, CONFIDENCE, PERSEVERANCE, PUNCTUALITY, and RESPONSIBILITY do not skip school, fall behind or drop out.
Students who are deeply rooted in TRUST and RESPECT will strike down bullying and are unlikely to become racially bigoted adults.
Students who are COMPASSIONATE, COURTEOUS, HONORABLE, GOOD CITIZENS, and demonstrate the COURAGE OF THEIR CONVICTIONS do not join street gangs.
Students who have accepted HONESTY, MORALITY, AND INTEGRITY as their guiding light will likely be life-long upstanding citizens.
Students who understand, live, and accept a life of SELFLESS SERVICE are unlikely to become self-serving adults.
Students who have an understanding that there is a lot they don’t yet know and even part of what they believe they know might be incorrect, have the quality of HUMILITY.
Students who understand SELF-RESPECT recognize that they are now better than they used to be and can be counted on in times of temptation because they are morally dependable.
With this value base, students across the nation are more likely to exercise good JUDGMENT and become great LEADERS.
The concept of using character education to “indoctrinate” youngsters has been effectively used by a national organization called The First Tee. It uses golf as the medium to bring kids together. The outcome is almost immediately transformational. I was involved with a First Tee chapter that provided character education to all of the 4th graders in a North Carolina county. The teachers very reluctantly observed the process until after about two months they all had an OMG moment. “What have you done to my students, they were asking, they are more attentive, more engaged in learning, more polite and understanding.” Studies of The First Tee program have shown that 100% of character education translates directly into the classroom and 80% into the students’ homes. A mother said to me, “what have you done to my teenage daughter, she now acts like a real human being?”
To be completely upfront here, I have spent the last few years attempting to market this concept to include sending the Campaign Homeroom document to President Trump, the VP, COS, White House principal deputies, Secretary DeVos, and North Carolina political leaders, all to no avail. My conclusion is that it rarely, if ever, makes it through the mailroom. All of the details for a national campaign of character education are contained in a 25-page White Paper. If any of you are interested, I will forward a digital copy to you upon request; my email, MandDcovault@yahoo.com
BOTTOM LINE. Our country is in trouble, serious trouble, and moving in exactly the wrong direction. The kids are our future and what they learn today will define the America of tomorrow.
Just for a moment imagine, across this country, 60 million K-12 youngsters in 2.4 million Home Room classes at 8 o’clock every morning in every school in America being taught and mentored by 2.4 million volunteers on the subject of character. Campaign Homeroom is within the art of the possible and “We the People”, not we the government, can make it happen and transform America.
——————————— Marvin Covault, Lt.Gen (US Army Ret.) shared this article. H/T McIntosh Enterprises.
Tags:Marvin Covault, Lt, Gen, US Army, Retired, Systemic Racism, Critical Race Theory, Campaign HomeroomTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Victor Davis Hanson, Ph.D.Victor Davis Hanson: (Private Papers) As I wrote not long ago, I think we can expect a big boom of pent-up demand coming that will result in 5 percent or so of annualized GDP growth, maybe as early in late second or third quarter of 2021 lasting until mid-year next year but accompanied by inflation reaching 4-6 percent. And then at some point, depending on whether the Biden huge tax hike, green deals, and new regulations are in effect, much higher inflation, slower growth, and recessionary trends in late 2022 or early 2023. So growth/boom/inflation/stagflation/recession?
You say, “So what? That’s the natural order of things”. Perhaps. But an entire generation has come of age without knowledge of anything but de facto zero interest, and little or no inflation, and plentiful jobs. I can attest from 1978-84, that inflation, recession, and unemployment can all exist at the same time. I can remember feeling lucky to have a farm production credit loan at 9% and knowing “delighted” friends who bought homes in 1981 at 10% and a family member who bought a car at 18% and felt he got a good rate. So buckle up…
The general consumer price index went up in March at .6 percent, in just 30 days (if that were to continue, we would have an annualized rate of over 7 percent.) But what really counts are life’s vitals like increases in gasoline (out here it’s up $1 dollar a gallon since the new year), and natural gas heating (5 percent rise). But these measurements lag. Housing has gone up about 20 percent here in California, at least new housing that depends on sky-high lumber.
So I drove into town again yesterday and did the following: bought gas at $3.97 a gallon; went to Home Depot: there I was stunned to see 4×8 one-inch plywood at over $100 a sheet and 1/2 inch over $60 (a year ago they were a quarter that or less). I wanted to buy a cheap ratchet set: all sold out, as many things in the tool departments were. All the lumber was either picked over or so expensive to be left alone (e.g., redwood 2/4s) or sold out, as paradoxical as that seemed. A family member is looking at a new house. The price from a year ago has gone up by a third. Propane has soared too.
Labor is short; “now hiring” or “workers wanted” signs are common. In sum, millions, with stimulus money, are re-emerging from their cocoons—rediscovering the joys of eating out, traveling, going somewhere/anywhere, driving longer than to the supermarket and back, and eager to buy a car or truck, remodel, fix up something—as the somnolent economy retools to accommodate them, but in apprehension faces higher taxes and more regulations. And the Biden response: print more money, dream up more unproductive woke “investment” and run up bigger deficits as if we were back in March 2020 in need of stimuli.
——————————- Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. Hanson shared via Private Papers.
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by Fred Lucas: About 14 separate families or groups of illegal immigrants boarded a flight Thursday at McAllen International Airport in Texas, the man in charge of border security during the Trump administration told The Daily Signal.
Mark Morgan, former commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said he watched from a nearby seat as the illegal immigrants boarded the American Airlines flight just after 3 p.m. CDT at the airport of the border town.
“By the eighth or ninth family is when I decided to take pictures,” Morgan told The Daily Signal on Friday. “I decided to take a video when I saw a large family with an infant child.”
When he witnessed the immigrants boarding the airliner bound for connecting flights at Dallas-Fort Worth, Morgan was traveling with Thomas Homan, acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement during the Trump administration.
Although the migrant families or groups on the flight didn’t appear to have identification, each held travel documents inside manila envelopes with their flight times and final destination.
That’s a marked difference from U.S. citizens when they board a plane, Morgan said.
The packets held by the migrants bore the words: “PLEASE HELP ME. I DO NOT SPEAK ENGLISH.”
A message asking for help with boarding a flight is visible on a vacant seat
near illegal immigrants March 30 on a flight from McAllen to Houston, Texas.
Morgan said the illegal immigrants on his flight carried similar signs.
At least one boy among the illegal immigrants boarding the flight held a smartphone, video shows. It is not clear whether the illegal immigrants were tested for COVID-19.
The incident witnessed by Morgan is another sign of the border crisis that has consumed much of President Joe Biden’s first 100 days in office. It is not clear how many such flights carrying how many illegal immigrants have flown out of McAllen and other border cities since Biden took office Jan. 20, where the migrants went, or how much it cost.
The Washington Postreported that more than 100,000 individuals tried to cross the southern border illegally in February. In March, that number increased to about 172,000, the highest monthly total in nearly two decades.
In November 2020, when Biden was elected, federal agents caught about 69,000 illegal immigrants at the border.
In the same period a year ago, the number arrested at the border between November 2019 and March 2020 decreased from 42,000 to about 33,000, according to government data.
Illegal immigrants, interviewed in recent news accounts, said they crossed the U.S.-Mexico border anticipating more accommodating policies from the new president.
Rep. Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., had a personal experience similar to Morgan’s during a recent flight back after a trip to the southern border.
“Tuesday morning on my flight, I was sitting right beside an illegal alien that had come from Guatemala with her daughter and she had this envelope that says, ‘I don’t speak English, please help me find my airplane and get on the right flight,’” Clyde told reporter Rachel del Guidice in an interview for “The Daily Signal Podcast.”
The Georgia congressman added:
And now, on the other side of it was her itinerary. She was on her way to Philadelphia. I know that in one instance, the day before, someone was going to New Jersey, another person was actually going to California. The one beside me was going to Philadelphia. This basically makes every solitary state of the union a border state, because as these illegals come across the border, they’re farmed out to every state of the union. And we don’t know whether or not they have actually had a negative COVID test so that they can actually be shown to not be carrying the COVID-19 virus. … If you come into the United States legally through a regular port of entry, you fly in, you have to show a negative COVID-19 test within three days of arrival at that port of entry, if you come in legally. But if you come in illegally, you don’t have to do that at all.Such flights occurred under previous administrations, including during the border surge in 2019, Morgan said. But the Trump administration worked to end the practice, he said.
“We had all the tools in place,” Morgan told The Daily Signal. “Now it’s worse than we’ve ever had. During the Trump administration, we did everything we could to stop this. The current administration is trying to better facilitate and prepare [illegal immigrants] for release.”
Historically, many illegal immigrants who are released into the country don’t face a hearing in immigration court for months or years. Critics such as Morgan say that flying them across the country will make it likely that they will remain here illegally.
“These aren’t detention centers [at the border]. They are welcome centers where they are given free clothes, free health care, and free plane tickets, so they will be flying all over the U.S. and never be heard from again,” Morgan said.
Morgan added that private detention centers with bed space paid for by taxpayers now sit empty.
“This is both an ideology and a political strategy,” Morgan said of the Biden administration’s actions. “They don’t want detention.”
The flight that Morgan saw the illegal immigrants board, and others like it, would have to be facilitated by the Biden administration. This would require a waiver from the Transportation Security Administration of the requirement to show ID, Morgan said.
And the families’ transportation costs would have been covered by taxpayers, who are expected to obey the nation’s rules and laws in their own travels, he noted.
Driven by the new border crisis, Customs and Border Protection facilities have released some families to nongovernmental organizations and coordinated efforts to transport them, Morgan said. These NGOs receive federal, state, and private funding.
“In fiscal year 2020, the Trump administration released less than 1,000 individuals [caught at the border], and we were addressing loopholes,” he said. “Fast forward to President Biden, and he systematically removed those policies.” Destinations for families of illegal immigrants vary, Morgan said.
“They go anywhere they want to go. A family comes in and, in some cases, mothers are bringing children when the father has already entered the country illegally,” Morgan said. “They go wherever the work is. Illegal aliens get to choose. The NGOs typically ask where they would like to go.”
Neither the Department of Homeland Security nor the Transportation Security Administration immediately responded to The Daily Signal’s inquiries about what Morgan saw at the Texas airport. The White House also did not respond to inquiries.
American Airlines handles all flights paid for by the federal government similarly, spokeswoman Stacy Day told The Daily Signal. Day, however, could not provide an estimated cost.
Day said in an email statement:
All passengers traveling domestically are cleared by TSA. American, like all U.S. airlines, provides travel to the federal government through our Government Services Agreements; however, the government does not disclose information about the nature of the flights they take or the passengers who are traveling. There isn’t a similar program for NGOs; they can book travel as any other customer. We’ll refer you to the relevant U.S. agencies for any additional information.Fewer than 20% of illegal immigrants that encounter Customs and Border Protection agents have a credible claim that they fear conditions in their home country, according to government data.
TSA’s waiver of the requirement to show identification is a security risk, Morgan said.
“I have been in service to the country for 35 years. I had to show ID twice and unpack my bag [at the same airport],” Morgan said.
“They didn’t have to show ID. They don’t have ID,” he said of the illegal immigrants. “They don’t have documentation. … We don’t know anything about their backgrounds.”
TSA announced Friday that it will extend the mask mandate for all airline passengers because of COVID-19 until Sept. 13. The children in photos from the McAllen flight did not appear to wear masks.
A veteran FBI agent and official, Morgan later was chief of the Border Patrol in the final months of Barack Obama’s presidency.
President Donald Trump picked Morgan as acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, but within two months tapped him in July 2019 to head Customs and Border Protection for the remainder of Trump’s term.
——————————– Fred Lucas writes for The Daily Signal. Ken McIntyre contributed to this report, which was updated to include the remarks from Rep. Andrew Clyde, R-Ga.
Tags:Fred Lucas, EXCLUSIVE, Illegal Immigrants, Fly American, Courtesy, Biden Border PolicyTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Gary Bauer: Biden’s Odd Choice
Yesterday, President Biden took a victory lap in Georgia after his unofficial State of the Union address to celebrate his first 100 days in office.
But going to Georgia is an odd choice for Biden. He has condemned the state for returning to the days of Jim Crow. He supported punishing Georgia with boycotts. Yet the first place he goes after his big address to the nation is Georgia?
Once again, the visual of his rally was just like the bad optics from his speech before Congress. It was as if we’re stuck in April of 2020, not April of 2021. Many at the drive-in rally stayed in their cars.
And the vaccinated Biden, with his vaccinated wife and his vaccinated Secret Service agents all seemed to panic when he couldn’t find his mask at the podium.
I don’t understand the message they are trying to send. This was an outdoor event, and he just told us that we don’t have to wear masks outside.
Ratings Bomb
While Big Media continues to act like Biden’s address to the nation was a modern-day version of the Gettysburg Address, the American people obviously disagree. The ratings are in and Biden bombed. Only 27 million people tuned in to Biden’s address Wednesday night.
Apparently, the only time Biden supporters show up is on Election Day. Strange.
For perspective, Donald Trump’s first address before Congress in 2017 got just under 48 million viewers. In 2018, 46 million Americans tuned in for Trump’s State of the Union address. In 2019, just under 47 million tuned in. And in 2020, 37 million watched the State of the Union address.
So, Donald Trump’s worst ratings were still significantly better than Joe Biden’s showing Wednesday night.
In addition, a new Rasmussen poll asked voters to rank Biden’s first 100 days. Only 36% said they were a “success,” while 44% said they were a “failure.”
Asked if Biden has been a “better” or “worse” president than expected, only 26% said Biden has been “better than expected,” while 39% said he has been “worse than expected.”
Biden’s radical agenda is clearly failing to unite the country.
I hope you have had a chance to review our list of Biden’s 100 mistakes in his first 100 days. Please share it with friends and family members, especially those who may still cling to the fiction that Biden is a “moderate.”
Arizona Audit Continues Last week, we reported that the Arizona Democrat Party had gone to court furiously attempting to prevent the state of Arizona from auditing the election results in Maricopa County, Arizona’s largest county.
That seemed really bizarre since Democrats and their media allies have assured us for months now that there were zero irregularities in the election. So, why fight an audit that could prove them right?
Well, the left has a problem. In spite of their insistence that the election was squeaky clean, a lot of Americans just aren’t buying it.
For example, Rasmussen also asked voters whether they believed Joe Biden won the election fairly. Only 48% of voters said yes, 39% said no and 13% aren’t sure. Amazingly, even 13% of Democrats don’t think Biden won the election fairly, but they are glad he won anyway.
I am pleased to report that Arizona Democrats lost their appeal to stop the audit, and hand recounts of more than two million ballots have been underway for several days now.
In response, Arizona’s left-wing secretary of state dispatched observers. Now left-wing groups are calling on the Biden Justice Department to send federal monitors to Arizona.
I have no idea how this will come out. But if major fraud is discovered it would delegitimize the idea that Biden has a mandate for his far-left agenda.
And for those who suggest that continuing to question the results amounts to undermining democracy, I would argue that this audit is much less of a threat than packing the Supreme Court.
Or creating more states to pack the Senate.
Or nationalizing all election laws.
Or flooding the country with illegal aliens.
Or waging war on law enforcement.
Or abusing our intelligence agencies to create false narratives about Russian collusion.
Pence In The Palmetto State
Former Vice President Mike Pence made his first public address yesterday since leaving office. Speaking before South Carolina’s Palmetto Family Council, Pence praised the historic accomplishments of the Trump Administration, and blasted the Biden/Harris Administration for, among other things, “unleashing the worst border crisis in our history.”
Pence vowed to fight for election integrity, stand with law enforcement and resist critical race theory. The vice president reminded his audience of what it was like the last time Joe Biden was in the White House and how Republicans won a historic victory of 63 seats in the 2010 elections.
Pence said confidently, “God isn’t done with America yet,” and he relayed a very poignant story about how he came to faith in 1978 at a youth festival that was almost canceled.
You can watch his speech here. His remarks begin at the 35:32 mark.
Will We Listen?
Years ago, a woman waited patiently in line to speak with me after I had finished delivering a speech. When her turn came, she started crying. She said she had escaped communism in eastern Europe. But she was starting to see everything she ran away from happening here in America. That was startling to hear.
Today, more and more refugees from communism are speaking up with the same warning. One of them is Maximo Alvarez.
Alvarez is a refugee from Castro’s Cuba. Communism and socialism are not theoretical systems of government to him. They are a harsh, brutal reality. But Alvarez has said that when he looks around America today, he sees shadows he thought he had outrun.
Every communist revolution has followed the same pattern. It begins with people yearning for power telling their fellow citizens that they know a way to give them everything for free.
The totalitarian left inevitably declares war on a nation’s police and military. Sound familiar? That is, of course, until they can gain power and the police and military are used to oppress the people. The totalitarian left doesn’t want the people to be able to protect themselves, so only the government has guns.
A totalitarian revolution always mocks God and tells you to follow the science. The totalitarian left thrives on division and envy. And it relies on censorship and media propaganda to survive.
All these things are the shadows that Alverez thought he had outrun. His father once told him to do everything possible to stop this from happening in America because there’s nowhere else to run.
When Paul Revere warned the colonists that the British were coming, they heeded his warning. Will we heed the warnings of those who escaped the clutches of the totalitarian left before it’s too late?
Good News
Alabama Governor Kay Ivey signed legislation preventing biological men who claim to be women from competing in girls’ sports.
Arizona Governor Doug Ducey signed sweeping pro-life legislation into law.
California Governor Gavin Newsom will face a recall election later this year.
Montana Governor Greg Gianforte signed three pro-life bills into law.
Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt signed three pro-life bills into law.
The America First Legal Foundation is suing the Biden Administration for racial discrimination. The lawsuit stems from the recent COVID relief bill that included special payments (reparations) only for black farmers.
New polling finds overwhelming support for voter ID laws. This poll, and others like it, demonstrate just how extreme Biden, Schumer, and Pelosi are. Their election bill, H.R. 1, repeals all state voter ID laws!
Yet another poll finds overwhelming opposition to the Democrats’ “defund the police” agenda.
———————– Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
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by Michael Barone: The COVID-delayed results of the 2020 census are finally in, with totals for the 50 states and the District of Columbia at nearly one-third of a billion — 331,449,281 — and with surprises having to do with the short run and what French historians call the “longue duree.”
The short-term news revolves around the function for which the framers of the Constitution mandated the world’s first regularly scheduled census: the reapportionment of seats of the House of Representatives among the states. That’s done according to a 1941 statutory formula that the Census Bureau conveniently applies.
The results were underwhelming. Only seven seats out of 435 were switched from one state to the other. Texas gained two, and Colorado, Florida, Montana, North Carolina and Oregon gained one each. Losing one each were California (for the first time in history), Illinois, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
Readers who keep up with these things will recognize that population and representation continue to flow from the Northeast and Midwest to the South and west and, generally, from Democratic states to Republican states. But they will also recognize the changes are small, nothing like the censuses in which one state gained eight seats (California in 1960) or another lost five (New York in 1980).
The partisan effects are likely to be small as well, expert forecasters agree. Sean Trende of Real Clear Politics predicts a Republican net gain of four seats. The Cook Political Report’s David Wasserman pegs it at 3.5 and Kyle Kondik of Sabato’s Crystal Ball at two. Not quite enough to overturn the 222-213 majority Democrats won in November 2020.
All three emphasize that the redistricting processes within the states could produce a wide range of results. According to Wasserman, Republicans control redistricting in states with 187 districts, Democrats in states with 75 districts and theoretically bipartisan commissions in states with 121 districts. Control is split between parties in states with 46 districts, and six states have just one district each.
That’s less of an advantage than Republicans had in the 2010 cycle and about the same as they had in the 2000 cycle; it’s less than the advantages Democrats had in the 1960, 1970 and 1980 cycles. Democrats’ advantages then derived from their majorities in northern metro areas and near monopolies in the South. Republicans’ more recent advantages are due mainly to the clustering of Democratic voters in central cities, sympathetic suburbs and university towns, while Republican voters are more evenly spread around the country.
As for the long-term effects, the 2020 census shows less population change and less internal migration than government and private estimators expected, based on models from previous decades. Arizona grew 3.3% less than the census estimate and didn’t gain the seat widely forecast, and Texas and Florida each fell a seat short of expected gains.
On the other hand, population outflows were less than expected, especially in New York, New Jersey and Rhode Island. The latter two didn’t lose seats as expected, and New York was only 89 people short of not losing a seat for the first time since 1940.
Speaking of which, the picture the census paints of the 2010-20 decade closely resembles that of the long-past decade of 1930-40. In those 10 years, dominated by the Great Depression of 1929-33 and its echo in the Roosevelt Recession of 1937-39, the nation’s population increased by only 7.3%.
That’s eerily similar to the 7.4% in the decade that just ended, dominated by the sluggish Obama recovery of 2009-16 and the downscale-driven, pre-COVID Trump upturn of 2017-19. These two stand out as the lowest growth intervals in American history; in every other 10-year period, the nation’s population has grown by double-digit (rounded off) percentages.
In each case, the previous decade was a poor guide for the one that followed, because the earlier one featured an abrupt decline, almost to zero, in immigration from abroad. That was the intended result of the 1924 Immigration Act. It was the unintended (and largely unnoticed) result of the housing price collapse in 2007, which struck first in markets with heavy Hispanic immigration. New York started gaining House seats after the 1892-1924 Ellis Island immigration ended; California stopped gaining them after the 1982-2007 inflow from Mexico stopped.
The 1930s were a decade when, with the picturesque exception of the Okies fleeing the Dust Bowl in the Great Plains, Americans hunkered down and cultivated their gardens. The 2010s turn out to be a decade when Americans, to a greater extent than appreciated by demographers and forecasters, hunkered down and cultivated their grievances in what The New York Times’ Ross Douthat describes as our “decadent society.”
By 1940, Americans had settled into a period of partisan parity and gridlock: Democrats won the presidency in four of six elections, from 1940 to 1960, but a coalition of Republicans and conservative Democrats controlled Congress for almost all that time. Partisan parity and gridlock are certainly familiar now: Joe Biden’s congressional majorities are almost identical to George W. Bush’s 20 years ago.
But some things can change. The census conducted on April 1, 1940, came just weeks before the fall of France and the accession of Winston Churchill. Within months, Depression America became Wartime America, and then, a few years later, it became Postwar America: No more hunkering down. As America emerges from lockdown, are similar changes and challenges ahead?
—————————— http://arkansasgopwing.blogspot.com/2021/05/the-2020-census-small-republican-gains.htmlMichael Barone is a senior political analyst for the Washington Examiner, resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and longtime co-author of The Almanac of American Politics. Article shared by Rasmussen Report.
Tags:Rasmussen Reports, Michael Barone, The 2020 Census, Small Republican Gains, in a Nation, Hunkered DownTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Which brings the question: What is D.C.’s grievance that America must somehow rectify by making it a state? Answer: Democrats want D.C. to have two senators to cement their control of the U.S. Senate, as they pack the Supreme Court by expanding the number of justices from nine to 13.
“How many legs does a dog have if you call his tail a leg?” asked President Abraham Lincoln, who answered his own question:
“Four. Saying that a tail is a leg doesn’t make it a leg.”
And Congress’ saying that D.C. is a state would equally contradict truth and reality, as our nation’s capital lacks all of the attributes of a 51st state of the Union.
Whence came our capital of Washington, D.C.?
The city was carved out of Maryland and Virginia in 1790, which voted to cede 100 square miles on the Potomac for a capital city of the United States to become the domicile of the federal government.
In 1846, Virginia’s share of the land, some 32 square miles, was ceded back. What was left was today’s Washington, D.C., of 68 square miles.
Is that sufficient for a state of the Union? Only if one wishes to change the character and composition of that Union.
Consider. The smallest state for 230 years has been Rhode Island. At 1,214 square miles, it is still 18 times as large as D.C. If D.C. were to become a state, it would be a microstate, smaller than every one of the 24 remaining counties of the state, Maryland, from which it was carved.
The Maryland counties that border D.C., Montgomery and Prince George’s, are eight times the size of Washington, D.C., and each has a million people, dwarfing the 700,000 residents of D.C.
Directly across the Potomac in Virginia is Fairfax County, also eight times as large as D.C., and with hundreds of thousands more people.
Supporters of statehood say D.C. has more people than Wyoming.
True, but Wyoming is also roughly the size of the United Kingdom, and more than 1,000 times the size of Washington, D.C.
Even by the standards of American cities, Washington ranks no higher than 20th in population.
Texas — with Houston, Dallas, San Antonio and Fort Worth — and California — with Los Angeles, San Jose, San Diego and San Francisco — both have four cities larger and more populous than our aspiring city-state of D.C.
By the terms of its admission to the United States as a state, the Republic of Texas was ceded a right to split into as many as five states of the Union, which it was joining. FDR’s future vice president, the Texan John Nance “Cactus Jack” Garner, was all for it.
“An area twice as large and rapidly becoming as populous as New England should have at least ten Senators,” Garner told The New York Times in April 1921, “and the only way we can get them is to make five States, not five small States, mind you, but five great States.”
Statehood for little D.C. could start a trend where mega-cities like Chicago and New York, with five and 10 times the size and population of D.C., secede from their respective states and seek full statehood as well.
What is at the root of this drive to make D.C. a state?
The answer may be found in the political character of our capital city.
Since the 23rd Amendment was ratified, 60 years ago, D.C. residents have voted in 15 presidential elections. In all 15 elections, D.C.’s three electoral votes have gone to the Democratic nominee.
Even in the 49-state Nixon and Reagan landslides of 1972 and 1984, D.C. went four- and five-to-one Democratic. In eight presidential elections since 1990, the GOP nominee has failed to win 10% of the D.C. vote.
Since the mid-1970s, D.C. has had home rule and, in every election since, has chosen a Democratic mayor and a Democratic city council.
How irredeemably Democratic is D.C.?
Voter registration statistics in the city as of last December was 403,000 Democrats and 30,000 Republicans, a ratio of 13-1.
Which brings the question: What is D.C.’s grievance that America must somehow rectify by making it a state?
Answer: Democrats want D.C. to have two senators to cement their control of the U.S. Senate, as they pack the Supreme Court by expanding the number of justices from nine to 13.
This is a naked national power grab — pure and simple.
If the real concern were the inability of the D.C. electorate to vote for members of Congress, that could be remedied — by returning the residential portions of D.C. to Maryland, whence they came, or by allowing D.C. residents to vote in Maryland’s congressional elections.
Making D.C. a state would send two Democrats to the Senate indefinitely. But it would violate the constitution and compact under which the nation was founded. And it would start a stampede for other disfiguring alterations, like packing the Supreme Court by adding four new justices.
Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam and American Samoa could soon follow and enter claims to become states of the American Union.
And a second unraveling of the republic would begin.
————————— Patrick Buchanan (@PatrickBuchanan) is currently a blogger, conservative columnist, political analyst, chairman of The American Cause foundation and an editor of The American Conservative. He has been a senior adviser to three Presidents, a two-time candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, and was the presidential nominee of the Reform Party in 2000.
Tags:Patrick Buchanan, conservative, commentary, The DC Statehood Power GrabTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Daniel Greenfield: When Airbnb began boycotting the homes of Jews living in those parts of Israel claimed by Islamic terrorists, the Jewish communities of the United States rallied against the dot com.
Sarah Margon however stood against the Jewish communities and with the Airbnb boycott.
“Airbnb to remove listings in Israeli settlements of occupied West Bank. Thanks @Airbnb for showing some good leadership here. Other companies should follow suit,” she tweeted.
“Airbnb is playing a role by supporting the settlement real estate infrastructure — they’re perpetuating an illegal activity,” Margon ranted. “There is no way for a company…to do business in the settlements without violating the laws of occupation.”
That’s the woman Biden picked as his Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor.
“Yesterday @Airbnb agreed to stop renting in the Israeli-occupied settlements,” Margon argued. “Other companies should follow @Airbnb’s lead.”
BDS will now have a powerful ally within the Biden administration and the State Department.
Margon’s hatred for Israel was not surprising. The leftist extremist was heading up the Human Rights Watch office in Washington D.C. HRW has defended BDS and recently issued a report falsely accusing Israel of apartheid. Airbnb’s temporary surrender to BDS was an HRW project.
Sarah Margon was defending an HRW policy. HRW’s Deputy Director for the region had agreed in an interview that it was a crime for Jews to live anywhere in the West Bank. That same HRW official recently argued that the Biden administration should support the “right” to boycott Israel. Margon’s appointment would make that much more likely. So much for human rights.
Margon was active on social media “urging companies to pull out of the Israeli Settlements”, but her hatred for the Jewish State goes beyond an economic war of BDS in all its forms.
When Peter Beinart put out his infamous, “I No Longer Believe in a Jewish State” op-ed, Margon highlighted an excerpt calling for one state and the destruction of Israel.
“Peter Beinart on fire,” she cheered.
That’s Biden’s Assistant Secretary for Human Rights supporting the destruction of Israel.
Sarah Michelle Margon is one of a number of anti-Israel activists Biden picked including Maher Bitar, who was pictured dancing in a keffiyah in front of a banner reading, “Divest from Israel Apartheid” and is now Biden’s Senior Director for Intelligence on the National Security Council, and Hady Amr, who described being “inspired by the Palestinian intifada” and is now Biden’s point man on the conflict between Israel and the terrorists fighting to destroy the Jewish State.
Reema Dodin, Biden’s Deputy White House Legislative Director, had argued that, “suicide bombers were the last resort of a desperate people.”
Margon’s selection isn’t surprising for an administration that appears determined to put a few moderates out front while packing the policy ranks full of anti-American and anti-Israel extremists. At one point Matt Duss, an ally of Margon, Bernie’s foreign policy advisor, and one of the more infamously anti-Israel figures in the echo chamber, was under consideration.
While Margon may not be up there with Duss, whom she’s praised and promoted, her attacks on Israel and opposition to Jewish civil rights was consistent. When she wasn’t attacking Israel, she was attacking the idea of protecting Jewish students from her anti-Israel collaborators.
When President Trump signed Executive Order 13899 on Combating Anti-Semitism at colleges, Margon complained that it “ostensibly addresses antisemitism. But in reality it’s a bogus initiative geared to stifle free speech & go after those who might criticize Israel.”
Margon’s hatred and hostility for the Jewish state were relentless.
As Hamas supporters rioted at Israel’s border fence with the terrorist statelet, a New York Times puff piece celebrated one of the rioters who was “screaming ‘Allahu akbar!’ and hurling stones”.
Sarah Margon tweeted a link to it with the comment, “Extra important read when the new US SecState comes out of the gate noting Israel has a right to defend itself.”
When the Obama administration stood against Israel, she tweeted, “Vote affirms illegality of settlements, longstanding US policy. Thank you @POTUS.”
Margon repeatedly complained that the United States was providing Israel with military equipment and falsely accused it of “exploiting COVID-19 & using it as a pretext for repression.”
“Such brutality & injustice rarely so stark,” she tweeted about a piece smearing Israel over casualties in Gaza.
After HRW, Sarah Margon joined one of George Soros’ Open Society Foundations as its director of foreign policy advocacy. The OSFs fund BDS groups and Soros, its backer, has blamed antisemitism on Jews and the “pro-Israel lobby”. “If we change that direction, then anti-Semitism also will diminish,” the extremist anti-Israel billionaire has argued.
“Despite what Giuliani wants you to think, being Jewish is not decided by political preference or how you live your life or how much you support Israel,” Margon, who is of Jewish ancestry, had argued. But how you live your life does determine if you’re Jewish or not.
And part of that is opposing antisemitism and the murder of Jews.
A snapshot of Margon’s activism can be seen in her Twitter feed which shows her promoting attacks on Israel by HRW’s Abier Almasri who has defended terrorists. In one article promoted by Margon, Almasri described, “three military assaults Israel has launched during its armed conflicts with the Hamas-led Gaza authority since 2008”. Not Hamas terrorists: authority.
“Starting our day off right – visit to @RashidaTlaib,” Margon tweeted in 2019 about accompanying Almasri to the militantly anti-Israel and pro-terrorist House member.
Included in the tweet was Omar Shakir, an HRW BDS activist, on whose behalf Margon had campaigned when Israel told him to leave. “Where is the US on the ouster of my colleague @OmarSShakir from Israel? Virtually silent, just like on the Israeli security forces’ disproportionate attacks on Palestinians in Gaza,” Margon complained in 2018.
But it wasn’t just the Islamic Jihadis trying to murder Jews who animated Margon’s activism.
When President Trump took out the head of ISIS and said, “he died like a dog”, Margon whined about his “aggressive language” which “can easily be used to recruit & radicalize.”
“US is illegally transferring foreign ISIS suspects from Syria to Iraq, leading to botched trials & torture,” another tweet complained.
All of this will have severe consequences for American soldiers who have come under fire from Sarah Margon before.
When Air Force pilots bombed an Afghan hospital that Taliban fighters had been using, Margon wrote a letter to Obama’s Secretary of Defense on behalf of HRW demanding a “criminal investigation” and the “possible criminal liability of US personnel.”
Our men and women in uniform, like the Israelis, have to watch out.
The Biden administration is coming for them.
————————— Daniel Greenfield writes for FrontPage MAG
Tags:Daniel Greenfield, FrontPage MAG, Biden Picks, Soros BDS Activist, Sarah MargonTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Caroline Glick: The US media is treating the leaked recordings of Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif’s conversations with a journalist allied with President Hassan Rouhani as a major scoop. The recordings were allegedly set for release after Rouhani leaves office following this summer’s presidential elections.
While there is good reason to doubt their authenticity, assuming the recordings are authentic, Zarif told his interlocutor two notable things. First, he said the Iranian government is merely a mouthpiece. All decisions related to Iran’s foreign and security affairs are made by the Revolutionary Guards in conjunction with Iran’s dictator Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Zarif said that his own contribution to foreign policymaking was “nil.”
As a historical document, the recordings, (if authentic) were helpful. It was good to hear Zarif admit this truth in his own voice. But he didn’t say anything that wasn’t already widely known.
Since the first “moderate” Iranian president appeared on the scene with Mohamed Khatami’s election in 1997, thousands of articles and still more intelligence reports have been written asserting and proving that Iran’s president and his ministers have no actual decision-making power in regards to anything with strategic significance to the regime.
When Rouhani, the “moderate” presidential candidate was elected in 2013, Israel brought reams of proof to the Obama administration that Rouhani had no influence on regime policy and that anyway, there was nothing moderate about him. Then-President Barack Obama, his vice president Joe Biden and his secretary of state John Kerry along with all of their advisors were unmoved. They didn’t care. They wanted to say the Iranian government was “moderate” to sell the policy of realigning the US towards Iran. It was an ideological position and they had no interest in reconsidering it. So the facts were dismissed.
The second significant thing Zarif allegedly said was that Kerry essentially acted as his agent. Zarif said that Kerry told him about 200 Israeli military strikes on Iranian targets in Syria. It bears noting that Zarif cultivated ties with Kerry since his service as Iran’s UN ambassador. Zarif’s time at the UN overlapped with Kerry’s tenure as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. In the recordings, he indicated that Kerry had developed an emotional attachment to Zarif over the years.
While Kerry denied transferring the information to Zarif during his tenure as Secretary of State or in their meetings after he left office, Kerry didn’t mention his actions in the Senate.
Whether or not Kerry actually told Zarif directly about Israeli operations, the fact is that senior Obama administration officials repeatedly leaked the media information about Israeli military strikes against Iranian targets in Syria to the media. And since they told CNN, why wouldn’t they tell Zarif and his associates?
Kerry is currently a member of Biden’s National Security Council and also serves as his envoy for climate change. Zarif’s alleged revelations provoked calls from Republican lawmakers that Biden fires him from his positions.
Even in the unlikely event that Biden dumps Kerry, it won’t have an impact on his administration’s policies towards Iran. Every senior official involved in the administration’s Iran policy shares Kerry’s pro-Iran and anti-Israel positions.
Take Colin Kahl. Biden’s appointment of Kahl to serve as Undersecretary of Defense for Policy was confirmed this week by the Senate. After word broke of the Mossad’s May 2018 seizure of Iran’s nuclear archive, Kahl posted a tweet insinuating that the archive was faked and the entire operation was an Israeli conspiracy to drag the US into war with Iran.
Speaking in opposition to Kahl’s confirmation, Senator Ted Cruz called Kahl, “the most virulently anti-Israel nominee that would serve in the Biden administration.”
Recalling Kahl’s conspiracy theory about the Iran’s nuclear archive, Cruz remonstrated that Kahl has “a lifelong obsession with and antipathy for the State of Israel, and he’s demonstrated a willingness to endanger Israeli lives and American lives to advance that hostility.”
Cruz placed Zarif’s claims about Kerry in the context of Kahl’s appointment saying that like Kerry, Kahl, “has been credibly accused of weaponizing and leaking classified information.”
Now, thanks to the Democrats who approved his nomination, Kahl is responsible for determining the US security posture towards Iran together with the Robert Malley, the State Department envoy to negotiations with Iran. Like Kahl, Malley has a long history of obsessive hostility towards Israel and support for Iran and its terrorist proxies.
Working with them is CIA Director Bill Burns, who ran secret negotiations with Iran for then secretary of state Condoleezza Rice towards the end of George W. Bush’s second term. This week Iran scholar Michael Rubin reported that Burns was in Baghdad over the past several days. There he reportedly met with Iranian officials in private homes.
Rubin reported that top administration officials have asked Iraq to release $4 billion “from an Iran escrow account that the Iraqi government had established during the Trump administration in order to ensure that Iraq could purchase Iranian fuel while ensuring that the proceeds would not subsidize Iranian terror.”
These moves align with the Biden administration’s previous successful effort to persuade South Korea to unfreeze $1 billion in Iranian funds after Iranian forces illegally seized a South Korean ship and held its sailors captive.
The goal of these efforts is clear. The Biden administration is seeking to give Iran money now, before it is in a position to cancel the economic sanctions the Trump administration applied to Iran because Iran refuses to curtail its illegal nuclear activities.
Burns moves, it should be noted are taking place as Malley is carrying out indirect negotiations with Iran in Vienna. The goal of those talks was previously to bring Iran into full compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal in exchange for the end of US economic sanctions. Malley has since adopted a position that Iran must merely return to the state of its nuclear activities before the Trump administration abandoned the deal. That is, Iran may continue to cheat, but at the level that it was cheating in 2018.
Under the 2015 agreement, all limitations on Iran’s nuclear activities are due to end in nine years. So at best, all Malley’s talks will do is postpone Iran from fielding a nuclear arsenal until 2030.
This brings us to Israel. This week, the heads of Israel’s security establishment traveled to Washington to brief top Biden administration officials on the latest developments in Iran’s nuclear project. On its face, the trip was an obvious move. The Americans are holding diplomatic talks with Iran. As the US’s chief Middle East ally, Israel sent its top officials to coordinate its efforts to block Iran from becoming a nuclear power with those of its ally. Unfortunately, the trip was an exercise in futility.
Even before Mossad Director Yossi Cohen, National Security Advisor Meir Ben Shabbat and head of Military Intelligence Dorector Maj. Gen. Tamir Heyman left their offices, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said that their briefings would have no impact on US policy towards Iran. Like the Obama administration before it, the Biden administration is ideologically committed to realigning US policy towards Iran and away from Israel and the Sunni Arab states. And no facts will sway it from that course.
So too, just as Kerry could not be trusted with classified information Israel shared with him and his Obama administration colleagues, so his colleagues in the Biden administration can be expected to misuse information Israel provides them about Iran.
Facing this reality, in which the US – the most important strategic actor in the region – is now openly in Iran’s corner, Israel needs to conceive and implement a strategy to bypass the US and achieve its goal of preventing Iran from becoming a nuclear power.
As a general rule, strategic policies are developed through political processes. Although it will be difficult, Israel has the ability to develop an international political strategy that achieves its goal while bypassing Biden. But this brings us to Israel’s domestic political morass. Here it is far from clear that Israel’s elected leaders have the political power to develop and implement a coherent and successful strategy for preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. Moreover, the domestic political obstacles harm Israel’s ability to implement a successful international strategy.
Consider past efforts. According to a 2012 exposé by Israel’s investigative journalism program Uvda (“Fact”), in 2010, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and then-Defense Minister Ehud Barak ordered the IDF and Mossad to prepare plans to attack Iran’s nuclear installations. Then-Mossad director Meir Dagan and then IDF chief of general staff Gabi Ashkenazy refused to follow the order. They claimed that Netanyahu and Barak lacked the legal authority to give such an order. At the time, current attorney general Avichai Mandelblit served as the IDF’s Military Advocate General. In a posthumously broadcast interview, Dagan insisted that Netanyahu’s determination to destroy Iran’s nuclear program was driven by “political” considerations.
In 2016, Uvda broadcast an interview with Leon Panetta. In 2010, as Obama’s CIA director, Panetta was Dagan’s counterpart. In the interview, Panetta revealed that after refusing Netanyahu’s order, Dagan travelled to Washington and informed Panetta about the order – thus alerting the US to Israel’s plans.
Dagan’s move was arguably treacherous, but more to the point, the fact that in 2010 he had faith in the Obama administration’s commitment to Israel’s security than he had in Netanyahu shows that at a minimum, Dagan had no understanding of international politics. The year before, at his address at the American University in Cairo, Obama declared before the world his intention to realign US policy away from Israel and the US’s traditional Sunni Arab allies and towards Iran and the Muslim Brotherhood. Dagan clearly failed to grasp the implications of the speech. Netanyahu and Barak clearly understood them.
As Attorney General, the same Mandelblit who claimed in 2010 that Israel’s elected leaders lacked the authority to determine strategic policy has even more aggressively eroded the governing powers of Israel’s political leadership, while arrogating those powers and authorities to himself and his office. Just this week, Mandelblit took his legally ungirded efforts to new heights by declaring illegal a legal vote of the government which approved the appointment of a justice minister that Mandelblit didn’t want.
In this state of affairs, with elected leaders hamstrung by unelected lawyers devoid of international political awareness or accountability to the voting public, the likelihood that Israel’s elected leaders will be capable of conceiving and carrying out a policy to block Iran’s rise as a nuclear power is not high.
The Israeli public discourse about legal reform generally focuses on the domestic implications of the legal fraternity’s seizure of the political powers of elected officials. But as the episode from 2010 makes clear, the current power imbalance between unelected lawyers and elected politicians has acute strategic implications. Until Israel’s elected leaders seize back their powers from the government attorneys, they will be unable to contend with the strategic challenge posed by the Biden administration’s embrace of Iran and gutting of the US-Israel alliance.
—————————— Caroline Glick is the Senior Contributing Editor of The Jerusalem Post and the Director of the David Horowitz Freedom Center’s Israel Security Project. For more information on Ms. Glick’s work, visit carolineglick.com.
Tags:Caroline Glick, Iran, Biden, Israel, Legal Fraternity ConvergeTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Victor Davis Hanson: Two days ago, I drove in a 5-square-mile radius and noticed that the 100 or so farms I grew up with are all gone. Caput. Everyone. Not one grandkid, relative, etc. seems to be farming. The acreage seems either rented out or sold off.
The land is usually leased to conglomerated operations (and the almond orchards look beautiful). Renters from Mexico and Central America mostly live in the clapboard decaying houses, and the barns and sheds look empty or eroding—or rented out to boarders. Often, they also sublet the yard to families living in trailers and make-shift sheds.
So strange that the land is more productive than ever, but the people who first developed it simply disappeared. Their only traces are these wooden skeletons that have not all been removed yet by larger agribusiness companies.
I grew up and still live on a small part of the land that our great-great-grandmother bought (as bare scrub) from Leland Stanford’s Southern Pacific railroad in the 1870s. See Frank Norris’s The Octopus, and cf. the Mussel Slough Tragedy (7 miles away), for the animosity of small farmers in the latter 19th-century to “the railroad” that had urged them to buy on credit undeveloped land—only to leverage its repossession later when it was fully developed.
(As a side note it is a paradox to work at Stanford, to listen to all the faculty and student earnests erasing the past about them, and to witness all the names of the supposedly illiberal and long-dead now vaporized for their crimes against 21st-century race, class, and gender norms (e.g., Father Sierra, David Starr Jordan, etc.).
And yet, and yet—even the most zealous renamer and reeducator does not mention changing the name of Stanford itself, built on the profits of senior Leland Stanford. He had quite unkind things to say about the Chinese laborers who helped build his empire and whose railroad policies in the San Joaquin Valley were aimed at destroying small farmers whom he lured to develop the lands gifted to him by the government—only to seek to evict and destroy them when they were cultivated and worth 50 times more than when purchased in their wild aboriginal state. I supposed Trotskyizing Father Serra is easy, but giving up the Stanford careerist brand is non-negotiable even for most committed revisionists.)
But enough of the modern editorialization: the homesteader agrarians who shot it out with the confiscators had public opinion on their side and ultimately the railroad began to back off, but not until after a lot of “tragedy”.
A quarter-century ago, I wrote two books once about our family’s fifth-generation farming some 110 years later, and how it became impossible for small orchard and vineyard growers to continue.
By 1980, four families were living on our 180-acre farm and we all had different views of what was going wrong around us, but all agreed something had gone haywire.
For an idea of what life was like before the fall, my brother and cousin five years ago published some poems and art (My San Joaquin) that give a rich flavor of what were once the common lives of everyone we knew but are now mere fragments of memory. I note that Horace warned of the cranky laudator temporis acti (the praiser of time past), but for all the technological wonders of the 21st century, Hesiod was right 2700 years ago that with material progress often comes moral regress.
—————————— Victor Davis Hanson – Private Papers
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Morning Rundown
After blowback, Biden sets refugee cap at 62.5K this fiscal year: As four families that were separated under the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” immigration policy in 2017 are set to be reunited this week, President Joe Biden signed a memo raising the maximum number of refugees into the U.S. to 62,500 during this fiscal year. Biden’s promise comes after his administration decided in April to leave a Trump-era cap of 15,000 refugees in place as agencies and resources on the southern U.S. border became overwhelmed by the influx of migrants. But Biden faced criticism from Democratic allies on Capitol Hill and refugee resettlement agencies across the country. In response to Biden’s decision to increase the cap on refugees, many resettlement agencies celebrated the news, as well as NAACP National President Derrick Johnson, who called it a “step in the right direction.” “We must continue to do all we can to help those fleeing extreme poverty, war and all forms of oppression,” said Johnson in a statement. Meanwhile, Biden sought to temper expectations and said that we may not achieve 62,500 admissions this year. “That goal will still be hard to hit,” he said in a statement. “We might not make it the first year.”
Millions in the bullseye as twisters carve path across Southeast: After a total of 23 reported tornadoes struck across four states early Monday morning, millions are still in jeopardy as more severe weather is expected across the Southeast. Today, a storm that first touched down in Mississippi early Monday morning, is expected to move into the Gulf Coast and the Southeast with severe weather from Louisiana to West Virginia. Many across Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Tennessee are also bracing for the possibility of damaging winds, large hail and the potential for a few tornadoes. So far, damage has been reported in Tupelo, Mississippi, Memphis, Tennessee, and the Atlanta area, where two people died after a likely tornado moved through the metro area Monday morning. According to meteorologists, the month of May is typically when severe weather rapidly escalates, especially across the southern and central plains. “May is often the peak of the tornado season,” said Matthew Elliot, warning coordination meteorologist for NOAA’s Storm Prediction Center. “So it is important to be vigilant when thunderstorms are in the forecast and to be prepared to take action should threatening weather approach your area.”
Eleven Madison Park to reopen as plant-based restaurant: Nearly one week after food and cooking brand Epicurious announced it was cutting beef out of its recipes, articles and newsletters, a New York-based chef and restaurant owner is also nixing beef and all meat from his menu, and taking on a plant-based approach. On Monday, Chef Daniel Humm of Eleven Madison Park in New York City announced that his restaurant will reopen in June with an evolved business model and a new meat-free menu. “It is time to redefine luxury as an experience that serves a higher purpose,” Humm wrote in an announcement on the restaurant’s website. “We are thrilled to share the incredible possibilities of plant-based cuisine while deepening our connection to our homes: both our city and our planet.” Humm said every dish will be made from vegetables, fruits, legumes, fungi, grains and more. While Humm said he was worried about abandoning some of the dishes that once defined his restaurant, he said he’s determined to still expertly execute the same level of flavor and texture of some favorites such as honey-glazed duck and butter-poached lobster for a new menu without meat or seafood. Learn more about plant-based diets and their benefits here and here.
Woman gives birth on flight to Hawaii with help of doctor, NICU nurses: Last Wednesday, somewhere over the Pacific, a woman who didn’t know she was pregnant gave birth to a baby boy. Lavinia “Lavi” Mounga was flying from Salt Lake City to Honolulu on April 28 for a vacation when she gave birth to her son, Raymond. He arrived early at just 29 weeks gestation. Luckily, a doctor from Hawaii and three neonatal intensive care unit nurses from North Kansas City Hospital were also on board the almost seven-hour Delta flight and helped Mounga deliver her baby. “I don’t know how a patient gets so lucky as to have three neonatal intensive care nurses onboard the same flight when she is in emergency labor, but that was the situation we were in,” Hawaii Pacific Health family medicine physician Dr. Dale Glenn, who was on board the flight, said in a statement. “Everybody jumped in together and everyone helped out.” Glenn also said they had to improvise on tools, using shoelaces to tie and cut the umbilical cord and an Apple Watch to monitor the baby’s heart rate. Since the surprise birth, Mounga has been discharged and Raymond will remain in the NICU until he’s ready to go home.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Emmanuel Acho joins us live to talk about his new book, “Uncomfortable Conversations with a Black Boy.” Plus, we will announce our May Book Club pick. And it’s May the Fourth, the day to celebrate all things “Star Wars,” and we’ll be joined by Dave Filoni, a superfan and director of the new Disney+ animated series, “Star Wars: The Bad Batch.” All this and more only on “GMA.”
Today we are looking at a controversial new form of school discipline in the pandemic, a tragic train overpass collapse in Mexico City and a new way of experiencing Rome’s ancient Colosseum.
Raynardo Antonio Ocasio, a 6-year-old kindergartener, has been banned from his classroom since September.
After attending in-person classes for four weeks last fall at the Zeta Charter School, across the street from his apartment in northern Manhattan, Raynardo was banished to the school’s virtual classes for failing to wear a mask and follow other Covid-19 safety rules.
The school said pushing Raynardo out was necessary to keep teachers and students safe at a scary moment in the pandemic.
More than seven months later, Raynardo is still attending classes virtually, missing out on developing social skills and struggling to learn, his mother Mayra Irizarry said.
More than that, education advocates say that removing students from in-person classes because of their behavior may violate those students’ rights, especially if they have disabilities.
“This is the new face of denial of access to public education,” said Lorraine Wright, a civil rights and educational justice advocate in Virginia. “It’s just a new way to send kids to an alternative setting. Now it’s just easier and covered under the guise of Covid protection.”
By Phil Helsel, Michelle Acevedo and Yuliya Talmazan | Read more
A metro train overpass collapsed onto a road in Mexico City on Monday night, killing at least 23 people including children, authorities said. Dozens more were taken to hospitals, some with serious injuries, the city’s mayor said.
Houston police were investigating a report of a possible kidnapping on Friday when they found 97 people, none of whom have authorization to be in the U.S., inside the two-story home, officials said.
Days after a deadly stampede resulted in the deaths of 45 people at a religious festival in northern Israel, many are now asking who is at fault. Some, including activists from inside the community, are calling for the ultra-Orthodox to look at their own role.
By Dr. Rob Davidson and Dr. Bernard Ashby | Read more
Two physicians who practice in Florida and Michigan write about watching the national race to vaccinate their fellow Americans with both optimism and alarm.
In a potentially significant shift in the debate over combating sexual assault in the military, Gen. Mark Milley said he is dropping his opposition to a proposal to take decisions on sexual assault prosecution out of the hands of commanders.
Could you spend three to four hours outside each day? Mom Ginny Yurich saw the benefits of more free play outside was for her kids: “They’re happier, they’re sleeping better, they’re not getting sick … We’re all thriving.” Now she’s encouraging other families to give it a try.
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Experts recommend the best sales to shop this month, from Mother’s Day to Memorial Day and across retailers like Amazon, Kohl’s, Nordstrom and more.
One fun thing
What would Rome’s ancient Colosseum, packed with up to 50,000 people, look like from a gladiator’s point of view?
You may soon find out.
Italy’s Culture Ministry announced a plan to furnish the 2,000-year-old building with a new retractable floor to allow visitors to “see the majesty of the Colosseum” from its center.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: Trump’s GOP foes keep being punished — by their own party
Republicans who have defended the integrity of the 2020 election results – or who have spoken out against Donald Trump and his actions that led to the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol – keep on getting punished inside the Republican Party.
That’s maybe the best way to view the recent news of 1) Mitt Romney getting booedin his home state of Utah before the state party failed to censure him; and 2) Liz Cheney now being on thin ice within the House GOP leadership – and possibly at risk of losing her job as conference chair.
Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
They follow the censures and primary challenges against other Republicans who voted to impeach Trump or convict him of inciting the Jan. 6, as well as the move by Georgia Republicans to strip Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger of some of his powers.
And it’s an ominous development for a democracy when saying THIS gets you in trouble with your own party:
“We can’t embrace the notion the election is stolen. It’s a poison in the bloodstream of our democracy,”Cheney said yesterday in a closed-door speech, per CNN (and confirmed by NBC News). “We can’t whitewash what happened on January 6 or perpetuate Trump’s big lie.”
What’s more, the same Trump story dating back to “Access Hollywood” keeps on repeating itself: Trump and his supporters fight back harder than any other side; a majority or more of the party stays silent in an effort to win the next election; and the critics get drowned out and later punished – if they don’t first reverse course and hope Trump’s base doesn’t notice. (See Graham, Lindsey.)
Wash, rinse, repeat.
But this time, it’s all to placate someone who lost in 2020, who divided the party during those twin Senate runoffs in Georgia that the GOP lost, and whose poll numbers remain upside down with the American public.
By the way, we have to ask: What changed for Cheney since her conference overwhelmingly defeated that previous effort to oust her from party leadership?
Was it that Trump and his supporters kept up their attacks against her?
Or that she kept on criticizing the former president – and refused to stay silent?
What happens if Trump gets his social-media megaphone back?
Speaking of Republicans trying to compartmentalize the former president – and focus instead on 2022 or 2024 – this is all happening in an environment where Trump NO LONGER has his Twitter and Facebook accounts.
But what happens if Facebook reinstates Trump, and all of Trump’s declarations get a lot more attention?
It becomes a lot harder to compartmentalize him.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
62,500: The Biden administration’s new cap on refugees for this fiscal year — after it was criticized for saying it would keep Trump-era limits in place.
27 years: How long Bill and Melinda Gates have been married. The couple announced their divorce on Monday.
More than 20 million: The number of coronavirus cases in India
32,624,945: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 49,511 more than yesterday morning.)
581,762: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 551 more than yesterday morning.)
246,780,203: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
29.3 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated
Biden to speak on vaccinations
At 2:30 pm ET today from the White House, President Biden delivers remarks on the country’s vaccination effort against the coronavirus.
The AP: “[T]he nation’s top general says he is dropping his opposition to a proposal to take decisions on sexual assault prosecution out of the hands of commanders.”
The FDA may authorize the use of the Pfizer vaccine for kids as young as 12 by next week.
Conservatives are newly focused on concerns about “critical race theory” in American education.
A transportation accident in Mexico City killed at least 23 people and injured about 70. Also, the South is at risk of severe weather after tornadoes have struck the region the last two days. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Two people in Georgia are dead after severe weather swept through the South leaving millions in the path of large hail, tornadoes and intense, damaging wind. One twister caused a major accident as it swept several cars and trucks aside on a Texas highway. Omar Villafranca reports.
Plus: SPCA sues for First Amendment rights of pet owners and veterinarians, an epic antitrust battle between Apple and Fortnite’s parent company begins, and more…
Americans are largely charitable toward undocumented immigrants already in the U.S. but not toward asylum seekers. Most Americans do not wish to see undocumented immigrants who are already living here be deported, according to the latest Pew Research Center poll of U.S. attitudes toward immigration.
When asked what should happen to people now in the country illegally, only 25 percent of survey respondents said they shouldn’t be allowed to stay and there should be a national effort to deport them. Another 5 percent said they don’t think undocumented immigrants should be allowed to stay—but they also don’t want to see a national deportation initiative.Meanwhile, 69 percent of those polled said there should be a way for undocumented immigrants living here to stay in the country legally if they fulfill certain requirements. And 42 percent of survey respondents said they should be provided with a path to citizenship, while 26 percent preferred a path to permanent residency, but not citizenship.The findings provide an interesting look at how the Trump administration’s immigration rhetoric and policies were out of touch with mainstream American opinion.
But they also suggest that four years under President Donald Trump did shift American opinions rightward on immigration. The 69 percent that now support a way for undocumented immigrants to stay is down from 77 percent in March 2017, “with the decrease being driven by shifting attitudes among Republicans,” Pew reports.
Unsurprisingly, Republicans are more divided than Democrats over what should be done regarding undocumented immigrants. A slight majority (51 percent) said they should not be allowed to stay in the country legally, while 48 percent said they should. Pew notes that “there also are age differences within the Republican Party: 62% of Republicans under 35 favor allowing undocumented immigrants to stay, compared with 46% of those ages 35 to 64 and 40% of Republicans 65 and older.” Meanwhile, “more than eight-in-ten Democrats … say there should be a way for undocumented immigrants who meet requirements to stay in the country legally.”
Not many folks from any political persuasion seem to think the federal government is doing a good job in its immigration policies:
The government receives negative ratings for how it has handled the situation at the border. About two-thirds of U.S. adults (68%) say that the government is doing a very (33%) or somewhat (35%) bad job of dealing with the increased number of people seeking asylum at the country’s southern border, while fewer than half as many (29%) say it is doing a very or somewhat good job.
But there’s little agreement about what the government should be doing.
And answers to questions about refugees and asylum status suggest the Biden administration—which announced yesterday that it would increase the number of allowed refugees from the 15,000 cap set by Trump to 62,500 for this fiscal year—is also at odds with what Americans want on immigration.
Some 79 percent of people polled by Pew said it’s either very (47 percent) or somewhat (32 percent) important to reduce the number of people seeking asylum in the U.S.
A smaller but still significant percentage—57 percent—said it should be harder for asylum seekers to be granted legal status here.
And a full half said it’s somewhat or very important for the U.S. to disallow asylum seekers entirely.
The Pew survey was conducted from April 5 to April 11, 2021, and includes data from 5,109 people, with a margin of error of plus or minus 2.1 percentage points.
In other immigration news: The Biden administration is making progress at cutting the number of unaccompanied minors in federal custody. “The number of unaccompanied children held by Border Patrol has plummeted by 88% since late March, when U.S. migrant holding facilities became severely overcrowded as thousands of minors crossed the southern border alone,” reports CBS News.
FREE MINDS
Animal welfare group files First Amendment lawsuit against veterinary board. The San Francisco Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) is suing the California Veterinary Medical Board for allegedly violating pet owners’ and veterinarians’ right to free speech. The nonprofit is challenging the board’s ban on veterinarians talking to people about their pets’ health by phone or by online chat unless the vet has met with the pet owner in person first.
“The California Veterinary Medical Board is suggesting they don’t trust veterinarians that they licensed to make sound decisions for animals,” Brandy Kuentzel, general counsel to the San Francisco SPCA, said in an emailed statement. “The law not only restricts veterinarians and pet owners’ constitutional right to free speech, it also restricts a pet’s access to veterinary care.”
“People can use telemedicine for themselves and their children, so why not for their pets?” Kuentzel added.
FREE MARKETS
Epic antitrust battle between Apple and Fortnite creator begins. Yesterday marked the beginning of a federal antitrust trial involving Epic Games—the company behind the immensely popular video game Fortnite—and Apple. Epic Games is suing Apple, after
Epic violated the terms of Apple’s app store and Apple dropped it from the store.
Epic violated Apple’s rules by offering its own in-app payment system, rather than relying on Apple’s in-app payment system. (Google has a similar requirement.) After Apple dropped Epic Games from its app store, Epic sued Apple (and Apple countersued).
“In order to win, Epic has to convince the judge that Apple has a monopoly with its App Store and abused that market power by forcing Epic (and other developers) to use Apple’s payment system,” notesAxios. “Apple argues that the relevant market isn’t iOS, but rather all the different options players have for games, of which it is just one player.”
As for the first day of Epic v. Apple trial, it was off to a rocky start, reportsGizmodo:
First, the court had issues getting both teleconference lines up and running, and even when they were humming along fine, everyone’s lines seemed to be unmuted. On the main line, one person chanted, “Epic Games! Epic Games!” Another chimed in, “I’m going to tell my mom, just don’t pick up the line,” while yet another offered this insightful commentary: “Tim Sweeney better know what he’s doing. If he messes up once, we won’t have iOS back. This call is live, by the way.”
The additional line suffered from the same audio issues as well. About 35 minutes into the hearing, while Epic’s legal team was still giving its opening statement, the audio suddenly cut out.…But one audience member figured out he was unmuted.
“FORTNITE SUCKS,” that person yelled into the mic. “Yo, yo, yo, we can’t hear anything, bro. The audio died or some shit.”
QUICK HITS
New today from @AndrewRCraig:
“Hayek offered what remains the defining statement of libertarianism as something distinct from and often in opposition to the political right.”https://t.co/nxsJy0nH1U
— Libertarianism.org (@libertarianism) May 3, 2021
• “The European Commission on Monday proposed easing restrictions on non-essential travel for visitors who have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19,” reportsAxios.
• Virginia, Illinois, and Nevada are appealing a ruling that they ratified the Equal Rights Amendment (several decades) too late for it to count.
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
05/04/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Stealth Edits; No ‘Sleepy Joe’; Kent State
By Carl M. Cannon on May 04, 2021 09:10 am
Good morning, it’s Tuesday, May 4, 2021. Fifty-one years ago today, cornered and panicked National Guardsmen sent to quell unrest at Kent State University opened fire without warning on a crowd of antiwar demonstrators. Four students — William Knox Schroeder, Allison B. Krause, Jeffrey Glenn Miller, and Sandra Lee Scheuer — were killed. Eight others were wounded, including Dean Kahler, who was paralyzed from the waist down.
The day before, Ohio Gov. Jim Rhodes had gone to Kent, where he denounced the demonstrators as “the worst type of people that we harbor in America.” This was an ugly thing to say. Absurd, too. The people he was talking about were dedicated and politically engaged college students, most of whom had never committed a crime in their lives. Very few of them were committing a crime that day, either: They were protesting an increasingly unpopular war. They were also very young. Allison Krause had turned 19 less than two weeks earlier. Bill Schroeder was also 19. Jeff Miller and Sandy Scheuer were 20, as was Kahler, a first-semester freshman. Scheuer and Schroeder weren’t even participating in the protest. They were walking to class.
“Gotta get down to it — soldiers are cutting us down,” Neil Young sang in his angry anthem memorializing their martyrdom. “What if you knew her and found her dead on the ground? How could you run when you know?”
A couple of years ago, Joe Biden was riffing off this pivotal tragedy when he said, inexplicably, that “over 40 kids were shot” at Kent State on May 4, 1970. I’m not sure what he was thinking: The death toll that day was bad enough, so much so that it helped alter the course of U.S. public opinion about the war in Vietnam. Today, President Biden is scheduled to speak in the White House about the progress of coronavirus vaccinations. Precision of language will be important, especially with a cohort of Americans who are doing their country no favor by refusing to be immunized against this pandemic that is still killing people all over the world. As “Star Wars” fans would tell him today: “May the 4th be with you, Mr. President.”
With that, I’d point you to RCP’s front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors:
* * *
Fact-Checkers Missed Stealth Edits to Abrams Op-Ed. John Hirschauer and Chandler Lasch have the details.
“Sleepy Joe” Was Just a Charade. Columnist J. Peder Zane writes that the president’s unifier stance as a candidate masked an authoritarian streak and strategy.
The Politics of Attacking Tim Scott. Charles Lipson explains why he believes the black senator’s response to Joe Biden’s speech last week elicited so much vitriol from progressives.
Collect Unpaid Taxes Rather Than Raise Corporate Rate. Former Sen. Blanche Lincoln argues that focusing on uncollected revenue would be more productive for the economy than increasing rates, as the president proposes.
The Curious Case of the Asian American Victim. Prominent Asian Americans have embraced a narrative of pervasive, historical victimization by whites — against much evidence to the contrary, Richard Bernstein reports for RealClearInvestigations.
The Last Contested Election Result of 2020. At RealClearPolicy, Alan R. Ostergren provides an insider’s view of Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks’ six-vote victory in Iowa’s 2nd Congressional District, which was finally decided on March 31.
NYT Argues With Itself About Biden and Taxes. RealClearMarkets editor John Tamny cites a Times report on 1 percenters and the taxes they pay in California to make a bigger point about the president’s spending proposals.
Sale of Yahoo and AOL Wrecks Big-Tech Hysteria. Also at RCM, Patrick Hedger puts Verizon’s decision into historical context.
Gen Z Is Anything But Politically Ill-Informed. At RealClear’s American Civics portal, Samuel J. Abrams reports the surprising results of a recent survey.
When Iran was elected by the UN Economic and Social Council to its Commission on the Status of Women, concerns were raised about the kind of message the international organization was sending to the world.
Recognizing and acting on the reality that China remains a communist country that is slowly and stealthily advancing its agenda of global domination is crucial to the future security of the United States.
When Airbnb began boycotting the homes of Jews living in those parts of Israel claimed by Islamic terrorists, the Jewish communities of the United States rallied against the dot com.
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Tuesday, May 4, and one of the world’s most influential philanthropic couples is calling it quits. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
Billionaire philanthropist couple Bill and Melinda Gates will separate after 27 years of marriage, the pair announced yesterday. In a joint statement, both said they had determined they could no longer grow together as a couple.
With an estimated net worth near $130B, the couple poured much of their wealth into the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Launched in 1994 while Bill Gates still led Microsoft, the company he founded, the group’s endowment has reached $47B. Their portfolio of international projects spans areas from infectious disease control to agricultural development to reproductive health.
The couple met while Melinda worked as a product manager at Microsoft in 1987—Bill famously (or infamously) wrote out a list of pros and cons to help decide whether to propose.
Facebook will reveal whether it will maintain a ban on former President Trump tomorrow morning, officials said yesterday. The decision was made by an independent oversight board whose role is to help the social media giant consider content moderation questions. CEO Mark Zuckerberg says he won’t overrule board decisions. The former president was suspended from the platform, as well as from Instagram, for comments made following the Jan. 6 storming of the US Capitol.
It will be by far the highest-profile decision made by the board, which was established by Zuckerberg in 2018 to assist in developing content moderation policies. The group (see members) does not intervene in the vast majority of questions—it has only released seven decisions—but rather focuses on representative cases that may act as precedents. The decision is expected to be announced at 9am ET tomorrow.
Separately, Trump’s suspension from Twitter will reportedly remain in place indefinitely.
Verizon Bails
Telecommunications giant Verizon will sell its media group, including AOL and Yahoo, to private equity firm Apollo Global Management for a reported $5B. The price tag represents just over half of what Verizon paid for the two companies in 2015 and 2017. Analysts say the move allows Verizon to focus on growing its internet provider and wireless services.
The sale is also somewhat symbolic. AOL, whose origins date back to 1983, was one of the biggest companies of the early internet age, dominating market share in connectivity, email, news, and chat. At the height of the tech bubble, the company was valued near $220B. Similarly, Yahoo was a dominant player in the search engine space before the arrival of Google, with a value exceeding $100B, but failed to successfully transition to a broader media company.
The deal is expected to be completed in the second half of this year.
Know someone who needs smart, objective news? Introduce us.
If you work for a performance athletic brand, you work with some pretty amazing materials. Materials that stretch, breathe, and move with you. As in, materials that aren’t denim.
So when a few Under Armour execs left to blaze their own trail, they started by addressing the biggest shortfall of denim, and jeans in general: movement. In Revtown’s book, three things make great jeans: comfort, function, and durability. That’s why their proprietary fabric consists of Italian denim that’s tough as nails, infused with the materials used in football uniforms and yoga pants. Revtown jeans are designed to keep you on the move, whether it’s from the office to the bar, or right back to the couch. No tight thighs, no bum-sweats, and absolutely no crotch-binding.
>Germany’s world-famous beer and folk festival Oktoberfest canceled for second straight year due to COVID-19 (More) | NYC’s Broadway theaters can reopen May 19, although musicals unlikely to begin until September (More)
>Three-time Indianapolis 500 winner Bobby Unser dies at 87 (More) | Marcel Stellman, Belgian record producer who created beloved French and British game show “Countdown,” dies at 96 (More)
>Marvel Studios reveals titles and release dates for several upcoming films, including the anticipated sequel “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” set for a July 2022 release (More)
Science & Technology
>Chinese tech giant Baidu launches paid driverless taxi service in Beijing, becoming the first company to offer autonomous transportation in China (More)
>The Environmental Protection Agency proposes industry-backed rule phasing out the use of hydrofluorocarbons in refrigerators and air conditioners; certain HFCs have more than 10,000 times the global warming potential of carbon dioxide (More)
>Long-awaited case brought by Epic Games alleging anticompetitive practices by Apple’s App Store begins (More) | See our previous write-up here (More)
>Retail stocks increase, tech stocks fall as US stock markets end mixed: S&P 500 +0.3%, Dow +0.7%, Nasdaq -0.5% (More) | Online trading giant Robinhood received $331M in Q1 payments from order flow (More)
>Berkshire Hathaway confirms Greg Abel will succeed as CEO when Warren Buffett steps down in the future (More)
>Asian American business leaders launch $250M fund to fight anti-Asian discrimination (More)
>New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut to lift pandemic restrictions for most businesses by May 19 (More) | See where all 50 states stand (More)
>Biden administration raises the annual refugee cap by almost 400%, from around 15,000 to 62,500 (More) | New level is comparable to the average limit between 2000 and 2016; see data here (More)
>Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces midnight deadline to form a coalition government; center-left lawmaker Yair Lapid may be tasked with the effort if no deal is made (More)
IN-DEPTH
The Plan to Kill bin Laden
Politico | Garrett Graff. Saturday marked the 10-year anniversary of the killing of Osama bin Laden. Read a fascinating oral history from the decision makers who helped plan and execute the raid. (Read)
How Long Can We Live?
NYT | Ferris Jabr. The number of centenarians—those living past 100 years of age—is set to dramatically increase by the end of the century. The advances beg the question, what are the limits of human life? (Read, $$)
And it all comes down to their secret sauce: the fabric. They created a proprietary fabric consisting of Italian-milled denim infused with the same stuff used in football uniforms and yoga pants. And it shows (and feels). With men’s and women’s styles, you can wear Revtown jeans around the clock, while staying comfortable all the while. Check them out today.
Historybook: Actress Audrey Hepburn born (1929); First Grammy Awards held (1959); Four killed, nine injured after National Guard opens fire at Kent State University (1970); Margaret Thatcher becomes first female prime minister of the UK (1979); Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin and Palestinian Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat sign peace accord (1994).
“You can tell more about a person by what he says about others than you can by what others say about him.”
– Audrey Hepburn
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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May 4, 2021
The Covid-19 Emergency Did Not Justify Lockdowns
By Donald J. Boudreaux | “Whatever the novelty and dangers of Covid-19, the novelty and dangers of Covid-19 lockdowns are at least arguably of the same magnitude. The dismissal of the unknown possible horrors of lockdowns in order to focus…
By Robert E. Wright & Aleksandra Przegalinska | “AI cannot credibly justify a radical policy like UBI at this point. Misunderstanding AI adds to a natural fear of the unknown though we know that technological change always proves beneficial to the…
By Robert Hughes | The Institute for Supply Management’s Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index eased back to 60.7 in April, a decline of 4.0 points over the 64.7 percent result in March. April is the eleventh consecutive reading above the…
By Ethan Yang | “This fintech crackdown could be emblematic of China’s authoritarian growing pains and it remains to be seen if they will even be able to balance economic progress with political control. This move will certainly have consequences…
Lockdowns are No Substitute for Focused Protection
By Paul E. Alexander | The most vulnerable groups in the US, which have been least able to afford the lockdowns and school closures, have been devastated by unscientific ineffective policies and have been hardest hit by Covid-19.
By Joakim Book | “We should indeed be skeptical of financial fads, of everything in the Everything Bubble. And we should argue over bitcoin’s many monetary attributes – mostly because we therefore highlight how other monetary regimes work.
Edward C. Harwood fought for sound money when few Americans seemed to care. He was the original gold standard man before that became cool. Now he is honored in this beautiful sewn silk tie in the richest possible color and greatest detail.
The red is not just red; it is darker and deeper, more distinctive and suggestive of seriousness of purpose.
The Harwood coin is carefully sewn (not stamped). Sporting this, others might miss that you are secretly supporting the revolution for freedom and sound money, but you will know, and that is what matters.
The lockdowns in response to the Covid-19 pandemic have taught many lessons. One is that politicians either don’t understand, or care, about maintaining the integrity of the wellspring of prosperity: private commerce, rooted in individual liberty and private property rights. A second is that an enshrined, protected and inviolable right—a human right—to private commercial dealing, on whatever scale or basis it may take, can no longer be overlooked.
If there is a palliative to be retrieved from the economic and social wreckage of tyrannical Covid-19 policies at home and/or abroad, it is this: the purposeful reversal of the political erosion of private property rights and the right of livelihood. And that turnabout should take the form of a long overdue, formal appanage: a primary and inalienable Human Right to Commerce.
On the menu today: A big look at how lack of Democratic unity, not the filibuster, is what is really blocking the progressive agenda; how the outlook for Democrats keeping the House keeps getting cloudier; and a corrective dose of perspective to counter one of the gloomiest New York Times articles in a while.
What’s Really Blocking the Progressive Agenda
Pop quiz: How many times have Senate Republicans used the filibuster to block legislation this year?
Give credit to Bill Scher at the Washington Monthly for recognizing that one part of the popular progressive narrative is not actually supported by the facts:
Whatever there is to say about Mitch McConnell’s … READ MORE
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The internet has changed a lot since 1996 – internet regulations should too
Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO), who led efforts to challenge the 2020 election results in Congress, on defended his fist pump to protesters outside of the Capitol on Jan. 6, The Hill reports.
Said Hawley: “Some of them were calling, so I gestured toward them. They had every right to be there… When I walked by that particular group of folks were standing there peacefully behind police barricades.”
He later called it a “slur” to lump in demonstrators outside of the Capitol with rioters who breached the building later.
Nate Cohn: “The expanding Democratic disadvantage in the Electoral College underscores how the growing diversity of the nation may not aid Democrats enough to win in places they most need help. Just as often, population growth is concentrated in red states — like Texas and Florida — where the Democrats don’t win nonwhite voters by the overwhelming margins necessary to overcome the state’s Republican advantage.”
“As for the Republicans, the widely held assumption that the party will struggle as white voters decline as a percentage of the electorate may be more myth than reality. Contrary to what Tucker Carlson says repeatedly on Fox News about the rise of ‘white replacement theory’ as a Democratic electoral strategy, the country’s growing racial diversity has not drastically upended the party’s chances. Instead, Republicans face a challenge they often take for granted: white voters.”
“Even in the pandemic era of closed borders, Australia’s latest travel restriction stands out: Anyone, including Australian citizens, who arrives in the country after visiting India in the previous 14 days can face up to five years in jail, a $50,000 fine or both,” the Washington Post reports.
“House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) confirmed on Tuesday he rented a room from GOP pollster Frank Luntz during the coronavirus pandemic, news that was first reported by Fox News host Tucker Carlson the night before,” The Hill reports.
Said McCarthy: “I didn’t know how this was controversial. Frank has been a friend of mine for more than 30 years. I met him with Newt Gingrich back when they were working on the Contract with America.”
“Jim Lamon, the chairperson of a solar power company and a supporter of former President Donald Trump, has launched a U.S. Senate campaign, hoping to oust incumbent Sen. Mark Kelly,” the Arizona Republic reports.
“He has made political contributions to Trump, to unsuccessful GOP Senate candidate Kelli Ward, who now chairs the Arizona Republican Party, to Kris Kobach, the former Kansas Secretary of State who lost a GOP primary for Senate in 2020, and to former Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., who bucked Trump and did not run for re-election in 2018.”
“A former Texas mayor, whose tenure lasted only 37 days, appears to be running for U.S. Senate in Missouri,” the Kansas City Star reports.
“Dan McQueen (R) became mayor of Corpus Christi in December of 2016. He resigned a little more than a month later, after allegations that he had, among other matters, misrepresented his educational credentials and concealed a romantic relationship with a top aide.”
The Atlantic: “The spring of 2021 is different from the spring of 2020… Scientists know a lot more about how COVID-19 spreads—and how it doesn’t. Public-health advice is shifting. But some progressives have not updated their behavior based on the new information. And in their eagerness to protect themselves and others, they may be underestimating other costs.”
“Being extra careful about COVID-19 is (mostly) harmless when it’s limited to wiping down your groceries with Lysol wipes and wearing a mask in places where you’re unlikely to spread the coronavirus, such as on a hiking trail. But vigilance can have unintended consequences when it imposes on other people’s lives. Even as scientific knowledge of COVID-19 has increased, some progressives have continued to embrace policies and behaviors that aren’t supported by evidence, such as banning access to playgrounds, closing beaches, and refusing to reopen schools for in-person learning.”
“A limited version of the picnic was held last year but the political speaking and games were canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic. The picnic traditionally kicks off the fall political campaign in Kentucky.”
Rep. Dina Titus (D-NV) denied reports that she is interested in leaving her House seat to become an ambassador in the Biden administration, calling them “rumors” and saying she is focusing on serving the needs of her constituents, the Nevada Independent reports.
“Georgia election officials plan to start canceling voter registrations as soon as this week, on a smaller scale than in past years and, for the first time, exchanging information with other states to identify invalid voters,” the Atlanta Journal Constitution reports.
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) told Fox News that Republican lawmakers want to replace Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) in their leadership because she isn’t “carrying out the message.”
The message Cheney Republicans object to is that Donald Trump lost the election fairly and then tried to overturn it.
The Times of London profiles White House chief of staff Ron Klain.
“Everybody who is anybody in Washington knows Klain, although few people outside the Beltway — the ring road surrounding the capital — have heard of him. He is a powerful, confident operator who knows the business of government inside out. Trusted to exercise power and take decisions, he keeps his boss informed while lifting the burden of office from him.”
David Leonhardt: “All of this rhetoric has obscured a basic fact about Biden’s tax plan: It would not actually raise tax rates on the rich to high levels, historically speaking.”
“If all of Biden’s proposed tax increases passed — on the corporate tax, as well as on investment taxes and income taxes for top earners — the total federal tax rate on the wealthy would remain significantly lower than it was in the 1940s, ’50s and ’60s. It would also remain somewhat lower than during the mid-1990s.”
Caitlyn Jenner (R), the former Olympic decathlete and reality TV personality now running for California governor, has branded herself as a “compassionate disrupter” fighting against “elitist” career politicians in a new campaign launch video released Tuesday, ABC News reports.
Seth Masket: “Schwarzenegger had a party behind him, one that was capable of collective action. No, there was no official way to designate a Republican nominee in the recall, but Schwarzenegger functionally became that anyway. A vast ideological range of Republican officeholders and activists, even those who strongly disagreed with his stances on some social and environmental issues, enthusiastically backed him, seeing him as the best shot the party would have in seizing the governor’s office for a generation.”
“Through both subtle and crass means, they pressured other Republican candidates out of the contest, making sure that the Republican vote would not be split. This is how Schwarzenegger ended up with 49 percent of the vote in a field of 135 candidates.”
Mark Barabak: Good news for Gavin Newsom – California is no longer the place it was in 2003.
The good news is that half of Americans now believe we are winning the war against COVID-19. The bad news is, nearly half still want you to keep wearing a mask, even if you’re vaccinated against the virus.
The Rasmussen Reports Immigration Index for the week of April 25-29, 2021 rose to 86.9, up from 83.7 two weeks earlier. The index is now as high as it’s been since early February; it reached a record low of 82.3 in late March. The Immigration Index has been under the baseline in every survey since Election Day last year. The index is still more than 18 points below where it was the week of October 22, indicating voters are looking for tighter immigration control from President Joe Biden’s administration.
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interview with Niall Ferguson via Uncommon KnowledgeNiall Ferguson is the Milbank Family Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and the author of Doom: The Politics of Catastrophe, his new book on the decisions made by governments and public health officials around the world during the COVID pandemic. In this wide-ranging discussion, Ferguson describes what governments and leaders got right and got wrong—very wrong—over the 15 months since the coronavirus spread from China.
by Lee Ohanian via California on Your Mind“Just opening your business, the amount of red tape . . . it puts the Soviet Union to shame. . . . Often times you’re hundreds and hundreds of thousands dollars in debt because of delays that were caused by the city and their processes.”
by Charles L. Hooper, David R. Henderson via The Wall Street Journal[Subscription required] Leaders’ greatest failure was not focusing on the elderly, who had lower costs and far greater benefits.
interview with Condoleezza Rice via George W. Bush Presidential CenterHoover Institution fellow Condoleezza Rice shares her perspective about the current state of the southern border and the root causes of the migrant increase.
by John B. Taylor, John F. Cogan via PolicyEdStimulus checks add billions to the federal debt that must be paid back eventually, often offsetting their effectiveness.
by Larry Diamond via Journal of DemocracyFew social scientists have done as much to expose the internet’s risks and dangers as Canadian political scientist Ronald Deibert. Measured and soft-spoken, he has been fearless and relentless in exposing corporate, criminal, and government efforts to hijack the internet for profit and power.
by Victor Davis Hanson via Victor Davis Hanson’s Private PapersI think daily, incrementally, insidiously the number of Americans that does not believe official Ministry of Truth communiques grows larger. And the number promulgating them for careerist purposes shrinks.
by John H. Cochrane via The Grumpy EconomistI have not independently checked, though the answer hardly matters. The fees and portfolios tell the story. Obviously any claim that this ESG portfolio will outperform after fees is … strained.
interview with Niall Ferguson via The Ben Domenech PodcastHoover Institution fellow Niall Ferguson discusses what past pandemics can tell us about the possible long-term impacts of COVID-19, how the Coronavirus became a catalyst for institutional mistrust, as well as solutions for addressing big tech censorship.
interview with Timothy Garton Ash via Debates on EuropeHoover Institution fellow Timothy Garton Ash discusses stopping autocratic tendencies in Hungary and the EU, as well as reversing the backsliding on the rule of law.
interview with Niall Ferguson via The Lawfare PodcastHoover Institution fellow Niall Ferguson discusses everything from earthquake zones, to viruses, to world wars, as well as how well our political and social structures have or have not adapted to the certainty of continued crises.
interview with Victor Davis Hanson via Scholars & SenseHoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson talks about the American economy, inequality in the education system, and the on-going left leaning bias in the media.
interview with Jack Goldsmith via LawfareHoover Institution fellow Jack Goldsmith explores how and when a president is held to account for wild and sometimes criminal behavior.
featuring Niall Ferguson via Politics and ProseDisasters are inherently hard to predict. Pandemics, like earthquakes, wildfires, financial crises. and wars, are not normally distributed; there is no cycle of history to help us anticipate the next catastrophe. But when disaster strikes, we ought to be better prepared than the Romans were when Vesuvius erupted, or medieval Italians when the Black Death struck. We have science on our side, after all.
quoting Raghuram Rajan via Hindustan TimesIndia’s relative success against the first wave of infections also likely led to it not swiftly preparing enough vaccines for its own population, he said.
mentioning Ayaan Hirsi Ali via HowTheLightGetsInWith world-famous philosophers, Nobel Prize-winning economists, leading politicians and radical scientists, the Debates and Talks programme for HowTheLightGetsIn May 2021 is here!
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
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This email was sent to: rickbulow1974@gmail.com
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71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief.
Good morning, it’s May 4, 2021. On this day in history, American Indians sold the Island of Manhattan for $24 worth of cloth and buttons (1626); Rhode Island declared independence from England (1776); and four Kent State University students were killed — nine injured — during an anti-Vietnam War demonstration on campus (1970).
TOP STORIES
Biden Calls on Homeland Security to Investigate Immigration Enforcement Agencies for White Supremacy Beliefs
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has been called upon to investigate possible threats of domestic violent extremism among their own.
TheJerusalem Post is reporting that Biden’s first budget proposal included a request for funding to investigate immigration enforcement agencies in light of concerns that a growing number of white supremacists might be hiding within the ranks.
Although DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas was not specific in his statement, he did point to the January 6 insurrection attack on the U.S. Capitol as a glaring example of the threat of American extremists.
The DHS’statement indicated it would “immediately begin a comprehensive review of how to best prevent, detect and respond to threats related to domestic violent extremism within DHS.”
The statement concluded with a compliment and a warning, “Each of you brings great honor to DHS.” The statement then shifts gears. “We will not allow hateful acts or violent extremism to penetrate the fabric of our Department and fundamentally compromise our ability to protect the Homeland.”
Torture? Alleged Sex Trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell’s Rough Time in Jail
Jeffrey Epstein’s former partner in crime, Ghislaine Maxwell, has complained of mistreatment in her Brooklyn jail cell. According to the New York Post, she indicated to her lawyers that what the prison guards are doing amounts to “torture.”
Maxwell alleges that heavy surveillance, coronavirus-related restrictions, gross food and other issues are inhibiting her ability to prepare for trial. Additionally, she has found the frequent nighttime security checks intrusive while she’s trying to sleep.
But the Bureau of Prisons has made clear the additional security is necessary for her circumstances. Her partner, Jeffrey Epstein, hung himself in August 2019 while awaiting trial. The system doesn’t need another event like this.
Most recently, the alleged sex trafficker and Epstein enabler has stated that she has experienced torture at the hands of prison guards who have “intimidated and humiliated” her. Maxwell complained the prison guards have been standing knee-to-knee over her while she uses the toilet.
Maxwell, in a filmed meeting with her lawyer, was seen keeping legal papers which is prohibited. This prompted guards to keep an even tighter watch on her, including bathroom visits.
The appeal was the latest attempt by Maxwell’s lawyer to have her released on bail. She is considered a flight risk based on her wealth, foreign citizenship and ability to avoid detection.
The appeals judges have considered ordering an independent psychiatric evaluation to determine her suicide risk.
U.S. Navy Fired Warning Shots as Three Iranian Fast Boats Test U.S. Patience
Last week,Fox News reported the U.S. Navy fired warning shots on three Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy patrol boats. The two U.S. ships attempted to make contact by radio and loud-hailer devices to warn the Iranian boats. Officials characterized the encounter as “unnecessarily close range with unknown intent.”
The incident took place in the Northern Persian Gulf while the U.S. ships were conducting routine operations in international waters. The coastal patrol boat USS Firebolt and Coast Guard cutter Baranof were approached by the Iranian ships, at times as close as 68 yards away. Due to a lack of response to verbal warnings, the U.S. crews fired warning shots, causing the vessels to retreat.
In a statement, a Naval spokesman said, “The IRGCN’s actions increased the risk of miscalculation and/or collision, and were not in accordance with the internationally recognized Convention of the International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea (COLREGS) ‘rules of the road.’”
The spokesman went on to say, “U.S. naval forces continue to remain vigilant and are trained to act in a professional manner, while our commanding officers retain the inherent right to act in self-defense.”
According to a report from Politico, this is the second act of Iranian aggression by sea toward U.S. ships in a month and the first time the U.S. has fired on Iranian vessels in almost four years.
ATP analysis: There is nothing new under the sun or in the North Persian Gulf. Countries in the region are at odds, to include the Middle East presence of the U.S. and Russia. The rival nations have been playing cat-and-mouse games on the sea and in the air. This incident is another weak show of force, staged for Iran’s home country propaganda.
Iran and the U.S. are also currently playing a diplomatic game. It would seem the U.S. is willing to head back to the table with the Islamic Republic, despite its antics.
The downside of playing the diplomatic game with countries like Iran is that they use it as a distraction strategy. While Iranian leaders sit at the table asking for concessions, the IRGC and terrorist organizations like Hezbollah play games around the world — dangerous games.
The Daily Intelligence Brief, The DIB as we call it, is curated by a hard working team with a diverse background of experience including government intelligence, investigative journalism, high-risk missionary work and marketing.
From All Things Possible and the Victor Marx Group we aim to provide you with a daily intelligence brief collected from trusted sources and analysts.
Sources for the DIB include local and national media outlets, state and government websites, proprietary sources, in addition to social media networks. State reporting of COVID-19 deaths includes probable cases and probable deaths from COVID-19, in accordance with each state’s guidelines.
Thank you for joining us today. Be safe, be healthy and
U.S. Customs and Border Protection purchased technology that vacuums up reams of personal information stored inside cars, according to a federal contract reviewed by The Intercept, illustrating the serious risks in connecting your vehicle and your smartphone.
A coalition of 80 U.S. agricultural, consumer, environmental, public health, and worker groups sent a letter Thursday to key figures in the Biden administration calling for them to “respect Mexico’s sovereignty and refrain from interfering with its right to enact health-protective policies”—specifically, the phaseout of the herbicide glyphosate and the cultivation of genetically modified corn.
The FBI raided an Alaska woman’s home and place of work last week in search of Nancy Pelosi’s stolen laptop. However, the woman says it was a case of mistaken identity.
The UN affiliated Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) proposes that governments should publish rules as computer code to be directly consumed by software and machines.
The WEF’s plan for a “Great Reset” is international in scope. There will likely be no nation spared from the attempts to transform our world and remake it in the vision of the Predator Class. Time is short for those who wish to exercise their voices and speak against the loss of freedom of movement. We either speak up now and stop the Great Reset vision in favor of a Greater Reset, a People’s Reset, or get comfortable in our digital prisons.
A CIA recruitment ad featuring a “cisgender woman of color” who rails against the “patriarchy” and announces she has been diagnosed with “generalized anxiety disorder” has been ridiculed for its woke pandering.
More than 60% of companies in the U.S. will require proof of vaccination from their employees, according to a new survey conducted by Arizona State University with support from the Rockefeller Foundation.
In the summer of 2019, Austin, Texas, Mayor Steve Adler and Councilman Greg Casar led a unanimous council vote to change the city’s ordinance concerning homeless camping.
Recent reports reveal that a Chinese company with connections to the Gates Foundation is involved in COVID-19 testing and poses a potential threat to American privacy, particularly the medical and health data of those who have been tested for COVID-19.
After failing to block Turkey’s purchase of the advanced S-400 Russian air defense system, Washington diplomacy in recent months appeared to have managed to “flip” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to support of US interests in several critical countries from Libya to Armenia to Ukraine, even Afghanistan. With the Turkish economy on the brink of catastrophe as the Lira plunges, it looks more and more like cynical strategists in Washington could have merely lured the wily Erdogan into a deadly bear trap .
A so-called independent fact-checker website FactCheck.org is exposed to be funded by the same $1.9 billion vaccine lobby group that it is supposed to check. The site is a Facebook partner whose articles are used to censor critical voices on the social media platform. It is headed by the former CDC director, which is again a conflit of interest.
The chief scientist for the newly created US Space Force has said he thinks ‘human augmentation’ will be here sooner rather than later. Dr. Joel Mozer, speaking at an event at the Airforce Research Laboratory, said that it is ‘imperative’ that the US outdo its adversaries by leading in ‘human augmentation’ in military technology.
From steel and copper to corn and lumber, commodities started 2021 with a bang, surging to levels not seen for years. The rally threatens to raise the cost of goods from the lunchtime sandwich to gleaming skyscrapers. It’s also lit the fuse on the massive reflation trade that’s gripped markets this year and pushed up inflation expectations.
It’s Canada’s turn in the carousel of attempts at terrible internet regulation around the world. The ruling Liberal party, which professor and internet law researcher Michael Geist has called the most anti-internet government in Canadian history for its wide variety of planned new internet laws, has been working for months on a bill to amend the Broadcasting Act and greatly broaden its scope, giving the CRTC (Canada’s counterpart to the FCC) authority over all kinds of online video and audio.
The Department of Defense (DOD) announced it is canceling U.S.-Mexico border wall construction efforts that were paid with funds that were initially allocated for the military.
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Welcome to the Tuesday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect tech and politics unfolding online. Today:
New York wants broadband to be accessible for all—cable companies would rather sue than provide it
NYPD gets rid of police robot dog after public pressure
Here’s what happens when the cops try to subpoena Signal
BREAK THE INTERNET
New York wants broadband to be accessible for all—cable companies would rather sue than provide it
Several lobby groups representing internet service providers (ISPs) have sued New York over a new law that requires them to offer $15-a-month broadband plans.
Last month, New York passed a law as part of its budget plan that would require ISPs in the state to offer low-income residents an option for $15-a-month broadband plans. The plan would be for 25 megabits per second (Mbps) download speeds and 10 Mbps upload speeds.
Experts told the Daily Dot at the time that New York’s plan was a “substantial step forward in addressing the challenge of broadband affordability that so many families around the country are confronting.”
However, it appears that ISPs feel differently.
Numerous lobby groups representing ISPs filed a lawsuit late last week arguing that New York does not have authority to require ISPs to offer a $15-a-month plan.
In response to the lawsuit, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) told the lobby groups to “bring it on.”
“If these companies want to pick this fight, impede the ability of millions of New Yorkers to access this essential service and prevent them from participating in our economic recovery, I say bring it on,” Cuomo said in a statement.
Why making your own pasta is a life-changing experience
If you’ve never tasted homemade pasta, you’re truly missing out. It transforms the beloved comfort food into something else entirely. But making it by hand can easily take all day. While there’s nothing like the taste of food made slowly with love, making it yourself is a lot easier with a pasta machine. Read on to learn how it works (and all the bumps we encountered along to way to that sweet homemade semolina).
In a statement, John Miller, the NYPD’s deputy commissioner for intelligence and counterterrorism, revealed that the department would be canceling its $94,000 contract with robotic design company Boston Dynamics.
Known officially as “Spot” but referred to as “Digidog” by police, the robot stirred controversy in February after footage of it being deployed in the Bronx went viral.
In a tweet at the time, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) condemned the department’s acquisition and accused police of deploying “robotic surveillance ground drones.”
In remarks to the New York Daily News, Miller disputed the claim from Ocasio-Cortez that the robot was being used for surveillance.
The removal of the robot dog also comes after City Councilman Ben Kallos filed a subpoena to learn just how much the NYPD had spent on Digidog. Kallos also introduced a bill that would ban the NYPD from using weaponized robots.
Signal was ordered last month by the United States Attorney’s Office in the Central District of California to provide a wide array of information on numerous users currently under criminal investigation.
But there’s just one problem: Given that the app was built from the ground up with privacy in mind, Signal doesn’t collect large amounts of data like other messaging services do.
In a blog post, Signal detailed how it was unable to provide nearly all of the information requested.
“Because everything in Signal is end-to-end encrypted by default, the broad set of personal information that is typically easy to retrieve in other apps simply doesn’t exist on Signal’s servers,” the company wrote.
The only data Signal was able to hand over for the accounts listed in the subpoena were the times and dates when they were created and the last time they connected to the app.
Is it possible to get slimmer, healthier and happier as you get older?
According to a Harvard geneticist that may actually be possible.
The secret is in your cell, and extending the caps at the end of them to protect your DNA and enhance your cells.
As you age these caps shrink and when your DNA gets damaged it leads to your health getting damaged, which can lead to weaker muscles, soreness, pain, and foggy thinking.
According to research by one of America’s top doctors there may be a way to actually extend these end caps, which can lead to clearer thinking, less pain, weight loss, and even more energy.
This method is already being used by many big name athletes and celebrities as well as some of America’s top doctors.
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NNPA NEWSWIRE — “Freedom Schools are not just culturally responsive, but we invest in young people – developing their sense of self-agency that they can make a difference in their home, their community and in the world,” expressed Dr. Starsky Wilson, the president and CEO of the Children’s Defense Fund (CDF), who is expected to discuss Freedom Schools further, and the most recent CDF State of America’s Children 2021, during the NNPA’s annual summer convention in June.
THE FLORIDA STAR – “FNEFL is thankful for the support and leadership of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris to ensure the American Rescue Plan of 2021 included critical nutrition investments to help people facing hunger,” said King. “Our foodbank has seen a 129% increase in people needing emergency food assistance since the start of the pandemic, and our struggle is reflected in every food bank nationwide. Nationally, the Feeding America network reports a 55% average increase in the need for emergency food assistance. We are honored to be given the opportunity to discuss food insecurity and the impact of COVID-19 on our community with Vice President Harris.”
THE LOUISIANA WEEKLY – As the city and the nation marked the start of the pandemic’s second year at the same time Americans began receiving the COVID vaccine en masse, the members of UNITE HERE Local 23 held a press conference on the steps of City Hall to announce their support for the recall rights of local hospitality workers who lost their jobs at New Orleans tourist-centered businesses and, as a result, have faced months of displacement and financial uncertainty.
THE SAVANNAH TRIBUNE – Dionne Formey, Polk State College’s Disability Services Coordinator, is committed to doing everything she can to ensure that students are able to succeed. To encourage students she often cites Malcolm X and states, “Education is the passport to the future, for tomorrow belongs to those who prepare for it today.”
THE GREENE COUNTY DEMOCRAT – The budget, which includes $3.5 million in projected revenues and $3.2 million in projected expenses was prepared using the best data available from past and current operations. The budget is divided into seven funds based on revenue streams. The budget includes: General Fund Administration, General Fund Police, General Fund Street and Sanitation, General Fund Debt Service, Water and Sewer Fund, 7-Cent Gas Tax Fund, 4-Cent Gas Tax Fund, Special Street Fund, and Capital Improvements Fund.
NEW ORLEANS DATA NEWS WEEKLY – “At first I was skeptical, because I’ve heard it takes a significant amount of time to get a vaccine developed,” said Mya Willis, a public health student at Xavier University of Louisiana.
THE ATLANTA VOICE – Clahar explains. “I know that with little simple change in our daily lives we can help end hunger in Atlanta. COVID-19 brought about extreme restrictions to an already restricted population. The hostile architecture, the lack of services, decrease in resources, and the disappearing of shelters一has pushed more homeless people into the unknown spaces of Atlanta”
VOICE AND VIEWPOINT – “Dr. Blair touched so many lives in San Diego. He mentored everyone — the young and old,” she said. “He was a true leader and civil rights hero.
SAVANNAH TRIBUNE – “Over our 43-year history, SCAD has always exemplified generous volunteerism through myriad worthwhile endeavors —computer donations for school children, historic preservation of Sapelo Island’s First African Baptist Church, tons of produce gifted from SCAD Back40’s organic farm, SCAD Buzz Bus educational supplies for schools, artworks for hospitals, and much, much more,” said SCAD President and Founder Paula Wallace.
THE ORLANDO ADVOCATE – “We are ecstatic to elevate black nurses as they bring wellness education, to help our corporate partners disseminate cultured wellness information, to elevate some and give to give hope to others within every zip code,” said Rhodes, who founded Michelle Rhodes Media LLC (The RNterprise Academy) to assist other nurses move into entrepreneurship.
THE NEW TRY-STATE DEFENDER – The Atlanta Police Department honored its first African-American woman officer, Linnie Hallmon Booker, with a virtual luncheon, where she was joined by friends, family and current personnel of the APD, including Chief Rodney Bryant.
NNPA NEWSWIRE — “This taxation without representation and denial of self-governance is an affront to the democratic values on which our Nation was founded. H.R. 51 rights this wrong by making Washington, D.C. a state and providing its residents with long-overdue full representation in Congress, while maintaining a Federal District that will continue to serve as our Nation’s seat of government,” the White House Office of Management and Budget said in a statement of administration policy.
NNPA NEWSWIRE — “We are very deeply engaged in working with members of the Senate and their teams on how this can move forward,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said of H.R. 1, or the “For the People Act of 2021,” which passed the House last month.
NNPA NEWSWIRE — “This law is driven by blatant racism, represents politics at its very worst, and is clearly illegal,” said Sophia Lakin, deputy director of the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project. “We urge the court to act swiftly to strike it down.”
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What you’ve missed: The Biden administration may outsource its domestic surveillance of US citizens to private firms, and the administration now claims schools “should probably all be open” by September.
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The BLM organization has released a new series of shocking and massive demands, centered around ex-President Trump and the “peaceful” riots of the summer of 2020.
According to their list of demands, there are seven things they want to happen immediately in America:
Convict and ban Trump from future political office;
Expel Republican members of Congress who attempted to overturn the election and incited a white supremacist attack;
Launch a full investigation into the ties between white supremacy and the Capitol Police, law enforcement, and the military;
Permanently ban Trump from all digital media platforms;
Defund the police;
Don’t let the coup be used as an excuse to crack down on our movement;
Pass the BREATHE Act.
For reference, the “coup” is how the organization has started referring to the Jan. 6 Capitol riots.
“We are joining Rep. Ilhan Omar, Rep. Ayanna Pressley, Rep. Cori Bush, Rep. Jamaal Bowman, and others who are demanding Trump be immediately convicted in the United States Senate. Trump must also be banned from holding elected office in the future,” states their first demand.
“In response to the coup, Politicians have already introduced the Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act of 2021. We’ve seen this playbook before. These laws are used to target Black and brown communities for heightened surveillance. Republicans are already busy trying to create an equivalence between the mob on January 6th and our Freedom Summer.”
“We don’t need new domestic terror laws, facial recognition, or any other new police power for the state. Our government should protect righteous protest and stay focused on the real issue: rooting out white supremacy. There are enough laws, resources, and intelligence, but they were not used to stop the coup. Our elected officials must uncover why.”
As far as policing, BLM states:
“The police were born out of slave patrols. We cannot reform an institution built upon white supremacy. We need a new, radical approach to public safety and community investment.”
“President Biden has already drawn on the BREATHE Act in his executive actions calling for racial equity screens in federal programs, investing in environmental justice at historic levels, and engaging with system-impacted communities. The BREATHE Act paints a vision of a world where Black lives matter through investments in housing, education, health, and environmental justice.”
NDP Critic and Deputy Critic for Canadian Heritage Alexandre Boulerice and Heather McPherson will now be voting in favour of the Conservative-led motion that would suspend Bill C-10 until it is confirmed to not violate any Charter rights.
The statement, released on Monday, calls out Heritage Minister Guilbeault for “not do[ing] the necessary review before moving forward.”
“This is why on Monday, we will be voting in favour of a motion that puts Bill C-10 on hold while the Department of Justice conducts a new Charter compliance analysis and calls on the Minister to appear in committee,” the statement says. “The NDP plans to table a sub-amendment that puts a timeline on the motion to make sure the [C]onservatives are not using this as an opportunity to delay the advancement of the bill indefinitely.”
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh told media last Tuesday that he may be open to supporting the controversial bill.
The heritage committee is made up of four Conservative members, five Liberal members as well as the Liberal chair, one NDP member, and one Bloc member. A tie would be decided by the chair.
With the intensity of the 2020 election finally winding down halfway in 2021, few events in the political world have generated the kind of buzz, attention, and scrutiny of Caitlyn Jenner’s new campaign for California governor. She seeks to replace current governor Gavin Newsom in a recall election poised to occur after nearly a year of effort on the behalf of the citizens of California who want him removed from office.
Jenner is perhaps the most famous transgender woman on the planet and she happens to be a lifelong Republican. While it is no secret that factions of the Republican party struggle with the topic of transgenderism, there is no shortage of bigotry and mudslinging coming from Democrats toward Jenner as well.
Many prominent figures on the left are condemning Caitlyn on the basis of her political affiliations, and refer to her as an enemy of the trans community.
Caitlyn has been on record for years as an activist and ally to transgender people, despite what Takei thinks or says. Several years ago she started the Caitlyn Jenner Foundation which advocates for housing, suicide prevention, healthcare, and more for transgender people. On multiple televised occasions, she has been seen on The Ellen DeGeneres show and more programs donating money to help trans people receive higher education. No amount of activism or charity work will satiate leftist detractors, however, who have most likely done far less for the community than Caitlyn.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo answered questions at a press conference on Monday, saying both that the scandal involving excess deaths in nursing homes was a Trump political scandal, and that unvaccinated young people risk killing their grandmothers.
“Nursing homes [are] being looked at by the Eastern District. That was a political investigation started by Donald Trump, who politicized not just COVID, but politicized nursing homes and policies toward nursing homes.”
“And wanted to blame Democratic governors, myself, and Michigan, and New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, it was all our fault, and then had his political Department of Justice start an investigation. And they were a political Department of Justice, there’s no doubt about that.”
“So that’s being done by the Department of Justice. I’ve already told New Yorkers where I am. I did nothing wrong. And period. And I’m not resigning and I’m doing my job every day.”
The investigation into the excess nursing home deaths in the state was launched and carried out by New York’s Attorney General Letitia James, a Democrat. The policy as regards nursing homes in the state of New York was that COVID-positive nursing home patients who were recovering after a stint in the hospital should be returned to their care facilities. Cuomo denied that this was the policy, and it was scrubbed from the New York state website.
Cuomo, however, has continued to blame Trump for the failings of his own administration.
Cuomo also took the opportunity to press for New Yorkers to get vaccinated, saying that the administration is particularly targeting “the youthful and the doubtful.”
The chair of the Defence Committee decided to cancel a committee meeting that was to be held on Monday.
The committee was set to meet amid an ongoing scandal, after it was revealed that Trudeau’s chief of staff Katie Telford knew about sexual misconduct allegations against General Vance in 2018, and him having kept his job and receiving a raise afterwards.
In his testimony to the House of Commons standing committee on national defence, Elder Marques (who served as a senior advisor to the prime minister) said that Telford told him to speak with advisors to the defence minister “on an issue relating to the [topic].”
Trudeau would go on to say that he was aware of a situation, but that he did not know it was of a “Me Too” nature.
Criticism of the Liberals for their mishandling of the situation has been intense. On Monday, New Democrat Leader Jagmeet Singh said that firing Talford was not good enough of a potential consequence, and that the problem lied with the prime minister.
The Conservative Defence Critic responded to this revelation by saying “Justin Trudeau’s claim that he was not aware of allegations of sexual misconduct by General Vance is clearly false.”
“It is outrageous to believe that everyone around Justin Trudeau was aware of these allegations but the prime minister didn’t know,” he added.
“The bosom of America is open to receive not only the Opulent and respectable Stranger, but the oppressed and persecuted of all Nations and Religions; whom we shall welcome to a participation of all our rights and privileges, if by decency and propriety of conduct they appear to merit the enjoyment.” —George Washington (1783)
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Recovery efforts go on in Mexico City after an accident, the U.S. is restricting travel to India due to COVID-19 and more news to start your Tuesday.
Happy Tuesday, Daily Briefing readers! Many are waking to the distressing news out of Mexico City this morning as a metro overpass collapsed late Monday night, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens more. Also in the news, the U.S. has placed restrictions on travel to India following the Asian nation’s crippling COVID-19 outbreak.
🌎 The Biden administration said Monday it would allow 62,500 refugees to resettle in the United States this year, reversing course after initially saying it would keep the historically low Trump-era limit of 15,000. But the president said the U.S. was unlikely to meet the higher goal.
⚖ Federal agents opened fire on an armed man outside CIA headquarters in McLean, Virginia, during an hourslong standoff on Monday, authorities said. The FBI said it is reviewing the incident.
⚖ Los Angeles County said it took “corrective personnel actions” against any employees who improperly shared photos from the scene of Kobe Bryant’s death, but said the photos were not publicly disseminated and Bryant’s widow, Vanessa, is wrong to file a lawsuit over it.
🖥Bill Gates, a Microsoft co-founder who is worth over $100 billion, and his wife Melindaare divorcing after 27 years of marriage. They said they’ll keep working together at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, a global health and development charity.
🎧On today’s 5 Things podcast, hear from activists pushing for police reform in Minneapolis following George Floyd’s killing and the conviction of Derek Chauvin. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
Here’s what’s happening today:
Recovery efforts continue in Mexico City after overpass collapse
At least 20 people were killed and about 70 more injured when a metro overpass in Mexico City collapsed, sending a subway car plunging toward a busy road late Monday night, authorities said. The accident trapped cars under rubble and passengers in train cars hanging in mid-air, video on social media and Mexico television showed. Dozens of rescuers have continued searching through wreckage from the collapsed, preformed concrete structure. “There are unfortunately children among the dead,” Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said, without specifying how many. The collapse occurred on the newest of the Mexico City subway’s lines, Line 12, the construction of which has been plagued by complaints and accusations of irregularities. The line had to be partly closed in 2013 so tracks could be repaired. The Mexico City Metro is one of the largest and busiest in the world, with at least four million people using it every day, The New York Times reports.
🟢 Lavinia Mounga boarded a flight from Salt Lake City to Honolulu, expecting to enjoy a family vacation. Hours later, she landed with a newborn baby boy in her arms. The new mom didn’t know she was pregnant and gave birth at just 29 weeks, a report states.
🟣The official title and release date for the highly-anticipated “Black Panther” sequel were revealed Monday as part of a megatrailer celebrating Marvel movies. Fans were also treated to a first look at Chloé Zhao’s “Eternals,” and learned the title of Brie Larson’s “Captain Marvel” sequel.
US to restrict travel to India following COVID-19 outbreak
Beginning Tuesday, the Biden administration will restrict travel from the U.S. to India . The decision comes after a recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, White House Press secretary Jen Psaki said last week. “The policy will be implemented in light of extraordinarily high COVID-19 caseloads and multiple variants circulating in India,” Psaki said in a statement. The restrictions apply to foreign nationals traveling from India to the U.S., not U.S. citizens. Others exempted include lawful permanent residents of the U.S. and their families, foreign officials and those traveling for humanitarian, public health or national security reasons. India has become the first in the world to report more than 400,000 daily cases, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. The U.S. has begun shipping valuable vaccine components, oxygen, and masks to India, and other nations are lending help as well, but the demand will still outstrip supply.
After severe weather — including a tornado in the Atlanta area — battered the South Monday, more storms are expected across the Southeast on Tuesday. States at the greatest risk include much of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Tennessee, the Storm Prediction Center said. Storm hazards Tuesday will include hail, flooding downpours, tornadoes and damaging, straight-line wind gusts of up to 75 mph, according to AccuWeather. At least 37,000 people were without power Monday evening in Texas, Georgia and Florida, according to poweroutage.us. One man was killed Monday in Douglasville, Georgia, when a falling tree brought power lines down onto his vehicle. There were reports of trees down across the Atlanta area, firefighters said.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis suspended local COVID-19 emergency orders Monday and signed a proposal lawmakers previously approved that limits the government’s ability to impose mask requirements and other social distancing measures used to combat the coronavirus. Tuesday will be the first full day the the altered rules will be in effect. The measure, Senate Bill 2006, also makes permanent DeSantis’ executive order that prohibits “vaccine passports,” saying it is unnecessary “to be policing people at this point.” DeSantis’ executive order to strike down local virus restrictions doesn’t apply to mask mandates or social distancing policies issued by businesses. Opponents warned the restrictions would generate lawsuits and could have other unintended consequences, such as tourists avoiding the state because of health concerns. They also questioned whether the measure will provoke a First Amendment challenge.
It’s Teacher Appreciation Week, and today is Teacher Appreciation Day. The pandemic was not kind to teachers, who have had to deal with school closings, finding new and creative ways to virtually teach students and other roadblocks. It has taken a toll on many. We wanted to highlight some ways to celebrate, appreciate and honor the teachers in our lives.
Tuesday is May the 4th, and that means it’s time to celebrate Jedi, Sith, the Resistance, the Skywalkers, and the rest of the Star Wars universe. Why May 4, you ask? Just look at the date, a play on “May the Force be with you.” With the pandemic still cramping our collective style somewhat, it’s a great time to binge on the beloved films and TV series at home. This year, fans will get a brand new story in the “Star Wars: The Clone Wars” galaxy in the form of “Star Wars: The Bad Batch.” The Lucasfilm Animation spin-off series opens with a special 70-minute first episode which premieres on May 4th on Disney+.
The Florida legislature recently passed Senate Bill 90 aimed at strengthening the state’s voting security systems. The bill contains a multitude of technical and substantive changes to the state’s voting systems, especially pertaining to absentee and mail-in ballots, and the use of drop boxes. The bill includes a ban on possessing multiple vote-by-mail ballots, and […]
A nurse at Houston Methodist Hospital has started a Change.org petition against her hospital’s mandatory vaccine policy. That’s according to a report from Becker’s Hospital Review. Houston Methodist Hospital is reportedly the first hospital in the U.S. to implement a mandatory Covid-19 vaccine policy for staff. The hospital has given employees until June 7 to […]
– May 3, 2021 – Statement by Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States of America Please explain to the Democrats and RINOs that the reason Texas-06 completely shut out Democrats in Saturday’s Jungle Primary is because of my Endorsement of Susan Wright, who surged last week after receiving it. The Democrats were […]
– May 3, 2021 – Statement by Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States of America The Fraudulent Presidential Election of 2020 will be, from this day forth, known as THE BIG LIE!
My last batch of signed books is now available. The timing couldn’t be better. Give to somebody you care about in these uncertain times. Information is power. Find out what’s behind the death of the news, and who’s behind big tech censorship. There’s hope.
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Want To Feel Stronger with One Simple Trick? Top Expert Says Do This Now
For years, Celebrity Fitness Trainer, Tony Horton, believed the only way to fight muscle aches, fatigue, and weight loss was with more exercise… and he is famous for training major stars like Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty and Stevie Nicks, to name a few of his celebrity clients. But recently, he’s found a better way to combat these common health issues that has nothing to do with exercise. Actually, it starts with one thing; Food.
Grown humans were seen crying at the reopening of Disneyland and people had thoughts
I get it. If you’ve been living in your basement for a year and waiting for Emperor Gavin Newsom to let you out of your house, it would be overwhelming to experience sunshine, fresh air, and a theme park at the same time:
Holy Cow. Bill and Melinda Gates are divorcing after 27 years of marriage.
Gates just tweeted it out:
Biden Administration considering outsourcing domestic spying to private companies to get around laws that prohibit domestic spying.
Sounds legit.
Would you like to see a Royal Marine in a jet pack fly off a little boat and land on a huge ship like Iron Man? Of course you would.
Just like that, like nbd. He made it look so easy.
MI GOP just put out this “Pure Michigan” parody ad called “Pure Hypocrisy, Pure Whitmer” … and it’s Pure 🔥🔥🔥
That’s a beautiful thing right there.
A chocolate shop in Seattle refused service to two police officers and now I guess we’ll just wait for Webster’s Dictionary to change the definition of “tolerance”
So this is where we’re at in America:
Hold onto your hats as ABC tries to spin the overwhelming belief that Biden hasn’t united America as national “optimism”
We’ve reached a new level of spin:
Check out the latest ridiculous girly-man FLOP from flopmaster LeBron James, along with a compilation of some of his best sprawls
LeFlop James, ladies and gentlemen — AKA King of the Flop!
DeSantis is out here making moves…
ENHANCE:
Ummm, Can Anyone Explain Why Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand Is Coming Out As Explicitly Anti-Family?
The Queen of Cringe, Senator from the State of New York Kirsten Gillibrand is trying to worm her way into the Bad Tweet Hall of Fame with this doozy that came seemingly out of nowhere:
Teacher Gives The Alphabet Song A Much Needed Update Rocking The Letters To A Tune By Korn 🤘
We can all agree, while classic and useful, the alphabet song is certainly outdated. And there have been attempts over the years to make the song hipper and improve the teaching method. This teacher on TikTok has finally come up with what I hope will be the new standard alphabet song for generations to come.
The Kentucky Derby had more viewers than any woke award show and most other sports games. Can you guess why?
So this happened:
“I give EVERYTHING” – Check out this officer’s heartbreakingly raw look into how cops feel as America demonizes them
This one hurts:
Caitlyn Jenner — Olympic gold medal winner and now trans person — says biological males should not be allowed to compete in women’s sports
So yeah, that happened.
Please enjoy this video of RINO Mitt Romney nearly getting booed off stage at his home state of Utah’s Republican convention
When you’re basically a corporate Democrat pretending to be a Republican and you show up to your home state’s Republican convention:
Special election in Texas district that Democrats felt they had a good shot at turning blue resulted in a runoff … Between two Republicans!
It’s suburban. There were eight Republicans splitting the vote vs. only six Democrats among the top 14 contenders. It was only +3 for Trump last go-around.
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
05/04/2021
View in Browser
Coronavirus Bulletin
TOP CORONAVIRUS NEWS
Best Countries for COVID-19 Vaccinations
Based on data collected by the research and statistics hub, Our World in Data, U.S. News analyzed which countries have the strongest performance in getting their citizens vaccinated against COVID-19. Read more.
Cardona Expects All Schools to Open This Fall
The education secretary’s comments come amid concerns over whether districts that have been slow to return students to classrooms will be able to do so to start the next school year Read more.
India’s Virus Surge Highlights Global Risks
Some countries have started looking toward relaxing mitigation measures in the not-so-distant future, but the crisis in India highlights that the pandemic is still far from over. Read more.
Moderna Vaccine to Go Global
Moderna has agreed to supply up to half a billion doses of its coronavirus vaccine to low- and middle-income countries, the company announced on Monday. Read more.
New U.S. COVID Cases Fall for Third Week
New cases of COVID-19 in the United States fell for a third week in a row, dropping 15% last week to 347,000, the lowest weekly total since October, according to a Reuters analysis. Read more.
Find the Latest Coronavirus Information by State
Each state, plus U.S. territories and Washington, D.C., has online resources about COVID-19. Here’s a guide.
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99.) MARK LEVIN
May 3, 2021
Posted on
On Monday’s Mark Levin Show, The Democrats and their ally in the teacher’s unions lobby the CDC which has become politicized and they’re politicizing the classrooms of America’s children and their health. Big Democrat cities obey the “follow the science” mantra to get the tax dollars of rural and suburban areas while they squander their own. Then, Hansjörg Wyss, a Swiss billionaire, is pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into the American political system by way of donations to groups supporting Marxist-Progressive ideas. While claiming to be apolitical, Wyss seems to solely support Democrat causes while the media chases Rudy Giuliani. Democrats pose the pretext of taking action on “dark money” while simultaneously allowing Wyss’ foreign billions to build political infrastructure. Later, Levinites need to take their liberty back from Marxists and we need to do it non-violently because all Americans aren’t Antifa. Nikole Hannah Jones, founder of the “1619 Project” claims Gov DeSantis and other critics of Critical Race Theory have not even read the teachings. This revisionist racist poison is spreading through academia, the media, and our government. This is a Marxist movement hellbent on destruction and violence wrapped in the patina of “free speech” instead of indoctrination and propaganda. Afterward, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken all but called on China to attack Taiwan. President Biden is a mix of our worst presidents – Carter and Obama. Finally, Dr. Kenneth Hartmann of OurCommunitySalutes.org calls in to discuss his annual online event honoring high school seniors enlisting in the U.S. armed services after graduation.
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / San Francisco Chronicle
100.) WOLF DAILY
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The U.S. House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee launched an investigation on Monday of President Donald Trump’s blocking of funds for the World Health Organization, giving the State Department a week to provide information about the decision as the world faces the coronavirus pandemic.
Afghan security forces fought back a huge Taliban offensive in southern Helmand province in the last 24 hours, as militants launched assaults around the country following a missed U.S. deadline to withdraw troops.
Common sense and a lot of data say no, but the Business Cycle Dating Committee, a panel organized by the National Bureau of Economic Research that acts as the official arbiter of U.S. recessions, has not yet pinned down an end date for the contraction it said started after February 2020
Facebook’s independent oversight board on Wednesday will announce whether it is overturning the company’s suspension of former U.S. President Donald Trump’s account. The long-awaited ruling will bring the focus back onto how the world’s largest social network decides what world leaders and politicians can and can’t say on their platforms.
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COVID presents no threat to children. There hasn’t been one case of a child giving COVID to a teacher. COVID is the club which Democrats mean to beat us down, into submission. Once the children are under their complete, insane control, the rest is …
Remember Trump’s historic peace with the NORKS? Handled with brilliant statesmanship Now, “Biden” admin (Democrats) are blowing up the world. China/Taiwan, Russia/Ukraine, Israel/jihad terrorism and now North Korea.
They have the big theft in place. The Democrats pulled off the biggest election theft in human history. Of course they are confident! This is war. This is where we plant our flag.
The media is the enemy of the people. The Democrat party has weaponized their ministry of propaganda to target, smear, defame and destroy the political opposition. Like Hitler, Stalin, Mao ….
Democrat Nazism. The vicious Jew hater is accused of shattering synagogue doors and windows, smashing multiple car windows — and dousing prayer books. Now, imagine if he had done this to several mosques ……..
Facebook Twitter Google+ For 30 days, I will report daily the terrorist attacks, the crimes, the butcheries of Ramadan Bombathon 2021. I have followed and report Ramadan Bombathon for 8 years. It has always amazed me to see that no mainstream …
Israel also transferred 5,000 vaccine doses meant to inoculate Palestinian health workers. Some of those vaccines were promptly claimed for themselves by PA leaders and their extended families, a scandalous misappropriation over which Israel had no …
Check out the latest episode in College Unbound! Episode 10: Leftist Mythology vs Reality: The Deadly Legacy of Marxism, Socialism, and Collectivism. Sign up here…
Quoting the Bible can’t land you in American prison (yet), but in Helsinki, it’s a different story. In a case that’s stunned the West, Finland’s former Interior Minister and leader of the Christian Democrats, has been criminally charged for…
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I have to ask some hard questions in this show. Do liberals care more about politics than conservatives? In this episode, I discuss a fascinating article that addresses this question while simultaneously explaining why liberals are obsessed with race. I also address the growing discontent with GOP sellouts Liz Cheney and Mitt Romney, and the continued fallout from the deep-state targeting of Rudy Giuliani.
Report: Republicans to Oust Liz Cheney From Leadership by End of Month
Congressional Republicans are revolting against RINOs, with Liz Cheney on track to be stripped of her leadership positions by months end, according to a new report.
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