Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday May 14 , 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
May 14 2021
Happy Friday from Washington, where President Biden’s homeland security secretary claims “dramatic” progress in countering the border surge during a Senate hearing. Fred Lucas rounds up some of the most telling moments. Democrats’ bid to pack the Supreme Court is destructive, write Rep. Ted Budd and pro-life leader Marjorie Dannenfelser. On the podcast, former independent counsel Ken Starr fears for the future of religious freedom. Plus: Using immigration numbers, Deroy Murdock puts the lie to the left’s claims of a racist America. On this date in 1948, as the British army withdraws, the modern Jewish state of Israel comes into existence with David Ben-Gurion in the post of prime minister.
“We must ensure our elections are fair and free from outside influence,” says one state lawmaker. “What happened in Green Bay during the 2020 election is truly disturbing.”
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Sarah Liang, one of our reporters in Hong Kong, was beaten with a metal bat in broad daylight outside her apartment building. The attack is suspected to have been orchestrated by the Chinese Communist Party in an effort to stop us from reporting the Truth about the CCP.
With all of the censorship and communistic acts that have been happening more and more frequently here in the United States, how long will it be before attacks like this begin happening right here on American soil?
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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From the story: Israel had been retaliating with air strikes, but the ground attack marks another major escalation in what authorities were already describing as the largest clash between Israelis and Palestinian militants since 2014 (Fox News). A look at how Iran has helped Hamas develop their drone technology (Jerusalem Post). Meanwhile, the conflict has proven the value of missile defense. From the story: A spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces says that Hamas and Islamic Jihad, Iran-backed terrorist groups based in Gaza, had fired some 1,700 rockets against Israeli cities this week as of Thursday evening. But the defining image of the conflict so far isn’t Israeli infantry maneuvering into enemy territory. Instead it’s the night sky over Tel Aviv that lights up as batteries of Iron Dome missiles, using radar and sophisticated computer systems, track and shoot down 90% of the incoming weapons (WSJ). From Erielle Davidson; Someone has yet to explain to me how the Palestinian government could possibly compromise with Israel and still win an election after naming schools after terrorists, subsidizing terrorist families, and promulgating textbooks that portray Jews as pigs and devils (Twitter).
2.
CDC: Fully Vaccinated People Can Stop Wearing Face Masks
And they no longer need to keep their distance from others (WSJ). From Ed Morrissey: …this is pretty much common knowledge already — only the CDC seems to have problems comprehending it (Hot Air). From Philip Klein: Though this is an important and long overdue development, because the guidance only refers to vaccinated people, and the vaccine has only been authorized for those 12 and older, it means that children will still be subjected to scientifically unnecessary rules. Children are at extremely low risk of getting severe COVID-19 or spreading it. The only rationale for ever having them wear masks was to limit the possibility of spreading to older and more vulnerable populations. But with those populations now protected, that rationale has gone away (National Review).
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3.
Colonial Paid $5 Million Ransom
In the form of 75 Bitcoin (New York Times). Republicans note this mini crisis shows how we are in no position to cut back on oil (Washington Examiner).
4.
Anti-Semitism and Ignorance of Democrat Squad Members on Full Display
The cluster of congressmembers are tweeting and speaking hatred of Jews as Israel is under attack (National Review). From another story: Leading Democrats such as Reps. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, meanwhile, argue the Israeli military’s retaliatory Gaza strike this week proves Israel will resort to its own “acts of terrorism” against innocent Palestinians with little pushback from American officials. Ms. Omar and Ms. Ocasio-Cortez claim that many U.S. lawmakers support Israel at every turn without question. Such accusations from the two progressive firebrands prompted outrage Thursday from former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who responded that the arguments being made by Ms. Omar and Ms. Ocasio-Cortez carried a “deep, deep flavor of antisemitism” (Washington Times). Senator Marco Rubio called Omar “out of her mind” for her tweets (NY Post).
5.
John Kerry Admits Uyghur Slave Labor Used to Build Solar Panels
But he eventually shrugged it off with “That’s not my lane. My lane is very specifically is to try and get the Chinese to move what we need to do with respect to climate itself.”
Media Outlet Blasts Young Reporters Who Dare to Expose BLM and Antifa
From the story: For the Intercept, the story isn’t the burning police car or the looted grocery store: it’s the young, ill-equipped and underpaid reporters who document it because the cable news channels can’t be bothered to” (Spectator). Among those criticized by Intercept is Townhall’s own Julio Rosas (Townhall). From Katie Pavlich: Townhall stands behind Julio and his fearless, real journalism. We will not tolerate smears that put a target on his back, which can result in violent thugs causing him physical harm as he documents volatile situations (Twitter). From Jennifer Van Laar: We absolutely do stand behind Julio. And this isn’t the first time lefty journos have smeared a Townhall Media journalist and put a target on their back. (remember the smear campaign against me, including LA Times publishing personal info?) It needs to stop (Twitter). From the Daily Caller: The reality is that our reporters were just a few of the many journalists who ventured out during a global pandemic, but they stood out from the rest of American journalism for two reasons. First, their bravery in accepting danger to cover an important story better than anyone else in America. And second, the nuanced, balanced and honest story they told (Daily Caller). Intercept co-founder Glenn Greenwald called the hit piece “disgusting and dangerous” (Fox News). From Andy Ngo: As someone who nearly died as a result of being beaten on the head for my video coverage of riots, I cannot overstate how much more you’re endangering these reporters in your hit piece. @spj_tweets & @pressfreedom need to condemn this anti-press freedom propaganda (Twitter).
7.
Russian Conspiracy Theorist Rewarded with Position at Justice Department
From Kimberly Strassel on Susan Hennessey: Like all good conspiracists, she also worked hard to cast doubt on facts that disproved her theories. She excoriated a 2018 memo by former House Intelligence Chairman Devin Nunes about FBI surveillance abuses, suggesting it was a “lie.” She wrote this before she’d even read the memo, which proved accurate. When the Justice Department inspector general released a 2019 report lambasting the FBI’s conduct in the Russia probe (including that Mr. Steele had cobbled together gossip), she tweeted that she didn’t “think the findings are significant enough” to “justify the work of a podcast.” (In the runup to her job offer, thousands of her prior tweets disappeared.)
Penn State University Rids Words “Freshman, Junior, Senior,” Calling Them Sexist
From the story: “The University … has grown out of a typically male-centered world. As such, many terms in our lexicon carry a strong, male-centric, binary character to them,” the resolution reads. “Terms such as ‘freshmen’ are decidedly male-specific, while terms such as ‘upperclassmen’ can be interpreted as both sexist and classist.” If they truly didn’t want to be “classist,” they’d do away with degrees altogether.
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Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 5.14.21
Good morning. ‘Sunburn’ has been waiting for you.
Another poll found Florida voters largely support the Gaming Compact recently signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis and Seminole Tribe of Florida Chairman Marcellus Osceola Jr.
The poll, commissioned by the Florida Chamber of Commerce, found 68% of voters approve of the deal, which would give the Seminole Tribe exclusive rights to oversee sports betting in Florida, both on their own properties and through pari-mutuels operating under their supervision. Meanwhile, just 21% disapprove.
Support was strong across party lines, with 75% of Republicans, 66% of NPAs, and 62% of Democrats supporting the proposed compact with the Seminole Tribe.
The Chamber poll comes two days after a survey conducted by Republican pollster Ryan Tyson found equally strong support for Gaming Compact.
Most Floridians are enthusiastically behind the new Seminole Compact proposal. Image via NSF.
The survey released Tuesday showed 62% support, with only 17% opposed. Further, support grew once voters were informed about what the state would get out of a new compact — a minimum of $2.5 billion in payments to the state over the next five years.
Voters also were swayed after hearing the Gaming Compact would bring substantial economic investments and jobs to the state. Current estimates say the proposal would create about 2,200 jobs.
Lawmakers are heading to Tallahassee next week to take up the proposal, which requires legislative approval.
Further off, the Chamber poll also tested how voters feel about sending U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio back to Washington next year and found him in a good position to win reelection, whether he faces Democratic U.S. Rep. Stephanie Murphy or former State Attorney Aramis Ayala.
Eighteen months out from Election Day, Rubio leads Murphy by 10 points, 51%-41%, and Ayala by 13 points, 52%-39%. Neither Murphy nor Ayala have officially announced, but both have positioned themselves for a statewide campaign.
Situational awareness
—@JoeBiden: After a year of hard work and so much sacrifice, the rule is now simple: get vaccinated or wear a mask until you do.
—@SlacktivistFred: So, for those of us in retail: The asshats who spent the past 15 months getting in your face yelling, I HAVE A HEALTH EXEMPTION HIPAA ADA! will now be getting in your face, yelling, and lying about having been vaccinated. This will be unpleasant.
—@YukonGold1898: I agree with the CDC’s decision today and probably won’t be wearing a mask much from now on, but I also think that the people who get viscerally angry at other people continuing to wear masks have their priorities way off.
—@OmarJimenez: Mask Off is going to end up the number one song in the country by the end of the day, isn’t it
—@SpataTimes: The CDC says it’s safe to put ketchup on a hot dog.
Tweet, tweet:
—@Chris_Minor10: Everyone in Tallahassee is worried about gas and ignoring the fact that late-night staple Gumby’s Pizza has atrociously renamed itself “Pizza Mouth.” Priorities …
Days until
Gambling Compact Special Session begins — 3; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 14; ‘Tax Freedom Holiday’ begins — 14; Memorial Day — 17; Florida TaxWatch Spring Meeting and PLA Awards — 20; ‘Loki’ premieres on Disney+ — 28; Father’s Day — 37; F9 premieres in the U.S. — 42; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 49; 4th of July — 51; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 56; MLB All-Star Game — 60; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 70; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 70; The NBA Draft — 76; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 78; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 84; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 102; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 112; NFL regular season begins — 118; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 123; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 133; ‘Dune’ premieres — 140; MLB regular season ends — 142; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 148; World Series Game 1 — 165; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 172; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 172; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 175; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 196; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 210; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 217; NFL season ends — 240; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 242; NFL playoffs begin — 246; Super Bowl LVI — 275; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 315; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 357; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 420; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 511; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 546.
Top story
“Feds tighten grip in Matt Gaetz probe” via Josh Gerstein, Marc Caputo and Matt Dixon of POLITICO — Federal investigators are intensifying their sex-crimes probe of Gaetz as they discuss a potential immunity arrangement with his former girlfriend and have struck a tentative deal with his one-time “wingman” who will likely plead guilty, according to multiple people familiar with the situation. The U.S. Department of Justice’s Public Integrity Section also continues to interview potential witnesses who could provide prosecutors with evidence against Gaetz. One witness told POLITICO that prosecutors spent two hours asking whether Gaetz or others in his circle had sex with a 17-year-old girl in 2017. Gaetz has denied he had sex with a minor. The likely plea by Joel Greenberg is a new development that signals Gaetz may be facing increasing legal peril.
“Manny Diaz hits the ground running with reelection fundraiser at Trump Doral” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Fresh off the 2021 Legislative Session, Republican Sen. Diaz is announcing a major fundraiser hosted at Donald Trump’s Doral resort. The event will take place Thursday, June 10. The money raised will help fund Diaz’s political committee, Better Florida Education. Diaz and his team haven’t yet listed price points to enter the event. But he’s looking to jump-start his 2022 fundraising effort after being on the sidelines recently. Diaz is already sitting on nearly $460,000 heading into the 2022 contest, but Florida lawmakers are barred from raising cash for the campaign accounts during the Legislative Session. The Senator is looking for a second term representing Senate District 36. So far, no other candidates have filed for the seat.
Manny Diaz is not sitting still post-Session.
“MDW Communications snags five Reed Awards for campaign work” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Political marketing firm MDW Communications picked up five Reed Awards from Campaigns & Elections, the leading publication for the political campaign industry. The accolades included two awards for “Best Website,” one for Sheriff John Mina and the other for former State Sen. Jose Javier Rodriguez; two awards for direct mail, one for Cooper City Commissioner Ryan Shrouder and the other for a mailer from the 2020 Miami-Dade County Commission District 5 race; and one award for email fundraising for Daniella Levine Cava’s successful campaign for Miami-Dade Mayor. MDW Communications’ showing in the Reed Awards comes shortly after the firm picked up a half-dozen Pollie Awards from the American Association of Political Consultants.
Dateline Tally
“Gov. Ron DeSantis: Incentivize work, not unemployment” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — DeSantis suggested Thursday that federal unemployment benefits would be better utilized as some sort of “back-end” benefit for Floridians who rejoin the workforce. The suggestion comes as Florida works to nudge unemployed Floridians into the state’s 400,000 plus job vacancies. Currently, unemployed Floridians earn a weekly maximum of $275 a week from the state and an extra $600 a week from the federal government. “I think that would change some of the incentive structure that we’re seeing and would still make it worth people’s while,” DeSantis told reporters in Ormond Beach of his idea to incentivize work, not unemployment. DeSantis and Republican colleagues contend the extra federal funds disincentivize the state’s re-employment effort and stifle Florida’s economic rebound.
Ron DeSantis bristles at the thought of paying people not to work.
“Tax relief package with ‘Freedom Week,’ Moffitt boost heads to DeSantis’ desk” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — This year’s tax package awaits DeSantis‘ signature after lawmakers sent the bill to his desk Thursday. The package (HB 7061) is expected to create $196.3 million in relief for Floridians, including through a new “Freedom Week” tax holiday. That and two returning but elongated holidays are alone expected to make up $134.6 million of that relief. Freedom Week would be July 1-7 and would cover sporting and live music events, state park admission, gym dues and movie theater tickets for events. It would also waive taxes on products like tents, sleeping bags, or even sunscreen purchased that week. The back-to-school holiday would run from July 31-Aug. 9. The disaster preparedness holiday would run from May 28-June 6.
“Pandemic fraud bill lands on Governor’s desk” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — DeSantis received a bill Thursday to protect consumers against fraud and scams during the COVID-19 pandemic. Sponsored by Republican Rep. Ardian Zika of Pasco County, the bill (HB 9) was the first measure to pass in the House during the 2021 Legislative Session and cleared both chambers with unanimous votes. “This is an important piece of legislation that protects our consumers against fraud during a pandemic,” Zika told House members. The proposal establishes criminal penalties and authorizes civil remedies from fraud as consumers seek vaccines or send personal protective equipment during a pandemic. It also stiffens penalties against fake websites and fraudulent COVID-19 ploys.
Florida just raised the legal age to smoke and vape to 21 — so why are public health groups so unhappy?” via Mitch Perry of Bay News 9 — DeSantis signed a measure last week that raises the age to buy tobacco and nicotine products from 18 to 21. The bill received strong support from both sides of the political aisle in the Florida Legislature, yet public health groups remain strongly opposed. The main source for the fervent opposition by public health agencies is that the legislation takes the power to regulate youth smoking away from local municipalities and counties and gives it to the state’s Department of Business and Professional Regulation, which they say won’t be nearly as effective in calling out retailers who sell these products to those under 21.
“Outspoken Joe Harding plans to bring back baby box bill” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — Rep. Harding says he’s not “your typical politician,” which is just what a politician would say. But in some ways, he might have a point. The small-town Republican comes to Tallahassee by way of Williston, a town in Levy County with around 3,000 people. Harding owns a landscape and construction business and describes his background as “very blue-collar.” Harding expects to have four of his sponsored bills from the 2021 Session signed into law. One preempts local occupational licensing regulations; another makes changes to the state’s workforce and postsecondary programs. A third bill updates fire sprinkler regulations, and the fourth is a local bill that makes changes to the Homosassa Special Water District.
Blue-collar Joe Harding is not your typical politician. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Fiona McFarland on her forward-thinking legislation that passed — and some that didn’t” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — Republican Sarasota Rep. McFarland has a background many politicians would envy. McFarland graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 2008 and spent eight years on active duty, serving on warships in the Western Pacific and at the Pentagon. McFarland also benefits from a politically connected mom, former Trump Deputy National Security Adviser K.T. McFarland. “I’ve seen through my own perspective and then my mom’s stories as well,” McFarland said in a post-Session interview with Florida Politics. What McFarland saw gave her a pessimistic view of politics. But she said her views changed after working in the Florida Legislature. “You know my view of politics was, frankly, not very great when I entered,” McFarland said.
Lobby regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Ken Granger, Capital City Consulting: Lexmark International
Daniel Martinez: Americans for Prosperity
Tara Reid-Cherry, Jared Willis, Strategos Public Affairs: Behavioral Health Center of Excellence
Got gas?
“Gas stations await relief from panic buyers while Colonial Pipeline restores service” via Taylor Telford of The Washington Post — Despite warnings from government officials and experts, panicked drivers have drained more than 17,000 stations throughout the Southeast, including many that would not otherwise have been affected by the pipeline hack. Some signs of improvement surfaced overnight in Atlanta, Charlotte and Raleigh, among the hardest-hit metro areas. But as of Thursday morning, more than 70% of the stations in North Carolina remained dry, and states as far apart as Delaware and Kentucky were feeling the artificial crunch, according to Patrick De Haan, an oil analyst at GasBuddy. The panic has driven U.S. gas demand up more than 11% so far this week, De Haan tweeted.
Gas stations are urging relief as panicked customers flock to the pumps. Image via AP.
“Amid pipeline hack fallout, Gary Farmer renews push to set up strategic fuel reserve” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Democratic Sen. Farmer is revisiting his calls for the state to set up a strategic fuel reserve after the Governor declared a state of emergency following the Colonial Pipeline hack. Colonial representatives have announced the company is resuming service, just under a week after a ransomware attack forced the company to shut the pipeline down. Word of that shutdown caused panic to spread across the south and in parts of Florida, particularly the Panhandle. “The Colonial Pipeline hacking exposed a major flaw in our state’s ability to be prepared for disaster to strike,” Farmer said in a Thursday statement.
Statewide
“State government open for business? Gradually” via Christine Sexton of Florida Politics — DeSantis has touted for months that Florida’s “open for business,” but it’s just now that state government is reopening offices, buildings and museums that interact directly with taxpayers. And the opening has seemingly come in fits and starts. Some agencies said their employees returned to work months ago after offices were initially closed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. But the state Capitol just opened last week. Reopenings have come after an April 29 public-health advisory by Department of Health Secretary Scott Rivkees recommending that government offices resume in-person operations and services. The DeSantis administration won’t answer questions about which state employees have returned to their offices and how many continue working from home.
Scott Rivkees says the Florida state government can resume as normal — soon.
“Florida’s first Chief Science Officer talks about the job — and the controversy” via Craig Pittman of the Florida Phoenix — Last week, I had coffee with a scientist named Tom Frazer. I was trying to nudge him to say some things about his former boss, but he was choosing his words verrrrry carefully. We sat at a sidewalk table in downtown St. Petersburg, both of us fully vaccinated but still maintaining our social distance because that’s what science says is safe. Frazer is all about following what science says. He’s dean of the College of Marine Science at the University of South Florida but, before that job, he served as Florida’s very first Chief Science Officer. This was Frazer’s first long interview after leaving the job.
“Conflict of interest questions raised in FSU search” via Ryan Dailey of News Service of Florida — The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, a key higher-education accrediting organization, is raising questions about a potential conflict of interest involving state Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran as he seeks to become president of Florida State University. Corcoran is a member of the state university system’s Board of Governors, which ultimately will have to approve the candidate selected by FSU’s Board of Trustees. “I’m concerned that if he doesn’t step down from his position on the Board while he is a candidate for the position since it is the Board of Governors that will be hiring the President, the SACSCOC Board of Trustees will find the institution out of compliance” with the accrediting body’s rules, SACS President Belle Wheelan wrote.
“Pinellas Sheriff Gualtieri backs challenge to Marsy’s Law ruling” via Jim Saunders of News Service of Florida — Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri this week said he plans to file friend-of-the-court briefs at the Florida Supreme Court in a dispute about whether a 2018 constitutional amendment known as “Marsy’s Law” can prevent the release of officers’ names. A three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal ruled last month that privacy protections in the constitutional amendment can apply to two Tallahassee police officers who argued they were victims because they were threatened in incidents that resulted in the use of force. A document filed by Gualtieri’s attorneys said a police officer “who shoots and kills another is not a ‘victim’ of that shooting and cannot invoke Marsy’s Law to shroud his shooting in secrecy.”
Corona Florida
“4,064 new Florida coronavirus cases reported Thursday; 47 new deaths” via FOX 13 News — The Florida Department of Health says the number of known cases of COVID-19 in the state rose by 4,064 Thursday. According to the state’s daily update, the total number of cases in Florida since the pandemic began is now 2,282,613. The number of Florida resident deaths has reached 35,929, an increase of 47 since Wednesday’s update. In addition, a total of 719 non-Floridians have died in the state. The state is not reporting a total number of “recovered” coronavirus patients. As of Thursday, the number of Floridians currently hospitalized for a primary diagnosis of COVID-19 was 2,684, with the state reporting a total of 92,742 hospitalized for treatment at some point.
“DeSantis will pardon those accused of violating COVID-19 restrictions” via Rafael Olmeda of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis is promising to pardon anyone in the state who is facing criminal penalties, including fines and jail time, for violating mask mandates and other efforts to stop the spread of COVID-19. The Governor made the promise Wednesday night on The Ingraham Angle on Fox News. “We’ll issue pardons … for any Floridian that may have outstanding infractions for things like masks and social distancing,” he said. State Attorney Harold Pryor said he was still waiting for the Governor to make good on the promises he made on television. “The cases are pending, and we will continue to follow the law unless and until the Governor takes official action,” he said in an emailed statement.
Ron DeSantis issues a blanket pardon for all COVID-19 violations.
“Gov. DeSantis: Florida will fill void if small cruise lines leave” via Brendan Farrington of The Associated Press — Calling Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings “not one of the bigger ones,” DeSantis said Thursday that if smaller cruise lines want to leave the state because of bans on vaccine requirements, their void will be filled. Miami-based Norwegian is the third-largest cruise line in the world and has three ports of departure in Florida — Miami, Port Canaveral and Tampa. It also makes stops in Key West. But it hasn’t operated in the U.S. since the federal government shut down all cruises last year because of the coronavirus pandemic. The federal government is getting ready to let cruises sail again, but only if nearly all passengers and crew are vaccinated against the virus.
“Rebekah Jones, the COVID-19 whistleblower who wasn’t” via Charles C.W. Cooke of National Review — This is a story about Jones, a former dashboard manager at the Florida Department of Health (FDOH), who has single-handedly managed to convince millions of Americans that DeSantis has been fudging the state’s COVID-19 data. When I write “single-handedly,” I mean it, for Jones is not one of the people who have advanced this conspiracy theory but rather is the person who has advanced this conspiracy theory. To understand that is to understand the whole game. This is about Jones and Jones alone. If she falls, it falls. And boy does it deserve to fall.
Corona local
“Low COVID-19 vaccination rates in Broward could be a threat as restrictions disappear” via Cindy Krischer Goodman and Aric Chokey of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — At a time when DeSantis is using sweeping authority to get rid of pandemic restrictions in the state, only about a third of the residents in pockets of Broward County are vaccinated. The low vaccination rates have local leaders fearful residents will be vulnerable should cases suddenly rise. Overall, more than half of Broward County is vaccinated with one or more doses. But in eight ZIP codes, only 33% to 39% of residents have received one or more doses. Those regions are along the southern edge of Broward County and encompass cities such as Miramar, Pembroke Pines and Hollywood. They also fall in the center of the county and include cities such as Fort Lauderdale, Lauderhill and Lauderdale Lakes.
The relatively low vaccination rates in Broward are troubling. Image via Reuters.
“Masks will be optional in Palm Beach County schools next year” via Brooke Baitinger and Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Palm Beach County’s school district announced the decision Thursday to make masks optional for students and staff starting next school year. The current school year ends June 18, and students and staff must wear masks until then, during next month’s high school graduation ceremonies, and during summer school, Superintendent Donald Fennoy wrote in a letter to parents. The school district won’t require masks next year because COVID-19 vaccines are widely available for adults and children, Palm Beach County’s positivity rate has been on a downward trend, and because DeSantis recommended against facial coverings in schools in the fall, Fennoy said.
Corona nation
“‘Great day for America’: Vaccinated can largely ditch masks” via Zeke Miller and Michael Balsamo of The Associated Press — In a major step toward returning to pre-pandemic life, the CDC eased mask-wearing guidance for fully vaccinated people on Thursday, allowing them to stop wearing masks outdoors in crowds and most indoor settings. “Today is a great day for America,” President Joe Biden said during a Rose Garden address heralding the new guidance. “If you are fully vaccinated, you no longer need to wear a mask,” he said, summarizing the new guidance and encouraging more Americans to roll up their sleeves. “Get vaccinated — or wear a mask until you do.” The guidance still calls for wearing masks in crowded indoor settings, but it will help clear the way for reopening workplaces, schools, and other venues.
Time to start ditching the masks, Joe Biden says. Image via AP.
“New mask guidance is a huge gamble, experts say” via Justin Rohrlich of The Daily Beast — The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Thursday issued new guidelines that marked the beginning of the end of indoor mask use and social distancing for vaccinated people in America. Those who are two weeks past their final COVID-19 shot can now skip masks when inside virtually anywhere and also drop their masks outdoors in large crowds, a context in which the CDC continued to recommend mask use as of two weeks ago. But while experts canvassed by The Daily Beast broadly agreed with easing federal guidance, they warned the blanket nationwide approach failed to account for America’s vast problems with vaccine hesitancy and pandemic truthers.
“National teachers union leader urges full reopening of schools in fall: ‘Conditions have changed’” via Collin Binkley of The Associated Press — The president of the American Federation of Teachers said Thursday there should be a full return to in-person learning in the fall and her union is “all in” on bringing students back to the classroom. In an address on social media, Randi Weingarten said the wide availability of vaccines and a new infusion of federal education money had removed many obstacles. If local unions heed her call, it would be seen as a major stride in the effort to reopen schools. Teachers’ unions have been blamed for slowing the process with demands for a variety of safety measures. Teachers in some districts have refused to return until ventilation systems are updated, virus tests are given, and all teachers are vaccinated.
“School nurses, health service corps part of $7.4B virus plan” via Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar and Zeke Miller of The Associated Press — The government is providing $7.4 billion to expand the nation’s public health capacity, including hiring school nurses to vaccinate kids, setting up a health care service corps and bolstering traditional disease detection efforts, White House officials said Thursday. Biden administration coronavirus testing coordinator Carole Johnson said it’s part of a strategy to respond to immediate needs in the COVID-19 pandemic while investing to break the cycle of ‘boom and bust’ financing that traditionally has slowed the U.S. response to health emergencies. “We really see this as funding that can help end the pandemic and help us prevent the next one,” Johnson told The Associated Press. Congress approved the money in President Biden’s coronavirus response law.
Corona economics
“As trillions flow out the door, stimulus oversight faces challenges” via Alan Rappeport and Glenn Thrush of The New York Times — Lawmakers have unleashed more than $5 trillion in relief aid over the past year to help businesses and individuals through the pandemic downturn. But the scale of that effort is placing a serious strain on a patchwork oversight network created to ferret out waste and fraud. The Biden administration has taken steps to improve accountability and oversight safeguards spurned by the Trump administration, including more detailed and frequent reporting requirements for those receiving funds. But policing the money has been complicated by long-running turf battles; the lack of a centralized, fully functional system to track how funds are being spent; and the speed with which the government has tried to disburse aid.
“As the pandemic has waned, so have the economic challenges Americans have faced” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — Biden signed his most significant legislative accomplishment into law on March 11. Centered on ameliorating the economic damage done by the coronavirus pandemic, it included substantial stimulus checks, which began going out to Americans a few days later. Even as that rollout began, though, the shape of the pandemic had already shifted dramatically. By March 17 — when the government started distributing the stimulus payments — some 40 million Americans had already been vaccinated against the virus. Relative to the middle of January, when the number of new cases each day was at its peak, new case totals were down about 70% and deaths down 60%. By late April, nearly 100 million people were fully vaccinated.
As the pandemic slows, so do the economic challenges facing Americans.
“Low pay, soaring rents, pro-landlord laws set up Florida renters for eviction once COVID-19 hit” via Caroline Glenn of the Orlando Sentinel — Housing experts argue Florida has some of the harshest eviction laws in the country, written so landlords can evict people as quickly as possible and without going to court. During the COVID-19 outbreak, those landlord-friendly laws, coupled with the state’s severe shortage of affordable homes, rising rents, and years of stagnant wages, left thousands of suddenly jobless renters exposed. Central Florida renters, many of them the same low-wage workers who power the region’s tourism economy, were particularly vulnerable. Even before the pandemic and mass layoffs upended their lives, they lived paycheck to paycheck in a town where rent keeps climbing and wages don’t budge.
“Lots of jobs, few hires: Labor shortage puts Tampa Bay restaurants in a pinch” via Jay Cridlin, Helen Freund and Malena Carollo of the Tampa Bay Times — For all the economic progress made in America’s pandemic recovery, many businesses are struggling to hire new workers — or, in some cases, the workers they let go last year. A number of industries that rely on low-wage workers are feeling the pinch. The effect has been particularly pronounced in the food service industry, where cooks, dishwashers and bussers aren’t reentering the workforce as quickly as they left it. The result: customers eager to get out and spend are now seeing reduced store and restaurant hours, labor and construction backlogs, and a few shuttered businesses. “It really is depressing,” said Traci Bryant Ferguson, who runs the restaurants Caracara, Taco Baby, Jack Pallino’s and the Nest in downtown Dunedin.
More corona
“Air travel is back, including all the things you hated” via Alison Sider of The Wall Street Journal — Passenger volumes at U.S. airports hit pandemic records over the weekend, with more than 1.7 million people passing through airport security Friday and again on Sunday. Frequent flyers like Tim Slabaugh aren’t thrilled. “We had this window in COVID-19 where business travel was just wonderful,” said the medical supply company representative, who kept up his travel pace throughout the pandemic. “The airports themselves were empty,” he said. “Now, it’s like somebody turned the light switch back on.” Many people traveling now are vacationers and “older folks, hopped up on vaccines,” he said, rather than travel pros. Fares are rising, middle seats are no longer empty, and everything from parking lots to security lines is getting more congested.
Air travel is back, baby — the good and bad. Image via WSJ.
“A maskless airline passenger blew his nose into a blanket. He now faces a $10,500 fine.” via Hannah Sampson of The Washington Post — The Federal Aviation Administration announced this week that it had proposed a civil penalty of $10,500 against a JetBlue passenger whose disruptive behavior on a flight included coughing and blowing his nose into a blanket. “The FAA alleges the passenger repeatedly ignored, and was abusive to, flight attendants who instructed him to wear a face mask,” the agency said in a news release. “The passenger’s disruptive behavior diverted flight crew members from their duties.” It was just the latest such announcement from the FAA, which has been cracking down on passengers who refuse to wear masks and otherwise disrupt crew members. Airlines have reported about 1,300 cases of unruly passengers to the FAA since February.
“RIP, all-you-can-eat buffets: A eulogy for a pre-COVID-19 pastime I’ll weirdly miss a lot” via Joe Berkowitz of Fast Company — The paradox of choice that can make dining out daunting simply does not exist at a hotel buffet. All-you-can-eat — or, for legal purposes, all-you-care-to-eat — buffets thrust hungry munchers into a three-dimensional Netflix menu of eminently attainable food options to binge simultaneously or stagger at your whim. In fact, the entire process is defined by your whim: from the order of courses to the sizes of portions and the number of rounds at-bat. Considering that the all-you-can-eat buffet is an ode to abundance, though, it’s ironic that the options for enjoying one in the COVID-19 era have dwindled down to nearly nothing.
Presidential
“Joe Biden says that fuel is ‘beginning to flow,’ as administration struggles to limit political damage from gas shortage” via Sean Sullivan of The Washington Post — Biden urged anxious Americans not to panic and rush to stockpile gasoline, seeking to reassure the country that a severe fuel shortage that has gripped the Southeast will likely be resolved in coming days. “Gasoline supply is coming back online and panic buying will only slow the process,” Biden warned. The restart is “not like flicking on a light switch,” Biden said, adding that he expects a “region-by-region return to normalcy beginning this weekend and continuing into next week.” Biden’s remarks came amid a fierce political showdown over his handling of the situation. White House officials — sensitive to how quickly concerns about gas can become full-blown political crises — have aggressively sought to showcase their efforts to ease the shortage.
Joe Biden urges Americans to stop hoarding gas. Image via AP.
Epilogue: Trump
“If New York indicts Florida resident Donald Trump, could DeSantis save him from extradition?” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — There’s a new wrinkle, involving DeSantis, in the saga of Trump. A major obsession among Trump lovers and Trump haters is trying to figure out if the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office will secure an indictment against the former President. POLITICO Playbook, the insider Washington newsletter, pointed Thursday to a little-known provision of Florida law that gives the state’s Governor authority to order an investigation into “the situation and circumstances of the person” in question “and whether the person ought to be surrendered” to another state. DeSantis is one of the nation’s most outspoken supporters of Trump. It was Trump’s support of DeSantis that propelled him to the 2018 Republican gubernatorial nomination.
Will Ron DeSantis run interference on a Donald Trump indictment? Image via AP.
“Prosecutors seek cooperation of Trump confidant, subpoena Manhattan private school” via Corinne Ramey of The Wall Street Journal — New York prosecutors have subpoenaed a Manhattan private school as they seek the cooperation of the Trump Organization’s chief financial officer in their investigation of former President Trump and his company, according to people familiar with the matter. The subpoena seeks information from Columbia Grammar & Preparatory School, where grandchildren of Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg are students, the people said. From 2012 to 2019, more than $500,000 of the children’s tuition was paid for with checks signed by either Weisselberg or Trump, the two children’s mother, Jennifer Weisselberg, told The Wall Street Journal. She is the former wife of Weisselberg’s son, Barry.
“Company: Ex-Trump lawyer raiding nonprofit for personal use” via Michael Kunzelman of The Associated Press — Former Trump attorney and self-proclaimed “Kraken releaser” Sidney Powell has told prospective donors that her group, Defending the Republic, is a legal-defense fund to protect the integrity of U.S. elections. But the company suing Powell over her baseless claims of a rigged presidential election says the true beneficiary of her social welfare organization is Powell herself. Dominion Voting Systems claims Powell has raided Defending the Republic’s coffers to pay for personal legal expenses, citing her own remarks from a radio interview. The Denver-based voting technology vendor sued Powell and others who spread false claims that the company helped steal the 2020 election from Trump.
Crisis
“Kevin McCarthy largely brushes off questions about GOP colleagues who played down Jan. 6 attack on Capitol” via John Wagner of The Washington Post — House Minority Leader McCarthy, a California Republican, largely brushed off questions Thursday about comments made during a hearing Wednesday by fellow Republicans who played down the severity of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, suggesting the setting was not appropriate for a response. McCarthy briefly took questions at an event at the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in Washington, which was a stop on a “Back the Blue Bike Tour” that included officers from the Capitol Police as part of National Police Week. McCarthy was asked about House Republicans who have continued to question last year’s presidential results and several who sought to recast the events of Jan. 6 during Wednesday’s hearing.
Kevin McCarthy downplays GOP comments about the Jan. 6 riots.
“‘Normal tourist visit’: Republicans recast deadly Jan. 6 attack by pro-Trump mob” via Colby Itkowitz of The Washington Post — Several House Republicans on Wednesday tried to recast and downplay the events of Jan. 6, comparing the mob that breached the Capitol to tourists, railing against law enforcement for seeking to arrest them and questioning how anyone could be sure the rioters were supporters of former President Trump. The Republicans’ distortions about the most violent attack on the Capitol since the War of 1812 defy the well-documented reality of what occurred that day — 140 police officers were injured, some bludgeoned with flagpoles and baseball bats, with one officer’s eye gouged out; rioters chanted “Hang Mike Pence” and erected a gallows on the Capitol grounds.
“What we know so far about the Capitol riot suspects” via Devlin Barrett, Abigail Hauslohner, Spencer S. Hsu and Ashlyn Still of The Washington Post — As prosecutors build cases alleging prior planning and coordination, the majority of those facing criminal charges were not known members of self-styled militias or other organized extremist groups. “The bulk of people being charged is what law enforcement sometimes calls free agents, and that tells you we don’t really have a firm grasp on the radicalization process,” said Colin Clarke, director of policy and research at the Soufan Group, a security consulting firm. Some of the information points to the ongoing risk of politically motivated unrest. Privately, law enforcement officials acknowledge that it could take years to identify and apprehend some of the individuals they are hunting — if they ever do.
D.C. matters
“House GOP rebuffs Liz Cheney’s demands to call out Trump’s election lies” via Manu Raju of CNN — Cheney told House Republicans in private on Wednesday that it’s time to reject former Trump’s big lie that he won the election because failing to do so will “make us complicit in his efforts to unravel our democracy.” But GOP lawmakers don’t want to hear it. From the most conservative members to ones in swing districts, a wide range of Republicans either back Trump outright, endorse aspects of his claims, or hope the issue will simply go away so they won’t have to weigh in. Many argue more investigation is needed over mail-in voting even though Trump’s own Justice Department found no evidence of widespread fraud. And most blame Cheney — not Trump — for injecting the issue back into the spotlight.
Liz Cheney speaks her mind and ruffles GOP feathers. Image via AP.
Local notes
“More than two dozen AR-15 rifles from the Miami Police Department are ‘unaccounted for’” via Charles Rabin of the Miami Herald — More than two dozen semi-automatic rifles owned by the city of Miami Police Department are missing. The prime suspects: The city’s own officers. It’s not a matter of theft, however, but record-keeping — at least for now. A strongly worded internal memo sent out to 1,400 sworn police officers Wednesday morning listed the serial numbers of 25 missing AR-15 rifles and warned officers that if the firearms are not returned by Monday, it could land them in hot water. A department spokesperson said it’s just part of an inventory check in place since the city’s new police chief, Art Acevedo, came aboard just over a month ago. “It’s not that unusual; we do it with the cars,” said Miami Police spokesman Michael Vega.
“Clerk in cash-strapped Opa-locka pocketed $266,784 in building fees, prosecutors say” via Charles Rabin and Aaron Leibowitz of the Miami Herald — Mary Brown, who spent almost six years as a clerk in Opa-locka’s Building and Licensing office, was jailed Thursday morning and charged with single counts of organized scheme to defraud, grand theft and official misconduct of a public servant. Her bond was set at $150,000, and she remained jailed Thursday. Investigators from the Miami-Dade Police Department’s Public Corruption Unit say that Brown stole $266,784 in licensing fees using a simple but effective method: She failed to record receipts for the purchased building licenses, issued the permits, and kept the cash payments. She stuffed some of the cash she stole in her bra, investigators claim.
Among municipal cash woes, an Opa-locka city employee is accused of stealing city funds.
“With Rome Yard reporting, the Tampa Bay Times omits key details” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — Tampa Bay Times reporter Charlie Frago has for weeks been following a major real estate development deal on prime West River property known as Rome Yard. Most recently, his reporting, aided by Chris O’Donnell’s keen investigative skills, found Ballard Partners lobbyist Ana Cruz, the longtime partner of Tampa Mayor Jane Castor, had toured the city with the founder of the company that ultimately won the lucrative development bid. It was a bad look. But the latest story ignores a contractual provision Ballard includes in all of its work related to the city of Tampa, stating that Cruz will not conduct work with the city for Ballard and that she will not profit from any of the work other members of the firm do conduct.
“Do LGBTQ protections apply to those fired over rumors? A Bradenton challenge could test case law.” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A former employee fired by a Bradenton church amid rumors about a lesbian affair has challenged her termination. Now the Time’s Up movement hopes her case clarifies job discrimination protections exist in Florida both for LGBTQ employees and those presumed to be. The case could also ensure religious groups don’t enjoy blanket exemptions regardless of the nature of a worker’s duties. Christie Leonard, a Parrish woman, worked 15 years at Gospel Crusade, starting as a video production volunteer and eventually working full time handling a mix of A/V and accounting duties. “I was employee of the year at one point,” she recalls.
“FPL opens fifth solar energy facility in DeSoto County” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Florida Power & Light Company has brought another solar plant online in DeSoto County, the company announced Thursday. The new Rodeo Solar Energy Center is FPL’s fifth solar energy center in DeSoto County, making DeSoto the county with the most FPL solar energy centers in Florida. It is also the county’s second solar energy center built to support the nation’s largest community solar program, FPL SolarTogether. The Rodeo Solar Energy Center houses approximately 300,000 solar panels and brings an additional 74.5 megawatts of power to the grid. It is built on land that FPL originally purchased in the 1960s.
Top opinion
“A once-in-a-lifetime chance to start over” via Arthur C. Brooks of The Atlantic — Americans might be entering the waning days of the year-plus coronavirus pandemic. In these last weeks and months before something resembling normality returns, we might ask ourselves, “What do I want ‘normal’ to look like?” When people talk about life before the virus, their recollections are often sentimental: about the “good old days”; about what we miss. I haven’t been able to find any surveys of what we most don’t miss from pre-pandemic times. But there is research that gives us clues. Studies have shown that spending time on people or activities that bring us down depresses our sense of meaning in life; unpleasant exchanges with bosses, customers, and co-workers lower our sense of well-being.
Opinions
“Did you vote to oust Cheney, Miami lawmakers? Tell us, so we know who you really are” via the Miami Herald editorial board — If Miami’s congressional Reps. Mario Diaz-Balart, Carlos Giménez and Maria Elvira Salazar voted their consciences, they should tell us how they voted on ousting Cheney from leadership positions in the U.S. House If the three Republicans voted their true conservative values, they should tell us that. And if they voted with their hearts beating only for the good of this country, let’s hear that, too. So far, we don’t know a thing. We need to know that their consciences hew to the Constitution, that conservatives value the truth, that their hearts beat for the principles of democracy.
“Seminole gaming compact benefits tribe, Floridians” via Carol Dover for the Orlando Sentinel — Floridians will be the big winners if the Florida Legislature votes to approve the new Gaming Compact next week. Not only does this compact mean significant revenue for the state, but it also means thousands of jobs for team members in the hospitality industry after a year of devastation from the COVID-19 pandemic. Pre-COVID-19, hospitality, and tourism was the largest employer in Florida and supported more than 1.5 million employees and their families. More than 934,000 of those employees were laid off at the beginning of COVID-19, and some of those jobs have yet to come back. The compact may also bring a much-needed boost in Florida tourism as both domestic and international visitors will come to enjoy the many entertainment and casino options offered.
“Let voters decide on legalizing sports betting in Florida” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — It’s that time again. The moment every few years when the state considers how much more gambling to allow. DeSantis recently hammered out a new deal with the Seminole Tribe, and the Legislature meets in Special Session beginning Monday to consider the proposed compact. Sports betting is big business. And legal or not, it’s going on in the state already. DeSantis makes a solid point when he says that by formalizing a deal the state can regulate betting activities and share revenue. But sports betting doesn’t come free. A revolution of this magnitude cries out for more than lawmakers’ stamp of approval. Voters — through a statewide referendum — should ultimately decide the issue.
“Daniel Martinez: Hispanic students have much to gain from Florida education bill” via Florida Politics — DeSantis has taken an important step to make this right by signing legislation to expand opportunities for our kids. And Hispanic families are among the biggest winners. To help make this possible for more families, the Governor has now signed HB 7045, sponsored by Rep. Randy Fine (with companion legislation in the Senate introduced by Sen. Diaz). This bill consolidates and streamlines existing K-12 education scholarship programs, making them available to a broader range of families. That’s particularly true in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic when many are struggling to make up lost income. DeSantis has shown that leaders in this state recognize the importance of giving them new ways to ensure their kids’ educational success.
“Skylar Zander: Home-based businesses are the way to economic vitality” via Florida Politics — This Session, legislators passed measures to remove outdated and unnecessary barriers to conducting business from home and encourages entrepreneurs to start new businesses. This will go a long way toward giving Florida the economic boost we all need. Legislators removed the requirement for new or small businesses to establish traditional office space to operate in Florida. They recognized that this antiquated requirement increases the cost of doing business and stifles economic growth. Since it is now clear that many businesses and employees can thrive regardless of where they’re located, why force businesses to maintain traditional office space that merely increases their overhead? Cutting unnecessary, burdensome, and expensive red tape is the right thing to do.
On today’s Sunrise
Lawmakers return to Tallahassee Monday to ratify a new Seminole Compact on gaming in Florida, but John Sowinski says this goes way beyond the Seminole Tribe.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Sowinski says the Compact will turn your smartphone into a mobile casino; even if you support more gambling, he says the state’s not getting a fair share.
— The Governor signs a bill that makes it legal to order booze with your takeout meal, another legacy of the COVID-19 pandemic.DeSantis and state lawmakers like it so much they decided to make the change permanent.
— The Governor says it’s no big deal if Norwegian Cruise Line steers clear of Florida because of a new state law that forbids them from requiring passengers to show proof of vaccination. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention imposed vaccination requirements on all the cruise ships, so DeSantis is suing the feds in federal court.
— And finally, a Florida Man bought so much gasoline that his Humvee went up in flames.
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFede on CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at politics in South Florida, along with other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Weekon Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Moderator Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable featuring attorney and political consultant Mac Stipanovich, ACLU of Florida Executive Director Micah Kubic, journalist Joe Brown and Florida PTA President Jennifer Martinez.
In Focus with Allison Walker on Bay News 9/CF 13: Walker will discuss the more than yearlong recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, and how federal resources will fuel the recovery. Guests include Tampa Mayor Castor and Clearwater Mayor Frank Hubbard.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: “No Casinos” President Sowinski explains why the group is against the gambling deal with the Seminole Tribe ahead of the Legislature’s Special Session; and one-on-one with candidate Eric Lynn on his decision to run for Florida’s 13th Congressional District.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: Former Republican Governor and Democratic U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist will discuss his entry into the 2022 gubernatorial race; a look at the Legislature’s Special Session on gambling compacts with Sowinski; and a deep dive on the influence of organized religion on politics and the separation of church vs. state.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justice on Channel 4 WJXT: Sen. Aaron Bean, Jacksonville City Council member LeAnna Cumber and Chris Hand, author, former City of Jax Chief of Staff (2011-15).
This Week in South Florida on WPLG-Local10 News (ABC): U.S. Sen Rick Scott, Broward County School Board Chair Dr. Rosalind Osgood, Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava and “No Casinos” President Sowinski.
Aloe
“Disney World is raising capacity, and new mask guidance is ‘big news’ for a hot Orlando summer, CEO says” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — Walt Disney World has lifted its attendance capacity beyond its previous self-imposed 35% limit, although company CEO Bob Chapek didn’t disclose by how much, as the theme parks significantly loosen their COVID-19 safety rules. Chapek didn’t specify when people could stop wearing masks at the Orlando parks but called the new CDC guidelines — which says fully vaccinated people can go maskless in most places — “big news” for Disney, especially with summer coming. He appeared to be hinting changes could be coming soon. At Disney World, attendance is improving, and guests are spending more at the resort than at the same time last year, the company’s chief financial officer, Christine McCarthy, said without disclosing exact figures.
Disney is welcoming the ‘big news’ from the CDC. Image via Disney.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to Audrey Henson, Todd Reid, and Susie Wiles.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Markets: 10 out of the 11 sectors in the S&P 500 closed in the green yesterday following a few days of steep sell-offs. Tesla dropped a day after Elon Musk said the company would stop accepting bitcoin as payment for cars due to environmental concerns.
Economy: Jobless claims fell to a new pandemic-era low of 473,000 last week. So far, 12 states have announced they’ll stop distributing extra unemployment benefits as soon as June or July.
The fizzle. Some of the biggest companies to IPO in 2020 and early 2021 are finding the public markets to be less inviting than a middle school boy’s treehouse.
The Renaissance IPO ETF, which holds a number of public companies that IPOed within the last two years, has fallen nearly 30% from its peak in February. Let’s check in on a few of the companies:
Airbnb: It may be the most valuable hospitality company in the world, but its stock has dropped more than 37% from its high and now sits below its opening price. Yesterday, CEO Brian Chesky predicted the “travel rebound of the century” this summer.
DoorDash: The delivery company’s stock was down 47% from its peak, but it popped more than 7% after hours following a strong earnings report yesterday. Revenue jumped 219% annually last quarter.
Coinbase: In its first earnings report as a public company, the huge crypto exchange missed expectations and continues to trade well below its opening price. It said it would add more cryptocurrencies to its platform, including dogecoin in six to eight weeks.
Snowflake: The cloud data firm backed by Berkshire Hathaway made a splash last fall as the largest software IPO ever, but it’s fallen more than 51% from its high.
Bumble: Shares in the dating company dipped below their initial price of $43 yesterday after reporting a mixed bag of earnings this week.
The big picture
Given the wide range of industries these companies serve, it’s hard to pinpoint one specific reason for their struggles. They’re more like runaway buoys drifting in the choppy waters of the market, where investors have been piling out of tech stocks over fears of inflation and tighter monetary policy.
But the drooping share prices of freshly public companies is enough to spook some private firms from taking the IPO plunge. Hearing care services provider Hear.com and mortgage insurer Enact Holdings recently delayed their IPOs because of market volatility.
Bottom line: It could take a lot more market mayhem to stop this IPO train, though. Last year, companies raised a record $167 billion in public listings, and they’ve already raised $158 billion so far this year.
Or mask acne for those who have had perfect skin for the past year. The CDC said yesterday that fully vaccinated people (meaning two weeks post-final shot) don’t need to wear face masks in most indoor and outdoor settings. Dr. Anthony Fauci also doubled down on the CDC’s April statement, telling CBS yesterday morning that “if you are vaccinated and you are outside, put aside your mask, you don’t have to wear it.” You heard the man, show us your face.
Health-care settings, buses/trains, and airplanes are all spaces you’ll still have to mask up regardless of vaccine status, but the announcement is sure to push the US even further toward a full-scale reopening.
29 states have already fully reopened all nonessential businesses, and 22 states (and growing) don’t have mask mandates.
More than 1.7 million people traveled via US airports last Sunday, the most daily passengers since the pandemic started.
Just in time for a summer of long weekends. As of Thursday, 59% of US adults have received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, inching closer to Biden’s new goal of 70% by the Fourth of July so they can all come to his barbecue.
Later this year, JPMorgan Chase, US Bancorp, and Wells Fargo will join several other banks in a pilot program offering credit cards to people without credit scores, the WSJ reported.
How’s that gonna work?
Under the government-backed initiative, the companies will share information with each other about credit card applicants’ bank accounts. They’ll examine balances and overdraft histories to identify financially responsible individuals who weren’t able to build credit before.
Eventually, the banks may make other financial products, like auto loans or mortgages, available to approved customers as well.
While banks and credit reporting firms have tried setting up alternative risk models before, they haven’t found an industry-wide solution. Last summer’s protests around racial injustice provided an extra push, and last year, banking, fintech, and nonprofit leaders met with the Treasury Department to find ways to get more credit into historically disadvantaged communities.
Big picture: For decades, a credit score was the golden ticket to a credit card. While there’s no shortage of finance startups hawking credit-building apps to consumers as young as 13, a massive banking gap persists among adults: The creators of the FICO score estimate that 53 million US adults lack traditional credit scores.
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Stat: The WNBA tips off its 25th anniversary season tonight, and less than half of the 12 teams currently share ownership with an NBA squad, per Axios. When the league started, all eight teams were located in cities with NBA teams and were required to share ownership.
Quote: “I think she appreciated it. It might not be the most traditionally romantic thing to do, but I figure that I’m helping her make a great investment.”
South Korean college student Jung Seung-Hyun explained to Insider why he bought stocks for his girlfriend on her birthday instead of flowers. It’s a big trend in the country for couples to gift each other “stock gift cards” in companies like Tesla, Apple, Amazon, and Disney.
US commercial casinos raked in $11.1 billion last quarter, according to the American Gaming Association, matching their best quarter ever. And 12 states set monthly gambling revenue records in March.
What happened? If the phrase of the year in 2020 was “in these unprecedented times,” 2021 has brought us “pent-up demand.” Flush with savings and itching for more excitement than a chessboard can provide, Americans have flocked to casinos to let loose.
And both traditional and new-ish sectors of the US gambling industry are seeing the benefits.
Las Vegas is back, if you trust all the lines out the door at McCarran International Airport. Southwest Airlines reported a significant rebound in traffic to Vegas after passenger demand plunged 97% during the pandemic.
Sports gambling brought in $961 million last quarter, eclipsing the total revenue in 2019.
Zoom out: States home to more than three-quarters of commercial casinos had rules capping occupancy at 50% in Q1, so revenue could boom even more this summer as capacity restrictions ease. On Wednesday, MGM’s nine casino floors in Las Vegas got the green light to expand to 100% capacity.
Disney added fewer Disney+ users than expected last quarter.
Binance, the world’s biggest crypto exchange, is reportedly being investigated by the DOJ and the IRS over potentially illegal activity on its platform.
The head of the US teachers’ union said public schools should fully reopen this fall.
McDonald’s is raising wages for the 36,500 employees of its corporate-owned US restaurants, which make up ~5% of its domestic locations. The restaurant industry is scrambling to retain and hire employees.
Amazon is hiring 75,000 more employees and offering a $100 signing bonus for fully vaccinated hires.
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The new recommendation, which carves out exceptions for buses, planes, hospitals, prisons and homeless shelters, will have significant implications for schools and businesses as the country begins to reopen. In announcing the decision, the CDC pointed to data from the last few weeks that show the vaccines work in the real world, stand up to the variants and make it unlikely vaccinated people can transmit the virus.
…
The new recommendation is an about-face from guidance issued just 16 days earlier in which the CDC suggested masks should still be used indoors or in crowds even if people are fully immunized. It also comes after CDC Director Rochelle Walensky faced criticism for the CDC being too slow to provide a path back to normalcy for fully vaccinated people.
…
Meanwhile, lawmakers, particularly moderate Republicans, had also increased political pressure on the CDC and the Biden administration in recent days to further update their guidelines as an incentive for people to trust that life will get better as more people get vaccinated.
Why won’t Missouri fund Medicaid expansion despite a ballot measure supporting it?
Health care advocates and Democratic leaders in the state immediately blasted Missouri Gov. Mike Parson, a Republican. Many said he had gone back on his word to…
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Where is the Israeli-Palestinian conflict escalating?
The Israeli military announced that air and ground forces were attacking in the Gaza Strip, but the extent of the operation remained unclear. Israeli troops last entered Gaza…
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All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLDo you support a subsidy for lower-income households to get broadband?
Yes
60%
No
31%
Unsure
9%
310 votes, 54 comments
Context: FCC offering $50/mth broadband rebates for low-income households.
HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS
“Yes – I live in a rural area and my children weren’t able to access schooling because of the lack of broadband. I know how much it can hurt. It’s not a luxury, it is a necessity.”
“No – I’d support subsidies to more effectively “wire up” low inco…”
“Yes – Not opposed but wondering with the advent of 5G if the me…”
We’re facing a number of challenges. We, meaning America. I would emphasize not exclusively but I would certainly emphasize the fact that Iran to, whom and to which President Biden would like to see the United States of America make love, is bombing the hell out of our only true friend in the Middle East, Israel.
In the wake of Rep. Liz Cheney’s Fox News interview, the left-wing media zeroed in on the congresswoman’s berating of the network for apparently not doing enough to dispel allegations that the 2020 election was stolen. Clearly, the irony is lost on these media outlets that spent four years peddling the fantasy that, with Russia’s help, former President Donald Trump stole the 2016 election.
Liberty Nation News Alert: Israel on the Brink of War?
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
In recent weeks, the legacy media and others on the left have highlighted what certainly seems to be a growing number of violent attacks against Americans of Asian descent. While the underlying message is, undoubtedly, that this is another symptom of America’s racism, one extremely uncomfortable truth is being avoided: A very great number of these apparently random and vicious assaults – possibly the majority of them – are perpetrated by black people, as video footage proves. It would certainly not be fair to claim that these attacks are happening because blacks are racist towards Asians – perhaps every one of the incidents in question had nothing at all to do with the ethnicity of either the victims or the perpetrators. Nevertheless, the narrative is being spun that these attacks are a racial problem. If so, is it not time that America had an honest conversation about who the alleged racists are, in this case?
The April price surge can be explained away by economic aberrations, but it could signal a self-sustaining spiral of elevated inflation and elevated inflation expectations.
Phil Gramm and Mike Solon | The Wall Street Journal
Maybe it’s time for a reality check on how high marginal tax rates, and the actual tax rates paid by Americans, can be raised without crushing economic growth.
“In a major step toward returning to pre-pandemic life, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention eased mask-wearing guidance for fully vaccinated people on Thursday, allowing them to stop wearing masks outdoors in crowds and in most indoor settings.” AP News
Both sides highlight the political implications of the new guidance:
“The political implications of today’s announcement were inescapable. The president needs the pandemic to end, but he also needs the public to see that his policies and leadership have helped make it end. So far, his success has been measured mostly in numbers—in the falling infection rate and in the hundreds of millions of vaccinations…
“Liberating the people from their face coverings is a far more visible step—one that Americans will feel, physically as well as symbolically, in their daily lives. It will also ease one of the most polarizing issues of the pandemic. The harsh political reality is that people might be more willing to credit Biden for ending the mask mandates than they are for keeping them healthy.” Russell Berman, The Atlantic
“What changed scientifically over the last two weeks? Nothing at all, but plenty changed politically. Congress and the media have pressed hard on the CDC’s assumptions that the vaccinated are still at risk in the pandemic, arguing — logically — that either the vaccines work or they don’t…
“And voila! Suddenly the guidance has changed, and not just for outdoors — where the risk of transmission is beyond microscopic even for the unvaccinated — but now for indoors as well, with exceptions for high-density situations. This new guidance has nothing to do with changing scientific data, but is the result of political pressure being brought to bear on the CDC and White House to quit undermining vaccinations by pretending they don’t matter.” Ed Morrissey, Hot Air
Both sides also urge tolerance for those who continue wearing masks despite the new guidance:
“The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday in new guidance that fully vaccinated people don’t need to wear masks outside or in most indoor settings. What it didn’t say, however, is you shouldn’t wear a mask or you can’t wear a mask or you’re entitled to mouth off about other people’s masks. Hundreds of corpses of people who died of COVID-19 in New York City are still lying in refrigerated trucks – and the few Americans who may appear overly cautious are being mocked…
“Some people may go on wearing masks forever. They may be immunocompromised, anxious, or simply respectful of the horrors of the last 14 months that have scarred tens of millions, especially frontline workers, with PTSD. They may want to avoid allergies or the flu. Or they may just be smart, like the people who ignored CDC advice and started wearing a mask in early 2020. Whatever they are thinking, leave them alone.” Jason Sattler, USA Today
“It’s a (mostly) free country and if you want to keep on wearing a face mask because you think it could help you avoid catching a disease, go for it. The data supporting such an assumption, particularly in the case of cloth face masks is dubious at best, but I’m not about to make your fashion choices for you. I have no intention of accepting this as ‘the new normal’ but you’ll all have to decide such things for yourself…
“There is [a] legal element to this question that hasn’t been dealt with yet. 18 states and Washington DC all have laws on the books that prohibit wearing any sort of face-covering in certain places or under specific circumstances. Since the pandemic hit, all of them have conveniently ‘forgotten’ about these laws rather than throwing everyone who leaves their home in jail… If I had to guess, the modification of these laws will be the choice for most states. If people are choosing to wear a mask for health reasons and not going around knocking over liquor stores, it’s harmless enough.” Jazz Shaw, Hot Air
Other opinions below.
From the Left
“Over the past few months, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) was criticized for playing it too cautiously with its Covid-19 guidance. The agency had recommended people wear masks outdoors, even kids in the outdoor heat of summer camp. It has overestimated the risk of outdoor spread and surface transmission…
“Experts argued that the CDC was failing to seize on a moment of victory: Vaccines are triumphing over the virus. The US needs more people to get the shots — and needs to encourage them to do so with the promise of a light at the end of the tunnel… With [this] news, the CDC snapped out of its cautious ways, moving faster than widely expected, given that the majority of Americans still aren’t fully vaccinated. And it finally embraced the power of the Covid-19 vaccines.” German Lopez, Vox
Many, however, ask, “How do you know whether people have been fully vaccinated? It’s not as if you can tell from looking at them. We might have had cool apps to tell us, but efforts to create vaccination certification programs got so bogged down in nasty partisan politics that some states have gone so far as to ban them. What you can be sure of is that the odds are good that most of the strangers passing through a public place, masked or not, are not fully vaccinated. Only about one-third of the population has been…
“CDC officials no doubt intended to lift the spirits of pandemic-weary Americans as well as give vaccination foot-draggers incentive to get their shots… But this well-intentioned announcement is likely to confuse people and lead to more resistance to mask wearing among unvaccinated people, as well as put pressure on state and local health officials to drop mask mandates earlier than is wise.” Editorial Board, Los Angeles Times
“We should not be imposing restrictions on Americans to protect those who’ve chosen to put themselves at risk — and who, disproportionately, oppose the restrictions just as much as they distrust the vaccines anyway. We also should not impose restrictions in deference to the folks who have managed to become addicted to the thrill of being stricter than everyone else about COVID protocols, even long after they’ve been vaccinated.” Robert Verbruggen, National Review
“In the United States, the emergency is over… We can say that without diminishing in any way the lethality of the past year, and without having to debate the value of the interventions and sacrifices of the last 14 months. This was a crisis. It was a plague. Now, in the U.S., it’s just a virus…
“Eradicating the coronavirus can’t be the goal. We didn’t eradicate the flu after the flu pandemic of 1919. Even polio still exists. Smallpox may be the only human disease we’ve ever stamped out. COVID isn’t gone, but infections, hospitalizations, and deaths are way down from the January peak… [COVID deaths are now] fewer than half as many as die daily from either heart disease or cancer…
“Driving, swimming, hiking, drinking, eating, making love, raising children — all of these things are risky. Living is a risk. For the past 14 months, we’ve been asked and ordered to give up a lot of living in order to save lives. It’s time to start living again.” Timothy P. Carney, Washington Examiner
💻 Happy Friday! Please join Axios’ Erica Pandey today at 12:30 p.m. ET for a conversation on succeeding in the world of hybrid work, with leadership experts from executive search consulting firm Spencer Stuart. Sign up here.
Smart Brevity™ count: 1,143 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
1 big thing: Crime jumps after court-ordered policing changes
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Most police agencies ordered to undergo reform by a federal court saw violent crime rates skyrocket immediately, Axios’ Russell Contreras writes from an analysis of departments under consent decrees since 2012.
Why it matters: The increases in violent crime rates — in one case by 61% — suggest that there can be unintended consequences, at least in the short term, to the policing changes many Americans have demanded in the year since George Floyd’s death.
They’ve also given police unions another argument in their campaign against reforms.
An Axios review of FBI and Justice Department data on all 12 agencies under consent decrees since 2012 found that seven of them experienced jumps in violent crime rates in two years, compared to the two years before they entered into the consent decrees.
Smaller municipalities (50,000 people) that entered into consent decrees saw violent crime rates decline.
Between the lines: Criminal-justice scholars say no one knows why violent crime rates can spike after consent decrees.
Stephen Rushin of Loyola University Chicago says only anecdotal evidence exists that suggests disruptions in department leadership or changes in tactics may contribute to the increases.
2. 😷 Mask liberation day: “We have all longed for this moment”
At 2:08 p.m. yesterday, America changed with this declaration from Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the CDC:
If you are fully vaccinated, you can start doing the things that you had stopped doing because of the pandemic. We have all longed for this moment, when we can get back to some sense of normalcy.
President Biden, in the Rose Garden shortly thereafter, called it “a great day for America in our long battle with the coronavirus”:
If you’re fully vaccinated and can take your mask off, you’ve earned the right to do something that Americans are known for all around the world: greeting others with a smile — with a smile.
🗞️ How it’s playing …
It’s not the end of the pandemic, “but it’s no longer rash, impolitic or scientifically dubious to broach the topic,” Joel Achenbach writes in The Washington Post:
“[T]he pandemic as we know it … could soon begin a gradual fade into memory.”
Joel’s bottom line: Pandemics “start quickly and end slowly.”
3. 🎬 “Axios on HBO”: Franklin Graham’s plea to Christians
The Rev. Franklin Graham, president of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and Samaritan’s Purse, told me for “Axios on HBO” that more Christians need to get vaccinated.
Using the cadence of an altar call, he gave this preacher’s plea:
I want people to know that God loves them. … He will forgive you and God will accept you into his presence. … I want people to know that COVID-19 can kill you. But we have a vaccine out there that could possibly save your life. And if you wait, it could be too late.
During my trip to North Wilkesboro, N.C., Graham told me about his recent visit with Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago, and we talked about President Biden and more.
See it all Sunday at 6 p.m. ET on “Axios on HBO,” on HBO and HBO Max.
4. Pictured: The world’s Muslims mark Eid al-Fitr
Worshippers space out to pray at Nyamirambo Stadium in Kigali, Rwanda. Photo: Habimana Thierry/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
For those who celebrate, Eid Mubarak! (Blessed feast!)
5. Israel not ready for de-escalation
In this incredible photo, rockets are fired toward Israel from Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip, as Israel’s Iron Dome aerial defense system mobilizes to intercept them.
Axios’ Barak Ravidreportsfrom Tel Aviv: With U.S. envoy Hady Amr set to arrive in Israel today for de-escalation talks, Israeli officials are concerned the U.S. intervention will lead to increased pressure to stop their military operation.
Fighting continued overnight, with the Israeli military massing forces along the frontier with the Gaza Strip and briefing reporters about ground forces entering the fight.
Anticipating a ground invasion, Hamas sent its elite forces to their defensive tunnels. The Israeli forces instead began to bomb those tunnels and did not cross into Gaza, Israeli officials say.
Wells Fargo is no longer viewed as the least ethicalbig company in America, Axios’ Felix Salmon writes from the new Axios Harris Poll 100 reputation rankings.
Wells Fargo’s “ethics” score of 38.9 in 2017 was by far the lowest in the history of the poll.
The bank’s woes began in 2016 with the revelation that it had created millions of fake accounts and opened them without the account holders’ permission or even knowledge.
Why it matters: After hitting extreme Axios Harris lows in 2017, Wells Fargo embarked upon a massive public rehabilitation campaign in 2018. It seems to have worked.
President Biden’s promise to cut the price of Americans’ internet bills has provoked a fierce lobbying campaign by cable and telecom companies to prove that the cost of broadband has already dropped, Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill reports.
Why it matters: Internet providers are desperate to fend off any move to regulate the prices they charge, while the government is increasingly viewing connectivity as an essential service.
Internet industry lobbyists are publicly touting studies showing a decline in prices, attacking reports that argue otherwise and telling members of Congress there’s no need for new regulations because they already have affordable programs in place.
But most Americans don’t qualify for those service plans. Biden’s push to reduce prices goes beyond just helping the poorest users.
Three-quarters of people between the ages of 18-29 say vaccination should be required to return to campus or work, according to new Generation Lab/Axios polling. 37% would refuse to come back unless those conditions are in place.
Why it matters: Young workers have pressured CEOs to take action on social and political issues, and have plenty of capital to exert on reopening policy, Axios’ Neal Rothschild writes.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’s hourlong town-hall appearance Wednesday night on Newsmax’s “Spicer & Co.” was loaded with evidence that he’s positioning himself for a presidential run in 2024, Axios Tampa Bay reporter Ben Montgomery writes.
DeSantis acknowledged his devotion to former President Trump on the same day the congressional GOP ousted Rep. Liz Cheney from its leadership for standing up to him.
He said he golfed with Trump recently, and talks to him on the phone.
He also attacked President Biden at every turn.
A big tell: DeSantis made no memorable mention of his opponents or likely opponents for governor in 2022.
Street racers gather in the parking lot of a Goodwill in Portland, Ore., in 2018. Photo: Anna Spoerre/The Oregonian via AP
Muscle-car rallies rose around America during the pandemic, prompting police crackdowns and laws with harsher punishments, AP reports.
TV shows and movies glorifying street racing had already fueled interest. Then shutdowns cleared normally clogged highways as commuters worked from home, and racers had time to modify cars.
But people have been killed as packs of vehicles, from souped-up jalopies to high-end sports cars, roar down city streets and through industrial neighborhoods.
Racers block roads and even interstates to keep police away as they tear around and perform stunts, captured on videos that can go viral.
In Aurora, Colo., 600-800 cruisers caused “street-racing gridlock” on I-225 in March. Police warned other motorists to stay away amid reports of guns being brandished and fireworks going off.
The Colorado State Patrol has tried to lure street racers to safety: The agency’s “Take it to the Track” program features weekly contests at Bandimere Speedway, in the foothills west of Denver.
The fighting appeared poised to intensify, with Israel amassing three brigades near the border and thousands of Muslim worshipers expected to attend Friday prayers at Jerusalem’s al-Aqsa Mosque.
By Steve Hendrix, Shira Rubin and Michael E. Miller ● Read more »
…a frightening subject…how to prevent a viral outbreak even worse than Covid-19” (The New York Times). In 2019, a panel of public health experts judged the U.S. to be more prepared for a pandemic than other G7 nations. Where did we go wrong? And how can we get it right?
Infrastructure may be President Joe Biden’s last, best chance to strike a major bipartisan deal this term. Some liberals think he would be a fool to take it.
Officials in Palm Beach County, Florida, are reportedly grappling with the possibility of former President Donald Trump being indicted by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr., who is looking for possible bank, tax, or insurance fraud.
Former national security adviser H.R. McMaster was the target of a planned sting operation by conservative activists working to expose people they viewed as being part of the “deep state” inside the government trying to undermine the Trump agenda, according to a new report.
Housing and Urban Development Secretary Marcia Fudge violated the Hatch Act in March with comments she made at a White House press briefing, the Office of Special Counsel found.
President Joe Biden faces growing pressure from liberals over how to handle the violent conflict in Israel, with the left wing of his party openly attacking his administration as he attempts to navigate one of the first foreign policy challenges of his presidency.
The Jesuit priest who presided over President Joe Biden’s inaugural Mass has resigned from his post as president of Santa Clara University in California after an investigation uncovered he participated in unprofessional, alcohol-influenced conversations with graduate students.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
March 19, 2021
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AP Morning Wire
Good morning. Here are today’s selection of top stories from The Associated Press at this hour to begin the U.S. day.
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israeli artillery pounded northern Gaza early Friday in an attempt to destroy a vast network of militant tunnels inside the territory, the military said, bringing the front lines closer to dense civilian areas and paving…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — In a major step toward returning to pre-pandemic life, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention eased mask-wearing guidance for fully vaccinated people on Thursday, allowing them to stop wearing masks outdoors in crowds and i…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — What insurrection? Flouting all evidence and their own first-hand experience, a small but growing number of Republican lawmakers are propagating a false portrayal of the Jan. …Read More
LONDON (AP) — When London’s Science Museum reopens next week, it will have some new artifacts: empty vaccine vials, testing kits and other items collected during the pandemic, to be featured in a new COVID-19 exhibition. …Read More
NEW DELHI (AP) — The man in the WhatsApp video says he has seen it work himself: A few drops of lemon juice in the nose will cure COVID-19. “If you practice what I am about to say with faith, you will be free of corona in five seconds,” says the man…Read More
A graphic calling the East Coast fuel supply crunch “Biden’s Gas Crisis.” A tweet speculating that gas stations running dry was an “INSIDE JOB.” A meme depicting the p…Read More
JERUSALEM (AP) — In the 1980s, Rabbi Meir Kahane’s violent anti-Arab ideology was considered so repugnant that Israel banned him from parliament and the U.S. listed hi…Read More
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — Multiple people were wounded in a shooting Thursday evening in Rhode Island’s capital, police there said. Providence police Maj. David Lapatin …Read More
NORWALK, Calif. (AP) — The winner of a $26 million California Lottery prize may have literally washed the chance of a fortune down the drain. The winning SuperLotto Pl…Read More
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Good morning, Chicago. Illinois public health officials on Thursday reported 1,918 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 and 35 deaths. There were 68,035 doses of the vaccine administered Wednesday.
In a big turning point in pandemic guidance Thursday, the CDC announced that people who have been fully vaccinated can largely forgo masks indoors. The move opens the door for fully vaccinated people to return to some activities in a way like life was before the pandemic, but reactions vary as people consider what they are comfortable doing. So how do you feel about it? Tell the Tribune here.
Life may start to feel closer to normal in Illinois beginning Friday, as more people are allowed into stadiums, amusement parks, restaurants and shops, and masks are expected to soon become optional in most situations for people who are fully vaccinated against the coronavirus.
The move to the next-to-last phase of Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s coronavirus reopening plan is a precursor to all restrictions being lifted, which could happen as soon as June 11. In addition to the looser guidelines of Pritzker’s bridge phase, officials offered some incentives for those who haven’t yet gotten their shots.
Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson, grandson and nephew of two legendary Chicago mayors, pleaded not guilty Thursday to federal charges stemming from a probe into the collapse of a clout-heavy bank in his family’s longtime Bridgeport neighborhood.
A former Chicago Blackhawks player from the 2010 Stanley Cup championship squad has sued the team, alleging negligence in their handling of a sexual assault complaint against a former assistant coach.
The player, identified only as “John Doe,” alleges in the lawsuit filed April 30 that former video coach Bradley Aldrich also sexually assaulted a teammate. The player who filed the lawsuit is seeking $150,000 in damages.
As Chicago looks to combat a shortage of affordable housing, its communities face a key challenge: the loss of the city’s iconic two-, three- and four-flats.
In high-cost communities, the buildings often were replaced with single-family homes. In lower-cost neighborhoods they were often demolished, leaving behind empty lots.
Diners are back. And restaurants are struggling to keep up.
After months of industry anxiety about whether customers would return to eating out as the COVID-19 pandemic persisted, people are indeed filling booths and tables once more. Now comes the hard part: being open during the pandemic.
Maybe it’s the traffic on the Kennedy. Or maybe it’s how many ramps you ascend in that downtown parking garage.
People whose jobs take them in or near the Loop have devised their own measurements for how quickly remote work abates and downtown offices repopulate.
The return to workplaces has been slow but the pace is picking up. Employers are planning to bring more staff back, with flexibility in mind. David Roeder has the full story…
Joel Kennedy admits payroll records were falsified, blames a former partner and threatens to sue if City Hall doesn’t drop the ban, which he says would put him out of business.
The updated guidelines remove the need for masks or social distancing for those who are fully vaccinated and would also allow them to go without a mask in crowds outdoors.
Ald. Tom Tunney wants to know why there have been no health guidelines released, no applications processed and no block party permits issued with just over two weeks to go before Memorial Day.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration OKed the project despite a liquor-license moratorium and opposition from neighborhood residents and Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez.
He worked the NBC station for 38 years. Hired as a writer in 1968, he soon was covering the Democratic National Convention, one of the biggest political stories of the century.
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Total U.S. coronavirus deaths as of this morning: Monday, 581,754; Tuesday, 582,153; Wednesday, 582,848; Thursday, 583,685; Friday, 584,487.
At long last, the masks can come off.
Fully vaccinated individuals — meaning those who are 14 days clear of their last dose of the vaccine — may resume going about their lives as normal and without any restrictions, including not having to wear masks indoors, according to new guidelines laid out by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Thursday.
“Anyone who is fully vaccinated, can participate in indoor and outdoor activities, large or small, without wearing a mask or physical distancing,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said during a White House briefing. “If you are fully vaccinated, you can start doing the things that you had stopped doing because of the pandemic. We have all longed for this moment, when we can get back to some sense of normalcy.”
According to the CDC, the new recommendations do not apply to health care settings, correctional facilities or homeless shelters. The agency also added that vaccinated persons should still wear masks where required by laws, rules and regulations, including on airplanes, trains and public transportation, as well as those set by local businesses and workplaces (The Hill).
The news was a major boon to the country’s push for a full reopening by July Fourth, the day President Biden has set as a goal as a return to normal for the country. Biden celebrated the new guidelines immediately on Thursday as he entered the Rose Garden to deliver remarks maskless alongside Vice President Harris.
“Today is a great day for America in our long battle with the coronavirus,” Biden said on Thursday afternoon, calling the day a “great milestone.” Biden said. “You all made this possible. Now let’s finish the work of beating this virus and getting everything back to normal” (The Hill).
Accordingly, the White House informed staff that those who are fully vaccinated no longer have to wear masks while at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. The White House Correspondents’ Association confirmed to members they no longer are required to wear face coverings while working there.
While restrictions have not been rolled back on Capitol Hill, lawmakers were already celebrating the new guidelines.
“Free at last,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) told reporters as he walked out of the chamber sans mask.
As The Hill’s Brett Samuels notes, Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) celebrated the news by removing their masks and declaring “freedom.”
The New York Times: Removing masks becomes the first bipartisan activity of Biden’s Washington.
The Washington Post: Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) keeps mask mandate on House floor despite CDC change, sparking GOP backlash: “It’s about control.”
According to Bloomberg News’s vaccination tracker, 46.6 percent of the U.S. population has received one dose of the vaccine, and 35.8 percent are fully inoculated.
Over the last week, the U.S. is averaging 2.1 million vaccinations per day, a figure that has been on the decline for much of the past month. According to The Washington Post, the U.S. is also averaging 37,000 new infections per day, roughly half of the daily case totals that were being reported a month ago.
Biden also used his remarks as an opportunity to appeal to those holding out receiving the vaccine. Health experts argued that the new guidance will be an incentivizing factor for those hesitant to receive the jab.
“I think we’ll get a bump in people seeking vaccination as [a] result of CDC announcement,” said former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb.“I know many on Twitter are saying the unvaccinated will simply say they were vaxed [sic]. Some will, but many won’t want to, they’ll now view vaccination as something with more value and seek it out.”
The Wall Street Journal: Blood expert says he found why some COVID-19 vaccines trigger rare clots.
The Hill: Bill Maher tested positive for COVID-19 despite being fully vaccinated.
CNBC: India reports more than 343,000 new cases as one professor claims infection may have peaked.
Reuters: India’s coronavirus tally surpasses 24 million cases as mutant spreads across globe.
> Schools: American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten called on Thursday for a full reopening of the nation’s schools for the next academic year, saying: “There is no doubt: Schools must be open. In person. Five days a week.”
About half of the nation’s public schools are not offering five days per week of in-person learning to all students, and teachers’ unions are accused of slowing reopening timelines while seeking strict virus mitigation measures, even after teachers began to be vaccinated in large numbers (The Washington Post).
– Protecting people’s privacy
– Enabling safe and easy data portability between platforms
– Preventing election interference
– Reforming Section 230
LEADING THE DAY
ADMINISTRATION & INTERNATIONAL: Biden on Thursday said the FBI continues to believe that the Russian government was not behind the cyberattack that led to the shutdown of the Colonial Pipeline, but that “the criminals who did the attack are living in Russia.” Speaking at the White House, the president also urged U.S. motorists not to panic amid fuel scarcity in some states and predicted a return to normal fuel supplies this weekend (The Washington Post).
The bombshell news of the day was Bloomberg News’s report that Colonial Pipeline paid nearly $5 million to Eastern European hackers on Friday, contradicting reports earlier this week that the company had no intention of paying an extortion fee to help restore the country’s largest fuel pipeline. Officials in the Biden administration were aware of the ransom, which was paid in difficult-to-trace cryptocurrency within hours after the attack. It underscored the pressure faced by the Georgia-based operator to get gasoline and jet fuel flowing again to major cities along the Eastern Seaboard.
Once the criminals received the payment, they provided the pipeline operator with a decrypting tool to restore its disabled computer network, Bloomberg reported. The tool was so slow that the company continued using its own backups to help restore the system, one of the people familiar with the company’s efforts said.
The president continued on Thursday to try to persuade motorists not to hoard scarce gasoline and urged patience, assuring Americans that Colonial Pipeline was poised to operate normally in affected areas “beginning this weekend and continuing into next week.”
Working to stave off panic buying and political damage ahead of the Memorial Day weekend, Biden spoke from the White House: “I know seeing lines at the pumps or gas stations with no gas can be extremely stressful. But this is a temporary situation,” he said. “Gasoline supply is coming back online and panic buying will only slow the process” (The Washington Post). Some GOP pundits have tried to connect the gasoline outages in some Southern states to Democrats’ environmental and energy policies (Vice), falsely suggesting that the government’s hidden hand is behind a ransomware attack.
The White House has mounted a concerted push to confront the pipeline situation, with officials appearing at daily briefings to explain the administration’s response to mitigate fuel shortages, The Hill’s Morgan Chalfant observes.
In a world of crises and global unrest, Biden inherited a pandemic, a recession, immigration challenges at the U.S. border and is suddenly faced with fuel transportation problems, serious cyber crimes and what could become war between Israel and the Palestinians (below).
Israel has massed troops along the border and called up 9,000 reservists following days of fighting with the Islamic militant group Hamas, which controls Gaza. Palestinians militants have fired some 1,800 rockets and the military has launched more than 600 airstrikes, toppling at least three apartment blocks (The Associated Press). Israel said early Friday that its military ground forces had attacked Gaza, a major escalation of violence. “We are doing this and we will continue to do so with great force,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. “The last word was not said and this operation will continue as long as it takes to restore peace and security to the State of Israel” (The New York Times).
Beyond domestic U.S. concerns, the Mideast crisis also threatens to poison the latest talks aimed at reviving the multinational Iran nuclear deal. While Biden has not put peace in the Middle East at the center of his foreign policy, as predecessors did, he’s made the Iran talks a priority (The Hill).
Democrats in Congress are divided about how hard the administration should push the Israeli government to soften its security policies and restart negotiations behind a long-elusive “two-state solution,” reports The Hill’s Alexander Bolton. Republicans, led by McConnell, offer firm support for Israeli defense tactics amid escalating violence in the Gaza Strip and central Israel. Some Democrats say U.S. policy swung too far in Netanyahu’s favor while former President Trump was in office and they favor a more neutral stance. Biden has not nominated a U.S. ambassador to Israel.
The Pentagon said on Thursday it will move 120 U.S. military personnel out of Israel “out of an abundance of caution” (The Hill).
> Immigration: The administration’s top border officials on Thursday defended immigration policies during testimony to the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee as both parties debate the causes of rising numbers of migrants at the U.S. southern border (The Hill).
> Education Department: Biden plans to nominate Catherine Lhamon to lead the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights. She held the same position in the Obama administration (NBC News).
*****
CONGRESS: Senate Republicans are prepared to send a new infrastructure offer next week to Biden as the two sides met on Thursday, with each claiming progress toward reaching a bipartisan deal on the issue.
As The Hill’s Jordain Carney notes, Biden met with a group of 10 Republicans, led by Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (W.Va.), where they discussed two of the biggest sticking points: what is considered “infrastructure” and how to pay for a potential package.
“He asked that we would come back with another offer, with more granularity to it and more details, and so we agreed to do that,” Capito said, indicating that the counteroffer will be delivered early next week, with another Biden meeting potentially on the docket.
“He wanted it pretty quickly,” Capito said. “I made it clear this was not a stagnant offer from us, and I didn’t want it to be perceived that way.”
Last month, the Senate GOP group laid out a $568 billion proposal — roughly a quarter the size of Biden’s $2.3 trillion jobs plan. Capito, on Thursday, didn’t rule out that Republicans would go higher in their next pitch that they give to the White House after McConnell indicated that their offer could approach $800 billion.
> GOP leadership: House Republicans are poised to fill the No. 3 slot in leadership this morning after weeks of infighting, with Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) expected to win the post and replace Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) as House Republican Conference chairwoman.
The vote is expected to take place at 8:30 a.m. today, with Stefanik the heavy favorite to win despite Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas), a member of the House Freedom Caucus, throwing his hat in the ring for the position (The Hill).
With 212 House Republicans in the conference, Stefanik will need to crack 107 votes to win the position. According to one House GOP member, Roy is not expected to crack 60 votes.
Adding to Roy’s issues, Trump said in a statement on Thursday that the Austin-area congressman “has not done a great job, and will probably be successfully primaried in his own district.” Roy represents a swing district in the Austin suburbs, having outperformed Trump there in November by 4 percentage points.
The race to replace Cheney is also forcing House Republicans to look ahead to the 118th Congress amid signals from Stefanik that she may only serve out this term in leadership before running to become chair of the House Education and Labor Committee if the GOP retakes the lower chamber.
As The Hill’s Scott Wong writes, to do so, the New York Republican would have to leapfrog over several colleagues with more seniority, with Reps. Tim Walberg (Mich.) and Glenn Grothman (Wis.) saying they may put up a fight. Republican Rep. Joe Wilson (S.C.) says he would endorse Stefanik for the top job on the education panel.
The Associated Press: Hoping for unity, GOP set to put Stefanik in top House post.
The Hill: Pelosi says GOP downplaying Capitol riot “sick” and “beyond denial.”
POLITICS: For more than a century, politicians have been fond of quoting or paraphrasing Napoleon: “When the enemy is making a false movement, we must take good care not to interrupt him.”
Ask Democrats to explain their current outlook, should Trump decide to run again in 2024, and they shrug. The Hill’s Amie Parnes reports that Democrats believe that as long as Republicans publicly throttle one another about the de facto leader of their party and his political vulnerabilities, Democrats should get out of the way.
“For better or for worse, there is absolutely nothing any Democrat can say or do that is going to change Trump’s behavior and any attempt to do so will be as impactful as farting into a tornado,” Democratic strategist Eddie Vale said.
The Hill’s Niall Stanage in his latest Memo writes that GOP forces opposed to Trump are not giving up. The 2022 and 2024 question: What impact will they have on the 45th president, as well as the GOP leaders they decry as Trump’s enablers?
OPINIONS
Outages and outrages: The fossil fuel industry exploits blackout fears, by Lewis Milford and Abbe Ramanan, opinion contributors, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3bnabds
Biden should take a page out of Reagan’s inflation-killing playbook, by Chris Talgo, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3eP3gw1
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Facebook supports updated internet regulations
2021 is the 25th anniversary of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, the last major update to internet regulation. It’s time for an update to set clear rules for addressing today’s toughest challenges.
The House meets at 9 a.m. and will consider legislation that would protect pregnant women in the workplace.
TheSenate will convene Monday at 3 p.m. and resume consideration of the Endless Frontier Act.
The president and Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:50 a.m. Biden will meet at 3 p.m. with six Dreamers who work in health care, education and agriculture. At 4:30 p.m., the president will receive an economic briefing from his advisers.
The vice president in the afternoon will travel to New York City and join her husband, Douglas Emhoff, for their daughter’s graduation. Harris will remain overnight in Washington.
The White House press briefing is scheduled at 12:30 p.m., accompanied by Cecilia Rouse, chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers.
Economic indicator: The Commerce Department at 8:30 a.m. reports on U.S. retail sales in April, reflecting purchases at stores, restaurants and online. It is expected to show continued expansion as the nation emerges from pandemic restrictions (The Wall Street Journal).
➔SPORTS: The NFL faces mounting pressure over accusations that it is treating Black former players as less intelligent than white players in order to deny them compensation for brain injuries suffered over their playing careers, reports The Hill’s John Kruzel. The league’s race-based approach has made it roughly three times harder for Black ex-players to qualify for payouts under the NFL’s landmark concussion settlement, according to one estimate. Now the former players and their families are seeking to bring on new legal firepower and more court oversight in what they say is a fight for equitable compensation in the face of intentional discrimination on the basis of race. “This is classic systemic racism,” said Ken Jenkins, an advocate for his fellow Black NFL retirees.
➔STATE WATCH: Nearly 900,000 Americans in Alabama, Mississippi and 11 other Republican-led states are set to see their unemployment checks slashed starting in June, as GOP governors seek to restrict jobless benefits in an effort to force more people to return to work. The cuts are likely to fall hardest on more than half a million people who benefit from stimulus programs adopted by Congress at the height of the pandemic, including one targeting those who either are self-employed or work on behalf of gig-economy companies such as Uber. Beginning next month, many of these workers are likely to receive no aid at all (The Washington Post). … Filings for jobless claims for the week ending May 8 fell to 473,000 as more governors bar the expanded unemployment aid and people return to work or find new jobs. It’s the fourth decline in the past five weeks (The Associated Press). … In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed a bill on Thursday allowing restaurants to permanently sell to-go alcoholic beverages with takeout and delivery meals beginning on July 1 (The Hill).
➔ ONE GOOD READ: For those heading into the weekend with time for some suspenseful reading, The New Yorker’s Douglas Preston returns to a 1959 mystery involving a group of nine skiers found dead in the Ural Mountains. Has an old Soviet whodunit finally been solved? “Something had happened that induced the skiers to cut their way out of the tent and flee into the night, into a howling blizzard, in twenty-below-zero temperatures, in bare feet or socks.”
THE CLOSER
And finally … 👏👏👏 Kudos to puzzle aces who completed this week’s Morning Report Quiz!
Here’s who motored into our winners’ circle with correct answers about the energy crises of the 1970s: Mary Anne McEnery, John van Santen, Gary Kalian, Luther Berg and Stewart Baker.
They knew that in April 1977, former President Carter delivered a prominent address to the nation about the U.S. “energy crisis,” in which he said, “The 1973 gas lines are gone.”
In 1979, the United States experienced an “oil shock” that had many causes and contributors, including the revolution in Iran, the U.S. reaction to the near-disaster at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania and gasoline panic buying by consumers. Thus, the answer was “all of the above.”
As Americans dealt with petroleum supply shortages in the 1970s, locks on gas caps became popular because people stole fuel by siphoning it out of vehicle gas tanks.
During his first year in office, former President Reagan promoted policies he said would address the energy crisis. Among his ideas: eliminate the Energy Department (which had been created under Carter).
The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
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Narrow talent pipelines, pigeonholing of portfolio issues and casual microaggressions from colleagues and bosses are some of the issues hampering efforts to recruit and retain more diverse House staffers, witnesses told the House Modernization of Congress Committee on Thursday. Read more…
ANALYSIS — Did House Democrats miss an opportunity to bounce back from 2020 disappointment by not getting involved in the recent special election in Texas? Looking back a decade ago at the special elections ahead of the last redistricting cycle, the answer is … maybe, Nathan L. Gonzales writes. Read more…
Vaccinated people can resume pre-pandemic activities without a mask or staying six feet apart in most areas on the House side of the Capitol, according to new guidelines from the Office of the Attending Physician. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
A dispute over honoring police officers ultimately came down to the word “who” at a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting Thursday. Sen. Cory Booker brought grammar to the rescue, and he also had something shocking to say about Sen. Ted Cruz. Read more…
Housing and Urban Development Secretary Marcia L. Fudge violated the Hatch Act, which limits the political activities of nearly all federal employees, when she briefed reporters from the White House in March, according to the Office of Special Counsel. Read more…
A Senate bill that would change how the military justice system handles major crimes such as rape now has at least 61 co-sponsors, the measure’s supporters confirmed Thursday. “This is a defining moment,” Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand said. Read more…
The White House will release its fully fleshed out fiscal 2022 budget request May 27, providing a detailed look at how President Joe Biden wants Congress to address taxes and spending during the next decade. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: It’s not a civil war; it’s a purge
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
Thursday was historic: America broke the back of the pandemic. New cases are at an eight-month low. Deaths are at a 10-month low. Best of all, if you’re vaccinated, you can take off your damn mask.Hallelujah!
More on that below, but first …
IT’S FRIDAY, so let’s take a step back and look at the biggest narrative of the week.
We’ve frequently used the term “civil war” to describe what’s going on in the Republican Party. But what if that’s the wrong way to think about it?
What we’re seeing in the GOP isn’t a civil war; it’s a purge. That’s the case JEFF GREENFIELD recently made in POLITICO Magazine, and Ryan interviewed him about it for this week’s edition of “Playbook Deep Dive.”Listen and subscribe here
As you go into the weekend, Jeff makes two big points that are worth considering and reflecting on after this week in American politics:
First: It’s a purge.
— The term “civil war” suggests some level of parity between the opposing sides. That’s not what we’re seeing.The window for people like Rep. LIZ CHENEY (R-Wyo.) to rally anti-DONALD TRUMP Republicans to her side passed weeks ago. She valiantly tried to de-Trumpify the GOP, but the troops never arrived. Straddlers like House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY — who initially criticized Trump for his actions around Jan. 6 — abandoned her and threw in with the die-hard MAGA types. Cheney was kicked out of House leadership. Her reelection will be a struggle.
— “In Congress, and at the grassroots, the dominance of Donald Trump over the party is more or less total,” Greenfield writes. “The small handful who denounced the former president for his massive lies about the election and his seeding of an insurrectionist riot are now either silent, or have embraced a mealy-mouthed argument for ‘election integrity.’”
Second: You may not realize it from the coverage, but the GOP is actually gaining strength right now.
— The day-to-day storylines in political media emphasize the divisions within the Republican Party and how those divisions weaken the GOP and help President JOE BIDEN push through his agenda. But if you step outside that narrative, you’ll see something very different.
— While it might look like a shitshow in Washington, the party is more like a hurricane gathering strength off shore that will wallop Democrats beginning in 2022. The Republican Party has a structural advantage in the House, Senate and Electoral College. It controls redistricting in a majority of states. Most ominously for Democrats — and democracy — it is using its power in statehouses and governors’ mansions across the country to pass voting laws that solidify these advantages.
— “The pattern is striking,” Greenfield writes, “if you want to survive as a Republican official, you will support the former president; if you support the former president, you will support laws that reflect his conviction that the election was stolen; if you enact those rules, you are making it more possible that he will win a second term. The party is talking with one voice; the voice is Trump’s, and it’s one that plenty of Americans are still perfectly receptive to.”
Happy Friday, and thanks for reading Playbook. One of us has been on the road driving through Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky and West Virginia, and we can safely report that while the CDC mask announcement is akin to V-J Day in Washington, D.C., much of red America gave up on face coverings a long time ago. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
— Looking at the circle of powerful men in Epstein’s orbit, Tara writes, “I came to a realization: Beyond these men exists a group of women, possibly even larger, who helped keep Epstein’s massive sex-trafficking operation running for more than 20 years.
“These women aren’t household names, even for people following Epstein’s story. But his victims say they were key to grooming and deceiving them and allowing Epstein to operate with impunity. In fact, most of Epstein’s victims were introduced to him through other women … It was the women around Epstein who tried to make them feel comfortable, as if what they were experiencing was normal or harmless.”
BIDEN’S FRIDAY — The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:50 a.m. At 3 p.m., Biden will meet in the Oval Office with six Dreamers who work in health care, education and agriculture. At 4:30 p.m., Biden will receive the Weekly Economic Briefing.
—Harris and second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF will travel to New York City in the afternoon to attend their daughter’s graduation.
— Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m. with Council of Economic Advisers Chair CECILIA ROUSE.
THE HOUSE will meet at 9 a.m. to take up the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, with first and last votes between 10:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.
THE SENATE is out.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
HAPPY DAYS ARE HERE AGAIN — “‘Better days are ahead’: Maskless Biden marks milestone in virus battle,” WaPo: “President Biden on Thursday afternoon strolled out of the White House with a triumphant demeanor — notably without wearing a mask — and declared the country on the precipice of defeating a pandemic that has killed more than 580,000 Americans, damaged the economy and been the single-most dominant issue of his young presidency.
“The occasion was the surprise announcement by federal health officials that Americans who are fully vaccinated can go without masks or physical distancing in most cases — marking a crucial milestone in the nation’s battle against the pandemic. …
“The White House was informed about the CDC’s decision Wednesday night, according to a White House aide. Shortly after the CDC made its decision public, the White House ‘covid ops’ team issued an all-staff email explaining that White House aides don’t need to wear masks at work if they are two weeks past vaccination.”
IMMIGRATION FILES — “Far Fewer Young Migrants Are In Border Patrol Custody, DHS Secretary Says,” NPR: “Homeland Security Secretary ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS told senators on Thursday that in the midst of a surge of migrants trying to enter the U.S., the number of unaccompanied minors in U.S. Customs and Border Protection custody continues to fall dramatically.
“The total number of young migrants in Border Patrol custody has fallen from nearly 6,000 in late March to 455 as of Tuesday, Mayorkas told a Senate panel in testimony. And the number of children in custody for longer than 72 hours has also fallen from 4,078 to zero in the same period. The efforts follow a change by the Biden administration to allow the children to be moved to facilities under the Department of Health and Human Services rather than DHS.”
PANDEMIC
STATES REACT TO NEW CDC GUIDELINES — “Some states lift mask mandates for vaccinated people, while others greet the new C.D.C. guidance with caution,” NYT:“As federal health officials on Thursday cleared the way for Americans who are fully vaccinated against the coronavirus to drop mask wearing in most situations, some states lifted mask mandates … Most of the state officials who responded to the shift were Democrats. Half of the country’s governors — most of them Republicans — had already lifted mask mandates in some form.
“On Thursday, the governors of Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, North Carolina, and Virginia, and the mayors of New York City and Washington, D.C., all Democrats, said they were taking the new guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention under advisement before adopting it. … [A]t least seven states led by Democrats began to lift mask mandates: Connecticut, Illinois, Kentucky, Minnesota, Nevada, Oregon, and Pennsylvania began to adjust their mask wearing guidance.”
MASKS ARE GONE, BUT VACCINE MISINFO REMAINS — “Inside one network cashing in on vaccine disinformation,”AP: “The BOLLINGERS are part of an ecosystem of for-profit companies, nonprofit groups, YouTube channels and other social media accounts that stoke fear and distrust of COVID-19 vaccines, resorting to what medical experts say is often misleading and false information.
“An investigation by The Associated Press has found that the couple work closely with others prominent in the anti-vaccine movement — including ROBERT F. KENNEDY JR. and his Children’s Health Defense — to drive sales through affiliate marketing relationships.”
A NEW ARGUMENT FOR THE INFRASTRUCTURE PACKAGE — “As Colonial Pipeline recovers from cyberattack, leaders point to a ‘wake-up call’ for U.S. energy infrastructure,” WaPo: “A major East Coast fuel pipeline lurched back to life Thursday as the nation continued to deal with the fallout from the biggest known cyberattack on U.S. energy infrastructure, but the Biden administration warned it would take time for fuel shortages to ease and pledged to take additional action to prevent a similar crisis. …
“Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG called the ransomware attack a ‘wake-up call’ that raises questions about whether the nation’s laws and political system are prepared for what he called ‘the cyber era.’ And Biden touted a new Justice Department task force to go after DarkSide, a hacker group that infiltrated Colonial Pipeline’s servers and said it would not relinquish control without a ransom.”
CONGRESS
NRCC TARGETS FRONTLINE DEMS OVER JOBS REPORT — The House GOP’s campaign arm thinks it’s found its newest line of attack against vulnerable House Democrats in the party’s bid to flip the House: last week’s disappointing jobs report. In at least 20 different media attacks across the nation this week, the NRCC has tried to link the disappointing jobs numbers with swing-district Democrats’ support of Biden’s American Rescue Plan, arguing that the enhanced unemployment benefits are keeping people from returning to the workforce. We’re told it’s a strategy they’ll continue as they seek to generate local headlines.
CHIP ROY THROWS IN AGAINST STEFANIK — “Stefanik and Roy make their pitches for House GOP No. 3,” by Melanie Zanona and Olivia Beavers: “[Reps.] ELISE STEFANIK (R-N.Y.) and CHIP ROY (R-Texas) on Thursday night pitched their House GOP colleagues on their cases to be the conference’s next No. 3 leader, pledging to put aside their personal views in order to execute messaging on behalf of the party less than 48 hours after the fraught eviction of Liz Cheney.
“Multiple Republicans in the room for the gathering, billed as a candidate forum, described the back-and-forth between the New York and Texas Republicans as friendly and formal. Roy contended that he was the more conservative choice, while Stefanik emphasized her efforts to elect GOP women and her fundraising prowess. …
“Roy, a member of the ultra-conservative House Freedom Caucus, joined the leadership race shortly before the forum after hinting at a run earlier this week. He has argued that Stefanik should not serve as House Republicans’ No. 3 leader because of her moderate record, also protesting the speed at which the party moved to replace Cheney.”
GAETZ-GATE INTENSIFIES — “Feds tighten grip in Gaetz probe,” by Marc Caputo, Josh Gerstein and Matt Dixon: “Federal investigators are intensifying their sex-crimes probe of Rep. MATT GAETZ as they discuss a potential immunity arrangement with his former girlfriend and have struck a tentative deal with his one-time ‘wingman’ who will likely plead guilty, according to multiple people familiar with the situation.
“The U.S. Department of Justice’s Public Integrity Section also continues to interview potential witnesses who could provide prosecutors with evidence against Gaetz. One witness told POLITICO that prosecutors spent two hours asking questions about whether Gaetz (R-Fla.) or others in his circle had sex with a 17-year-old girl in 2017.”
WHAT DEBT LIMIT? — “‘Doesn’t matter’: Democrats reject GOP’s debt limit demands,”by Burgess Everett, Caitlin Emma and Jennifer Scholtes: “Senate Republicans dramatically changed their party rules to take a hard line on the debt limit in the coming months. Democrats don’t care.
“In fact, the Democratic majority says it has no intention of negotiating with Republicans bent on slashing spending as a condition for avoiding default after the July 31 deadline. Democrats say they won’t haggle with the minority party over the faith and credit of the United States, citing lessons from the presidency of BARACK OBAMA.
“The diametrically opposed views heading toward a cutoff point that regularly vexes Washington could become highly consequential as Congress labors to cut bipartisan deals on a host of issues.”
CHAOS IN THE HOUSE — “Riot revisionism, hallway aggression, squashed alliances: The House nears a Cold War,”by Sarah Ferris and Nicholas Wu: “The rift between the two parties over the insurrection is worse today than it’s been at perhaps any point since early January, with lawmakers openly berating each other in the hallways and refusing to partner on legislation. The fractious breakdown of what little bipartisan comity remained in the House is playing out, of course, in the long shadow of the former president. And the growing tide of GOP insurrection revisionism could turn the already-bitter divide between House Democrats and Republicans who voted to support Donald Trump’s election challenges into permanent cold war.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
CHENEY A ‘NO’ ON 2024 BID (FOR NOW) — “Liz Cheney says she’s not running for president,” by Ben Leonard: “The Wyoming Republican, who recently said she wouldn’t rule out running, told Fox’s Bret Baier Thursday night that she wasn’t throwing her hat in the ring.”
WATCH: Cheney gets ousted and the GOP attacks voting rights and Fauci: The monthslong feud between Cheney and McCarthy has officially come to a head, as Republicans voted to oust her from her leadership position this week. But it wasn’t just Cheney caught in the Republican crossfire — ANTHONY FAUCI sparred with Sen. RAND PAUL (R-Ky.) over Covid-19. In the Senate, Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL attacked voting rights legislation as more Republican states pass stricter voting laws across the country. EUGENE is back from his grandma’s house and watches this week’s top videos with TARA.
“Senator Wyden’s office asked the Department of Defense, which includes various military and intelligence agencies such as the National Security Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency, for detailed information about its data purchasing practices after Motherboard revealed special forces were buying location data. The responses also touched on military or intelligence use of internet browsing and other types of data, and prompted Wyden to demand more answers specifically about warrantless spying on American citizens.”
TRIAL PUSHED PAST AUGUST — “Judge Delays Trial in George Floyd Case,”AP: Former Minneapolis police officers THOMAS LANE, ALEXANDER KUENG and TOU THAO “had previously been scheduled to go on trial in August but the judge said he chose to delay the trial so that a federal case could go first. A federal grand jury indicted all four former officers on charges of violating Mr. Floyd’s constitutional rights.
“Hennepin County District Judge PETER CAHILL denied a defense motion to move the trial, but said given all the publicity surrounding the trial, it would make more sense for the federal case to move forward first.”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
NO END IN SIGHT — “Israeli forces escalate campaign in Gaza with tanks, artillery, planes; Hamas launches rockets,”WaPo: “The Israeli military escalated its campaign against the Hamas militant group in Gaza late Thursday as artillery, tanks and war planes combined in a withering assault on the Palestinian enclave, and the Israeli military readied at least three brigades of troops for action, raising the prospect of a ground invasion.
“Just after midnight, the Israeli military announced that air and ground forces were attacking in the Gaza Strip, but the extent of the operation remained unclear. A military spokesperson initially said, ‘There are ground troops in Gaza.’ But another spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces later issued a ‘clarification,’ saying, ‘There are currently no IDF ground troops inside the Gaza Strip.’”
DIPLOMATS WARN WE’RE MISSING OUR SHOT — “U.S. diplomats: Send vaccine overseas now or China, Russia will win out,” by Erin Banco: “Frustrated U.S. diplomats are pressing State Department leaders back in Washington to move faster on donating Covid-19 vaccines abroad, arguing that the Biden administration’s indecision is ceding ground to China and Russia … [which have] used donations of their homegrown vaccines to extract political concessions from nations seeking aid, four senior officials with knowledge of the situation said.
“Two of those officials said China, in particular, is pressuring officials in the roughly 50 countries receiving its vaccine donations to recognize Chinese sovereignty over Taiwan. Meanwhile, Russia has used its Sputnik V vaccine to strengthen its relationships with countries in South America.”
MEDIAWATCH
KHAKI KING GETS NEW GIG — “Steve Kornacki inks multimillion-dollar deal with NBCUniversal,”The Hill: “Political correspondent STEVE KORNACKI has signed a four-year, multimillion-dollar deal with NBCUniversal, the parent company of NBC and MSNBC, the company announced Thursday.
“In addition to politics, Kornacki will bring his analytical skills to the ‘entertainment, sports and streaming networks of NBCUniversal,’ the company said in a statement announcing the deal. NBCUniversal’s Television and Streaming Entertainment group is also developing a game show for Kornacki to host that will involve statistics, sports and politics.”
TRUMP CARDS
DETAILS ON PROJECT VERITAS OPERATIONS — “Activists and Ex-Spy Said to Have Plotted to Discredit Trump ‘Enemies’ in Government,”NYT: “The campaign included a planned sting operation against Mr. Trump’s national security adviser at the time, H.R. MCMASTER, and secret surveillance operations against F.B.I. employees, aimed at exposing anti-Trump sentiment in the bureau’s ranks.
“The operations against the F.B.I., run by the conservative group Project Veritas, were conducted from a large home in the Georgetown section of Washington that rented for $10,000 per month. Female undercover operatives arranged dates with the F.B.I. employees with the aim of secretly recording them making disparaging comments about Mr. Trump.”
SIDNEY POWELL HIT WITH LAWSUIT — “Company: Ex-Trump lawyer raiding nonprofit for personal use,”AP: “Former Trump attorney and self-proclaimed ‘Kraken releaser’ SIDNEY POWELL has told prospective donors that her group, Defending the Republic, is a legal defense fund to protect the integrity of U.S. elections. But the company suing Powell over her baseless claims of a rigged presidential election says the true beneficiary of her social welfare organization is Powell herself.
“Dominion Voting Systems claims Powell has raided Defending the Republic’s coffers to pay for personal legal expenses, citing her own remarks from a radio interview. The Denver-based voting technology vendor sued Powell and others who spread false claims that the company helped steal the 2020 election from Donald Trump.”
“I found that name-dropping JASON MILLER — Trump’s de facto post-presidential spokesman and gatekeeper — to a hostess could get you a better table at Palm Beach Grill. When I considered moving to Palm Beach permanently, it was a former Trump ambassador who tried to sell me real estate.”
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week” with Yamiche Alcindor: Eugene, Kasie Hunt, Susan Page and Manu Raju.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
ABC
“This Week”: Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.). Panel: Cecilia Vega, Pierre Thomas, Mary Bruce and Rachel Scott.
FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.). Panel: Steve Hayes, Catherine Lucey and Juan Williams. Power Player: Edwin Fountain.
CBS
“Face the Nation”: Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) … Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) … Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) … Chris Krebs … Scott Gottlieb.
MSNBC
“The Sunday Show”: Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) … Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) … Rep. David Cicilline (D-R.I.) … Jane Harman … Jon Meacham … Jeh Johnson.
Gray TV
“Full Court Press”: Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) … Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.).
CNN
“Inside Politics”: Panel: Michael Shear, Jackie Kucinich, Manu Raju, Melanie Zanona and Leana Wen.
NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Peter Baker, Brendan Buck, Donna Edwards and Kristen Welker.
PLAYBOOKERS
SPOTTED on the Hill on Thursday: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s (R-Ga.) spokesperson video-recording reporters, which precipitated the following exchange:
Andrew Solender of Forbes: “Why is your spokesperson filming us?”
MTG: “Why are y’all filming and recording me?”
SPOTTED at Cafe Milano on Thursday night: Mike Pompeo … Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) … Rep. Jim Costa (D-Calif.) … Postmaster General Louis DeJoy.
SPOTTED: Reps. Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.), John Yarmuth (D-Ky.), Mary Gay Scanlon (D-Pa.), Madeline Dean (D-Pa.) and Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) and U.S. Ambassador to Russia John Sullivan at a dinner hosted by Mercury co-chair and former Rep. Toby Moffett (D-Conn.) on Thursday. Pic
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Gladys Cisneros is now director and senior adviser for international labor at the White House National Security Council. She previously was Mexico director for the AFL-CIO’s Solidarity Center.
— Jessica Mackler is joining EMILY’s List as VP of federal and gubernatorial campaigns for the 2022 midterms. She most recently ran independent expenditure operations for the Democratic Governors Association in 2020 and the DCCC in 2018.
TRANSITION — Ryan Thomas is now Midwest regional press secretary at the DNC. He previously was national press secretary for Stand Up America.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Mark Zuckerberg … Reps. Jackie Speier (D-Calif.) and Gary Palmer (R-Ala.) … Tom Donilon of O’Melveny & Myers … former Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.), now at Arent Fox … J.B. Poersch of Senate Majority PAC … Susie Wiles … WaPo’s Eva Rodriguez … ABC’s Karen Travers and Alexandra Svokos … CNN’s David Gelles … Ryan Travers … POLITICO’s Carly Sitrin, Dari Gessner, David Guide and Charles Friend … Sam Newton … Jon Vogel of MVAR Media … Sydney Thomas of Rep. Mark Green’s (R-Tenn.) office … College to Congress’ Audrey Henson … Aneiry Batista … Erwin Chemerinsky … Tyler Law … former Reps. Erik Paulsen (R-Minn.), Mimi Walters (R-Calif.) and Alan Mollohan (D-W.Va.) … Cassie Scher of Nahigian Strategies … Markham’s Elizabeth Kilgallin Harnik … Brigit Helgen … Bloomberg’s Robert Levinson and Josh Eidelson … Jesse Meisenhelter … Kara Allen … Judith Barnett … Brian Canfield … Todd Reid … Elizabeth Mulkey … former DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen … Jill Stein … Howard Wolfson … Alex Katz of Blackstone … Caleb Brock (2-0) … Twitter’s Nick Pacilio … Lenwood Brooks
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The State of Israel & The Ancient Hebrew Republic “America and Israel have a common love of human freedom and a democratic way of life”-Johnson – American Minute with Bill Federer
On midnight, MAY 14, 1948, the modern State of Israel came into being and was immediately recognized by the United States and the Soviet Union.
It had previously been part of the British protectorate following World War I, but Britain relinquished control due to irreconcilable differences with the Arabs.
It became a homeland for the thousands of Jews who were persecuted and displaced during World War II.
The day after the State of Israel was created, it was attacked by:
Egypt,
Syria,
Iraq,
Lebanon.
the Arab Legion, and
the Transjordanian Army.
Against all odds, Israel survived.
The Armistice between Israel and her enemies was negotiated by Ralph Bunche, the first African American to receive the Nobel Peace Prize.
In 1947, Ralph Bunche set up a meeting between two members of UNSCOP and Menachem Begin, the leader of the Irgun Jewish underground.
As he was leaving Begin’s hideout, Ralph Bunche told the future Israeli Prime Minister:
“I can understand you. I am also a member of a persecuted minority.”
Richard Crossman of Britain asked Bunche if his exposure to the Jews had made him anti-Semitic “yet.”
Ralph Bunche answered:
“That would be impossible … I know the flavor of racial prejudice and racial persecution.
A wise Negro can never be an anti-Semite.”
Democrat President Harry S Truman sent a telegram to the President of Israel, Dr. Chaim Weizmann, President of the Provisional Council of State, Tel Aviv, October 2, 1948:
“On this your first New Year’s Eve as President of the Provisional Council of the State of Israel I send you warm personal greetings and congratulations.
May the New Year bring peace to Israel and to its citizens the opportunity to dedicate themselves in tranquility to furthering the prosperity of their country.”
On November 29, 1948, President Truman wrote to Dr. Chaim Weizmann, the first president of Israel:
“I want to tell you how happy and impressed I have been at the remarkable progress made by the new State of Israel.”
Truman added:
“I remember well our conversations about the Negeb … and I deplore any attempt to take it away from Israel.
I had thought that my position would have been clear to all the world, particularly in the light of the specific wording of the Democratic Party platform.”
The 1948 Democrat Party Platform stated:
“President Truman, by granting immediate recognition to Israel, led the world in extending friendship and welcome to a people who have long sought and justly deserve freedom and independence.
We pledge full recognition to the State of Israel.
We affirm our pride that the United States under the leadership of President Truman played a leading role in the adoption of the resolution of November 29, 1947, by the United Nations General Assembly for the creation of a Jewish State.
… We approve the claims of the State of Israel to the boundaries set forth in the United Nations resolution of November 29th and consider that modifications thereof should be made only if fully acceptable to the State of Israel.
We look forward to the admission of the State of Israel to the United Nations and its full participation in the international community of nations.
… We pledge appropriate aid to the State of Israel in developing its economy and resources.
We favor the revision of the arms embargo to accord to the State of Israel the right of self-defense.”
Truman continued his letter to Israel’s President Dr. Chaim Weizmann, November 29, 1948:
“I have interpreted my re-election as a mandate from the American people to carry out the Democratic platform — including, of course, the plank on Israel.”
Democrat President John F. Kennedy remarked opening the Ouachita National Forest Road at Big Cedar, Oklahoma, October 29, 1961:
“We take our lesson … from the Bible and the story of Nehemiah, which tells us that when the children of Israel returned from captivity they determined to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem, in spite of the threats of the enemy.
… The wall was built and the peace was preserved.
But it was written, ‘Of them that built on the wall … with one of his hands he did the work, and with the other he held the sword.'”
Democrat President Lyndon B. Johnson stated in 1968:
“America and Israel have a common love of human freedom and a democratic way of life …
Through the centuries, through dispersion and through very grievous trials, your forefathers clung to their Jewish identity and their ties with the land of Israel.
… The prophet Isaiah foretold, ‘And He shall set up an ensign for the nations and He shall assemble the outcasts of Israel and gather together the dispersed of Judah from all the four corners of the earth’ …
History knows no more moving example of persistence against the cruelest odds.”
Ancient Israel came out of Egypt, around 1,400 BC and entered the Promised Land.
For the next 400 years, the Children of Israel were the first well-recorded instance in history of a nation ruled without a king.
This was a model for America’s founders.
After the U.S. Constitution was written, it needed to be ratified by nine states in order to go into effect.
Eight states had ratified it and New Hampshire was in line to be the ninth, but disagreements caused its Ratifying Convention to be adjourned in February of 1788.
After the annual day of fasting, set by New Hampshire’s Governor, state delegates reconvened in June of 1788.
They listened to an address on June 5, 1788, by Harvard President Rev. Samuel Langdon, titled “The Republic of the Israelites an Example to the American States.”
Afterwards, New Hampshire delegates voted to ratify the U.S. Constitution, and being the ninth state to do so, put it into effect.
In his address, Rev. Samuel Langdon stated:
“Instead of the twelve tribes of ISRAEL, we may substitute the thirteen states of the American union, and see this application plainly …
That as God in the course of his kind providence hath given you an excellent Constitution of government, founded on the most rational, equitable, and liberal principles, by which all that liberty is secured …
and you are empowered to make righteous laws for promoting public order and good morals;
and as he has moreover given you by his Son Jesus Christ … a complete revelation of his will … it will be your wisdom … to … adhere faithfully to the doctrines and commands of the gospel, and practice every public and private virtue …”
Langdon continued:
“The ISRAELITES may be considered as a pattern to the world in all ages …
Government … on republican principles required laws; without which it must have degenerated immediately into … absolute monarchy …
How unexampled was this quick progress of the ISRAELITES, from abject slavery, ignorance, and almost total want of order, to a national establishment perfected in all its parts far beyond all other kingdoms and states!
From a mere mob, to a well regulated nation, under a government and laws far superior to what any other nation could boast! …”
Langdon concluded:
“It was a long time after the law of Moses was given before the rest of the world knew any thing of government by law …
It was six hundred years after Moses before … Grecian republics received a very imperfect … code of laws from Lycurgus.
It was about five hundred years from the first founding of the celebrated Roman empire … before the first laws of that empire.”
It was the first four hundred years in the Promised Land, before they demanded their first king, Saul.
* ISRAEL was the first well-recorded instance of a nation with millions of people and no king. People of each village, town and city met in a “synagogue,” which means “house of meeting,” where, in addition to learning the law they chose the elders who would sit in public judgement at the city gate.
* In ISRAEL, at this time, had no royal family to pay obeisance to. Everyone was equal under the Law, as it taught “Ye shall not respect persons in judgment; but ye shall hear the small as well as the great.” (Deuteronomy 1:17). This was the beginning of the concept of equality.
In ISRAEL, the Law stated that every person was made in the image of the Creator, “God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them” (Genesis 1:27).
Each person possessed God-given rights which no one could take away, and it was the government’s purpose to guarantee these rights.
* ISRAEL treated non-Israelites as equals.
“The stranger who resides with you shall be to you as one of your citizens; you shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt: I the LORD am your God” (Leviticus 19:34)
* ISRAEL was tolerant. Though convinced they were worshiping the only true God, they never waged ideological war to force other nations to accept Him, nor did they force the non-Israelite strangers living within their borders to convert.
John Locke wrote in A Letter Concerning Toleration (1689):
“Foreigners and such as were strangers to the commonwealth of Israel were not compelled by force to observe the rites of the Mosaical law … We find not one man forced into the Jewish religion and the worship of the true God …
If any one … desired to be made a denizen [citizen] of their commonwealth … to embrace their religion … this he did willingly, on his own accord, not by constraint.”
* ISRAEL had a system of honesty which provided a basis for commerce.
Leviticus 19:36 “Just balances, just weights, a just ephah, and a just hin, shall ye have.”
Proverbs 11:1 “A false balance is abomination to the LORD: but a just weight is his delight.”
• In ISRAEL, land was permanently titled to each family. This contrasted with most of the world, where kings granted land to loyal vassals, or as in Egypt, where the pharaohs owned the land.
Israel called it the Promised “Land” because each family owned title to their land. This prevented a dictator from gathering up the land and putting the people back into slavery.
If a person owned land, they could accumulate possessions. The Bible called this being “blessed”; Karl Marx called it being a “capitalist.”
Marx wrote in his Manifesto, 1848: “The theory of the communists may be summed up in the single sentence: Abolition of private property.”
Noah Webster wrote in the preface of his Dictionary (republished 1841):
“Let the people have property and they will have power – a power that will forever be exerted to prevent a restriction of the press, and abolition of trial by jury, or the abridgement of any other privilege.”
• ISRAEL had a bureaucracy-free welfare system.
When someone harvested their field, they left the corners and gleanings for the poor, like in the story of Ruth.
This way, the poor were taken care of, while maintaining their dignity by doing something, without a political leader collecting everything and doling it back out as favors to those who would keep him in power.
* ISRAEL had relatively few laws, as citizens were accountable to God to treat each other fairly.
Leviticus 19:18 “You shall not take vengeance or bear a grudge against your kinsfolk. Love your neighbor as yourself: I am the LORD.”
* ISRAEL had no police. Everyone was taught the Law, and everyone was personally accountable to enforce it. It was as if everyone in the nation was “deputized.”
* ISRAEL had no prisons. The Law required swift justice at the “gates of the city” and a “city of refuge” where fugitives could flee to await trial.
* ISRAEL had no standing army, as every man was in the militia, armed with a sword upon their thigh, and ready at a moment’s notice to defend his family and community. “Every man has his sword on his thigh” Song of Solomon 3:8.
* ISRAEL was the first nation where everyone was taught to read.
At the time the Children of Israel left, Egypt had 3,000 hieroglyphs, and reading them was the scribes’ secret knowledge.
Only one percent of Egypt could read.
The National Archaeological Museum in Athens, Greece, in its section on Egyptian Artifacts, has a display on “Scribes,” stating:
“Only a small percentage of ancient Egypt’s population was literate, namely the pharaoh, members of the royal family, officials, priests and scribes.”
Scribes wrote on stone or clay sherds, wooden boards, linen, papyrus, and parchment. Scribes kept writing complicated to enhance their job security. It was their secret knowledge. They were needed to decipher the cryptic hieroglyphs.
The elite deep-state ruling class used complicated writing to maintain control over uneducated masses.
Anthropologist Claude Levi Strauss (1908-2009), wrote:
“Ancient writing’s main function was to facilitate the enslavement of other human beings.”
George Orwell wrote in Nineteen Eighty-Four:
“In the long run, a hierarchical society was only possible on a basis of poverty and ignorance.”
Other nations had languages with hundreds and even thousands of characters:
the Hittite language had 375 cuneiform characters;
the Indus Valley Harappan language had 417 symbols;
the Luwian language of Anatolian had over 500 logographic hieroglyphs;
the Akkadian language in Mesopotamia had over 1,500 Sumerian cuneiform characters;
the Chinese language had nearly 10,000 pictogram and ideogram characters, invented by scribes of China’s Yellow Emperor.
When Moses came down from Mount Sinai, he not only had the Ten Commandments, but he had them in a 22 character Hebrew alphabet. (“aleph” is the first letter, “beth” is the second).
With so few characters, even children learned to read.
Levites not only taught the Law, they also taught the people how to read it for themselves.
In fact, they were required to, as the law was addressed to each person, who was personally accountable to God obey it.
• In ISRAEL, people chose their leaders. Honest elections allowed for government by the consent of the governed.
“Moses spoke unto the children of Israel … How can I myself alone bear your … burden … TAKE YOU wise men, and understanding, and KNOWN AMONG YOUR TRIBES, and I will make them rulers over you” (Deuteronomy 1:3–13).
“Judges and officers SHALT THOU MAKE THEE IN ALL THY GATES which the Lord thy God giveth thee throughout thy tribes” (Deuteronomy 16:18–19).
“Moreover thou shalt provide OUT OF ALL THE PEOPLE able men, such as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness; and place such over them, to be rulers of thousands, and rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens” (Exodus 18:21).
Rather than a pyramid style, top-down form of government where the king’s will is law, the Hebrew Republic was a bottom-up form of government, like a living tree drawing nutrients from the roots, where every cell contributes to its growth.
During the 400 year period of the Hebrew Republic, anyone could be raised up into leadership as there was no hereditary monarchy:
Jephthah was the son of a prostitute;
Gideon was from an obscure family; and
Deborah was a just woman who knew the Law.
Israel was truly unique.
E.C. Wines wrote in Commentaries on the Laws of the Ancient Hebrews, with an Introductory Essay on Civil Society & Government (NY: Geo. P. Putnam & Co., 1853):
“Menes in Egypt; Minos in Crete; Cadmus in Thebes; Lycurgus in Sparta; Zaleucus in Locris; and Numa in Rome.
But … Moses differed fundamentally from … these heathen legislators …
Moses’ … national unity … was not that species of unity, which the world has since so often seen, in which vast multitudes of human beings are delivered up to the arbitrary will of one man.
It was a unity, effected by the abolition of caste; a unity, founded on the principle of equal rights; a unity, in which the whole people formed the state.”
In a unique way, Ancient Israel helped in the founding of America, as America’s founders looked back to the Hebrew Republic as an example of self-government; and America helped in the founding of the modern State of Israel, as Harry S Truman and other U.S. leaders defended it against all odds and against hostile enemies.
In April 3, 2002, House Majority Whip Tom DeLay mentioned Israel in an address at Westminster College:
“No one can ignore the horrible aggression in the Middle East … The State of Israel has been targeted by groups committed to her complete elimination.
… And on the basis of our shared principles and democratic values, America has an undeniable obligation to stand squarely with our democratic ally against those attempting to end the State of Israel …
The State of Israel has fought five major wars to defend its right to exist since 1948 …”
DeLay continued:
“Israel and America are kindred nations.
The founders of both countries were profoundly influenced by faith.
Both countries drafted governments that practice religious tolerance …
Both countries are filled with immigrants summoned by dreams. For people fleeing the storms of persecution, both countries have been safe harbors …”
Congressman DeLay concluded:
“No one should expect the people of Israel to negotiate with groups pursuing the fundamental goal of destroying them …
America has a clear duty to stand beside a democratic ally that is besieged by terrorists …
The terrorists attempting to destroy the State of Israel should know that America will never allow that to happen.”
In regards to Israel, former Democrat President Jimmy Carter stated in his book, Keeping the Faith-Memoirs of a President (published 1982, p. 274):
“The Judeo-Christian ethic and study of the Bible were bonds between Jews and Christians which had always been part of my life.
… I also believed very deeply that the Jews who had survived the Holocaust deserved their own nation, and that they had a right to live in peace among their neighbors.
I considered this homeland for the Jews to be compatible with the teachings of the Bible, hence ordained by God. These moral and religious beliefs made my commitment to the security of Israel unshakable.”
On March 23, 1982, to the National Conference of Christians and Jews, New York, Republican President Ronald Reagan stated:
“A strong, credible America is also an indispensable incentive for a peaceful resolution of differences between Israel and her neighbors.
America has never flinched from its commitment to the State of Israel — a commitment which remains unshakable.”
On December 10, 2001, Republican President George Bush remarked at the White House Lighting of the Menorah:
“As God promised Abraham, the people of Israel still live … America and Israel have been through much together …
We’re reminded of the ancient story of Israel’s courage and of the power of faith to make the darkness bright.
We can see the heroic spirit of the Maccabees lives on in Israel today.”
Republican President Donald Trump stated on March 21, 2016:
“I came here to speak to you about where I stand on the future of American relations with our strategic ally, our unbreakable friendship and our cultural brother, the only democracy in the Middle East, the state of Israel …
Iran has … ballistic missiles, with a range of 1,250 miles … designed to intimidate … Israel … We’re not letting it happen to Israel, believe me.
Do you want to hear something really shocking? As many of the great people in this room know, painted on those missiles in both Hebrew and Farsi were the words “Israel must be wiped off the face of the earth.” You can forget that …
When I become president, the days of treating Israel like a second-class citizen will end on day one.”
Dr. Walensky Announces New CDC Mask Guidance Content created by Conservative Daily News is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details.
A top Republican congressman on the Oversight Committee has opened an inquiry into Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm’s ownership stake in energy firm Proterra, according to a Wednesday letter. Rep. Ralph Norman, who is the ranking member of the House Oversight Committee’s Subcommittee on Environment, told Granholm that he is conducting …
Gov. Ron DeSantis announced Wednesday evening that he will be pardoning Floridians charged with violating COVID-19 mask or social distancing restrictions. The Florida Republican broke the news on “The Ingraham Angle” to Mike and Jillian Carnevale, gym owners who face jail time for allowing their members to workout maskless. “I’m …
The numbers are in for April. For Biden and Harris, the numbers may bring smiles to their faces. The rest of us are shocked, appalled, and wondering when this will stop. There were 178,622 attempted Border Crossings just in April. That is over a 900% increase from April of 2021. …
In a move that sent shockwaves throughout the tech sector, Apple recently unveiled a new feature that allows users to opt out of apps tracking them across their devices. Facebook’s feathers were particularly ruffled, which was to be expected—tracking users across apps and using that data to place targeted ads …
In a recent interview with Fox News, Ex-Navy SEAL Jocko Willink spoke out about Critical Race Theory and said what many Americans are truly thinking. In recent weeks, there has been a push back from lawmakers who have tried to limit the power of Critical Race Theory in schools, due …
President Biden Delivers Remarks on the Colonial Pipeline Incident The event is scheduled to start at 11:50 a.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details.
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki holds a briefing today. The briefing is scheduled to start at 12:30 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details.
Happy Friday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Miniature horses are all up in your business.
We’ve almost made it through this week but I’m not optimistic enough to put anything beyond next Monday on my calendar. Just curious, what does one wear to the end of the American Experiment? I would like to go out in style.
I am sure they are already aware, but I need to make sure that all of the people who voted for Joe Biden know that I’m judging them. Harshly. Not just them, but their loved ones as well. Even their descendants who have yet to be born. Heck, if I have any loved ones who voted for him I’m judging me.
Yeah, I’m not a fan.
We’ve already discussed this week that this doddering fool, who concussed people are calling the president of the United States, can’t stay up later than the early-bird special to do president stuff. At every turn, this guy is an embarrassment.
We should all remember that Joe Biden has never been the sharpest tool in the shed. Long before his recent, painfully obvious mental decline he was a stone-cold dullard who was known for plagiarism and saying inappropriate things in public.
Oh, and groping.
Again though: no mean tweets!
Now we have creepy totalitarian tweets:
Shut it, Drools.
The relentless mask/vaccine one-note messaging from the Biden administration is getting more wearisome by the minute. There are other things going on in the world that the empty husk’s handlers should be making him pretend to deal with.
President Joe Biden took to the podium on Thursday. A conflict between Israel and Hamas rages, and the southeast is entirely out of gasoline, but he again wanted to tell Americans to get vaccinated for COVID-19. The highest inflation since 2008 and a terrible jobs report have also hit the news. And we still have an endless flow of illegal immigrants over the border. But Biden wants to talk about vaccines. It’s no wonder Press Secretary Jen Psaki tells the president, “Don’t take questions.”
After 100 days, the pandemic was the only thing a majority of Americans approved of him handling, so maybe his handlers think that this plays to his lone strength. As far as large swaths of the country are concerned, the pandemic is waning. People who wanted vaccines have gotten them, and some folks are just going to wait and see. The continual browbeating of people who do their own research and don’t trust Dr. Anthony Fauci as far as they could throw him is a waste of time.
So, Biden did his typical spiel, using moral shaming to get a vaccine and talking about the current rates. The administration keeps using a carrot-and-stick method to talk about all the cool things you can do once you get the shot. The southeastern U.S. watches this and just shakes its head. Apparently, the press corps is getting a little bored, too. As Biden shut his binder, they started shouting questions about the actual news.
Biden campaigned solely on the pandemic, and he just can’t seem to quit it. What’s most annoying now is that he’s got celebrities, social media, and the mainstream media involved in his heavy-handed mask/vaccine shaming. I have to be online for work all day and I can’t get away from vaccine information banner ads and videos. I’m fully vaccinated and this propaganda campaign is kind of making me regret it.
I know only a handful of people who haven’t gotten vaccinated yet (and still aren’t sure if they are going to) and I know for certain that this full-court press to harass everyone until they get it isn’t working. Stacey mentioned the lack of trust in Anthony Fauci, but the CDC and the government as a whole also haven’t done anything that would make skeptics trust them. Shutting down the Johnson and Johnson vaccine over something statistically insignificant no doubt moved a lot of people from “on the fence” to “no way.” One good friend was scheduled to get the J&J shot just a few days after they pulled it and he’s not interested in giving it a whirl now.
Inside every Democrat beats a totalitarian heart. They used to hide it better, but now they don’t care that everyone knows. A lot of Americans still bristle at things like that. The continued vaccine shaming isn’t going to win any hearts and minds. In fact, it’s more than likely having the opposite effect. They’d probably have more success if they dialed it all down a lot and just let people ponder without being drowned by waves of virtue signaling.
For the moment, it’s still a free country. It’s a shame that the president is too far gone to remember that.
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
With Busy Airports and Restaurants, U.S. Moves Closer to Full Reopening . . . More than 1.7 million people traveled through the nation’s airports on Sunday, the most since the start of the pandemic. The New York City subway hit its highest daily ridership since March 13, 2020, with some 2.2 million riders last Friday. The San Francisco Symphony held its first in-person performance in more than a year, and the Kansas City Symphony plans to return later this month to its concert hall. On Monday, some restaurants in the U.S. hit a milestone, according to data from OpenTable. Seated diners at reopened restaurants on the reservation platform’s network reached 100% of 2019 levels. Increased Covid-19 vaccinations, lower case counts fuel broad rollback of restrictions.New York, New Jersey, Minnesota, Delaware, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island will lift most economic restrictions this month. Wall Street Journal
Colonial Pipeline says it has restored full service . . . The Colonial Pipeline, the target of a ransomware attack last week, has resumed full operations, the company announced Thursday afternoon. “We can now report that we have restarted our entire pipeline system and that product delivery has commenced to all markets we serve,” the company said in a statement. The company said it anticipates “several days” before supply chains return to normal after the pipeline shutdown prompted gas shortages and panic buying. The Hill
Politics
‘Where’s Durham?’: Investigation of Russia-collusion probe’s origin quietly hits second anniversary . . . Former President Donald Trump gushed “I am so proud” when then-Attorney General William Barr tapped John Durham to look for widespread wrongdoing by FBI officials in the early stages of its Russia-collusion probe. That was in May 2019. Two years later the investigation has practically disappeared without an utterance from Mr. Durham or any sign that he has uncovered anything. Washington Times
Where’s Durham? Is he a living, breathing human being? Will there ever be a Durham report?
Trump’s ex-White House Counsel to Testify About Mueller Report . . . The Justice Department and a House committee reached an agreement that will allow former Trump White House counsel Don McGahn to offer testimony about events described in special counsel Robert Mueller’s 2019 Russia report. Democrats have sought Mr. McGahn’s testimony for two years as part of an investigation of potential obstruction of justice by then-President Donald Trump during Mr. Mueller’s Russia investigation. McGahn’s testimony to a closed-door transcribed interview with the Judiciary committee is to be scheduled as soon as possible. He will be permitted to testify about matters referenced in the public portion of Mr. Mueller’s report. A transcript may be released publicly. Wall Street Journal
What now for anti-Trump Republicans? . . . Republicans opposed to former President Trump are not going to win the war for the soul of the party anytime soon — if ever. Rep. Liz Cheney’s (R-Wyo.) ouster from House leadership, via an overwhelming voice vote Wednesday, makes that clear. Cheney and others of her ilk are not giving up. The question is what kind of impact they can have in their rhetorical guerrilla war against the former president and the GOP leaders whom they brand as his enablers. For now, many are dispirited by Cheney’s fall and what it says about the party writ large. “The outlook is grim,” said Olivia Troye, who broke with Trumpism after having served as a staffer to then-Vice President Mike Pence. The Hill
75 million.
McCarthy, House GOP Signal Support for Police in Midst of Defunding Calls . . . House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R., Calif.) took aim at the “defund the police” movement Thursday, playing up GOP support for police officers after a year of unrest and rising rates of violent crime. “Now more than ever, Congress must show our gratitude for the sacrifice and service of our fallen heroes,” McCarthy said. “We should not talk about the defunding of the police. We should talk about providing what they need to protect us.” McCarthy addressed a small crowd gathered at the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in Washington, D.C., Thursday morning. Washington Free Beacon
Marjorie Taylor Greene vs. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez: Shouting, taunting, threat to call cops . . . Ms. Greene confronted Ms. Ocasio-Cortez as she exited the House chamber Wednesday afternoon. Ms. Greene shouted that Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, a leader of the far-left group of young Congress members known as “The Squad,” was failing to defend her “radical socialist” beliefs by declining to publicly debate her, according to the report.
“You don’t care about the American people,” Ms. Greene reportedly shouted. “Why do you support terrorists and Antifa?” Ms. Ocasio-Cortez in a statement to the newspaper, said, “we hope leadership and the Sergeant at Arms will take real steps to make Congress a safe, civil place for all Members and staff — especially as many offices are discussing reopening.” Washington Times
Virginia School Board Member Makes Anti-Israel Social Media Posts . . . A Fairfax County school board member referred to Israel as an “apartheid” state that “kills Palestinians” in two social media posts Thursday morning. In posts celebrating the end of Ramadan, Fairfax County School Board member-at-large Abrar Omeish wrote that Israel is a colonizing state that “desecrates the Holy Land.” Omeish posted the same message on her public Facebook and Twitter accounts, which she uses both in her private capacity and as a district official. “Hurts my heart to celebrate while Israel kills Palestinians & desecrates the Holy Land right now,” Omeish said in the posts. “Apartheid & colonization were wrong yesterday and will be today, here and there. May justice + truth prevail.” Washington Free Beacon
National Security
Colonial Pipeline likely got hacked because of these two avoidable reasons . . . The enormous ransomware attack on the oil pipeline operated by Colonial Pipeline that reportedly transports as much as 45% of the fuel consumed on the east coast like occurred because weak security. Ransomware attacks on businesses happen because of people. Either a) an employee clicks on a malicious link contained in an email or fake website (this is known as “phishing”) or b) a device on a network was compromised because it was running an out-of-date operating system. This is what investigators will likely find. It’s very possible that an intrusion happened on an employee’s personal device. Why? According to the FBI, ransomware attacks have increased an astonishing 69 percent in 2020 compared to 2019 and have costed businesses more than $4 billion mainly because of so many people were working from home using less secure, out-of-date devices running older operating systems to get access to their companies’ networks. The whole situation could have been avoided if the people in charge of the technology at Colonial Pipeline had done these three things. Washington Times
Colonial Pipeline Said to Pay Ransom to Hackers Who Caused Shutdown . . . Colonial Pipeline Co. paid a ransom to the criminal hackers who caused the company to shut down the country’s largest conduit of fuel, according to people familiar with the matter, a payment that allowed the firm to obtain decryption tools to try to unlock its computer systems. The ransom, paid in cryptocurrency, was approximately $5 million at the time of the transaction. It couldn’t be learned whether the ransom payment directly enabled Colonial to restart its 5,500-mile conduit, which runs from Texas to New Jersey. Energy analysts said it would likely take days before gasoline supplies are returned to normal in affected states in the Southeast. Wall Street Journal
Once you pay people off like this, of course, they’ll be back for more. America was held hostage.
China Tries to Put Its Imprint on Blockchain . . . China, home of the Great Firewall, is trying to bring order to a scrappy corner of cyberspace—and in the process put its mark on the next-generation internet. A Beijing-backed initiative aims to shape a category of online record-keeping called blockchain. Most commonly associated with bitcoin, blockchain holds broad promise for business and other uses but has been hobbled by a lack of uniform technical standards. With an offer of ultracheap server space, Beijing is beckoning blockchain’s global community of developers to adopt its vision for the technology. Success could put China in a powerful position to influence future development of the internet itself and promote international use of Chinese innovations, like a homegrown Global Positioning System and a digitized national currency.Wall Street Journal
Whether it’s Belt & Road scam or getting the US addicted to its cheap labor, China always plays the long game, making it hard for the frog to know that it’s in trouble till it’s actually boiled. Americans must outplay Chicoms lest we don’t want to be “boiled” by the CCP.
Arizona AG calls for Kamala Harris ouster as ‘border czar’ . . . Vice President Harris must be removed from her role in dealing with the border surge, Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich said in a letter this week to President Biden, saying his running mate has blown her chance to fix things. Mr. Brnovich said it’s insulting to watch Ms. Harris make trips to other states for “less-pressing matters” while neither she nor Mr. Biden has visited Arizona or other border states to get an up-close look at the migrants surging across the boundary line from Mexico. The Republican attorney general said it was “shameful” that Border Patrol agents aren’t getting more support from the Biden team, which has displayed inaction in the face of its duty to uphold federal immigration laws and ensuring public safety. Washington Times
Army releases recruitment advertisement featuring lesbian wedding . . . The US Army released an animated advertisement featuring a girl raised by two mothers, who marched in pride parades. The advertisement, titled Emma|The Calling, showed a girl’s childhood before she joined the Army as a Patriot Missile operator. The two-minute video followed Emma while she watched her two mothers get married, joined a sorority at the University of California-Davis, and fought for “freedom” at a young age by participating in a gay rights parade. “It begins in California with a little girl raised by two moms. Although I had a fairly typical childhood, took ballet, played violin, I also marched for equality. I like to think I’ve been defending freedom from an early age,” she said in the advertisement, which was posted to YouTube on May 4. Washington Examiner
How nice. Now can the US Army get back to its real mission please? There’s some work to be done for Emma with those Patriot missiles in Europe, to keep the russkiys at bay. No more Obama-style promises of “flexibility to Putin” please. Emma, also grab a world map on the way to your deployment, in case the Russians jam your GPS signal – geography is probably not something that your school taught.
Coronavirus
Biden Gives Americans An Ultimatum On Vaccines . . . President Joe Biden issued an ultimatum to Americans Thursday after the CDC eased restrictions for vaccinated Americans.
“The rule is now simple,” the president tweeted. “Get vaccinated or wear a mask until you do.” “The choice is yours.” The CDC updated its guidance Thursday, allowing vaccinated Americans to forgo masks both outdoors and in most indoor situations. The guidance still encourages Americans to wear a mask in crowded areas but otherwise says it is safe for vaccinated people to go mask-less in crowds outdoors. Daily Caller
Gov. Cuomo says NY isn’t ready to follow federal advice on going maskless . . . Pandemic-weary New Yorkers had their hopes deflated Thursday when Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he wasn’t ready to ease the state’s mask mandate — even though the feds gave the green light for vaccinated Americans to finally show their faces and gather indoors again. In a late-afternoon statement, Cuomo said he and Health Commissioner Howard Zucker had yet to decide if the Empire State would adopt newly announced guidelines from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. New York Post
Gov. Ron DeSantis Vows to Pardon Those Charged With Disobeying COVID Orders . . . Gov. Ron DeSantis announced Wednesday evening that he will be pardoning Floridians charged with violating COVID-19 mask or social distancing restrictions.
The Florida Republican broke the news on “The Ingraham Angle” to Mike and Jillian Carnevale, gym owners who face jail time for allowing their members to workout maskless. Daily Signal
International
Israeli Ground Troops Attack Targets In Gaza . . . Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) ground soldiers attacked Gaza early Friday morning local time following a barrage of 1,500 rockets that targeted airstrikes failed to curb. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu previously announced that IDF soldiers were massing at the nation’s border with Gaza in preparation for invasion. He promised that Israel would “would extract a very heavy price from Hamas” in response to repeated rocket attacks that have killed at least seven Israelis. Daily Caller
Pentagon: 120 US military personnel moved from Israel ‘out of an abundance of caution’ . . . The Pentagon on Thursday confirmed reports that it pulled 120 U.S. military personnel from Israel. Defense Department press secretary John Kirby said the U.S. Central Command and U.S. European Command staffers flew aboard a C-17 military aircraft and arrived in Ramstein Air Base in Germany earlier on Thursday. The Hill
Muslim Brotherhood Praises Dems for Abandoning Israel in Time of War . . . The Muslim Brotherhood’s official online mouthpiece offered praise this week to Democratic members of Congress who are publicly criticizing Israel as it defends itself against an onslaught of terrorist rockets. “Democratic representatives demand the protection of Palestinians from Zionist attacks,” reads a headline in Ikhwan Online, the Brotherhood’s official propaganda site. The jihadist extremist group, which is designated as a terror outfit in multiple countries, highlighted critical remarks about Israel’s defensive operations made by outspoken opponents of the Jewish state—Reps. Ilhan Omar (D., Minn.), Rashida Tlaib (D., Mich.), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D., N.Y.), Andre Carson (D., Ind.), Debbie Dingell (D., Mich.), Mark Pocan (D., Wis.), and Cori Bush (D., Mo.), as well as Sen. Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.). Washington Free Beacon
Kamala Harris niece Meena condemns Israeli “oppression” of Palestinians . . . Vice President Kamala Harris’ niece Meena offered a more forceful take on the Israel-Gaza unrest Wednesday than that of her aunt, urging people to fight “Palestinian oppression” allegedly being committed by Israel. Harris, a 36-year-old lawyer and businesswoman shared a statement seen across Instagram, along with the caption “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. I stand in solidarity with the residents of Sheikh Jarrah.” White House Dossier
This apple surely did not fall far from a related tree.
UK Navy To Deploy Largest Fleet In Decades To South China Sea . . . The United Kingdom will soon deploy the largest fleet it has assembled in decades to the eastern Pacific in a major show of military support for the U.S. amid growing tensions with China. The naval deployment is the largest fleet the U.K. has assembled since the Falklands War in the early 1980s. The deployment is the first stage of a larger overhaul of the U.K.’s military now that the nation is freshly divorced from the European Union. Much like the U.S., the U.K. is working to remake its military for conflicts against first-world powers after decades of tailoring its military toward fighting insurgents in the Middle East. Wall Street Journal
Money
Wall Street panicking that Biden’s tax hikes will be retroactive . . . The White House won’t rule out a retroactive implementation of its sweeping new tax plan — and tax haters across Wall Street are in a panic. The Biden administration has previously said levying taxes retroactively — which could stick taxpayers with jacked-up rates on transactions dating back to Jan. 1 instead of imposing them beginning next year — isn’t its “first choice” as it pushes a bold series of hikes on companies and the rich.
Nevertheless, it has refused to rule out the rare but not unprecedented move. In January, Mark Mazur, Treasury Department deputy assistant secretary for tax policy, said retroactive taxes could make sense if they were introduced early enough in the year. New York Post
Amazon, McDonald’s, Others Woo Scarce Hourly Workers With Higher Pay . . . The fight is on for lower-wage workers. Some of the biggest U.S. employers of entry-level workers are adding tens of thousands of new positions as the economy roars back from the coronavirus pandemic. Many are raising wages or adding perks to entice workers from other jobs or off the sidelines of the labor market. Amazon said it would hire 75,000 more workers and offer $1,000 signing bonuses in some locations. McDonald’s said it wants to hire 10,000 employees at company-owned restaurants in the next three months and that it would raise pay at those locations. Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc., Applebee’s and KFC are among other chains seeking to hire tens of thousands of workers.
Many companies have struggled to find enough available workers, though there are signs that more are entering the labor market to take some of those open positions. Wall Street Journal
You should also know
Africans, Caribbeans Flock to ‘Systemically Racist’ US . . . If AmeriKKKa is so bigoted, why do Africans and Caribbeans leave black-run, predominantly black nations and come to the United States of America, which the Democrat left condemns as Earth’s headwaters of “systemic racism” and white supremacy? According to the most recent Department of Homeland Security data, 548,891 African immigrants became permanent US residents between 2015 and 2019. In 2020, these were the top 10 African sources for such new green card holders —plus each nation’s black population percentage, courtesy of the CIA “World Factbook”: Nigeria, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Eritrea, Cameroon, Somalia, South Africa, and Sudan. Total: 49,672 permanent residents from 10 nations that are 90.1% black, on average. America’s population is 13.4% black. Daily Signal
On a related topic, I’ve got a suggestion. Those who dislike capitalism and are actively working to subvert America and turn it into a socialist country, should simply move out to a country that already has socialism. And spare the rest of us all the nonsense. You see, people who uproot themselves from their homelands to come here are not stupid – unlike ‘woke’ American agitators, many immigrants actually lived real racism and socialism, rather than reading about it in books. They chose America, nonetheless. No-one is storming the walls trying to get in into Venezuela, Cuba and the like. Even the Russians have abandoned socialism after 70+ years. Have some common sense, leftists.
Netflix outpaced by the old media companies it sought to dethrone . . . Once a scrappy upstart of the TV industry, Netflix has become the king of streaming with 208m subscribers — nearly half of the world’s total excluding China. But the latest round of quarterly results from media companies, which concluded on Thursday night with figures from Disney, has shown that the disrupter is now firmly in the role of defensive incumbent. Three of the old media groups that Netflix sought to dethrone — Disney, HBO and ViacomCBS — all grew their streaming services more quickly in the first three months of this year, fueling investors’ fears that Netflix must keep pouring billions into new shows to entice viewers or risk losing its momentum. Financial Times
Guilty Pleasures
Cat leaps from window of burning building — and sticks the landing . . . A cat landed safely and survived after jumping out of an upper-story window of a burning building in Chicago Thursday, video shows. The fire broke out in the afternoon at a multi-story building in the city’s Englewood neighborhood. Video posted by Chicago Fire Media on Twitter showed smoke coming from broken, open windows on the fifth floor. Soon after, the cat in question was captured sticking its head out of one of the broken windows. The feline then jumped, as someone in the crowd appeared to yell, “Look at the cat!”
Audible gasps were also heard from onlookers as the cat fell, bounced on the grass, and walked away safely. Fox News
Watch the video – it’s incredible. The cat jumps, out of a tall buildings window, at about 32-33 seconds mark. And just walks away, like nothing happened.
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Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The Centers for Disease Control issued new guidance for fully vaccinated people yesterday, saying those two weeks past their final COVID-19 vaccine dose can “resume activities that you did prior to the pandemic … without wearing a mask or staying 6 feet apart” in most indoor and outdoor settings. Americans will still be required to wear masks on planes, buses, and trains, however.
Bloomberg News reported Thursday that Colonial Pipeline paid nearly $5 million in ransom money last week to the DarkSide hackers that infiltrated the company’s systems. Asked if he was briefed on such a payment, President Joe Biden said he had “no comment on that.” Colonial had said earlier this week it resumed most operations on Wednesday evening.
Initial jobless claims decreased by 34,000 week-over-week to 473,000 last week, the Labor Department reported on Thursday, the lowest level since March 14, 2020.
Rep. Chip Roy of Texas announced yesterday he will run against Rep. Elise Stefanik in the race to succeed Rep. Liz Cheney as House GOP conference chair. Republicans are expected to vote this morning, and Stefanik—having received backing from former President Donald Trump—is the clear favorite.
Politico reported yesterday that an independent government watchdog concluded that Housing and Urban Development Secretary Marcia Fudge violated the Hatch Act earlier this year when she weighed in on a 2022 U.S. Senate race.
The United States confirmed 39,013 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 3.9 percent of the 1,005,408 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 831 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 584,478. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 30,244 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 1,915,642 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 154,624,231 Americans having now received at least one dose.
What to Do About Federal Unemployment Insurance?
As the vaccines continue their march across the land, with roughly 2 million Americans getting the jab each day, it’s clearer than ever that we’ve reached the end of the total-war phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. The CDC’s latest guidance on indoor and outdoor mask-wearing means that even the most safety-conscious Americans will begin tiptoeing back into “normal” life, making the primary question not whether the U.S. economy will come back online, but how soon.
A growing chorus of voices, however, are warning that even as the viral threat wanes, artificial barriers are hampering America’s ability to get back to work. Initial jobless claims are the lowest they’ve been since the start of the pandemic, but unemployment remains stubbornly high—a fact attributable in part to the federal government’s ongoing payout of expanded unemployment insurance at the same level as competitive wages in many states, which is not set to expire until September.
Last month’s jobs report did little to quell these concerns. After analysts had predicted that the economy would create 1 million jobs in April, the Labor Department reported last Friday that nonfarm payrolls increased by a mere 266,000 jobs last month. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate slid up to 6.1 percent.
Since then, the Biden administration has taken pains to convince the American public that the latest jobs report is just a snapshot in time. “I know there’s been a lot of discussion since Friday’s report that people are being paid to stay home rather than go to work,” the president said on Monday. “Well, we don’t see much evidence of that.”
“We’re going to make it clear that anyone collecting unemployment who is offered a suitable job must take the job or lose their unemployment benefits,” Biden said. “There are a few COVID-19-related exceptions so that people aren’t forced to choose between their basic safety and a paycheck, but, otherwise, that’s the law.”
Republican policymakers at both the federal and state levels are weighing in too. GOP Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska said this week he would introduce legislation enabling any current beneficiary of federal unemployment who gets a job by July 4, 2021 to receive two extra months of the payments as a “signing bonus.” Sasse characterized this plan as being both “pro-worker” and “pro-recovery.”
We sent you nearly 1,000 words on the situation in Israel earlier this week, but so much has happened since then that Charlotte had to write 2,000 more.
In a piece for the site today, she takes a look at the escalating violence, its myriad causes, and what comes next.
Here’s a 10,000-foot view of the situation.
As cross-border rocket fire between Israel and Gaza intensifies, families across Israel are becoming full-time occupants of their home, apartment, and neighborhood bomb shelters.
“The past several days have been especially challenging as a parent, in having to answer difficult questions posed by our 6-year-old daughter,” Adam Levick, who lives with his wife and two young children in Modi’in, told The Dispatch after Tuesday night’s attacks. “Though they’ve prepared her at school to some degree, we had to carefully explain to her, in language she would understand, but not language that would scare her, that there are people who want to hurt us, but that we’ll be safe in the shelter, and that our army—a word she likely doesn’t fully understand—and God—a word she does understand, as we are religiously observant—are protecting us.”
Modi’in—along with other cities across central Israel—has come under unprecedented rocket fire in the past several days, as Hamas unleashes its artillery on heavily populated civilian areas in retaliation for recent Arab-Jewish skirmishes in the Israeli capital of Jerusalem.
Before foreboding U.N. warnings of “full-scale war,” Amos Giland—a former Israeli defense official—described the lead-up to the conflict as a “powder keg” primed to “explode at any time” with prescient accuracy early this week. On Monday morning, a clash between police and Palestinians left more than 500 participants—mostly Muslim—wounded in the capital’s holiest site. By Monday evening, Hamas militants based in the Gaza Strip had retaliated with more than 450 rockets aimed at cities across Israel.
The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) hit back in a series of targeted strikes the same night, setting off an aerial fight with alarming casualties on both sides. Early morning Friday, Israeli ground forces—including troops, artillery, and tanks—had amassed the border to Gaza. But despite contradictory statements from Israel’s military and premature reports from the media, no ground offensive has been launched into the territory as of yet.
According to the Gaza-based Palestinian Ministry of Health (a source that analysts have rightly cautioned should be taken with a grain of salt), at least 109 Gazans have been killed since Monday, including 28 children. Six Israelis, including a 6-year-old boy, have also been killed.
We’re pretty sure we’ve never mentioned Rebekah Jones in this newsletter, and that was intentional: Her conspiratorial claims about Florida cooking the books to downplay its COVID-19 situation were farcical, and we didn’t want to elevate them beyond the Resistance Twitter fever swamp. But her theories caught on in certain pockets of the left, in large part because they painted GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis as a ruthless monster. Charles Cooke eviscerates the whole saga in a comprehensive piece for National Review. “There is an extremely good reason that nobody in the Florida Department of Health has sided with Jones,” he writes. “It’s the same reason that there has been no devastating New York Times exposé about Florida’s ‘real’ numbers. That reason? There is simply no story here.”
Ezra Klein wants us to talk more about UFOs. There’s been an uptick in stories about potential sightings, and former high-ranking intelligence officials have repeatedly hinted at there being pertinent information to which the public is not privy. “All this is a little weird,” he writes. “None of it is proof of extraterrestrial visitation, of course. … The way I’ve framed the thought experiment in recent conversations is this: Imagine, tomorrow, an alien craft crashed down in Oregon. There are no life-forms in it. It’s effectively a drone. But it’s undeniably extraterrestrial in origin. So we are faced with the knowledge that we’re not alone, that we are perhaps being watched, and we have no way to make contact. How does that change human culture and society?”
“Randi Weingarten, president of the nation’s second-largest teachers’ union, plans to call on Thursday for a full reopening of the nation’s schools for the next academic year” https://t.co/7Kf7iVuzeQ
Atlantic reporter McKay Coppins joined David and Sarah on yesterday’s Advisory Opinions to chat about his recent profile of Brett Kavanaugh, which tracks the Supreme Court justice’s journey from his contentious 2018 Senate confirmation hearings to the bench. Plus: A discussion of a federal judge’s decision to dismiss the National Rifle Association’s bankruptcy case, the Facebook Oversight Board’s decision to uphold the platform’s ban on Donald Trump, and lower level judicial confirmation hearings.
Historian Niall Ferguson joined Jonah on The Remnant yesterday to talk about his new book: Doom: The Politics of Catastrophe. The pair discuss the human tendency to prepare for one disaster scenario while another hits us square in the jaw, the reason “we may be forced by companies to do Zoom” even after the pandemic ends, and why book tours are delirium-inducing even when done from the comfort of one’s home.
For more on the violence in Israel this week, check out David’s latest French Press(🔒). “One does not have to view Israel through rose-colored glasses to know that it is right to respond to jihadist attacks with military force,” he writes. “Israel is not a perfect nation, but it does have the right to use its superior firepower to attack and destroy jihadists who possess murderous intent.”
Kemberlee Kaye: “Sad and hilarious, but mostly hilarious.”
Mary Chastain: “I don’t believe in coincidences. It’s not a coincidence the big teacher union AFT nowwants to fully reopen schools in the fall. A day ago emails showed them pushing the CDC to keep schools closed. It’s also not a coincidence the CDC decided to say vaccinated people can go without masks in most places. People chided the CDC, including the left, about their stupid caution because it caused more vaccine hesitation. Since Texas didn’t go to hell after it revoked mask mandates and numbers in other states continue to fall they knew they’d lose that precious control they desire so much. Thanks for accepting science, AFT and CDC, you know, months and months after the rest of us did! “
Stacey Matthews: “Charles C.W. Cooke’s takedown of discredited Florida data tech Rebekah Jones, who became a media darling last year after falsely accusing Gov. Ron DeSantis of firing her for refusing to manipulate coronavirus dashboard data, was a thing of beauty.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “As Gaza-based Palestinian terrorist groups intensify their rocket offensive against Israeli towns and cities, Jerusalem is stepping up surgical strikes to eliminate the terrorist command structure and missile launch sites. Using Islamist Hamas-controlled Gaza as their bases, terrorists fired more than 1500 rockets into Israel since Monday. As a result, the Israeli death toll on Thursday rose to seven, including an IDF soldier.”
Samantha Mandeles: “Last Saturday, May 8, in Schorndorf, Germany, anti-Semitic vandals reportedly attacked an independently-owned shop selling Jewish and Israeli products. Local Antifa members claimed credit for the attack, in which participants hurled Christmas ornaments filled with red paint at the building, spattering the storefront. Shop owner and longtime supporter of Israel, Franz Laslo, told the German press that “left-wing terrorism has long established itself in Schorndorf.” Dismayed at this latest example of continuing European Jew-hate, I looked for an Anti-Defamation League (ADL) statement condemning (or even just mentioning) the attack on Laslo’s shop, but could find nothing; instead, only three days before the leftist attack, ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt did post a tweet expressing his grave concern about how “right-wing” extremism “is the greatest threat” to Germany’s security. His hypocrisy would be shocking if it weren’t so common.”
Legal Insurrection Foundation is a Rhode Island tax-exempt corporation established exclusively for charitable purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to educate and inform the public on legal, historical, economic, academic, and cultural issues related to the Constitution, liberty, and world events.
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CDC Finally Tells Us What We Already Knew
Yesterday, the CDC finally declared that those who are fully vaccinated from COVID-19 no longer need to wear a mask, as if that should ever have been a question. While it may seem obvious to any rational individual that precaution measures could be limited once one is inoculated to a disease, the CDC dragged their feet in making this startling announcement. The one exception to this suggested guideline is travel on public transportation, such as planes, trains, and busses, or when in high-risk places such as hospitals, nursing homes, and prisons.
Alexandria Hein and Kayla Rivas described the situation for Fox News, writing:
“When pressed whether public criticism pressured the CDC to update the recommendations, [CDC Director Dr. Rochelle] Walensky said the agency was following the science.
“I want to be clear that we followed the science here. While this may serve as an incentive for some people to get vaccinated, that is not the purpose, our purpose here is as a public health agency to follow the science and to follow where we are with regard to the science and what is safe for individuals to do..”
The CDC relying on that seemingly logical yet increasingly meaningless leftist buzzword “follow the science,” demonstrates the opposite, that political influence and public pressure are driving the COVID guidelines more than actual science.
Though at least it’s reassuring that the Biden administration is finally understanding that providing some incentive in the form of the promise to return to regular life is required to increase vaccinations. If lockdowns and mask mandates would persist regardless, many may wonder, what’s the point?
Politicians Square Off Over Israel
AOC took shots at President Biden’s Israel policy and handling of the border crisis in one fell swoop on the House floor yesterday. Like the other members of the Squad, AOC has taken a firmly anti-Israel stance, supporting Palestinian militants over the staunch ally of the US.
Earlier this week, Biden publicly placed his support behind Israel during this uproar of violence, in which Hamas sent deadly rockets into Israel, making the point that they “have the right to defend themselves.”
Leftist politicians took to Twitter to express their anti-Israel sentiments and support for the radical militants attacking. Among others, Ilhan Omar called Israel’s airstrikes “an act of terrorism,” while AOC claimed that Biden took “the side of occupation.” Rashida Tlaib condemned the US and Israel for “promoting racism.”
Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have taken a stand against their radical peers. Rep. Ted Deutch tweeted, “No one should defend Hamas. Ever,” proceeding to detail their atrocities.
Marco Rubio took aim at Omar during a Fox interview, and Ted Cruz referred to her as “press secretary for Hamas,” a comment she shared to fundraise.
What to Watch – Les Intouchables
One of the most charming, simultaneously heartbreaking and uplifting films is currently on Netflix, and this beautiful French dramedy is the perfect film to check out this weekend. The overwhelmingly charismatic Omar Sy plays Driss, an ex-con who shows up to interview for a role as a caretaker for Philippe (François Cluzet), a wealthy tetraplegic man, merely seeking a signature on his unemployment form. Philippe instead decides to hire Driss, impressed by his blunt nature following a series of interviews filled with pitiful and patronizing candidates. This decision starts an unlikely but beautiful friendship.
Philippe introduces Driss to classical music and inspires him to create his own art, while Driss shows Philippe the value of more contemporary culture (mainly Earth Wind and Fire) and helps him once again enjoy life. While the description sounds somewhat formulaic, the well-drawn characters, excellent writing, strong cinematography, and wonderful performances make this film stand apart.
The supporting cast bring the film to life with rich and likable characters, but the heart of the film rests on Sy and Cluzet, who are superb as the leads with a beautiful dynamic and phenomenal performances. When the film ends by sharing that the pair upon whom the film was based were still close friends and left an indelible impact on each other, it is truly wonderful to hear.
There’s an American remake, The Upside, but it lacks the warmth, heart, and artistry of the original. You won’t be disappointed by checking out this masterpiece of French cinema.
Paulina Enck is an intern at the Federalist and current student at Georgetown University in the School of Foreign Service. Follow her on Twitter at @itspaulinaenck
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May 14, 2021 01:00 am
The Queen doesn’t set UK election policy (Parliament does) but there’s certainly a lot America could learn about election integrity from the British. Read More…
May 14, 2021 01:00 am
Military officers from two leading democracies were viciously attacked for warning their fellow countrymen about existential threats. Read More…
May 14, 2021 01:00 am
The latest CDC guidelines for education will put America’s children even further behind the rest of the world in basic learning. Read More…
Three minutes to prison
May 14, 2021 01:00 am
The repercussions of Derek Chauvin’s murder convictions are only just picking up steam. This situation is going to get ugly. Read more…
Who’s really in charge in America?
May 14, 2021 01:00 am
The recent letter signed by 124 retired U.S. military admirals and generals casts a pall over the 2020 election. Read more…
The CDC does a U-turn on masks
May 14, 2021 01:00 am
Suddenly, we’ve gone from double and triple masking to no masking at all, without any sign of new data driving that change. Read more…
If what’s happening in Israel were happening in America…
May 14, 2021 01:00 am
Imagine lying down to go to bed in a border town in Texas and hearing explosions in the sky. But it isn’t the Fourth of July. It’s Texas Independence Day and the explosions aren’t fireworks but incoming rocket fire from Mexico on the anniversary of their defeat in the Texas Revolution. Read more…
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Pennsylvania State University will no longer use labels like “freshman,” “junior,” or “senior,” because such terms are not inclusive enough and perpetuate a Western male-dominated viewpoint. What are the details? On April 27, Penn State’s faculty senate announced the passage of an “inclusive language” resolution that has effectively banned the use … Read more
I’m a little more optimistic about the future of country music than Alan Jackson is. That’s because when young people are exposed to the original sounds, they love it.
Tech companies have monopolized our communications, our social spaces, and even our inner lives. Finally, a book by Sen. Josh Hawley, ‘The Tyranny of Big Tech,’ provides a template to reign in their power.
A peculiar ranch incident in New Mexico nearly 75 years ago has kept UFO enthusiasts intrigued at the possible presence of alien life on Earth until this very day.
Will Americans ever be able to trust the CDC again after the agency mismanaged, lied, and bent to politics of this moment? If so, it will take a long time.
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
Friday, May 14, 2021
by Linda Noakes
Hello
Here’s what you need to know.
No end in sight as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict escalates, scientists say the COVID-19 lab leak theory cannot be ruled out, and hackers DarkSide are back
Today’s biggest stories
Palestinian women walk at the site of destroyed houses in the aftermath of Israeli air and artillery strikes in the northern Gaza Strip, May 14, 2021. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem
One building watchman in Gaza was given advance warning to evacuate by an Israeli officer – offering an insight into how, at least sometimes, these neighbors and antagonists fight their wars.
We visited the ancient city of Acre, often held up as an example of Arabs and Jews living alongside each other in relative calm, to find fear and mistrust now replacing peaceful co-existence.
Family members mourn at a crematorium ground on the outskirts of Bengaluru, India, May 13, 2021. REUTERS/Samuel Rajkumar
PANDEMIC SLAMS ASIA
Prime Minister Narendra Modi sounded the alarm over the rapid spread of the coronavirus through India’s vast countryside, as the official tally of infections crossed 24 million, and 4,000 people died for the third straight day.
The origin of the novel coronavirus is still unclear and the theory that it was caused by a laboratory leak needs to be taken seriously, according to a group of leading scientists.
Bitcoin is heading for its worst week since February, while dogecoin has leapt by a quarter, as the latest tweets on cryptocurrencies from Tesla boss Elon Musk send the digital coins on a wild ride. A regulatory probe into crypto exchange Binance added to pressure on bitcoin.
But the coal industry is betting it can survive the decarbonization of electricity and industry and keep fossil fuels in the mix by leaning on carbon-capture technology, the head of the World Coal Association has told Reuters.
Meanwhile, Europe faces the prospect of higher electricity bills and a supply crunch, as utilities struggle to finance new gas-fired power plants unless they meet tougher emissions criteria imposed by banks pressured to stop financing fossil-fuel projects.
As Russia’s climate envoy describes a recent global trend towards ambitious new targets to reduce emissions as an “unreasonable race”, the U.S. has brought back its climate change website detailing ongoing threats after Trump officials stopped updating it.
Quote of the day
“We can buy equipment, we can build plants. But in biotechnology, competent people is the most important thing. And there are not very many of them”
Drought-stricken California trucks its salmon to the sea
During a typical spring, the young salmon swimming at the Nimbus Fish Hatchery would be released into the American River and then make their way out to the Pacific Ocean to grow to adulthood. This week they embarked on a very different journey.
The unscripted, one-off special was filmed earlier this year on the same sound stage in Los Angeles as the original comedy about six young New-Yorkers.
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by Tony Perkins: The Biden administration doesn’t mind if the military has chaplains — it just doesn’t want them to stand for anything. That’s the message from the new commander-in-chief, who seems to be picking up right where his former boss left off. Transgenderism in, religious freedom out.
Like a lot of people who’ve struggled with the whiplash of the new administration, the Army’s Chaplain Andrew Calvert struggled to find a good reason for bringing back the gender identity debate in the ranks. When President Biden dedicated one of his first executive orders to overturning the ban on transgender troops, Calvert had a hard time understanding the rationale. The Pentagon, under Donald Trump, had already ruled out the idea as a distraction, an unnecessary waste of taxpayer dollars, and a setback for military readiness.
“How is rejecting reality (biology) not evidence that a person is mentally unfit (ill), and thus making that person unqualified to serve,” Calvert wrote on his personal Facebook page a couple of days before the decision came down. “There is little difference in this than over those who believe and argue for a ‘flat earth,’ despite the overwhelming evidence to the contrary… The motivation is different, but the argument is the same. This person is a MedBoard for Mental Wellness waiting to happen. What a waste of military resources and funding!”
Almost immediately, Calvert was reported to his commander and an investigation ensued. “We are aware of Major Calvert’s social media post,” a spokesman for his branch told reporters. The matter is under review, he insisted, before adding, “We support the commander-in-chief, secretary of Defense, and all DOD policies and directives.” Calvert, who’s served since 2009 and has a Bronze Star, among other awards, didn’t have to wait long for the Army’s decision. II Corps Commander Lt. General Robert White handed down a reprimand that could essentially end his career. “Your actions,” the general wrote, “cast serious doubt on your character and future as a leader in the Army.”
Shell-shocked, Calvert reached out to First Liberty Institute, where Michael Berry and company are desperately trying to appeal. “The Army decided that [his] viewpoint, even expressed by a chaplain in accordance with his sincerely held religious beliefs, was impermissible,” Mike explained on “Washington Watch.” “The hits keep on coming,” he shook his head. “History is now repeating itself. We hoped [it] wouldn’t. We hoped that [even under Biden] religious freedom would still remain strong in our military… I mean, what’s next? Are they going to go after chaplains for what they say from the pulpit during chapel services?”
And of course, the really outrageous piece of this is that under the Trump administration, members of the military were not only openly protesting the president’s decisions — they were applauded for it! “We had uniformed members of our military marching in political rallies and political parades in uniform, expressing openly their opposition to their commander-in-chief’s policies. And that was all considered to be perfectly acceptable — and in fact, something that should be celebrated and applauded by many in the military and in the media. And now you have a chaplain who expresses his support for [what was] at that time was the existing policy of the Department of Defense, and he’s being punished. This just goes to show you’re only really allowed to have one point of view and one perspective.”
Chaplain Calvert’s Facebook account clearly states that this is his personal page and he is only speaking as Andrew Calvert — not a member of the Armed Forces. But that didn’t matter to this Pentagon. They don’t care that he’s a chaplain who’s required by his denomination to hold to these values. “If you express your religious views openly and you happen to be a member of the military, they will come after you,” Mike warned.
And unfortunately, he believes, the purge is only going to continue. “And we know that that’s exactly what the far-Left wants to happen. They want to root out anybody who holds a view contrary to what they believe… And the bottom line is, that’s going to hurt our military. That is going to cause people to turn away from military service. We’re already seeing problems with recruiting and retention. And if that continues, that’s a national security concern.” But then, as Joe Biden learned from his old boss, there’s only one war that needs fighting in this country — and that’s the culture’s.
To show your support for Chaplain Calvert, sign FRC’s petition to his commander, Lt. General Robert White. Add your name to the many others who think Andrew’s record should be restored and religious freedom everywhere respected.
—————————–
Tags:Tony Perkins, A Major’s Step Backwards, on Religious LibertyTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
From time to time, I’ll try to update our contemporary American vocabulary.
Victor Davis Hanson
by Victor Davis Hanson : Diversity/Diverse
This noun and its adjective have lost all currency. Ostensibly, diversity assumes that variety, in general, is better than uniformity. In some cases, perhaps it is, although the Japanese, for example, might argue their homogenous society avoids many of the problems in contemporary America. And, after all, our original motto of uniting states into the union was e Pluribus Unum, not ex uno plures.
“Diverse” has become a very narrowly defined adjective. It means solely different from white, male, Christian, and heterosexual—such as Latinos, blacks, women in general, Muslims or Buddhists, and transgendered and homosexuals. In other words, the “diverse” community comprises about 67-70 percent of America; the non-diverse, and supposedly dominant enemy of diversity, is only about 30-33 percent of the population. Under no circumstances can diversity imply hopes for political heterodoxy in hiring or admissions.
Instead, political diversity is supposed to be as incendiary as racial diversity is calming.
Privilege/White Privilege
This buzzword implies that 90 percent of citizens at the Founding were of Northern European (e.g., English, Scots-Irish) descent and rigged the country to favor their interests in perpetuity against a series of many different immigrants (Irish, Catholics, Jews, Eastern Europeans, Asians, etc.) as well as Native Americans and blacks. The word is data-free and cannot withstand cross-examination that might suggest that lots of groups (e.g., Punjabis, Koreans, Japanese, etc.), who are markedly different in appearance and religion from the founding norms, enjoy a great deal of wealth, status, and influence.
Usually, elite whites and minorities with privilege use the term “privileged” to castigate middle class and poor whites without it (e. g, “dregs,” “deplorables,” “Neanderthals,” “clingers,” “chumps,” etc.) As a rule of thumb, those who accuse others of having “privilege” or even “white privilege,” enjoy it, or something comparable to it, themselves.
Recently the adjective “unearned” has been attached. But its use is usually confined to scripted and public self-serving apologies, such as the sort that deans, provosts, and college presidents offer—as in “I have been the beneficiary of unearned privilege….” Such usage is meant to deflect the incoming fire of woke mobs and hysterias to someone else, through the use of preemptive and empty confessionals that do not entail any sacrifice or concrete concessions, or proof of contrition.
Racism/Racist
The inflation and promiscuity in the use of these once critical nouns and adjectives render them now empty and without meaning. If everyone and everything is racist, then nothing is. Increasingly, calling a person a “racist” is good proof that he is not, but that the accuser likely is. Like “Shut up!” or ‘F—k you!”, “Racist!” is simply an interjection used to end abruptly all conversation. It is as common and empty as the introductory adverb, “Well…,” or the pause word “uh.”
Soon we may see people use the word in a similar manner, “Racist, how are things going?” and “Racist, now let’s turn to another subject.” Or, “hmmm, racist, racist, racist, hmmm, as I was saying….”
“Underserved” or “Marginalized” Community</ br> These adjectives should suggest the pathologies of a geographical area or particular group are not an individual’s or a community’s fault—but largely to be blamed on society at large. Mostly they are euphemisms for “crime-ridden” or “dangerous.” The charge of “underserved” or “marginalized” is frequently lodged but rarely substantiated or documented. Ethnic or minority groups, who perform better on college entrance tests or have higher per capita incomes than do the majority of Americans, or lower crime rates, are rarely if ever termed “overserved” or “de-marginalized.”
—————————- Victor Davis Hanson // Private Papers.
Tags:Victor Davis Hanson, Private Papers, Words, that don’t matterTo 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 Open Borders
After 500,000 illegal aliens crossed our southern border this year, some media outlets yesterday reported that the Biden Administration had “seen the light” and would begin construction of a small portion of border wall.
I was skeptical when I saw the report, and I was right to be skeptical. The administration rushed to reassure its radical left-wing base that it is only reinforcing a levee. There will be no additional border wall construction.
In fact, the Biden Administration announced last month that it is that Trump set aside to build the wall.
This administration has zero interest in stopping the crisis at the southern border. To them, mass illegal immigration is not a crisis. They want not 500,000 but millions of illegal aliens pouring into the country because these future voters will be grateful to the left.
That’s why amnesty is a top priority for the left. It is central to their long-term strategy to fundamentally transform America.
Please stand with me now as we fight the left’s radical open borders agenda.
Don’t Believe Your Lying Eyes Our founding fathers intended the “free press” to be a vital check against overreaching government. Unfortunately, the “mainstream media” is anything but a “free press” dedicated to good government.
And it’s striking just how confident this administration is that the media are willing partners in its agenda. It’s the sort of thing you see in totalitarian regimes, particularly under communism.
For example, the Biden White House has spent more time trying to avoid referring to the border as a “crisis” than securing the border. Alejandro Mayorkas, the secretary of homeland security, insists with a straight face that the border is closed.
But we just learned that 178,000 illegal aliens were apprehended in April, and many more were not apprehended. Plus, many who were caught are being allowed in.
That IS NOT a closed border!
Meanwhile, as gas stations were closing left and right in more than a dozen states, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm denied that we had a gas shortage, saying, “We have a supply crunch.” Oh, okay. That’s makes it all better.
There are multiple states where 50% or more of the gas stations are closed. There are lines that go on for blocks. Fights are breaking out as people get frustrated waiting for $7 a gallon gas.
And the Biden Administration refuses to admit that their hostility to pipelines is wrong. In fact, their allies like Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer are still trying to close even more pipelines!
Every small business owner in America will tell you that they are having an extremely hard time finding people willing to take available jobs. It’s not surprising that a person who can get paid almost as much or more staying home will do so instead of going to work.
But the White House continues to insist that there is no evidence that unemployment benefits on steroids have anything to do with the fact that there are eight million job openings but only 266,000 people were willing to accept job offers last month.
And if you had any doubt at all that the media were eager “team players,” we learned this week that they must clear certain reports past the Biden White House, which reserves the right to edit quotes or veto their use entirely.
No self-respecting journalist would ever agree to such a demand. But there are virtually no journalists in the “mainstream media” today. They are partisan hacks, more than happy to spread the administration’s propaganda.
The Left vs. Israel
Not long ago, Israel enjoyed broad public support in America. But like so many things, the left has ruined that too.
When Hamas started firing rockets at Israel this week, Andrew Yang, who is campaigning for mayor of New York City, issued a statement defending Israel. He was immediately attacked by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who denounced Yang’s statement as “utterly shameful.”
I guess AOC is cheerleading for Hamas.
It wasn’t long before “#YangSupportsGenocide” was trending on Twitter. Now Yang is rushing to show how “balanced” he is between the Jewish state and the terrorists.
Meanwhile, the State Department dispatched a top diplomat to the region yesterday, attempting to broker a ceasefire. And Biden said the bare minimum expected of an American president – that Israel has the right to defend itself.
Well, that was too much for the progressive wing of the Democrat Party. AOC attacked Joe Biden for “taking the side of occupation.”
The progressive movement, which is the ascendant wing of the Democrat Party and represented by AOC’s socialist squad, is rabidly anti-Israel and anti-Semitic. It will have serious implications for Israel and the United States in the decades ahead.
But none of Biden’s assurances to Israel should be taken seriously as long as he remains committed to giving Iran billions of dollars in sanctions relief, which the ayatollah will inevitably use to replenish Hamas’ missiles!
Blinken’s Blunder
As we reported yesterday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken insisted that Israel had “an extra burden” to avoid civilian casualties. To be clear, Israel always goes out of its way to avoid civilian casualties. But Blinken has it completely backwards. Israel is not putting civilians at risk – Hamas is!
Hamas is committing war crimes by deliberately locating its weapons and rocket launchers in civilian areas. Hamas does that because they are evil and because they know we will pressure Israel with misguided demands “to avoid civilian casualties,” while Hamas continues to indiscriminately fire rockets at Israeli civilians.
But a sovereign state has an obligation to defend its citizens, which Israel is doing. It is absurd for any nation to demand that Israel handcuff itself in conflicts against barbaric terrorists who are intentionally risking civilian lives.
AWOL Leaders
As you know, Rep. Liz Cheney was voted out of her leadership role yesterday. She’s also at risk of being voted out of office. Her approval rating in Wyoming has plummeted, and it’s not hard to understand why.
Cheney seems to believe that her main opponent is Donald Trump, not the Biden/Harris socialist makeover of America. Since the election, Cheney has only made headlines for attacking Trump, who is supported by the vast majority of her party.
And that brings me to another prominent Republican, George W. Bush.
Where is “W” in this battle for our country? In recent weeks, he has been busy attacking the GOP with the same rhetoric that leftists use against us, the same leftists who tried to destroy his presidency.
Conservatives rallied to Bush’s defense. Why is he not coming to ours?
I have seen nothing from Bush about Biden’s failures, whether its empowering Iran or undermining our religious liberty or attacking law enforcement. Does Bush have no opinion at all on the left’s effort to push critical race theory in our schools?
There is only one issue that seems to motivate him — more immigration into the U.S., at a time when millions of Americans are unemployed.
And to think that before Donald Trump came down the escalator to announce his campaign for president, GOP elites were attempting to convince us that we needed a third Bush presidency (Jeb!) to save the country.
—————————– Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
Tags:Gary Bauer, Biden’s Open Borders, Your Lying Eyes, AWOL LeadersTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
When signed into law, the Texas Heartbeat Act will abolish elective abortions as early as six weeks, when the preborn child’s heartbeat is detectable using methods according to standard medical practice.
Photograph of 26-week-old baby in womb.
by Life Site News: This morning, May 13th, the Texas Senate gave final approval (amendment concurrence) for the final passage of the pro-life Texas Heartbeat Bill, SB 8 authored by Senator Bryan Hughes (R-Mineola) and sponsored by Representative Shelby Slawson (R-Stephenville).
The bill passed by a bipartisan vote of 18-12 and is now on its way to Governor Greg Abbott for his signature. The policy would take effect on September 1, 2021.
Rep. Shelby Slawson is serving in her first legislation session and has shown she is ready to lead on such an important issue, while Senator Bryan Hughes is a veteran of the Texas Legislature and one of the most distinguished pro-life members at the Texas Capitol.
Gov. Greg Abbott has already stated twice in Twitter posts that he will sign the Texas Heartbeat bill.
“A heartbeat is a universal sign of life, and that’s why so many Texans believe that when a heartbeat of an unborn child is detected, that child should be protected. The Texas Heartbeat Act is different than Heartbeat laws in others states, by relying on civil actions to enforce the law making it near impossible for the usual claims of a constitutional violation,” said Jonathan Saenz, president and attorney for Texas Values.
“Today is a great day for all future preborn children in Texas. The strongest pro-life bill in Texas history will soon be on the Governor’s desk. We are grateful the Legislature recognizes the importance of life,” said Mary Elizabeth Castle, Policy Advisor at Texas Values.
When signed into law, the Texas Heartbeat Act will abolish elective abortions as early as six weeks, when the preborn child’s heartbeat is detectable using methods according to standard medical practice.
A heartbeat is a universal indicator of life and a key medical indicator that an unborn baby will reach live birth. SB 8 requires physicians to check for a baby’s heartbeat and inform the mother if the presence of a heartbeat is detected. Once a heartbeat is detected, the doctor must take all necessary steps to protect the life of the child.
The bill also creates civil liability for a doctor that performs an abortion after a heartbeat is detected, and for aiding and abetting an abortion. SB 8 empowers citizens to file civil actions to enforce the Heartbeat law.
However, the Texas Heartbeat Act is novel in approach, allowing for citizens to hold abortionists accountable through private lawsuits. No heartbeat law passed by another state has taken this strategy. Additionally, the bill does not punish women who obtain abortions.
Since the government will not be in the position of enforcing the law, this makes it nearly impossible for there to be a claim of an unconstitutional violation. The government must be the one enforcing the law for there to be a constitutional violation or a successful pre-enforcement challenge.
Since 2013, Arkansas, Georgia, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Dakota, Ohio, South Carolina, and Tennessee have all signed into law a similar Heartbeat bill, with Texas about to be the next.
Texas Right to Life Senior Legislative Associate Rebecca Parma welcomed the news, saying: “The Texas Heartbeat Act is the strongest Pro-Life bill passed by the Legislature since Roe v. Wade and will save thousands of lives. This is a historic day and now is the time to build on our momentum. State lawmakers must use the remaining weeks of session to pass additional life-saving legislation like the Texas Abolition Strategy and the Respecting Texas Patients’ Right to Life Act.”
The Texas Heartbeat bill has been supported by a number of groups and individuals, looking to defend the life of the unborn.
Some key groups supporting the Texas Heartbeat Bill include: Texas Values, Human Coalition Action, Family Policy Alliance, Concerned Women for America (CWA) Texas, Texas Right to Life, Janet Porter (Faith 2 Action), Chairman Allen West (RPT), SBA List, Texas Eagle Forum, ACLJ, Texas Teens for Life, Fredericksburg Tea Party, Texas Young Republicans, Baylor Bears for Life/Students for Life Action, Texas Pastor Council, Texas Faith & Freedom Coalition, Ethics and Religious Liberty Committee of SBTC.
Key pro-life leaders supporting the Texas Heartbeat Bill: Abby Johnson, Gov. Greg Abbott, Dr. James Dobson, Ann Hettinger, Lauren Muzyka, Jason Jones, Kelly Shackelford, Janet Porter, Jonathan Saenz, Abortion survivors Gianna Jessen and Claire Culwell, Walter Weber, Pastor Frank Pomeroy, Tim Von Dohlen, Karen Garnett, Pastor Dave Welch, Jessica Colon, Tim Lambert.
—————————— LifeSiteNews.com.
Tags:Abortion, Abortionists, Greg Abbott, Heartbeat Abortion Bans, Pro-Life Legislation, Texas Heartbeat Act, Texas Right To Life, Texas Values, LifeSiteNewsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Kyle Smith: If you have always believed that everyone should play by the same rules and be judged by the same standards, that would have gotten you labeled a radical 50 years ago, a liberal 25 years ago, and a racist today.” Thomas Sowell, who combines a Mark Twain-level gift for apothegms with the rigor of a data scientist, said that back in 1998, but like many of his sparkling one-liners, it’s more strikingly true now than ever.
At 90, Sowell remains “one of the great minds of the past half century,” as host Jason L. Riley puts it in the one-hour PBS documentary Thomas Sowell: Common Sense in a Senseless World, which can be viewed here, but fair warning: This film is a gateway drug. You are bound to get hooked on Sowell, just like many others interviewed in the film. These include podcaster Dave Rubin, a Silicon Valley executive with Overstock.com; a Dallas rapper named Eric July from the band Backwordz; and Sowell’s friend Steven Pinker, the Harvard professor and linguist. Riley, a Wall Street Journal columnist and author, makes a perfect guide because he is the Sowell whisperer: His new bookMaverick: A Biography of Thomas Sowell, is about to hit shelves.
In a film written and produced by Tom Jennings, Riley takes us through how Sowell, who lost his dad before he was born and his mother when he was a small child, rose from poverty. His early years he spent in a house with no electricity in North Carolina, then an apartment in Harlem, where a family friend guided him to a love of the Harlem branch of the New York Public Library when he was eight years old. At the University of Chicago, one of his professors was Milton Friedman, who proved unable to talk him out of being a Marxist. What did the trick was a government job. In the Department of Labor, Sowell found that increased minimum wages reduce employment, but this fact interested no one. “People in the government didn’t give a rip whether it worked or not. They were simply implementing the policy,” notes another black intellectual, columnist Larry Elder.
Sowell, a longtime economist at Stanford’s Hoover Institute, is, despite being a presence in the newspapers via his syndicated column for decades, tough to nail down for an interview, and there is no new footage of him in this film. But vintage clips showcase a talent for boiling down complex arguments that made him at least as effective a television communicator as WFB, who hosted him on Firing Line. As Sowell’s interests took him from economics to education to family structure to race, immigration, late-speaking children, and why civilizations flourish or fail — all of which subjects he discussed in detail in his many books — he fired off one diamond-tipped one-liner after another. “The first lesson of economics is scarcity,” he once wrote. “The first lesson of politics is to disregard the first lesson of economics.” He observed, “Some things are believed because they are demonstrably true, but many other things are believed simply because they have been asserted repeatedly.” He said, “The vision of the Left — and I think many conservatives underestimate this — is really a more attractive vision. The only reason for not believing in it is that it doesn’t work.” Aaron Hunsaker, the Overstock.com executive who has sleeve tattoos on both arms and more tattoos on his hands and knuckles, marvels that it’s “punk rock to base things off of individual freedoms and thought.” Rubin recalls asking Sowell why he stopped being a Marxist: “Uh, facts,” was Sowell’s reply.
Pinker, a longtime admirer, conflates Sowell’s amateur interest in photography with his professional ethos. To be a photographer, he notes, paraphrasing Sowell, is to understand that everything is a trade-off. “If you close down the diaphragm you get lots and lots of stuff in focus,” Pinker says. “On the other hand, you’re cutting down the amount of light.” In matters of public policy, Sowell has said, “There are no solutions, only trade-offs. Just like photography.”
Pinker and other friends and admirers such as Elder and Walter Williams, the George Mason University professor who died in December, emphasize that Sowell would never tailor his positions to suit whatever the current intellectual fashion might be, or what might be expected of a black intellectual. This made him toxic in some circles: “He spent a career putting truth above popularity,” notes Riley. “He will not compromise any of his opinions for the sake of social politeness,” says Pinker. As time went on, his cultural and political antagonists decided their best bet was simply to pretend Sowell didn’t exist, and so he was increasingly relegated to conservative media. “You can’t argue with Tom, so you might as well hide what he’s doing,” is how Williams put it.
Today, though, thanks to the democratic power of the Internet, Sowell’s reach is wide. A Twitter account that passes along one Sowell-ism per day has more than 700,000 followers. YouTube clips of his various TV interviews have racked up far more than 10 million views combined. And this documentary has itself been viewed 3.7 million times. Thanks to his immense reserves of courage, wit, and plainspoken wisdom, Sowell is an intellectual superstar, whether the legacy media admit it or not.
————————– Kyle Smith (@rkylesmith) is a fellow at National Review Institute and National Review’s critic-at-large.
Tags:Kyle Smith, National Review, The Great Elucidator, Thomas SowellTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
When an arrogant present dismisses the wisdom of the past, then an all too predictable future becomes terrifying.
Victor Davis Hanson
by Victor Davis Hanson: Human nature stays the same across time and space. That is why there used to be predictable political, economic and social behavior that all countries understood.
The supply of money governs inflation. Print it without either greater productivity or more goods and services, and the currency cheapens. Yet America apparently rejects that primordial truism.
The United States is more than $28 trillion in debt — about 130 percent of the country’s annual gross domestic product. The government will run up a $2.3 trillion budget deficit for 2021 after a record $3.1 trillion deficit the year before.
The Biden administration still wants to borrow more — another $2 trillion in new social programs and “infrastructure.”
In the crazy last 100 days, the price of everything from lumber, food, and gas to cars and houses has soared. Yet many interest rates are still stuck at or below 3%.
Jobs are plentiful; workers are not. Is it a surprise when government handouts discourage the unemployed from taking a pay cut to go back to work?
After being freed from 13 months of quarantine, Americans are splurging. But this huge pent-up demand is causing shortages.
Producers fear the Biden administration’s loose talk of higher taxes, greater regulation, and cutbacks in energy development.
Are the old principles really obsolete? Should we be printing money while expanding government debt? Is it wise to keep interest rates close to zero and to discourage employment, production and thrift? This dangerous behavior used to ensure inflation, followed by ruinous stagflation.
After George Floyd was killed while in police custody in Minneapolis, some U.S. cities slashed police spending. Police response times have slowed in many places, perhaps because officers are worried about being fired for using force.
The result? In major cities such as New York and Los Angeles, homicide and violent crime rates have increased by double digits. State
and local governments believed they were exempt from primeval laws of deterrence that warned when criminals assumed they would not be caught and punished, then they committed more crimes.
The same dangers of ignoring unchanging human nature apply to foreign policy.
Aggressive opponents such as Iran, North Korea, China, and Russia expect that the Biden administration will ignore their brinkmanship.
They assume the administration will cut American defenses. And Biden sounds to them more critical of Trump’s foreign policy than of America’s enemies. Why not take previously unwarranted risks?
So, Russian troops predictably mass on the Ukrainian border. China steps up its harassment of Taiwan. North Korea launches more missiles, Iran hazes U.S. ships in the Persian Gulf. And now, rockets from Gaza pour into Israel.
Apparently, the Biden administration did not believe that dictatorships and theocracies would interpret its virtue-signaling as a weakness to be exploited rather than as magnanimity to be returned in kind.
The old dictum of the Roman writer Vegetius — if you want peace, prepare for war — was just too much of a downer to take seriously.
In the old days, the greater the impediments to crossing a nation’s border — walls and the enforcement of laws — the less likely was illegal immigration. Here too, the Biden administration apparently rejected the ancient warnings.
Stopping construction of the border wall, promising amnesties in advance, and damning the tough enforcement of the previous administration have only led to more illegal immigration.
Refusing to call the chaos at the southern border a “crisis” did not mean it was not a disaster.
Wisdom of the ages also warned that humans’ first allegiance was to their own tribe, as defined by race, ethnicity, or religion. That existential danger is why multiracial nations always wisely sought to tamp down tribal differences and to emphasize common ties of citizenship and transcendent common interests. Otherwise, a diverse country ended up like Lebanon, Rwanda, or the former Yugoslavia, where tribal feuding turned bloody and barbaric.
Yet for three months, the Biden administration has emphasized racial differences rather than our melting-pot commonalities. It has stereotyped America’s white population — hardly uniform in terms of class and ethnicity — as somehow uniformly enjoying unearned privileged and acting systemically racist.
Amid such talk, the danger is that racial tensions will increase, hate crimes will spike, racial demagogues will dominate, meritocracy will vanish and tribal solidarity will replace it. And the ancient idea of America will unwind.
When an arrogant present dismisses the wisdom of the past, then an all too predictable future becomes terrifying.
——————————- Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush.H/T The Patriot Post.
Tags:Biden Administration, Is Mocking, Ancient Wisdom, Victor Davis Hanson, The Patriot PostTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
The CPI jumped 4.2% in April, but that’s only part of the frustrating picture. by Nate Jackson: Have you ever compared the price of beef now versus a few months ago? Or picked up a package at the grocery store only to realize it’s smaller than it used to be and it’s more expensive? Are you building a house right now and pulling your hair out over the price of materials? And then have you seen news reports about inflation still sitting at 2% and thought, “What are they smoking?”Well, the Labor Department issued its inflation estimate Wednesday in the form of the Consumer Price Index (CPI), and it jumped 4.2% over the last year, well above predictions of 3.6% and marking the fastest growth since 2008. That may be some validation for the inflation we’re all seeing, but it only begins to account for the hit to our wallets when buying goods and services these days.
What is CPI anyway? The Bureau of Labor Statistics defines it as “a measure of the average change over time in the prices paid by urban consumers for a market basket of consumer goods and services.” In plain language, the Labor Department selects representative products and averages the increase or decrease in prices over a period of time.
The average, then, greatly depends on which items are selected for “the basket.” In the latest numbers, for example, used autos accounted for a third of the total increase after surging 10% in April alone, and 21% year over year. We’re told “core” inflation is more like 3%, but the rise in prices is drastic in a number of areas, from meat, milk, and eggs to airfare, hotel rooms, and rental cars. The Daily Calleradds, “The prices of several commodities have already risen rapidly. Lumber, gasoline, steel, copper, computer chips, homes and home appliances have all increased in price.” Homes are up 17%, while steel and lumber in particular have tripled and quintupled, respectively.
It’s important to remember that inflation is a form of taxation, and it often happens because the government prints more money as a way of stabilizing the national debt. The more money is printed, the less that money is worth.
A decade ago, the great economist Thomas Sowell explained, “Inflation is a quiet but effective way for the government to transfer resources from the people to itself, without raising taxes. A hundred dollar bill would buy less in 1998 than a $20 bill would buy in the 1960s. This means that anyone who kept his money in a safe over those years would have lost 80 percent of its value, because no safe can keep your money safe from politicians who control the printing presses.”
Another great economist, Milton Friedman, once said, “Central bankers always try to avoid their last big mistake. So every time there’s the threat of a contraction in the economy, they’ll over stimulate the economy, by printing too much money. The result will be a rising roller coaster of inflation, with each high and low being higher than the preceding one.”
Thus, when the federal government floods the market with trillions of dollars in “COVID relief,” the effect is to inflate prices, which reduces purchasing power. Suddenly, millions of Americans have a few thousand extra dollars to spend thanks to multiple rounds of direct government payments. The unemployed are often earning more than their working counterparts. Wages are being driven up by the fact that employers have to compete against the government for workers, and when it’s more expensive to employ someone, a business has to raise prices.
The Wall Street Journalreports, “Some 36% of small businesses indicated that they had raised selling prices in April, the highest share since 1981, according to a survey conducted by the National Federation of Independent Business.”
Meanwhile, just as demand is spiking, supply lines are a mess. Try ordering a bike, a couch, or an appliance. Not only are you going to wait for months, but you’re probably going to pay more, and there’s only one answer ever given: “COVID.”
The Biden administration’s response? Let them eat cake. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell shrugs it off as “transitory” and expected as part of the recovery. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen dismissively says, “I don’t believe that inflation will be an issue.” Perhaps not for overpaid Beltway bureaucrats, but for the rest of us out here in flyover country, it is indeed an issue.
Again, there are numerous reasons for the increasing inflation. Some is caused by uncontrolled market forces. Most, however, is due to manipulation from DC, as well as government-imposed lockdowns in states around the nation. While both parties went on a spending binge last year that goosed inflation numbers, Joe Biden aims to be the Six Trillion Dollar Man with his runaway federal spending proposals. Instead of slowing down on spending as the economy recovers, Biden insists “it’s working” and therefore we need more of it.
As long as “free money” policy predominates, we’ll all continue to pay a lot more for everything.
———————————– Nate Jackson writes for The Patriot Post.
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by Douglas Andrews: A group of 124 retired generals and admirals made their patriotic voices heard — and pulled no punches in the process.
To no one’s surprise, James Mattis didn’t sign the letter. Nor, we suspect, did any other supporters of the Paris climate agreement and the Iran nuke deal.
Still, 124 retired generals and admirals did sign it, and that lends great significance to the open letter they published this week. Why? Because it’s not every day that such a large group of senior military officers speaks out as one, nor every day that such a group openly questions both the legitimacy of a national election and the physical and mental health of a sitting commander-in-chief.
But question they did.
“Our Nation is in deep peril,” their letter begins. “We are in a fight for our survival as a Constitutional Republic like no other time since our founding in 1776. The conflict is between supporters of Socialism and Marxism vs. supporters of Constitutional freedom and liberty. During the 2020 election an ‘Open Letter from Senior Military Leaders’ was signed by 317 retired Generals and Admirals, and it said the 2020 election could be the most important election since our country was founded. ‘With the Democrat Party welcoming Socialists and Marxists, our historic way of life is at stake.’ Unfortunately, that statement’s truth was quickly revealed, beginning with the election process itself.”
Apparently, the flag officers didn’t get the memo that the 2020 election was fraud-free and that Basement Joe Biden got all 81 million of his record-shattering votes on the up-and-up. No, these flag officers appear to have joined the tens of millions of Americans who aren’t satisfied that the issue of fraud was ever fully investigated and adjudicated. Or, as former House Republican Conference Chair Liz Cheney might say, they’re “spreading THE BIG LIE.”
“Without fair and honest elections that accurately reflect the ‘will of the people,’” their letter continues, “our Constitutional Republic is lost. Election integrity demands ensuring there is one legal vote cast and counted per citizen. Legal votes are identified by State Legislatures’ approved controls using government IDs, verified signatures, etc. Today, many are calling such commonsense controls ‘racist’ in an attempt to avoid having fair and honest elections. Using racial terms to suppress proof of eligibility is itself a tyrannical intimidation tactic. Additionally, the ‘Rule of Law’ must be enforced in our election processes to ensure integrity. The FBI and Supreme Court must act swiftly when election irregularities are surfaced and not ignore them as was done in 2020. Finally, H.R.1 & S.1, (if passed), would destroy election fairness and allow Democrats to forever remain in power violating our Constitution and ending our Representative Republic.”
Clearly, the flag officers recognize the grave threat posed by HR 1 / SR 1. So do we.
The collective group calls itself “Flag Officers 4 America” and it sports a simple website whose homepage reads, “We are retired military leaders who pledged to support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic. Although retired from active service, each of us feels bound by that oath to do what we can, in our capacity today, to protect our nation from the threats to her freedom.”
After their critique of the 2020 election, the officers denounce President Biden’s unprecedented spree of executive orders and his failure to work with Congress. They then hit on eight issues that threaten our nation: open borders, China, Big Tech censorship, the Iran nuke deal, the Keystone pipeline, the misuse of our military, Rule of Law, and the mental and physical condition of the commander-in-chief. After each issue, the flag officers list the actions that a strong America must take.
Their language is forceful and patriotic throughout, and their prescriptions have an unmistakable “America First” edge to them.
“Under a Democrat Congress and the Current Administration,” the letter concludes, “our Country has taken a hard left turn toward Socialism and a Marxist form of tyrannical government which must be countered now by electing congressional and presidential candidates who will always act to defend our Constitutional Republic. The survival of our Nation and its cherished freedoms, liberty, and historic values are at stake. We urge all citizens to get involved now at the local, state and/or national level to elect political representatives who will act to Save America, our Constitutional Republic, and hold those currently in office accountable. The ‘will of the people’ must be heard and followed.”
If you like what you’ve read, the flag officers invite you to visit their website and add your own signature to the letter.
—————————— Douglas Andrews writes for The Patriot Post.
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But this schooling is also something that kids have to survive. If and when Johnny can’t add, spell, figure out who’s buried in Grant’s tomb, or relate premises to a conclusion — the lessons and educational theories he’s been subjected to often have something to do with it.
Now Johnny is being told, if his skin is white, that he must feel guilty about his skin color and work to find, dwell on, and exterminate super-subtle racism buried deep within his privileged soul. He can’t just be happy and learn.
The rationale for this assault on the individual is called “critical race theory.” And in some school districts, this mislabeled “antiracist” indoctrination is being imposed on students (as it is also being imposed throughout society).*
Parents in Loudoun County, Virginia, are fighting back by forming a PAC with the mission of ejecting purveyors of critical race theory from the school board. The PAC is led by Ian Prior, who says that county parents “cannot wait until 2023 to elect new leaders.”
Board members must be recalled because of the board’s failure to reopen schools, its imposition of “dangerously divisive critical race theory,” and its cooperation with “tactics designed to intimidate students, parents and teachers from exercising their First Amendment rights.”
* “On April 19, 2021, the Biden Administration proposed a rule,” alerts Heritage Action, “that would allow the Department of Education to prioritize recipients to receive K-12 grants if they include critical race theory in their curriculum.” The Federal Register is accepting public comments on the proposed rule here until May 19.
—————————— 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.
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Daniel Greenfield (@SultanKnish): Israel is a not a war zone because of geopolitics, but because it shares a common crisis with Europe, America, Russia, China and numerous other countries, most of whom are trying to buy time for their own internal Islamic insurgencies by siding with the Jihadist insurgency inside Israel.
A sizable hostile minority within your borders is always an explosive element, but Islamic migration is unique in that it emerged and still emerges from a tribal and religious manifest destiny of world conquest.
Israel’s Islamic minority is particularly hostile because unlike those of America, Europe, Russia, and China it came to the Jewish State as a conquering force and made up the ‘Herrenvolk’, the colonial master race, within living memory (religiously, if not ethnically under the Ottoman Empire). The hostility was fed by a succession of foreign powers, Britain before and after WW2, Germany in WW1 and WW2, by Russian during the Cold War, by Iran, Qatar, and Russia after the Cold War, but it’s still innate.
Tribal hostility is bad enough as even a brief look at Rwanda and African genocides, or those in the Balkans ought to show, but combine that with Islamic manifest destiny and you have a perpetual war.
While the legal fiction that is the international community has kept on pressuring Israel to “resolve” the conflict with territorial concessions, providing the insurgency with dedicated territory has worsened it.
Nor have any of the nations or alliances pressuring Israel to resolve the conflict managed to do it.
The responses have ranged from integration and appeasement in America and Europe, Russia’s efforts to convince its Muslims that they have a common enemy in the West, and China’s ruthless crackdown. What all these varying efforts have in common is trying to convince or compel a Muslim population to see itself as part of the local nation or empire, to bind its destiny to European liberalism, to the Han Chinese, to Greater Russia, or to American democracy, and not to a global Ummah of which it is a fragmented piece.
Israel’s strategy of integrating the Arab Muslim population within randomly defined borders, convincing them to see themselves as part of the Jewish State, while treating those outside those borders as autonomous is even more paradoxical and contradictory than these same failed strategies.
The fragmented Muslim populations of the world are the remnants of an aspiring empire created by centuries of conquests and invasions. Islam convinces them to see themselves as part of that Ummah, a civilizational empire that is meant to encompass the world. Tribalism sharpens the edge of that religious hostility by giving it a personal edge and a familial aspiration.
Critics say that Muslim terrorism kills more Muslims than non-Muslims. That’s true, but not much of a defense.
Islamic manifest destiny has traditionally destroyed Muslim societies comprehensively, but then again Roman imperialism and European colonialism destroyed their own societies quite thoroughly. Globalism usually destroys any society arrogant enough to be infected by the fever which is one reason why America is so endangered. It’s also why China has survived for thousands of years by xenophobically turning inwards at key moments in its history. That’s why China is likely to leave the scene within the next generation, taking its ‘prizes’ and going home, or will destroy its own society.
Israel doesn’t have that option.
The Jewish State isn’t suffering from an Islamic insurgency because it wanted to operate on a global scale, but because foreign invading powers, most notably the Syrian-Greeks and the Romans, imposed their dominion using Arab mercenaries. When Byzantium declined and fell, the barbarians they had been using to keep the peace turned on the Eastern Roman Empire, just as the barbarians Goths had turned on the Western Roman Empire, and assembled together a religion from the scraps of Judaism, Christianity, and assorted local pagan faiths based on their imperatives of conquest and domination.
The Islamic conquests failed to assemble any kind of global utopian empire. But then they never had a chance of doing that. They did however destroy countless peoples, eliminate many cultures, and create broken mirror images of the original Mohammedan Jihad with little emirates ruled by little Mohammeds. And they killed countless millions and ushered in a thousand years of tyranny and terror.
The fall of the Ottoman Empire revived Jewish hopes for reclaiming their homeland, but the Zionists had not counted on the endurance of that original war imperative or on the weakness of civilization.
And so the conflict continues.
It continues in Israel, in Europe, and in America, in Russia, and in China, and around the world.
The conflict has been particularly sharp in Israel because where Muslims are a minority in America, China, and (for a limited time before they become a majority) in Europe and Russia, they are a regional majority. And because of the strategic importance of the region, half the world has made it its business to intervene.
Israel’s current two major factional antagonists, Fatah and Hamas, are products of the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany.
The Nazis shaped the Muslim Brotherhood and the Soviet Union shaped the PLO with their strategies, tactics, and organizations, so that Israel is fighting both the Communists and the Nazis in its own territory.
But underneath the overlay of Third World liberationism and genocidal nationalist antisemitism familiar from the Soviet and Nazi projects is the old Jihadist manifest destiny and its much older antisemitism.
And while National Socialism has yet to control a major government or play more than a marginal role in America or Europe (though not for a lack of effort by the new generation of ‘Hipster Nazis’ more familiarly known as the alt-right), Marxism is a major player in American and European politics.
So the campaign against Israel gets plenty of support from the Left. As does Islamic terror in general.
Israel faces a sharper version of the dual crisis of Jihad that the world does.
The first part of the crisis is an internal insurgency while the second part of it is the development of nuclear weapons by Islamic powers like Iran and Pakistan that can destroy civilization (aided and abetted by the familiar Russian, Chinese, and North Korean pipeline for Third World insurgencies).
The Jewish State has adroitly managed to form a temporary alliance through the Abraham Accords with some regional traditional Sunni powers that have become alarmed at the threat of both of Shiite Iran and Islamist transnational ideological groups like the Muslim Brotherhood, but Iran and the Brotherhood have a direct insurgency operating on its soil.
Combine that with the fall of the Trump administration and the rise of a pro-Iran and a pro-Brotherhood Biden regime in Washington D.C. and the current conflict was inevitable.
But it was inevitable anyway.
Iran, Qatar, and various other players have not been investing a fortune in Hamas and other terrorist groups just to have them sit on the money. After a certain number of years they start a war to test Israel’s defenses, military and diplomatic, leading to chaos, carnage, and a pressure for more concessions.
This time is no different.
The roots of the crisis are ancient, but they’re also more recent. When confronting a civilizational Jihad, it takes only mistake. And a bad Israeli government mad that mistake in the 90s by agreeing to create an autonomous territory for the insurgents. Another bad government made another one a decade ago by withdrawing from Gaza and leaving it as a truly autonomous territory governed by Hamas.
Both moves were based on a fundamental misunderstanding of the resulting consequences.
Modern Islamic governments pursue utopian socialist schemes using a corrupt ruling class, much like the Communists and the Nazis, resulting in corruption, economic disaster, and external conflict.
Hamas and the PLO/Fatah, like ISIS, is no more capable of running a functional government.
Instead humanitarian NGOs, in this case UNRWA, provide some basic services for the population while the Jihad forges onward to kill and kidnap its enemies operating much like organized crime.
(A lot of Democrat inner cities run on the same gang warfare slash welfare state principle.)
Autonomy never does anything other than expand and spread the crisis. Treaties just define the starting point for the next phase of the conflict. Negotiations are a theater for extracting the maximum amount of concessions as a starting point for the next war whether it’s with Iran, the PLO, or any Jihadists.
Israel hasn’t figured out how to resolve the problem. But neither has anyone else in the world.
And there may be no answer.
The world is facing a 7th century crisis and trying to deal with it through 21st century means.
To be modern means believing that all problems have answers whereas to be postmodern is to believe that the answer is to repent of our past. The modern approach has led to ceaseless negotiations while the postmodern approach has meant endless appeasement and apologies for our past misdeeds.
Neither the modern nor postmodern way has done anything other than play into the hands of the Jihad.
Netanyahu, like other conservative Likud leaders, has appeared modern while eschewing modernity’s preference for pat solutions and postmodernity’s apologies and appeasement. And so Israel has been living in a premodern moment, adapting rapidly to circumstances as it has in some ways throughout its modern existence. But that’s a survival strategy and not a healthy one either.
Israelis tend to take each day as it comes.
Flying El-Al is very different than flying normal airlines. Everything appears unready even minutes before boarding. The orderly process of boarding by class and status in most airlines is present only in theory as everyone rushes to get on board. It seems impossible that this whole thing should work or that the plane should take off in time. And yet it does, more reliably than most airlines, and works out.
That’s Israel in a nutshell. And it’s a familiar observation for Americans in Israel.
Israelis are always in crisis mode and they take one crisis at a time, and what ought to be a shambles somehow turns around. It’s frustrating to the modern mind and many Americans can’t take it.
Yet Israel persists.
But that perpetual crisis mode, a legacy of thousands of years of Jewish history, may offer few lessons to the world. Crisis mode works until it doesn’t. And then the failure can be catastrophic.
Israel has fought an almost impossible war bravely, gallantly, and dashingly, jumping from one innovation to another, and then being miraculously rescued with that familiar certainty that neither it nor the Jewish people could exist without a G-d who intervenes invisibly at crucial moments so that the survivors of the ashes of the death camps went on to defeat enemy armies and found a nation.
But the world needs a better answer.
The answer may not be simple, but it begins with countries recognizing that they share a common problem and after generations of ‘bargaining’ with the Jihad, recognizing that we’re all facing the same war, and that across cultures and even political affiliations, the West and the East, Right and Left, we may be enemies, but we also share a common enemy. One whose assault civilization may not survive.
We can either unite against the Ummah, that embryonic empire of Sharia and Jihad, whose boundaries are those of the world, or we can cut our separate deals with its separate parts, which will all fail.
And then we will fail and fall with them.
——————————- Daniel Greenfield (@SultanKnish) writes at DanielGreedfield.org.
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by Bill Donohue comments on racism and what elites are saying about it:
The Catholic Church regards racism to be “intrinsically evil” and supports policies to check it. It must be noted, however, that today there is no shortage of educators, reporters, activists, and lawmakers who claim to oppose racism while harboring an agenda that sometimes promotes it.
They do so mostly for ideological reasons, though those in the diversity and grievance industry also profit from it monetarily. Critical race theory, which is an inherently racist prescription—it judges people on the basis of their skin color, not their individual traits—is a textbook example of promoting racism in the name of fighting it.
In my lifetime, never have non-whites been treated more fairly than they are today, yet there is an avalanche of news stories that say just the opposite. While objective conditions have definitely improved, the perception that we are a racist nation is widespread. How can this be?
When Senator Tim Scott, an African American, recently said that “America is not a racist country,” he was ridiculed, maligned, and insulted. Why the anger? Because he challenged, to great effect, the raging narrative in elite quarters that America is irredeemably racist.
Vice President Kamala Harris was asked to comment on what Scott said. “No, I don’t think America is a racist country,” she said, but we need to “speak truth about the history of racism.” Previously, she went further than that when she declared, “America has a long history of systemic racism.”
President Biden is concerned about racism as well, claiming that “white supremacists” constitute the “most lethal terrorist threat.” He took his cues from the FBI which is preoccupied with white supremacists.
Ask most Americans who qualifies as a white supremacist and the likely answer is someone who belongs to the Ku Klux Klan. But the Klan has actually been in decline. So who are these people who pose the “most lethal terrorist threat”?
The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) is the go-to site that journalists use to access information about white supremacy and hate crimes. It is a left-wing activist organization that claims to monitor such offenses.
Last month it sounded very much like President Biden when its president and CEO, Margaret Huang, said, “We’re facing a crisis of far-right extremism and deep threats to our democracy.” From whom? She identified the mob storming the Capitol in January as being “led by white supremacists and other far-right extremists.”
Huang provided no evidence to support her remarks; she simply asserted that white supremacists were the principal culprits. It apparently never occurred to her that these men and women were mostly angry pro-Trump supporters who felt disabused by electoral politics and political correctness, concerns that have nothing to do with feelings of racial superiority. Veterans and former police officers appear to have been overrepresented. If they are white supremacists, we need to see the empirical evidence.
In fact, the SPLC does a lousy job defining who these white supremacists are. Its lengthy report, “The Year in Hate and Extremism 2020,” says an awful lot about white supremacists but is noticeably short on identifying exactly who they are.
For example, it says they track “extremist flyers,” reporting that they found 4,900 “flyering incidents.” The worst offenders, it said, were those who promoted the “white nationalist ideology,” a train of thought it left undefined. It did not say who these white nationalists were or whether they were responsible for any violence. It did say that the Klan is no longer “a significant generator of white supremacist terror,” largely because it “saw its count dwindle to 25 groups in 2020.” So who are the new Klansmen? SPLC has racism on the brain. In its report, it expresses dismay over the fact that “only 38 percent of respondents” in a survey believed that “systemic racism” accounts for a disparity in health outcomes between whites and non-whites, “even as COVID-19 ravages communities of color.”
It did not say whether white supremacists were to blame for this condition, but it did say that it was unnerved to learn that the majority of Americans thought that Black Lives Matter (BLM) violence in 2020 was a bigger problem than police violence against blacks. With good reason: BLM killed 25 people, assaulted the police, burned down entire neighborhoods, and engaged in widespread looting. In 2019, police shot and killed 999 people: 452 were white and 252 were black; 26 of the whites and 12 of the blacks were unarmed.
For the record, SPLC regards as “far right” extremists anyone who thinks that boys who “transition” to girls should not be allowed to compete against girls in sports and shower with them. Perhaps they are the new Klansmen.
Real racism and extremism, as the Catholic Church understands it, must be opposed and defeated. It does not help this noble cause when prominent Americans and non-profit organizations are bent on finding racism under every rock.
———————————- Bill Donohue writes for Catholic League.
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Today’s headlines are ripped straight out of the newspapers of 1973. by Rick Manning: While President Joe Biden may look fondly back on the year 1973, the year he began serving in the United States Senate, did he really have to bring the entire country back with him to that fateful year?Today’s headlines are ripped straight out of the newspapers of 1973.
Jerusalem is on fire as Palestinian unrest is creating tensions unseen for years. Fueled by Biden’s U.S. policy changes which have provided millions of dollars to the Palestinian government, massive rocket attacks on Tel Aviv coming from the Palestinian Authority proxy Hamas have been chronicled in dramatic video of the Israel Iron Dome missile defense system destroyed them and prevented mass casualties in heavily populated areas. The scene is reminiscent of the coordinated attack by Israel’s neighbors, Egypt and Syria, forty-eight years ago on Yom Kippur and during the Islamic celebration of Ramadan. Eerily, the current attacks on Israel in 2021 are also occurring during the Ramadan celebration period.
Nineteen seventy-three was also marked by the first massive gasoline shortage in America resulting in gasoline lines and shortages that crippled America. The 300 percent increase in gasoline prices which resulted led to the determination that America would seek energy independence, which was finally achieved during Donald Trump presidency – an achievement the Biden administration is desperately attempting to undo. The eco-terrorism cyber attack has politicians on the left salivating at the thought of using the gas lines as a catapult to pass the crippling Green New Deal under the false guise of energy security.
For gearheads, the oil shortage, high gas prices, and environmental policies led to the end of the muscle car era. Similarly, today Biden’s New Green Deal aspirations would effectively end the dominance of the internal combustion engine. The symmetry is eerie.
And of course, in 1973 the United States signed an agreement with South Vietnam, North Vietnam and the Viet Cong, to begin the withdrawal process from Vietnam, a decision that led to the murder of millions in Vietnam and Cambodia due to their opposition to the communist forces in those countries. In 2021, Joe Biden is pledging a troop withdrawal from Afghanistan which will undoubtedly result in the Taliban takeover of control of that country. While continuing Trump’s policy to end U.S. ground presence in that country is the right thing to do, it will likely result in human slaughter as Afghanistan devolves into civil war, reminiscent of Indonesia in 1973.
Rising inflation is another Biden gift from 1973, a year where the inflation rate almost doubled from the previous year to 6.22 percent. In the first three months of the Biden administration, inflation has almost doubled to 2.6 percent with a reasonable expectation that the prices Americans pay for goods will continue to increase as the full effects of the helicopter money policies demanded by the Democrats continue to be felt throughout the economy.
For those who remember 1973, the idea of America traveling back to experience the travails of that era after experiencing four years of hopeful pursuit of peace and prosperity in our nation is a little bit depressing. Particularly when we realize that the one thing President Joe can’t bring back is the music of the early 70’s. Marvin Gaye, George Harrison, John Lennon and Jim Croce are dead, and the rest of the greats are in their 70’s (but still touring.) I guess we can always hang our hopes on the Rolling Stones Keith Richards leading a music revival, because he just might be the one person currently on earth who the Grim Reaper simply doesn’t want.
—————————— Rick Manning is President of Americans for Limited Government.
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Biden has announced a “commission” to study the issue of packing the Supreme Court, a topic that even members of the court and leftist icons like the late Justice Ruth Ginsburg opposed.
But Democrats aren’t content to wait for the predetermined outcome. … Read more…
President Donald J. Trump boards Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, Tuesday, Oct. 20, 2020, en route to Erie International Airport in Erie, Pennsylvania….Read more…
President Trump successfully had worked to make sure federal Title X taxpayer money was not being used to fund abortions. Joe Biden, when he moved into the Oval Office, immediately…Read more…
By Andrew Trunsky Daily Caller News Foundation As the U.S. climbs out of a once-in-a-century pandemic, rising prices have led to increasing worry that rapid inflation could be just over…Read more…
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Morning Rundown
Fully vaccinated Americans can return to life without masks, CDC says: In new guidance that marks a turning point for the nation’s reopening, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday that fully vaccinated Americans no longer need to wear masks indoors or outdoors, including in crowds. “If you are fully vaccinated, you can start doing the things that you had stopped doing because of the pandemic,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said at a White House briefing held to announce the change. “Anyone who is fully vaccinated can participate in indoor and outdoor activities, large or small, without wearing a mask or physical distancing.” The CDC pointed to additional data from the last few weeks that show the vaccines work in the real world, stand up to the variants and make it unlikely vaccinated people can transmit the virus. President Joe Biden celebrated the new guidance on mask-wearing as “a great milestone.” The new recommendation does carve out exceptions for buses, planes, hospitals, prisons and homeless shelters. States will also still have the choice to implement their own guidelines. As for people who are fully vaccinated but feel uneasy walking into a public area where they don’t know the vaccination status of others, Walensky said the science shows they’re “protected.”
Bill honoring Vanessa Guillen is reintroduced: Just over one year after the death of Army Spc. Vanessa Guillen, lawmakers reintroduced a bill in her name to reform the way the military handles sexual assault and harassment cases. Guillen, 20, was allegedly killed by another soldier at the Fort Hood Army base on April 22, 2020. Her family says she told them she was being sexually harassed by a superior but didn’t report it out of fear of retaliation. The I am Vanessa Guillen Act would move sexual harassment prosecution decisions outside the chain of command to an Office of the Chief Prosecutor within each military service and create a confidential reporting process integrated with the Department of Defense’s Catch a Serial Offender Database. It would also make sexual harassment a punishable crime under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The bipartisan bill was first introduced last September in a previous session of Congress but was never voted on.
Prince Harry calls being a royal like ‘being in a zoo’:Prince Harry gave a very candid account of life as a member of Britain’s royal family, likening it to “a mix between ‘The Truman Show’ and being in a zoo.” Harry, who left the royal family last year with his wife, Duchess Meghan, and their son Archie, spoke to “Armchair Expert” podcast hosts Dax Shepard and Monica Padman in a revealing interview that touched on everything from the impact that therapy had on Harry to his parenting style. Harry, who is expecting a second child with Meghan, said he is trying to “break the cycle” as a dad. “There’s no blame,” Harry said. “I don’t think we should be pointing the finger or blaming anybody, but certainly when it comes to parenting, if I’ve experienced some form of pain or suffering because of the pain or suffering that perhaps my father or my parents had suffered, I’m going to make sure that I break that cycle so I don’t pass it on.” Speaking later about his family’s move from the U.K. to California, Harry said, “Well, that wasn’t the plan, but sometimes you’ve got to make decisions and put your family first and put your mental health first.”
78-year-old great-grandmother earns college degree: Vivian Cunningham’s inspiring story proves it’s never too late to follow a dream. The 78-year-old great-grandmother graduated from Samford University in Birmingham, Alabama, decades after she started her college education. Cunningham was a single mom of two in the 1960s when she began working at the Alabama Power Company, which offered to reimburse her college tuition. Over the years, she pursued her education bit-by-bit while raising her family. After retiring in 1992, Cunningham started to attend Samford University. Her son and daughter were there to watch her accept her bachelor’s degree in liberal studies on May 8. “The only thing I can say is I was just elated,” said Cunningham. “It feels good to be, you know, have gone through that educational process.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” in our latest installment of “Rise and Shine,” Becky Worley is helping us celebrate the beautiful state of Hawaii by talking to various business owners, from zip-line to surfing instructors, who have reopened since shutting down during the pandemic. Plus, we’ll also hear about Hawaii’s new “volun-tourism” initiative, which aims to get tourists to come and help care for the state. And Jack Johnson and Paula Fuga join us live from Hawaii to perform “If Ever.” Also, Max Minghella joins us live to talk about his roles in “Spiral” and “The Handmaid’s Tale.” All this and more only on “GMA.”
Today we look at how the escalating Israel-Gaza crisis is posing big questions for President Joe Biden, how doctors are fighting vaccine misinformation and a call for new rules on school air quality.
President Biden is having to adapt his policies in real time as the intensifying Israel-Gaza conflict quickly outpaces his best-laid plans.
Israel stepped up its bombardment of Gaza early Friday as warplanes, tanks and artillery led an escalation that intensified fears of an all-out invasion after days of attacks that have killed more than 100 Palestinians, including 31 children.
Arab and Jewish mobs have also beat people and torched cars in a wave of communal unrest.
In a call Wednesday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Biden “condemned the rocket attacks by Hamas and other terrorist groups, including against Jerusalem and Tel Aviv,” the White House said in a readout of the conversation.
The response was criticized by the left wing of the Democratic Party: “No mention of the ongoing occupation of millions in an open air prison,” said Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn.
The rising violence challenges Biden, who has spent the past three months burnishing his progressive bona fides, to pick a side in a conflict that has brought his predecessors little but disappointment
Some stores are asking vaccinated people to stay away due to fears they “shed spike proteins,” which can affect women’s menstrual cycles according to a medically baseless theory popular on social media. Combatting these fears is a challenge for physicians.
The Education Department is drafting new guidance about indoor air safety in schools, as a group of experts warn that schools have spent hundreds of millions on scientifically unproven air cleaning devices that could produce harmful chemical byproducts.
There’s little sign of Tea Party-style resistance to President Biden’s economic plans, as growing evidence suggests that the Reagan-era framework for opposing Biden’s plans is under severe strain.
Sluggish economic growth and high inflation doomed the tradition of Democratic big spending that Biden is trying to revive. He needs to course-correct, quickly, writes the editor of the Washington Examiner.
Keep track of your vaccination card and prevent it from getting damaged by storing it in a vaccination card holder, wallet or wristlet.
One amazing thing
Here’s a cat that must have just used up some of its nine lives.
Chicago firefighters were filming the outside of a burning building when a black cat unexpectedly jumped from a fifth-floor window, to the screams of onlookers — only to land on its feet and run away to safety.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Trump still controls the GOP. But the party is trying to prevent future Trumps from winning statewide nominations
Yes, this week confirmed that Donald Trump remains the de-facto leader of the Republican Party.
But something else happened, too: Republicans who are in the business of winning elections are trying to prevent future Trumps – at least those who have the same kind of baggage he did in 2015-2016 – from capturing statewide GOP contests.
AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta
Case in point: On Wednesday, Missouri Republicans offered a last-minute proposal to institute a Top-2 runoff if no candidate claims a majority in a GOP primary; currently, all it takes is a plurality to win a GOP primary in the Show Me State.
The apparent objective here? To make it MUCH MORE difficult for former Gov. (and scandal-plagued) Eric Greitens to win the Republican primary for the state’s open Senate seat in 2022.
This move in Missouri follows what we already saw take place in Virginia – with the state party holding a confusing and convoluted convention instead of a primary, all in a seeming effort to make it harder for the “Trump in heels” Amanda Chase to win the GOP’s gubernatorial nomination.
And it worked. Chase, who might have won a plurality in a primary race, finished third in the drive-through/ranked-choice/weighted-by-locality convention, and outsider Glenn Youngkin won the nomination.
Two things can be true at the same time: One, the GOP is still Trump’s party. And two, Republicans realize that candidates with baggage like Trump can be liabilities for the party.
But also don’t be surprised that when you build a party in Trump’s image, you wind up with more Eric Greitenses and Amanda Chases running for statewide office.
Trump’s real power
That Trump can still dominate his party after losing in 2020, but that the same party is working to prevent future Trumps from winning statewide nominations confirms what NBC’s Benjy Sarlin has observed.
Trump’s real power is that he’s taken the Republican Party hostage.
“One reason is that he commands the loyalty of many base voters, who can potentially primary his opponents. But just as important, he can credibly threaten to take those voters away from the GOP entirely, dragging down Republicans of all stripes,” Sarlin recently wrote.
As Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. put it: “If you tried to run [Trump] out of the party, he’d take half the party with him.”
That’s his real power – something that Greitens and Chase don’t command.
Replacing Liz Cheney
Beginning at 8:30 am ET this morning, House Republicans will gather to elect a new chair of the GOP conference, the third-highest Republican in House leadership, replacing Liz Cheney.
Today’s vote could be a voice vote or a secret ballot, NBC’s Capitol Hill team adds; it all depends on what members demand in the room.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
33,013,859: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 38,935 more than yesterday morning.)
588,486: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 761 more than yesterday morning.)
339,165,445: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
33 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated.
8: The number of New York Yankees players and staff who tested positive for Covid-19 despite being fully vaccinated.
TWEET OF THE DAY: The big hole in the CDC’s new mask guidance
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says people who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 can participate in indoor and outdoor activities without wearing masks and social distancing. Also, Israel is now preparing for a possible ground invasion of Gaza as the death toll from rockets and airstrikes continues to rise. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky talks to “CBS This Morning” about the new guidelines for fully vaccinated Americans. Walensky weighs in on the timing of the decision and the “honor system” for enforcement.
As economic recovery continues, consumers are paying more for everyday items. CBS News business analyst Jill Schlesinger explains what’s triggering those higher costs and addresses fears of another 1970s-style inflation.
As the pace of new vaccinations is slowing in the U.S., states and businesses are offering unique incentives to encourage more people to get the shot. From baseball tickets to hotdogs, Vladimir Duthiers took a trip around New York City to see what your COVID vaccine dose can get you.
Plus: Death penalty proposed for Atlanta massage parlor shooter, judge tosses Google antitrust suit, and more…
Texas abortion bill includes civil suit provision. They say everything is bigger in Texas. This apparently includes attempts to thwart reproductive freedom. The state has now passed one of the most extreme anti-abortion bills that this country has seen.
The bill‘s main tacks are twofold. Like many recent measures passed by Republican-led legislatures—and laterstruckdownincourt—this one would ban abortion after the presence of a “fetal heartbeat.” The term is typically used to refer to any embryonic cardiac activity—an electrical pulse that mimics a heartbeat even before an embryo has a heart—and can generally be detected about two weeks after pregnancy registers on a typical home test.
Where Texas takes things even further is by allowing almost anyone who thinks an abortion has taken place outside these parameters to sue—essentially creating pro-life “vigilantes,” as Emily Shugerman at The Daily Beast puts it.
The person suing does not have to have any connection to the parties allegedly involved, nor even live in Texas. They just can’t be “an officer or employee of a state or local governmental entity.”
Nor must their target be limited to abortion providers. Anyone who “aids and abets” an abortion taking place—say, by driving someone to a clinic or helping someone find an abortion provider—can be sued (though a woman getting an abortion cannot). This includes anyone “paying for or reimbursing the costs of an abortion through insurance or otherwise,” the legislation specifically notes.
Amy Hagstrom Miller of Texas-based abortion clinic Whole Woman’s Health told The DailyBeast, “It’s unprecedented, there’s no question. The idea that just anybody should be able to police a highly trained physician and their staff—that any Joe on the street can make that claim—is just totally shocking.”
Should the Atlanta massage parlor murderer get the death penalty? MSNBC opinion columnist Chris Geidner argues no:
The desire of many prosecutors to seek harsh sentences is a well-documented problem. The practice can be coercive, forcing people to plead guilty in circumstances where they would ordinarily go to trial to take the most significant charges off the table. The practice has thrown fuel on the fire of mass incarceration, filling our prisons with an increasingly aging population.
But here, in a case where charges of hate-motivated violence are also at issue, the practice is particularly ill-suited: The death penalty in America is both historically and presently a biased system, and using that most extreme punishment to prosecute bias-motivated crime only serves to root that biased system more deeply in our lives.…
The March 16 spa shootings must be prosecuted, accountability for the killings must be sought, and the effect of bias in the attacks must be addressed. But using this case to further entrench the death penalty in our nation and in our lives does not — and cannot — advance those goals.
FREE MARKETS
A win for Google in antitrust case filed by advertisers. A federal judge has dismissed an antitrust lawsuit brought by several businesses that used Google ads, while giving them until June 14 to amend the suit. From Reuters:
The ruling by District Judge Beth Labson Freeman in San Jose, California, marks one of the first major decisions in a spate of antitrust cases filed against Google over the last two years by users and rivals as well as the U.S. Department of Justice and state attorneys general.
Labson Freeman said plaintiffs, including Hanson Law Firm and Prana Pets, that alleged Google abuses its dominance in digital advertising need to clarify which market they think it monopolizes.
“The Court is particularly concerned that Plaintiffs’ market excludes social media display advertising and direct negotiations,” she wrote.
The plaintiffs also need to better explain why Google’s refusal to support rival systems that the advertisers rely upon is anticompetitive, because antitrust law does not require monopolists to help competitors survive, Labson Freeman said.
• In light of the new guidance, some states are lifting parts of their mask mandates. “Oregon and Washington are working quickly to update their guidance for businesses to lift masking and distancing requirements by verifying a person’s vaccination status,” reports KGW8. “The new guidance will not apply to schools yet.”
• In Minnesota, “Gov. Tim Walz Thursday announced his statewide coronavirus mask mandate will end Friday, although, in line with CDC recommendations, the state is still recommending that only fully vaccinated people stop wearing them,” according to the St. Paul Pioneer Press.
• “A new study finds that both legal and undocumented immigrants are more law-abiding than native-born U.S. citizens,” Reason‘s Billy Binion reports.
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.
An edict went out throughout the Joe Biden-run government. Stop what you’re doing and focusing on what your mission used to be, and focus more on pandering to the woke Twittersphere. The U.S. Army … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
05/14/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Joe and Jimmy; Labor Shortage; Quote of the Week
By Carl M. Cannon on May 14, 2021 09:19 am
Good morning, it’s Friday, May 14, 2021, the day of the week when I reprise quotations intended to be uplifting or educational. Today’s, as promised, comes from Abraham Lincoln — but during the Mexican-American War. Rarely discussed in American politics today, that conflict was a momentous event in the evolution of the two countries.
It cost Mexico the potential wealth of California and most of what we know as the American Southwest, as well as much prestige and self-confidence — not to mention the lives of thousands of soldiers and civilians. On the other side of the border, the United States gained vast new lands, a sense of its own power, and a new generation of battle-tested veterans, including two future presidents, Franklin Pierce and Zachary Taylor.
The war also served as a proving ground for a host of future Civil War generals, ranging from Stonewall Jackson, George Pickett, Braxton Bragg, Joseph E. Johnston, and Robert E. Lee on the Confederate side to George McClelland, George Meade, John C. Fremont, Winfield Scott Hancock, and Ulysses S. Grant in the Union Army.
Few took notice then, but that war also occasioned the emergence of powerful political voice from Illinois. Abraham Lincoln wasn’t yet in the House of Representatives when Congress approved President James K. Polk’s 1846 request for a declaration of war against Mexico — and Lincoln would only serve one term there — but in that time he would emerge as an articulate voice against the war.
On Jan. 12, 1848, he arose in the well of the House to make a memorable speech, which I’ll quote from in a moment. First, 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:
* * *
Gas Lines, Inflation Spur GOP’s Biden-as-Carter Messaging. Phil Wegmann reports on the president’s remarks yesterday in response to current crises, and Republican attempts to tar him with a late-1970s brush.
Biden’s State-Sponsored Labor Shortage. Greg Orman spotlights evidence from his state of Kansas that enhanced unemployment benefits are eroding some Americans’ incentive to work.
Ensuring Health Coverage for All Is Compatible With Market Discipline. At RealClearPolicy, James C. Capretta lays out a solution that doesn’t require wholesale change to existing insurance arrangements.
The Post-COVID Future of American Medical Care. At RealClearHealth, Leif Murphy offers a few prescriptions.
Foreign Currencies’ Rise Doesn’t Signal Dollar’s Demise. At RealClearMarkets, Ken Fisher argues that less dollar reliance means a broader, more stable global economy.
Federal Leasing Ban Imperils U.S. Energy Security. At RealClearEnergy, James Marks asserts that the administration’s decision will increase our reliance on oil imports.
The Soil of Europe Is Ripe for Sowing. At RealClearReligion, U.K. evangelist J. John sees a new receptivity to faith-based messages throughout the continent.
* * *
In December 1847, Abraham Lincoln, a freshman member of Congress from Illinois who was then a member of the Whig Party, introduced what were then labeled “Spot Resolutions” calling on President Polk to directly answer a series of questions about the U.S. war with Mexico. Mainly, Lincoln wanted the commander-in-chief to state plainly — and show evidence — that the first military engagements of that war had taken place, as Polk assured the public, on American territory.
It wasn’t an easy thing to prove because it probably wasn’t true, and on Jan. 12, 1848, Lincoln delivered a speech intended to bolster his assertion that the war was “unnecessarily and unconstitutionally commenced.”
As an orator, the 38-year-old version of Abe Lincoln, freshman backbencher, was hardly the careful and temperate statesman Americans would come to know a decade later when he debated Stephen A. Douglas on slavery, or during the Civil War when he emerged as one of the great unifying voices in political history. No, Rep. Lincoln was on a mission, and it wasn’t to unify, it was to educate. When calling for war, Polk had accused Mexico of shedding “American blood on American soil.” Lincoln posed a simple question. He wanted to know the particular spot of soil “on which the blood of our citizens was shed.”
As countless congressional peaceniks have maintained since then, in wars ranging from Vietnam to Iraq, Lincoln was saying that the president of the United States had misled the country into war. In making his point, Lincoln wasn’t above heated rhetoric and extreme ridicule.
Polk’s refusal to give a straightforward and convincing explanation of where and why the war started, Lincoln said, was evidence “that he is deeply conscious of being in the wrong, that he feels the blood of this war, like the blood of Abel, is crying to Heaven against him.”
Lincoln questioned Polk’s motives for waging war, adding that his attempts to justify it sounded “like the half insane mumbling of a fever-dream.”
Later in the speech, Lincoln said of the president: “First he takes up one, and in attempting to argue us into it, he argues himself out of it; then seizes another, and goes through the same process; and then, confused at being able to think of nothing new, he snatches up the old one again, which he has some time before cast off. His mind, tasked beyond its power, is running hither and thither, like some tortured creature on a burning surface, finding no position on which it can settle down and be at ease.”
In conclusion, Lincoln said, “He is a bewildered, confounded, and miserably perplexed man.”
Strong antiwar rhetoric aimed at presidents has been a feature of American public life from the First World War to the recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. But even in its excess, what lies underneath this questioning is a disquieting image invoked by young Abe Lincoln — that of an innocent populace in another land who must bear the brunt of a U.S. military invasion in a dispute they were powerless to mediate.
Sifting through the evidence, Lincoln said, invoked as “a singular fact” that “the president sent the army into the midst of a settlement of Mexican people, who had never submitted, by consent or by force, to the authority of Texas or of the United States.”
And that is our quote of the week, as well as a thought to keep in mind for future wars.
Good morning. It’s Friday, May 14, and we’re covering new guidance from US health officials, a ransom paid in the recent gas pipeline cyberattack, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
US health officials yesterday loosened COVID-19 guidance, saying those who are fully vaccinated no longer need to wear masks in most indoor and outdoor settings. Masks are recommended in certain situations—for example, while flying—and state-, local-, and establishment-specific requirements must be followed.
The move comes as new COVID-19 cases in the US fell to their lowest levels in almost eight months, with just over 35,000 new infections being reported daily. That figure represents a 50% decline over the past month and an 85% drop since the peak of the pandemic in the country in January.
Daily deaths are hovering near 600 per day, the lowest in almost 10 months. Most states reported single-digit deaths on multiple days, with many reporting zero deaths. See how your state is doing here.
In related news, researchers say they may have found the link ($$, WSJ) between some COVID-19 vaccines and rare blood clots. Studies suggest stray proteins and a common preservative found in the AstraZeneca shot may cause an immune system response that induces the symptoms. The Johnson & Johnson shot, which uses similar technology, is under study. Health officials have identified 28 cases and three deaths potentially linked to the Johnson & Johnson vaccine in the US, out of more than 9 million shots given (AstraZeneca’s vaccine is not yet approved in the US).
Almost 59% of US adults have received at least one vaccine shot, with 45% having been fully vaccinated. See a breakdown here.
Overall, Americans are feeling optimistic—worry about contracting the virus is at its lowest point since the pandemic began.
Colonial Pays Up
Colonial Pipeline, owner of an extensive pipeline network that supplies almost half of the East Coast’s gas, paid $5M to a hacker group that had forced the company to shut down its primary line. The news contradicts previous reports the company would not consider negotiating with the group, with some worrying the move sets a dangerous precedent that will increase the frequency of similar ransomware attacks.
Company officials halted service as a proactive measure after the self-described Robin Hood-style hacker collective known as DarkSide gained access and locked parts of Colonial’s IT system. The stoppage sparked panic buying among consumers in the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic, with gas prices jumping by 40% week-over-week in some locations. By Wednesday, the group claimed to have hacked three new victims.
Despite the pipeline returning to full capacity, analysts expect gas prices to stay high as demand surges in the wake of economic reopenings.
Delay in Minneapolis
The trial of three former Minneapolis police officers involved in the May 2020 murder of George Floyd will have their trial delayed until March of next year, a judge ruled yesterday. The proceedings, originally scheduled for Aug. 23, were pushed back to allow for a federal civil rights case to proceed beforehand.
The three officers, Thomas Lane, J. Alexander Kueng, and Tou Thao, were on the scene when Floyd was killed by their former colleague Derek Chauvin. Each was charged with the same crimes—aiding and abetting second-degree murder and manslaughter. Chauvin was found guilty of murdering Floyd by a jury in April. Many legal experts say it will be more challenging to prove charges in the case of Chauvin’s colleagues, all of which will be tried together.
Chauvin, who has appealed his conviction, is scheduled for sentencing June 25.
Know someone stressed out by the news? Introduce us.
There’s a lot of dough in the pizza industry. In fact, the US pizza market will be worth an estimated $54B by 2023 (up from $46B today). Read on for an exciting investment opportunity and more cheesy pizza puns.
Because of labor and real estate costs, traditional pizzerias have low profit margins (estimated at 22% on average). But Piestro is changing the game. They’ve designed a robotic pizzeria that makes pizza at a fraction of the cost of traditional pizzerias and boasts an impressive 48% projected profit margin. Topping it all off, Piestro machines are lightning fast (three-minute cook time) and open 24 hours a day.
> “Friends” reunion sets May 27 release on HBO Max; see teaser trailer for the special that each star was reportedly paid $2.5M for participating in (More)
>Eight fully vaccinated New York Yankees players and staff test positive for COVID-19 (More) | Five-time world champion gymnast Simone Biles to compete for first time in 18 months in prep for June’s US Olympic Trials (More)
>Banksy’s “Love is in the Air” painting sells for $12.9M, becomes first piece of physical art sold for cryptocurrency at Sotheby’s auction house (More)
Science & Technology
>NASA’s Voyager 1 detects a faint hum in interstellar space, likely from ionized plasma; launched in 1977, the spacecraft is the most distant human-made object in space, at more than 14 billion miles from Earth (More)
>Study finds skin cancer can alter the metabolism of healthy tissue elsewhere in the body; results may allow for an indirect way to treat tumors (More)
>Brain circuitry for cognition in songbirds mirrors that of mammals, study finds; study sheds light on the evolution of avian brains (More)
>US stock markets up (S&P 500 +1.2%, Dow +1.3%, Nasdaq +0.7%) after three consecutive days of losses (More)
>An estimated 473,000 Americans filed initial unemployment claims last week, a new pandemic-era low (More) | McDonald’s, Chipotle, and many other US restaurants raise wages in effort to source hourly workers (More)
>Disney misses earnings expectations on lower Disney+ subscriber figure of 103 million paid subscribers (More) | Cryptocurrency trading giant Coinbase sees revenues and profits soar; reports $1.8B in Q1 revenues, $771M in net profit (More)
>Israeli military bombards Gaza Strip in attempt to destroy underground tunnels used by Hamas militants, preps for possible ground invasion (More) | Violence intensifies in Jewish-Arab neighborhoods inside Israel (More)
>First US service member charged in the Jan. 6 storming of the US Capitol; Maj. Christopher Warnagiris of the US Marine Corps arrested for assaulting a police officer (More) | Separately, new body camera footage captures the moment a police officer was assaulted during the raid (More)
>Rep. Chip Roy (R, TX-21) to challenge Rep. Elise Stefanik (R, NY-21) for vacant House GOP conference chair post following Rep. Liz Cheney’s (R, WY-At large) ouster (More) | Former associate of Rep. Matt Gaetz (R, FL-1) expected to plead guilty in sex trafficking case (More)
IN-DEPTH
The Chaos Machine
Invisibilia | Kia Miakka Natisse, Yowei Shaw. (Podcast) The story of the 209 Times, a conspiracy and troll-fueled website that became the main source of news for many in Stockton, California. (Listen)
Grit
TED | Angela Duckworth. (From 2013) How the characteristic of grit—a mix of patience, passion, and perseverance for long-term goals—can be one of the greatest predictors of success. (Watch)
*From the archive of 1440 staff favorites. Check for another next Friday!
The Longest Lifer
BBC | Swaminathan Natarajan, Lauren Potts. After almost seven decades, Joe Ligon, charged with an overturned life sentence at age 15, is preparing to be released. (Read)
What is Disgusting?
New Yorker | Jiayang Fan. A look at the operations behind Sweden’s Disgusting Food Museum, and who gets to decide what qualifies for inclusion. (Read, $$)
Piestro’s incredible robotic pizzeria can make the pizza of your dreams on-site in just three minutes. Imagine how much preparation and delivery time that could save you at the mall, university, or workplace.
With profit margins that more than double traditional independent pizzerias, Piestro could fundamentally change the way Americans eat pizza on-the-go. Take a look at their investment opportunity today.
Clickbait: Boston man loses life savings at the carnival, gains a dreadlocked banana.
Historybook: Jamestown is settled as first successful permanent English colony in the Americas (1607); Lewis and Clark begin their western expedition (1804); HBD actress Cate Blanchett (1969); First US space station, Skylab, is launched (1973); RIP Frank Sinatra (1998).
“Don’t hide your scars. They make you who you are.”
– Frank Sinatra
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief.
Good morning, it’s May 14, 2021. On this day in history, the first permanent British settlement in North America was founded at Jamestown, Virginia (1607); the State of Israel was established (1948); and Skylab, the first U.S. space station, was launched (1973).
TOP STORIES
Embattled Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu Has Conceded Defeat in Forming a Majority in Parliament; What’s Next for Israel’s Election Debacle?
Israeli President Reuven Rivlin recentlymet with party leaders in order to determine if any lawmaker would be able to form a government. The country has been in gridlock after Prime Minister Netanyahu failed to build a coalition to serve as a majority in parliament.
Although the Right-wing Likud party finished first in the March 23 election, Netanyahu has not been able to muster the support needed to proceed.
President Rivlin has a mostly ceremonial role in the government, but he has recently taken on a much more prominent one due to the endless cycle of elections. Rivlin raised concerns about the likelihood a government could be formed under the current circumstances.
Rivlin met with both centrist Yair Lapid and religious Right-winger Natalie Bennett in an attempt to find a new candidate to form a government and end the gridlock.
In a recent poll by the Israel Democracy Institute, 70 percent of Israelis believe the coalition talks will fail and yet another new vote will be called.
ATP analysis: The Israeli political process is unlike the American system. With Netanyahu conceding, one highly probable outcome is a combination government with centrist Yair Lapid and the right-wing Naftali Bennett at the helm.
What does this mean for America?
Netanyahu was willing to enter into negotiations for a two-state solution with the Palestinians. President Biden has been a strong proponent of this option.
Naftali Bennett does not support a two-state solution, so this will likely further cause division and disagreement between Israel from America. Bennett’s staunch stance could also ignite further unrest and attacks in the West Bank and the Gaza strip.
It remains to be seen how this combination of governments will help or hinder the fragile peace agreements with Israel’s Arab neighbors.
Instagram Inadvertently Offers a Marketplace for Human Servitude in the Persian Gulf, Africa and Asia
Instagram is a fun platform for sharing photos with friends, family, fans and customers. Unfortunately, in some parts of the world, the photo-sharing site has become a marketplace for maids sold into servitude from Africa and Asia to the Persian Gulf countries.
The Washington Post is reporting that “unlicensed agents have exploited the social media platform to place these women into jobs that often lack documentation or assurances of proper pay and working conditions.”
Vivian, a 24-year-old woman from Kenya, stated, “They advertise us on social media, then the employer picks. Then we are delivered to their house. We are not told anything about the employers. You’re just told to take your stuff, and a driver takes you there.”
Once she traveled to Dubai, fully expecting to begin her job as a maid on arrival. She was instead jammed into a small room with 15 other women. There she remained for several weeks, sleeping on the floor, until an agent was able to find her employment via ads on Instagram. In addition to a photo, the ad also included her weight, nationality and date of birth.
The Post investigated the Instagram ads and discovered more than 200 accounts that “appeared to play a role in marketing women as maids in countries including Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.”
These unlicensed postings appear alongside legitimate postings for employment, but the positions lack the protections afforded domestic workers who are employed above board. Additionally, by being represented by a licensed agency, there is documentation that can support the worker in case of an abuse. These postings also open up the door to trafficking and exploitation.
Instagram representatives were asked why these ads were still in circulation. Facebook (owner of Instagram) spokeswoman Stephanie Otway stated, “We’ve developed technology to detect this kind of content and behavior, but it’s not perfect. We’re constantly working to improve this technology to help us catch more of this content more quickly.”
Human rights and international labor experts are concerned these individuals who are employed off the radar are essentially sold into servitude, and they are at a high risk for all sorts of exploitation, financially and otherwise.
Once Again, Israel Must Prepare for Muslim Violence
Every year, during Ramadan, Israel must prepare for the violence that inevitably erupts as Muslims make their way to al Aqsa Mosque for prayer.
TheJerusalem Post is reporting, “Though the IDF had already bolstered its troops for the Muslim month of Ramadan over concern that violence might erupt, a deadly shooting attack and a rare statement threatening Israel by Hamas terror chief Mohamed Deif led the military to prepare for a range of possible scenarios both in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.”
From Gaza, Hamas supporters launched incendiary balloons toward agricultural areas in southern Israel, in an attempt to cause catastrophic fires.
In the Fatah-ruled West Bank, Hamas supporters called the Palestinian election postponement a “coup,” and it has been reported that the terror organization is attempting to provoke riots.
UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Tor Wennesland said he is “deeply concerned by the surge in tension and violence in the occupied West Bank, including east Jerusalem, since the beginning of the holy month of Ramadan.”
ATP comment: It’s undeniable that people, en route to prayer, are being encouraged to act violently. That seems counterintuitive, yet no one is remarking on it.
There are, of course, violentsub-groups inother world religions besides Islam. But how many of the major faiths have leaders cloaking themselves in their religion and inciting the masses to commit acts of violence against others as they head off to church, synagogue, temple or other house of worship?
It’s time we take a look at this provocation of violence and call it what it is: terrorism.
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What you’ve missed: New CDC guidelines state that there is no need to wear a mask if you are fully vaccinated, and Bill de Blasio treats New Yorkers like toddlers by promising them burgers and fries if they get vaccinated.
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Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in March issued an invitation to the world to illegally cross the US-Mexico border. This morning, under questioning from Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO), he couldn’t even remember saying the words.
“Don’t you think you bear any responsibility for the current crisis,” Hawley asked Mayorkas in a Senate hearing on Thursday, “by telling the world earlier this year that the border was open? Your words were ‘we’re not telling you not to come, we’re just telling you we’re putting a system back in place in which you can come.’ Don’t you think people took your words at face value then?”
“Senator, I’ve never said that the border is open and I’ve never believed it,” Mayorkas replied.
Hawley jumped in asking for clarity, “We’re not telling you not to come, how would you parse that?”
“Senator, I never said the border is open, and I never believed that it should be an open border,” Mayorkas said.
“You did say that ‘we’re not telling you not to come,’ though, right, you did say that,” Hawley asked.
“I’m sorry, Senator, I apologize.”
“You remember saying don’t you, that ‘we’re not telling you not to come,’ those are your words that you said in a press conference. You said that, right?” Hawley asked again.
“No, I don’t recall saying that,” Mayorkas said. “I don’t believe I ever–”
“You don’t recall saying that,” Hawley said.
“That’s correct, Senator.”
“This is interesting news,” Hawley replied, “the secretary just said that he doesn’t have any memory of making those comments, that’s extraordinary.”
And it is. Because Mayorkas said those exact words. In fact, it was in the same March 1 press conference that he insisted there was no crisis.
Dr. Jordan B. Peterson took to Twitter on Wednesday to critique the controversial Canadian censorship bill. Bill C-10 is currently being pushed forward by the Liberal government and is being spearheaded by Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault. If passed, Bill C-10 would regulate all Canadian social media users and impose CRTC restrictions on content.
“How about we don’t do this, Canada. I’d hate to move,” said Peterson in a tweet.
The celebrated Canadian psychologist also took aim at the CBC:
“I have a million more YouTube subscribers than our national broadcaster CBC. So does that make me a broadcaster to be regulated by Trudeau’s pathetic minions? Or does it just indicate that CBC is a failure, despite the fortune it takes in in public subsidy?”
“CBC, your heavily subsidized but once admired and credible state broadcaster is now ideologically addled, propagandistic, outdated and increasingly despised or ignored. And now you dare to extend your incompetent governance to other media forms?”
Bill C-10 initially exempted user-generated content from being subject to regulation, but this clause was recently and abruptly removed. Following the alteration of this bill, multiple experts voiced serious concerns over the new effects, including the former commissioner for the CRTC itself.
In an interview with The National Post, former CRTC commissioner Peter Menzies said that Bill C-10 “doesn’t just infringe on free expression, it constitutes a full-blown assault upon it and, through it, the foundations of democracy.”
Dr. Peterson also directly addressed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau saying, “Just try and regulate my YouTube channel and see what happens @JustinTrudeau.”
Dr. Petersonconcluded his criticism by correlating this bill to Bill C-16, the controversial pronoun bill that played a role in his rise to fame. The psychologist also tagged Conservative MP Pierre Poilievre in one of his tweets and made the announcement that he will soon be appearing on the Jordan Peterson Podcast.
Tesla and SpaceX founder and billionaire Elon Musk’s announcement of the company’s decision to stop accepting payments in Bitcoin for its products over its impact on the environment crashed the cryptocurrency market for a few hours in the late hours of Wednesday with the exception of Cardano, a cryptocurrency touted for its sustainability.
In his statement on Wednesday evening, Musk said that the company would halt its transactions of Bitcoin due to his concerns about “rapidly increasing use of fossil fuels for Bitcoin mining and transactions, especially coal, which has the worst emissions of any fuel.”
His statement wiped out nearly $300 billion in the cryptomarket.
“Cryptocurrency is a good idea on many levels and we believe it has a promising future, but this cannot come at great cost to the environment,” Musk added. “Tesla will not be selling any Bitcoin and we intend to use it for transactions as soon as mining transitions to more sustainable energy.”
“We are also looking at other cryptocurrencies that use <1% of Bitcoin’s energy/transaction,” Musk concluded.
Forbes reports that in the wake of the crash, the price of Cardano’s ADA cryptocurrency, which is valued as the world’s most valuable token, surged as crypto-traders latched onto its promise of a “much less carbon-intensive alternative.”
Cardano is the only top-ten cryptocurrency to see a rise as price of Ethereum, Bitcoin and others fell, hitting its latest all-time high of $1.96 at noon Eastern time. The surge in interest also pushed its market capitalization to $61.5 billion even as the broader cryptomarket plunged nearly 10% after Musk made his announcement.
Cardano founder James Hoskinson, who also co-founded Ethereum, responded to Musk’s call for an environmentally sustainable cryptocurrency, tweeting: “Are we finally going to have the Cardano conversation? Come to my farm …. Got sweet tea and minidonkeys.”
Hoskinson claims that Cardano uses 6 gigawatt hours of energy per year, which is less than 0.01% of the 115.85 terawatt-hours Bitcoin is estimated to use.
The Intercept, a formerly respectable news outlet, released a video on Thursday that takes aim at journalists who covered Antifa violence, BLM protests and riots, and civil unrest during the summer of 2020 and into the winter.
Entitled “Meet the Riot Squad: Right-Wing Reporters Whose Viral Videos Are Used to Smear BLM,” the video is a smear job itself, an effort to frame BLM rioters and Antifa militants as the good guys, and those who cover their mayhem as the bad ones.
The journalists who are targeted by the intercept were exceptional in their willingness to cover events and circumstances that other outlets would not. Julio Rosas of Townhall, Jorge Ventura of Daily Caller, Drew Hernandez, Shelby Talcott of Daily Caller, and others, were taking their independent lens to protests. This is not something that CNN, MSNBC, NPR, or The Intercept can claim to have done.
The video claims that Rosas took stories that would have been merely local, and brought national attention to them, as though is is both a problem and something other journalists don’t do – meanwhile, this happens literally all the time, every day, at nearly every major outlet in the country. And it should. No one would have known about George Floyd’s death in police custody were it not for journalists taking that local story and making it national, and the same could be said for countless other stories that cross the transom every single day.
The independent journalists who risked their own safety to tell the untold story were not interested in making sure that BLM and Antifa came off smelling like roses. Indeed, the spin that CNN’s Oscar Jimenez’s concept of the “fiery but mostly peaceful” riot was not one that would be found among the reporters lambasted by The Intercept.
A four-year-old video has resurfaced in which American Idol contestant Caleb Kennedy, now 16, sits next to a friend that wears a white hood many are calling reminiscent of KKK hoods, forcing Kennedy to withdraw after backlash calling the South Carolinian racist, the Daily Mail reports.
Kennedy was just 12 in the three-second video, and according to his mother, he and his friend had just watched the horror movie The Strangers, in which one of the characters sports a similar head covering.
Kennedy released a statement to his Instagram Wednesday apologizing to his fans, saying that in addition to withdrawing he would be stepping away from social media for some time.
“Hey y’all, this is gonna be a bit of a surprise, but I am no longer gonna be on American Idol. There was a video that surfaced on the internet that it displayed actions that were not meant to be taken in that way,” Kennedy said. “I was younger and did not think about the actions, but that’s not an excuse. I wanna say sorry to all my fans and everyone who I have let down.”
“I’ll be taking a little time off social media to better myself, but saying that, I know this has hurt and disappointed a lot of people and made people lose respect for me. I’m so sorry! I pray that I can one day regain your trust in who I am and have your respect!” Kennedy continues. “Thank you for supporting me.”
Kennedy’s mother Anita Guy told the Herald Journal that he “doesn’t have a racist bone in his body.
“I hate that this has happened and how Caleb is being portrayed by people online,” Guy said. “This video was taken after Caleb had watched the movie ‘The Strangers: Prey at Night’ and they were imitating those characters. It had nothing to do with the Ku Klux Klan, but I know that’s how it looks. Caleb doesn’t have a racist bone in his body. He loves everyone and has friends of all races.”
While many cheered Kennedy leaving the show, in a sign that the tide of cancel culture may be turning, backlash against his departure from the show was quick and fierce.
Welcome to the Friday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect the week online. Today:
Movies are back
Chrissy Teigen sorry for cyberbullying teen reality star
Italy’s exiled royal house… and the teen influencer they’ve named future queen
BREAK THE INTERNET
We’re about to begin summer blockbuster season
“Movies are back.”
I first saw the phrase used sarcastically, but now peoplereally mean it when they say it thanks to theaters opening across the country and, well, new movies actually being released in those theaters.
A lot of us have not set foot in a theater in quite a while and we’re about to get flooded with a slew of highly anticipated new releases, including The Green Knight (shown above), Zola, In the Heights, Black Widow, and F9.
What will social media look like once people start to regularly return to movie theaters? Will we see a rash of memes post-opening weekend like we did for the last two Avengers films?
Will we see threads of people live-tweeting a film-going experience?
Personally, I’m looking forward to chaotic Letterboxd reviews that mention audience reactions. People huffily leaving a movie 20 minutes in—or the entire theater clapping at a happy moment? I can’t wait.
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Chrissy Teigen sorry for cyberbullying teen reality star
Courtney Stodden rose to fame in 2011, after marrying 51-year-old actor Doug Hutchison at the age of 16. Ten years on, Stodden is reevaluating their 10-year career as a reality TV star—including the cruel and exploitative treatment they faced as a teenager in the public eye.
According to Stodden, TV personality Chrissy Teigen harassed them on Twitter during the early years of their fame.
“She wouldn’t just publicly tweet about wanting me to take ‘a dirt nap’ but would privately DM me and tell me to kill myself,” said Stodden. “Things like ‘I can’t wait for you to die.’”
On Wednesday, Teigen publicly apologized for her past tweets about Stodden, saying, “I’m mortified and sad at who I used to be. I was an insecure, attention seeking troll. I am ashamed and completely embarrassed at my behavior.”
The saga of Italy’s exiled royal house… and the teenager they’ve named future queen
Even though Italy hasn’t had a king since the referendum that abolished the monarchy in 1946, the exiled royal House of Savoy still maintains its claim to the throne and has chosen 17-year-old princess Vittoria as their future queen.
Despite an official lifting of their exile in 2006, something which involved formally giving up their claim on Italy’s throne, none of the Savoyans actually live in Italy, only visiting the country they claim to rule on occasion.
They also, despite their renunciation, continue to maintain that they are the rightful rulers, with some at least holding out the eventual hopes of regaining the throne.
In order to name Vittoria as his heir, Vittorio Emanuelle IV had to overturn a thousand-year-old law forbidding women from taking the throne, something people invested in the Italian monarchy say he has no right to do until the throne is restored.
According to leading industry sources, grocery stores across the United States are worried about food shortages.
Experts say more grocery hoarding may come as disruptions push America’s food supply “near its breaking point”.
As a result of this crisis, survival food is more important than ever.
If you don’t take action or if you stockpile the wrong foods, you could be setting your family up to be hungry in a time of crisis.
It sounds harsh, but the truth is too many people with good intentions are making critical mistakes with their survival food.
Mistakes like…
Getting MREs with a 5-year shelf life – depending on where you purchase them from they could be near expired…
Getting gross survival foods that are tough to stomach and so high in salt, MSG and preservatives you could clog your arteries and get yourself sick…
Or simply getting the wrong foods and leaving a critical hole in your meal plan, which means your family can become malnourished…
Well, I decided not to worry anymore.
Obviously, waiting for the government to give me a handout in a disaster just wasn’t an option for me. And I was completely turned off by the crazy high cost of survival food sold by most stores.
Currently 4Patriots survival food kits are flying off the shelves because:
4Patriots Survival Food Kits are a tremendous value. This is not ordinary food. This is delicious, nutritious, good-for-25-years super survival food that protects you from going hungry in a crisis. This is high quality survival food without any fillers or poor-quality “frankenfood” that the other guys use to pad their survival meals. They are made right in the U.S.A. and you won’t believe how inexpensive these kits are – just a fraction of what some other brands charge.
There’s no fancy packaging, it’s military-grade sturdy stuff and can stand up to the crazy things that happen in a crisis. This food has a shelf life of up to 25 years, so you have complete peace of mind for the long term. And they’re using the most compact kits so you can store them anywhere in your house without any extra hassle. They’re sturdy, water-resistant and stack easily. And extremely covert too.
You can make these meals in less than 20 minutes. Just add boiling water, simmer, and serve. I tried ’em and I think they taste as good or better than any other survival food I’ve ever had. And you get a whole slew of choices for breakfast, lunch and dinner so you don’t get stuck eating the same thing day-in and day-out.
Last Time, Their Best-Selling 3-Month Kits Sold Out Completely In Just 4 Days… Today They Have Them Back In Stock!
Since they finally have these best-selling kits back in stock…
They’re going to load you up with FREE GIFTS when you get yours today. Just look at all you get with this special:
It starts with great savings on the 3-Month Kit. It retails for over $800, but during this special the standard retail pricing goes out the window.
So you spare a ton and they’re just getting warmed up, because…
FREE Bonus #1: because they are so popular and they are a true foundation for your preparedness plan, they’re going to give you 2 of their popular 72-hour Survival Food Kits when you get your 3-Month Kit today.
That’s extra meals (on the house), grab-and-go portability and a way to get through any short-term crisis without even breaking into your stash. People love these kits. It’s one of their top-rated items on our website.
So you’ll get those 2 complimentary 72-hour Survival Food Kits AND…
(Hold on to your hat, folks)
FREE Bonus #2: They’re also going to give you their Victory Garden Seed Collection. Each Victory Garden Seed Collection contains survival seeds from 8 varieties of garden favorites. You’ll harvest them again and again, season after season. And stored cold, they’ll be good for years.
FREE Bonus #3: You also get their Sun Kettle Personal Water Heater. With your Sun Kettle Personal Water Heater, you can boil water without fuel, flames, smoke or noise. Use your Sun Kettle to purify water, cook food, wash up, clean up and much more. It’s like having a mini-microwave the size of a thermos.
FREE Bonus #4: They’re also going to give you their Exclusive Ultimate Survival Digital Library. With these 4 digital books you’ll have the information and tips to help you prepare for an emergency. Together, these books are valued at $80 but they’re yours free as a thank you for your purchase.
But that’s not all because you also get…
FREE Bonus #5: You also get their Digital Meal Planning & Recipe Guide. Inside, you’ll find easy ways to whip up delicious meals you’d be proud to serve your kids. Normally valued at $19.95, you’ll get this brand NEW report for FREE.
FREE Bonus #6: You also get Freedom Joe’s Survival Coffee. Rich, aromatic coffee designed to last 25 years. Coffee is one of the most in-demand items when the “you-know-what” hits the fan. Stay alert when the going gets tough with a cup of premium survival coffee from 100% pure arabica beans. You get 30 servings of delicious, aromatic survival coffee added to your Kit.
FREE Bonus #7: You also get Bugle Boy Survival Cocoa. Warm up with each cup of chocolatey goodness that is sure to satisfy the young and the young at heart. With your Survival Cocoa Kits, you’ll have the satisfying comfort of a steaming cup of cocoa when you and your loved ones need it most. You’ll get 14 servings of this taste-tested hot cocoa FREE for arming yourself with survival food.
But we’re still not done because you also get…
FREE Bonus #8: You also get $25 OFF Your Next Purchase. This is FREE money in the bank for you. You get $25 off any future purchase of $100 or more. Use it to get our best-selling survival food, solar gadgets and so much more! Get whatever you need to round out your preparedness plan. It’s completely up to you. That’s what we call an incredible deal.
But we want to sweeten the pot more. So when you order your 3-Month Survival Food Kit today, you also get…
FREE Bonus #9: You get FREE Shipping and Handling. Last but not least, you’ll get FREE shipping on your 3-Month Survival Food Kit and all of your bonus items today. It’s not cheap to ship 688 servings of food in two totes (plus all the FREE gifts you’re getting). But you deserve it for becoming a loyal customer. And frankly, we want to do it for you.
The peace of mind that comes from having a survival food stockpile shouldn’t exclusively be for well-off Americans. So you’re getting huge savings today.
You’ll even get an easy, no nonsense monthly payment plan. Just the best-tasting, made-in-America survival food protection without the sticker shock.
Look, this food tastes homemade. It’s built to last the long haul. It’s a snap to prepare. And everyone from former Navy SEALs to middle-American grandmas are singing its praises.
First, you get their no-questions-asked 365-Day Double Satisfaction Protection. That way there’s no risk for you. And you can even keep the complimentary gifts for giving your survival food a try.
Second, if you open your 4Patriots meals anytime in the next 25 years and find your food has spoiled or gone bad, you can return the entire stockpile and they will still return triple your purchase amount.
That’s how confident they are that this food will stay delicious and nutritious for the next 25 years.
Because if you don’t take action to get your food stockpile today, you’ll be in the same boat as the brainwashed masses who think “everything is fine.” And if a crisis hits and your family asks, “What are we going to eat?” your mouth will go dry and you’ll feel powerless.
But what if you decide to secure your food stockpile instead? Just imagine how much better you’ll feel right away. When a crisis hits, you will be able to calmly reassure them that they’re safe and they will have plenty to eat.
Listen, I can’t predict the future. I don’t know exactly when or how a crisis will hit.
As it stands today, it’s every man for himself. In a crisis, the loss will be beyond what you can imagine. That’s why I want you to have the same peace of mind that I do.
I was surprised to find that the densely packed packages were easy to prepare and were tasty as well. I definitely recommend having survival food on hand for the times when ‘life’ happens while we are planning other things.
Billy H.
Received my food kit in the mail and I was able to make the potato soup on my cookstove. Just needed boiling water. Gave it a good stir and let it simmered. When I opened up the pot, it smelled so good. You can see the chunks of potatoes and carrots in each bite you take. It’s a good soup.
Kevin S.
72 hour kit is a perfect starter kit for any scenario. Put one in your car, work bag, in your house or RV. If you want to start preparing safe food, this is where to start.
Carol B.
Hey Frank, I have been iced in this weekend. I thought I would try my potato soup. To my utter delight ….. IT WAS DELICIOUS… Thank you for such a wonderful product and the peace of mind it brings.
Ken K.
I am not a full blown survivalist. I am not an idiot, either. I have been through enough in my life and have seen friends who have been through an emergency situation. Sure, sometimes it is for a few days and I pray that it is not longer than that for you or me or anyone we know. Save up if you have to, but get at least a month’s supply. It tastes good although if it is that dire of an emergency, you will be happy to eat anything. IF you have something to eat for your family. Get some water, too, and something to heat it with. We made some of this product and had family and friends over for them to taste and they all agreed they didn’t think anything would be this good and they will be ordering. Just do something. You can’t miss out on this deal.
Justin A.
My wife and I tried the food and we were both surprised about how good it tasted and how satisfied it made us feel afterwards. It feels good knowing that I can provide for my family if a crisis arose and I intend to get more in the future. Also the shipping and customer service has been top notch. This probably the cheapest survival food I have found and the company is great.
Gary M.
I actually had lost my job and was homeless for a while. I dug into my food supply, and I cannot fully describe how delicious and easy to prepare everything is. I felt like I was eating like a king. I am going to stock up again as soon as I settle into my new job. Everyone should participate with this company. You will not be disappointed.
John H.
We’re in Florida and have made many preparations for the aftermath of a possible hurricane. While we are thankful that Florida has not been hit in several years, it gives us great peace of mind to know we have our Food4Patriots kit stashed away, knowing it’s not a case of “if” but “when.”
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May 14, 2021
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Masks no longer required for many fully-vaccinated, House GOP to determine Cheney’s replacement and more news to start your Friday.
We’ve made it through another work week, Daily Briefing readers! Happy Friday! States are loosening their mask mandates after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced new guidelines. And House Republicans are expected to choose a replacement for Liz Cheney after she was removed from her leadership post.
🔵 In public, President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu like to tout their relationship as warm and friendly. But it’s no geopolitical bromance.
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, we have the latest on new mask guidelines for vaccinated Americans. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
Here’s what’s going on today:
More states begin lifting mask mandates after updated CDC guidance
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said he would sign executive orders Friday ending the mask mandate he enacted by emergency authority last July. The move comes after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced new masking guidelines that carry welcome words: Fully vaccinated Americans, with just a few exceptions, no longer need to wear masks indoors. The agency also said fully vaccinated people don’t have to wear masks outdoors, even in crowded spaces. The announcement represents a quantum shift in recommendations and a major loosening of the mask restrictions that Americans have had to live with since early 2020.
House Republicans to decide Rep. Cheney replacement
Several lawmakers are expected to reconvene Friday to decide who will replace Rep. Liz Cheney as the chair of the House Republican Conference. The overwhelming expectation is Rep. Elise Stefanik will be voted in. The New York congresswoman has already been endorsed by party leaders like Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., Minority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., and former President Donald Trump, who called her the “superior” choice to Cheney, who was removed from her leadership position Wednesday amid her outspoken criticism of Trump.
Prince Harry at the Global Citizen VAX LIVE: The Concert To Reunite The World
Getty Images photo for Global Citizen VAX LIVE; USA TODAY graphic
Israeli tanks pound Gaza ahead of possible incursion
Israeli artillery pounded Gaza early Friday as part of a large operation to attempt to destroy a vast network of tunnels beneath Gaza City used by militants to evade surveillance and airstrikes, the military said. The operation has brought the front lines closer to dense civilian areas and paves the way for a potential ground invasion . Israel has troops along the border and called up 9,000 reservists following days of fighting with the Islamic militant group Hamas, which controls Gaza. Palestinian militants have fired some 1,800 rockets and the military has launched more than 600 airstrikes, toppling at least three apartment blocks.
Newsmakers in their own words: Disney’s CEO reacts to the CDC
Disney CEO Bob Chapek noted there’s “going to be a lot more comfortable people this summer in Orlando” as the Florida city where Disney World is gets hot and humid.
Barry Jenkins’ ‘The Underground Railroad’ streams on Amazon
The Oscar-winning director of “Moonlight” brings Colson Whitehead’s “The Underground Railroad” to TV in a hard-to-watch adaptation that’s a huge achievement, our critic Kelly Lawler writes. In Barry Jenkins‘ new miniseries, which streams on Amazon Friday, the metaphorical Underground Railroad in the antebellum South becomes a literal one. “As a kid, when I first heard the words ‘Underground Railroad,’ I imagined something like this show, trains with conductors. It made my ancestors seem super-heroic to me, but in a very grounded way,” Jenkins said.
In theaters and also streaming Friday:
🎥 In “Those Who Wish Me Dead,” Angelina Jolie stars as an elite firefighter who gets a chance for redemption. Brian Truitt’s review: ★★ out of four (in theaters and on HBO Max).
🎥 In the thriller “The Woman in the Window,” Amy Adams plays an agoraphobic individual struggling to figure out what’s real and what’s not. Brian’s review: ★★ out of four (streaming on Netflix).
The 2021 WNBA season — the league’s 25th — gets started Friday with eight of the league’s 12 teams in action. The first game of the night will see the Indiana Fever take on the New York Liberty in Brooklyn, New York (7 p.m. ET on NBA TV). However, the game of the night appears to be the Phoenix Mercury traveling to Minneapolis to face the Minnesota Lynx, a matchup of two teams that made the playoffs last season.
📸 Photo of the day: Two NBA veterans have a spirited chat 📸
May 13: Heat forward Udonis Haslem (40) exchanges words with Sixers center Dwight Howard (39) during the first half in Miami. Haslem received two technical fouls and was ejected after just three minutes.
Jasen Vinlove, USA TODAY Sports
Udonis Haslem has now officially played in 18 seasons for the NBA’s Miami Heat.
The CDC on Thursday eased mask guidance for people who are fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, allowing them to go maskless indoors and outdoors in most settings. Read more.
Teachers Union Calls for All Schools to Reopen
The head of the politically powerful American Federation of Teachers says in a speech that ‘conditions have changed’ and that it is time to fully reopen schools. Read more.
Gaza’s Hospitals Beset by Bombs and Virus
Just weeks ago, the Gaza Strip’s feeble health system was struggling with a runaway surge of coronavirus cases. Then, the bombs began to fall. Read more.
Shortages, Virus Fears Threaten Jobs Recovery
Many factors account for the disappointing April jobs report, suggesting the recovery will not follow a straight line upward. Read more.
When Will COVID-19 Vaccines Be Available Globally?
Experts say it could be 2023 or later before COVID-19 vaccines are widely available in some countries. 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 13, 2021
Posted on
On Thursday’s Mark Levin Show, The CDC and President Biden told the country that masks are no longer required for fully vaccinated individuals, as much as Biden wants to take credit for this it was Donald Trump’s Operation Warp Speed that got us this far. It was the leadership of state Governors like Ron DeSantis who led Florida through this pandemic without destroying their economy or denigrating citizens. Then, Economist Milton Friedman taught that capitalism is a necessary condition for political freedom. The less economic freedom we have the less political freedom we have. This is why the left uses the climate change de-growth movement to change the American economic system through Marxist ideas. Now the economy is suffering, pipelines are getting hacked and ransom is being paid, and America’s energy infrastructure is much less safe as a result. The Green New Deal will be much worse than this current cyber-attack. Biden is a human pandemic and the ransomware president! Later, the Muslim Brotherhood, a terrorist organization, is praising the anti-Semitic wing of the Democrat Party for abandoning Israel amidst an onslaught of rocket fire. Yet, Speaker Pelosi, Chuck Schumer, and Biden have done nothing to stop or condemn members of Congress for going against an American ally and rooting for terrorists. Synagogues were burned and rockets were fired at apartment buildings by Hamas. Interestingly, no mosques were targeted by the Israelis. Afterward, Bill O’Reilly calls in to discuss his new book, Killing the Mob: The Fight Against Organized Crime in America.
Germany. Perfect. Germany’s leading Jewish group on Thursday condemned protests in front of a synagogue in the western city of Gelsenkirchen as “pure antisemitism.”
Democrats are furiously working, funding these Nazis. Ahmadinejad openly called for Israel to be “wiped off the map” adding that “The establishment of the Zionist regime was a move by the world oppressor against the Islamic world.”
Trump gave us peace in the Middle East. The Democrats resurrected the jihad state and set the Middle East on fire. Stop the Democrat-autocrats from aiding and abetting the world’s largest state sponsor of terror. Now.
The election was stolen. Destroying evidence in what is the biggest election fraud in human history is not even newsworthy by the democrat media ministry of propaganda.
🤣 😂 🤣 😂🤣 😂 Keep it up, America. CNN is hemorrhaging viewers. However, CNN’s audience is still large enough to spread their vile propaganda. Viewers need to boycott this trash network in greater numbers.