Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday May 18, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
May 18 2021
Good morning from Washington, where the Supreme Court will hear an abortion case that could lead to the overturning of Roe v. Wade. We’ve got commentary from Sarah Parshall Perry. President Biden cancels his predecessor’s Garden of American Heroes, and Jarrett Stepman isn’t pleased. In a video report, Rachel del Guidice introduces a patriotic Border Patrol leader of Mexican lineage. On the podcast, we find out what China is up to with digital currency. Plus: schooling Bernie Sanders on defense, and the 1776 Commission returns. On this date in 1860, Abraham Lincoln, 51, a one-term congressman from Illinois, is nominated for president at the Republican National Convention in Chicago.
The ramifications of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, to be argued nearly 49 years after the Supreme Court legalized abortion on demand in Roe v. Wade, promise to reverberate for some time.
“My loyalty is just toward one country, and when … I see how disrespectful some people have been toward America … it’s frightening and it’s sad,” says Art del Cueto.
China’s digital currency is backed by China’s central bank. The Chinese government has the power to direct the way users spend the money or how quickly they spend it because the currency is fully digitalized.
Sanders used an erroneous cliché, asking, “Why should we give the military more money when the United States already spends more money on its military than the next 12 countries combined?”
Members of the 1776 Commission will reconvene next week in Washington after expressing opposition to a Biden administration regulation to promote critical race theory in schools.
You are subscribed to this newsletter as rickbulow1974@gmail.com. If you want to receive other Heritage Foundation newsletters, or opt out of this newsletter, please click here to update your subscription.
Red Rock Secured: China Weaponizes Bitcoin Against the US Dollar (And Your Retirement Savings). Help Protect Your Money with Gold & Silver. You don’t have to worry anymore.
SPRING INTO ACTION
With all that has been going on in America right now, you must agree that there has never been a more important time to have access to honest, fact-based news reported in Truth and Tradition.
For a limited time, get full access to The Epoch Times for 2 months for just $1:
Get 2 Months for $1
WORDS OF WISDOM
“You may forget but let me tell you this: someone in some future time will think of us”
We’ve all known about China’s currency manipulation schemes for decades. China purposely devalues their currency so that they can maintain their export pricing advantage over all other countries. Up until now, it has been one of China’s most effective ways to counter the US Dollar in the open market. Now China is ramping up to take on the US Dollar in a brand-new battlefront…. Bitcoin.
Your Savings and Retirement could be the First Casualty in China’s Currency War Against the US Dollar!
The Epoch Times, 229 W 28th St, Fl.5, New York, NY 10001
With social media censorship sidelining many important headlines, our Morning Brief email is how we make sure you get the latest developments that our reporters have curated from around the world. It’s our way of keeping you truly informed so that you can make the decisions that align with your values. We hope you enjoy our coverage. Manage your email preferences here.
3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
Having trouble viewing this email? View the web version.
Supreme Court Agrees to Take Up Abortion Case that Could Challenge Roe
From the story: The eventual ruling by the conservative-majority court, expected next year, could allow states to ban abortions before a fetus is viable outside the womb, upending decades of legal precedent. Lower courts ruled against Mississippi’s law (Reuters). From Jeanne Mancini, president of March for Life: “This is a great case. Nobody can ever say exactly how justices are going to rule on a particular case … but we are very encouraged” (Washington Times). From Dan McLaughlin: While that case appears unlikely to settle the 48-year war over the constitutional status of abortion, it offers the first opportunity to witness the 6–3 majority of George W. Bush and Donald Trump appointees in action on the abortion issue. And because the case involves a direct ban on some abortions, rather than a regulation, it potentially puts the entire edifice of Roe v. Wade in the crosshairs (National Review). Planned Parenthood is already using this to raise money (Twitter).
2.
GOP Seeks to Get Democrats on Record Condemning Hamas
Amazing it is taking effort to get anybody to condemn terrorists. But there are Democrats who clearly side with Israel’s enemies.
White House Environmental Advisors Reject Nuclear Power
Despite the hard fact that it is good for the environment (The Hill). From Dan Crenshaw: Tell me you’re not serious about reducing emissions without telling me you’re not serious about reducing emissions (Twitter).
4.
Governor Cuomo Received $5 Million for Book Praising His Handling of Covid in New York
Though we now know was scandalous and deadly (NY Post). From another story on Cuomo: Gov. Andrew Cuomo — who’s facing allegations that he sexually harassed a series of female aides — deflected, joked and laughed before denying Monday that he’d ever had an intimate relationship with a subordinate (NY Post).
5.
Biden Looks to Pardon Criminals Based Upon Race
The New York Times calls it a “rebuke” of Trump whom they insist pardoned based upon “wealth or connections.” That’s a big “or.”
Voddie Baucham: The Left is Trying to Silence Black Voices Like Mine
From the piece: The elites of our society urge us to “elevate black voices,” but it is important to understand what they mean. They don’t want to elevate all black voices, but only those who subscribe to the creed of Critical Race Theory. If you don’t avow that our society is infected with systemic racism and that white supremacy, white privilege, and white fragility are the root of all of the problems that black people face, then you are a heretic. Your consciousness is “white” and therefore oppressive, no matter how black your skin may be.
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It is only sent to people who signed up from one of the Salem Media Group network of websites OR a friend might have forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy.
Unsubscribe from The Daybreak Insider
OR Send postal mail to:
The Daybreak Insider Unsubscribe
6400 N. Belt Line Rd., Suite 200, Irving, TX 75063
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 5.18.21
Rise ‘n’ shine. Wake up to the best blurbs on politics and policy in Florida.
President Joe Biden is above water in Jacksonville, but “Blu-Val” cheers might be premature.
A new poll conducted by the University of North Florida’s Public Opinion Research Lab found the President with a plus-3 approval rating in the county, 49%-46%.
Views were split along party lines, with 61% of Democrats saying they strongly approve of the President and 78% of Republicans saying they strongly disapprove.
Joe Biden is popular in Jacksonville, but it’s not yet time to call it ‘Blu-Val.’
While Biden’s numbers are good, Gov. Ron DeSantis’ numbers were better.
The first-term Republican has 50% support in Duval while 43% disapprove. His job approval rating is markedly improved from six months ago when he registered 42% support.
Again, the results were polarized. More than two-thirds of Democrats strongly disapprove of DeSantis, while 76% of Republicans strongly approve.
Agricultural Commissioner Nikki Fried, meanwhile, scored a plus-20 approval rating — far higher than the President or Governor. But the top line obscures the number of voters who have no clue who the top statewide Democrat is. She garnered 37% approval, 17% disapproval, while a whopping 46% said they didn’t know.
The poll was conducted online May 11-16. It has a sample size of 1,263 registered voters in Duval County and a margin of error of plus or minus 2.8 percentage points.
Situational awareness
Tweet, tweet:
—@MarcACaputo: What makes (Joel) Greenberg’s case so unusual is the scope of crimes he pleaded guilty to, making him one of the most corrupt Florida politicians of all time. With such a record of rank dishonesty, his testimony alone is not enough for the feds to indict (Matt) Gaetz
—@NoahPransky: Here’s the thing @mattgaetz gets … he could be the 2nd-most powerful man in the GOP within a year. B/c anything short of a trafficking conviction — regardless of all the evidence — allows him to claim “full exhortation” and become the new face of (Donald) Trumpism.
—@ChrisSprowls: We stand with the Israeli people and our Jewish brothers and sisters. Israel has continued to demonstrate a willingness to make peace. Hamas is testing the new administration. We must all stand against terror, for Israel, and for peace.
—@Fred_Guttenburg: A personal message to the nasty progressives who are telling me to “stay in my lane” & saying, “I used to support you, but now I can’t,” that is OK. What is not OK are some of the comments directed at me because I am a Jewish person. Let me be clear. I am not a political person & not looking for support. As someone with family & friends in Israel throughout my life, including now, I am well aware of the terror that they face daily. I am also well aware of the plight of the Palestinian people. I am entitled to and will share my opinions.’
—@MDixon55: These gaming meetings might also uncloak a universal truth of lawmaking in Tallahassee: Members don’t really know what’s in the bills
‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 10; ‘Tax Freedom Holiday’ begins — 10; Memorial Day — 13; Florida TaxWatch Spring Meeting and PLA Awards — 16; ‘Loki’ premieres on Disney+ — 24; Father’s Day — 33; F9 premieres in the U.S. — 38; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 45; 4th of July — 47; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 52; MLB All-Star Game — 56; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 66; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 66; The NBA Draft — 72; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 74; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 80; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 98; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 108; NFL regular season begins — 114; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 119; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 129; ‘Dune’ premieres — 136; MLB regular season ends — 138; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 144; World Series Game 1 — 161; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 168; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 168; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 171; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 192; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 206; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 213; NFL season ends — 236; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 238; NFL playoffs begin — 242; Super Bowl LVI — 271; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 311; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 353; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 416; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 507; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 542.
Top story
“Supreme Court to take up major abortion-rights challenge” via Mark Sherman of The Associated Press — The Supreme Court agreed Monday to a showdown over abortion in a case that could dramatically alter nearly 50 years of rulings on abortion rights. With three justices appointed by Trump, who are part of a 6-3 conservative majority, the court is taking on a case about whether states can ban abortions before a fetus can survive outside the womb. Mississippi is not asking the court to overrule the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision confirming a woman’s right to an abortion. But abortion-rights supporters said the case is a clear threat to abortion rights. “The court cannot uphold this law without overturning the principal protections of Roe v. Wade,” Nancy Northup, president and CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights, said in a call with reporters.
An abortion challenge gets a SCOTUS review. Image via AP.
Special Session
“Lawmakers kill added mobile gambling in deal between state and Seminole Tribe” via John Kennedy and Jim Rosica of the Tallahassee Democrat — Minutes into the Special Session Monday, House Speaker Chris Sprowls said he and Republican leadership had gotten future online and mobile casino gambling nixed from a proposed deal between the state and Seminole Tribe. And sports betting, still a go, now will not start till Oct. 15 at the tribe’s casinos. “I realized many shared the same concern as I, that some language in the compact could be construed to lead to the backdoor expansion of online gaming,” he said. “Even the mere possibility of this was unacceptable.” The Palm Harbor Republican said he, Rules Committee Chair Paul Renner and Select Committee on Gaming Chair Randy Fine “engaged directly with the Seminole Tribe,” who agreed to strike that language.
Chris Sprowls throws a monkey wrench into the Senate’s gambling plans.
“Ron DeSantis’ gambling deal means billions for Florida, but is it enough?” via Skyler Swisher and Gray Rohrer of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — DeSantis’ deal-making skills are getting a test. DeSantis inked a $500-million-a-year gambling agreement with the Seminole Tribe, but some lawmakers think the state could have done better given how much gambling the Seminole Tribe will get to control. “This is the dream deal of the Tribe,” Sen. Jeff Brandes said. “This was the easiest deal for the state — not the best. But this was a great deal for the Tribe.” DeSantis’ office has been lobbying lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, and some representatives think the Seminoles should be paying more, House Democratic Co-Leader Evan Jenne said. “That is their sticking point as to why they don’t plan on voting for the compact as it stands,” he said.
“Legislature races toward mobile sports betting but without safeguards for data privacy” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times — Legislators spent much of the Regular Session on a proposal that would have imposed new disclosure requirements on companies that collect information from anyone who downloads an app or uses a website. Now, data harvesting is an essential component to operating the central provision of the new gaming Compact. Bettors are routinely required to provide extensive information, including date of birth, Social Security number, physical and email addresses, and other personal identifying data. While sports betting is “not going to produce a huge revenue stream” for the Seminole Tribe, it will allow the Tribe to get into the online gambling market and build a database of younger players, which it can use to target for its other products.
“Senate panel greenlights Gaming Control Commission” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — The Senate Appropriations Committee voted 16-3 on Monday to approve a bill (SB 4A) establishing the Gaming Control Commission as a law enforcement agency within the Attorney General Office’s Department of Legal Affairs. The commission would take up the findings from an investigation into gaming violations to oversee penalties and fines. “The goal is to have this commission have the state of Florida not violate the Compact ever again and to go in there and shut down anything they think violates the Compact,” said Sen. Travis Hutson, the St. Johns County Republican tapped to carry the Senate’s gaming measures. The Governor would appoint the panel’s five commissioners. The Legislature has already appropriated at least $2 million for the commission.
“House panel approves pari-mutuel decoupling bill, fantasy sports bill” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Two House bills weaving the legal framework for the Seminole Compact’s impact on horse racing (HB 7A) and fantasy sports (HB 9A) betting were approved by the House Select Subcommittee on Authorized Gaming Activity. But the pari-mutuel decoupling bill is pitting parts of the horse industry against other parts, as the horse breeders and owners wish to see horse racing continue while some track owners wish to make that optional. The bill would allow card rooms and slot machines to continue operating even if races cease. That would not be so for thoroughbred racing, which Rep. Chris Latvala and other proponents of the bill contend is still too big and too important an industry in Florida to risk losing.
“‘Don’t mess with Bingo’; Senators are cold to rule changes amid gambling reforms” via Laura Cassels of the Florida Phoenix — Changes in state rules over Bingo games in Florida may have hit a dead-end Monday. The Senate Appropriations Committee did not vote on the three measures related to Bingo. In the House of Representatives, the Bingo measures have no counterparts, indicating a lack of interest in that chamber, too. Sen. George Gainer, a northwest Florida Republican, and others said they don’t see why popular, low-dollar Bingo games have been swept into a Special Session called to implement a 30-year, $2.5 billion gambling compact with the Seminole Tribe of Florida. “I represent northwest Florida, and we don’t care how much roulette or blackjack you play, but don’t mess with Bingo,” Gainer said, looking fierce but prompting good-humored laughter.
Don’t mess with North Florida bingo, says George Gainer.
“House enlists gaming expert to help lawmakers navigate Compact” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The House has enlisted the help of a gaming expert to assist lawmakers as they take up a historic gaming compact between Florida and the Seminole Tribe. The expert, Attorney George Skibine, will appear remotely at scheduled committee meetings to answer questions from lawmakers throughout the week. He will also help lawmakers navigate federal laws and entities, including the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, the National Indian Gaming Commission, and the Interior Department. Skibine served as the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs at the U.S. Department of Interior from 2008 to 2011, according to his LinkedIn profile.
“Advocates want to boost resources for the 24-hour hotline in FL to respond to gambling addiction” via Issac Morgan of the Florida Phoenix — During the Special Session, the Florida Council on Compulsive Gambling wants lawmakers in both chambers to address issues surrounding gambling problems, such as increasing awareness of its 24-hour hotline and expanding operations to respond to a larger volume of callers. According to the Compact, the Council would work with the Seminole Tribe to provide online resources and display printed material about compulsive gambling at its facilities. The Tribe would be required to make an annual donation of at least $250,000 “per operational gaming facility” to the organization. Still, advocates want more funding to respond to residents across the state.
“Dan Gelber, Philip Levine argue voters should have a say in new gaming deal” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Multiple Miami-Dade County leaders spoke out Monday against a new gaming proposal, arguing Florida voters should get a say in the process. Miami Beach Mayor Gelber and former Miami Beach Mayor Levine attended Monday’s news conference. Armando Codina, founder and executive chairman of Codina Partners, and Stephen Sawitz, who owns the iconic Joe’s Stone Crab, also spoke out against the deal. “The citizens of the State of Florida were very clear in their mandate when we approved Amendment 3 in 2018: We are the ones that must decide gambling in our state,” Gelber said. “What we’re watching is the Florida Legislature approving this law in backrooms and yachts. We need to let the people of Florida vote.”
Special Session sked:
The Senate Democratic caucus meets in advance of a floor Session, 8:30 a.m., Room 228, Senate Office Building.
The Senate holds a floor Session to consider a proposed Seminole Compact and other gambling issues, 10 a.m., Senate Chamber.
The House Select Committee on Gaming meets, 10:30 a.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The House Rules Committee meets, 5 p.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
Dateline Tally
Nice scoop, fellas — “Christina Pushaw, outspoken Rebekah Jones critic, tapped as DeSantis’ press secretary” via Jordan Kirkland and Brian Burgess of The Capitolist — DeSantis has tapped conservative journalist and communicator Pushaw to be his new press secretary. Pushaw, who most recently worked as a freelance journalist publishing in national conservative outlets, landed inside the Governor’s office as DeSantis transitions into campaign season. Born in California, Pushaw carved out a career in communications after graduating with a bachelor’s in history from the University of Southern California. She also holds a master’s in international relations and economics from Johns Hopkins University. Pushaw first got onto the radar of the DeSantis administration for her willingness to call out the now thoroughly discredited “whistleblower” Jones in a series of investigative stories, including a blockbuster exposé in Human Events in February.
Freelance journalist and communications pro Christina Pushaw will now be press secretary for Ron DeSantis. Image via Twitter.
“‘I don’t think anything’s a gimme’: Dana Trabulsy on her work this Session” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — After flipping a historically blue district, St. Lucie Republican Trabulsy headed to Tallahassee for her first Legislative Session. “I can’t believe it took me 57 years to figure out what I really want to do,” Trabulsy quipped. She started by making a splash in the world of aquaculture. “I learned more than I ever thought I would. I had no idea it was going to be such an intricate bill,” Trabulsy said. Trabulsy’s House bill (HB 669) adding largemouth bass to the list of farmed fish in Florida passed the House on April 26. “(It’s) a great opportunity for people to enjoy bass, just like they enjoy catfish or tilapia or salmon and the other fish that are farmed,” Trabulsy said.
“Court refuses to send gun case to justices” via News Service of Florida — An appeals court Monday refused to send to the Florida Supreme Court key issues in a case about a 2011 state law that threatens tough penalties if city and county officials approve gun-related regulations. As is common, the court did not explain its reasons. A panel of the appeals court on April 9 upheld the constitutionality of the 2011 law, challenged by 30 cities, three counties, and more than 70 local officials. Florida since 1987 has barred cities and counties from passing regulations that are stricter than state firearms laws, and the penalties in the 2011 law were designed to strengthen that “preemption.”
Nicholas Mortellaro, Strategos Public Affairs: Behavioral Health Center of Excellence
Statewide
“Joel Greenberg pleads guilty in federal court after striking cooperation deal” via Martin E. Comas of the Orlando Sentinel — As Greenberg stood inside a federal courtroom pleading guilty as part of a cooperation deal with prosecutors, a plane flying outside towed a banner with an ominous message to a prominent ally of the former Seminole County tax collector: “Tick tock Matt Gaetz.” Greenberg, who resigned from the tax collector post in disgrace after his arrest last June, on Monday pleaded guilty to six felonies, including sex trafficking of a child. According to the plea agreement, Greenberg will be required to register as a sex offender when he is released. If the information he presents is useful and of “substantial assistance” to them, prosecutors will recommend a lower prison sentence.
Joel Greenberg pleads out in federal court. Image via AP.
“Plane carrying ‘Tick Tock Matt Gaetz’ banner flies over Orlando federal courthouse” via Alex Galbraith of Orlando Weekly — A plane carrying a banner that read “Tick Tock Matt Gaetz” flew over Orlando’s federal courthouse on the morning that Greenberg entered a plea deal that included pleading guilty to sex trafficking charges. Greenberg paid out the exact amount sent to him by Gaetz to several young women under euphemisms like “school.” The Daily Beast claims to have obtained a letter from Greenberg where he admitted both he and Gaetz paid an underage girl for sex. In Gaetz’s home district, a billboard insinuating that the congressman was a sex offender was put up by a liberal PAC.
“BOG member alleges improper influence on FSU presidential search” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Alan Levine sent a letter to Board of Governors Chancellor Marshall Criser III on Sunday questioning whether a letter from the president of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges led to Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran being eliminated from contention. As Education Commissioner, Corcoran holds a seat on the SUS Board of Governors, which must approve the eventual pick for FSU president. SACSCOC President Dr. Belle Wheelan said in a letter to Board of Governors Chair Syd Kitson that Corcoran’s consideration presented a potential conflict of interest and implied that if Corcoran remained a candidate without giving up his seat on the board, that FSU could lose accreditation. Without accreditation, FSU could see a mass exodus of students and donors.
“Corcoran says he made sure Amy Donofrio was fired; now her legal team’s responding” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — A Duval County teacher who hung a Black Lives Matter flag in her classroom says she heard she was fired through a YouTube video. On Monday, Amy Donofrio‘s legal team released a statement criticizing a recent guest speaking engagement from Florida Department of Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran at Hillsdale College, a private conservative school in Michigan. Corcoran used Donofrio as an example while speaking about critical race theory and curriculum oversight and announced that he had her fired. In March, the school district announced Donofrio would be removed from her classroom. By April, the Southern Poverty Law Center announced it was suing Duval Schools on Donofrio’s behalf.
“Groups back challenge to ‘Marsy’s Law’ ruling” via The News Service of Florida — First Amendment and journalism groups want to weigh in if the Florida Supreme Court takes up a case that could help shield the identities of law enforcement officers involved in use-of-force incidents. The constitutional amendment bolstered victims’ rights, and a three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal ruled last month that privacy protections in Marsy’s Law can apply to two Tallahassee police officers. One incident drew national attention, as an officer identified in court documents as “John Doe 2” shot a Black transgender man, Natosha “Tony” McDade, in May 2020. Because the police officer was the victim of an aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in the incident, he contends he had the right under Marsy’s Law to prevent the release of his name.
“As hurricane season approaches, three insurers are canceling thousands of Florida customers” via Ron Hurtibise of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — As another hurricane season bears down on the state, more than 50,000 Florida home insurance customers will soon receive notices that their policies have been canceled or won’t be renewed. State insurance regulators recently authorized “extraordinary” terminations of thousands of policies of Florida-based insurers Universal Insurance of North America, Gulfstream Property & Casualty, and Southern Fidelity. And the bloodletting will likely continue over the coming months with other insurers seeking to shed risky or unprofitable policies while refusing to insure older homes with roofs, electrical systems and plumbing that have not been upgraded to comply with current building codes.
“Citizens Insurance nears 600,000 policies” via News Service of Florida — Continuing to add thousands of customers a week, Citizens Property Insurance Corp. was approaching 600,000 policies at the end of April. According to newly updated figures on the Citizens website, the state-backed insurer had 589,041 policies as of April 30, up from 569,868 at the end of March. As a sign of the major growth over the past year, Citizens had 453,911 policies as of April 30, 2020. The growth has come as private insurers have cited financial problems that have led them to shed customers and seek significant rate increases. The Legislature last month approved a bill (SB 76) that includes changes aimed at slowing the growth of Citizens and making it less competitive with private insurers.
2022
“What DeSantis’ media strategy reveals about him” via Steve Bousquet of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Past Governors also resented the media at times. Bob Martinez, Lawton Chiles, Jeb Bush and others had their share of bad press, and all had tense moments with reporters. Claude Kirk once memorably threatened to oppose the license renewals of TV stations after they didn’t cover his news conference the day he unveiled a new “Arrive Alive” license tag. But that was the exception. Tangling with the press is a rite of passage for a Governor, a test of mettle. The occasional “hit piece” or blind “sources say” story goes with the territory. This Governor goes way too far.
When it comes to the press, Ron DeSantis goes a little too far. Image via AP.
Corona Florida
“Florida reports 58 coronavirus resident deaths, less than 2k new cases” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida’s resident death toll from coronavirus rose to 36,133 with the addition of 58 more reported fatalities on Monday while also adding 1,976 more positive COVID-19 cases to bring the total to 2,293,980. It’s only the third time the state has reported less than 2,000 new infections on its daily report this year and the first since April 12. Both cases and deaths have been declining. Week over week, the state Department of Health reported 22,198 new cases and 344 resident deaths from Sunday to Sunday. Compared to the week ending May 9, that’s a drop from 27,028 new cases and 463 resident deaths.
“Your condo building still can require masks and much more. Here’s what associations may enforce.” via David Lyons of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — For more than a year, condo associations had to become COVID-19 traffic cops for hundreds of thousands of Floridians in high-rises and sprawling complexes. They had to enforce the use of masks, social distancing and rules for pools and other public spaces. Now the state of Florida has enforcement out of the hands of local governments, and the CDC has eased guidance for vaccinated people. It is debatable whether or not private residential community associations are impacted by the Governor’s prohibition against the use of “vaccine passports.” The recent COVID-19 liability bill does specifically protect community associations so long as they were following the advice of public health officials when the cause of action occurred.
Despite what the government says about mask-wearing, your HOA can make its own rules. Image via AP.
“Florida tourism improves in early 2021, but still struggles to recover from pandemic” via Jim Turner of The News Service of Florida — Florida’s tourism industry saw improvement during the first three months of 2021, but the number of visitors was still down 14% from a year earlier as the state continued to grapple with the COVID-19 pandemic. Travel-industry officials can envision bluer economic skies ahead as businesses scale back mask requirements and other social-distancing rules imposed to combat the virus that has killed more than 36,000 Floridians. Florida drew 26.16 million visitors from Jan. 1 to March 31, down from 30.4 million tourists during the first quarter of 2020, according to numbers posted late Friday by the state tourism-marketing agency Visit Florida.
Corona local
“Disney World fan reaction is complicated after the theme park changes its mask rule overnight” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — Disney World announced that masks would no longer be required outdoors for the first time since the attractions reopened in July during the pandemic. The rule went into effect on Saturday, when the Magic Kingdom opened about 10 hours later. Disney still requires masks in the ride lines, transportation, and indoor spaces such as restaurants and theaters. Universal and SeaWorld enacted similar policies, relaxing face-covering rules also on Friday. In the theme park world, fans’ reactions ran the gamut from praise to concern. Many Disney guests said they were elated to take off their masks outdoors in Orlando’s hot, humid weather, calling it liberating.
Not everyone is thrilled with Disney’s mask rule changes, but many are. Image via AP.
Corona nation
“The million-dollar jab and other giveaways reveal a desperate push to vaccinate America” via Joel Achenbach, Ariana Eunjung Cha, Frances Stead Sellers, and Kevin Williams of The Washington Post — The United States has a surplus of coronavirus vaccine doses on its hands, and long gone are the days when people waited hours to get jabbed. Dwindling demand has forced Governors and Mayors to get creative. New York Mayor Bill de Blasio tried to market the vaccines by offering burgers and fries from Shake Shack, which he dutifully, awkwardly ate on camera while trying to keep a straight face. Now, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine has upped the ante. He’s offering $1 million to five adults, provided they are vaccinated. That’s $1 million each. They’ll be chosen by lottery once a week, starting May 26. Separately, he’ll hand out full-ride scholarships at a public state university to five vaccinated teenagers.
“Joe Biden to send U.S.-authorized vaccines abroad for first time” via Josh Wingrove of Bloomberg — Biden plans to send an additional 20 million doses of U.S. coronavirus vaccines abroad by the end of June, including, for the first time, shots authorized for domestic use, where supply is beginning to outstrip demand. Biden will announce Monday that he’ll export 20 million doses of vaccines from Pfizer Inc., Moderna Inc. or Johnson & Johnson, on top of 60 million AstraZeneca PLC doses he had already planned to give to other countries, according to a senior administration official familiar with the plan. The official stressed that the measures are only a first step as the U.S. pivots its attention to quelling the pandemic abroad.
Joe Biden starts sharing vaccines with the rest of the world. Image via Reuters.
“CDC’s No. 2 official to retire this summer in second high-profile exit” via Lena H. Sun, Yasmeen Abutaleb and Dan Diamond of The Washington Post — The CDC’s No. 2 official plans to retire this summer, marking the second high-profile departure this month as the Biden administration seeks to rebuild trust in the battered agency. Anne Schuchat, principal deputy director of the CDC, told senior agency leaders on Monday that she plans to retire after 33 years at the agency. Schuchat has been principal deputy director to four CDC directors and served as acting director several times. Schuchat categorically denied reports of tensions with CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, saying in an exchange of text messages, “Whoever told you that has no idea of the close relationship we have.
Corona economics
“Child cash benefit will begin hitting millions of parents’ bank accounts July 15” via The Internal Revenue Service on July 15 will start delivering a monthly payment of $300 per child under 6 and $250 per child 6 or older for those who qualify. The monthly benefits will be deposited directly in most families’ bank accounts on the 15th of every month or the closest day to that date, if the 15th falls on a holiday or weekend for the rest of the year, without any action required. For instance, an eligible family with two children ages 5 and 13 will receive $550 from the IRS directly to their bank accounts on or close to the 15th of every month from July to December.
More corona
“Target, CVS and other stores ease mask requirements after CDC guidance” via Maria Arias of Axios — A growing list of large retailers has begun to ease mask requirements for fully vaccinated customers, after the CDC issued guidance last week saying vaccinated people can do most activities without wearing a mask or physically distancing. Target and CVS Pharmacy on Monday were among the latest to update policies to allow fully vaccinated guests in their stores without face coverings, unless required by local law. CVS will still require employees to wear masks while at work. Target is also “providing paid time to U.S. hourly team members when they get their vaccines” as well as offering free Lyft rides, up to $15 each way, for their workers to drive to and from their vaccine appointments.
Target joins other retailers who are loosening their mask rules. Image via CNBC.
“A vaccine from Sanofi and GSK is said to produce strong immune responses in a mid-stage study.” via Rebecca Robbins of The New York Times — Sanofi, the French pharmaceutical company, said on Monday that it would move the experimental COVID-19 vaccine it is developing with GlaxoSmithKline into a late-stage trial after the shot produced strong immune responses in volunteers in a mid-stage study. The findings are encouraging for a vaccine that has fallen behind in development and has so far disappointed those expecting that it would be crucial in combating the pandemic. If the vaccine can become available in the last three months of this year, as its developers hope, it could still play a central role as a booster shot as well as an initial inoculation in the developing world, where the pace of vaccination is lagging.
“How to handle your reentry anxiety as the pandemic recedes” via Elizabeth Bernstein of The Wall Street Journal — For more than a year, we’ve followed certain routines — working and socializing from home, wearing masks and keeping our distance from others if we do go out and we’ve become familiar with them. But now the world is changing again. On Thursday, the CDC advised that fully vaccinated people don’t need to wear masks or socially distance, except in certain settings. And while it feels like great news, for many of us, it’s also unsettling because we’re not sure what will happen. Start by deciding what you feel comfortable doing. You need to reassure your brain that you’re safe. “The whole point of going out is to improve our levels of happiness and well-being,” says Michelle Gielan, a positive psychology researcher.
“Pandemic prom: No dancing, weird locations” via Te-Ping Chen and Valerie Bauerlein of The Wall Street Journal — After proms across the country were canceled last year, they’re back on at many schools this spring, with some unusual twists. No dancing cheek to cheek and, in some cases, no dancing at all. COVID-19 tests and vaccination cards are as de rigueur as corsages and boutonnieres. Some schools are turning to unlikely venues to promote social distancing, such as malls and football stadiums. At Kearney High School in northwestern Missouri, students attended prom in one-hour shifts. Owen J. Roberts High School in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, held their prom under a tent in the school parking lot rather than in a hotel as usual. Some schools have even held their prom at a mall.
Presidential
“Biden paid 25.9% rate and earned $607,336, tax returns show” via Josh Boak of The Associated Press — Biden restored a long-standing presidential tradition Monday by releasing his tax returns, showing that 25.9% of the first couple’s income went to the federal government in 2020. The average federal income tax rate is just over 14%. Biden and his wife, Jill Biden, a teacher, earned $607,336 last year while running for President. That is down from $985,223 in 2019, when they primarily earned money from book sales, speeches and positions at the University of Pennsylvania and Northern Virginia Community College. Those income opportunities diminished because of the campaign. Biden’s predecessor, Trump, declined to release his tax returns, a precedent that the new administration rejected.
The Bidens have no problem releasing their taxes.
Epilogue: Trump
“Republicans’ conflicting message: Embracing Donald Trump election lie is key to prominence, just stop asking us about it” via Michael Kranish, Marianna Sotomayor, and Jacqueline Alemany of The Washington Post — The Republican Party’s contorted response to Trump’s false claim that the election was stolen was on stark display as House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy stood in the White House driveway. McCarthy had helped engineer the ouster Wednesday of Rep. Liz Cheney as the No. 3 House Republican leader for saying Trump’s claim of a stolen election was a lie. Yet he insisted later that day, “I don’t think anybody is questioning the legitimacy of the presidential election.” In fact, most Republicans say in polls that they still question the legitimacy of the election. While many Republican members of Congress have acknowledged the reality of Biden’s ascension to the White House, a number still twist themselves into political knots to avoid saying he did so fairly.
Kevin McCarthy wants you to stop making him lie about the 2020 election. Image via AP.
“Trump jets off to New Jersey, but GOP Florida still in ex-President’s thrall” via Antonio Fins of The Palm Beach Post — Trump is at his New Jersey property for the summer, and his Mar-a-Lago club is closed until the fall, but Palm Beach County and South Florida remain very much in the Trumpian political limelight. Last week, the Trumpettes fan club, including numerous Mar-a-Lago club members, announced it will host another gala for Trump at Mar-a-Lago in mid-February of next year. The group held three major parties at Mar-a-Lago dating to 2018, selling out each year and welcoming then-President Trump and DeSantis at the 2020 gala. “This will be the biggest event we’ve ever held,” said Trumpettes co-founder Toni Holt Kramer, adding that next year’s event will be used to start 2022 midterm election efforts. “We’ve got the hottest weekend with Lincoln’s Birthday, the Super Bowl and Valentine’s (Day).”
Crisis
“Black, Brown and extremist: Across the far-right spectrum, people of color play a more visible role” via Hannah Allam and Razzan Nakhlawi of The Washington Post — People of color are playing increasingly visible roles across the spectrum of far-right activism. Today, non-White activists speak for groups of radicalized MAGA supporters, parts of the “Patriot” movement, and, in rare cases, neo-Nazi factions. The “multiracial far right,” as it’s sometimes called, adds another layer to an already fraught debate over how to address violent extremism, the top domestic terrorism threat. Although the GOP’s hard-right turn in the Trump era has blurred the line between mainstream and extreme, there remains a divide between ordinary conservatives of color and those who align themselves with right-wing movements linked to hate and violence.
Black members of the far-right are becoming more vocal. Image via NBC.
“He was banned from having guns after his Capitol riot arrest. Then he shot a mountain lion, feds say.” via Katie Shepherd of The Washington Post — After his arrest for allegedly storming the U.S. Capitol building and kicking a police officer on Jan. 6, Patrick Montgomery was released from custody and allowed to return to Colorado, with a few stipulations, including that he does not possess any firearms. So federal prosecutors said they were disturbed to learn that Montgomery recently shot and killed a 170-pound mountain lion and then proudly posed for photos with the corpse. Colorado officials say he also broke state laws because he was banned from owning firearms due to an old felony robbery conviction. Now, federal prosecutors have filed a motion to revoke his release and asked a judge to place the 48-year-old on house arrest with a GPS monitor. He could also face new state charges.
D.C. matters
“Miami lawmaker wants American branding on all vaccines sent abroad” via Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — Miami Republican Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar wants the U.S. to be more like China and Russia when it comes to international vaccine distribution. For months, the two U.S. adversaries have sent their own COVID-19 vaccines to countries across the world. China sent millions of doses to Chile, andthe South American country’s 84% vaccination rate per 100 people ranks among the highest in the world. As part of a public relations push, Russia vaccinated the entire microstate of San Marino, which is now offering Russian-made vaccines to tourists in a bid to revive its economy.
Maria Elvira Salazar wants America to follow China’s lead on vaccines. Image via Twitter.
Local notes
First on #FlaPol — “Ken Welch staffs up as St. Pete mayoral primary nears” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — In a sign that his campaign for St. Petersburg Mayor is about to ramp up, former Pinellas County Commissioner Welch is assembling a power squad of Tampa Bay area politicos. In recent days and weeks, Welch has brought on several top-tier consultants and strategists as the August Primary Election draws near. Hires include Stephanie Owens, who is serving as the campaign manager. Owens is a principal for Dolphin Strategies, a firm whose clients include advocacy organizations, government agencies, political candidates, parties, and committees. Kevin O’Hare, a former regional organizing director for U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s 2020 presidential campaign, serves as a field director.
Ken Welch for Mayor staffs up.
“Tampa’s Rome Yard bid process upheld by review officer” via Charlie Frago of the Tampa Bay Times — A disputed bid that has caused a political headache to Mayor Jane Castor has been decided in the city’s favor Monday, as a review officer ruled city officials and appointees did nothing illegal in awarding the contract to a Miami development firm. Castor greeted the news with a statement calling it “monumental” for the city and West Tampa neighborhoods. The Rome Yard, an old city truck lot adjacent to the West River project and the Hillsborough River, was preliminarily awarded to Related in March, pending negotiations between the city and the firm. Tampa-based InVictus Development, LLC, filed a formal protest, charging that a city selection committee member had fouled the process.
“Lawsuit alleges ‘massive’ cover-up, lies in Hialeah police chase and killing of motorist” via David Ovalle of the Miami Herald — Four years ago, Lester Machado led Hialeah police on a car chase that ended when he crashed into a concrete Metrorail column. Six police officers fired a staggering 122 bullets, killing Machado inside his car. The reason for the traffic stop in the first place? The Hialeah cop who tried pulling over Machado said his Honda Accord had a broken tag light. But lawyers for his family now claim that the officer, Teannie Hernandez, lied about the reason for the stop in October 2017. The evidence: When lawyers had the Honda, still in police custody, recently hooked up to a battery, the tag light worked perfectly, according to a newly updated lawsuit filed in federal court.
“Massive development swallows Coral Gables home as city runs roughshod over longtime resident’s property rights” via Francisco Alvarado of Florida Bulldog — The path to Orlando Capote’s front door in Coral Gables is an impassable construction zone that no one can enter, not even his neighborhood mail carrier. On a recent afternoon, cement trucks and excavators clogged the unpaved, rocky terrain along the small stretch of Coconut Grove Drive, where Capote’s two-bedroom home is located. A padlocked chain-link gate and fence separates the construction site and the sidewalk in front of the house, forcing Capote to enter and exit his property through an alley behind his backyard. Capote accuses Coral Gables officials, including Fire Marshal Troy Easley and Fire Chief Marcos de la Rosa, of shutting down the only road with direct access to his front door even though it only benefited a private development.
“Clevelander sues Miami Beach over 2 a.m. alcohol-sales rollback, Ocean Drive closure” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — The Clevelander, one of South Beach’s best-known hotels, sued the city of Miami Beach Monday over what its attorneys called a “series of regulatory attacks” that will soon force the popular entertainment venue to turn down the music and end alcohol sales hours earlier. The historic Ocean Drive hangout is challenging the restrictions on alcohol sales and loud music, along with the city’s closure of Ocean Drive to vehicles and the practice of issuing code warnings that cannot be appealed. The Clevelander filed the lawsuit in Miami-Dade Circuit Court. It seeks a temporary and permanent injunction, along with declaratory relief above $30,000.
The Clevelander is not taking Miami Beach alcohol rollbacks lying down.
“At home on the high seas: Housing costs spawn liveaboard sailboat craze” via Wendy Rhodes of The Palm Beach Post — In a county where the median annual income is less than $33,000, a typical one-bedroom apartment rents for $1,650 per month, and the median price of a home is about $450,000, life on the water has become an attractive and affordable option for some people. But what began as a last resort to homelessness for some, and a way to save money on housing costs for others, has become a preferred lifestyle choice for all. Sailboats can be purchased for the cost of a few month’s rent. Add to that the freedom to drift wherever the wind blows you and having the beauty and serenity of marinas, waterways, and the sea as your constant companion, and the choice becomes an easy one.
“Cameras will combat child abuse in special needs classrooms” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel —Cameras may watch teachers and students in Broward County’s special needs classrooms this fall as part of a state effort to help prevent child abuse. Tucked inside a bill passed by the Legislature that limits when teachers statewide can restrain or seclude a child is a camera requirement that applies only to Broward County. The state plans to create a pilot program where the district will have to install video cameras in classrooms where most students are disabled if a parent makes a written request.
“Grandmother loses custody of granddaughters after asking for help” via Elaine Allen-Emrich of Venice Gondolier — Zsazsa Karajman said her own daughter became addicted to drugs at 12. The 72-year-old grandmother has been the primary caregiver and mother figure to her two granddaughters since 2016, almost all of their lives. They were doing fine, Karajman said, until she asked for a three-day respite to heal from surgery, and state officials removed the children from her home. Caseworkers from the Department of Children and Families and the Safe Children Coalition have monitored custody of the girls since Karajman’s daughter did not legally sign them over to her care in 2016. The girls also have a court-appointed Guardian Ad Litem who speaks for them during court hearings, home visits or other issues.
Top opinion
“DeSantis wagers big on gambling compact” via Joe Henderson of Florida Politics — We’re watching a three-dimensional game of political chess play out in Tallahassee. Proponents of the compact must develop ways that A): ensure the best deal for the state and B): can survive a court challenge. DeSantis invested a huge amount of personal political capital in winning this battle. History is on his side, too. Florida lawmakers are awfully good at ignoring the will of the people if it stands in the way of something they want. Voting rights for ex-felons? Nah. The amendment regulating class sizes in public schools? Nope. Medical marijuana? Delay, deny, nitpick. Buying land for conservation? Nearly 75% of voters approved that amendment in 2014. Lawmakers must have thought they were kidding, though.
Opinions
“The CDC’s mask guidance is a mess. Biden needs to clean it up.” via Leana S. Wen of The Washington Post — Last Thursday’s abruptly announced guidance from the CDC has devolved into a giant mess. Governors and Mayors were caught by surprise, leading to a flurry of rapid changes and a patchwork of disparate regulations across the country. Businesses found themselves scrambling without the tools they need to relax restrictions for the vaccinated while protecting the unvaccinated. While many people happily shed their masks and celebrated the apparent end of the pandemic, others are concerned that with only 37% of the country fully vaccinated, this relaxation is premature and could lead to a resurgence of infections. If such a head-scratching turn of events had occurred under Trump, the administration surely would have been blamed for the lack of coordination and the resulting widespread confusion.
“How compromise with the GOP can serve the country” via Bloomberg Opinion — On May 12, 113 days into his presidency, Biden finally sat down with leaders of the House and Senate: Chuck Schumer, Mitch McConnell, Nancy Pelosi and McCarthy. It’s surprising and disappointing that this took so long to happen. Biden invited the leaders of both parties to the Oval Office to discuss infrastructure, taxes and other issues. He began by saying, “When I ran, I said I wasn’t going to be a Democratic President, I was going to be President for all Americans.” That’s a promise the country needs him to keep. Until now, unfortunately, he has largely left Republicans out in the cold. But building bridges requires cooperation, flexibility and pragmatism, as any engineer will tell you. To succeed, Biden will need to keep showing more of those virtues, and not just on taxes and infrastructure.
“Don’t overlook Democrats’ hard-fought wins for everyday Floridians this Session” via Sen. Lauren Book for the Tallahassee Democrat — Democrats in the Florida Legislature prioritized the real needs of our state, reaching across the aisle to take action and get things done where we could. The Legislative Black Caucus ushered forth a meaningful first step toward ensuring transparency and accountability in policing. I was proud to champion significant reforms to Florida’s child welfare system and effectively prohibit the use of seclusion and unsafe restraint in special education classrooms. As Florida voters head to the ballot box in 2022 and ’24, I urge them to keep these facts in mind: Despite being in the minority, Democrats in the Florida Legislature fought hard to prioritize the needs of everyday people and keep a bevy of bad GOP bills at bay.
On today’s Sunrise
The Special Session on gambling is underway; it’s almost like lawmakers never left town.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Session began with a major concession as the House Speaker announced a controversial provision that could have turned your smartphone into an online casino is gone from the proposed Seminole Compact.
— Some lawmakers are dead set against any expansion of gambling, but an attorney for the Seminole Tribe says Florida can’t afford to pass up this deal.
— The compact passed the Senate Appropriations Committee by a vote of 18 to one. It goes to the Senate floor and then the House floor tomorrow; lawmakers are trying to get out of town by Wednesday.
— The former Seminole County Tax Collector pleads guilty in a federal sex trafficking investigation, promising to cooperate with the feds as their investigation continues. North Florida Congressman Gaetz was not mentioned by name, but an airplane was circling over the courthouse towing a banner that read “tick-tock Matt Gaetz.”
— If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. Orlando Congressman Darren Soto is leading the charge for a bill allowing the government to negotiate Medicare drug prices with Big Pharma.
— And finally, a Florida Man lost his job as a deputy for sending inappropriate text messages to two women he met on the job.
What Mark Kaplan is reading — “Gators planning on full attendance at the Swamp this season” via Matt Baker of the Tampa Bay Times — The Florida Gators are planning on having full attendance this football season at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium. UF said Monday that the school will resume “full in-person participation in athletic and other activities on our campuses, including fan participation in stadiums and arenas.” The news came during an announcement of other changes related to the coronavirus pandemic, including an updated guideline that masks are now optional. Ben Hill Griffin Stadium was limited to 20% capacity (about 17,000 fans) last year. The stadium’s official capacity is 88,548. The announcement will no doubt please coach Dan Mullen, who made headlines last year when he called for UF fans to pack the stadium.
The Swamp may be full this season.
“COVID-19-sniffing dogs, masks, smaller crowds: South Beach food festival prepares for the pandemic” via Carlos Frías of the Miami Herald — Dogs trained to detect COVID-19 symptoms will be sniffing the tens of thousands of guests entering the South Beach Wine & Food Festival, which runs for four days starting on May 20. And a massive staff, including 1,500 Florida International University hospitality students, will be checking temperatures, enforcing masks and continuously sanitizing as they volunteer during a festival that will draw an estimated 20,000 people to South Beach this week. For its 20th anniversary, the festival finds itself re-imagining what hospitality means in a time when the coronavirus continues to be a threat, especially for what is believed to be the largest gathering of people outside of the Super Bowl since the pandemic began.
Happy birthday
Happy birthday to a slew of Florida politicos, including former Rep. Mike Miller, St. Pete City Councilmember Robert Blackmon, Brooke Bustle, Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald, poker savant Trevor Mask, and Michael Wickersheim.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
Unsubscribe Having trouble viewing this email? View in browser
Good morning. Many of you mentioned a small typo in Saturday’s newsletter where we referred to “Home Depot” as “Hope Depot.” Given that m and p are not particularly close to each other on the keyboard, we can only attribute the error to that profound feeling of optimism you get from walking by Kohler’s $6,750 Bluetooth-enabled toilet ($9,750 in black).
Markets: Stocks ticked lower as earnings season draws to a close.Comcast was the top decliner in the S&P 500 after Discovery and AT&T’s WarnerMedia made their merger intentions official.
Covid-19: More retailers are dropping mask mandates. President Biden will send 20 million vaccines abroad by the end of June, including (for the first time) ones that were approved in the US. It’s very much needed: Yesterday, the WHO warned of the “huge disconnect” between the countries with the highest vaccination rates and the rest of the world.
Elon Musk impersonators have scammed investors out of $2+ million worth of cryptocurrency in the last six months, according to the Federal Trade Commission. While crypto scams have been on the rise for months, the unwitting involvement of the “dogefather” himself ties into a growing conversation about Musk’s outsized influence on cryptocurrency.
In the last few months…
Bitcoin prices rose over 15% in February when Tesla said it was investing in bitcoin and taking the cryptocurrency as payment…then tanked 17% this month when Musk tweeted that Tesla was changing course. This past weekend, they fell after he replied to a tweet implying that Tesla may have sold its bitcoin holdings (Musk later said Tesla didn’t).
Dogecoin, too, rose ahead of Musk’s SNL debut, sank 15% after he said it’s “a hustle” on live TV, then soared over 30% last Friday when he tweeted to his 55 million followers that he’s working with dogecoin’s developers.
Is he breaking any rules?
Musk famously crossed the line in 2018 when he tweeted that he had “funding secured” to take Tesla private. He didn’t, and the SEC fined both Tesla and Musk and had him step down as chairman. Tesla lawyers now vet any tweets containing any information “material to the company.”
As for his crypto tweets, Musk is within bounds…for now. “It’s clearly grossly irresponsible, but it may not be illegal,” Better Markets CEO Dennis Kelleher told Reuters.
To break the law, lawyers told Reuters, Musk would need to 1) be using insider information or 2) influencing prices for the purpose of enriching himself or his associates.
Regardless of whether he’s profiting or trolling, Musk’s ability to send the price of an asset worth almost $1 trillion swinging by double-digit percentages is “bizarre and incredible,” Bloomberg’s Matt Levine writes.
While Tesla’s initial embrace of bitcoin was a major stamp of legitimacy for the crypto, the CEO’s comments are now fueling critics’ argument that cryptocurrency is too volatile. “If one person can dramatically alter spending power, the ‘stable store of value’ criteria of a currency is not met,” UBS Chief Economist Paul Donovan wrote.
While we’re here…Michael Burry, the IRL version of Christian Bale’s character in The Big Short, took out a $534 million bet against Tesla in Q1. He’s previously expressed concerns about Tesla’s profitability.
Yesterday, AT&T confirmed reports that it’s spinning off its entertainment division, WarnerMedia, and merging it with Discovery to create a $120+ billion media company spanning news, sports, film, scripted and unscripted programming, and whatever 90 Day Fiancé is.
In other words, Anderson Cooper, Guy Fieri, Harry Potter, Randy Fenoli, and Wonder Woman will all attend the same holiday party next year.
What we know
AT&T shareholders will have a majority stake (71%), and Discovery CEO David Zaslav, who “secretly architected this deal for several months from [his] brownstone in NYC,” will lead it.
As for WarnerMedia CEO Jason Kilar, the NYT reported that Kilar wasn’t told about the deal until recently and has hired a legal team to negotiate his exit.
“The new company will be better after the deal, but it will take time,” Rich Greenfield of LightShed Partners told Reuters. Both WarnerMedia and Discovery are still transitioning away from their dependence on cable, but Zaslav thinks the new company can eventually sign up 400 million streaming customers.
In a study meant to scare you a little, the World Health Organization and International Labour Organization found that working long hours can lead to startling health risks and caused over 745,000 deaths in 2016 alone.
The wildest part of the study? That 2016 part. It doesn’t account for challenges posed by the global pandemic over the last year: frontline workers being exposed to the virus, teleworking blurring work/life balance, and employees picking up tasks from laid off or furloughed coworkers.
Big picture: While only 5% of the US population faces serious levels of overworking, a major portion of people affected by work-related illness are those living in the Western Pacific and Southeast Asian regions, according to the study.
Some Chinese tech employees are still pushing back against the industry’s “996” culture of working 9am–9pm, six days a week.
Bottom line: If you needed a final push to close your laptop while the sun is still out, let this be it: People who work 55+ hours a week have a 35% higher risk of stroke and 17% higher risk of dying from heart disease, says the WHO.
There are people who have their stuff together, and then there’s this guy, who—just judging off his suit and general demeanor—we would trust to manage literally anything in our life.
But reader, we have some info. We think we know what he’s looking at on his tablet: Three “Double Down” Stock Picks for 2021 by the Motley Fool.
That’s right—you don’t have to be wearing a perfectly tailored suit to invest like you’re wearing a perfectly tailored suit.
These potentially market-beating ideas come straight from Motley Fool Stock Advisor, a service whose followers have seen an average return of 555% on their stock picks.
But “Double Down” picks aren’t any old picks. When Motley Fool slaps the “Double Down” label on a pick, you can be sure they mean it. After all, historic “Double Down” picks include early stakes in the likes of Netflix, Amazon, and Apple.
To see the picks, join Motley Fool Stock Advisor right here.
Stat: Every registered thoroughbred horse is a descendant of one of three stallions: the Byerly Turk, the Darley Arabian, and the Godolphin Arabian, who came to England from the Middle East around 1700. This New Yorker piece discusses the cloudy future of the horse racing industry.
Quote: “I couldn’t decide between Chinese or Korean, so it was very helpful.”
When he isn’t sure which cuisine to get for dinner, or what outfit to wear each day, writer Brandon Wong turns to his followers on the social media app NewNew. The app, which is still in beta, is a “human stock market” that allows users to buy shares in creators and vote in polls to help them make decisions, per the BBC.
Sure, Broadway opening up and NYU undergrads giving each other stick-and-pokes on fire escapes are great, but nothing signifies New York City’s return to normalcy more than the MTA’s move yesterday to open subways to their full 24/7 schedule.
The backstory: Last May, Gov. Cuomo shut down the subway system overnight for the first time in its 100+ year history from 1am–5am daily for cleaning, disrupting many essential workers’ commutes.
Public transit systems in cities such as Chicago, DC, and LA were also hit hard during the pandemic. Only about 50% of riders in the US have returned.
MTA officials rang the NYSE bell yesterday to celebrate the opening and rolled out its #TakeTheTrain campaign on Sunday to encourage riders to ditch Uber for the underground lifestyle. But given recent violent subway attacks and a slow return to offices, New Yorkers aren’t necessarily lining up at the turnstiles. Weekday ridership is currently down 63% from before the pandemic.
Looking ahead…Biden’s infrastructure plan, which emphasizes public transit over roads, calls for a $621 billion investment into modernizing transportation networks.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Amazon is considering buying MGM, per The Information.
Monthly advance payments under the expanded child tax credit will hit some Americans’ bank accounts starting July 15, President Biden said yesterday.
The World Economic Forum has called off its special meeting in Singapore in August due to Covid-19 concerns.
The social media app Parler is back on the App Store months after it was kicked off following the Capitol riots in January.
The median price of homes in California topped $800,000 for the first time in April.
SPONSORED BY YIELDSTREET
Don’t put all your eggs in one asset. When you invest with Yieldstreet, your portfolio has the potential to generate returns with alternative investments across multiple asset classes. That means diversification with typically low stock market correlation—aka the kind of investment strategies that used to only be available to institutional investors. Earn up to a $500 bonus when you sign up and fund your Yieldstreet account today.
BREW’S BETS
Tech Tip Tuesday: Learn how to edit your iPhone photos using the TikTok formula. Virality not included.
Movie recs: Someone on Twitter asked, “What is a truly fantastic but totally underrated film that should’ve been a massive hit but not enough people know about?” Peep the replies for great recs.
Help us help you: At this point, we know each other pretty well. But every now and then we like to check in and make sure we’re bringing you advertising that matters to—who else—you. So do us a quick favor (emphasis on quick) and take this short survey.
This month marks 100 years since one of the worst instances of racial violence in US history. In a neighborhood of Tulsa, OK, known as Black Wall Street—a thriving ecosystem of Black-owned businesses—a white mob attacked Black residents, killing hundreds and destroying the district. This week, we’ll be discussing this event and what it means for Black finance today.
To dive in…
1) Watch our TikTok series on what happened 100 years ago.
Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization [is] a challenge to a Mississippi law that prohibits nearly all abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy. [Mississippi’s] law applies even before the fetus is viable — meaning that it is capable of surviving outside the uterus.
…
But, as the Supreme Court has repeatedly affirmed, “a State may not prohibit any woman from making the ultimate decision to terminate her pregnancy before viability.” A conservative federal appeals court struck down the Mississippi law, with even Judge James Ho, a staunch opponent of abortion, conceding that existing Supreme Court precedent “establishes viability as the governing constitutional standard.”
…
Now that the case is before the justices themselves, however, Dobbs gives the Court’s new majority a vehicle it could use to toss out this longstanding rule. The Supreme Court decided to focus on a single question — “Whether all pre-viability prohibitions on elective abortions are unconstitutional.”
How many American families will get the new child tax credit?
The $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan [passed in March] revamped the $2,000 child tax credit, widening its reach and beefing up the amount to $3,600 per child 5 and un…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Congress was officially notified of the proposed sale on May 5. That was nearly a week before hostilities intensified between Israel and Hamas. A group of House Democrats…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLDoes cryptocurrency’s energy footprint affect your desire to use it as a currency?
Yes
46%
No
45%
Unsure
9%
260 votes, 61 comments
Context: Tesla stops accepting Bitcoin due to mining energy footprint.
HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS
“Yes – It’s supposed to be the way of the future… a step forward. At this early in the game, before mass-adoption, we need to make sure it is in fact better on every front, especially energy impact.”
“No – The Petro Dollar (and as a result the value of all other fiat currencies) is responsible for far more CO2 emissions…”
“Unsure – Bitcoin has a huge energy cost and is not set-up to be a useful currency long-term. However, many cr…”
How will AT&T’s deal with Discovery change the digital streaming landscape?
Under the agreement AT&T will unwind its $85 billion acquisition of Time Warner, which closed just under three years ago, and form a new media company with Discovery. AT…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Don’t scroll past. Support credible news for everyone.
What is the basis for a new study on the risks of overwork?
The global study, which the WHO calls the first of its kind, found that in 2016, 488 million people were exposed to the risks of working long hours. People working 55 or more hours each week face an…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
The Associated Press ran a story covering the soon-to-begin trial of Cristhian Bahena Rivera for his murder of Mollie Tibbetts in 2018. AP wrote that Rivera would find it difficult to receive a fair trial – despite his already admitting to the murder – because “he faces a jury likely to be predominantly white, in a state that Trump carried in the 2020 election.” Did any news agency have the same qualms regarding Derek Chauvin?
SAY WHAT? Liz Cheney Endorsed by the Worst Person in the World?
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
Despite all the media attention on Rep. Liz Cheney and a narrative that the GOP is irreparably split, little focus is given to the ever-widening rift in the Democratic Party. As President Biden attempts to usher in a ceasefire, members of his own party are pushing for him to halt the $700 million arms deal with Israel. With members of the squad continuing to rally behind Palestine, can Biden even create unity within his own team?
Expanded funding should grow slowly but over a longer period, to allow for new projects to not only start but also be sustained and to make it possible for new cohorts of researchers to find their places in the scientific community.
The Federal Reserve’s “Financial Stability Report” spans 73 pages but fails to identify the biggest risk to the economy and financial sector: the Federal Reserve’s continued monetary expansion to fund proliferating government spending despite warning signs of rising inflation.
“The Supreme Court on Monday set the stage for a major ruling next year on abortion – one that could upend the Supreme Court’s landmark decisions in Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, in which the court ruled that the Constitution protects the right to have an abortion before a fetus becomes viable. The court granted review in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, a challenge to the constitutionality of a Mississippi law that (with limited exceptions) bars abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy.” SCOTUSblog
The left frames the issue around women’s bodily autonomy, and is alarmed that the Supreme Court will likely weaken legal protections for abortion.
“This action suggests that the conservative majority is no longer interested in gradually eroding abortion rights until they are, in reality, nonexistent. This strategy has guided the anti-abortion movement for decades. It has resulted in laws that shutter abortion clinics under a bogus pretext, compel doctors to read anti-abortion propaganda, force women to undergo ultrasounds and waiting periods, and forbid abortions for specific reasons, like fetal disability…
“After the confirmations of Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett, the conventional wisdom dictated that the Supreme Court would begin to uphold these laws, chipping away at Roe until it became a hollow promise. But the new conservative majority is not waiting for these half-measures to reach the court; with Dobbs, it has gone for the jugular.” Mark Joseph Stern, Slate
“Rather than overruling Roe and Casey, the court might say that viability is no longer a meaningful marker for determining when a state may restrict a woman’s right to choose — a decision that would be as consequential as scuttling Roe itself. It could allow states to restrict access to abortion at any point during pregnancy, sharply curtailing reproductive rights as lower courts reconsider the constitutionality of bans on abortion after 12 weeks, 10 weeks or six weeks of pregnancy…
“It was [Justice Ruth Bader] Ginsburg’s dying wish that the winner of the election name her replacement, perhaps in part because Trump promised to appoint justices who would overrule Roe and the abortion right that Ginsburg viewed as essential to women’s equal citizenship. She was right to worry.” Leah Litman and Melissa Murray, Washington Post
“[If Roe is overturned] women with money who are seeking abortions will be able to travel to states where it is legal. But poor women and teenagers will not be able to do so. For them, it will be like it was before 1973: They will have to choose between an unsafe, back-alley abortion or an unwanted pregnancy… [This] should frighten all who believe that women should have the right to reproductive autonomy.” Erwin Chemerinsky, Los Angeles Times
“Laws that make it difficult to get an abortion always end up disproportionately affecting women of color and lower-income women, who have a difficult time getting to a clinic and paying for an abortion. It’s already an ordeal to get an abortion in Mississippi, given that there is only one clinic. A pregnant woman could run out of time in states with bans of 15 weeks or less just trying to make arrangements to get an abortion…
“Lawyers for the state of Mississippi have argued that the viability threshold ‘constantly moves.’ In fact, since Roe vs. Wade was decided, it has barely changed. Dr. Daniel Grossman, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of California San Francisco, says viability remains at about 24 weeks; survival without severe health problems is rare for fetuses delivered earlier than that…
“When deciding this case, the Supreme Court could send a clear message to state legislatures, once and for all, that a woman has a constitutional right to an abortion before the fetus is viable.” Editorial Board, Los Angeles Times
From the Right
The right frames the issue around the rights of the unborn, and argues that abortion policy should be determined through the democratic process.
“Perhaps the court will take this opportunity to reconsider Roe v. Wade and to see it for what it was—an unwarranted and unwise power grab in which the court crafted a ‘constitutional’ right to abortion out of thin air. Overturning Roe would return abortion policy to the states where it belongs—and to the democratic process in which Americans debate the morality of abortion and their elected state representatives decide what citizens of their state can and cannot do.” Sarah Parshall Perry, Daily Signal“Throwing out Roe would not mean banning abortion. It would not even necessarily mean restricting abortion. Roe is a bad legal decision not because of any moral question related to abortion but because it is bad law. The Constitution does not say anything about abortion one way or the other, and it does not contain any provision that could reasonably be interpreted as mandating abortion rights or prohibiting abortion. The Constitution has no more to say about abortion than it does quantum physics…“Because the Constitution is silent on abortion, a post-Roe order would be established legislatively. Put another way: Post-Roe, the law would be made by the lawmakers. That would probably mean that Oklahoma and Utah will end up with abortion laws that are very different from those of California and New Jersey. As a constitutional matter, that is appropriate — it is, in fact, how things are supposed to be: We have 50 different states for a reason…“The Supreme Court is not supposed to function as an Iranian-style guardian council keeping the state and society within certain moral guardrails. The Supreme Court is there to interpret the law… If the abortion-rights advocates want to have a constitutional right to abortion inserted into the Bill of Rights, we have a constitutional-amendment process for such purposes. Get to work.” Kevin D. Williamson, National Review“Laws like Mississippi’s have broad public support. According to an NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll from 2019, only 29% of Americans think that abortion should generally be allowed after the first three months of pregnancy (13 or so weeks). That broad public support is likely to grow when Americans learn that—according to this Center for Reproductive Rights database—France, Italy, Germany, Spain, Norway, Switzerland, and lots of other European countries have a gestational limit of 14 weeks or earlier.” Ed Whelan, National Review“[At 15 weeks] This is a developing human being who has his or her own unique DNA and one who most likely developed a detectable heartbeat at six weeks of development. At eight weeks, the unborn human’s lungs develop, and two weeks later, the brain and other vital organs are beginning to function, as the Virginia Department of Public Health notes…“Even at 12 weeks, which is still in the first trimester, the unborn human can swallow. At 16 weeks, the unborn human is usually about 4 1/2 inches long and has its own movements inside of the womb (limbs and eyes), according to the Mayo Clinic… The good news: A Supreme Court with a 6-3 conservative majority agreeing to hear the Mississippi case is promising for the pro-life movement… Hopefully, the court does the right thing.” Tom Joyce, Washington Examiner
💻 You’re invited … to our Axios Virtual Event with Dr. Anthony Fauci!
Tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET, Caitlin Owens and I will talk “Vaccines and the Road Ahead” with Dr. Fauci and Dr. Albert Bourla, Pfizer chairman and CEO, and Jim VandeHei talks with PhRMA president and CEO Stephen J. Ubl. Sign up here.
Smart Brevity™ count: 1,184 words … 4½ minutes.
1 big thing: Big media to get a lot bigger
The megamerger of Discovery and AT&T media assets is likely to trigger a chain reaction of other media giants forming ever bigger combinations, Axios Media Trends expert Sara Fischer reports.
Why it matters: Today, we get content from hundreds of sources. But those are increasingly being gobbled up by the same owners — almost a flashback to the days of getting news from three broadcast networks.
Between the lines: In the hours following the announcement of the new media behemoth — a combination of WarnerMedia and Discovery — insiders began to speculate which would be the next big deal.
“I’ve got to think that Comcast has a war room in downtown Philly where they’re all trying to figure this out,” a former WarnerMedia executive tells Axios.
⚡ Breaking: David Zaslav will stay on as Discovery CEO through at least 2027, leading the massive joint venture with WarnerMedia, sources tell Sara. Go deeper.
2. Slow moves to improve police training
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Police departments have ramped up training in the year since George Floyd’s death — but there’s little solid evidence that the programs work, experts and practitioners tell Axios managing editor David Nather.
Why it matters: If the training does have a meaningful impact in steering officers away from deadly confrontations, it could take years.
The programs are designed to deter the use of force in several ways:
De-escalation training teaches police officers how to defuse volatile situations.
Implicit bias training shows officers how hidden biases might affect their actions and suggests ways to counteract them.
Duty-to-intervene training, such as Georgetown Law’s Innovative Policing Program, teaches officers how to step in to prevent a colleague from using inappropriate force.
Between the lines: A fair amount of de-escalation and implicit bias training is already in place, driven by heightened interest after the 2014 shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo.
A new Axios-Ipsos poll found that nearly seven out of 10 Black Americans — 68% — said the police do not look out for people like them well.
That’s a drastically different perception than other groups: 83% of white Americans, 60% of Hispanic Americans, and 61% of Asian Americans all said the police look out for them well.
To stay on the good side of the Chinese authorities, Apple has made decisions that contradict its carefully curated image, the N.Y. Times reports from Guiyang, China, which houses an Apple data center:
Why it matters: Apple has risked the data of Chinese customers, and aided government censorship in the Chinese version of its App Store.
COVID is driving more employers to offer benefits like extra protection against major hospital bills — and even pet insurance, Axios health care editor Tina Reed writes from a survey by Willis Towers Watson.
94% of the 238 employers who responded to the survey indicated they expect voluntary benefits — benefits that are available but largely unsubsidized — to hold great importance over the next three years.
That’s up from 36% in 2018.
Fast-growing benefits: Hospital indemnity coverage, to be offered by 65% of the employers by 2022, and critical illness coverage (76%).
The Middle East conflict is a new test of social-media companies’ ability to manage their platforms, Axios’ Sara Fischer and Ashley Gold write.
Why it matters: Social media has become a much larger part of our everyday lives and media diets since the 2014 war in Gaza.
The fighting is coming directly to our phones and screens as activism spikes. Some users are finding posts removed or accounts frozen.
Videos of Israel’s “Iron Dome” air defense intercepting rockets from Gaza circulate daily.
A spokesman for Israel’s prime minister tweeted a video last week purporting to show Palestinians launching rockets in a civilian area of Gaza — but the video was actually from 2018 and located elsewhere, the N.Y. Times reported (subscription).
New data from Zignal Labs provided to Axios shows online support for both sides spiked dramatically over the past week.
That includes a spike in use of the hashtags #freepalestine and #savepalestine, according to the Zignal data.
⚾ Fenway Park will allow full capacity (37,731) beginning May 29.
The 50th runningof the New York City Marathon will be on the customary day — the first Sunday in November — but with 33,000 entrants instead of the usual 55,000.
Race director Ted Metellus (via N.Y. Times): “It’s the North Star. It’s the thing that says we’re back.”
House GOP leaders today will hold a “Tax Camp” — a “tax teach-in” to show newer members “how tax reform helped blue-collar workers,” and how to oppose President Biden’s plans, Axios’ Alayna Treene reports.
Why it matters: It’s an early messaging sign for midterms next year, when Republicans are optimistic about regaining the House.
Also today, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen will be at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce — making the opposite case to business leaders.
She’ll urge them to support President Biden’s $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan, Axios’ Hans Nichols scooped in Sneak Peek.
8. 🎞️ What Hollywood is reading
Amazon is in talks to acquire the iconic MGM studio for $9 billion, Variety reports:
MGM is known to be for sale, and chatter has circulated for some time that Amazon (and other tech giants) have been sniffing around.
“In a sign Amazon has upped its focus on entertainment, last week the company announced that it had tapped Jeff Blackburn, a former high-ranking executive who recently exited the ecommerce giant, to return to Amazon in a new role overseeing a consolidated global media and entertainment group.”
9. NASA next: A flying telescope
Photo illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios. Photo: QAI Publishing/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
The high-price James Webb Space Telescope is close to launch, Axios Space author Miriam Kramer writes.
The Webb is in the final stages of testing in the U.S., then will be shipped to French Guiana for launch at the end of October.
Why it matters: NASA’s Webb could transform space science, revealing the light of never-before-seen galaxies and stars. But there have been delays and billions of dollars in budget overruns.
The projectiles failed to even enter Israeli territory, and Israeli artillery immediately responded, but it raises the specter of a new front opening in the conflict.
For decades, conservatives have been chasing the goal of overturning Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court’s 1973 decision legalizing abortion, while liberals have been warning it could be as few as one Republican-appointed justice away from disappearing.
Democratic New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand’s yearslong effort to overhaul military sexual assault policies reached a significant milestone last week: filibuster-proof support from more than 60 senators plus growing support in the House, marking rare bipartisan and bicameral agreement that puts the legislation on track for passage.
Companies are now encountering difficulties with finding workers as the coronavirus pandemic wanes, and some economists think the hefty federal unemployment expansion may be a big part of the problem.
Venezuelan migrants fleeing political repression and dire economic circumstances are increasingly traveling to the United States’s southern border, and nearly all are being admitted under the Biden administration.
Soon after President Joe Biden was pictured visiting former President Jimmy Carter, he began fielding charges that his administration had resurrected the worst of the Georgia Democrat’s time in office.
The world must immediately stop investing in new oil and gas projects in order to eliminate greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, the International Energy Agency said in a new report.
Members of an audit team in Windham, New Hampshire, are finding more discrepancies in the 2020 election results in the state and suspect folds in ballots could be to blame.
Lawyers for Rudy Giuliani urged a federal judge to order federal prosecutors to reveal the government’s justifications behind search warrants in an investigation into the former New York City mayor’s foreign business dealings.
You received this email because you are subscribed to Examiner Today from The Washington Examiner.
Update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive.We respect your right to privacy – View our Policy
Unsubscribe
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
March 19, 2021
View in browser
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) — Israel carried out a wave of airstrikes on what it said were militant targets in Gaza, leveling a six-story building, and militants fired dozens of rockets into Israel on Tuesday. Palestinians across the region observed a…Read More
President Joe Biden expressed support for a cease-fire between Israel and Gaza’s militant Hamas rulers in a call to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but he stopped short of demanding an immediate stop to the eight days of Israeli airstrikes…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — In agreeing to hear a potentially groundbreaking abortion case, the Supreme Court has energized activists on both sides of the long-running debate who are now girding to make abortion access a major issue in next year’s midterm elec…Read More
NEW DELHI (AP) — India’s total virus cases since the pandemic began swept past 25 million on Tuesday as the country registered more than 260,000 new cases and a record 4,329 fatalities in the past 24 hours. …Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Colorado Rep. Jason Crow, a former Army Ranger who served three tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, says it took time for him to stop constantly scanning his environment for threats when he returned from war 15 years ago. …Read More
JERUSALEM (AP) — A week into their fourth war, Israel and the Hamas militant group already face allegations of possible war crimes in Gaza. Israel says Hamas is using Palest…Read More
NAGURSKOYE, Russia (AP) — During the Cold War, Russia’s Nagurskoye airbase was little more than a runway, a weather station and a communications outpost in the Franz Josef L…Read More
BANGKOK (AP) — The Thai affiliate of Paris-based insurance company AXA said Tuesday it is investigating a ransomware attack by Russian-speaking cybercriminals that has affec…Read More
CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Australia’s oldest-ever man has included eating chicken brains among his secrets to living more than 111 years. Retired cattle rancher Dexter Krug…Read More
“There are only two forces that can carry light to all the corners of the globe … the sun in the heavens and The Associated Press down here.”
Mark Twain
GET THE APP
Download the AP News app to get breaking news alerts from AP on your phone, tablet or watch.
Hertz Global’s decision to choose new sponsors for its bankruptcy exit plan didn’t come easy — or fast. It came after extensive back-and-forth wrangling with two worthy private investment groups at a closed-door auction last week.
Good morning, Chicago. Yesterday we saw some positive news on the coronavirus front. Illinois recorded under 1,000 daily cases of COVID-19 for the first time since mid-March, with 946 new cases. Officials also reported that six Illinoisans died from the coronavirus, which is the lowest number since the end of March. Vaccination numbers, on the other hand, have continued to decline with 32,253 doses of the vaccine administered statewide Sunday.
Meanwhile, get ready for summer heat. this week. The National Weather Service said that after a few rainy days this week, we should expect temperatures in the mid-80s starting Thursday.
And speaking of summertime, after a year of canceled festivities due to the coronavirus, Chicago will see some of its favorite events return, including Pitchfork Music Festival, which organizers said is coming back in September with a female-powered lineup.
— Nicole Stock, audience editor
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
Fully vaccinated people in Illinois will no longer be required to wear face coverings in most situations under new rules Gov. J.B. Pritzker issued Monday, putting the state in line with new federal guidance that caught many by surprise last week.
The change to the state mask mandate that went into effect more than a year ago comes after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention put out new guidelines Thursday that said people who are two weeks past their final coronavirus vaccine dose can safely resume most of their pre-pandemic activities without wearing a mask.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker plans to end his statewide moratorium on evictions this summer as Illinois receives $1.1 billion in federal aid to help landlords whose tenants are behind on their rent due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Child tax credit: Most US parents will get monthly checks of $250 or $300 per child, starting in July
The resolution cites rapid testing programs and vaccines already received by many school employees and students 12 and older, along with ongoing trials in younger children. The resolution also references studies supporting in-person learning for more positive academic outcomes and mental health.
When COVID-19 hit, study abroad students studying abroad scrambled to get home. Will those programs resume this year? Some schools say there’s still too much uncertainty.
The voice Cubs fans will hear on the PA system at Wrigley Field from now on? That would be 21-year-old Jeremiah Paprocki. The first-semester college senior is the first Black person to fill the role. Paprocki also is younger than anyone on the Cubs’ current roster.
“It’s been a dream of mine since I was a kid,” Paprocki said.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker followed the lead of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday, issuing an updated executive order removing his mask and social distancing mandates — in most settings — for those who are fully vaccinated.
The state’s department of public health also removed its emergency rules on social distancing for fully vaccinated people. Rachel Hinton has the full story…
Reese and others were confronted by a man while they were inside a stolen car. Another person then appeared and opened fire. The motive of the shooter was unclear.
The Black Caucus joins the City Council’s Hispanic and Progressive caucuses in supporting the plan. Mayor Lori Lightfoot opposes it, but Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa said the three caucuses provide enough votes to override a veto.
Asked about his face covering at an unrelated news conference on Monday, Pritzker said he thinks all residents “are going to have to adjust to the idea” of not needing to wear a mask. “I have to think about it a little more, I must admit,” Pritzker said.
The rental assistance program is expected to provide about 120,000 renters some relief. Struggling homeowners will also be able to tap into $400 million in mortgage assistance starting later in the summer, Pritzker said.
Illinoisans collecting unemployment insurance receive an extra $300 a week from the federal government, intended to help them through the pandemic. So far, 18 Republican governors have said they will not allow the extra benefits. Two Illinois Republicans say Pritzker shouldn’t, either.
More than 64% of people in the state have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, with about 61,275 doses going into arms for the state’s seven-day rolling average.
A GoFundMe has been launched to help the families of Inmer Rivera Tejada, 39; Rafael Rivera Tejada, 36; and their nephew Guillermo Rivera Tejada, who died in the blast.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Tuesday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 585,970; Tuesday, 586,359.
The Supreme Court next year will render what could be a seismic decision about a constitutional right to abortion, a prospect raised on Monday that cheered opponents of Roe v. Wade and disturbed abortion rights advocates who fear the intentions of the court’s conservative majority.
The court’s agreement in an unsigned order on Monday to take up a dispute over a Mississippi law that bans virtually all abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy immediately animated partisans on both sides. With attention firmly on next year’s midterm elections and the White House after 2024, the prospect of a Supreme Court decision that could curtail or overturn abortion rights is also expected to revive debate about the size of the Supreme Court and its rightward-leaning 6-3 majority (The Hill).
On Capitol Hill, progressive Democrats wasted no time weighing in. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said Congress could legislate abortion rights. “This shouldn’t just be up to the Supreme Court,” she tweeted. “Congress can — and must — pass a law to protect the right to a safe and legal abortion, no matter what Trump’s justices say. … Congress must step up to enshrine Roe into federal law.”
President Biden is “committed to codifying” in law the landmark 1973 right to abortion affirmed by Roe v. Wade, regardless of the debate about the Mississippi state law, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said (The Hill and CBS News).
Ohio Rep. Tim Ryan (D), who is running for the Senate, echoed the calls within his party to seek action in Congress. “The fact that #SCOTUS is reviewing this extreme abortion ban underscores the urgent need for us to pass laws that protect this fundamental right,” he tweeted.
The odds of such legislation getting through the current 50-50 Senate are seen as nearly nil.
Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) tweeted that the Monday announcement was the “biggest threat to Roe v. Wade in 30 years. The justices cannot turn back the clock on reproductive freedom.”
Republican Sen. James Lankford of Oklahoma called the Supreme Court decision to take up the Mississippi case “a huge step forward in the work that has been done over decades to protect the life of every child starting in the womb.”
In Georgia, former Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R), who has left the door open to running again after losing her seat in a special election this year, hailed the court’s agreement to hear the Mississippi case as “great news! The Supreme Court will finally have the opportunity to overturn Roe v. Wade and restore the right to life in our country.”
The Mississippi law seeks to ban most abortions about two months earlier than allowed in Roe and subsequent decisions and is seen by both sides of the abortion debate as potentially pivotal in establishing how aggressively the court’s majority will move to place new constraints on abortion (The New York Times). The case, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, probably will be argued in the fall, with a decision likely in the spring of 2022 during the campaign for congressional midterm elections (The Associated Press and SCOTUSblog).
“Yes, this will energize anti-choice crusaders, but in reality public opinion is against them,” Democratic strategist Cole Leiter told the Morning Report. “If you thought the Women’s March lit the match for the 2018 midterms, buckle up.”
Abortion rights advocacy organizations on Monday used the kind of rhetoric that often appears in fundraising entreaties. The National Abortion Rights Action League warned that “it doesn’t get scarier than this,” and the Planned Parenthood Advocacy Fund of Massachusetts tweeted, “Let’s be explicit: anti-abortion extremists made it clear that this was the goal all along. It’s why they couldn’t wait to rush Amy Coney Barrett onto the Supreme Court before the November election. Keep your hands off of our health care.”
Fifty percent of Americans believe abortion should be legal only under certain circumstances. About 29 percent believe it should be legal under any circumstances. Just 20 percent, according to Gallup, favor making abortion illegal under all circumstances.
Abortion rates have continued to fall in the United States since 2011, but abortion restrictions were not the main driver, according to a report by the Guttmacher Institute, which supports women’s reproductive rights.
> More in the court: Why Justice Stephen Breyer, 82, may resist calls for his retirement: The justice, who has served on the court for nearly 27 years, “has been particularly adamant that politics plays no role in judges’ work, and he recently suggested that it should also not figure into their decisions about when to retire,” reports The New York Times’s Adam Liptak. … The court on Monday also backed a bid by major players in the oil and gas industry to undo a lower court’s decision that kept the city of Baltimore’s lawsuit against them in state court. Justices ruled 7-1 that the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals erred in its decision that it lacked jurisdiction to consider certain grounds from the companies for bringing the case into federal court. Justice Sonia Sotomayor was the dissenting vote (The Hill).
More D.C. discord: Progressive efforts to beef up voting rights in Congress face major stumbling blocks as GOP state legislatures propose new restrictions around the country. In a letter to senators, Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) called on lawmakers of all stripes to throw their weight behind strengthening the 1965 Voting Rights Act instead of enacting the For the People Act, a sweeping package that would overhaul elections. But Republicans are balking at supporting even that, with nearly half of Republicans saying the party’s strategy for future elections should be changing voting laws (The Hill). … After months of mostly keeping his head down and being a team player, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is speaking up (The Hill).
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
The internet has changed a lot since 1996 — internet regulations should too
– Protecting people’s privacy
– Enabling safe and easy data portability between platforms
– Preventing election interference
– Reforming Section 230
LEADING THE DAY
ADMINISTRATION & MIDEAST: Today, Israel carried out a wave of airstrikes on what it said were militant targets in Gaza, leveling a six-story building, and militants fired dozens of rockets into Israel as war, now in its second week, shows no signs of abating. Palestinians across the region observed a general strike (The Associated Press).
The toll: At least 212 Palestinians have been killed to date, including 61 children and 36 women, with more than 1,400 people wounded, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which does not separately categorize fighters and civilians. Ten people in Israel, including a 5-year-old boy and a soldier, have been killed in the ongoing rocket attacks launched from civilian areas in Gaza toward civilian areas in Israel, according to news accounts.
On Monday, the White House said Biden expressed “support” in principle for a cease-fire in a call to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The president’s action and emphasis on civilian casualties signaled U.S. concern for an end to Israel’s part of hostilities with Hamas, although it fell short of joining growing Democratic demands for an immediate cease-fire. Biden’s intention is to show support for Israel’s right to defend itself from Hamas (The Associated Press and The Hill).
An Israeli official told Axios that the Biden administration had not given Israel a deadline for reaching a cease-fire but had been stressing on Monday that it was reaching the end of its ability to hold back international pressure on Israel over the Gaza operation. “The overall message was that they support us but want this to end,” the Israeli official said. The U.S. has blocked at least three attempts at the United Nations Security Council to release a statement on the situation in Gaza.
Hours before the release of the White House statement, Secretary of State Antony Blinken signaled that the Biden administration would continue to urge a de-escalation of violence but would stop short of wading into the international diplomatic drive underway to try to negotiate peace.
“In all of these engagements we have made clear that we are prepared to lend our support and good offices to the parties should they seek a cease-fire,” he said.
Biden faces pressure from the U.N. Security Council, some Democrats in Congress and others who want him and other international leaders to get more involved in forging an immediate diplomatic end to the worst Israeli-Palestinian violence in years and revive long-collapsed mediation for a lasting peace (The Associated Press).
The New York Times: Diplomatic efforts appear stalled. Thus far, Israel has resisted efforts by Egypt, Qatar and the United States to broker a cease-fire. And Hamas has continued its rocket fire into Israel.
While traveling in Copenhagen during a tour of Nordic countries, Blinken spoke again on Monday with Israeli Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi.
The Hill’s Laura Kelly reports that the U.S. approach to the situation in Gaza is frustrating close allies and leading to criticism from some of Israel’s staunchest defenders on Capitol Hill.
Blinken also said on Monday that he has yet to see evidence of intelligence related to Israel’s destruction of a 12-story building in Gaza used as a media bureau by The Associated Press, Al Jazeera and other outlets. Israeli military forces say they destroyed the building after giving occupants an hour’s notice because it claimed Hamas operated there (The Associated Press).
> Steel tariffs: The United States and the European Union (EU) on Monday temporarily suspended tariffs in an ongoing steel dispute as Biden pursues better trading relations with allies. The decision comes in time for Biden’s visit to EU headquarters in mid-June to discuss a new relationship following the bloc’s difficult relationship with former President Trump (The Associated Press).
> Child tax credit: On Monday, the IRS announced the first monthly payment of the expanded child tax credit from the COVID-19 relief law will be sent to 39 million households beginning on July 15, benefiting more than 88 percent of children in the United States. The White House used the phrase “Bidenomics” to describe the administration’s economic and taxation policies.
> Biden and Vice President Harris tax returns: In another contrast with his predecessor, Biden released copies of his tax filings on Monday showing adjusted gross income of $607,336, along with his wife, Jill Biden,HERE. The vice president’s returns showed adjusted gross income of nearly $1.7 million in 2020 with her husband, Doug Emhoff, an attorney, HERE.
*****
CORONAVIRUS: Confusion continued to set in Monday as states and municipalities attempted to sort out mask recommendations days after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued guidance allowing fully vaccinated individuals to not wear masks in most settings.
As The Hill’s Justine Coleman notes, a range of experts and groups, including National Nurses United, have questioned rolling back the mask rules for vaccinated people and believe it could jeopardize the country’s recovery. However, the administration has thrown its weight behind the new guidance, saying that it reflects the vaccines’ effectiveness and signals a step toward normalcy.
“The CDC director promised the American people that she would convey the latest science to them as she knew it, that she would not delay, that she would not be impacted by politics or influenced by political pressure on the White House or elsewhere,” Psaki said. “And that’s exactly what she did.”
In response, a number of states and entities rolled back their rules on Monday. Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) changed the District’s guidance to largely reflect the CDC’s updates.
According to the mayor, fully vaccinated people in the nation’s capital must wear a mask or practice social distancing only in settings where doing so is required, including in businesses that mandate masks, taxis and rideshares, schools, health care settings, and homeless shelters. District residents and commuters will also have to continue wearing masks on the Metro and on buses (The Hill).
In Massachusetts, Gov. Charlie Baker (R) announced that all remaining COVID-19 restrictions in the commonwealth will be lifted on May 29 ahead of Memorial Day weekend. The order also rescinds Massachusetts’s face covering order (The Hill).
However, the same cannot be said for California, as Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) has delayed lifting the Golden State’s mask mandate until mid-June (The Hill).
The Hill: Mask mandate lifted for vaccinated people in national parks, federal buildings.
The New York Times: They’re vaccinated and keeping their masks on, maybe forever.
The Hill: Senators shed masks after CDC changes guidance.
Mediaite: Scott Gottlieb, former Food and Drug Administration commissioner, predicts the disappearance of masks within weeks: “Nobody is going to be wearing” them.
> Vaccines: Biden on Monday announced that the U.S. will share an additional 20 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines that have been approved domestically with the rest of the world by the end of June.
According to Biden, doses of the Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech or Johnson & Johnson vaccine will be shared amid calls for the administration to help nations that have struggled to inoculate their citizens. The decision is on top of a commitment by the Biden administration to ship out 60 million doses of AstraZeneca’s jab as it is cleared by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). It is not known how long it will take for the FDA to declare the AstraZeneca vaccine safe.
“We know America will never be fully safe until the pandemic that’s raging globally is under control,” Biden said during a White House address. “No ocean’s wide enough, no wall is high enough, to keep us safe” (The Hill).
As for the situation in the U.S., the national map of vaccinations closely resembles an electoral map as most Democratic-leaning states are administering shots at a level well above the national average, while states that vote Republican in presidential contests are bringing up the rear.
As The Hill’s Peter Sullivan writes, the politics surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic have consistently been partisan, with polls showing that conservatives and Republicans, particularly men, are the most hesitant to get vaccinated. The data bears this out as the jab rates in states offer insight into the national political winds.
Making up the top states for vaccination rates are New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Hawaii and Connecticut. Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Wyoming and Idaho make up the bottom of the list. Some swing states offer surprises, with Pennsylvania boasting a vaccination rate of 55 percent and Georgia and Arizona, both of which supported Biden, checking in at 44 and 37 percent, respectively.
Axios: Vaccine-hesitant Americans cite inaccurate side effects.
CNBC: COVID-19 variant from India could become dominant in the UK “in a matter of days,” posing unknown dangers.
The Associated Press: India reports record day of virus deaths as cases level off.
> Sports: The New York City Marathon is returning this fall with a smaller field (The Hill)… In Japan, the Tokyo Olympics scheduled for July-August face pressure from the Japanese people, including Japanese doctors, who would like to cancel the competitions because of fears of COVID-19 transmission. The International Olympic Committee says it expects the Olympics to proceed (Yahoo Sports).
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
POLITICS: Joel Greenberg, an associate of Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), pleaded guilty to six federal crimes on Monday, including sex trafficking of a minor, and has entered into a plea deal with prosecutors and is cooperating in the Justice Department’s investigation into the Florida congressman.
Greenberg, a former Seminole County, Fla., tax collector, is at the center of the legal investigation looking into Gaetz and allegations against him involving sex crimes. As part of his plea deal, Greenberg admitted that he recruited women for commercial sex acts and paid them more than $70,000 between 2016 and 2018, including sending money through Venmo. Greenberg had been facing 33 federal criminal charges before the plea agreement.
The attention now turns to Gaetz, who has maintained that he has committed no wrongdoing. In a statement to The Hill, a Gaetz spokesperson said, “Joel Greenberg has now confessed to falsely accusing an innocent man of having sex with a minor” (The Hill).
> Trump watch: Trump is slated to address the North Carolina state GOP convention next month amid Republican preparations for the midterm elections and as the former president continues to float a possible 2024 bid.
Trump will address the convention dinner on June 5 in Greenville (The Hill). News of the appearance comes as he gears up to become more active and boost the political hopes of GOP allies while concurrently kicking around a potential third White House run. As Brett Samuels and Morgan Chalfant write, the 45th president is expected to soon resume his signature rallies and hold his first fundraiser for his new super PAC.
The Washington Post: “Our democracy is imperiled”: Maricopa County officials decry 2020 recount as a sham and call on Arizona Republicans to end the process.
The Hill: Democrats look to rebuild party structure with midterms in mind.
> Primary bids: Arizona State Treasurer Kimberly Yee (R) on Monday launched her campaign for governor to replace Gov. Doug Ducey (R), who is term-limited. Yee was elected as treasurer in 2018 and previously served as majority leader for the Arizona state Senate (The Hill). … In Georgia, Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan (R) announced that he will not run for reelection next year, due in large part to his rebukes of the former president’s false claims of a rigged election in the Peach State last year (The Hill). … Finally, former Rep. Lou Barletta (Pa.) kicked off his bid to retake the Pennsylvania governorship on Monday, becoming the highest-profile Republican to formally announce a bid for the post. Barletta lost the state’s Senate contest to Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) in 2018 by 13 points, having been accused of running a lazy campaign that was plagued by poor fundraising. Barletta is running to replace term-limited Gov. Tom Wolf (D) (The Hill).
OPINIONS
Biden hits choppy waters, by Niall Stanage, associate editor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2RrLDcz
The Trumpy right is violating everything our children are taught, by Dana Milbank, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/2S234QS
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Why 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 10 a.m. to consider nine bills, including the Senate-passed anti-Asian American hate crimes bill and reauthorization of State Department operations for fiscal 2022. The House Foreign Affairs Committee hears testimony at 10 a.m. about U.S. strategy in Afghanistan from witnesses with the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development.
TheSenate will convene at 10 a.m. and resume consideration of the Endless Frontier Act aimed at helping the United States compete with China through technology and research.
The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9 a.m. Biden will travel to Dearborn, Mich., to speak at 1:40 p.m. at the Ford Rouge Electric Vehicle Center before returning to the White House this evening.
Blinken is in Reykjavik, Iceland, where he will meet with President Gudni Johannesson, Prime Minister Katrin Jakobsdottir and Foreign Minister Gudlaugur Thordarsonand and participate in the May 19-20 Arctic Council Ministerial. The secretary will also tour Keflavik Air Base.
Emhoff will travel to Annapolis, Md., to meet with small business owners.
The White House coronavirus response team will brief reporters at 10:15 a.m.
Economic indicator: The Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development at 8:30 a.m. will jointly report housing starts for April. Analysts think there could be a small retreat in the housing boom after March set a 15-year high.
➔ MORE INTERNATIONAL: Pope Francismet on Monday at the Vatican with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif (Republic World/AP Television News). … Japan’s economy slumped back into decline during the first quarter of the year, blamed on declining consumer spending during the pandemic (Reuters). … Hong Kong’s government on Tuesday suspended operations at its representative office in Taiwan in a sign of escalating diplomatic tension between the global financial hub and the democratically ruled island that Beijing claims (Reuters).
➔ MEDIA MERGER: AT&T and Discovery Communications on Monday announced a $43 billion deal to bring one of Hollywood’s biggest studios and Discovery’s channels under the same ownership. The goal for the newly merged company is to offer a wider array of material than either can offer on its own to compete with Netflix, Amazon and Disney in the widely acknowledged top tier of streamers (The Associated Press). AT&T owns CNN, HBO and Warner Bros. after acquiring many brands in a $108.7 billion purchase of Time Warner in 2018. The deal would mark the entry of another player into a crowded market. “This is a streaming arms race and AT&T is making an offensive strategic move to further bulk up its content in the battle versus Netflix, Disney and Amazon,” Dan Ives from Wedbush Securities told the BBC.
➔ SPACE: For some Americans, the U.S. Space Force is little more than a punchline on Twitter or a Netflix satire with middling reviews. Retired Col. Bill Woolf is hoping the Space Force Association can help change that. “If the only thing that folks have to reference are late night comedians or a Netflix series, then that’s a problem,” Woolf, president and founder of the association, said in a recent interview with The Hill.
➔ HORSE RACING: Bob Baffert, the head trainer for Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit, was suspended from Belmont Park and Saratoga Race Course on Monday, meaning not only is he not allowed on the grounds of either location, but he will not be able to enter his horses at the tracks. The ruling means Medina Spirit, who failed a drug test after the Kentucky Derby but was able to compete in the Preakness Stakes on Saturday, will not be able to compete in the third leg of the Triple Crown races on June 5 or at either track throughout the summer (The New York Times).
THE CLOSER
And finally … Spectacular water views, solitude with nature, historic properties at no charge to new owners!
The General Services Administration (GSA) is offloading four picturesque lighthouses the Coast Guard no longer needs, searching for interest among entities that might be willing to adapt the structures for new uses. The GSA has in mind other federal, state and local agencies; nonprofit organizations; educational and community development agencies, or groups devoted to parks, recreation, culture or historic preservation.
The buildings in question are Beavertail Lighthouse in Jamestown, R.I., which is the country’s third-oldest lighthouse and was established on the site in 1749 before the current granite tower was erected in 1856. The views of Narragansett Bay are breathtaking. Then there’s Watch Hill Light in Westerly, R.I., not far from Taylor Swift’s beachside mansion. Also on the list: Cleveland Harbor West Pierhead Light in Ohio, and Duluth Harbor NorthPierhead Light in Minnesota (The Associated Press).
The government is asking interested groups to formally apply by mid-July (see details for Beavertail Lighthouse HERE.) The National Park Service reviews the applications.
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!
TO VIEW PAST EDITIONS OF THE HILL’S MORNING REPORT CLICK HERE
TO RECEIVE THE HILL’S MORNING REPORT IN YOUR INBOX SIGN UP HERE
OK, but instead of calling it ‘The Jan. 6 Commission’, what if we called it ‘The Commission to Investigate Jan. 6’:
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said this morning that he does not support the bipartisan commission to investigate the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. https://bit.ly/3opHQsi
McCarthy’s reasoning: “Given the political misdirections that have marred this process, given the now duplicative and potentially counterproductive nature of this effort, and given the Speaker’s shortsighted scope that does not examine interrelated forms of political violence in America, I cannot support this legislation.”
What McCarthy would like — the commission to investigate all political violence, just not Jan. 6: McCarthy wants the commission to probe “the ‘political violence’ in American cities, the 2017 shooting at a Republican congressional baseball practice or the fatal attack on Capitol Police on April 2.”
Why this matters: While Democrats likely have the votes to pass a commission in the House, they will need the support of at least 10 Republicans to pass the bill in the Senate. McCarthy’s opposition will make this trickier. https://bit.ly/3opHQsi
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
The internet has changed a lot since 1996 — internet regulations should too
– Protecting people’s privacy
– Enabling safe and easy data portability between platforms
– Preventing election interference
– Reforming Section 230
It’s Tuesday! I’m Cate Martel with a quick recap of the morning and what’s coming up. Send comments, story ideas and events for our radar to cmartel@thehill.com — and follow along on Twitter @CateMartel and Facebook.
Did someone forward this to you? Want your own copy? Sign up here to receive The Hill’s 12:30 Report in your inbox daily: http://bit.ly/2kjMNnn
IN THE WHITE HOUSE
And this brings us to the conclusion of the honeymoon phase:
Via The Hill’s Niall Stanage, “President Biden is enjoying strong approval ratings but faces a troubling stretch ahead as he approaches his four-month mark in office.” https://bit.ly/2S5gEmJ
Well, when you put it that way…: “Inflation ticked up rapidly in April. Job numbers disappointed. Israel and the Palestinians are in a de facto state of war. And, as if all that were not enough, other issues including immigration and the culture war are simmering.”
Let’s play, electoral map or vaccination rate map:
Via The Hill’s Peter Sullivan, “The U.S. vaccine map looks a lot like a map of how states vote in presidential elections, with most blue states vaccinating at levels well above the national average and GOP states bringing up the rear.” https://bit.ly/2SZrOK9
The states with the highest vaccination rates: “The deep-blue state of Vermont has the highest share of its population with at least one vaccine dose, at 65 percent, according to data compiled by The New York Times, followed by Massachusetts, Hawaii, New Hampshire and Connecticut.”
The states with the lowest vaccination rates: “The state with the lowest vaccination rate, Mississippi, at 32 percent, is deeply red, as are the other four states that round out the bottom five: Louisiana, Alabama, Wyoming and Idaho.”
Total number of vaccinations administered in the U.S.: 274 million shots have been given. Seven-day average of doses administered: An average of 1.83 million doses For context: The U.S. population is roughly 331 million. Breakdown of the numbers:https://bloom.bg/3iVTPLH
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Why 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.
Via The Hill’s Reid Wilson, “Republican state legislators see this year’s decennial redistricting process as a prime opportunity to gain House seats in next year’s midterms — with some believing those gains alone can help the GOP take back the majority.” https://bit.ly/2RuCmAz
What’s happening: “Legislators are preparing for the most public redistricting process in American history. Both Democrats and Republicans stand ready to accuse each other of radical gerrymandering, while advances in technology give each side the chance to draw ideal districts that are both pleasing to the eye and politically favorable.”
I got my mind on the midterms, and the midterms on my mind:
Via The Hill’s Max Greenwood, The Democratic National Committee and its state counterparts are restructuring how funds are shared with state parties that are struggling. https://bit.ly/3v3u94Q
Why you should care: The aid could help rebuild struggling state Democratic parties. Dems are hoping the restructure could help them ahead of the midterms.
‘Time for the recount to go bye-bye’:
Via The Washington Post’s Rosalind S. Helderman, “The Republican-dominated Maricopa County Board of Supervisors on Monday denounced an ongoing audit of the 2020 election vote as a ‘sham’ and a ‘con,’ calling on the GOP-led state Senate to end the controversial recount that has been championed by former president DonaldTrump.” The full story: https://wapo.st/3oq2B76
Watch: https://bit.ly/2SY6qF8 My favorite reaction: “The CDC recommends keeping both hands on your bicycle, even if fully vaccinated.” (Via NBC’s Gary Grumbach) https://bit.ly/3flE0wg
The House and Senate are in. President Biden is in Michigan today. 9 a.m. EDT: President Biden received the President’s Daily Brief. 10 a.m. EDT: President Biden left for Detroit.Video of Biden departing on Marine One: https://bit.ly/3tXaWAv 12:30 – 2:15 p.m. EDT: Senators meet for weekly caucus meetings.
The Senate’s full agenda today: https://bit.ly/3wgEsTq 12:45 p.m. EDT: President Biden tours the Ford Rouge Electric Vehicle Center in Dearborn, Mich. 4:30 – 6:30 p.m. EDT: First and last votes in the House.
Two years ago, House Democrats focused on one lawsuit that could pave the way for Congress to more easily and quickly enforce congressional subpoenas in court. But that House Judiciary push is now poised to fizzle out in a way that does little to bolster congressional oversight and may have actually weakened it, legal experts say. Read more…
Top Democrats argue that voters would prefer tax increases on a small group of wealthy individuals and corporations to pay for infrastructure spending over broad-based “user fees” that would take a bigger chunk out of lower-income voters’ wallets. Read more…
Security researchers studying ransomware attacks and criminal gangs say the operations are mimicking multilevel marketing programs, the most well-known of which is the Tupperware party that began in the 1950s as an informal network of housewives who sold plastic storage boxes to friends and family. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Rep. Steve Stivers, who retired Sunday after a decade in the House, thought about running for Ohio’s open Senate seat but is heading to the Ohio Chamber of Commerce instead. Heard on the Hill asked him about that, whether nice guys finish last in today’s hyperpartisan politics and where the GOP should go from here. Read more…
President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden jointly paid $157,414 in federal income taxes for 2020, according to their tax return released Monday. The taxes paid amounted to an effective tax rate of 25.9 percent on $607,336 in adjusted gross income, the return showed. Read more…
OPINION — If Congress passes the American Innovation and Jobs Act this year, it would send a powerful signal to the rest of the world that America is fully committed to maintaining its global leadership in innovation, writes Sharon Heck, corporate vice president of finance and chief tax officer at Intel and chair of the R&D Coalition. Read more…
House Democrats and immigrant advocates are ramping up calls for the Senate to pass legislation that would provide a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as children. The measure would grant permanent legal protections to around 3.4 million undocumented immigrants called “Dreamers.” Read more…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
1201 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Suite 600
Washington, DC 20004
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: The curious case of Stephen Miller and Andrew Yang
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
SPOTTED: CHUCK SCHUMER and MITCH MCCONNELLwalking maskless through the halls of the Senate for the first time in a long time. (h/t @mkraju)
Since the tweeting started May 11, the campaign has been inundated with questions from volunteers who want to know why Miller — a figure reviled by the left for creating DONALD TRUMP’S Muslim ban and his child separation policy — would be talking up their candidate. Progressives have attacked Yang on Twitter over it. And the New York press corps has asked Yang about his support from Republicans. “I certainly would never ask for or want their support,” Yang responded.
“It’s hurting us, [Miller] must know that,” said one Yang campaign aide, adding that the candidate’s supporters are asking: “‘Why is this happening? What is happening?’ It’s making people question why people like Andrew Yang.”
Yang had been ahead in the polls until recently, when ERIC ADAMS took a slight lead. In order to win, Yang needs a coalition of voters under 45, base Democrats and some progressives. Yang’s campaign fears that Miller’s praise will turn off “normy Dems.”
“Stephen Miller doesn’t endorse normal Democrats,” the aide said.
There are suspicions in New York political circles that Miller is sabotaging Yang to help Adams, who is considered to be the more conservative of the two. But Miller laughed at the idea that he was secretly working for a Democrat in the mayoral race.
“I would never play that game,” Miller told us. “If I was working for a candidate, I would very publicly be working for that candidate. Full stop.”
Miller’s not the only prominent Republican to weigh in on the mayoral race. On his May 7 show, TUCKER CARLSON spoke favorably of Adams, a former police officer, asking, “Could New York City have a gun-wielding mayor?”
As for Miller, he claims he’s just an observer: What happens in New York politics affects the rest of the country.
“As much as I disagree on issues with Yang, I’ve admired that he’s taken on positions antithetical to the progressive left in a very progressive primary,” Miller said.
He also noticed that Yang, who is the son of immigrants and pro-sanctuary cities, has barely waved off his support.
“He hasn’t made any real significant attempt to distance himself from Republican praise … which suggests to me that he, as an individual, understands that there are a lot of independent voters in the primary,” Miller said.
BIDEN’S TUESDAY — The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9 a.m. He’ll leave the White House at 9:40 a.m. for Detroit, arriving at 11:30 a.m. He’ll tour the Ford Rouge Electric Vehicle Center in Dearborn, Mich., at 12:45 p.m. and deliver remarks at 1:40 p.m. He’ll leave Detroit at 3:55 p.m., getting back to the White House at 5:30 p.m.
— The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 10:15 a.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI will gaggle on Air Force One on the way to Detroit.
HAPPENING TODAY: Senate Republicans are expected to present a new proposal to the White House on infrastructure. Sens. SHELLEY MOORE CAPITO (W.Va.), JOHN BARRASSO (Wyo.), MIKE CRAPO (Idaho), PAT TOOMEY (Pa.) and ROGER WICKER (Miss.) will meet with Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG, Commerce Secretary GINA RAIMONDO and White House legislative affairs.
THE HOUSE will meet at 10 a.m. and will take up a variety of bills, including the Covid-19 Hate Crimes Act. House Dems and the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus will hold a news conference on the bill at 10 a.m. The Rules Committee will take up the Jan. 6 response appropriations supplemental at 9:30 a.m. ZALMAY KHALILZAD, special representative on Afghanistan reconciliation, will testify before the Foreign Affairs Committee at 10 a.m.
THE SENATE will meet at 10 a.m. to take up the Endless Frontier Act, with a recess from 12:30 p.m. to 2:15 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN CLASH
POTUS BREAKS HIS SILENCE — “Biden calls for cease-fire in Israel-Hamas fighting as pressure mounts to halt violence,”WaPo: “Biden ‘reiterated his firm support for Israel’s right to defend itself against indiscriminate rocket attacks’ during a call with Israeli Prime Minister BENJAMIN NETANYAHU, the White House said. But in adding that Biden ‘expressed support for a cease-fire,’ the administration went further than previous accounts of U.S. interactions with Israeli officials in describing the closed-door diplomacy and suggesting a private push.
“Even as pressure mounted from fellow Democrats and others urging a cease-fire, Biden administration officials had stopped short of joining their calls until Biden spoke to Netanyahu and then issued a carefully worded statement afterward.”
AND IS UNDER GROWING PRESSURE FROM THE LEFT — “‘I’m troubled by it’: Dems trash Biden’s handling of Israeli strikes in Gaza,”by Andrew Desiderio: “While Biden told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday that he ‘supports’ a ceasefire, according to the White House, that may not be enough for fellow Democrats who have urged the president to more aggressively join the international push for both sides to lay down arms.
“The pressure campaign from top Democrats represents a recalibration of the party’s posture toward Israel, which has grown increasingly antagonistic on Capitol Hill after decades in which support for the Palestinian cause was seen as a political third rail. Many lawmakers have lost patience with Netanyahu, arguing that his government has taken actions against Palestinians that make a two-state solution to the conflict less achievable.”
CHENEY UNBOUND — Rep. LIZ CHENEY (R-Wyo.), the deposed No. 3 House Republican sat with Olivia Beavers and Mel Zanona to talk about what comes next.“In some ways, it feels as though Cheney views her current place in the political wilderness as her destiny. And she is certainly embracing her role as a self-cast Cassandra, determined to speak prophecies no matter who’s listening.
“‘I’m really glad that I decided to stay in the House,’ Cheney said. ‘As we’re engaging in these battles about principles and the future and standing up for truth, I think that these battles really are being fought out in the House.’
“‘When you look at history, it’s individuals who make a difference,’ she added. ‘And I feel really honored to be able to stand up and speak on these issues that I think are going to determine the future of the country and the future of our democracy.’
“But other Republicans … argue Cheney may have seen a brighter future, and surely a safer one, had she landed in the Senate.
“‘If she had run for the Senate and won, she’d be a rank-and-file senator. Would it be such a big deal? She’d be like MITT ROMNEY,’ said Sen. KEVIN CRAMER (R-N.D.), who endorsed now-Sen. CYNTHIA LUMMIS (R-Wyo.) before Cheney decided not to enter the race. ‘She wouldn’t have a leadership position to lose, plus she’d have a six-year term. It’d be a lot different.’”
SCOOPLET: HOUSE GOP LEADERS CALL ON PELOSI TO END PROXY VOTING — It’s not exactly surprising since they’ve never been fans of the practice in the first place. But today House GOP leaders and all Republican committee rankers will cite updated CDC guidelines to call on Speaker NANCY PELOSI to end proxy voting and remote hearings.
In the letter led by Rep.BRUCE WESTERMAN (R-Ark.), which will be sent later today, Republicans note that 75% of lawmakers are vaccinated — and everyone has access to the vaccine. They also cite new guidance from the chamber’s attending physicians suggesting members and staff can essentially return to normal operations once they get those shots. The letter comes as Pelosi and her leadership team have extended proxy voting through July 3. The practice of remote voting was set to end this week. Read the letter
SENATE GOP COULD KILL BIPARTISAN JAN. 6 COMMISSION —Burgess Everett and Marianne LeVinetalked to a bunch of Senate Republicans on Monday and found that many of them were signaling they might not vote for the 9/11-style commission proposed by a bipartisan group of House members.
“The commission will slow us down from some of the things we need to do,” Sen. ROY BLUNT (R-Mo.), a McConnell ally, told our colleagues. “I’m no fan of the commission.”
McConnell has refused so far to weigh in. Republicans in the Senate want to see how the idea plays out in the House first.
THE WHITE HOUSE
BEING KAMALA HARRIS — In a bit of a passion project for White House reporter Anita Kumar,she spoke with 20 people who know Harris’ personal story firsthand or from an arm’s length — friends, aides, lawmakers, activists and scholars — about the VP’s Indian heritage. “Politicians and activists of Asian descent have cheered Harris’ ascent,” she writes. “But they want her to speak out more about her Indian heritage, embracing it as she does her Black roots, and advocate for policy issues important to Asian Americans, including legal immigration, Covid-19 disparities and discrimination and hate crimes. They say the need has never been more pronounced, as the discrimination Asians have long faced continues to grow, marked tragically by the March shooting of six women of Asian descent at three Atlanta-area spas. …
“She’s been accused of not being Black enough, criticized for not touting her Asian heritage and faulted for choosing to say she’s Asian over Indian. Some Americans are unaware of her biracial background while others forget she has any Asian heritage at all.”
SCOTUS WATCH
THE LOOMING ABORTION RULING — National Review forecasts how the conservative majority might handle Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, a major abortion rights case it decided Monday to rule on. “The Stakes of the Supreme Court’s New Abortion Case”: “[W]e shouldn’t expect Dobbs to be the case in which Roe falls. More likely, the Court could start cracking open the internal contradictions in its prior abortion jurisprudence, paving the way for more dramatic progress later — much in the way that the Court’s liberals used decisions striking down sodomy laws and the federal Defense of Marriage Act to lay the legal groundwork for overturning state bans on same-sex marriage. If Chief Justice John Roberts and some of the other Republican appointees on the Court are not on board with that campaign, we will know from their opinions in Dobbs.”
TWO NO. 2s SIGNING OFF IN ATLANTA — “Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, a Trump critic, will not run for a second term in 2022,”Atlanta Journal-Constitution: “Lt. Gov. GEOFF DUNCAN said Monday that he won’t be seeking a second term as Georgia’s No. 2 official and will instead focus on building a ‘GOP 2.0’ movement that urges fellow Republicans to envision a party beyond former President Donald Trump.
“Duncan said in an interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that he doesn’t plan on resigning his seat, but instead will seek to serve his final 19 months in office while also pushing a plan to revive what he calls a foundering national GOP still too focused on the 2020 election.”
— “CDC’s second-in-command Anne Schuchat to step down,”by Adam Cancryn and Erin Banco: “Schuchat’s retirement [this summer] would be the CDC’s second high-profile departure in the past month … A career CDC scientist for more than 30 years, Schuchat has served as the agency’s No. 2 official since 2015. She twice did brief stints as the CDC’s acting director, and was key to the federal government’s response to major infectious disease outbreaks … But she had clashed with CDC Director ROCHELLE WALENSKY in recent months.”
ARIZONA AUDIT GETS MESSIER — “Arizona Republicans fight back against election fraud claims,” AP: “The GOP-dominated Maricopa County Board of Supervisors cast the audit as a sham that’s spun out of the control of the state Senate leader who’s ostensibly overseeing it. Board Chairman JACK SELLERS said Senate President KAREN FANN is making an ‘attempt at legitimatizing a grift disguised as an audit.’
“Last week, Fann sent a letter to Sellers questioning records that document the chain of custody of the ballots and accusing county officials of deleting data. The county on Monday sent a 12-page response vehemently denying wrongdoing, explaining its processes and accusing Cyber Ninjas of incompetence.”
WEATHERING A SCANDAL, AND THEN SOME — “Cuomo Set to Receive $5.1 Million from Pandemic Book Deal,” NYT: “The governor received the bulk of the money last year, $3.12 million, and under the contract, he is set to be paid another $2 million in installments over the next two years, state officials said. … Across the publishing world, the revelation of Mr. Cuomo’s payment elicited shock: The amount appeared to be a staggering sum to pay to a politician who already had a meager sales record for his previous book, a memoir that sold just a few thousand print copies.”
PLAYBOOKERS
SALLY QUINN DECLARES D.C.’S SOCIAL SCENE DEAD — Say it ain’t so, for our sake. WaPo: “Trump and covid may have finished off what was once the traditional Washington A-list, but it was already in trouble long before January 2017. The GEORGE W. BUSH administration was the last time it really thrived. Things slowed considerably during the Obama years. The First Couple was famous for not wanting to make new friends or go out in Washington except to see those already close to them. NEERA TANDEN, head of the Center for American Progress, once was quoted as saying that President BARACK OBAMA didn’t like people. Many in his administration took their cues from the White House.” Read her full piece here
— NYT’S ANNIE KARNI DECLARES W.H. CELEBRITIES ARE GONE TOO: “Mr. [MIKE] DONILON’S low-key presence, despite his considerable influence over the leader of the free world, is emblematic of the overall culture of the Biden White House: It is the least personality-driven West Wing in decades. Because of his longevity in politics and underdog personality, combined with the depth of the crises he is facing, President Biden is undoing a longstanding Washington tradition in which staff members enjoy their own refracted fame.”
NOBEL THIRSTY —“Bill Gates Thought Jeffrey Epstein Was His Ticket to a Nobel, Ex-Staffer Says,” by Daily Beast: “‘[BILL GATES] thought that JEFFREY [EPSTEIN] would be able to help him, that he would know the right people, or some kind of way to massage things, so he could get the Nobel Peace Prize, which is what Bill wants more than anything else in the world,’ the staffer said. ‘I think he was ultimately disappointed it didn’t work out,’ the person added.”
IN MEMORIAM — A bipartisan group of bold-faced names is organizing a fundraiser to honor Richard Bates, Disney’s beloved longtime government relations chief who died suddenly late last year at age 70. More than a dozen of his admirers — from Wayne Berman and Kellyanne Conway to Rahm Emanuel and Tom Daschle and ABC journalists Jonathan Karl and Rick Klein — are aiming to raise $250,000 on Bates’ behalf to support the Music Health Alliance, which helps music industry professionals gain access to health care.
Bates became a fixture in Washington politics representing Disney for three decades. Here’s Variety’s obit on him, and a personal tribute written by his son, Ricky.
MEDIAWATCH — “WarnerMedia-Discovery merger could save CNN’s Jeff Zucker: sources,” N.Y. Post: “David Zaslav — the always-working, fleece-wearing chief executive officer of Discovery — is expected to run the new media conglomerate he’s forming with AT&T with a little help from his friends.
“And that could lead to some of the top media executives who failed to thrive under telecom giant AT&T returning to the fold, including CNN chief Jeff Zucker and ex-HBO chief David Plepler, sources said.”
SPOTTED: Rep. Steve Chabot (R-Ohio) on a Southwest flight from Cincinnati to BWI on Monday morning. … Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.) sitting in first class on a midday flight Monday from Dallas/Fort Worth to DCA. … Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.) at the Salt Line in Navy Yard. … J.D. Vance at Joe’s on Monday night.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Michael Long is joining S-3 Group as a principal on its government affairs team. He previously was senior adviser and director of member services for Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
— Alexandria Phillips is now comms director for Surgeon General Vivek Murthy. She previously was deputy chief of staff for Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), and is a Hillary Clinton, Chuck Schumer and State Department alum.
TRANSITIONS — Greg Minoff has launched Blue Wall Mail, a direct mail political consulting firm. He most recently led the Biden campaign’s direct mail program, and is a longtime Democratic politics veteran. … Erika Naegeli is now a consultant at APCO Worldwide. She previously was press officer at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
ENGAGED — Caryn Lenhoff and Matt Sarge, veteran operatives who lead the DNC research department’s rapid response team, got engagedover the weekend at Lake Anna in Virginia. Pic
—Theresa Gambo, financial and office administrator for the House Energy and Commerce GOP, and Thomas Neal, a sales executive for Fairview USA, got engaged this weekend. Thomas pretended there was a rock in his shoe and got down on one knee to pop the question in front of the Capitol reflecting pool. Pic
WEEKEND WEDDING — Sophie Trainor, deputy chief of staff for Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.), and Peter Khanahmadi got married this weekend in Baltimore, surrounded by family and close friends. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Mondaire Jones (D-N.Y.) … Seven Letter’s Erik Smith … Matt Yglesias (4-0) … NBC’s Josh Lederman and Leah Graf … Tim Chapman … Vox’s Libby Nelson … POLITICO’s Cristiano Lima, Bryan Bender, Simona Lightfoot, Felicia Figueiredo and Blake Turner … E&E News’ Chelsea Harvey … Univision’s Janet Rodriguez … Alex Witt of the Center for American Progress … Abby Sugrue … Snap’s Sofia Rose Gross … Dana Singiser … Democrat Matt Gorman … Gabrielle Shea of NEC Corp. … Laura Morgan-Kessler of Carpi & Clay … AP’s Meg Kinnard … Farah Melendez … Hiltzik Strategies’ Ryan Hughes … Jennifer Foley Lisaius … Pete Boogaard of FWD.us … Eric Trager … GMMB’s Liz Oxhorn … Sam Graham-Felsen … Caitlin Manaois … Katie Young … Taylor West … Ezra Cohen-Watnick … Heather Swift … Robin (Roberts) Winchell … Querry Robinson … Clyde Haberman … Gary Kopff … former Sen. Tom Udall (D-N.M.) … Anthony Cruz … Nate Denny … Javier LLano
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
The discrimination we’ve been expecting against “unvaccinated” people has begun. It is now open season on anyone who dares to make their own decisions about what to put in their body based on their own individual choice and health. (Where have we heard that arcane idea before?) Not only that, …
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing Tuesday then he will head to Michigan where he will deliver a speech at an electric vehicle center. This has become a repeating pattern on the daily schedule: briefing in the oval, deliver a speech, day over. President Biden’s Itinerary for …
I grew up loving sports. Playing them, watching them, talking about them. Growing up in the ’60s and ’70s in New England was not the best time for being a sports fan. The Patriots were young and not very good. The Red Sox failed us more often than not. The …
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo used the majority of the profits he earned in 2020 from his book on COVID-19 leadership lessons to enrich his three adult daughters, according to a statement from one of his advisors. The advisor, Richard Azzopardi, told The New York Times on Monday that Cuomo …
Just a short time ago, President Joe Biden said that removing COVID restrictions across the country was Neanderthal thinking. Now, states accused of being “Neanderthals” in their thinking appear to be the actual winners. On Sunday, Texas reported zero COVID deaths for the first time in 13 months. The state …
A San Diego-based company is selling crocheted prosthetic penises for “trans youngsters” to pin onto their underwear. Stitchbug Studio sells “soft packers” sewn or crocheted by owners B Amborn and Ruth Rigney, according to the company’s website, which describes the owners as “professional artists and crafters coming together to deliver …
The Biden administration redirected over $2 billion allocated for other health initiatives to care for unaccompanied migrant minors, Politico reported Saturday. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) will receive $850 million meant for the federal emergency medical fund depleted by COVID-19 and another $850 million set aside for …
AT&T and Discovery announced a $43 billion merger that would create one of the largest U.S. media companies in an attempt to compete with Netflix and Disney. The deal would merge AT&T’s media content division WarnerMedia with Discovery, creating a standalone media company that executives hope will become one of …
The United States Supreme court has agreed to take up a major Mississippi abortion case that could have an impact on Roe v. Wade. The court announced Monday that it will hear Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health Organization beginning in October, and a decision on the case will likely come …
President Biden Delivers Remarks on the COVID-19 Response and the Vaccination Program The event is scheduled to begin at 1:00 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.
House Republicans replaced Rep. Liz Cheney (WY) with Rep. Elise Stefanik (NY) as the conference chairman on Friday after Cheney’s ouster on Wednesday. So what? It’s not news nor a surprise that this “grand” old party replaced one self-serving political hack with another. That’s their game in the Republican “leadership.” …
Christians celebrate the birth of our Savior Jesus Christ on Christmas. Jews have Hanukkah when they celebrate liberation from oppression. Muslims celebrate Eid al-Fitr when the Ramadan fasting ends. Buddhists have Wesak to celebrate Buddha’s birth. But, for the bureaucrats and politicians salivating at the opportunity to spend our money, …
When you’re stuck in a bad situation, someone has to take the lead. That’s what Marine Corps Pfc. Robert C. Burke did in 1968 when his unit was pinned down by intense enemy fire in Vietnam. Burke didn’t make it out alive, but his actions earned him the Medal of …
One might think that the government overkill of the Covid lockdown and the forced masking of the nation would have taught the Biden administration a lesson or two about lying about science and causing the entire nation to plunge into a near-depression in order to block Donald Trump‘s bid for …
Last week saw the Colonial Pipeline get held for ransom by Russian hackers who extorted $5 million out of the U.S company. Whilst negations took place, the pipeline was unable to produce and supply gasoline, which meant the highest bump in gas prices for consumers in 7 years. Since then, …
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki holds a briefing today. The briefing is scheduled to start at 12:00 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 Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Ptarmigan is still my favorite silent “p” word.
It’s difficult to describe the magic that is being worked in my life by tacos lately. They’re probably the healthiest coping mechanism I’ve found yet.
These past fifteen months have given us myriad examples to prove we’re all just sims and the advanced being who’s playing the game has a most twisted sense of humor. Nothing seems real at this point. Reason and logic are out the window.
Frequent fodder here at the Briefing during this time has been the bumbling gubernatorial triumvirate of Gavin Newsom, Gretchen Whitmer, and Andrew Cuomo. Make no mistake, I would love to be able to stop writing about them but they just won’t go away. Few people have benefited more from a toxic combination of liberal media bias and the participation trophy era than these three. The fact that they’re all still employed is kind of stunning when you think about it. Back when this country had more backbone, shame would have made each of them tuck tail and resign.
Forbes reports a bombshell: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is set to haul in a total of $5 million from the book he wrote while he was supposedly handling the COVID crisis in his state.
A cool five million for a book about “Leadership Lessons” from the governor who bungled things so badly that he killed 15,000 or so people.
That’s the real galling thing here. Cuomo not only didn’t handle things well, he was actively covering up how poorly he was doing. He has yet to face anything in the way of accountability. Quite the opposite — he’s making bank on his failure. I’m trying to remember the last time that a Democrat was held accountable for any wrongdoing.
We have been subjected to over-the-top demagoguery from elected Democrats — including the alleged president — and the so-called “experts” for over a year and it’s nigh on impossible to count how many times they’ve all been wrong.
Matt has a post about the most recent and egregious example:
In March, Texas Governor Greg Abbott axed the state’s mask mandate and other COVID-related restrictions on businesses and people.
Joe Biden blasted the decision, calling the move a “huge mistake” and “Neanderthal thinking.”
“The last thing we need is the Neanderthal thinking that in the meantime everything’s fine, take off your mask, forget it. It still matters,” he said. “It’s critical, critical, critical, critical that they follow the science.”
Dr. Anthony Fauci also called it “risky” and “potentially dangerous.”
“When you pull back on all mitigation methods on all public health guidelines, that’s when you get into trouble and history has proven that,” Fauci told Chris Wallace of Fox News. “This isn’t just some kind of a theoretical, a point that I’m trying to make. It’s not theoretical. It actually happens.”
Weeks later, when no surge in cases happened, Fauci tried to suggest that there might be a “lag,” but no surge ever happened.
Now, for the first time since the start of the pandemic, Texas has reported zero coronavirus deaths for a day. They also reported the fewest COVID cases in over a year, the lowest seven-day COVID positivity rate ever, and the lowest number of COVID hospitalizations in 11 months.
Where does Greg Abbott go for his apology? Or Ron DeSantis?
Fauci’s mouth runs like diarrhea from a toddler. There may not be any highly educated person in history who’s said more stupid things in a one-year span than Anthony Fauci. The hacks in the mainstream media never call him out on any of it. He’s still treated like he’s the messiah by the mask fetishists.
It’s OK to be sick of these people. They’re horrible and they’re bad at their jobs and they’ve been praised for ruining what was once the greatest country on Earth.
Somewhere, someday, they’ll hopefully have to answer for all of this.
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
Fuel shortage exposes Biden’s energy policy as gas prices spike, Keystone XL pipeline lays in pieces . . . As the country worries about the recent Colonial Pipeline hack, causing gas prices to skyrocket and putting national security at risk, the administration continues to portray the incident as a nonissue while pushing the vitality of pipelines for fuel transportation. Meanwhile, Biden’s harsh cancelation of the Keystone XL Pipeline was fully supported by his inner circle, including Department of Energy (DOE) Secretary Jennifer Granholm, who defended the president’s decision during her Jan. 27 confirmation hearing. But Granholm preached during a news conference last week that pipelines are “the best way” to transport energy, and advocated back in 2016 to do “everything possible to keep fossil-fuel energy in the ground.” Fox News
Politics
Trump to reemerge June 5 with speech to North Carolina Republicans . . . Donald Trump will speak at attend the North Carolina Republican Party’s 2021 State Convention in Greenville at the Convention Dinner on Saturday, June 5th. “President Trump won North Carolina in 2016 by promising to put America First, and he won North Carolina in 2020 by keeping that promise,” North Carolina GOP Chairman Michael Whatley said. “President Trump delivered real results for North Carolina by rebuilding the military, standing strong against China, and unleashing the American economy. We are honored to welcome President Trump to our convention as the Republican Party launches our campaign to retake Congress and the Senate in the 2022 midterms.” White House Dossier
Trump signals he’s ready to get back in the game . . . An emboldened former President Trump is preparing to become more active as he looks to boost GOP allies while mulling a new run for the White House. Trump is expected to hit the road soon resuming his signature rallies, which will put him more in the public eye and create questions for television networks about coverage. He’s also set to hold his first fundraiser for his new super PAC. The Hill
Biden Issues Dark Warning that Unvaccinated Americans will Pay The Price . . . President Joe Biden said Monday that Americans who chose to not receive the coronavirus vaccine will “end up paying the price” for their decision. The president said that coronavirus deaths were down 81% to the lowest level since April of 2020, but warned that the progress could be “reversed” if people don’t get vaccinated. “If the unvaccinated get vaccinated, they’ll protect themselves and other unvaccinated people around them. . . Ultimately, those who are not vaccinated will end up paying the price,” Biden said. Daily Caller
Kamala Harris Keeps Enemies List of Journalists Who May Be Racist . . . Vice President Kamala Harris keeps a list of reporters and other political types who might be racist and whom she thinks don’t fully understand her or appreciate her life experience.” That list presumably includes the people at Vogue magazine, who managed to enrage libs by putting Harris on the cover earlier this year. It remains unclear why the libs became enraged; Harris was wearing her signature Converse kicks and everything. Harris reportedly judiciously monitors the words journalists use to describe her. “She particularly doesn’t like the word cautious, and aides look out for synonyms too,” according to the Atlantic. “Careful, guarded, and hesitant don’t go over well.” Antonyms as well. During the 2020 campaign, journalists were sounding the alarm about the word “ambitious. Washington Free Beacon
Sanders flexes on Biden, seeking to shape Democratic agenda . . . Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is starting to flex his political muscle and become more outspoken on a number of issues after months of mostly keeping his head down and being a team player. Sanders has trashed removing the $10,000 ceiling on the state and local tax (SALT) deduction, which has been a top priority for Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), and has put pressure on President Biden over foreign policy with his sharp criticism of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The 2020 presidential candidate, who finished second to Biden in the Democratic primary, accused Netanyahu of cultivating a culture of “racist nationalism.” The Hill
Biden’s ‘unconfirmables’ land plum administration jobs after derailing . . . President Biden is doling out enviable consolation prizes for top administration picks who crash and burn on the road to Senate confirmation. Neera Tanden, Elizabeth Klein land on their feet. Neera Tanden began her new job Monday as White House senior adviser, two months after she withdrew her nomination to head the OMB. Years of mean tweets brought into question her judgment, temperament and ability to win support from the sitting senators and other lawmakers whom she had roasted. Meanwhile, Elizabeth Klein announced hat she will serve as a senior counselor to Interior Secretary Deb Haaland. Biden administration entrusts authority with political figures unable to pass muster in a Senate controlled by their own party. Biden administration’s model is to find homes for unconfirmables in other positions, often in the White House, from which they de facto exercise all of the power they were denied by being too extreme even for some in Biden’s own party, if with none of the de jure authority. Washington Times
National Security
Ousted Space Force officer says CRT, Marxism “antithetical” to American values . . . A lieutenant colonel in the US Space Force who was relieved of his command told Fox News Digital on Monday he is being “misportrayed” online in regards to the comments about Marxism he made on a podcast earlier this month – and that he has received a private outpouring of support from fellow service members. Lt. Col. Matthew Lohmeier, formerly the commander of the 11th Space Warning Squadron at Buckley Air Force Base, was ousted from his position last week after his appearance on a podcast, wherein he promoted his new book, “Irresistible Revolution: Marxism’s Goal of Conquest & the Unmaking of the American Military.” It is not politically partisan to expose or attack critical race theory or Marxism,” Lohmeier told Fox News. “Critical Race Theory and Marxism are antithetical to American values. Most people – including senior leaders – who are pushing these ideas are pushing them without any understanding of Marxism,” he warned. Fox News
DHS: Violent Extremists May Exploit Easing COVID Restrictions . . . The Biden administration fears that lifting coronavirus restrictions may spark domestic terrorism. Just one day after the CDC lifted most mask mandates for those who are fully vaccinated, the Department of Homeland Security issued a national advisory warning, “Violent extremists may seek to exploit the easing of COVID-19-related restrictions across the United States to conduct attacks against a broader range of targets after previous public capacity limits reduced opportunities for lethal attacks.” Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas announced the bulletin in a tweet Friday afternoon. Patriot Post
Better keep those masks on, to scare away those violent extremists.
Coronavirus
State vaccine rates fall along red, blue divide . . . The U.S. vaccine map looks a lot like a map of how states vote in presidential elections, with most blue states vaccinating at levels well above the national average and GOP states bringing up the rear. The politics of COVID-19 have been partisan from almost the onset of the pandemic, and polls consistently show that Republicans, particularly men, are more hesitant than Democrats to get vaccinated. The deep-blue state of Vermont has the highest share of its population with at least one vaccine dose, at 65 percent, followed by Massachusetts, Hawaii, New Hampshire and Connecticut. The top 21 states for vaccination rates all went for President Biden in the 2020 presidential election. Iowa — with 47 percent of its population receiving at least one shot — is the highest ranking state on the list, at No. 22, that voted for former President Trump. The Hill
IDF air strikes continue to destroy Hama tunnel network, kill Islamic Jihad commander . . . The IDF bombed another 15km section of the underground network (known as the “Hamas Metro”) overnight Sunday, dropping 110 pieces of ordnance on 35 targets in 20 minutes. The homes of 9 Hamas commanders were also wrecked. In some, weapons were stored. The underground network of hundreds of multi-branched kilometers housing Hamas and Islamic Jihad command posts, terrorist units and hideouts allows their combatants to move secretly between sectors undetected. In a joint operation with the Shin Bet on Monday, IDF airstrike in northern Gaza killed Hasam Abu Harbid. Harbid officiated as Islamic Jihad’s northern Gaza sector division from 2019 when he predecessor Baha Abu al-Atta was killed in an IDF targeted assassination. DEBKAFile
Money
Kamala Harris and husband contribute paltry amount to charity . . . Vice President Kamala Harris and the Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff earned $1.7 million in 2020 but gave just $27,000 to charity, or about 1.6 percent of their income. The average charitable contribution among households that reported an AGI between $500,000 and $2 million was 3.1% of income, according to data from filing year 2017 reported by the Tax Policy Center. It was 4.3% as a percentage of AGI among all returns for the same tax year. White House Dossier
They’d rather the government redistributes, charitably, your money to help others.
BLM Co-Founder Engaged in Potential Self-Dealing . . . Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors was identified in a press release as co-chair of an art company that has profited from several activist groups that call Cullors a co-founder and leader, which charity experts say amounts to self-dealing and raises ethical and legal questions. Black Lives Matter (BLM) Global Network Foundation, BLM PAC and Reform LA Jails — three activist groups Cullors claims to have co-founded and led — have provided business to the art company, Trap Heals, the Daily Caller News Foundation previously reported. Trap Heals was founded and run by Damon Turner, the father of Cullors’ only child, the DCNF found. Daily Caller
You should also know
Supreme Court Unanimously Rejects Warrantless Gun Seizure . . . The Supreme Court ruled 9-0 on Monday that Rhode Island police officers acted illegally when they seized a man’s guns without a warrant. Edward Caniglia sued the city of Cranston, Rhode Island, after police officers located and took his guns while he was in the hospital for a mental health wellness check. He argued that the seizure violated his Fourth Amendment rights, although two federal courts ruled against him. Those courts relied on a provision of the law that allows police to seize guns from drivers while on the road.
“The very core of the Fourth Amendment’s guarantee is the right of a person to retreat into his or her home and there be free from unreasonable governmental intrusion,” Justice Clarence Thomas wrote for the Court. Daily Caller
The Unsilenced Majority: Conservatives set up shop to fight cancel culture, corporate ‘wokeism’ . . . A handful of heavyweights in the conservative movement on Monday launched an advocacy group designed to push back against what the organization describes as a rising tide of “cancel culture” and “corporate wokeism.” Mike Davis, founder and president of the group, Unsilenced Majority, said he wants to model the group on other organizations he leads that focus on judicial nominations and Big Tech. “As we’ve shown with the Article III Project and the Internet Accountability Project and now Unsilenced Majority, when you take off the gloves, put on the brass knuckles and punch back, you’ll break the left’s glass jaw,” Mr. Davis said in an interview. Washington Times
A midlife crisis takes shape in the US . . . For decades, America has enjoyed the economic and geopolitical fruits of its high birth rate. Between 1990 and 2010, fertility levels in the US were higher than the average for any developed country with the exception of Israel, Iceland and New Zealand. So what does it mean that the US birth rate is on track to plunge below the recent trend rate of Europe? In 2007, just before the great recession, the US total fertility rate, meaning the number of births that a woman is expected to have in her lifetime, was 2.12. By 2019, just before Covid-19 struck, it had fallen to 1.71. Provisional CDC data from 2020 shows that the total fertility rate has since dropped to a record low of 1.64, roughly the rate in Europe over the past five years. Financial Times
Apple Working With Chinese Government To Censor And Surveil Its Citizens . . . Apple has repeatedly given in to escalating demands from the Chinese government, abetting the communist regime’s censorship and surveillance of its citizens. Apple’s latest data center in the city of Guiyang, expected to be completed in June, will store Chinese users’ information on servers run by a state-owned Chinese firm. Apple reportedly abandoned its encryption technology after the Chinese government objected, and state employees will manage the servers and security tools used to secure information. Daily Caller
Guilty Pleasures
Democrats Wearing Binkies To Wean Themselves Off Masks . . . With the CDC finally relaxing some guidelines around mask-wearing, Democrats are facing the dread of parting with something that has been giving them feelings of safety and security for over a year. To help them cope with the loss, many Democrats are turning to baby pacifiers to help wean them off the masks.
“The binky is a perfect bridge toward a maskless future,” said one Democrat. He then quickly popped the rubber nipple back in his mouth for a few minutes before continuing. “I think it’s important to be open and vulnerable about the trauma we have all experienced in the last year.” He then grabbed his blanket and teddy bear and went down for a nap. Dr. Fauci has endorsed the use of binkies for vaccinated Democrats, but he’s still suggesting a mask be worn over them at all times. Babylon Bee
Satire.
Do you love Cut to the News? Let your family and friends know about it! They’ll thank you for it. Spread the word . . .
By Email – use the message that pops up or write your own.
Happy Tuesday! It’s possible we spoke too soon yesterday about the cicadas.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear a case concerning a Mississippi law banning abortions after 15 weeks, the most direct challenge to Roe v. Wade the conservative-majority court has tackled yet.
In a Monday call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Joe Biden “expressed his support for a ceasefire” but “reiterated his firm support for Israel’s right to defend itself against indiscriminate rocket attacks,” according to a White House readout.
Top Republicans on the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors blasted fellow Republicans pushing additional audits of the 2020 election results as conspiracy theorists and grifters. “We ran a bipartisan, fair election. That’s every piece of evidence that I’ve ever seen put in front of us,” said Clint Hickman, a Republican supervisor. “We are operating on facts and evidence presented to this board.” The county’s top election official, Stephen Richer, also a Republican, called new claims of irregularities from former President Donald Trump “unhinged.”
The Biden administration announced Monday the U.S. would send an additional 20 million doses of the Moderna, Pfizer, and Johnson & Johnson coronavirus vaccines to countries struggling to meet demand next month. The new doses will be on top of the 60 million doses of AstraZeneca vaccine that are set to be released pending FDA approval.
The Treasury Department said that the child allowance payments passed in Democrats’ March stimulus package—up to $300 per child per month for a single year—will be distributed starting July 15.
Joel Greenberg, a former county tax collector with strong ties to Florida congressman Matt Gaetz, pleaded guilty Monday to federal crimes including sex trafficking a minor. The New York Times reported last month that Gaetz himself is under federal investigation for possible sex trafficking crimes.
The United States confirmed 54,013 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 6.2 percent of the 873,736 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 385 deaths were attributed to the virus on Monday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 586,352. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 26,726 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 866,694 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 157,827,208 Americans having now received at least one dose.
Supreme Court to Hear Major Abortion Case
The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear oral arguments for Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, a case that challenges the constitutionality of a Mississippi state law that permits abortions after 15 weeks of gestational age only in cases of medical emergency or instances of severe fetal abnormality. In a one-line order issued on Monday, the Supreme Court said it will rule next term on the long-standing question of whether all pre-viability bans on elective abortions are unconstitutional.
Legal experts and abortion activists say this case presents an opportunity for the Supreme Court’s 6-to-3 Republican-appointed majority to modify or even overturn Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, two cases that have governed abortion law for decades.
“Anti-abortion politicians have exploited their power for this exact moment: the opportunity for the newly comprised Supreme Court to take away our right to abortion,” Planned Parenthood Action Fund President Alexis McGill said Monday. “By taking this case, the court will be reviewing nearly 50 years of precedent guaranteeing our right to abortion. In a country where your ability to access abortion already depends on your income and ZIP code, the court’s decision could even further decimate access.”
Abortion case law’s thorny history dates back to 1973, when the Supreme Court constitutionalized a woman’s right to an abortion in Roe v. Wade. The landmark ruling created an absolute right to an abortion in the first trimester of pregnancy, but held that states could regulate the practice in the second trimester pursuant to the compelling interest of protecting maternal life. Roe also held that states had a compelling interest in protecting fetal life at the start of the third trimester, when the fetus is considered viable and can survive outside the womb.
As we wrote yesterday, the CDC’s updated COVID guidance concerning masks has lit a fire under states, local governments, and national businesses like Target and Starbucks to move away from policies requiring masking among the vaccinated. Just yesterday, California and New York announced they would move toward lifting their mask mandates, albeit on two very different timetables—New York effective tomorrow, California not until June 15 with the caveat that this date could be pushed back.
“New Yorkers have worked hard over the last year to prevent the spread of COVID and keep each other safe,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a press release. “That work has paid off and we are ecstatic to take this next step in the reopening of our beautiful state.”
A few stragglers, however—including Delaware and New Jersey—have continued to forge ahead with broad mandates and no plans as yet to lift them. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said Monday he is keeping his state’s indoor mask mandate intact, although he is ditching the outdoor mandate for fully vaccinated New Jerseyans.
“As far as we can tell and as much as we want to get there—and we will get there, as it relates to indoor masking, it’s only a matter of time—if you’re in a business and a public setting, we’re not there yet. We’re frankly not there yet,” Murphy said at a vaccination event with actress and comedian Whoopi Goldberg.
It’s tempting to believe that conspiratorial, tin-hat thinking is something only other people are susceptible to—especially people less educated and more credulous than we imagine ourselves to be. Which is why this piece from the New York Times’s Ben Smith is so fascinating in its depiction of a moral panic that descended on a small online community of former winners of the quiz show Jeopardy! after a contestant who had just won his third game held up three fingers on his right hand—a gesture which, the contestants quickly decided, was likely some sort of white power symbol. “The element of this story that interests me most is how the beating heart of nerdy, liberal fact-mastery can pump blood into wild social media conspiracy, and send all these smart people down the sort of rabbit hole that leads other groups of Americans to believe that children are being transported inside refrigerators,” Smith wrote. “It reflects a depth of alienation among Americans, in which our warring tribes squint through the fog at one another for mysterious and abstruse signs of malice.”
The Endless Frontier Act, which was introduced in the Senate by Sen. Chuck Schumer and has the support of several Republicans, aims to put the United States in a better position to compete with China by investing in technological innovation, including in artificial intelligence and high-powered computing. The bill means well but does not go far enough to eclipse China’s effort in the same industries, Stuart Anderson of the National Foundation for American Policy argues in an article for Reason. Anderson also contends that the bill should do more to encourage Chinese people to immigrate to America and stay here by reforming existing visa policies.
$5 million for a book about your awesome covid leadership is a pretty strong motive to cover up evidence of how weak your leadership actually was
Toeing the Company Line
On Monday’s Advisory Opinions, David and Sarah tackle the huge news about the Supreme Court’s abortion case, walking through possible outcomes and how it fits in with the court’s previous jurisprudence on abortion questions. They also discuss Caniglia v. Strom, a unanimous Supreme Court ruling this week concerning warrantless police searches of homes.
Let Us Know
Where is your state on mask mandates? Are you listening to state and federal guidance to determine your approach to masking and returning to normal or are you making your own decisions?
Mary Chastain: “Why isn’t Cuomo rotting in jail with absolutely no money to his name? The jerkface received a$5 million book deal. He already got $3 million and will get the other $2 million in the coming years. The book only sold 50,000 copies! The publishing company won’t reprint it or sell it in paperback due to the investigations into the nursing home deaths. Don’t forget nine women accused him of sexual harassment.“
Leslie Eastman: “The removal of Lt. Col Matthew Lohmeier from his Space Force command for criticizing the spread of Critical Race Theory through the US military shows that Team Biden will clearly keep the US space program grounded in inane and divisive race-based policies while our competitors are free to capture the high ground in space. If the direction doesn’t change soon, Lohmeier will not be the last Critical Race Theory casualty in our armed forces.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “As relentless rocket attacks against Israeli towns and cities enter the second week, the Israeli military is targeting high-profile terrorist operatives of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad inside Gaza. The overnight Israeli airstrikes, which continued until early morning Monday, destroyed tunnels networks, rocket launcher sites and terrorist command posts across Gaza; as well as the homes of at least 9 top Hamas commanders which doubled as terrorist bases and weapons depots, the Israel Defense Forces confirmed.”
Stacey Matthews: “Mary’s report on how the Lincoln Project is ‘targeting children with a ‘Franklin Project’ civics program’ may be the most unintentionally terrifying thing you’ll read today.”
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.
For more information about the Foundation, CLICK HERE.
The Supreme Court Will Hear a Major Abortion Case Next Term
SCOTUS announced this morning that it will hear arguments in Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health Organization, a challenge to the constitutionality of a Mississippi law that (with some exceptions) bars abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy. This will be the first abortion case to be argued before the Supreme Court since Justice Amy Coney Barrett was confirmed in 2020.
The question the court will consider, specifically, is “whether all pre-viability prohibitions on elective abortions are unconstitutional.” This has the potential to be a major ruling from the high court, one that could upend landmark decisions in Roe v Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, in which the court determined that the Constitution protects the right to have an abortion before a baby “becomes viable.”
In a statement on Monday, March for Life president Jeanne Mancini noted that the U.S. is one of only seven countries, including China and North Korea, that allows abortions through all nine months of pregnancy.
This afternoon, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said that President Biden is committed “codifying Roe,” regardless of the outcome of this case. The court will hear the case in its next term, which begins in October, and is likely to reach a decision by June of 2022.
I’ve written some about the aspects of the abortion debate in America, including the eugenics based history of Planned Parenthood, America’s largest abortion provider, and the horrific conditions in abortion clinics that abortion advocates go to lengths to protect under the guise of choice.
Inflation Fears Grow for the White House
Trillions in government spending, a surge of consumer demand, low interest rates, and supply chain strain is a cocktail for an unstable economy. The Consumer Price Index — which measures the average change in prices over time that consumers pay for a basket of goods and services — just saw its biggest monthly increase since 1982.
“All of those factors combined to push the consumer price index (CPI) up 0.8 percent in April and 4.2 percent over the past 12 months, the fastest annual rate since 2008, the Labor Department reported this past week. When stripping out the more volatile prices for food and energy, the index registered the biggest monthly increase since 1982.
While the ramped-up consumer spending is a sign of increased optimism, the Biden administration faces political risks as Americans find themselves dealing with inflation levels that the country hasn’t seen in more than a decade.
Deepening concern among Americans about inflation could derail not only Biden’s economic agenda but also the Democrats’ hopes of defending narrow congressional majorities in the 2022 midterm elections.
“Now people are spending again, and obviously April’s numbers show that they’re spending even more aggressively than forecasters, most of them, anticipated,” said George Selgin, an economic policy expert at the libertarian Cato Institute.
“There are some adverse supply shocks going on, some of which affected the April numbers, but the big story is the pent-up demand and purchasing power that people have finally started to dispose of,” he added.
Inflation had been widely expected to rise as the U.S. rebounded from the coronavirus recession following a plunge in consumer spending. But the unexpectedly sharp increases in prices have spurred more criticism from Republican lawmakers who have for months questioned the White House and Fed’s handle on inflation.
“There’s never been a time that I know of in history where you have had a significant increase in money supply where you don’t have inflation,” said Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) in an interview with The Hill.”
For the Nerds…
Here’s a two-fer for your Tuesday. When it comes to managing Big Tech, we often hear about Sec. 230, antitrust, and common carriage. But what about interoperability? Zach Graves of the Lincoln Network breaks down the promises and perils of using interoperability to infuse competition into the tech space.
And if you’re a 2nd Amendment nerd, my friend (and colleague) Phil Reboli has teamed up with Gun Owners of America to produce Minute Man Moment — a series of short videos which discuss the latest in 2A policy.
For the Oenophiles…
It’s rosé season, but pink wine isn’t just for sipping. It’s for pairing, too. When pairing rosé (or any wine), match weight with weight. That is, your more delicate, light, and dry rosé (think Provençe) will pair best with more delicate foods like fresh salads or charcuteries. Bigger, juicer rosés out of California, or even southern France, can be paired with barbecued meats or a bit of spice. Salmon, veggie skewers, charcuterie, soft cheeses, even duck — all great candidates to pair with pink!
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list
Note: By using some of the links above, Bright may be compensated through the Amazon Affiliate program and Magic Links. However, none of this content is sponsored and all opinions are our own.
May 18, 2021 01:00 am
Trump sadly lacked some necessary management skills. There is someone even better in the wings and there are simple steps he can take to destroy the Swamp. Read More…
May 18, 2021 01:00 am
Leaders in education don’t want to answer any questions dealing with Critical Race Theory. It’s time they were forced to. Read More…
May 18, 2021 01:00 am
The demand for debt abolition is a symptom of one of the left’s most common, and most irrational, core assumptions, conflating empathy with ethics. Read More…
Peace Calm for our time?
May 18, 2021 01:00 am
If the Biden administration doesn’t stop appeasing the terrorists at home and abroad, history tells us we are headed for another massive war to stave off yet another genocide that some so casually dismiss. Read more…
Tea Party, where are you?
May 18, 2021 01:00 am
The fact that the Tea Party isn’t holding rallies anymore does not mean that it’s vanished from American politics. Read more…
American Thinker is a daily internet publication devoted to the thoughtful exploration of issues of importance to Americans.
This email was sent to <<Email Address>> why did I get this? unsubscribe from this list update subscription preferences
AmericanThinker · 3060 El Cerrito Plaza, #306 · El Cerrito, CA 94530 · USA
Legendary guitarist Eric Clapton said he suffered “disastrous” side effects from his COVID-19 vaccine treatments and blamed “propaganda” insisting that the shots are safe.What are the details? … Read more
An unnamed “good guy with a gun” put a stop to what could have been a horrific mass killing over the weekend by using his own weapon to gun down a massacre suspect, … Read more
Instead of keeping the spotlight on Donald Trump, those who genuinely want a post-Trump GOP should focus on developing better options politically as well as in personality and policy.
In 2004, not liking gay marriage made you uncool. In 2021, it might make you a hate criminal — and no amount of past Democratic donations, good liberal activism, or yard signs will save you.
In the coming months, as the WTO decides how to proceed with this controversial decision, they must consider not just the current pandemic but the future of pharmaceutical innovations.
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.
,
You received this email because you signed up on our website.
Unsubscribe
40.) REUTERS
The Reuters Daily Briefing
Tuesday, May 18, 2021
by Linda Noakes
Hello
Here’s what you need to know.
A devastating cyclone hits India, Biden pitches his electric dream, and the new ‘Big Short’?
Today’s biggest stories
The Authority of Law statue outside the United States Supreme Court in Washington, U.S., May 17, 2021. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
Biden and first lady Jill Biden reported a drop in income as they filed their tax returns for 2020, marking a return to the normal practice of releasing such information by modern U.S. presidents.
Waves caused by Cyclone Tauktae crash up on the promenade near the Gateway of India monument in Mumbai, India, May 17, 2021. REUTERS/Niharika Kulkarni
Cross-border fighting between Israel and Hamas appeared to have abated slightly, with no fatalities logged in Gaza for the first time since hostilities erupted on May 10, and fewer long-range Palestinian rocket attacks. We look at the strain on Gaza’s hospitals from COVID and conflict.
Hong Kong’s government suspended operations at its representative office in Taiwan in a sign of escalating diplomatic tension between the global financial hub and the democratically ruled island that Beijing claims.
The family office run by ‘Big Short’ investor Michael Burry has disclosed a short position against Tesla worth more than half a billion dollars. Burry was profiled in the book and film of the same name for betting against the U.S. housing bubble.
Berkshire Hathaway has sold nearly all of its holdings in Wells Fargo, as Warren Buffett abandons a more than 31-year-old investment that was among his most successful before the bank was felled by scandals.
Walmart raised its full-year earnings forecast and beat estimates for same-store sales as it benefited from additional stimulus checks that put more money in consumers’ pockets and boosted demand for apparel and electronics.
Home Depot blew past quarterly same-store sales estimates, as demand remains strong for the top U.S. home improvement retailer’s products even as vaccinations open up more traditional avenues for customers to spend their money.
Quote of the day
“There will be birth. There will be death. There will be romance in the treetops. It’s going to be better than an episode of Game of Thrones”
Dr. Michael Raupp
Professor Emeritus of Entomology at the University of Maryland
You are receiving this email because you signed up for newsletters from Reuters. No longer want to hear from us? Unsubscribe from The Reuters Daily Briefing.
by Tony Perkins: Americans could use some good news right about now — and this morning, the Supreme Court gave it to them. After 29 long years, the justices just took a case that every pro-lifer has been waiting for: a direct challenge to Roe v. Wade. For the first time since 1992, the highest court in the land has a chance to deal a death blow to the precedent that’s tied this country in judicial knots — and robbed us of 62 million unique, irreplaceable lives. That could all change by this time next year when the Supreme Court has what some legal scholars are calling “the best opportunity they’ll ever have to overturn Roe.”
For years, cases have been bubbling to the surface from the states — all of them designed to do what Mississippi’s law just did: force the Supreme Court to reconsider the country’s abortion standards. A lot of people — FRC experts included — think the mere fact that the justices took the case is a victory. It means, most likely, that the court’s newest members are ready to make a major change in the law. “This is groundbreaking,” FRC’s Katherine Beck Johnson agreed. The fact that the Supreme Court has agreed to hear “the first gestational limit on abortion since Roe” is a significant shift. “With Justice Amy Coney Barrett now on the Court, we look forward to the unborn being protected,” she said.
And that’s exactly what groups like Planned Parenthood are afraid of. The organization’s action arm, led by Alexis McGill, was disgusted by the announcement, warning that almost 50 years of radical precedent is on the line. Pro-lifers, she said sullenly, have obviously been waiting for this day, since it’s “the opportunity for the newly compromised Supreme Court to take away our right to abortion.”
Mississippi’s law, which went through the ringer on appeal, would limit abortion to the first 15 weeks of pregnancy unless there’s a serious abnormality with the baby. That’s two months earlier than the 24-week limit, set by Planned Parenthood v. Casey in the early 90s. But times and technology, Mississippi argues, have changed. In her brief to the high court, state attorney general Lynn Fitch (R) calls it an “inflexib[le] viability standard [that] eviscerates ‘the states’ ability to account for ‘advances in medical and scientific technology that have greatly expanded our knowledge of prenatal life…'” She pointed to the new science on fetal pain and stimuli — explaining that babies can now feel pain much earlier than researchers thought. “Mississippi attempted to introduce these advances below. But the district court disregarded them,” she argued.
In fact, Judge Carlton Reeves didn’t just disregard them, he chastised Mississippi for trying to bait the new justices into taking their case. “The state chose to pass a law it knew was unconstitutional to endorse a decades-long campaign, fueled by national interest groups, to ask the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade,” he wrote. “This court follows the commands of the Supreme Court and the dictates of the United States Constitution, rather than the disingenuous calculations of the Mississippi Legislature.”
Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge James Ho was much more sympathetic but agreed that he was bound by what the Supreme Court had decided all of those years ago. Still, he didn’t mind reminding the justices in his reluctant (but separate) concurrence that “Nothing in the text or original understanding of the Constitution establishes a right to an abortion. Rather, what distinguishes abortion from other matters of health care policy in America — and uniquely removes abortion policy from the democratic process established by our Founders — is Supreme Court precedent.”
Now is the time to change that, NRO’s Ed Whelan says. “Laws like Mississippi’s have broad public support. According to an NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll from last year, only 29 percent of Americans think that abortion should generally be allowed after the first three months of pregnancy (13 or so weeks). That broad public support is likely to grow when Americans learn that — according to this Center for Reproductive Rights database — France, Italy, Germany, Spain, Norway, Switzerland, and lots of other European countries have a gestational limit of 14 weeks or earlier.” This case he points out will finally give President Trump’s three justices a chance to send the issue back where it belongs — to state legislatures. “Indeed,” he wrote in November, “it is unlikely that there will ever be a more opportune moment.”
For some justices, like Thomas and Samuel Alito, this day has been a long time coming. “Our abortion precedents are grievously wrong and should be overruled,” Thomas insisted as recently as last year. FRC’s Mary Szoch agrees. “Roe and Casey were obviously wrongly and arbitrarily decided… Now, with this direct challenge to Roe and Casey, the Court has a chance to correct their errors and send the ‘right’ to abortion back to the states. We must pray ardently that the justices have the courage to stand against the pressure from the left and uphold the Constitution. Ultimately, we must pray that hearts and minds everywhere change and that the review of Mississippi’s abortion ban is the beginning of total protection of the unborn child in the womb.”
—————————— Tony Perkins (@tperkins) is President of the Family Research Council . Article on Tony Perkins’ Washington Update and written with the aid of FRC senior writers.
Tags:Tony Perkins, Family Research Center, FRC, Family Research Council, A Supreme Chance, at an Abortion FixTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Bill Donohue: On May 14, Melissa Rogers, the executive director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, met with leaders of six secular organizations: Freedom From Religion Foundation, the American Humanist Association, American Atheists, Center for Inquiry, Ex-Muslims of North America and the Secular Coalition for America.
None of them are religion-friendly and some are positively militant in their agenda. They expressed their displeasure with the pro-religious liberty policies of the Trump administration, accusing it of fomenting “Christian nationalism.” The creation of this fiction is central to the anti-religion politics that drives these groups.
It would be one thing if White House staffers in domestic policy or civil rights invited representativesMelissa Rogers of these six organizations to discuss their concerns; it is quite another when those who purport to work with people of faith do so. The problem is traceable to February 14, the day Biden issued his executive order establishing his faith-based program.
It was President George W. Bush who founded a White House office of faith-based initiatives. He realized how effective these programs were in the delivery of services to the needy. He also knew that government programs, which are typically distant from those whom they serve, would be enhanced by partnering with these religious agencies. That is why he sought to put an end to government policies that shunned these entities.
President Obama pursued a more secular approach, effectively gutting the faith element in faith-based programs. Trump restored and strengthened the Bush model. Now Biden is picking up where the Obama-Biden administration left off.
On February 14, the White House announced that the Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships “will not prefer one faith over another or favor religious over secular organizations (my italics).” But the whole point of creating an office of faith-based programs was to prioritize religious social service agencies. Thus did Biden set in motion what happened on May 14.
If the Biden administration is going to manipulate the founding purpose of faith-based initiatives by welcoming the advice of militant secularists, it would do us all a favor and simply trash this office. It is obviously a bust.
————————— Bill Donohue writes for the Catholic League
Tags:Bill Donohue, Catholic League, Biden’s, Faith-Based Program, Is A BustTo 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: Anti-Semitism Abounds
As more than 3,000 rockets have rained down on Israeli civilians, Israel has hit Hamas hard. A senior Hamas military commander was killed today. Over the weekend, Israel destroyed Hamas’s intelligence headquarters, which was housed in a high-rise building shared by several media outlets, including the Associated Press and Al Jazeera.
You’d think the media would be condemning Hamas for essentially using journalists as human shields. But, no. Instead, most media reports are blasting Israel for “escalating the violence,” “threatening civilians,” “using disproportionate force,” and any other excuse you can think of.
Predictably, there were numerous riots by Palestinians and their supporters this weekend. Not in the so-called “Arab Street” in the Middle East, but in many western nations, including the United States. In contrast, many Arab capitals were quiet. They have figured out that they don’t want Hamas and Iran to be their future.
But there were riots and protests in London, Paris, Berlin, and in several major cities across the United States. These protests are driven by radical Islamists and radical leftists, and they reek of anti-Semitism.
And as the Biden Administration is pushing its open borders policies and dramatically increasing the number of refugees it is bringing into the country, it is worth asking how these new arrivals are being vetted, and whether they are even being vetted at all.
Donald Trump suspended immigration from nations that were known hot beds of terrorism and anti-Semitism. He was blasted as a bigot for doing so.
But why should we be importing more anti-Semitism into America? No one has been able to explain that to me, and it’s a legitimate question that our policymakers should be required to answer.
Meanwhile, there are ways you can take a stand for Israel.
ICE Abolished Did you miss the story about Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) being abolished? Well, you’re forgiven for not catching it. Joe Biden and his open borders gang are smart enough to avoid saying it out loud, as the socialist Squad does.
But that is the definition of “moderate” now in the Democrat Party. They effectively abolished ICE, but they’ll never tell you they did it.
Last month, deportations hit a record low, even as illegal border crossings are surging to record highs. Under new Biden Administration regulations, ICE has effectively been handcuffed.
The overwhelming majority of deportations carried out by ICE are for convicted criminals. But the Biden Administration has dramatically limited the authority of ICE agents. According to one analysis, Biden’s rules would prohibit nearly 90% of deportations that were allowed when Donald Trump was in office.
And not only are deportations way down, but the number of illegal aliens currently in ICE custody is also at a record low. That means a lot of criminal aliens are loose on our streets.
So, ICE has effectively been abolished.
Needless to say, most Americans are not happy with Biden’s handling of the border. They blame him for the current crisis, and prefer Trump’s border security policies over Biden’s open borders agenda.
CRT Strikes Again The struggle for racial reconciliation in America will go on for a long time. It is imperative that justice prevails. But it is important that you understand what is going on and how this battle is being waged.
The left has twisted the central message of Martin Luther King, Jr. He believed that all races are equal because they are made in the image of God, and that it is unacceptable to judge people based on the color of their skin. Instead, we should be judged by the content of our character.
In the name of fighting racism, the left is demanding the right to teach our children that all whites are oppressors. They claim white people were historically oppressors, that they are oppressors now and that they are genetically born to be oppressors because of the color of their skin.
These left-wing bigots are teaching white children that they are bigots and must be reeducated. That’s critical race theory, and it must be defeated if we want to achieve racial reconciliation in America.
When Governor Kevin Stitt signed legislation banning critical race theory in Oklahoma’s schools, he was kicked off a commission planning events to memorialize the centennial of the Tulsa Race Massacre.
When a commanding officer of the Space Force had the audacity to warn that critical race theory and Marxism were being pushed in the military, he was fired over the weekend.
This is not a battle for “sunshine patriots.” You must be all in. Or you must be prepared to lose all of the country.
When Harry Went Bonkers
One thing that drives me crazy is when someone voluntarily comes to the United States and quickly becomes a critic of our country, bashing our ideals, institutions and deeply held values.
Ilhan Omar comes to mind. As a young child, her family fled war-torn Somalia, and she lived in a refugee camp for several years. When Omar was a teenager, her family came to the United States, and she was eventually elected to Congress.
Now Omar has a tremendous platform to share her remarkable story. And it is a remarkable story – from a refugee camp to Congress. Only in America.
But Omar frequently uses her notoriety to bash Israel or the United States, the two pillars of Judeo-Christian civilization. Maybe she just doesn’t know any better.
It’s harder to come up with an explanation for Prince Harry, who, after moving to the United States, just declared the First Amendment “bonkers.”
Harry left his homeland and could have gone anywhere. But Harry chose the U.S., where he and his celebrity wife have made tremendous use of the First Amendment. Yet now he is bashing one of our most cherished freedoms.
Maybe it’s just sour grapes. After all, we used to be the 13 colonies of Great Britain. But King George III looked down his nose at us, and didn’t want us to have any freedoms. So, the colonists rebelled.
After Lexington and Concord Bridge, Bunker Hill, Trenton and Yorktown, we became a new breed of people – Americans. And our ideals have spread all over the world.
Here’s my advice: Whether you’re Ilhan Omar from Somalia or Prince Harry from England, if you can’t love America, then please go somewhere else. The world is your oyster. Pick a country, and quit trying to drag ours down!
But as Professor Jonathan Turley warns, we should take Harry’s comments seriously. This isn’t just some ignorant Brit bashing what he doesn’t understand.
Whether it’s Big Tech corporate giants censoring speech online, members of Congress calling for “Truth Commissions” or radical activists attempting to punish men and women of faith, there are plenty of progressives in this country who aren’t particularly fond of the First Amendment’s guarantee of free speech and religious freedom.
Abbott vs. Biden
Two months after Joe Biden accused Governor Greg Abbott of “Neanderthal thinking” for lifting his state’s mask mandate, Texas (with a population of 29 million people) reported zero COVID deaths yesterday.
———————————- Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Anti-Semitism Abounds, ICE Abolished, CRT Strikes AgainTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
We have a drug shortage problem in America, and we need to cut red tape – not cut corners – to get safe and effective drugs to market efficiently. by Sen. Mike Braun: I built a small business in my hometown into a national company, and I saw firsthand how broken our health insurance system is as a business owner trying to insure my employees.I decided to self-insure after too many years of hearing my underwriter tell me, “You’re lucky your costs are only going up 15 percent this year.” I took on Big Health care and built a plan for my employees based on two guiding principles: No one should go broke because they get sick or have a bad accident, and my employees should be empowered to take ownership in their own health care by shopping around for the best prices for services and prescriptions.The lessons I learned from taking on the health care industry in my own company led me to take on Big Health care in the US Senate, and the principles of forcing price transparency, cutting red tape, encouraging innovation, and facilitating fierce market competition have inspired the four health care reform bills I’ve reintroduced.Drug Price Transparency Act
Pharmacy Benefit Managers, or PBMs, act as middlemen between drug manufacturers and patients to administer prescription drug benefits and negotiate rebates. The current system allows for PBMs to pocket an undisclosed portion of rebates, causing drug manufacturers to raise prices to account for PBMs’ cut off the top. These misaligned industry incentives and murky pricing maneuvers force patients to shoulder the burden of increasing drug prices.
My first bill, the Drug Price Transparency Act would pull back the curtain on this broken system, and require insurers and PBMs to pass rebates directly to consumers enrolled in commercial health plans and Medicare Part D, incorporating HHS’s Rebate Rule, finalized last year.
My Drug Price Transparency Act establishes two new requirements to qualify for safe harbor for rebates: one for rebates which are passed on to patients at the point of sale, and the other for flat service fee payments made to PBMs, which cannot be tied to the list price of drugs. Just like in any other market, knowing the price of a product before you have to pay it empowers consumers to shop around for the best price, leading to lower prescription drug list prices and reduced out-of-pocket payments for patients.
Health Care PRICE Transparency Act
Hospitals and insurers have long taken advantage of the health care industry’s misaligned incentives that promote opaque pricing maneuvers to increase their profits, with patients footing the bill. Price transparency would empower patients to make more informed decisions when making health care choices, and increase competition among hospitals, group health plans, and insurance issuers in the individual and group markets to lower costs and improve the quality of health care services.
President Donald Trump made great progress toward health care price transparency through executive actions. My Health Care PRICE Transparency Act would build on this work by codifying two US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) final rules, Hospital Price Transparency, and Transparency in Coverage. My bill requires hospitals to disclose the cost of an item or service set by the hospital and establish an internet-based price estimator. It also requires insurers to provide consumers with personalized access to cost-sharing information so they can compare costs and know what they have to pay before they pay it.
Promising Pathway Act
Americans with serious and life-threatening diseases don’t have time to wait for the slow pace of Washington, DC, and for many of the millions of families fighting terminal illnesses, access to experimental treatments is their only hope.
My Promising Pathway Act will speed up the regulatory process for getting drugs to the patients that need them with an FDA provisional approval pathway for rapidly progressing conditions where few treatment options exist, such as ALS.
Under this provisional approval, those with rapidly progressing terminal illnesses would have access to drugs that provide their only hope for treatment, and real-world data collected from these patients would be incorporated into the drug approval process.
Accelerated Drug Approval for Prescription Therapies (ADAPT) Act
We have a drug shortage problem in America, and we need to cut red tape – not cut corners – to get safe and effective drugs to market efficiently.
My ADAPT Act would create an expedited drug approval process at FDA, specifically for drugs that are currently approved for sale in developed countries and have a satisfactory history of clinical trial data.
Think of it as a passing lane for drugs and treatments that have already been approved in other developed countries like Canada and the UK with strong clinical data focused on quality control, supply chain safety, and manufacturing processes, without compromising one bit on FDA’s safety and efficacy standards.
While many in Congress want to solve these drug shortage problems with drug importation, the ADAPT Act is a better solution that would help solve this problem and increase market competition between drugs on the marketplace without compromising on safety.
Americans are clamoring for real solutions on health care, and the lessons I learned in the real world by taking on the health care industry in my company – and the stories I’ve heard from Hoosiers struggling with rising costs and dwindling options – inspired these four solutions that will inject transparency, competition, and efficiency into our broken health care system, and help steer America off our collision course with socialized medicine.
Congress must listen to the voices I hear every time I travel Indiana calling for action on real health care solutions rather than more talk and bigger government, before it’s too late.
——————————— US Sen. Mike Braun is a Republican who represents the state of Indiana. The views expressed in this article do not reflect the views of any person or institution other than the author.
Tags:US Sen. Mike Braun, Americans Want Solutions, on Health Care, Four Ideas, from the Real World, Gingrich 260To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
A new woke recruiting ad sends all the wrong messages about America’s Armed Forces. by Arnold Ahlert: Just when Americans might think a CIA recruitment ad featuring a 36-year-old “cisgender Millennial” Latina CIA agent, who identifies as an “intersectional woman of color” and who has been “diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder,” might be the bottom of the woke barrel, the U.S. Army proves them wrong.The Army’s latest recruitment ad features a girl raised by two mothers, a lesbian wedding, and a civil rights protest, all aimed at “shattering stereotypes.” It opens with some music and the cartoon pictures of a soldier morphing into their photos. Then comes the narrative. “This is the story of a soldier who operates your nation’s Patriot Missile Defense Systems,” an animated female soldier named “Emma” states. “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,” Emma says, while images of a “Pride” demonstration are shown. “I like to think I’ve been defending freedom from an early age.”Whether she knows it or not, Emma is already in trouble. As the Democrat Party and the Biden administration have made clear, “equality” and the meritocracy implied by it must give way to “equity” and mandated outcomes that ostensibly redress historic injustices.
Emma then tells the story of one of her moms becoming paralyzed after an accident that occurred when Emma was six years old. “Doctors said she might never walk again,” Emma says. But after tapping into the family’s pride and working hard, she adds, her mom was able to “to get back on her feet, eventually standing at the altar to marry my other mom.”
Emma then says she graduated at the top of her high school class, attended university, and joined a sorority “full of strong women,” but as graduation approached she felt empty, especially when compared to her sorority sisters who were “studying abroad in Italy” and “climbing Mount Everest.” “I needed my own adventures,” she decided. “My own challenge. And after meeting with an Army recruiter, I found it. A way to prove my inner strength, and maybe shatter some stereotypes along the way.”
Cartoon Emma then morphs into U.S. Army Corporal Emma Malone-Lord. “And I answered my calling,” she says.
The ad closes with the words, “What calls you?”
For a United States Army that is also determined to “morph” from a lethal fighting force into a social justice-besotted enterprise, it appears one’s “calling” has far less to do with protecting national security than ticking off the politically correct boxes that satisfy progressive sensibilities.
Moreover, those sensibilities countenance no deviation whatsoever from leftist dogma. That is precisely why Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin issued a 60-day stand-down order requiring military leaders to discuss “the importance of our oath of office; a description of impermissible behaviors; and procedures for reporting suspected, or actual, extremist behaviors.” Austin used the Capitol riot on January 6 as the impetus for doing so, because some of those rioters were active-duty service members and military veterans.
Perhaps Austin might have more credibility if he voiced concern that the only lethal force used during that riot was directed at 35-year-old Air Force veteran Ashli Babbitt, who was shot and killed by a law enforcement officer. An officer whose identity remains unknown and whose actions have been deemed by the Justice Department as insufficient evidence to bring any charges.
He might also have more credibility if he voiced an equal amount of concern for the thousands of homeless military veterans afflicted with any number of combat-related disorders precipitated by fighting in endless wars, where equally “enlightened” military brass were far more concerned with “winning hearts and minds” than with defeating our enemies. So much so that American troops were required to remove the magazines from their weapons while quartered at bases with armed Afghans they were training to become policemen and soldiers. Astoundingly, it took more than 100 deaths for a military brass neck-deep in the PC swamp to figure out that the presence of armed Afghan trainees in the presence of unarmed American trainers gave our so-called “trusted Afghan partners” a decided tactical advantage.
That they’re still in the PC swamp is unsurprising. During the Obama administration, what could be best described as a purge of top military leaders took place. “I think they’re using the opportunity of the shrinkage of the military to get rid of people that don’t agree with them or not toe the party line,” a senior retired general said at the time.
And not just top generals. In 2013, Breitbart compiled a list of more than 197 military commanders, mostly at the rank of colonel or above, who were terminated by the Obama administration beginning in 2009.
No one should be surprised by those previous machinations, the current ones precipitated by Austin, or the production of woke recruitment videos. The military has long been perceived by leftists as the last bastion of conservative opposition to their agenda, and thus its ongoing bastardization proceeds apace, even if national security is compromised in the process.
It should also surprise no one that the military.com website offers the following assessment regarding the fact that nearly half of female soldiers taking the Army Combat Fitness Test are failing it, and that enlisted women are struggling the most. “The data again raises questions about whether the Army’s attempt to create a fitter force is creating more barriers to success for women,” it states.
Barriers to success for women? That such a contemptuous calculation would attach itself to putting men and women in harm’s way, where the only thing that should matter is the ability to do the job — one that requires a high degree of fitness — is highly indicative of the moral and intellectual rot that passes for military wisdom. The only thing worse is the apparent abandonment of anything resembling an effort to make our military wholly lethal — and wholly committed to achieving victory.
Here’s the U.S. Army’s recruitment video. Here’s a Russian army recruitment video. The differences couldn’t be starker — or more ominous — for America going forward. While the U.S. remains technologically superior, that superiority becomes an illusion when the will to win is supplanted by political correctness. Nothing makes that more obvious than Afghanistan, where the military spent two decades engaging a far less lethal force of guerrillas.
Guerrillas that will bring the Islamist status quo back to that nation — after we unceremoniously withdraw.
The current video is part of a series titled “The Calling.” It’s intended to be the first of a five-part video series following five “diverse” soldiers from different backgrounds who all joined the military. The bet here is that none of the five videos will “divert” from progressive orthodoxy.
It’s what happens when a PC-addled command structure prioritizes inclusion over readiness — and courts disaster by doing so.
—————————————— Arnold Ahlert writes for The Patriot Post.
Tags:Arnold Ahlert, The Patriot Post, U.S. Army, Prioritizes Inclusion, Over ReadinessTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Seton Motley: President Donald Trump began to revolutionize US trade policy for the very much better. We’d spent decades getting royally screwed by everyone else on the planet. We’d spent more than half a century committing slow-motion national suicide to the perpetual benefit of Communist China.
Trump put our outsourcing everything to corrupt China on the national radar. We went from not talking about it at all – to roundly denouncing it – in about three Trump seconds. Suddenly everyone was conversant in the Uyghurs’ west China plight. Trump’s “Make America Great Again” easily transmogrified into a national movement to “Make It in America Again.”
Trump’s use of tariffs wasn’t because he liked tariffs. It was because he disliked everyone’s tariffs. And trade limits. And subsides. Trump imposed tariffs upon countries that were massively subsidizing their exports to us – and taxing and severely limiting their imports from us. Trump wanted to reduce all of these anti-trade impositions – from and by everyone.
The point of Trump’s trade policy was identical to the point of all Trump policy: Make things better for Average Americans. Outsourcing everything to China and everywhere else is a huge boon to America’s Bigs – Big Tech, Big Business, Big Banks, Big Stocks, etc. But it royally screws Average Americans. Allowing foreign countries to export their domestic cronyism to us is a huge boon to America’s relocating Bigs – but it royally screws Average Americans.
Trump was trying to undo many decades of trade dumbness. The underlying theme of all the dumbness – was cronyism. Big Cronies benefited – Average Americans got screwed.
Biden’s trade people have spent most of its four months in power – almost singularly focused on getting monstrous Big Tech out from under some international digital taxes. Trump too was opposed to these taxes. But Biden is nigh myopically working to end/prevent them – to the exclusion of almost all other things trade. It’s almost as if Biden is supplicant to Big Tech’s bidding.
“But U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai, in one of her first moves after taking office in March, issued a set of reports that found each of the six countries had adopted a digital service tax that unfairly hurts U.S. commercial interests….
“The OECD talks have ‘definitely’ advanced since Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and her team took the reins, Chip Harter, a consultant with PwC, told our colleagues at Morning Tax. Harter was Treasury’s lead negotiator under Yellen’s predecessor, Steven Mnuchin….”
“USTR will conclude a series of hearings to gather feedback on retaliatory tariffs against six countries seeking to impose digital services taxes on American firms.”After four years of Democrats incessantly whining about Trump’s judicious use of tariffs to better things for Average Americans? Biden prepares to tariff – to benefit Big Tech.
U.S. Trade Chief Readies Tariffs Against Six Countries Over Digital TaxesThese foreign nations are looking to impose upon US Big Tech companies what is known as a Digital Services Tax (DST). What is a DST?:
“(S)ome countries are seeking to impose taxes on multinational tech companies based on their digital rather than physical presence.”Now, you may oppose the DST predicated upon the principle of wanting less taxes everywhere. So do I. But that absolutely isn’t a principle Biden shares with us.
Biden Will Reportedly Announce a $3.5 Trillion Tax HikeI’m guessing it’s the fact that other governments besides Biden’s gets the tax money.
You may oppose the DST predicated upon the principle of not taxing people who don’t live in your country. So do I. But that absolutely isn’t a principle Biden shares with us.
“The potential tariff hit: In its investigations, USTR found that U.S. internet companies face a combined digital services tax liability of up to $880 million in the six countries.”So all six countries are looking to impose a combined tax bill on all of Big Tech – of less than $1 billion. That is NOTHING to these corporate monstrosities.
Facebook: $888.4 billionLet’s pretend each Big Tech company could take respective turns paying the annual DST bill to all six countries for all Big Tech companies. And for simplicity’s sake – let’s round the tax bill up 12% to an even $1 billion.
For Big Tech, these digital taxes are a rounding error. Each Big Tech company has more in its petty cash drawer. This is NOTHING to them.
Of course, Big Tech doesn’t want to pay even these relatively minuscule amounts. That is understandable.
Biden going all out to get Big Tech to not have to pay them? To the exclusion of nigh all other US trade policy?
That is Big Government cronyism pathetic-ness.
———————————— Seton Motley is the President of Less Government and he contributes articles to ARRA News Service.
Tags:Seton Motley, Less Government, Joe Biden, International Trade Big Tech Cronyism, Is Ridiculously Small BallTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:AF Branco, editorial cartoon, Reading, Writing, RiotingTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:AF Branco, editorial cartoon, Mullah-BucksTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Speakers at a May 6 virtual event sponsored by Latinos for Tennessee, a traditional values advocacy group, explained what critical race theory is and why it’s so pernicious.
The Rev. C.L. Bryant, a Baptist minister and a senior fellow at FreedomWorks, had been a proponent of critical race theory as a young man, but has since turned against it.
“Critical race theory was something that was formed back in the 1950s, along with black liberation theology,” he explained.
Though its proponents are often compared to civil rights advocates of the past, Bryant said, their goal is really to ensure that the efforts of Martin Luther King Jr. and others were all for nought.
One of the more prominent aspects of critical race theory, Bryant says, is how it changes the definition of racism.
“When you change the definition, you change the destination,” he said, and that destination is moving people away from traditional ideas about education, family, gender, and marriage.
“What it has done is, it has weakened society as far as its core values are concerned,” Bryant said.
Also, among its most pernicious aspects, the minister said, is how critical race theory ideology makes Americans hate one another and hate their country.
“Critical race theory is a tool, a mechanism,” Bryant said, to make young people of all colors think America was founded in slavery and racism.
Bryant explained that he grew up experiencing actual “systemic” racism under segregation and that his parents had been civil rights advocates. But the legal segregation that was present in America’s past no longer exists.
“Is there anything you can do in America today where the color of your skin would stop you from doing it?” he asked.
He said that most critical race theory proponents have no clue what actual systemic racism is, and that if anything, it’s critical race theory ideas that are becoming so common.
Robby Starbuck, a director and producer, spoke about how critical race theory mirrors how Marxists have used racial division in other countries to empower their ideas.
Starbuck, who is Cuban American, said Cuban communists used racial division to seize power in that Caribbean island nation.
Another way radicals usher in revolution is through the changing of shared language, he said, and that is one of the core tenets of critical race theory.
Starbuck cited the word “Latinx”—widely used as a gender-neutral stand-in for “Latino” and “Latina” in left-wing academic circles—that has now become commonly used in the media.
That’s despite the fact that very few Hispanic people actually want to be called that, he said.
Despite many of the concepts and ideas of critical race theory being unpopular, the constant exposure to them, Starbuck said, “creates reality for people.”
Indoctrination is a powerful tool in the hands of left-wing ideologues, he said, and that’s unfortunate because America’s children deserve a “politically neutral education.”
While critical race theory may be becoming pervasive in America, Starbuck offered that there is hope in countering and defeating it. He cited the May 1 election in a Dallas suburb in which candidates who supported critical race theory curriculum were resoundingly defeated at the polls.
Dr. Ming Wang, a surgeon, author, and refugee from Communist China, said there are parallels between what is being peddled by advocates of critical race theory and what he encountered living in a communist country.
“To me, America is so unprecedentedly polarized, it’s deadly,” he said. “And that polarization is defined by the increasing fixation on our differences, rather than appreciating what we have in common.
The problem is, we are told to focus on our differences rather than what unites us, he explained, and what we really need most today is a “vaccine” against the virus of polarization.
Have an opinion about this article? To sound off, please email [email protected] and we’ll consider publishing your edited remarks in our regular “We Hear You” feature. Remember to include the url or headline of the article plus your name and town and/or state.
————————- Jarrett Stepman writes for The Daily Signal
Tags:Jarrett Stepman, The Daily Signal, Critical Race Theory, Weakens Society, Breeds Hate, Minorities SayTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Robert Romano: 2020 and 2021 are two sides of the same coin: Price instability brought about by the dollar being either relatively too strong or too weak, which can lead to or exacerbate economic slowdowns, creating higher unemployment and worse if the conditions persist for too long.
Since then, more than 17 million jobs have been recovered as states and businesses have steadily reopened, adjusting to the pandemic. This has been accompanied by an ongoing torrent of government spending — more than $4.95 trillion of new debt since Jan. 2020, $2.7 trillion of which was purchased by the Federal Reserve since then —and a subsequent weakening of the dollar.
Now we’re well into 2021, but the torrent of government spendinghas not abated, which began with the $2.2 trillion CARES Act in March 2020 and then the additional $900 billion phase four legislation that passed in December, both to address the economic fallout of Covid. Now, Congress has passed another $1.9 trillion Covid spending bill in March. Adding to the mix, President Joe Biden has another $2.3 trillion infrastructure spending bill planned.
As one would expect, even with the Fed engaged in massive quantitative easing, flooding the rest of treasuries markets, the weakening of the dollar has continued, leading to significant price inflation—the opposite side of the price instability coin—up 4.2 percent in the past 12 months, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The last three months, if prices continue climbing unabated the next nine months the way they did the past three months — that would bring annual inflation all the way up to 7.2 percent.
The month of April saw a surge in food, electricity, used cars and trucks and transportation prices, but a temporary softening of fuel prices, although the measurement was taken before the East Coast gas shortage in early May. Now, oil is again rallying, returning to $65 a barrel, prices not seen since Sept. 2019.
Where does it go from here? One key factor to watch will be the trade-weighted U.S. dollar index, published by the St. Louis Federal Reserve, which gives you a view of the relative strength of the dollar versus that of trade partners.
In the short-term, while the dollar is still weakening and the economy and inflation heating up as the recovery continues, one can expect job creation to continue. However, despite the flood of trillions of dollars of spending, job creation has slowed the past month, from 609,000 more Americans saying they had jobs in March, to 328,000 in April.
With 7.5 million jobs left to recover from the Covid recession, at the April rate, it might take another two years to just get back to where we started before the coronavirus swept the land.
Could the spending be counterproductive? For example, does the additional $300 on top of regular unemployment benefits create a perverse incentive not to look for work?
Additionally, if inflation becomes persistently high, it could eventually slow down consumer spending and result in stagflation. That was certainly the case in the 1970s, where inflation correlated with high unemployment, too.
Last year the battle was that the dollar was far too strong, deflation and the economy closing as millions of job losses were rampant.
In 2021, after a year of spending and borrowing trillions and now the dollar is rapidly getting weaker, and too much spending could be curtailing job seeking.
Neither extreme is good or healthy for the economy long-term, advising price stability as the way to keep everything running smoothly and create the conditions for job creation. First up should be forestalling or severely curtailing Biden’s planned infrastructure spending binge and instead focus on conditions for safely reopening the economy, and winding down the emergency economic supports, including the unemployment extensions. Will Congress take its foot off the gas pedal?
Obviously, the continued economic recovery depends on the current successful administration of the Covid vaccines and their long-term effectiveness. With 155 million doses administered, if we start seeing cases and deaths rise again, all bets are off. Then, we won’t be worried about inflation.
—————————— Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
Tags:Robert Romano, Americans for Limited government, price stability, US, economyTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Judd Garrett : Liz Cheney was removed from her leadership position by the Republican Party on Wednesday mainly because she has spent too much time attacking former President Trump for questioning the results of the 2020 election, and not enough time trying to stop Joe Biden’s agenda. She has said, “there is clearly an attempt to unravel the democracy,…by focusing on challenging the legitimacy of the election.” And that we have “particular obligation to make sure people know the election wasn’t stolen, that we shouldn’t perpetuate ‘the big lie,’.”
Donald Trump is not lying when he questions the results of the election. He is making an unsubstantiated claim. And that is an important distinction. Most proven claims of wrong doing start out as an unsubstantiated claim that with a thorough investigation, and fact finding, is then proven either true or false. Liz Cheney does not know the election was honest with any more certainty than Trump knows it was stolen. Her claims of election integrity is as evidence-free as Trump’s claims of election fraud. And therein lies the problem. Neither side knows the truth.
26 million more votes were cast in 2020 than in any previous Presidential election, so it’s fair to ask whether all 26 million of those new votes were cast legally and legitimately. Election integrity is paramount to a functioning country, and simply stating the election was fair, like Liz Cheney, does not make it fair. That is something dictators do; they make blanket claims of integrity without any evidence to back them up. So, questions about the integrity of an election should not be ignored, or shot down as threats to democracy, they should be fully investigated. Yet we have never had a complete forensic investigation or audit of the 2020 election. So, Liz Cheney’s claim that the election was fair is as unproven as Trump’s claim that it was stolen.
Not only were 26 million more votes cast, we also had unprecedented, unconstitutional, and rushed-thru changes to our election laws in many states, primarily the battleground states, so it only makes sense to conduct a thorough investigation of our elections to determine if these changes hold up to the highest standards of integrity.
In 2000, we believed it was right to allow a challenge of the Presidential election all the way to the Supreme Court to ensure that election was fair so the American people would have confidence in our newly elected President. 4 years ago, we thought it was necessary to appoint Robert Mueller to investigate the 2016 election for 2 ½ years for the same reason. So, why isn’t it worth investigating this election? Why are any questions of this election immediately dismissed as lies and attempts to undermine our democracy? Why is every challenge of this election blocked and stonewalled? What are they trying to hide?
Regardless of what Liz Cheney says, questioning an election does not undermine our democracy; not investigating potential fraud in an election undermines our democracy. A thorough investigation would answer many of the questions that people have, and it would go a long way to build confidence in our current President, and also help to ensure the integrity of future elections. Transparency is vital to a functioning government, so telling people to look the other way, and don’t ask questions is the exact opposite of transparency.
The burden of proof should rest not only on the people charging fraud, but also on the government officials claiming integrity. “Not guilty” is not a high enough bar for our elections. We must demand proof of innocence, proof that there was no fraud. Claims of either fraud or legitimacy must be held to the exact same standards of proof when it comes to elections or other governmental functions. That’s what transparency means. This will restore the American citizens’ trust in our elections, as opposed to simply making an unproven claim of integrity like Liz Cheney continues to do.
We can never assume anything regarding the integrity of our election system, and we must scrutinize it to the highest degree with the strictest standards. The problem is that the people who are blocking and stonewalling investigations into the 2020 election, are the ones pushing Federal changes to our election laws which would remove many of the mechanisms in place that ensure the integrity of the vote. The people who don’t want to investigate potential voter fraud in this past election are also pushing policies that would make it easier to commit voter fraud in future elections.
This is not about our past, Donald Trump; this is about our future, our country. The legitimacy of our elections which determines the legitimacy of our government is at stake. We must ensure that not only was the 2020 election legitimate, but safeguard all of our elections moving forward because if we stop having legitimate elections, we will descend into chaos. So, the “big lie” is not the claim that the 2020 election was stolen, or the 2020 election was legitimate. The “big lie” is the charge that questioning the results of an election undermines our democracy because scrutinizing elections makes democracy that much stronger.
————————- Judd Garrett writes for Objectivity is the Objective. His most recent non-writing job was as Director of Advanced Scouting with the Dallas Cowboys. He is a frequent contributor on the topics of sports and politics to Real Clear Politics.
Tags:Judd Garrett, The Big Lie?To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
We have a complete meltdown of control at our southern border, with the tragedy of little kids being trafficked as if they were boxes of Mexican fruit – suffering abuse and deprivation;
The drug cartels are taking advantage of the border breakdown by pouring deadly drugs into our country that is killing people from New York to Oregon;
Gasoline will soon be double the cost it was a year ago, and some people can’t find a gas station that has any gas left;
Employers can’t stay open because people are living off government giveaways of stimulus checks and unemployment instead of taking jobs that are available;
Our schools are still closed in many places because the teachers don’t want to go back to the classroom, and
The Middle East is being burned down by rockets flown by jihadist terrorists from the Hamas stronghold of Gaza.
At the rate he’s going, Joe Biden will make Jimmy Carter become a candidate to become the 5th President on Mt. Rushmore.
I admit I didn’t vote for Joe Biden and feared he would lead us off the left side of the cliff, but even I thought it would take longer than 100 days to do it.
I’m especially grieved to see the great progress toward peace in the Middle East that was achieved by the historic Abraham Accords replaced by violence, destruction, and death as the terror group Hamas fires thousands of rockets toward civilian targets in Israel.
Joe Biden wants to revive the horrible deal with Iran to supposedly cause them to give up building a nuclear weapon, but sensing real weakness on the Biden team has emboldened Iran to buy more rockets for Gaza so they can try to kill Israelis.
This at a time when Gaza and the Palestinians could sure use schools, streets, medical care, and jobs.
Instead they use the Iranian money and sadly, the money you the American taxpayer gives them to buy bullets, bombs, and rockets to kill Jews in Israel.
To his credit, after a few days of silence, President Biden finally called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and publicly acknowledged that Israel has a right to defend itself against these senseless attacks on their sovereign land.
For the past four years, Israel was in the most peaceful period of the past decade. President Trump moved the Embassy to Jerusalem just as he had promised and his team tried a completely different approach to peace which resulted in the breakthrough Abraham Accords, which brought about the first peace agreement between Israel and Arab lands in 25 years. As a result, the UAE, Morocco, Bahrain, and others are now trade partners and tourism partners with Israel with other Arab nations being expected to follow.
Joe Biden was in government for almost 50 years. Donald Trump had never held any political office. Sure Trump could be rough around the edges, but when you’re stuck in a long line to get gas that is costing you twice what it did a year ago while listening to the news about the violence in the Middle East and the downturn of our economy, you might want to remember that it’s not the personality of a President that gives our nation its strength, but his policies. And the ones we’re seeing right now just aren’t working out well.
———————————– Mike Huckabee is the former governor of Arkansas and longtime conservative.
Tags:Mike Huckabee, Joe Biden, leads America Off, the Left Side, of the CliffTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by E. P. Unum: Now that the Spring Semester has come to a close and I have submitted final grades for my students, I find myself struggling and trying to understand many of the things that are going on around me in the world. Here are some of them:
1. I listened to President Biden respond to a question about why the price of gasoline at the pump had increased nationally by 67% and in my neck of the woods even higher. Almost as if he expected the question, he quickly responded that the increase was attributable to the Colonial Pipeline shut down due to a cyber-security attack by criminals who live in Russia. Of course, this is a blatant falsehood. Costs have been rising steadily all across the nation ever since Biden canceled the Keystone XL Pipeline a few hours after he took office and then disallowed oil and gas exploration o federal lands or offshore. These facts alone contributed to significant cost increases due to the cost of transporting oil from Alberta Canada to US Refineries via truck and rail. In addition, with the stroke of his pen, Biden wiped away decades of work and effort, culminating in the United States achieving complete energy independence. Indeed, under Trump, America for the first time in history became an oil-exporting rather than importing nation. Given our vulnerabilities to cyberattacks on our oil and gas delivery systems, shouldn’t we be building more pipelines, not cutting back on our system of delivery?
2. Of course there is the argument posed by the liberal progressives on the left that Biden’s decision was necessary as an important first step toward weaning our nation off from fossil fuels and transforming America quickly to the use of battery-powered electrical vehicles. Putting aside the important essential about just how batteries are produced, has anyone thought through just what would occur if, for example, electric cars were jammed on major travel roads like the Cross Bronx Expressway in New York; the Long Island Expressway, the infamous 405 connecting San Diego and Los Angeles and many other highly traveled roads. Cars breaking down in need of recharging and an inability of road service to get to them because of the congestion. It is really a simple, straightforward question so vitally necessary in forward-thinking planning. I’ll wait for an answer…..
3. Imagine if you will, that you are a young college-educated employee in his or her first job. You are making $50,000 per year or $961.54 per week but are laid off due to the pandemic. You file for unemployment, are approved for $400 per week tax-free, and the Federal Government chips in another $300 per week until September 2021, approximately four months from now. So now you are making $700 per week tax-free sitting home, going to the beach (it is now summer), and hanging out with your friends or girlfriend/boyfriend. Your employer calls and asks you to come back to work at your old salary. What would you do? I’ll bet you would opt to continue on unemployment which is what most people are in fact doing, and it is perfectly understandable. Our government has created a system that rewards people to not work and that is undemocratic as well as ill-advised in terms of economics.
4. Yes, indeed good ol’ Joe Biden speaks to us in a calm, easy style quite unlike that curmudgeon Donald Trump who sometimes (heaven forbid) got angry and yelled at people. He even dared to send mean tweets and Facebook posts. Oh, my goodness! Maybe it is so nice listening to calm, soothing good ol’ Joe from Scranton PA, but I’m having a tough time reconciling what he says with what is happening in the world under Biden versus what it was under Trump. For example:
Trump, unlike all his predecessors, created peace in the Middle East with the Abraham Accords with Arab and Muslim nations, for the first time, opening trade and commerce with Israel. Today, calm and folksy Joe Biden is now dealing with a possible full-scale war between Israel and the Palestinians. That did not occur under Trump, and indeed, would not occur under Trump.
Biden desperately wants to re-institute the Iran Nuclear Agreement which Obama pioneered. He has removed sanctions with Iran and is considering releasing about $1.0 billion in funds held by the U.S. It remains to be seen what we will get in return for this goodwill. If Iran holds true to form, we will end up getting nothing. Trump walked away from Iran and the Obama Nuclear pact because it was, and still is, a pathway for Iran to develop a nuclear bomb which they have repeatedly said they would use against Israel.
The U.S. Navy stopped a huge cargo ship containing weapons, anti-tank missiles, and other hardware destined for the Houthi Rebels in Yemen who are waging war against Saudi Arabia, our ally. Those weapons came from Iran. And Biden wants to reopen negotiations with this rogue state? Doesn’t make sense to me.
Joe Biden says he is a practicing Roman Catholic. Yet he unilaterally negated the Mexico Accord making abortions in foreign nations U.S.Taxpayer funded. Why would Biden take such a step without any clamoring from citizens demanding it?
We have been fed a steady diet of media hype such as the American Rescue Plan; the Family Plan and the Infrastructure Plan, each costing trillions of dollars…money we don’t have. Billions of dollars embedded in these plans include gifts…grants… to foreign nations, some of whom don’t like us very much. I’m wondering…are there nations in Europe or Asia whose citizens pay taxes to their respective governments who, in turn, give aid to America? Many of America’s homeless are veterans who risked their lives to ensure those nations had freedom and came back home with profound disabilities. Some did not return at all. Do we ever receive any grants and gifts from these nations? Asking for a friend…….
I am still puzzled by the fact that doctors at Bethesda Naval Hospital have not given President Biden a complete physical and disclosed to we the people that our President is “fit for duty” physically and mentally. Aren’t we entitled to this? Keep in mind that Joe Biden suffered two….two…subarachnoid hemorrhages (bleeds in the brain) usually requiring lifelong medications and continual monitoring. Do we know what medications he is taking? Is he fit to be the Commander in Chief of our Armed Forces? He seems to be having difficulty speaking and focusing, and I do not believe I am the only one concerned about this.
If you have children or grandchildren you should be enraged by what is happening in terms of educating our children. Today, our children are being exposed to Critical Race Theory and Cancel Culture. They are being taught to hate our country and to view everything through the spectrum of race. CRT and Cancel Culture are essentially un-American and un-democratic. They are rooted in Marxist/Socialist/Communist Ideology and you need to stand up and express your displeasure with these ridiculous curriculums.
The real existential threat to the United States is not climate change. The real threat is China. And we need to unite ad bid together to meet this threat head-on. Climate Change is not real. It is unsettled science and advocates and town criers like John Kerry, perhaps the most dangerous man in America, need to shut up and stay home. How about a nationally televised debate on climate change moderated by independent scientists. Seems to me we ought to have the opportunity to consider the arguments from both sides before spending trillions and changing the face of our nation.
Finally, notwithstanding the decision by the CDC and President Biden to state that citizens who are vaccinated need not wear mass outside or inside anymore, Dr. Fauci had to chime in. Dr. Anthony Fauci of the NIH stated unequivocally that children should still wear masks when playing outside. I find that inexplicable. Dr. Fauci once played basketball in high school in New York City. I wonder how he would feel about playing basketball wearing a mask? I wonder if he heard about the female high school 800-meter runner who was forced to wear a mask and collapsed at the finish line. Maybe the Prophet of Doom ought to think before he makes such proclamations.
Yes, indeed, a number of puzzling things going on.
——————————– E.P. Unum is US! H/T McIntosh Enterprises – May 17, 2021.
Tags:E.P. Unum, Things That Puzzle MeTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Jack Miller: If Abraham Lincoln were alive today and looking out from a speaker’s stand over our divided nation, he would probably once again deliver his Gettysburg speech. All he would need to change is the number of years:
“Twelve score and five years ago our fathers brought forth upon this continent, a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.”
During a time when all over the world kings reigned with absolute power, our founders brought forth a nation based on the vision which Jefferson so perfectly expressed: “that all men are created equal.” And because we were all created equal, we are all entitled to the same rights—amongst which are the rights to “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
Jefferson knew that no human institution could ever perfectly embody these ideals. But he declared that ours would be the nation that was always striving to achieve that vision.
Our history is the story of our steady progress toward that vision. We have made great strides: slaves were freed, the franchise extended, and liberty and sovereignty secured at the cost of blood and treasure. We know there is still much to be done, and that work will never cease.
We traditionally have looked to our schools and universities to help raise up the next generation of informed and aware Americans—Americans who value our founders’ vision and who can lead this nation forward to continue our progress. Yet few of us feel very good about what we see.
Too often, politicized or partisan instruction has replaced thoughtful American History and old-fashioned civics instruction, including the careful and reflective reading of America’s historic documents such as the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and their sources of inspiration in English common law and Enlightenment philosophers. In response, The 1776 Commission published a report to honor our true history and refute misrepresentations of it.
To be sure, American education can boast many excellent programs in such areas as science, technology, medicine, engineering, and other fields. But our schools are no longer fulfilling their mission when it comes to forming the next generation of informed and patriotic citizens. Without those citizens, we will be unable to continue pursuing the vision of our Declaration.
Taking Action
Many Americans are rightfully becoming more and more concerned about this problem. Instead of being discouraged, we at the Jack Miller Center are doing something about it. Since 2004, we have been building a cadre of professors on college campuses across the country. Today we have about 1,000 professors, on more than 300 campuses, who have taught well over 1 million students about the wisdom and promise of our founding documents and our history of making them a reality.
We are beginning to see a revitalization. It is not yet strong enough, but it promises a real renaissance in the honest study of American History, in the understanding of our foundational documents, and in the true meaning of that vision that binds together all Americans of whatever race or ethnicity.
By the time kids reach college, it is almost too late. By then, too many of our young people have settled into the belief that America is fundamentally evil and that our free market system is inherently unfair—even though it gives all individuals the greatest opportunities to succeed. So, five years ago, we began a K-12 teachers initiative, starting by enriching the knowledge of high school social studies teachers about our history and our founding principles.
We started in Chicago and expanded to New York City, Wisconsin, Virginia, and now the entire state of Florida. The response from the teachers has been great. They are hungry for good content that they can use in their classrooms. Our vision is to expand this state by state until we are covering the country.
This is a boots-on-the-ground effort. We are really making a difference. For more information on our progress both at the university and the K-12 level, visit our website at jackmillercenter.org. This is an effort that all patriotic Americans can and should get behind.
To conclude as Lincoln did in his Gettysburg address: “we here highly resolve…that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”
————————- Jack Miller is the founder and chairman of the Jack Miller Center, a nonprofit working to get the teaching of our founding principles and history back into schools across America. Article shared by The American Mind.
Tags:Jack Miller, Taking Back, American EducationTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Daniel Greenfield: In November, the American Federation of Teachers was touting Kelly Trautner’s views on safe school reopenings. Earlier in the pandemic year, Trautner had promoted a webinar on a safe return to schools. By 2021, the AFT’s Director of Healthcare, was offering her own lessons on “yoga and pranayama practices” and “meditation and mindfulness”.
As a certified yoga teacher and “Registered Karuna Reiki Master” (meaning she had mastered Stage III of Holy Fire of the pseudoscience which includes “healing past life issues” and “clearing cellular memories from the DNA”), this was something Trautner was qualified to do.
But the AFT’s Director of Healthcare, occasional yoga teacher, executive coach, and master of the secret energy arts was telling the CDC under what conditions schools could be reopened.
And she was doing it with the backing of the Biden administration.
Biden had run for office promising to “listen to the science” and “follow the science” especially when it came to reopening schools. While desperate parents clamored to reopen schools and save their children from depression and suicide, he promised them that he would only allow it if the science said he could.
“I set an ambitious but achievable goal of opening most K-8 schools by the end of my first 100 days,” Biden declared. “It is also a goal we can meet if we follow the science.”
Then he redefined reopening most schools as being ‘open’ for at least one day a week.
Biden hasn’t achieved his goal because he didn’t really try. The American Federation of Teachers, the greedy and powerful union, and its local affiliates, had fought school reopenings. When CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said that schools could reopen, the Biden administration quickly claimed that she had only spoken “in her personal capacity”.
Biden promised that there would be “science-based judgment” on reopening schools coming.
Emails obtained by Americans for Public Trust showed that the CDC’s “science-based judgement” was actually being shaped by the AFT and revealed an email from its Reiki Master slash lawyer slash meditation expert laying out obstacles to reopening schools.
Not only wasn’t Biden following the science, but he was following a literal pseudoscience.
The AFT not only got access to the CDC’s guidance but Trautner sent an email providing “possible ways to strengthen the document” by calling for exempting teachers who “who have documented high-risk conditions or who are at increased risk for … COVID-19”, or who have a household member at “increased risk”, from having to go back to work teaching students.
Based on CDC materials, the category of increased risk could potentially cover teachers over 65 or even 45 years old, minorities, anyone with type 1 or type 2 diabetes, pregnant teachers, former smokers, alcoholics, or teachers who are overweight or obese.
A 5’2 teacher who weighed 136 pounds would qualify as overweight using the BMI index.
With categories like these, it would be hard to find teachers who weren’t potentially exempt from doing their jobs.
The CDC’s guidelines told schools to offer “remote work” options to teachers with “high-risk conditions that place them at increased risk for severe illness from COVID-19”. A possibly narrower group, but seemingly incorporating the core proposal from Trautner and the AFT.
The CDC also apparently added Trautner’s line about revisiting the guidelines, “in the event of high community-transmission results from a new variant of SARS-CoV-2.”
The email from Trautner to the CDC was forwarded by Carole Johnson.
Johnson is one of Biden’s three pandemic response coordinators. Forwarding Trautner’s email to the CDC made it very clear that the Biden administration wanted the “science” to be governed by the demands of the AFT through its Director of Healthcare whose medical background was in “healing past life issues” and releasing “karma and deeply seated issues on the cellular level”.
Before becoming a Biden pandemic response coordinator, Johnson had been the Commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Human Services.Johnson’s tenure in the scandal-plagued Murphy administration, which had forced nursing homes to accept infected coronavirus patients, and whose state-run veteran homes had become death factories, had been controversial in her own right. Before that, Johnson had been a senior health policy advisor in the Obama White House, and had worked for assorted lefty non-profits and legislators. What were her scientific qualifications for any of this?
As a New Jersey briefing noted, Carole Johnson “has a Master’s degree in government from the University of Virginia. She also has brought on board Andrea Katz, who is her Chief of Staff. Ms. Katz is an attorney by training, and has worked in various capacities for the democratic party.”
Katz is currently the chief of staff of the New Jersey Department of Human Services.
Working in various capacities for the Democrats seems to be all the science that’s needed.
That and a law degree.
Kelly Trautner, in addition to her energy healing skills, also has a BA in political science from Marshall University and a JD from Capital University. After graduating from law school, Trautner seemed to have become the deputy executive officer of the Ohio Nurses Association. When the union affiliated with the AFT, Trautner came along for the ride.
Along the way she ran the Center for Balanced Living, practiced executive coaching, was certified in yoga and energy healing, and rose to become the director of AFT Nurses and Health Professionals even though there’s no sign in her bio of being a nurse or having any kind of medical degree in anything. This year, she made the leap to Senior Director on Health Issues.
Several years earlier, Trautner had been urging followers to “send Reiki” energy “alone or in a group” because “the world needs our light.”
It’s not clear what scientific or medical qualification Trautner has on health issues. It’s one thing to head up a union for medical workers, and another to give the CDC medical guidance.
The AFT could have found an actual doctor to serve as Director of Healthcare, and to negotiate with the CDC, the fact that it didn’t says everything about the legitimacy of its medical concerns.
The CDC and the Biden administration certainly knew whom it was dealing with and didn’t care.
When a Reiki master with a law degree is providing the CDC with school reopening guidance, that’s not science, it’s union politics.
A few years ago, Kelly Trautner was running a center using “trauma-informed yoga programming” to treat eating disorders. And then she was telling the CDC what to do.
Biden claimed that he was going to listen to the scientists. And then he let an energy healer with a background in healing past life issues and clearing cellular memory have more influence over reopening schools than the actual parents desperately fighting for their children.
So much for the science.
The majority of white Democrats are no longer Christian. And lefties love mocking religion, claiming that they’re rationalists who believe in science, not superstition. And then, whether it’s Hillary Clinton’s seance or the Marianne Williamson presidential campaign, they prove to be willing to believe in anything and everything except God and the Bible.
43% of liberals believe that astrology is scientific, 58% of Democrats believe in UFOs, and 69% believe in ghosts. Less than half of Democrats know that the earth revolves around the sun.
70% of Republicans believe in God. Only 45% of Democrats do. 39% believe in some ‘other’ power or spiritual force.
When that’s the base of your party, why not turn to an ancient energy healing system from 1989 which planted World Peace Crystal Grids at the poles to send peace energy all over the world?
People are entitled to believe whatever they like. What they’re not entitled to do is falsely claim that they’re the party of science when what they really believe is they’re unhappy because in a past life they were Lizzie Borden whose ghost still haunts their downstairs bathroom and that the spaceship is coming to take those with the right colored auras back to their home planet.
And they can’t claim that they’re listening to the science when they’re obstructing school reopenings, when what they’re really doing is listening to energy healing union hacks.
“The science has been evolving,” AFT boss Randi Weingarten had argued. “It’s not a political calculation, it’s based on trying to make the science work.”
Evolving the science to make it work for you is what you do when you don’t like the results.
And then you can regress your DNA’s cellular memory and explain that teachers shouldn’t be expected to actually teach children until they work out their past lives as long as the American Federation of Teachers keeps funding the political ambitions of the Democrat Party.
—————————- Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center’s Front Page Magazine, Joe Biden, Put Past Life Healer, in Charge of School Reopenings.
Tags:FrontPage Mag, Daniel Greenfield, President Biden. Put Past Life Healer in Charge, School ReopeningsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Mario Murillo Ministries: A few days ago, I received an email from, of all people, CNN. They wanted to know if I was still holding on to my ‘conspiracy theories.’ I thought, “Who are the real conspiracy theory nut jobs?”
Remember how the left ridiculed us for predicting disaster once Biden got into the White House? They were quite sincere and convinced that we were wrong. They said with conviction, “Oh no, you are wrong! Biden will be a president for all the people. The world will be relieved at his presence. Peace and security will ensue.”
Now, Biden is overseeing a vast human tragedy at the border, soaring gas prices, racial hatred, and the world on the brink of war.
Not only were we right—we were too right. It has degenerated faster than even we imagined. We emphatically warned that he would rain down calamity after calamity. That he would cause soaring gas prices, inflation, a spike in murder rates, unrest in the Middle East, and war.
You had none of that when Trump was President. In fact, you had the polar opposite. Under Trump, we became a world class energy exporter. Under Trump, violent crime dropped, across the board. Under Trump, the Middle East began an era of peace with the miraculous Abraham Accords. Under Trump, our borders were secure, and America stayed out of wars.
Using the media and Big Tech, evil marketing and theft, Biden entered the White House. Remember how wicked they made Trump sound? Remember how wrong it was for any decent person to vote for Trump? That Woke-A-Cola was so widespread that even pastors were explaining why they could not vote for Trump. Listen to this doozy, spouted by a man with a PhD from a Pentecostal Denomination:
“As a spiritual leader who believes the Bible is the revealed word of God, I vote for Joe Biden. Some Christian friends may point to the abortion policies espoused by Democrats, and question my pro-life convictions. But politics is NOT a single-issue enterprise. And the Bible presents a stark contrast between godly and ungodly behaviors far more extensively than simply about the unborn. Before you write an angry reply to the post, do one simple thing: read any chapter of the Book of Proverbs, and see if you can find a single verse to suggest the current president is someone to follow. In addition to several other passages, I read a Proverbs chapter daily, and cringe multiple times about the boastful man-in-office who claimed he would ‘save Christianity.’”
With little effort at all, I was able to find Trump in the book of Proverbs: “He who rebukes a man will find more favor afterward than he who flatters with the tongue” (Proverbs 28:23).
I also found a description of this misguided pastor in Proverbs: “Like a muddied spring or a polluted well are the righteous who give way to the wicked” (Proverbs 25:26).
And by the way…abortion literally is a single-issue enterprise.
I wonder how his words appear to him now―now that Biden has sold himself to do evil, every bit as much as Ahab in the Bible. I wonder how he, and the other Biden Evangelicals, feel now that every iota of what conservatives and Trump supporters said would happen, has indeed happened, and more.
Perhaps, the craziest conspiracy theory of our time was to believe that Biden was going to be good for America.
But the Left called us conspiracy nuts for believing that all of Trump’s wonderful achievements would go down the drain. Every executive order of Biden is as helpful as using leeches on a hemophiliac. Everything he has touched has rained down misery and racial hatred. And, he is pushing the world to the brink of Armageddon.
The cesspool of hatred for Israel, known as the Squad (Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, and AOC), is boiling over. Democrats own that now.
The leftist progressives that have seen their conspiracy theories coming true, now know beyond knowing, that the Biden presidency is the most unimaginable horror for America. And now we know that the “Christians,” who were duped into voting for this debauchery, need to repent. Utterly repent!
——————————— Mario Murillo is an evangelist Mario Murillo, minister, blogger
Tags:Mario Murillo, Ministries, Who Are, The Real Conspiracy Theory, Nut JobsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
You are subscribed to email updates from ARRA News Service.
To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
Email delivery powered by Google
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the RedState.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions
This commander was dumped for warning about Marxism in the military. Now his book is at No. 1. Looks like the ‘woke’ punishment backfired again! Read more…
“The GOP will lose far more supporters than it will ever gain by buying in to the transgender movement and promoting its ‘stars’ such as Jenner.” Read more…
This email was sent to rickbulownewmedia@protonmail.com. You are receiving this email because you asked to receive information from WND. We take your privacy and your liberty very seriously and will keep your information in the strictest confidence. Your name will not be sold to or shared with third parties. We will email you from time to time with relevant news and updates, but you can stop receiving information from us at any time by following very simple instructions that will be included at the bottom of any correspondence you should receive from us.
Our mailing address is: WND | 580 E Street PO Box 100, | Hawthorne, NV 89415
NOT GETTING OUR MAIL, YET?SIGN UP HERE FOR BPR DAILY EMAILS
Your input is critical to us and to the future of conservatism in America. We refuse to be silenced, and we hope you do too. Sign up for daily emails and never miss a story.
For the latest BPR videos subscribe to our Rumble page.
You may unsubscribe or change your contact details at any time.
47.) ABC
May 18, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
US to send 20M COVID-19 vaccine doses to other countries: As more Americans get vaccinated, President Joe Biden announced Monday that the U.S. will share more doses of vaccines with the rest of the world in an effort led by the White House COVID-19 response coordinator. “These are vaccinations and vaccines that are authorized to be put in arms of Americans and, by the end of June, when we’ll have taken delivery of enough of such vaccines to protect everyone in the United States, the United States will share at least 20 million of those doses, that extra supply, with other countries,” Biden said. The news comes as more states and businesses respond to new guidance on masks released last week by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Monday that vaccinated New Yorkers no longer have to wear masks, even indoors. California’s health director also announced Monday that the state’s mask requirement will end on June 15.
IRS says a bigger child tax credit is on its way: The vast majority of American families with children will automatically receive up to $300 per month per child beginning July 15, the IRS and Treasury Department announced Monday. As part of President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, the child tax credit increased from $2,000 to $3,000 for children over 6, and to $3,600 for children under 6. In addition to the increased amount, the credit is now refundable, meaning families get checks throughout the year, rather than waiting until after filing taxes. Families who qualify for the child tax credit will receive monthly payments without taking any further action. You can find out what benefits your family is eligible for with this COVID-19 relief calculator.
Supreme Court to take up major abortion case: The U.S. Supreme Court announced Monday it will take up an abortion rights case seen as a major challenge to Roe v. Wade. The court will hear in its next term Mississippi’s appeal of lower court decisions striking down a state ban on all abortions after 15 weeks, with the exception of medical emergencies or severe fetal abnormality. The court said it would be considering the question of whether all pre-viability prohibitions on elective abortions are unconstitutional. The case will likely be argued next fall and decided by June 2022. It will be the first direct test on the issue for the court’s new conservative majority, including the three justices nominated by former President Donald Trump. Abortion remains legal in Mississippi and the ban will remain blocked as the Supreme Court reviews the case.
Trailer drops for Prince Harry, Oprah’s mental health series: The first look at Prince Harry and Oprah Winfrey’s mental health docuseries is out, and it shows both Harry and Winfrey getting personal. “To make that decision to receive help is not a sign of weakness,” Harry says in the trailer for Apple TV+’s “The Me You Can’t See.” “In today’s world, more than ever, it is a sign of strength.” Harry’s wife, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, and their 2-year-old son, Archie, also both make appearances in the trailer, which also features familiar faces including Lady Gaga, Glenn Close and Zak Williams, son of the late Robin Williams. The docuseries, which Winfrey and Harry co-created and produced, airs this Friday. It is the latest mental health-focused project for Harry in his new life in California as a non-working member of Britain’s royal family. The duke recently spoke about his own mental health in a podcast interview, revealing that therapy for him “was like the bubble was burst.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” we are celebrating AAPI Heritage Month with Chef Tu David Phu in Oakland, California, who is cooking up garlic noodles. Plus, we have a surprise for a local Oakland restaurant. And Gabrielle Union and Dwyane Wade join us to talk about their new children’s book, “Shady Baby,” based on their daughter, Kaavia. Also, golfer Jack Nicklaus and his son Jackie join us to talk about Jackie’s new memoir, “Best Seat in the House,” about all the life lessons Jackie learned from his father. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Today we look again at the unfolding crisis in Israel and Gaza as the conflict there continues despite growing calls for a ceasefire, retail tensions after the DCD’s change in mask guidance, and President Joe Biden’s tax returns.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Tuesday morning.
More than 100 missiles were fired by Israeli jets into the Gaza Strip overnight as the conflict entered its second week, hours after President Joe Biden added his support to a proposed ceasefire.
At least 212 people, including 61 children, have been killed by the Israeli strikes over the past week, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. Fifteen Palestinians have been killed in clashes in the occupied West Bank.
During that time Hamas has launched some 3,440 rockets from Gaza into Israel, killing ten Israelis including two children and one soldier, officials there said.
Though Biden told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday that he supported a ceasefire, he has so far resisted pressure, much of it from within his own Democratic Party, to criticize Israel’s actions. Read more here.
President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden made over $600,000 in 2020, a disclosure that marks the return of a tradition that dates back to President Richard Nixon but was cast aside by former President Donald Trump.
Advocates and activists on both sides of the abortion divide have said the court is ready to overturn Roe v. Wade. Unfortunately, this time they are right, writes Robin Marty from reproductive justice organization Yellowhammer.
The $2.6 million Unity Works initiative seeks to put at-risk young adults on the road to success with job training, education and mental health services.
Many Americans are faced with a tax bill that they just can’t pay and that’s a big reason we put off doing our taxes. But ignoring the fact that you owe money to the IRS is a bad idea.
Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.
For a bald or shaved head, a head shaver could be an essential grooming product to keep on hand at home.
One fun thing
The French are known for turning snails into a meal, but now they are being put to an altogether different use.
A 28-year-old French artisan, Damien Desrocher, is using gastropod fluid — in other words, snail slime — to make soap bars, which he sells in local markets.
He says he’s one of just three producers in France, raising around 60,000 snails near Lille.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: Florida’s Senate race just got very interesting
The good news for Democrats: They’re now expected to have a top-tier candidate to challenge Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., in 2022.
NBC News has confirmed the Politico report that Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla, plans to run for Rubio’s seat (when there had been chatter that she might run for governor instead).
Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images
The bad news for Dems: In the last 10 years – with the lone exception of Barack Obama in 2012 – Florida has been Lucy while the Democrats have been Charlie Brown trying to kick that football, as the party has lost top statewide races there in 2010, 2014, 2016, 2018 and 2020.
Still, here’s what the Demings news means:
A Rubio-vs.-Demings race in pricey Florida is certain to be the most expensive Senate contest of 2022, especially with both Rubio and Demings having national profiles.
Demings running for the Senate and Charlie Crist and/or Nikki Fried for governor would give the Dems a strong top of the ticket in what’s been a difficult state for the party.
Demings’ move produces a dilemma for Rep. Stephanie Murphy, D-Fla., who also has been eyeing a Senate challenge to Rubio. Does she run against Demings for the Dem nomination? Or does she set her sights on a safer Central Florida House seat after redistricting?
With Demings now expected to run, it produces yet ANOTHER House vacancy for Dems. Crist. Demings. Maybe Murphy. We know redistricting produces a lot of uncertainties, but those exits will create holes for a Democratic Party that controls the House by the narrowest of margins.
Chuck Schumer now has a counter to Mitch McConnell’s likely get of Gov. Chris Sununu to run against Sen. Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., in the Granite State. And in a lot of ways, New Hampshire has almost been as frustrating for national Republicans as Florida has for national Dems
Democrats now have what appears to be five legitimate Senate pick-up opportunities in 2022 – with chances in (in order) Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Ohio and now Florida. Republicans, meanwhile, currently have three pick-up opportunities in New Hampshire, Arizona and Georgia, but still need to find candidates in those last two states. (And Nevada could be competitive, too, if they find the right candidate.)
Bottom line: Demings running is a significant development in the battle for the Senate, which currently stands divided at 50-50 – with Democrats holding the vice presidency and thus the tiebreaker.
But we also have a ways to go until Nov. 2022.
TWEET OF THE DAY: All in the families: The Giulianis and the Cuomos
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
More than 100: The number of missiles launched by Israel into the Gaza Strip overnight.
Just over $600,000: Joe and Jill Biden’s income in 2020, according to their newly-released tax returns.
More than $5.1 million: The price tag on Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s book on leadership during the coronavirus crisis.
33,133,187: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 30,845 more than yesterday morning.)
274,411,901: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
34.4 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated.
Manchin makes his counteroffer on voting rights
“Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, wrote a letter Monday calling on Congress to reauthorize the Voting Rights Act, seeking to jump-start a debate on a bipartisan path to bolstering voting access,” NBC’s Sahil Kapur writes.
More from Kapur: “While the letter didn’t name the bill, a Manchin aide said the senators are referring to the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, which aims to require states with a recent record of discrimination in voting rights to get federal pre-approval before changing their election laws.”
And: The Manchin-Murkowski letter “comes as Manchin faces progressive criticism for being the lone Democratic holdout on the ‘For The People Act,’ a sweeping bill that aims to allow more ballot access and that all states must follow. The Democratic-controlled House approved that bill but it hasn’t taken up the bill named for John Lewis.”
McClellan’s not-so-subtle swipe at McAuliffe
In Virginia’s Democratic race for governor, state Sen. Jennifer McClellan is up with a new TV ad – airing in the Richmond market – that takes a not-so-subtle swipe at frontrunner Terry McAuliffe.
“For 15 years, my perspective and experience has helped Virginia’s legislature make meaningful progress,” McClellan, who is Black, says in the ad.
The ad then scrolls past the portraits of the state’s previous governors, who have all been white men, save for Douglas Wilder. “But for 245 years, the perspectives of Virginia governors – while different in some ways — have more in common than not,” with the ad stopping on a picture of Terry McAuliffe.
“This moment demands something different,” McClellan’s ad concludes.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The House will vote on a new spending bill to provide security for members and their families.
Mike Pence is speaking out against the Biden administration’s “weak” approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
President Biden said he would support a cease-fire in the Middle East after a week of fighting between Israel and Hamas has left over 200 people dead. Also, the Supreme Court will hear a case that could be the most direct challenge to Roe v. Wade in a generation. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
For the first time since the pandemic began, the number of coronavirus cases are down in all 50 states. Now New York is easing its mask restrictions as states get back to normalcy. Mola Lenghi reports.
Despite the U.S. announcing it will share 20 million more doses of COVID-19 vaccines with the world in the coming weeks, global disparities in distribution have grown more evident. As Holly Williams reports, China and Russia are already filling the vacuum distributing their vaccines – which come with serious efficacy concerns – to low-income and developing countries.
If you’re a parent confused about safety guidelines and changing mask mandates, Dr. Tara Narula and best-selling author Gretchen Rubin joined “CBS This Morning” with advice to help plan this summer.
Death toll climbs as calls for Israel-Hamas ceasefire go unheeded
Palestinians vent anger in a “day of rage,” risking new clashes as Israelis face more rocket fire and their military reduces neighborhoods in Gaza to rubble.
Plus: On SATs and bias, what changed when Texas lifted its mask mandate, and more…
Warrantless seizure of guns from a home is not OK, the Supreme Court reminded police officers on Monday. This applies even if someone is undergoing treatment for mental health issues.
The case, Caniglia v. Strom, involved a domestic dispute between Edward Caniglia and his wife. “During an argument with his wife, petitioner Edward Caniglia placed a handgun on the dining room table and asked his wife to ‘shoot [him] and get it over with.’ His wife instead left the home and spent the night at a hotel. The next morning, she was unable to reach her husband by phone, so she called the police to request a welfare check,” the Court explains in its summary. It goes on to explain that:
The responding officers accompanied Caniglia’s wife to the home, where they encountered Caniglia on the porch. The officers called an ambulance based on the belief that Caniglia posed a risk to himself or others. Caniglia agreed to go to the hospital for a psychiatric evaluation on the condition that the officers not confiscate his firearms. But once Caniglia left, the officers located and seized his weapons. Caniglia sued, claiming that the officers had entered his home and seized him and his firearms without a warrant in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
A federal district court sided with the cops who had seized Caniglia’s guns without a warrant. And the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit affirmed this decision, saying that a “community caretaking exception” to warrant requirements made it OK. But the Supreme Court disagreed in a unanimous decision.
“The Fourth Amendment protects ‘the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures,'” notes Justice Clarence Thomas in the Court’s opinion. And “the ‘very core’ of this guarantee is ‘the right of a man to retreat into his own home and there be free from unreasonable governmental intrusion,” he points out, citing the 2013 case Florida v. Jardines.
“To be sure, the Fourth Amendment does not prohibit all unwelcome intrusions ‘on private property,’—only ‘unreasonable’ ones,” adds Thomas. “We have thus recognized a few permissible invasions of the home and its curtilage. Perhaps most familiar, for example, are searches and seizures pursuant to a valid warrant.” And police are sometimes permitted to enter under exigent circumstances, such as a need to offer emergency assistance to an injured person or to prevent imminent harm.
Yet none of those circumstances applied in this case. And the “community caretaking” exception applied by the 1st Circuit doesn’t work, suggested SCOTUS. In that case—Cady v. Dombrowski—police without a warrant searched an impounded car for a firearm.An impounded car is different than a home, and “what is reasonable for vehicles is different from what is reasonable for homes,” the Supreme Court concluded. Not only that but “Cady expressly contrasted its treatment of a vehicle already under police control with a search of a car ‘parked adjacent to the dwelling place of the owner,'” wrote Thomas:
Cady’s unmistakable distinction between vehicles and homes also places into proper context its reference to “community caretaking.” This quote comes from a portion of the opinion explaining that the “frequency with which . . . vehicle[s] can become disabled or involved in . . . accident[s] on public highways” often requires police to perform noncriminal “community caretaking functions,” such as providing aid to motorists. But, this recognition that police officers perform many civic tasks in modern society was just that—a recognition that these tasks exist, and not an open-ended license to perform them anywhere.
The Supreme Court has repeatedly rejected arguments for exceptions to the requirement that police obtain a warrant before searching a home. “We thus vacate the judgment below and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion,” the justices wrote.
FREE MINDS
Should we do away with the SATs? Many progressives think so, arguing that the test is a poor measure of cognitive ability or perhaps even “white supremacist.” Leftist writer and The Cult of Smart author Freddie deBoer challenges their conceptions, including the idea that “SATs/ACTs don’t predict college success,” that they only measure test taking ability, that they “just replicate the income distribution,” that they’re easily gamed by tutoring, and that losing the SATs will help colleges expand racial diversity.
“Any useful discussion of these issues has to start with getting past the mountains of fake facts and folk wisdom that progressive people have been peddling” about them, suggests deBoer. “If you’re anti-SAT/ACT, say so—but stop making empirically indefensible claims.”
FREE MARKETS
Nothing changed when Texas lifted its mask mandate:
Weeks ago, Gov. Abbott made Texas the first state to abolish its mask mandate and lift capacity constraints for all businesses.
So, what changed?
Nothing. There was ~no effect on COVID cases, employment, mobility, or retail foot traffic, in either liberal or conservative areas. pic.twitter.com/M8aeKOKJuP
A number of states are dropping mandatory mask requirements in light of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s new guidance. For instance, New York will start letting private establishments make their own mask decisions:
Effective Wednesday, NYS will adopt the CDC’s new mask & social distancing guidance for vaccinated people.
Unvaccinated people should continue to wear a mask.
Masks will still be required on public transit, in schools & some communal settings. Private venues may require masks.
Virginia lifted its mask mandate last Friday. Massachusetts’ mask mandate will end on May 29. Kentucky’s mask mandate will be repealed as of June 11.
Elsewhere, “state investigators will no longer inspect retail businesses for compliance with the Ohio mask mandate, which will be revised Monday to allow fully vaccinated Ohioans to drop their masks in most indoor locations,” reports The Enquirer.
National chains including Target have said they’ll stop requiring customers to wear masks in states where it’s not mandated. Masks “will continue to be strongly recommended for guests and team members who are not fully vaccinated,” said Target.
Some stores have even been removing mandates a little prematurely:
L.A. County’s director of public health Monday said officials have been contacting a number of retail chains to emphasize that existing rules that require everyone to wear masks indoors in a store remain in effect in California.
The education effort came after the Trader Joe’s in South Pasadena posted a sign in front of its store on Friday that gave permission for vaccinated shoppers to enter its market without a mask — a policy that violates California orders.
• Joe Arpaio, the former sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona, is costing the state hundreds of millions in legal fees to defend his erstwhile racial profiling. “The costs to taxpayers from a racial profiling lawsuit stemming from former Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s immigration patrols in metro Phoenix a decade ago are expected to reach $202 million by summer 2022,” the Associated Press reports.
• The Atlantic looks at how Vice President Kamala Harris is doing so far. “If Biden’s presidency succeeds, Harris will be on a glide path to the Democratic nomination and potentially the White House,” writes Edward-Isaac Dovere. “If it doesn’t, her vice presidency could end her political career.”
• In July, “roughly 39 million households will begin receiving automatic payments” as part of the new child tax credit program, CBS News reports.
• Sex work is part of the gig economy, writes Farmingdale State College sociology professor Angela Jones, in a piece on her research into online sex work communities and how “the internet has helped improve sex workers’ lives, including by keeping them safer.”
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.
In a new Manhattan Institute issue brief, Daniel Hopkins addresses the problems of low general-election turnout and suggests big cities could hold elections concurrently with state and federal elections and end partisan primaries.
By Daniel Hopkins
May 18, 2021
Modern police didn’t get their start as slave patrols, and saying so is just one more way activists stir up anger against law enforcement.
By Hannah E. Meyers New York Post
May 17, 2021
Supposedly engaged in a struggle against misinformation, Facebook and its fact-checking partner spread their own.
By John Tierney City Journal Online May 17, 2021
Nashville is attracting a sizable share of blue-state transplants looking to escape hostile economic policies or cancel culture.
By Mark Pulliam City Journal Online
May 17, 2021
Join MI’s Reihan Salam for a wide-ranging conversation with Bret Stephens on the Biden administration’s foreign policy and the future of American power.
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
52 Vanderbilt Ave. New York, NY 10017
(212) 599-7000
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the Townhall.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions
You can unsubscribe by clicking here.
Or Send postal mail to:
Townhall Daily Unsubscribe
P.O. Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219
* Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.
55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
05/18/2021
Share:
Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Schools and Unions; Defending Israel; What Boesky Said
By Carl M. Cannon on May 18, 2021 09:20 am
Good morning, it’s Tuesday, May 18, 2021. Thirty-five years ago today, a commencement speaker at the UC-Berkeley school of business enthralled the graduating class by giving them permission to indulge their least altruistic instincts. It was probably predictable that a corporate raider nicknamed “Ivan the Terrible” would go beyond the typical platitudes of a graduation speech, and Ivan Boesky didn’t disappoint. It was okay, he told them, to be greedy.
But is that really what Boesky said that day? I’ll have more on this in a moment. I’ve written about it before, but the theme is suddenly relevant again, and it’s a matter of life and death. 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:
* * *
CA School Board Dispute a Test Case for Teacher Union Clout. Susan Crabtree examines a union’s attempt to remove a board trustee amid efforts to fully reopen schools, which the new trustee favors.
To Get America Back to Work, Congress Needs Courage. Tarren Bragdon urges lawmakers not to renew enhanced unemployment benefits when the relief provision ends in the fall.
If You’re Just Discovering Inflation, You Likely Don’t Know What It Is. RealClearMarkets editor John Tamny argues that many analysts lack a fundamental understanding of the concept.
Congress Needs to Reform the Postal Service. At RealClearPolicy, Lynn Haueter warns lawmakers not to simply throw more money at the problem.
Defend Israel — or Prepare for a Wider Conflict. At RealClearDefense, Robert Charles lays out potential scenarios if Congress and the administration remain passive.
Why the U.S. Must Do More in India. At RealClearHealth, a trio of authors underscore the value of global cooperation and solidarity in pandemic containment.
Teachers Deserve Our Appreciation Every Day. At RealClearEducation, former N.J. Gov. Tom Kean writes that teachers have risen to the occasion as COVID posed innumerable challenges.
The Right of Revolution in the American Founding. At RealClear’s American Civics portal, Kevin Portteus explains a frequently overlooked teaching of the Declaration of Independence.
Waiving Vaccine IP Protections Will Do More Harm Than Good. Todd Zion lays out his rationale at RealClearHealth.
* * *
This issue about vaccine patents featured in RealClearHealth got me to ruminating about Ivan Boesky’s infamous speech to the graduates, their families, and professors at the conferring of master’s degrees at U.C.-Berkeley’s Haas School of Business on May 18, 1986. Boesky was not yet accused by the government of insider trading, had not yet paid hundreds of millions of dollars in fines and restitution, and had not yet served time in prison for his transgressions.
But he had achieved notoriety as a corporate raider — and was selected as a speaker by a vote of the grad students themselves. These future titans of Wall Street and Silicon Valley admired the 49-year-old son of a Detroit topless bar owner who had made himself into a billionaire. They wanted to hear how he did it.
“Greed is all right, by the way,” Boesky said, pausing for effect. “I want you to know that. I think greed is healthy. You can be greedy and still feel good about yourself.” With that, the audience erupted in cheers and applause. Later, after Boesky’s fall from grace, this sentiment was rendered in a shorter way by the fictionalized Gordon Gekko in the Hollywood hit “Wall Street.”
“Greed is good,” actor Michael Douglas proclaimed in that movie. It is this formulation that people remember. The moral of the story in “Wall Street,” however, is that greed is bad, a sentiment found in most of the great philosophies of the world, and the Bible.
And yet, Ivan Boesky was making a more subtle argument. I believe he was saying that the engines of dynamic capitalism depend on men and women who will become fabulously rich, and that this helps drive innovation, job creation — and, by extension, prosperity in the United States. Today, a debate is raging over Americans’ easy access to a COVID vaccine. Yes, it was developed with what Franklin Roosevelt liked to call “American know-how,” and yes, this came about both because of taxpayer-funded research and the dynamism of free-market capitalism. Nonetheless, is there a moral obligation to share it with the rest of the world? Leaving aside the practical question of whether waiving patents is the best way to make that happen, I believe most of us would like to share this life-saving medical advance with the rest of the world. And that desire, that altruism, is as American as apple pie.
Violent protests featuring the shouting of anti-Semitic slogans raged throughout many cities in Europe over the weekend as fighting between Israeli defense forces and Palestinian terror groups entered the second week.
Events in Israel this week are eerily similar to what occurred in the summer of 2014. Then, the Iranian regime, buoyed by its engagements with the Obama administration, empowered and encouraged its terrorist proxy Hamas to attack Israel from Gaza so it could gauge the U.S. response.
Center for Security Policy Advisory Board Chairman Pete Hoekstra and Center President Fred Fleitz joined John Bachman on Newsmax TV to discuss the recent ransomware attacks on the U.S. Colonial pipeline and the Irish health service.
Since World War II concluded with Japan’s unconditional surrender on the deck of the U.S.S. Missouri, military conflicts have generally not ended, but been suspended.
This email is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this email on the Twitchy.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions
You can unsubscribe by clicking here.
Or Send postal mail to:
Twitchy Unsubscribe
P.O. Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219
* Copyright Twitchy and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.
WERE YOU FORWARDED THIS EDITION OF THE HOT AIR DAILY?
You can get your own free subscription to the #1 blog delivered to your email inbox early each morning by visiting: http://www.hotair.com
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on Hot Air OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions
You can unsubscribe by clicking here..
Or Send postal mail to:
Hot Air Daily Unsubscribe
P.O Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219
* Copyright Hot Air and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here
Good morning. It’s Tuesday, May 18, and we’re covering the Supreme Court’s decision to hear a challenge to Roe v. Wade, a messy divorce in Seattle, and more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
The Supreme Court announced yesterday it would review Mississippi’s prohibition on abortions after 15 weeks during its upcoming term. The case, to be heard in the fall, is considered the most direct challenge to the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that generally established the right to an abortion prior to fetal viability (see overview), typically considered to be around 24 weeks.
It will also mark the first arguments on the issue since the court gained a 6-3 conservative majority since Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined the court following the death of former Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in September. Chief Justice John Roberts joined liberal justices last June in a 5-4 decision striking down a Louisiana law requiring abortion clinics to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals.
Mississippi passed the new law in 2018, which was immediately challenged by the Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the only abortion provider in the state. The legislation included exemptions for health emergencies and fetal abnormalities. Lower courts struck down the law, citing Roe v. Wade, and suspended its implementation pending appeal.
The high court said it would focus on a single question—whether all bans on elective abortions prior to viability violate the Constitution.
Brooklyn Center Case Begins
The former Minnesota police officer involved in the fatal shooting of 20-year-old Daunte Wright during a traffic stop last month made her first appearance in court yesterday. A judge ruled the trial may proceed, with a possible start date in December.
According to reports, Wright was pulled over in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Center for expired tags, but police sought to detain him after discovering an outstanding warrant. Kim Potter, a 26-year veteran of the force, claims she mistakenly pulled her gun instead of her Taser as Wright attempted to flee. Body camera footage revealed Potter threatening to deploy the Taser (view here; warning: sensitive content). Experts say such mistakes are rare, with documented instances occurring about once a year.
Potter faces one charge of second-degree manslaughter, which requires prosecutors to prove she was culpably negligent and took an unreasonable risk that led to Wright’s death.
Gates Admits Affair
New details behind the divorce of the billionaire philanthropist couple Bill Gates and Melinda French Gates emerged yesterday, following reports the Microsoft founder left the company’s board amid a probe into an extramarital affair with an employee.
According to reports, the affair occurred around the year 2000 but came to the board’s attention in 2019 (Melinda and Bill were married in 1994). Gates ultimately resigned from the board last March before the investigation’s conclusion. Via a representative, Gates acknowledged the affair but denied it was the cause of his resignation.
The news follows reports alleging Gates had developed a reputation for questionable advances toward Microsoft employees over the years ($$, NYT)—a characterization also disputed by Gates. French Gates was also reportedly concerned by her husband’s meetings with deceased sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein, which Gates contends were focused solely on philanthropy.
See how the couple’s wealth, estimated to be near $130B, is spread around.
Trust in media is at an all-time low. Help spread the word about 1440.
Meet Brett. In 2014, his dog, Jada was experiencing horrible stomach issues, and Brett simply couldn’t get to the bottom of it. He tried fasting, bland diets, and (what felt like) every commercial dog food on the market. But unfortunately, nothing seemed to work.
>NBA Playoffs begin today with an expanded play-in tournament; see analysis on all 20 playoff teams (More) | How the play-in tournament works (More) | Basketball Hall of Fame broadcaster Marv Albert to retire at the end of this season (More)
>Amazon in talks to buy MGM and its 4,000 films and 17,000 TV episodes for $9B (More) | Rapper T.I. and wife Tiny Harris under investigation for sexual assault and drugging women (More)
>Fox establishes a nonfungible token company, announces first-ever blockchain animated series from “Rick and Morty” creator Dan Harmon (More) | What is an NFT? (More)
Science & Technology
>Apple reportedly complied with demands by the Chinese government around privacy and data to continue building products in the country; concessions include storing Chinese user data and iPhone encryption keys to servers in the country (More)
>Scientists discover quasicrystals—solid crystals with nonrepeating structures—in the aftermath of the world’s first nuclear bomb test; such materials, once thought impossible, require intense pressure and heat to form (More)
>Ultrasound pulsesdirected at overactive nerve cells near the kidney drop blood pressure in patients with drug-resistant hypertension (More)
>US stock markets fall (S&P 500 -0.3%, Dow -0.2%, Nasdaq -0.4%) led by tech stocks as inflation concerns linger (More)
>AT&T to spin off WarnerMedia and combine with Discovery’s media assets, creating a new publicly traded company; AT&T shareholders to receive 71%, Discovery shareholders to receive 29% of combined entity (More)
>Eastman Kodak tells sources New York attorney general is preparing insider trading lawsuit against the company (More)
>President Joe Biden makes first call backing a cease-fire in the Gaza Strip during a discussion with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (More) | Read the history of the conflict (More)
>Cyclone Tauktae makes landfall along India’s west coast, narrowly missing Mumbai; at least 12 deaths have been reported, with more than 150,000 people evacuated (More)
>Republican election officials in Maricopa County, Arizona, rebuff claims of election irregularities, call on state Senate GOP to end audit of ballots (More) | See background on the effort here (More)
IN-DEPTH
The Five Micron Mistake
Wired | Megan Molteni. For months at the beginning of the pandemic, mixed guidance on whether the coronavirus was airborne caused mass confusion. At the heart of the problem was a microscopic difference with huge consequences—the difference between droplets and aerosols. (Read)
Flamin’ Hot Scandal
LA Times/MSN | Sam Dean. Richard Montañez has long touted his underdog story of inventing the popular Flamin’ Hot Cheetos while working as a janitor at a snack factory. After two books and with a movie deal in the works, his former colleagues now claim the story is bogus. (Read)
There are a couple things you should know about most commercial pet food: “Meal” often refers to rejected, discarded, or diseased animal parts. High heats in production have been shown to produce acrylamide, a known carcinogen in animals. They’re chock-full of preservatives, so you can keep bags open for weeks on end. Guess what you’ll find in The Farmer’s Dog? None of the above.
Historybook: Pope John Paul II is born (1920); Jackie Cochran is first woman to break sound barrier (1953); HBD actress Tina Fey (1970); Mount St. Helens erupts, killing 57 (1980); Facebook raises $16B; largest initial public offering for a tech company at the time (2012).
“Say ‘yes,’ and you’ll figure it out later.”
– Tina Fey
Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.
Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com.
Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here!
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
SHARE:
Join Our Email List
View as Webpage
May 18, 2021
“Governing as Looting” in Washington and Beyond
By James Bovard | “Automatic ticketing regimes provide a stark refutation to the illusion that governments automatically serve the people. Especially for policies shrouded in sanctimony, government agencies are almost always more wasteful or…
Lift Your Gaze, Please: the April Inflation Overshoot is …
By Joakim Book | “A betting man, if he wants to remain a betting man, updates his priors. So, I side with Jason Bloom at the asset manager Invesco: ‘There is so much dislocation in the economy from the reopening and base effects from a year ago…
By Richard M. Ebeling | “Whether the CPI records a higher or a lower rate of general price inflation, the more deleterious effects resulting from monetary inflation are those relative price and wage distortions, and resource, labor and capital…
A Conversation on the Importance of Entrepreneurship
By Ethan Yang | On this episode of the AIER Authors Corner, Ethan Yang interviews Dr. Eammon Butler, who joins us from Cambridge, UK. Dr. Butler co-founded the Adam Smith Institute, which was credited with advising the Thatcher government in its…
Will 2020 Prove to Be the Beginning of the End of Modernity?
By Donald J. Boudreaux | “Abruptly starting 16 months ago, humanity was encouraged to hold in contempt – even to censor – the relative few persons who refused to abandon liberal sensibilities. Abruptly starting 16 months ago, there quite possibly…
Understanding Big Tech Dominance Requires Economics, Not…
By Peter C. Earle | “Censorship” is an arguably specious accusation to level at Big Tech and social media firms. The argument that such platforms are players in a grand, purposeful yet unseen world order, or that they are being ordered to pick…
It’s the small things that we use daily in life that reveal our loyalties. This is precisely why we made an AIER coffee mug. It suggests stability, dignity, and determination. It has personalized a matte-finish exterior with a shiny lip and interior. It has a 17-oz capacity and a flat handle for comfort. It says everything it needs to say!
This volume places an emphasis on presenting the great conservative and libertarian thinkers who participated in the Philadelphia Society meetings from 1965 to 1980. These thinkers asked questions that are still relevant today: What is the role of tradition in society? How important is individual liberty? What is the correct balance between freedom and tradition? Can “ordered liberty” be best achieved by the free enterprise system or should order and common values be promoted by government? What does it mean to be a conservative? Should libertarians and conservatives be allies? The transcriptions in this volume address these questions and more.
On the menu today: Out of nowhere, it’s seemingly hip and cool to point out the long-obvious fact that SARS-CoV-2 could well be the result of a lab accident in Wuhan. And Politico drives me to do the unthinkable: call for people to get off Kamala Harris’s back.
Oh, Sure, Now It’s Okay to Speculate about a Lab Leak in Wuhan
Some of us are COVID-origin hipsters, I guess; we were into the lab-leak theory before it went mainstream.
A newly-discovered photo shows Rep. Andrew Clyde (R-GA) — who recently likened the deadly January 6 insurrection on the U.S. Capitol to a “normal tourist visit” — screaming behind someone with gun drawn as rioters pounded at the barricaded door to the House floor.
Scientific American: “A large part of the answer is that this is what the party’s spokespeople have been saying for 40 years, from the early days of acid rain to our ongoing debates about climate change.”
“It has mostly been Republican governors resisting mask mandates, even when science showed they slowed the spread of COVID-19. And it was, by and large, Republican governors lifting those mandates in the spring, even while Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, begged them not to.”
“Everyone deserves accurate information to be presented in an apolitical way and to be addressed with respect and not condescension. But the reality is that most of the science that matters most comes from the government or from scientists funded by the government. Until Republican leaders stop telling voters not to trust the government, many of them won’t trust science.”
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) said he would run for re-election despite a possible primary challenge from Texas Land Commissioner George P. Bush (R), the Texas Tribune reports.
Said Paxton: “He’s got this mentality he’s gonna be president one day and he’s gotta get started.”
Kyle Kondik: “A telling sign about the pro-Republican redistricting outlook in Florida: Reps. Charlie Crist, Stephanie Murphy, and Val Demings all won their seats following a court-ordered remap in advance of 2016. They now are all reportedly running statewide as a fresh GOP gerrymander looms.”
“Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine’s $5 million lottery to encourage vaccinations appears to be an early win,” NBC News reports.
“State health officials said Monday that more than 25,400 Covid-19 vaccine shots were administered Friday, two days after the program was announced, making it the highest vaccination day in three weeks.”
“Maybe more telling were the people who got vaccinated. Vaccinations for residents ages 30 to 74 spiked by 6 percent after weeks of steady decline.”
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) said he will not support bipartisan legislation for the 9/11-style commission to probe the Jan. 6 Capitol riots, The Hill reports.
Said McCarthy: “Given the political misdirections that have marred this process, given the now duplicative and potentially counterproductive nature of this effort, and given the Speaker’s shortsighted scope that does not examine interrelated forms of political violence in America, I cannot support this legislation.”
An Ohio Mayor has been credited with saving the life of her skydiving partner after an equipment malfunction during a training exercise, the Dayton Daily News reports.
Emails obtained by the Denver Post between staff members of Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-CO) “show requests for donating money for Christmas gifts and notes about running personal errands for his wife.”
“The emails buttress claims made in a lawsuit filed Thursday in federal court by a former Lamborn employee, which also alleged the congressman’s office was lax on COVID protocols even after staffers and Lamborn himself contracted the virus. Those internal communications fly in the face of Lamborn’s claim to Colorado Public Radio on Friday that the lawsuit consists of a ’tissue of lies.’”
Charlie Cook: “There are clear signs that the enthusiasm for Trump—in other words, his force as a person—is waning, but there are no signs that his message and positions on key issues are similarly losing that intensity of support.”
Chris Christie (R) told the Ruthless podcast that he will not wait to see if former President Donald Trump runs for president in 2024 before making his own decision to run.
Said Christie: “I’m also not going to be one of these people who’s going to say, ‘Well, I’ll wait to see what President Trump’s going to do.’ You know, I’m not going to defer to anyone if I decide that it’s what I want to do, and that I think I’m the best option for the party and for the country.”
Andrew Giuliani (R), the son of former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, announced Tuesday that he’s officially running for governor of the state in 2022, NBC News reports.
Said Giuliani to the New York Post: “I’m a politician out of the womb. It’s in my DNA.”
He added: “Giuliani vs. Cuomo. Holy smokes. It’s Muhammad Ali vs. Joe Frazier. We can sell tickets at Madison Square Garden.”
Gov. Andrew Cuomo hasn’t had a lot of good news lately, but he would certainly welcome Giuliani as an opponent.
“After devastating India’s biggest cities, the latest Covid-19 wave is now ravaging rural areas across the world’s second-most populous country. And most villages have no way to fight the virus,” Bloomberg reports.
“In Basi, about 1.5 hours from the capital New Delhi, about three-quarters of the village’s 5,400 people are sick and more than 30 have died in the past three weeks. It has no health-care facilities, no doctors and no oxygen canisters. And unlike India’s social-media literate urban population, residents can’t appeal on Twitter to an army of strangers willing to help.”
The Hill: “Republican state legislators see this year’s decennial redistricting process as a prime opportunity to gain House seats in next year’s midterms — with some believing those gains alone can help the GOP take back the majority.”
“Legislators are preparing for the most public redistricting process in American history. Both Democrats and Republicans stand ready to accuse each other of radical gerrymandering, while advances in technology give each side the chance to draw ideal districts that are both pleasing to the eye and politically favorable.”
A must-read piece in The Atlantic by Edward-Isaac Dovere:
“Biden’s story about his candidacy was already changing. In the new version, he had never intended to get into the 2016 race against his friend Hillary Clinton, no matter how much that account stretched the definitions of never and friend. And he definitely wasn’t going to enter the 2020 race.”
“The top Republicans in Arizona’s largest county gave an impassioned defense of their handling of the 2020 election Monday, calling on fellow members of the GOP and business leaders to speak out against an unprecedented partisan election audit,” the AP reports.
“The GOP-dominated Maricopa County Board of Supervisors cast the audit as a sham that’s spun out of the control of the state Senate leader who’s ostensibly overseeing it.”
How big is the U.S. national debt? How many Americans don’t have health insurance? What’s the top tax rate? If you watch liberal news media, you’re more likely to get those answers wrong.
The Rasmussen Reports Immigration Index for the week of May 9-13, 2021, rose to 88.1, up from 86.9 two weeks earlier. The index is now as high as it’s been since early February; it reached a record low of 82.3 in late March. The Immigration Index has been under the baseline in every survey since Election Day last year. The index is still more than 15 points below where it was the week of October 22, indicating voters are looking for tighter immigration control from President Joe Biden’s administration.
The U.S. Army is Designed to Break Things and Win Wars
The U.S. Army recently released an animated video advertisement that showcases a young girl who is raised by two moms. She is brought up in a household that embraces all the predictable moments and ideals one would expect in such a story of diversity. Eventually, she recognizes she has a calling to join the Army. Throughout the video, there are images that not only completely normalize the gay lifestyle, but celebrate it.
We fully recognize these situations exist and great soldiers may come from these atypical homes, but does it justify targeted recruitment ads?
Republican Leadership Ousts Liz Cheney For Not Toeing The Line
Wyoming Republican Rep. Liz Cheney was removed from the No. 3 position in caucus leadership as a result of her rebuke of Donald Trump.
The decision, helmed by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., sets an unsettling precedent for the future voices of the Republican Party.
NBC News has reported the defiant Cheney as stating to fellow House Republicans, “We must be true to our principles and to the Constitution. We cannot let the former president drag us backward and make us complicit in his efforts to unravel our democracy. Down that path lies our destruction, and potentially the destruction of our country.”
Fellow Republican and Cheney supporter, Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., called it a “sad day,” stating, “There were no speeches, really. It was just Kevin standing up and then the vote happened.”
Meanwhile, the party leaders elevated staunch Trump ally Rep. Elise Stefanik in place of Cheney.
The question of whether this is a good move for the rapidly transforming Republican Party is an important one. Is elevating Trump and solidifying him as the Party leader the best option for Republicans and for the Country?
Is silencing and punishing those who disagree with him a fair and ethical move? If the Republican tent cannot accommodate a variety of opinions, how many of its voters will protest by looking elsewhere for their voices to be heard?
NBC reported, “GOP strategists are torn about the political impact of Cheney’s removal, with some arguing it wouldfurther alienate Trump-skeptical voters, particularly in the suburbs.”
“The suburban voters who’ve switched voting from Republican to Democrat are the new swing voters in American politics,” said Whit Ayres, a Republican pollster. “It remains to be seen whether they are permanently in the Democratic camp or come back to the Republicans. But the suburban voters who are most at risk of becoming permanent Democrats are the college-educated suburban women. And removing someone like Liz Cheney pushes them further away from the GOP.”
These hasty decisions may have dire consequences for the future of the Party.
U.S. Navy Intercepts Ship With Massive Haul of Illicit Weapons Off the Coast of Oman and Yemen
The USS Monterey, along with an SH-60 Seahawk helicopter, were able to intercept a suspicious ship in international waters off the coast of Oman and Yemen. What the crew discovered on board was an enormous shipment of weapons that were likely destined for Houthi rebels or other militants in the Horn of Africa, Yemen or another place in the region.
It is not unusual for the U.S. to conduct security operations along major shipping routes in order to “reassure allies and partners, and preserve freedom of navigation and free flow of commerce,” reported theJerusalem Post.
The massive cache of weapons “included advanced Russian-made, anti-tank guided missiles and Chinese Type 56 assault rifles.” The U.S. Fifth Fleettweeted the announcement and impressive video of the cache laid out on deck.
The crew of the ship were interviewed and fed while their ship was inspected. Then they were reportedly set free, minus their shipment of weapons. It is unclear why they were not detained further.
ATP analysis: The Biden administration’s weakened stance toward Iran has led to increased attacks throughout the Middle East and Africa. These attacks are funded and supported by the Islamic Republic Guard Corps.
The IRGC has a long history of smuggling illegal weapons into countries like Lebanon and Syria in order to bolster the countries’ terrorist organizations. The objective is to disrupt any Western influence and protection.
Iran has backed the Houthis in Yemen for many years, providing the training and weapons to continue attacking Saudi Arabia with drones and missiles.
The timing of this is no coincidence. Saudi Arabia and Israel have been working behind the scenes on a pact to improve economic relations and support.
While continuing to export terror, Iran has dangled peace deal negotiations as a means of appeasing the U.S. Now they are positioned to do the same with Saudi Arabia.
It is unknown whether Saudi Arabia will repeat the mistake of the Biden administration, engaging with Iran while allowing the IRGC and the Houthis freedom of movement to attack their civilian population and military installations.
The Daily Intelligence Brief, The DIB as we call it, is curated by a hard working team with a diverse background of experience including government intelligence, investigative journalism, high-risk missionary work and marketing.
From All Things Possible and the Victor Marx Group we aim to provide you with a daily intelligence brief collected from trusted sources and analysts.
Sources for the DIB include local and national media outlets, state and government websites, proprietary sources, in addition to social media networks. State reporting of COVID-19 deaths includes probable cases and probable deaths from COVID-19, in accordance with each state’s guidelines.
Thank you for joining us today. Be safe, be healthy and
What you’ve missed: Bill Gates received marriage advice from Jeffrey Epstein, and Gov. Cuomo announces that New York will drop their mask mandate due to new CDC guidance.
If this was forwarded to you and you enjoy the content, subscribe to receive our newsletter every weekday, right in your inbox!
Want to sponsor The Post Millennial?Register here and we’ll get in contact with you.
On Monday, President Joe Biden spoke on the issue of vaccines to the American public, including what appeared to be a veiled threat that people not getting the vaccine will “pay the price” for not getting it.
Biden stated during his speech:
“If the unvaccinated get vaccinated, they will protect themselves and other unvaccinated people around them. If they do not, states with low vaccination rates may see those [COVID-19 infection] rates go up, may see this progress reversed.”
“Only those who are not vaccinated will end up paying the price. The vaccinated will continue to be protected against severe illnesses, but others may not be, if you’re not vaccinated.”
(It is assumed that Biden is referring here to severe illnesses arising from complications due to COVID, since the vaccine clearly can’t and doesn’t protect against any other severe illnesses.)
Biden had previously on May 13 talked about the vaccine, mentioning that it’s ok for people to still “mask up” and for businesses to require people to wear masks, and that people should “respect” them.
“Last week the CDC announced that if you’re fully vaccinated, you no longer have to wear a mask. The science now shows that your vaccination protects you as well as being masked, or better than being masked.”
“So, you can protect yourself from serious illness from COVID by being vaccinated, or wearing a mask until you’re fully vaccinated.”
An open letter signed by an expansive list of respected tech critics was published on Monday. The letter calls on the Trudeau Liberals to “stop harming the Internet, and the freedoms and aspirations of every individual in this country, and our knowledge economy through overreaching regulatory policies that will have significant, yet unintended consequences for the free and open Internet in Canada.”
“Now more than ever,” it says, “all members of Canadian society rely on the Internet. A recent series of proposals and actions taken by your government threaten to adversely impact our freedom to access online content of our choice, to post legal content without fear of censorship, and even risk disrupting the technical infrastructure of the Internet.”
“Such proposals include amendments to the Broadcasting Act in Bill C-10, forthcoming online harms legislation, and proposals from both the CRTC and the Ministry of Innovation, Science and Economic Development to block content at the network level.”
“We understand that some online regulation may be necessary, and that policies need to be updated. But decisions about Canada’s Internet policy can’t be taken lightly––they have social, economic and cultural implications and could harm the technical foundation that makes the Internet work for everyone.”
“We urge you to carefully consider decisions through consultation and impact assessments to avoid negative implications for individuals, our economy, and our democracy. More than ever, we need evidence-based policies that reflect the interests of every individual in this country––not rushed, politically-driven processes that respond only to those of a few.
Among those who signed were TekSavvy VP Andy Kaplan-Myrth, and Konrad von Finckenstein QC, the Former Chairman of CRTC, Former Commissioner of Competition.
A reporter for the Associated Press, stationed in Morocco, has a history of posting anti-Semitic tweets, reporting from Breitbart reveals. While photojournalist Mosa’ab Elshamy has since deleted the tweets, they contained language that plays on old insults against the Jewish people.
While these revealed tweets are from a decade ago, a perusal of his current tweets exhibits a similar sentiment.
Under the handle @mosaaberizing, he wrote in November 2010, in reply to a since-deleted account, that “The filthy pigs theory was, surprise surprise, a joke as well 🙂 I think it should only be applied to Zionists (and their women).”
Additional, now deleted, tweets from 2011 take aim at Jewish children and families playing what he calls “the holocaust card,” used as a means to “distract you from the slaughter I commit daily.”
Elshamy began his career in photojournalism during the Arab Spring in 2011. His images have been used by TIME Magazine, Paris Match, The New York Times, Rolling Stone and Aljazeera English, and are available through Getty, AFP, and EPA. One of his images was named a TIME Magazine photo of the year in 2013, along with 10 others.
Breitbart reported that “After the publication of this article, Elshamy deleted some of the tweets.” They also obtained a statement from AP, which read:
“AP condemns antisemitism and all forms of discrimination. We require all of our journalists to follow AP’s News Values and Principles and social media policy. … AP was unaware of such tweets, which were sent prior to his joining AP, but as soon as we became aware we took steps to ensure they are deleted. The tweets do not reflect the views of the AP, which strives to cover the Israeli-Palestinian conflict fairly and factually.”
Mosa’ab Elshamy did not respond to a request for comment to The Post Millennial by the time of publication.
Actor Matthew McConaughey in the past days has been noted to be quietly making calls to explore the idea of a potential run for the office of Governor of Texas, according to sources.
The former Academy Award winner and native of the state has been mulling over the possibility of challenging incumbent Greg Abbott in 2022 for some time now. This time, he has supposedly been talking to an unnamed “deep-pocketed moderate Republican and energy CEO” recently, along with other prominent Texans who would potentially support his campaign.
According to Fox News, McConaughey has continued to surprise people on both sides of the political spectrum over the past several months, appearing to not have any partisan bias at all, and giving his honest opinion on many different issues that are important to him.
He famously went on Joe Rogan’s massively popular podcast in late 2020 to criticize cancel culture and bias in the Hollywood film industry, but has taken issue with extremists on both the right and the left side of things in politics.
He has also repeatedly called for more unity in general during more than one interview, recently claiming that we have “lost trust” in each other in America, and that this needs to be fixed.
The way that the Colonial Pipeline ransomware attack played out wasn’t at the hands of an (immediately) government-backed effort. Instead, it was a ragtag gang of cybercriminals known as the DarkSide group.
Last week, it was like America time-traveled back to the 1970s, in terms of fuel shortage. Gas prices spiked amidst news of the hack and it caused shortages in enough areas that a state of emergency was declared for over a dozen states.
Towards the end of last week, Bloomberg learned that Colonial Pipeline paid almost $5 million in ransom to DarkSide to get a decryption tool used to restore the company’s computer hardware. This was despite circulated reports suggesting the pipeline company would refuse to pay up.
Now, according to CoinDesk, we’re got answers as to the Bitcoin address and how much was paid. The outlet says 75 BTC was paid on May 8th. They even posted the exact blockchain address where Colonial Pipeline’s ransom was received at.
CoinDesk got this information from a blockchain detective firm called Crystal Blockchain. The product director there had additional insight, including another company that fell victim to DarkSide’s extortion.
“We analyzed each potential cluster (of addresses) and found additional evidence in one of them: a transaction of $4.4 million, or 78 BTC sent by Brenntag,” Kyryllo Chykhradze told the outlet.
A supplementary report from KrebsOnSecurity from last Friday explains that authorities (from an unnamed country) seized the servers and drained the money from DarkSide’s crypto accounts.
Gas shortages are still ongoing at some places across the US today as the country repairs the supply chain.
A U.S. Space Force officer’s self-published book positing that Marxist ideology and Critical Race Theory is being spread throughout the military reached the top of Amazon’s bestseller list on Sunday after it was learned that he was relieved of his command.
More police departments across the U.S. are using the technology, but there aren’t well established national guidelines on how it should be used. 60 Minutes reports, Sunday.
The largest undercover force the world has ever known is the one created by the Pentagon over the past decade. Some 60,000 people now belong to this secret army, many working under masked identities and in low profile, all part of a broad program called “signature reduction.”
Israel has thanked the US for blocking a United Nation’s Security Council statement calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, and stressing the need to protect children and other civilians.
The megadrought that has almost the entire western half of the country in a death grip is starting to become extremely painful. In some areas, irrigation water is being totally cut off for farmers, and that is going to result in a totally lost year for many of them. Without water, you simply cannot grow crops, and irrigation water is the difference between success and failure for multitudes of western farmers. Scientists are also warning that this upcoming wildfire season could be even worse than last year due to the bone dry conditions
Scientists in the UK working as advisors for the government have expressed regret for using what they now admit to be “unethical” and “totalitarian” methods of instilling fear in the population in order to control behaviour during the pandemic, according to a report.
“Smart” televisions have long been the poster child for the abysmal privacy and security standards inherent in the “internet of things” space. Such televisions have been routinely found to have the security and privacy standards of damp cardboard, making the data they collect delicious targets for hackers and intelligence agencies alike.
Yet another deadly Chicago weekend has seen shootings soar with as of Sunday mid-evening 48 people shot since Friday night, including 5 killed from their wounds. “A violent weekend in Chicago left at least 48 people shot in separate incidents, including two police officers who were wounded on Sunday morning when they responded to a ShotSpotter detection alert, authorities said,” ABC News reports in a mid-evening update.
A former Jeffrey Epstein insider claims that Bill Gates was a regular at the notorious pedophile’s $77 million Manhattan townhouse, where Epstein held “men’s club” – type gatherings for his closest pals (documented by his home’s alleged network of spy cameras, we’re sure).
Amid all the contention of the last few days, sparked by Elon Musk’s virtue-signaling, the noise-to-signal ratio around the crypto market’s energy use has gone to ’11’ on the Spinal Tap amplifier of social justice.
Newly released video shows Capitol police allowed Jan 6 protesters to enter the Capitol building after acknowledging their right to “peacefully assemble.”
The United States is the nation that most threatens democracy worldwide, far more than Russia or even China. That is the headline finding from a new worldwide poll of 53 countries commissioned by the Alliance of Democracies (AoD). The poll also found that the global public considers rising inequality and the increased power of the super rich to be the greatest threat to liberty and democracy.
CNN host Brian Stelter, whose entire shtick is crying incessantly that mild criticism of journalists is a form of violence, is defending the Israeli Defense Forces’ blowing up a civilian tower housing journalists from the AP and a bunch of other media outlets in Gaza.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has announced the formation and rebranding of new and existing DHS components into what it is now calling the DHS Center for Prevention Programs and Partnerships (“C3P” in milspeak).
Lt. Col. Matthew Lohmeier published his book, “Irresistible Revolution: Marxism’s Goal of Conquest & the Unmaking of the American Military,” this week and appeared on multiple conservative podcasts to promote it, each time criticizing Defense Department leadership and accusing the agency of pushing an agenda that is “rooted in Marxism.”
You are subscribed to email updates from BlackListed News.
To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
Email delivery powered by Google
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States
Welcome to the Tuesday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect tech and politics unfolding online. Today:
Biden revokes Trump’s controversial social media executive order
Case against ‘deepfake mom’ falls apart after prosecutors backtrack on manipulated video claims
New study shows digital divide is much worse than the government says it is
BREAK THE INTERNET
Biden revokes Trump’s controversial social media executive order
President Joe Biden on Friday revoked a controversial executive order that former President Donald Trump signed last summer that targeted Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.
Trump’s executive order directed a section of the Commerce Department to petition the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to “clarify” Section 230. Trump signed the order after Twitter fact-checked several of his tweets.
The former president became fixated on the law, which shields all websites from being liable for what users post on them, as his presidency ended.
The executive order wasvehemently criticized at the time. It also faced a lawsuit from a consumer advocacy group that argued it was unconstitutional.
In October, former FCC Chairman Ajit Pai agreed to move forward with Trump’s executive order after the agency collected public comments on it (which were flooded with automated messages decrying alleged censorship of conservatives).
But in late January, Pai admitted that the agency would not act on Trump’s order.
Trump’s social media executive order was one of several that Biden revoked. There was no explanation given by the Biden administration as to why Trump’s order was included among those that were revoked.
Everything you need to know about Delta-8 THC, a milder form of cannabis
Whether you’re a cannabis user or simply into alternative medicine, there’s a good chance you’ve heard about Delta-8 THC. Unlike the Delta-9 THC found in what we think of as traditional pot, Delta-8 provides a milder experience.
Think a cup of coffee to a cup of espresso. But that’s just the beginning.
How is Delta-8 different than traditional cannabis? Let our explainer walk you through the details.
Case against ‘deepfake mom’ falls apart after prosecutors backtrack on manipulated video claims
The case against a Pennsylvania mom accused of making deepfakes has begun to fall apart after prosecutors admitted that it couldn’t prove the claim.
During a preliminary hearing on Friday, prosecutors backed away from their allegations regarding manipulated media and Raffaela Spone, the 50-year-old woman accused in March of harassing her daughter’s cheerleading rivals by sharing deepfakes of them drinking, vaping, and posing nude.
The initial claims gained international attention, leading one of the alleged victims, then 17-year-old Madi Hame, to reveal one of the alleged deepfake videos during an interview with NBC News in March.
But the so-called deepfake video, which appeared to show Hame vaping, immediately spurred skepticism among experts. Although the claim from Hame and police that the footage had been manipulated was widely promoted with little-to-no pushback, an exclusive investigation by the Daily Dot in April uncovered serious issues with the allegations.
Bucks County District Attorney Matt Weintraub appeared to suggest in a March press conference regarding Spone, who had been charged with three counts of cyber harassment of a child and one count of harassment, that investigators had come to their conclusions after performing a metadata analysis.
Yet in comments to the Daily Dot, Hilltown Township Police officer Matthew Reiss, who carried out the arrest against Spone, admitted that the department never located the so-called deepfake video.
Instead, just like what was seen on NBC News, investigators merely had a cell phone recording taken by Spone of the vaping video being played on what appeared to be a laptop.
New study shows digital divide is much worse than the government says it is
A new study shows that the digital divide and broadband availability gap in the United States is much higher than what the government currently says it is.
The FCC estimated last year that 14.5 million Americans lacked access to broadband. However, a new report from BroadbandNow released this week shows that number is much higher, checking in at 42 million.
BroadbandNow manually checked more than 58,000 addresses using “check availability” tools from 11 large internet service providers (ISPs) to see whether wired or fixed wireless service was available. The addresses were from areas that at least one of those 11 ISPs offered service according to a form the FCC has where ISPs self-report whether broadband is being served.
That form, Form 477, has been criticized in the past because if an ISP offers service to just one one home in a Census block, the FCC counts that entire area as having access from that provider.
BroadbandNow also found that all sources of providing internet—DSL, fiber, cable, and fixed wireless—were over-reported on broadband maps.
Could Former President Trump Soon be
on Trial Facing Criminal Charges?
Former President Trump is potentially facing criminal charges in multiple states following the 2020 election and for his alleged role in instigating the Jan. 6th riots at the U.S. Capitol.
The states of New York, Georgia and the District of Columbia all have open active investigations which could ultimately turn into indictments, charges and a possible trial for Trump.
The information presented here is for general educational purposes only. You should always consult with your personal physician regarding any personal health problem, and you should always consult with your financial adviser regarding investment decisions. FDA DISCLOSURE: The statements, articles, and products featured in Headline USA emails and at HeadlineUSA.com have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. No information or products appearing in emails or the website are intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. MATERIAL CONNECTION DISCLOSURE: Headline USA may have an affiliate relationship and/or another material connection to any persons or businesses mentioned in or linked to from emails or the website and may receive commissions from purchases you make on subsequent web sites. You should not rely solely on information published by Headline USA to evaluate the product or service being offered. Always exercise your own due diligence before purchasing any product or service.
HEADLINE USA • PO BOX 49043 • CHARLOTTE, NC 28277
Unsubscribe | Report Spam | View In Browser Forward to a Friend | Ensure Email Delivery
78.) NATURAL NEWS
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
Web version
Breaking News Alert
This is a breaking news alert which we send infrequently to update you on emerging breaking stories.
This email was sent to rickbulownewmedia@protonmail.com. You are receiving this email because you asked to receive information from The Western Journal. We take your privacy and your liberty very seriously and will keep your information in the strictest confidence. Your name will not be sold to or shared with third parties. We will email you from time to time with relevant news and updates, but you can stop receiving information from us at any time by following very simple instructions that will be included at the bottom of any correspondence you should receive from us.
Our mailing address is: The Western Journal P.O. Box 74273 Phoenix, AZ 85087
This email was sent to rickbulow1974@gmail.com. You are receiving this email because you asked to receive information from Conservative Tribune. We take your privacy and your liberty very seriously and will keep your information in the strictest confidence. Your name will not be sold to or shared with third parties. We will email you from time to time with relevant news and updates, but you can stop receiving information from us at any time by following very simple instructions that will be included at the bottom of any correspondence you should receive from us.
Our mailing address is: Conservative Tribune P.O. Box 74273 Phoenix, AZ 85087
The conflict between Israel and Hamas rages on and more news to start your Tuesday.
Good morning, Daily Briefing readers. Israel unleashed more airstrikes on Gaza and Hamas fired rockets into Israel this morning. And, some good news: A new report says COVID-19 infections are down in every state.
💰 The White House released the tax returns of President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and their spouses, restoring a tradition that was broken by former President Donald Trump.
⚖ Los Angeles officials said they have apprehended the person believed to have ignitedthe Palisades Fire, which has grown to about 1,280 acres.
🎶 Before the performances of the top nine singers kicked off Monday night, coach Nick Jonas revealed on “The Voice” he was injured in a weekend accident.
Israel carried out a wave of airstrikes on what it said were militant targets in Gaza, leveling a six-story building, and Palestinian militants fired dozens of rockets into Israel in the second week of war. The strikes toppled the Kahil building, which contains libraries and educational centers belonging to the Islamic University. Israel has vowed to press on with its operations, and the United States signaled it would not pressure the two sides for a cease-fire even as President Joe Biden “expressed his support” for one. The shift came after 29 Democratic and independent senators issued a joint statement on the issue earlier Monday.
Announcement expected in probe of North Carolina Black man shot by deputies
District Attorney Andrew Womble scheduled a news conference for 11 a.m. Tuesday to discuss what the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation found in its probe of the fatal shooting of Andrew Brown Jr., a Black man, by sheriff’s deputies outside his home on April 21. Lawyers for Brown’s family said last week the video shown to his family make it clear the deputies were “unequivocally unjustified” in fatally shooting Brown , who was unarmed, as he tried to flee in his car.
What else people are reading:
🔵 Another ex-federal official is acknowledging the possible existence of UFOs, weeks before a report on the phenomena is expected to be sent to Congress.
Thunderstorms and flash flooding have slammed the Gulf Coast and they’re forecast to become a larger concern in the region Tuesday. The National Weather Service (NWS) issued a flash flood emergency in Lake Charles, Louisiana, as some areas reported up to 12 inches of rain. A number of tornado warnings were issued in various cities and the NWS urged residents at risk to seek higher ground.
Newsmakers in their own words: Albert Pujols on joining the Dodgers
Los Angeles Dodgers infielder Albert Pujols
USA TODAY photo and graphic
Albert Pujols spoke to the media for the first time as a member of the Los Angeles Dodgers, saying he never demanded on being the Los Angeles Angels’ every-day first baseman and there were “no hard feelings” between him and the team.
COVID-19 infections are down in every state, report says
A report being released Tuesday will show that COVID-19 infections are down in all 50 states , President Joe Biden said. The report comes after news that the pace of new coronavirus infections fell to pre-surge levels last weekend. The U.S. reported 232,489 cases in the week ending Sunday, which is a few thousand less than what it did in the week of Sept. 12, the day before the fall surge got underway and turned into a disastrous winter. The U.S. continues to report about 600 deaths a day, roughly one-fifth the pace seen in January.
⚾ The Los Angeles Angels are expected to get more information Tuesday about three-time MVP Mike Trout’s right calf injury.
Children in Ohio can sign up for vaccination scholarships
Starting on Tuesday, 12 to 17-year-olds in Ohio who are vaccinated against COVID-19 can sign up for a drawing that would give them a full-ride public college scholarship if they win. Drawings will be held for five straight Wednesdays to select one student to receive the scholarship, which will cover tuition, room-and-board and books. The raffle is part of an effort from Gov. Mike DeWine to increase vaccinations in the state. In addition to the scholarships, the state will also give away $1 million prizes to five adults who get vaccinated.
ICYMI: Some of our top stories published Thursday
📺 ‘American Idol’ judges weighed in on the Caleb Kennedy controversy with Luke Bryan saying it makes for a “challenging and upsetting week.”
If you are on a mobile device or cannot view the images in this message, click here to view this email in your browser. To ensure delivery of these emails, please add emails@thedailybeast.com to your address book. If you no longer wish to receive these emails, or think you have received this message in error, you can safely unsubscribe.
93.) ABSOLUTE NEWS
Please read or unsubscribe here
Featured Today
Democrat FINALLY Gets What She Deserves [LEARN MORE]
DISCLAIMER Use of this Publisher’s email, website and content, is subject to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use published on AbsoluteNews.com. The content in our emails is for informational or entertainment use and is not a substitute for professional advice. Always check with a qualified professional for treatment advice and/or diagnosis. Be sure to do your own careful research before taking action based on anything you find in this content.
Ninety percent (90%) of affluent American households gave to charity last year, despite the pandemic. Households with a net worth of $1 million or more or an annual income of $200,000 or more were considered “wealthy” households, in a recent study reported in Philanthropy.com. Twenty-one percent (21%) of those wealthy household donors made donations specifically […]
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) recently signed into law a bill shoring up protection of residents’ Second Amendment gun rights. It sharpens penalties against local governments that improperly regulate firearms and ammunition. It has been illegal for local Florida governments to regulate firearms and ammunition since 1987. The “preemption statute” was passed then so that […]
Republican members of Congress have introduced “The Defund the Wuhan Institute of Virology Act.” It would permanently cut U.S. funding to the Wuhan Institute of Virology in China. A growing number of scientists have said they believe Covid-19 leaked from the lab. Despite confusion, misleading statements from some public health officials and politicians, and much […]
My last batch of signed books is now available. The timing couldn’t be better. Give to somebody you care about in these uncertain times. Information is power. Find out what’s behind the death of the news, and who’s behind big tech censorship. There’s hope.
Rightwing.org represents the majority interested in protecting truth, justice, and the American way. We are the mortal enemy of misinformation, extremes, corruption, fake news, racial division, environmental assaults and the disarmament of Americans. Rightwing.org curates, summarizes and fact checks the day’s hottest news and views giving people a source of real American news that’s easier to trust.
Use of this Publisher’s email, website and content, is subject to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use published on RightWing.org. Content marked “Special” or “Sponsored” may be a paid third party advertisement and are not endorsed or warranted by our staff or company. The content in our emails is for informational or entertainment use and is not a substitute for professional advice. Always check with a qualified professional for treatment advice and/or diagnosis. Be sure to do your own careful research before taking action based on anything you find in this content.
Taste & See’s goal is to help you make Jesus the centerpiece of your table, your home, and your life. Give a beautiful gift to a friend or family member and add to your own home with our beautiful Greater Love stoneware dinnerware collection. It’s made here in the USA and is dishwasher, microwave, and oven safe. We give 100% of our net profits to Open Doors International and Samaritan’s Purse. Taste and see that the LORD is good. How happy is the person who takes refuge in Him. Psalm 34:8 CSB
Why is Matthew McConaughey standing on a rock bridge in the middle of nowhere with a mask on?
Actor Matthew McConaughey wants us to be bridges or build on bridges or do something with bridges, and presumably the best way to do so is to take pictures of ourselves in the vast American outdoors with masks over our faces:
A news anchor makes a surprising discovery while reporting on a missing dog.
Juliana Mazza, a reporter for 7 News Boston, was filming a story on a missing dog named Titus when she encountered a very familiar looking dog.
Cinderella’s new fairy “godmother” is here to teach us “magic has no gender”
Topping the charts as this week’s winner for next-level intersectionalism, we have Amazon’s new Cinderella reboot and a fairy “godmother” played by a gay black man!
Don’t use hand sani while smoking a cig folks 😧
This is what happened when a Maryland man who decided to put on hand sanitizer while smoking a cigarette:
MARX ACTIVATED: Most U.S. households with children will receive monthly “tax credits” to fight poverty and it seems socialism is here to stay!
Do you have a child? If so, you may be getting an extra $250-$300 per kid deposited into your bank account each month starting in July!
Target is no longer selling Pokémon or sports trading cards after a brawl in a parking lot that involved a gun
Trading cards are hot right now due to crazy popularity during the pandemic.
“Neanderthal thinking” in Texas has resulted in the state’s best Covid numbers in about a year.
.
Here are the national retailers who have lifted mask mandates for the immunized, as well as those who haven’t
Are you a person who remixed a Disney song to celebrate your vaccination day or got a Pfizer tattoo to show off your status to those second-class Moderna citizens?
Why doesn’t our media or govt care about the slaughter of Christians?
While our intellectual betters like to put Christians at the top of their intersectional thought exercises as “oppressors,” said Christ followers continue to be the most persecuted group around the world.
Twitter suspended a Spanish politician for tweeting “A man cannot get pregnant. A man has no womb or eggs.”
This is real life.
Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt grilled steaks like a boss directly underneath a PETA billboard criticizing him
How do you earn the titles of grill master and troll master simultaneously?
Joe Rogan on woke culture. Listen to this man!
It’s Joe Rogan so, y’know, language warning:
This townhome complex put laundry detergent powder on all of their rooftops to discourage moss and I guess they didn’t think it’d rain because check out this nearby creek after it did
So here’s something you should probably never do:
Oops: an Italian health worker accidentally shot up a woman with 6 doses of the Pfizer vaccine
How would you like to be this lady?
France has formally kicked gender-neutral language to the curb, saying it’s a “danger” to their nation 👀
Somehow, against all odds, the French government ignored the past few centuries of history and found a spine:
Did anyone else notice what this school admitted?
By now you’ve undoubtedly seen the viral video clip of Shawntel Cooper, a mom in the Loudoun County (Virginia) school district, who joined an impressive horde of angry parents at a recent school board meeting to protest the corporation’s plans to adopt a “culturally responsive” curriculum aimed at deconstructing “white supremacy.”
Woman uses 10-pound log of meat to beat down her archenemy in an Ohio Walmart
This meaty assault took place in Euclid, Ohio at a Walmart, because where else could this happen?
The Supreme Court has agreed to hear a Mississippi case challenging Roe v. Wade
The United States Supreme Court said Monday that it will hear arguments in a Mississippi abortion case that could directly challenge the landmark Roe v. Wade decision of 1973.
Congressman Swalwell went full beta male, shrieking hysterically at a staffer who suggested he didn’t have to wear his mask anymore.
Never go full beta male:
Our mailing address is:
Not the Bee, LLC
PO Box 87044
Canton, MI 48187-0044
You received this email because you are a subscriber to Not the Bee or you opted-in to our newsletter through a prompt on our website. If you no longer wish to receive these emails, click here to unsubscribe.
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
05/18/2021
View in Browser
Coronavirus Bulletin
TOP CORONAVIRUS NEWS
Do You Still Have to Wear a Mask?
The government’s new guidance on masks for vaccinated people has left some Americans confused and businesses and states scrambling. Here’s the lowdown. Read more.
New COVID Vaccine Shows Promise
Pharmaceutical giants Sanofi and GlaxoSmithKline announced on Monday that their coronavirus vaccine candidate showed a strong immune response in adults, with no serious safety concerns. Read more.
U.S. Virus Deaths Fall to 14-Month Low
Deaths from COVID-19 last week fell to their lowest in nearly 14 months in the U.S., and new cases declined for a fifth week in a row, according to a Reuters analysis of state and county data. Read more.
A Glimmer of Hope in India’s Virus Crisis
A dip in the number of coronavirus cases in Mumbai is offering a glimmer of hope for India, which is suffering through a surge of infections. Read more.
Gaza’s Hospitals Strained on Two Fronts
Gaza’s hospitals were struggling to cope with the COVID-19 pandemic before the conflict with Israel erupted last week. Now, amid airstrikes and rockets, Gaza’s doctors are battling to keep pace. 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.
CONNECT WITH US
❤ Let us know how you’re dealing with the outbreak.
Send your story to coronavirusbulletin@usnews.com, and we may feature it in one of our newsletters.
You can also stay informed and connect with us on Facebook.
Unsubscribe from This Email List | Manage My Email Preferences | Privacy Policy
I bought four of the Patriot Power Cells. They work so well, I bought eight more to give to my kids and friends for Christmas. I work outdoors a lot, so I take mine along to plug in my cell phone. They also have a flashlight on them, which comes in real handy. This is a good buy, you won’t regret it.
Shirley C.
I’m very happy with the 4Patriots products. I’ve gotten the Power Cell, which is fantastic to charge my cell phone anywhere. It’s rechargeable and I’m very happy with all of the 4Patriots products. And I’m very happy with Frank Bates, he’s very truthful, honest and helps others in need. I really appreciate his products and his emails that I get. I’m really, really happy. I would recommend his products and him to anyone. Thank you so much.
Wing C.
I bought four of the Patriot Power Cells. I know they will come in handy. Because I know people with their cell phone, saying “oh I have no battery left.” And you know what? They’re getting it for Christmas. That’s what I’m doing for them. We live here in New York, things are quite ample here at this time, ya know. But for emergencies like that – to have your cell phone, your contact to the outside world – it’s important. Thank you very much, Frank.
Richard G.
It’s a great item for me on weekends out in the country, the swimming pool, wherever else I don’t have electricity available. Oftentimes people have come out to the pool, for example, and brought their power adapter to keep their cell phones or laptops or whatever charged up. They wound up losing them. With the Power Cell, it works great to recharge in the shade and I highly recommend it. Thank you very much.
Featured reviews are from real customers. Sometimes customers are given a free product to test, or received a free product as a thank you for submitting honest feedback. Cade Courtley is a former Navy SEAL who served 9 years of active duty and has been compensated by 4Patriots for his hard work in helping test and endorse products. The United States Military & U.S. Navy SEAL Team are not affiliated with 4Patriots. They have not endorsed, sponsored or recommended this product; no affiliation or endorsement is claimed.
This email is never sent unsolicited. You have received this Newsmax email because you subscribed to it or someone forwarded it to you. To opt out, see the links below.
If this email has been forwarded to you and you would like to sign up, please click here.
Remove your email address from our list or modify your profile. We respect your right to privacy. View our policy.
This email was sent by: Newsmax.com
1501 Northpoint Parkway, Suite 104
West Palm Beach, FL 33407 USA
DM219593
010104pffxzc
99.) MARK LEVIN
May 17, 2021
Posted on
On Monday’s Mark Levin Show, The American media has fully displayed how corrupt it is. The entire profession of journalism is a disgusting joke. America needs a free press but, lamentably, doesn’t have one. CBS News’s John Dickerson grilled Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, over their response to the Hamas rocket attacks, and did so by only asking accusatory questions. Hamas relies heavily on propaganda to influence its media narrative. For example, the implosion of a building that housed media outlets including Al Jazeera and the Associated Press was leveled by the IDF and there wasn’t a single casualty due to Israel’s diligence to protect civilian lives. Then, the head of Space Force has been removed from his position for citing how Marxism and Critical Race Theory have seeped into the US military. Marxism and holocaust denial has been a staple in the American Media and even the Associated Press misinformed the citizenry back in the days of World War II by collaborating in a Nazi cover-up. Indeed, similar misreporting is happening now when Hamas terrorists dressed as civilians were killed in military action their deaths were listed as civilian deaths, not as enemy combatants. Later, Richard Weaver wrote about the modern press in “Ideas Have Consequences” remarking that it was a negative force that appears omniscient but isn’t. Afterward, the reason America is beating the coronavirus is that we are reaching herd immunity and because of the vaccine that Donald Trump pushed for. Trump was a superb leader and he followed the science of herd immunity and vaccines. Joe Biden can’t even figure out when or where to wear a mask.
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Anadolu Agency
100.) WOLF DAILY
Wolf Daily Newsletter
We send our newsletter via email to avoid censorship. Please add news@mail.wolfdaily.com to your email contact list to make sure you are not missing any emails.
The Supreme Court has placed itself back on the frontlines of the U.S. culture wars by taking up major cases on abortion and guns, with rights cherished by millions of Americans – and potentially the future of the nation’s top judicial body itself – on the line.
As some of the United States’ estimated 3,821 strip clubs start to open up again, women who work as strippers are confronting a transformed industry. Revenue in the industry is estimated to have decreased 17.4% in 2020 and is forecast to fall another 1.5% this year…
Joe Biden will make the case for his $174 billion electric vehicle plan on Tuesday, calling for government grants for new battery production facilities during a visit to a Ford Motor electric vehicle plant in Michigan.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s contract with publishers for his book about dealing with the coronavirus pandemic was worth $5 million, according to tax documents released by his office to the media on Monday.
Were you forwarded this email? Click here to subscribe to our free daily newsletter and be entered to win a roll of Nancy Pelosi toilet paper
You are receiving this e-mail as a part of your free subscription to the Wolf Daily newsetter.
If you received this email in error, or would like to be removed from the Wolf Daily Newsletter, please click below to be removed from future mailings.
In 1990, World Economic Forum cofounder and former Chairman Maurice Strong asked a disturbing question, “Isn’t the only hope for the planet that the industrialized civilizations collapse? Isn’t it our responsibility to bring this about?” With …
The Democrat-communists have destroyed every great American institution. Their hatred of the good for being the good. The final coup mortel is the military. They have declared war on us and still America sleeps.
Human Rights Watch’s recent report on Israel is a perfect example of an ideological attack (cultural marxism) by the UN, which was followed by the military attack by Hamas. Israel is being targeted not only by Islamists but also by “politically …
President Biden has “bloody hands” and the Austrian government is accursed for supporting Israel in its conflict with Hamas, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a fiery televised speech on Monday.
The mission of the Media Research Center is to create a media culture in America where truth and liberty flourish. The MRC is a research and education organization operating under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, and contributions to the MRC are tax-deductible.
Is this the biggest national security threat of our time? Troubling new video about UFOs surface. In this episode, I discuss the controversy, along with the brewing controversy surrounding the Secret Service. I also address the new Spygate emails.
Supreme Court Unanimously Rules That Warrantless Gun Seizures Are Illegal
The Supreme Court of the United States has ruled 9-0 that police in Rhode Island acted illegally when they seized a man’s guns from his home without a warrant. This was a rebuke not just to overzealous police officers and gun control advocates, but to the Biden Administration which had asked the court to uphold the lower court ruling in Caniglia v. Strom.
Fauci Admits to Masking After Vaccination Solely for Optics
Dr. Anthony Fauci admitted Tuesday that his use of masks despite being vaccinated had nothing to do with science, instead claiming he wore the masks not to send “mixed signals.”
Mike Pence Says Biden’s Weakness Caused Recent Israel-Palestine Violence
Former vice-president Mike Pence wrote in a piece for National Review that Joe Biden’s “weakness” caused the current round of fighting between Israel and the Palestinians, which was initiated by Hamas in Gaza.
After opposing and crossing President Trump during his attempt to get the results in Georgia’s November election reversed based on alleged voter fraud, the state’s Republican Lt. Governor has announced… Read more…
In a move that sure looks and smells a lot like socialism and looks like a way to bribe voters the Biden administration will start sending monthly checks up to… Read more…
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused to make it easier for police to enter a home without a warrant for reasons of health or public safety, throwing out a… Read more…
During an interview with ABC News host and Democratic Party propagandist George Stephanopoulos Dr. Anthony Fauci basically implied he was wearing a mask after being vaccinated for appearances rather than… Read more…
A few days ago, after Israeli leaders decided to strike back at Hamas for indiscriminately launching thousands of rockets into Israel, Bernie Sanders tweeted “The devastation in Gaza is unconscionable…. Read more…
In what can only be bad news Senate Republicans are set to announce their version of an infrastructure bill raising hopes of a possible bi-partisan deal. As most of us… Read more…
You are receiving this email because you asked to receive information from The Federalist Papers. We take your privacy and your liberty very seriously and will keep your information in the strictest confidence. Your name will not be sold to or shared with third parties. We will email you from time to time with relevant news and updates, but you can stop receiving information from us at any time by following very simple instructions that will be included at the bottom of any correspondence you should receive from us.
Our mailing address is: The Federalist Papers P.O. Box 74273 Phoenix, AZ 85087