Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday June 23, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
June 23 2021
Good morning from Washington, where Senate Democrats fail to force a vote on a bill to tell states how to run their elections. Fred Lucas reports on what happened, and also on the status of Arizona’s audit of one county’s election results. On the podcast, the author of a new book on woke corporations describes the unfolding threat. Plus: free speech denied to opponents of critical race theory; President Biden revives California’s wasteful rail project; and Sen. Rick Scott presents a video on runaway government spending. On this date in 1972, Congress passes education amendments, known as Title IX, that prohibit federally funded educational institutions from discriminating based on sex.
In a Facebook post, the NAACP’s Duluth branch comments on a postponed presentation: “Thank you, Duluth! You made it known that we have no desire to host white supremacists in our community.”
“If wokeism is a religion, then an employer can no longer force that religion down the throat of their employees any more than they could force down … any other religion,” says Vivek Ramaswamy.
Something that actively calls for high-speed rail is the Green New Deal, which ignores grade-school geography and imagines that Americans would rather spend days on a train than hours in a plane.
These “national standards” not only reject traditional sexual morality, but regard the once-liberal perspective on universal reproductive health education as discriminatory.
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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Republicans Filibuster Democratic Effort to Force Nationalized Elections
From the story: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Republicans won’t stand for Democrats’ attempt to impose new voting standards on states that would “rig” elections in their favor. He called the substance of the nearly 900-page bill “rotten” to its core (Fox News). From the New York Times: Republicans on Tuesday blocked the most ambitious voting rights legislation to come before Congress in a generation, dealing a blow to Democrats’ attempts to counter a wave of state-level ballot restrictions and supercharging a campaign to end the legislative filibuster (New York Times). From David Harsanyi: By incessantly calling the Dems’ attacks on state laws a “voting rights bill” — and largely ignoring its most objectionable elements — journos are really just campaigning for it (Twitter). This lengthy Hill coverage never bothers to tell their readers a single reason why Republicans oppose the bill (The Hill). The Wall Street Journal editorial board looks at the many problems with Joe Manchin’s so-called “compromise” (WSJ).
2.
Democrats Worry Crime Will Bite Them in Next Election
A tacit admission they are the reason crime is on the rise.
Biden Official Says COVID Origins May Never Be Known
From the story: The top U.S. intelligence official said in an interview with Yahoo News on Monday that the true origin of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has killed 600,000 Americans and almost 4 million people worldwide, may never be known (Yahoo News). From the Daily Wire: Avril Haines, director of national intelligence, claimed her team was doing everything it could not only to discover the origins of the pandemic, but also to figure out new ways to look at the problem in hopes of finding a breakthrough. “It’s true that the vast majority of pandemics and novel diseases have originated through human contact with animals, but you also look at the fact that it appears to have come from the area in which this lab was doing work on coronaviruses and you have to look at that option as well” (Daily Wire).
4.
Senator Chris Murphy Says Democrats Must Remove Filibuster to Save Democracy
From the story: Senator Chris Murphy said he supported removing or reforming the filibuster so Democrats could pass legislation in the U.S. Senate with a simple majority vote in order to “save our democracy.” When asked about Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) opposing removing the filibuster, Murphy said, “We no longer have two parties that are both committed to democracy and extending the vote. In fact, we have one party that spent much of the beginning of this year actively trying to install someone as president who didn’t win the electoral college vote or the popular vote. So when that breakdown occurs, it is the responsibility of the majority party to make sure that our democracy is protected.”
Cities Run Ads Begging Tourists to Visit Their Cities After Year-Long Riots
From The Police Tribune: Full-page advertisements have been taken out in The New York Times and other major newspapers on Sunday as part of a massive promotional effort to try to lure tourists back after a year of highly-publicized, violent rioting (The Police Tribune). From KOIN: Travel Portland confirmed it purchased the advertisement and said, “After a year of encouraging visitors and locals to support small businesses here and from a distance, it’s time to issue an invitation to come back to Portland” (KOIN).
Advertisement
6.
Houston Methodist Hospital Fires 153 Employees for Not Getting Vaccinated
Same hospital that suspended them a few weeks ago. Remember when they were heroes? Now they are out of a job.
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Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 6.23.20
Coffee is for closers. So is Sunburn, your morning rundown of Florida politics.
Good Wednesday morning.
Former Tampa Bay Times Political Editor Adam Smith will become Tampa Mayor Jane Castor‘s next Communications Director, sources tell Florida Politics.
Smith, whose hire is pending final details, will replace Ashley Bauman, who left her post earlier this year citing health reasons.
Smith most recently served as Senior Vice President at the public affairs firm Mercury in its Tampa office. There, he was overseeing work on former Pinellas County Commissioner Ken Welch‘s bid for St. Petersburg Mayor. With Mercury, he also previously worked on Castor’s overwhelmingly successful mayoral campaign in 2019.
While sources say Smith’s role will likely be somewhat different from Bauman’s, which was heavy on digital presence, he’ll take on leadership over the Castor administration’s messaging as she enters the second half of her first term in office.
___
Tampa will host a Donald Trump rally on the Fourth of July weekend. Maybe.
Sources say the former President’s team is doing the rounds looking for a place to host the event. So far, no dice. If they can’t book a location in the Big Guava, they’re ready to check out some alternatives.
Will Donald Trump hold a July 4 rally in Tampa? Could be. Image via AP.
Since leaving office, Trump hasn’t made many public appearances, mostly relying on statements, news releases, and various blogs to work around his social media bans and reach his fans.
He did, however, surface at the North Carolina Republican Convention to deliver his first major speech in months to a crowd of an estimated 1,250 people.
A full-on Trump rally typically draws in a larger crowd, if there’s a venue available, of course.
___
After years of trying, the Seminole Tribe of Florida and the state signed a new Gaming Compact that will bring sports betting to the state, assuming it’s approved by the federal government.
The massive shift in the gaming landscape has led the Tribe to add reinforcements to its lobbying corps via its Hard Rock International brand.
The paperwork has yet to show up on the state’s website, but once the lobbying registration database is updated, it will show the Tribe has inked a deal with Ballard Partners for help navigating the brave new world of gambling in Florida.
The firm, led by Brian Ballard, previously repped a variety of gaming interests. With the addition of the Tribe to its client sheet, Ballard Partners has deregistered two other gaming clients — Draft Kings and Fan Duel.
Ballard Partners is among the most successful firms in the state, and in most quarters, it tops the list of top lobbying firms by revenue.
In other notes:
— Path to insurrection: CNN released an interactive media package analyzing the chaotic events of Jan. 6 and took a deep dive into how the nation got to the point where thousands of Americans thought it prudent to seize the nation’s Capitol. It features videos of Trump supporters who bought into what’s become colloquially known as “the big lie” that Trump rightfully won the 2020 election, as well as information about the groups and leaders who fanned the flames. Read more here.
— It’s Ron DeSantis’ party now: For 10 minutes Tuesday, Morning Joe hosts Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski, along with a three-person panel, gushed about Florida’s Governor and how he may be rising in stature to the point of being the GOP’s new de facto leader. While there was plenty of praise heaped on DeSantis, the conversation also had an air of almost relief, that DeSantis may be the one pushing Trump from the spotlight. Florida Politics reporter ScottPowers dives more into the segment here.
— Did Disney mangle the Star Wars universe?: The Atlantic makes the case they did. They explain why the transition from the early days of George Lucas’ vision to today’s Disney-fueled onslaught of streaming options might have watered down the brand’s value. But with anything Disney, hope is never far off. The piece hypothesizes The Mandalorian series as the Star Wars franchise savior. And of course … baby Yoda. (We know, we know: he’s not actually baby Yoda.)
💍 — She said ‘yes’: Congrats to a super-smart couple: Vanessa Thompson, chief of staff for Sen. Jeff Brandes, on her engagement to RJ Myers, legislative and governmental affairs specialist at Suskey Consulting.
She said ‘yes!’
Situational awareness
Tweet, tweet:
—@SenSchumer: Every single Senate Republican voted against even starting debate on critical voting rights legislation. Senate Republicans again signed their names alongside Trump, the Big Lie, voter suppression. Make no mistake: The fight in the Senate to protect voting rights is not over.
—@JuddLegum: Senate Republicans unanimously vote to establish Juneteenth as a holiday and then a couple of days later unanimously vote to block legislation to protect voting rights. Any questions?
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@ChristinaPushaw: Dr. Peter Hotez reveals that he knows nothing about Soviet history. Yes, Stalin was a brutal dictator and Communism is inhumane, but the Soviets were very advanced in the sciences. First man in space, anyone? Even more important than science was scientism. Like Hotez wants here.
—@PeterHotez: Wow is this really the press secretary of Gov DeSantis, trolling me? Apologizing for Stalin? Also confusing historical periods. Stalin died in 1953, and Yuri Gagarin made the first human space mission in 1961 under Khrushchev‘s thaw into the 1960s.
—@michellesalzman: Friends around town as I see them: “How’s being a grandma?” Me: “It’s amazing!” #Family
—@GrayRohrer: Say what you want about Scott Maddox, but when his palm got greased, the building got finished. Thanks a lot, FBI.
Days until
Microsoft reveals major Windows update — 1; F9 premieres in the U.S. — 2; Bruce Springsteen revives solo show, “Springsteen on Broadway” — 3; ‘Tax Freedom Holiday’ begins — 8; Fourth of July — 11; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 16; MLB All-Star Game — 20; Jeff Bezos travels into space on Blue Origin’s first passenger flight — 27; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 30; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 30; the NBA Draft — 40; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 42; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 48; Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 56; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 62; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 71; NFL regular season begins — 78; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 83; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 89; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 93; ‘Dune’ premieres — 100; MLB regular season ends — 102; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 107; World Series Game 1 — 126; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 132; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 132; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 134; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 148; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 156; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 170; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 180; NFL season ends — 200; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 202; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 202; NFL playoffs begin — 206; Super Bowl LVI — 235; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 275; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 317; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 344; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 380; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 471; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 506.
Top story
“Ron DeSantis OKs academic surveys to ensure campuses aren’t ‘hotbeds for stale ideologies’” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — During a stop in Lee County, DeSantis signed legislation requiring university professors to be surveyed on ideology. “It used to be thought that a university campus was a place where you would be exposed to a lot of different ideas,” DeSantis said. He spoke at Three Oaks Middle School, where he signed multiple pieces of legislation involving Florida’s civics curriculum. He also signed a bill (HB 233) that requires annual intellectual diversity surveys of Florida’s university and college professors. He said hiring faculty with a range of political views and values would be essential to providing quality education in Florida’s public institutions. “You need to have a true contest of ideas,” he said. DeSantis said too often, he hears from parents concerned that if they send a child to a college or university setting, they will be “indoctrinated.”
Ron DeSantis wants to keep Florida universities from becoming ‘hotbeds of ideology.’
“State university faculty, students to be surveyed on beliefs” via Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald — The measure, which goes into effect July 1, does not specify what will be done with the survey results. But DeSantis and Sen. Ray Rodrigues, the sponsor of the bill, suggested on Tuesday that budget cuts could be looming if universities and colleges are found to be “indoctrinating” students. “That’s not worth tax dollars, and that’s not something that we’re going to be supporting moving forward,” DeSantis said at a news conference. University faculty members have worried the new measure could create a chilling effect on their freedom of speech. Democratic lawmakers also have argued the bill might allow politicians to meddle in, monitor and regulate speech on campus in the future.
2022
“How Democrats can defy history in 2022” via Ronald Brownstein of CNN — The huge voter turnout over the past three elections could scramble the usual dynamics of midterm voting, potentially providing Democrats their best chance to avoid losses next year that could cost them control of the House, the Senate or both. The President’s party has almost always lost ground in the first midterm after his election, a trend that stretches back well into the 19th century and threatens Democrats clinging to a slim majority in the House and a 50-50 split in the Senate after Joe Biden‘s victory in 2020. Democrats have a unique, rarely discussed, asset in avoiding that fate in 2022: the unusually large pool of voters who have backed its candidates in recent elections. Nearly 91 million individual Americans have voted Democratic in at least one of those three most recent elections, but only 82 million Republicans did the same.
How can Democrats flip the script for 2022? Image via CNN.
“DeSantis cultivating a national army of small-dollar donors” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A committee backing DeSantis’ reelection raised nearly $870,000 in just over two weeks in June. Perhaps more significant, that came from nearly 1,200 different donors, including more than 1,000 individuals who gave less than $1,000. That shows DeSantis is cultivating a base of small donors as he becomes more of a national figure. A look at the 1,170 donations to Friends of Ron DeSantis bears that out. More than half the donations come from Florida sources, 730 of them. From June 1-16, the political committee tallied about $869,213. A $100,000 donation came from Naples real estate professional Brenda O’Loughlin, the largest donation so far this month. Cannae Holdings gave $50,000. So did Atlanta attorney Rahul Patel and New York real estate professional Haim Chera.
“Charlie Crist slams DeSantis for stoking ‘The Big Lie’” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Rep. Crist, a Democratic candidate for Governor, pounded Gov. DeSantis for continuing to let conspiracy theories fester. The St. Petersburg Congressman said the Republican Governor won’t address right-wing extremism or embrace the truth about the November election. “Three days ago, I challenged Gov. DeSantis to reject the Big Lie and launch a bipartisan investigation into Florida-based hate group members and their connections to the January 6 insurrection at our nation’s Capitol,” Crist said. “Our Governor could have done the right thing to keep Floridians safe and stop violent hate groups from organizing in Florida. Instead, he has chosen partisanship and division.”
“Naples anti-abortion activist Bill Oppenheimer running for City Council in 2022” via Omar Rodríguez Ortiz of the Naples Daily News — Oppenheimer filed a form last month designating a treasurer and bank account for a campaign for the City Council election in February 2022. As president of the anti-abortion group Action for Life Inc., Oppenheimer has led in recent months a grassroots effort to ban abortions within city limits. Supporters of the ban have protested at City Hall and have taken over the public comment section of council meetings. They are demanding council members put an abortion ban ordinance on the agenda and declare Naples a “sanctuary city for the unborn.” Four out of seven councilors have said they do not support adding such an item to a council meeting agenda.
“Hearing set in ballot initiative battle” via News Service of Florida — U.S. District Judge Allen Winsor issued an order Monday scheduling a hearing on a request for a preliminary injunction in a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida and three political committees seeking to put initiatives on the November 2022 ballot. The law (SB 1890), passed by the Legislature in April and signed by DeSantis, places a $3,000 limit on contributions to political committees collecting petition signatures in initiative drives. The ACLU and the political committees contend that the cap violates First Amendment rights and would make it virtually impossible to collect the required petition signatures. Republican lawmakers passed the measure as part of years of efforts to make it harder to amend the state Constitution.
“GOP Governors call for redistricting data” via News Service of Florida — DeSantis and 14 other Republican Governors Tuesday urged the federal government to release coronavirus-delayed census data needed to formally begin the redistricting process. A letter, distributed by the Republican Governors Association, said, “we are now facing a nearly half-year delay beyond the statutory deadline for receiving redistricting data. This delay places an unreasonable burden on our states and undermines public trust in the foundations of our democratic republic.” The letter was sent to U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo by DeSantis and the Governors of Arkansas, Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Iowa, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Wyoming. The Census Bureau released some data in April, but the redistricting data isn’t expected until the end of September.
Ron DeSantis and GOP Governors are asking Gina Raimondo to get the ball rolling on redistricting. Image via AP.
“Delray PAC finance report raises more questions than it answers on mayoral election” via Mike Diamond in the Palm Beach Post — Progress for Delray Beach, the dark-money political action committee (PAC) that was heavily involved in the March 9 mayoral election, has finally submitted a campaign finance report. The report, however, raises more questions than it answers. The PAC mailed thousands of flyers critical of Mayor Shelly Petrolia in the weeks leading up to the election in an unsuccessful effort to defeat her. The problem is that its finance reports indicate it had no money in its bank account during January and February when it mailed the flyers. And they had to be designed well before they were mailed. Petrolia claims some of the attack flyers were misleading and others untrue.
Dateline Tally
“State urges judge to reject tech industry arguments against new social media law” via The News Service of Florida — Florida attorneys late Monday pushed back against an attempt to block a new state law that would put restrictions on companies such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. The state argued that U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle should reject a request by online-industry groups for a preliminary injunction against the law, a top priority of DeSantis. The law, which is scheduled to take effect July 1, seeks to prevent large social-media companies from barring political candidates from their platforms and would require companies to publish standards about issues such as blocking users. The industry groups NetChoice and the Computer & Communications Industry Association filed a lawsuit on May 27 and are seeking the preliminary injunction, contending that the law would violate First Amendment rights and harm companies’ efforts to moderate content.
State responds to social media crackdown challenge — Attorney General Ashley Moody put up the state’s first defense for the new social media crackdown bill in federal court. As reported by Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida, Moody argued that the law was intended to protect Floridians against Big Tech’s “unprecedented power.” “The social media behemoths’ power to silence both on their platforms and throughout society has given rise to a troubling trend where a handful of corporations control a critical chokepoint for the expression of ideas,” Moody’s office said a response to a challenge filed in Tallahassee federal court. The state’s response is 61 pages long and includes over 1,000 pages of new articles it claims will back its position that Big Tech companies unfairly target conservatives.
Ashley Moody is mounting a vigorous defense of the state’s Big Tech punishment law. Image via Getty Images.
“Child care van alarms finally make it into law” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Democratic Sen. Linda Stewart‘s long-running effort to protect young children from being forgotten in sweltering child care transport vans finally notched a victory Tuesday. DeSantis approved SB 252 brought this year by Stewart and Rep. Ben Diamond in the pile of bills the Governor signed late Tuesday. “This will absolutely save lives,” Stewart said. Stewart has been pushing for nearly five years to require child care centers that provide transport for children to install vehicle alarms that will sound if someone is left behind inside. She first began pushing the legislation in 2017 after the death of 3-year-old Myles Hill of Orlando, who died of heatstroke after being left in the back of a day care van for seven hours.
Happening tomorrow — The St. Lucie County Chamber of Commerce holds its annual Legislative Luncheon, featuring Sen. Gayle Harrell and Reps. Erin Grall, Toby Overdorf, Dana Trabulsy and Kaylee Tuck, 11:30 a.m., Boys & Girls Club of SLC Westside Club Campus, 3361 S. Jenkins Road, Fort Pierce. RSVP at StLucieChamber.org.
“Legislative report card: Florida Chamber of Commerce flunks three Leon County lawmakers” via James Call of the Tallahassee Democrat — Sen. Loranne Ausley and Reps. Allison Tant and Ramon Alexander, all Democrats from Tallahassee, each got an F in the Florida Chamber of Commerce annual legislative report card. But Rep. Jason Shoaf, a Port St. Joe Republican, scored an A after voting the Chamber’s position 100% of the time. He represents a southwestern slice of the county. The business advocacy group evaluated lawmakers’ performance during the 2021 Legislative Session according to their votes on nearly two dozen bills on business climate, regulations, infrastructure development and “talent” (education and job training). Overall, 53% of lawmakers, or 86 Republicans, were awarded As, with 26 members of the 160-member Legislature voting 100% of the time with the Chamber’s position.
“Steven Outlaw, former interim TPD chief, named head of Florida Public Safety Institute” via Christopher Cann of the Tallahassee Democrat — Tallahassee Community College on Monday announced law enforcement veteran Steven Outlaw as the new executive director of its Florida Public Safety Institute. Outlaw will direct the Institute, best known for operating the Pat Thomas Law Enforcement Academy in Gadsden County, which offers the training to become a sworn officer. Outlaw most recently was interim Tallahassee police chief after Michael DeLeo resigned in June 2019. Outlaw remained the top cop until current chief Lawrence Revell was appointed. “Steve Outlaw’s significant experience in law enforcement, strong background in training and connections in our community, as well as his leadership skills and integrity all make him an ideal executive director at the Institute,” TCC President Jim Murdaugh said.
Statewide
“Nikki Fried announces first statewide study on energy equity” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Fried announced Tuesday morning her office is launching the first-ever statewide study of energy equity. The examination, conducted under Fried’s Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Office of Energy, seeks to improve energy equity in Florida. “To help those who need it the most, we need to understand the systemic inequalities, the barriers and disparities and all the factors that keep vulnerable communities trapped in a cycle of energy efficiency and higher energy costs,” Fried said. Research has shown that low-income, Black and Hispanic families face an energy burden three times higher than other consumers. This is often driven by increased utility costs due to energy inefficient appliances, insulation and weather. The office has already issued requests for proposals for researchers, which are due by July 21 at 5 p.m.
Nikki Fried is launching a statewide energy audit. Image via Facebook.
“Ashley Moody blasts court-packing proposals at South Florida roundtable” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Moody met with Republican leaders in South Florida Tuesday to rally against court-packing, a controversial move that would expand the U.S. Supreme Court to include additional justices. The roundtable, hosted by Florida International University, comes as a commission created by Biden explores the possibility of an expansion. It also comes after Democratic lawmakers introduced a bill to expand the Supreme Court from nine to 13 justices. Proposed in April, the bill would allow Biden to nominate four additional justices to the bench. While unpopular among Republicans and some Democrats, more progressive lawmakers have pushed for the expansion in the weeks and months following Trump’s presidency.
“Fourth of July travel volume in Florida will approach record, alongside national trends” via Grace Mamon of the Tampa Bay Business Journal — Travel during Independence Day weekend is projected to be the second-highest on record, nearing pre-pandemic highs, as almost 2.6 million Floridians plan to take a trip. The number of Florida travelers is up 36% from the 2020 Independence Day weekend. “Travel is back this summer,” Debbie Haas, vice president for travel for AAA, said. “We saw strong demand for travel around Memorial Day and the kickoff of summer, and all indications now point to a busy Independence Day.” Nationwide, about 47 million Americans plan to travel between July 1 and July 5, with most planning to travel by car, the release said.
“States race to launch multibillion-dollar sports betting for NFL season; fans and foes in Florida ready to clash” via Laura Cassels of the Florida Phoenix — Are you ready for some football? More to the point: Are you ready to gamble on it (legally)? Twenty-one states and the District of Columbia are set to go, and nine more are working on it as fast as they can, including Florida, hinging on approval from the federal government that could reshape the state’s gambling landscape. The initial target date is Sept. 9, kickoff day for the National Football League, resuming after a long time-out forced on the league by COVID-19. Preseason play begins on Aug. 12. The floodgates that blocked sports betting opened three years ago with a pivotal U.S. Supreme Court ruling, sparking a gold rush worth billions.
Assignment editors — Representatives of the Florida Municipal Power Agency (FMPA) and Florida municipal electric utilities, including Fort Pierce Utilities Authority, Beaches Energy Service (Jacksonville Beach), Keys Energy Services (Key West), Kissimmee Utility Authority, Ocala Electric Utility and Orlando Utilities Commission, join for a news conference to mark the first year of the Florida Municipal Solar Project, 9 a.m., Harmony Solar Energy Center. 8101 E. Irlo Bronson Memorial Highway, St. Cloud.
“‘Boys State’: High school boys create a mock government” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — The Florida American Legion Boys State brings together 352 “delegates” for a week of mock government activities. In its 77th session since 1940, the youth leadership program is organized by the American Legion Department of Florida. This year marks a return of the program after canceled last year due to COVID-19. Delegates in Florida this session will get access to several high-profile guest speakers. Gov. DeSantis is slated to speak to the group Tuesday. Also on the agenda throughout the week are Lt. Gov. Jeanette Núñez, U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, Tallahassee Mayor John Dailey and FAMU President Larry Robinson, among others.
“Conservancy of Southwest Florida study tracks invasive python movements” via Karl Schneider of the Naples Daily News — The Conservancy of Southwest Florida released a five-year study on invasive Burmese pythons to help design more effective control programs in the state. The study is the longest tracking effort to date, looking at home range estimates and preferred habitat for the invasive snakes. “This was quite a heavy-lifting assignment,” Ian Bartoszek, a wildlife biologist with the Conservancy and an author of the study, said. “It’s a wide-angle lens of how pythons are using the landscape here in the coastal region in Southwest Florida.” The study, released Monday, also marks a milestone in the Conservancy’s efforts to remove the invasive snakes from the ecosystem.
A wildlife conservatory is keeping tabs on invasive pythons.
“A small program at George Stone got Yamaha’s attention. It could impact schools nationwide” via Madison Arnold of the Pensacola News Journal — One program at George Stone Technical College is so successful that it could serve as a blueprint for more than 100 similar schools across the country. Executives at Yamaha spent Monday learning about the school’s marine service technology program, meeting its instructor, students and graduates. The executives wanted to learn just how the program has become so successful, boasting graduation and retention rates that hover between 96% and 98%. Kenyon Ward, the marine training coordinator for Yamaha Marine, said dealers in the industry are facing a massive lack of technicians. To help combat that problem, Ward and other Yamaha executives are hoping to apply George Stone instructor Stefan Schmitt’s methods to the more than 100 schools it has partnered with nationwide.
Corona Florida
“Joe Biden might extend the CDC eviction moratorium another month; Gov. DeSantis won’t reinstate his” via Caroline Glenn of the Orlando Sentinel — The Biden administration is said to be considering a one-month extension of the CDC’s national eviction moratorium because of the slow rollout of rental assistance that’s prevented Americans from catching up on rent before the moratorium ends on July 1. Without the CDC moratorium, Florida renters would be particularly vulnerable to eviction after DeSantis allowed the state’s moratorium to expire last fall. For weeks, housing groups and Democratic lawmakers have urged the White House to extend the moratorium, pointing to Census Bureau data showing that 6 million people — mostly people of color and with disabilities — were behind on rent in May. In Orange County alone, 6,352 evictions were filed from April 2020 to March 2021.
Joe Biden wants to extend eviction moratoriums, Ron DeSantis is not keen on the idea.
“Florida cruise industry getting ready to set sail” via Mel Holt and Jack DeMarco of WFTV — DeSantis took a moment during a Jacksonville news conference to talk about the ruling in favor of Florida’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction against the CDC. “I think it’s important for the folks in this industry to be able to have a path forward, but I also think it’s beyond this. In this country, we’ve seen government overstep its bounds in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic,” said DeSantis. The CDC has until July 2 to propose a narrower set of guidelines to safeguard the public’s health. While Port Canaveral’s CEO, Captain John Murray, has not commented about the federal judge’s most recent ruling, he has told us in the past that there’s no lack of demand for cruises.
“Freedom of the Seas ship returns to PortMiami after simulated voyage” via Trent Kelly and Amanda Batchelor of WPLG — Royal Caribbean’s Freedom of the Seas ship returned to PortMiami Tuesday morning after setting sail on a simulated voyage and becoming the first ship to sail with passengers from the U.S. since the pandemic began. “There’s a huge comeback. There are lots of ships being planned to be restarted with lots of paying guests. We are very excited to get started again,” said Patrik Dahlgren, senior vice president of the Royal Caribbean Group. The simulated sailing left Miami on Sunday with some 600 employee volunteers onboard. “I think it was actually not too much different. I’d have to say,” one volunteer, Elisa Shen, said. “Everything you would normally want to do in a cruise ship, you could do.”
“Jacksonville cruises to Bahamas still on hold until after August” via David Bauerlein and Steve Patterson of The Florida Times-Union — The cruise industry will fire up the propellers again this summer for the first time since March 2020, but it still will be sometime after August before passengers resume boarding Carnival Cruise Line’s Ecstasy ship in Jacksonville. Two weeks ago, Carnival announced a handful of its ships would resume carrying passengers, starting with Mardi Gras from Port Canaveral on July 31 with other ships coming online in August with sailings from Miami, Long Beach, California, Galveston, Texas and Seattle. As for eight other ships, including the Ecstasy from Jacksonville, Carnival said June 10 it had “extended the pause” through Aug. 31 for voyages by them from U.S. ports. The company said Monday it has not made any changes to that statement.
“Third grade language arts scores dip” via News Service of Florida — The Florida Department of Education reported that 54% of third grade students this year scored “satisfactory” or above on the state English-language arts exam, a 4 percentage-point decrease from 2019 when the exam was last administered. The department, however, touted the results as evidence of the importance of keeping schools open through the COVID-19 pandemic. In a news release accompanying the results, the department wrote that despite the decrease, “the data clearly shows that, on average, districts with higher rates of in-person instruction weathered the ‘COVID-19 slide’ better and saw lesser declines between 2019 and 2021 than districts with higher rates of virtual instruction.” Results from other statewide assessments will be published no later than July 31, according to the department.
Corona nation
“America hits 150 million fully vaccinated, White House says” via Katerina Ang, Miriam Berger and Derek Hawkins of The Washington Post — The United States has fully vaccinated 150 million people against the coronavirus, marking a major milestone in the fight against the pandemic. But the country is expected to fall short of Biden’s goal of getting one shot into the arms of 70% of U.S. adults by July Fourth, and the highly contagious new variants are spreading rapidly. Roughly 46% of U.S. residents have completed their vaccination schedule, a significant improvement but nowhere near the threshold necessary to snuff out the virus in the country. Health experts have said the more contagious delta variant of the coronavirus, first detected in India, could become dominant in the United States over the summer, adding urgency to their pleas for more people to get their shots.
America hits a vaccine milestone. But will it be enough? Image via AP.
“COVID-19 rebounds in U.S. South, with many shunning vaccines” via Jonathan Levin of Bloomberg — COVID-19 transmission is accelerating in several poorly vaccinated states, primarily in the South plus Missouri and Utah, and more young people are turning up at hospitals. The data present the clearest sign of a rebound in the U.S. in months. In Missouri, Arkansas and Utah, the seven-day average of hospital admissions with confirmed COVID-19 has increased more than 30% in the past two weeks, according to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services. In Mississippi, the hospitalization rate is up 5% in the period. The jump in hospitalization is particularly jarring among 18- to 29-year-olds in the outlier states.
“Why is there such a gender gap in COVID-19 vaccination rates?” via Angelica Puzio of FiveThirtyEight — For months, local, state and federal officials have been consumed with how to persuade Americans who are wary of the COVID-19 vaccine to get the shot anyway. Experts worried about low turnout among women, who reported significantly more vaccination hesitancy than men before the vaccine rollout. And public health officials warned that non-Hispanic Black Americans would be more hesitant than other racial groups because of the historical abuses and exclusion they’ve experienced at the hands of medical professionals and researchers. But the data on actual gender differences in vaccination rates veered in an unexpected direction, leaving an entire group of vaccine-hesitant Americans largely untargeted: men.
“Biden administration to miss June target for some COVID-19 vaccine donations” via Sabrina Siddiqui of The Wall Street Journal — The White House on Monday detailed plans to allocate 55 million COVID-19 vaccine doses it is donating overseas, saying the shipments would likely take longer than Biden’s initial target of sending them out by the end of June. White House officials said the delays were related to logistical challenges in countries set to receive the vaccines. In addition, the AstraZeneca vaccine, which was supposed to be among those donated, hasn’t been approved for shipment, leading the administration to substitute vaccines from other manufacturers. Biden said last month that the administration expected to export 80 million donated doses by the end of June.
Corona economics
“The pandemic stimulus was front-loaded. That could mean a bumpy year.” via Neil Irwin of The New York Times — The U.S. economy is about to face a new challenge that has its roots in the arithmetic of growth: That which fiscal stimulus giveth, fiscal stimulus taketh away. The $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan enacted in March, as well as a $900 billion pandemic aid package passed in December, is heavily front-loaded. They were set up to get money out the door fast. But one consequence of that strategy is that fiscal policy in the quarters ahead will subtract from economic growth. Economists mostly project that the economy, with strong momentum in the labor market and huge pools of pent-up savings by households, will be strong enough to keep growing despite the fading of the fiscal boost. There is no modern precedent for such huge swings in sums the government is pumping into the economy. The case for staying calm even as federal spending plummets rests on the rapid growth of the private sector in recent months.
It may be a rough year for the American economy. Image via Reuters.
“This week’s end to $300 federal unemployment benefit sparks mixed reaction” via Emerald Morrow of 10 Tampa Bay — A $300 federal unemployment benefit will end on Saturday for Floridians, and it’s sparking mixed reactions among those depending on the benefit and employers desperate to fill open positions. “It’s going to be devastating for people. People are really scared,” said Vanessa Brito, an unemployment advocate who helps job-seekers navigate their unemployment benefits. The state decided last month to opt out of the additional federal benefit as part of its “Return to Work” initiative. Some employers across the Tampa Bay area who have had a hard time filling vacancies said they hope the end of the extra benefit will bring more workers into their doors.
“Federal coronavirus relief for Orange County exceeds $400 million. How will it be spent?” via Stephen Hudak of the Orlando Sentinel — Orange County revealed Tuesday it will receive more than $400 million in federal coronavirus relief assistance, including nearly $90 million combined for Lynx and SunRail and another $10.5 million from Housing and Urban Development to address homelessness. The total includes direct payment of around $271 million to the county from the American Rescue Plan. The county has received $135 million in direct aid, Deputy County Manager Darren Gray said. Details of the plan aren’t finished, partly because the money comes with strings attached. Cristina Berrios, an assistant county attorney, said last year’s Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act was a “nine-month spending frenzy almost” because it was pushed out as emergency-relief spending while this funding demands more accounting.
“Santa Rosa County could spend majority of American Rescue Plan money on infrastructure” via Annie Blanks of the Pensacola News Journal — Santa Rosa County Commissioners had many different ideas for how best to spend $36 million in American Rescue Plan Act money, but the one thing they all agreed on Tuesday was that much of the money should be used on infrastructure. Per federal guidelines, the funds must be encumbered or obligated by Dec. 31, 2024, and fully expended by Dec. 31, 2026. Jared Lowe, grants and special programs coordinator with the county, cautioned that while stormwater and drainage projects are 100% allowable under ARPA federal guidelines, road infrastructure is a stickier subject, and there have to be specific guidelines met for the funding to be used for that sort of project.
More corona
“Almost 900 Secret Service employees were infected with COVID-19” via The Associated Press — Roughly 900 U.S. Secret Service employees tested positive for the coronavirus, according to government records obtained by a government watchdog group. Secret Service records show that 881 people on the agency payroll were diagnosed with COVID-19 between March 1, 2020, and March 9, 2021, according to documents obtained by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. More than 11% of Secret Service employees were infected. Secret Service spokesperson Justine Whelan said COVID-19 testing of employees was proactive, with more than 25,000 tests being administered. The records received through a Freedom of Information Act request did not include the names or assignments of those who tested positive.
COVID-19 is running rampant among members of the Secret Service. Image via AP.
“Miami escapes upheaval at other American Airlines hubs. Few cancellations expected” via Taylor Dolven of the Miami Herald — Despite a wave of summer flight cancellations by American Airlines, operations from Miami International Airport will remain largely unaffected, a spokesperson said. The onslaught of travel bookings by cabin-fevered Americans led the airline to announce temporary cuts earlier this week amid staff shortages. Throughout the rest of June, American will make around 50-60 short-notice flight cancellations nationwide each day as needed. For the first half of July, the company has already canceled around 50-80 previously scheduled flights per day nationwide, accounting for about 1% of its capacity. The impact on Miami flights will vary.
Presidential
“‘This fight is far from over,’ Biden says after Senate Republicans block debate on elections bill” via Felicia Sonmez of The Washington Post — Biden on Tuesday vowed to continue pushing for action on voting rights legislation, hours after Senate Republicans blocked debate on a far-reaching elections bill. “Unfortunately, a Democratic stand to protect our democracy met a solid Republican wall of opposition,” Biden said. “Senate Republicans opposed even a debate — even considering — legislation to protect the right to vote and our democracy. It was the suppression of a bill to end voter suppression — another attack on voting rights that is sadly not unprecedented.” While the measure was blocked, Biden said Democrats on Tuesday took “a step forward to honor all those who came before us, people of all races and ages, who sacrificed and died to protect this sacred right.”
The fight for voting rights is far from over, Joe Biden says. Image via AP.
“U.S. to narrowly miss Biden’s July 4 vaccination goal, White House says” via Dan Diamond of The Washington Post — The U.S. will miss Biden’s original goal of getting at least one dose of coronavirus vaccine to 70% of adults by July 4. White House coronavirus coordinator Jeff Zients conceded Tuesday. Zients instead announced a new goal: ensuring that 70% of Americans age 27 and up receive at least one shot through the July 4 holiday weekend. Seventy percent of Americans age 30 and up have already received at least one shot, Zients said. The nation needs “a few extra weeks” to ensure that Americans between ages 18 and 26 are vaccinated at rates similar to older adults. He said the U.S. would miss a second goal laid out by Biden: ensuring that 160 million Americans were fully vaccinated by Independence Day.
“Biden pushes shots for young adults as variant concern grows” via The Associated Press — The U.S. government is stepping up efforts to get younger Americans vaccinated for COVID-19 as concerns grow about the spread of a new variant that threatens to set the country back in the months ahead. The push is underway as the delta variant, first identified in India, has come to represent more than 20% of coronavirus infections in the U.S. in the last two weeks, the CDC reported. That’s double what it was when the CDC last reported on the variant’s prevalence. “The delta variant is currently the greatest threat in the U.S. to our attempt to eliminate COVID-19,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, said at a White House briefing on the virus. “Good news: Our vaccines are effective against the delta variant.”
Epilogue: Trump
“Donald Trump’s GOP friends and foes unite — to shrug at Dem fury over secret subpoenas” via Olivia Beavers of POLITICO — Democrats are pushing forward full-throttle on investigations, calling to hear from William Barr and Jeff Sessions as well as other Trump administration officials, such as former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein. The GOP is almost unified in its response: The government should investigate leaks of classified information, even if that sweeps up members of the opposite political party, as long as it is within the confines of the law. And they say that applies to Democratic Presidents, too. Trump’s Justice Department aggressively pursued leak investigations. And as skeptical as they are of those Democratic probes, multiple Republicans acknowledged that conservatives would be outraged if the situation were reversed.
“Fox News and Trump are still pushing hydroxychloroquine. Here’s what the data actually shows.” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — The rapid decline of the coronavirus in an increasingly vaccinated American public has allowed us all to focus on other related, but formerly less pressing, things. High on that list thus far has been whether scientists and the media were too anxious to dismiss the lab-leak theory — a valid debate with real implications. But also pretty high on that list — and rising — for a small but passionate number of people is something else they claim Trump was right about all along: hydroxychloroquine as a coronavirus treatment. “There was a study that came out that said that hydroxychloroquine actually helped people survive,” Steve Doocy of Fox News said Monday morning.
A small group of people insists Donald Trump was right about hydroxychloroquine as a coronavirus treatment. Image via AP.
“Trump’s fundraising arm is back advertising on Facebook” via Meridith McGraw of POLITICO — Trump’s fundraising arm is once again advertising on Facebook after the social media giant banned the ex-President from using the site. Starting late last week, Save America Joint Fundraising Committee, a joint venture between Trump’s Save America leadership PAC and his Make America Great Again PAC, has spent $3,506 on Facebook ads promoting Trump’s upcoming rally outside Cleveland, Ohio and calling for donations to his fund. Another ad, targeting Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, asks supporters to donate to “STOP SLEEPY JOE.” The ads link to Trump’s Save America fundraising page, run by the Republican digital ad firm WinRed.
“RNC paid Trump’s Mar-a-Lago over $175,000 for donor retreat” via Brian Schwartz of NBC News — The Republican National Committee paid just over $175,000 to former President Donald Trump’s private club to host part of its spring donor retreat. Federal Election Commission filings show that the six-figure sum was paid in May to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago, a month after the April donor event at the private club in Palm Beach, Florida. A Republican National Committee spokeswoman confirmed that more than $175,000 was, in fact, for the meeting. The new RNC filing describes the payment to Mar-a-Lago as fees for “venue rental and catering.”
“Beware ‘smokescreen trolling,’ Trump followers’ favorite tactic” via Whitney Phillips of Wired — Some of the claims coming out of the Trump camp in recent weeks are laughable: that Biden is the Hamburglar, that Democrats are conspiring to take away the Chick-fil-A sauces of “real” Americans, that socialism is making your burritos more expensive. Some are much more serious, but just as demonstrably false: that the 2020 election was stolen, that Democrats are guilty of widespread voter fraud, that the January 6 insurrection wasn’t an insurrection at all. When Trumpists post wild accusations to social media, they’re not open to having their minds changed, and they will be impervious to whatever facts you think they might be missing. They will, however, be very pleased by your efforts to try.
“Trump wanted his Justice Department to stop ‘SNL’ from teasing him” via Asawin Suebsang and Adam Rawnsley of the Daily Beast — In March 2019, the then-President of the United States had just watched an episode of the long-running, liberal-leaning NBC sketch comedy series, and grew immediately incensed that the show was gently mocking him. Trump had asked advisers and lawyers in early 2019 about what the Federal Communications Commission, the courts systems, and the Department of Justice could do to probe or mitigate SNL, Jimmy Kimmel, and other late-night comedy mischief-makers. “It was more annoying than alarming, to be honest with you,” one source recalled.
Crisis
“After seven months of debunking, the false belief that Biden won because of fraud hasn’t budged” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — Despite Trump’s insistence that the evidence of fraud was overwhelming, it was not. In fact, it was all but nonexistent, and what evidence one might have pointed to was not credible. In the months since, other fraud theories have emerged and faded, with no such claim withstanding any extended scrutiny. Polling shows about a third of Americans think Biden won only because of voter fraud, the same fraction of the electorate that held that view in polling in March, in January and in November. Americans are as likely to ascribe Biden’s victory to unfounded fraud claims as they were seven months ago.
Some people just didn’t get the memo. Image via AP.
“Judge tosses most claims over clearing protesters in D.C. park” via Michael Balsamo of The Associated Press — A federal judge dismissed most claims filed by activists and civil liberties groups who accused the Trump administration of violating the civil rights of protesters who were forcefully removed by police before then-President Trump walked to a church near the White House for a photo-op. U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich said Monday the claims in the suit, which alleged that Trump and then-Attorney General Barr had conspired to violate the rights of protesters last June, were speculative, and it was premature for the court to conclude whether the actions of law enforcement officers were justified. Friedrich dismissed the claims against Barr and other federal officials, including the acting U.S. Park Police chief, Gregory Monahan.
D.C. matters
“Marco Rubio urges ‘strong American leadership’ against China on COVID-19 question” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Rubio, appearing on Fox and Friends, was promoting his so-called “COVID Act,” which would institute sanctions on Chinese doctors, firms and labs 90 days after being passed if China doesn’t allow a legitimate investigation of the genesis of the virus. “For all we know, the next great pandemic is being developed in a Chinese laboratory,” Rubio said, saying this was a “global issue.” The Rubio bill would “cut off any and all federal funding for research” if China “doesn’t allow for a full, clear, and transparent investigation of how this thing started … We already know enough about what happened in China, I think, to tell you they’ve done something wrong.”
Marco Rubio has zero doubt that China is cooking up a new virus.
“Here are the Florida additions to the SEC’s list of companies misleading investors” via David J. Neal of the Miami Herald — Four Florida companies are among the 64 most recent additions to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s list of “unregistered entities that use misleading information to solicit primarily non-U.S. investors.” That’s the agency’s description of its PAUSE — Public Alert: Unregistered Soliciting Entities — list. “The latest additions are firms that SEC staff found were providing inaccurate information about their affiliation, location or registration (with the SEC),” the SEC said. “In addition to alerting investors to firms falsely claiming to be registered, the PAUSE list flags those impersonating registered securities firms and bogus “regulators” who falsely claim to be government agencies or affiliates.
Local notes
“Gunfire blows out windows at Fort Lauderdale City Hall” via Susannah Bryan of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Shots were fired around 12:45 a.m. at 11 North Andrews Ave, police spokeswoman Casey Liening said. Patrol officers went to the address after getting a ShotSpotter notification and confirmed shots had been fired but found no victims. Police didn’t realize City Hall had been hit by gunfire until getting a call from workers who found a mess on the second floor when they showed up for work at 100 N Andrews Ave. That news was a relief to Mayor Dean Trantalis, who has found himself at the center of a political firestorm of late. He said the shooting initially gave him pause about “the dangers that lurk among us.”
“Driver in Pride parade crash ‘keeps seeing it like a movie,’ friend says” via Andrew Perez and David Selig of WPLG — The Fort Lauderdale Gay Men’s Chorus is a family, a brotherhood that is now in mourning after a tragic crash took the life of one of its members at the start of Saturday night’s Stonewall Pride Parade. Jim Fahy, 75, was killed and Jerry Vroegh, 67, was injured when their fellow chorus member Fred Johnson Jr., 77, crashed into them with a pickup truck as they were set to march in the Wilton Manors parade. Police and Johnson have called it an accident. His foot reportedly slipped and got stuck under the brake, pushing down to accelerate. On Tuesday, Local 10 News spoke with Chuck Gregory, a friend of Johnson’s who says he is “devastated.”
The driver in the Wilton Manor pride accident is devastated by what happened. Image via AP.
“The Town Square mess: Anger boils over Boynton’s downtown project that is only half-finished” via Jorge Milian of the Palm Beach Post — By one measure, Boynton Beach’s massive Town Square development project has been a rousing success. The portion of the public-private endeavor funded by taxpayers — the work includes the new four-story City Hall, a police station, a fire station and an amphitheater — was completed on time, on budget and is in use. But the private component of Town Square — two parking garages and three residential apartment buildings — is a mess, a situation city officials blame on the developer. Boynton Beach, saddled between popular downtown destinations Lake Worth Beach to the north and Delray Beach to the south, wasn’t considered an option for retail, upscale condos and restaurants in one location.
“Miami International Airport director Lester Sola out under Daniella Levine Cava, sources say” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Sola, director of Miami International Airport since 2018, is leaving his post, sources said, a move that follows several months of high-profile contract fights involving the county-owned airport under Miami-Dade’s new Mayor, Levine Cava. No details were available on Sola’s pending departure, which was confirmed by multiple county sources. County representatives and Sola did not respond to a request for comment. The veteran administrator was a leading figure in the administration of Levine Cava’s predecessor, Carlos Giménez, serving as head of Internal Services and Water and Sewer before Giménez named him the county’s Aviation Director in February 2018.
“Miami federal inmate died after running into concrete wall, says union rep for guards” via Jay Weaver of the Miami Herald — A federal inmate who may have been high on drugs threatened to slug a correctional officer before being pepper-sprayed, and then he ran directly into a concrete wall — an impact that led to his death from a head injury, according to sources familiar with the incident at a Miami lockup. Drew C. Sikes, who was arrested in March on charges of shooting his assault rifle at Everglades National Park rangers and police officers, died at the Miami Federal Detention Center on June 16, according to a Bureau of Prisons website. The site does not indicate the nature of his death, and BOP officials have not responded to requests for comment.
“Blue-green algae warning issued for Lake, Seminole waterways” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — Health officials in Lake and Seminole counties issued Blue-green algae alert Monday. The Florida Department of Health said it found harmful blue-green algal toxins in both Lake Howell in Seminole County as well as the Dead River residential canal south of U.S. Highway 441, which connects Lake Eustis and Lake Harris in Lake County. The findings came from samples taken on June 9. If toxic, the cyanobacteria can cause nausea, vomiting and even liver failure in severe cases. Officials advised people not to drink, swim or use watercraft in waters where algae bloom is visible; wash skin and clothing with soap and water if they come into contact with the algae or discolored or smelly water; keep pets away from the area; don’t cook or clean dishes with water contaminated by algae blooms, or eat shellfish from water with the blooms.
“New algae harvesting technology on Lake Munson filters water that flows to Wakulla Springs” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — In just 28 minutes, water from Tallahassee’s Lake Munson can go from choked with algae to crystal clear. On the shoreline of the 255-acre lake sits a single-story holding tank and filtration unit developed by California-based engineering company AECOM. It sucks out water through a pipe, separates individual algae particles and spits it back out to not only improve water quality before it hits the world’s largest first magnitude spring but actually also prevent explosive, toxic algal blooms. The test program in Lake Munson, where roughly half the stormwater runoff from the city ends up, hopes to introduce a new tool to fight nutrient buildup that causes more frequent trouble with algae that’s plagued Florida’s water in recent years.
“250 gators removed from Disney properties since 2-year-old’s 2016 death” via Kalia Richardson of the Orlando Sentinel — About 250 alligators have been removed from Disney properties since an alligator killed 2-year-old Lane Thomas Graves from the shores of Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort and Spa five years ago. Disney management and staff have worked directly with trappers contracted through the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission to remove them. Disney has also installed a boulder wall and reptile warning signs at the resort, as well as reinforced training among Disney staff. The majority of nuisance gators taken from Disney are euthanized and sold for their hide and meat, according to FWC spokesperson Tammy Sapp. Some are transferred to alligator farms, animal exhibits and zoos, while those less than 4 feet are relocated, Sapp said.
“Washington Square consultant now suing developer over alleged breach of contract” via Tamaryn Waters of the Tallahassee Democrat — A former consultant for the now-defunct Washington Square development in downtown Tallahassee is suing the property owner for more than $600,000. Walter Hall, of Synthesis Consulting Group, filed a breach of contract lawsuit on April 30 in Orange County against developer Fairmont Tallahassee LLC, run by Ken McDermott. Hall, a frequent face for the project, worked closely with McDermott, also the property owner. The lawsuit includes a copy of an April 7 email from McDermott to Hall that says Washington Square is “over for now.” Fairmont, one of at least two companies associated with the $150 million project, has been hit with a string of liens and lawsuits, including one that ended in a settlement with the city of Tallahassee over easement rights in 2019.
“Orange County pet store owners protest proposed sales ban, say it will cost jobs” via Stephen Hudak of the Orlando Sentinel — Pet shop owners and their employees, literally armed with puppies, appealed Monday to Orange County commissioners to reject an ordinance that would ban stores here from selling puppies, kittens and bunnies — and most likely put the shops out of business. Trevor Elizabeth Davies, owner of Petland Orlando South near Orlando International Airport, said their near quarter-century record of operation should prove they care not only about the animals they sell but also the customers who buy them. More than three dozen people, all employees or owners of eight pet shops in Orange County, joined the demonstration at the County Administration Building, all wearing red T-shirts bearing the message “Save Our Pet Stores” in English or Spanish.
“Opposition mounts to controversial Indian River curriculum ahead of Tuesday School Board vote” via Sommer Brugal of TC Palm — Some elements of a proposed school curriculum would be inappropriate for elementary-aged students, a group of parents and other community members are arguing. Their objections — ranging from concerns about lessons discussing systemic racism, immigration and gender identity to concepts of critical race theory, an approach that examines the intersection of race, law and equity — were brought into focus Monday at a “Save our Students” town hall meeting organized by Vero Beach activist Susan Mehiel. The event, which attracted about 60 people, was a last-minute effort to rally community members to speak out against the K-5 English Language curriculum, which the School Board is expected to vote on Tuesday.
“Highwaymen museum could come to Fort Pierce with African American Cultural and Historical grant” via Olivia McKelvey of TC Palm — An African American Cultural and Historical grant could pave the way for a Highwaymen museum in Lincoln Park. To preserve the prominent Black artists’ legacy, former Rep. Larry Lee urges the city to apply for the grant, which could award up to $1 million with a local match. “If we could get the city, the county, its new schools and agencies on board and we could come up with a million locally, the state, the way I read it, will match it,” Lee told the City Commission Monday. “But I think we could do something really nice with $2 million.”
“Collier County repeals burn ban due to significant rainfall since end of May” via Jake Allen of the Naples Daily News — Collier County commissioners repealed an outdoor burn ban Tuesday that was put in place in late May as dry conditions persisted and a large brush fire burned in Golden Gate Estates. According to the county, the burn ban was lifted due to significant rainfall that has accumulated since it was implemented. The Florida Forestry Service, Department of Emergency Management and the Collier County Fire Chiefs Association recommended a lift on the ban, according to the county. The burn ban impacted the unincorporated areas of Collier County and was implemented on May 25 as the 14th Avenue brush fire burned.
“Federal grant could help researchers from Mayo unlock mysteries of Alzheimer’s disease” via Matt Soergel of The Florida Times-Union — A $33 million grant from the National Institute on Aging will support Alzheimer’s research led by Mayo Clinic’s Guojun Bu, principal investigator for a project led by the Jacksonville institution that will work with multidisciplinary teams from several other facilities. Focusing on a certain gene linked to Alzheimer’s disease and other age-related dementias, they will determine if they can target it to disrupt the disease process. Bu said there is a reason for hope, given recent progress in Alzheimer’s research, including a newly approved drug and encouraging clinical trials underway. His team of about 25 to 30 researchers at Mayo with work with teams from Washington University in St. Louis and Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.
“New report: Jacksonville gets full return on taxpayer backing of Shad Khan’s Four Seasons hotel” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — Jaguars owner Khan‘s planned Four Seasons hotel moved closer to its first vote this week as a Downtown Investment Authority staff report said the city would get a dollar-for-dollar financial payback from pumping taxpayer incentives into the luxury development. The report’s finding on the rate of return for taxpayers will get close attention from City Council members after Khan’s previous proposal for turning Lot J near the stadium into an entertainment district fell short. The report on the Four Seasons proposal says the city would put up as much as $114 million for various financial incentives and city coffers would gain $114 million in new revenue from sales, property and hotel bed taxes over 20 years.
Shad Khan’s Four Seasons development will provide Jacksonville taxpayers a one-on-one return.
“Santa Rosa makes anything louder than normal conversation levels illegal past 9 p.m.” via Annie Blanks of the Pensacola News Journal — Santa Rosa County is tightening up its noise ordinance to make it illegal for sounds louder than 60 decibels — the sound level of a normal conversation or a dishwasher — to come from private or commercial properties between the hours of 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. That’s a marked change from the county’s old noise ordinance, which is more subjective and requires a deputy or code enforcement officer to sit in his or her patrol car with the windows up outside the offending property line and determine if they can hear the noise coming from inside the property. The new ordinance will utilize calibrated decibel readers to determine the actual, scientific level of noise coming from a property.
“Why you’ll see fewer balloons and confetti in Boca Raton’s outdoor spaces” via Victoria Villanueva-Marquez of the Palm Beach Post — A deflated balloon and a mess of confetti, the remnants of a private celebration at the park, will soon be tough to spot on an afternoon stroll through Boca Raton. Starting Jan. 1, Boca Raton will prohibit balloons, confetti and plastic foam containers at parks and other city properties. The city will follow the lead of 25 other municipalities in Florida, such as Boynton Beach, that have passed similar bans meant to reduce environmental pollution. Boca Raton Councilwoman Monica Mayotte, who proposed the ban, noted that the state prevents local governments from regulating plastic bags and several other single-use plastics. She argued that the ban was “the only option” that allowed the coastal city to protect the environment from plastic waste.
Top opinion
“A win for DeSantis. Cruise ships still losing” via Randy Schultz for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — DeSantis and Florida Attorney General Moody declared victory for the state last week when a federal judge sided with them and against the CDC on COVID-19 rules for cruise ships. But are the state and the industry really in a better position? No, because of DeSantis. U.S. District Judge Steven Merryday ruled that the CDC can’t impose requirements on ships leaving from Florida. Yet the injunction doesn’t take effect until July 18. Sixteen days earlier, Royal Caribbean hopes to resume cruises with paying passengers by using the CDC guidance. The company’s Freedom of the Seas conducted a test voyage out of Miami on Sunday, with just 600 passengers on a ship that can hold almost 4,400.
Opinions
“Will Florida’s antifa-aimed public disorder bill snag a Trump supporter?” via Frank Cerabino of The Palm Beach Post — Remember the rush by Florida lawmakers to craft an “anti-rioting” bill designed to enhance penalties against mostly nonviolent protests stemming from Black Lives Matter demonstrations? It was all about stopping the looting by antifa, a nonexistent organization, and protecting our Southern heritage, the Confederate monuments that venerated our slave-owning secessionist past. Alexander Jerich, a Trump supporter, put his truck into a “burnout” skid at an LGTBQ mural, leaving black tracks to deface the street mural. After the vandalism video appeared, Jerich turned himself into Delray Beach Police, which charged him with criminal mischief and reckless driving, with a felony enhancement based on prejudice, under the anti-rioting bill.
“Maybe Seminole investigators won’t probe shady campaign. But we will. We’re going to court.” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — When last we checked on two controversial legislative races from last year — both featuring suspicious, third-party candidates and an abundance of dark money coming from mystery sources — the state was probing only one of them. In the race down in Miami, the prosecutor had launched an investigation that led to the arrests of two people, including a former legislator. Fortunately for Central Floridians, the South Florida prosecutor — and your local newspaper — are still pressing for answers. The Sentinel is also fighting in court to access records that the indicted former legislator, Frank Artiles, is trying to hide to see if they shed light on actions here. Maybe the people paid to enforce the law in these parts don’t care enough to seek answers. But we do.
On today’s Sunrise
Florida’s education system is getting serious about civics. DeSantis approved three bills to revamp civics instruction in Florida schools.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— One bill orders the department of education to revamp the entire civics curriculum from kindergarten till the end of high school … and more.
— Another bill prohibits colleges and universities from excluding speakers with unpopular viewpoints. It’s the Florida GOP’s response to long-standing claims that liberal professors cancel conservatives; House Speaker Chris Sprowls says it’s more than just political posturing.
— Senate President Wilton Simpson shares that concern. During a speech to members of the Board of Governors, Simpson said universities are out of step with the rest of the state.
— On a lighter note, Wilton also recommended that members of the board not kill their annoying teenagers.
— And finally, a Florida Man is fined $2,500 because he cut the wrong nut.
“Disney World to unwrap 2 fireworks shows, 50 golden statues for anniversary” via Dewayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — Walt Disney World will celebrate the 50th anniversary of its opening. The 18-month celebration officially begins on Oct. 1, precisely 50 years after the resort opened to the public. In 2021, that will be the birth date of “Disney Enchantment,” a nighttime show at Magic Kingdom featuring fireworks and projection effects. It will also be the first night for “Harmonious,” the previously announced show on Epcot’s World Showcase Lagoon. At Disney’s Animal Kingdom, “Disney KiteTails” will be presented multiple times daily inside the Discovery River Amphitheater. A more stationary 50th-anniversary offering will be a collection of golden statues of 50 characters spread across Disney World’s four theme parks. Visitors will interact with the figures “in surprising ways,” the company said.
Disney World unveils a little more of its 50th birthday celebration.
“USA Today digital mosaic honors moon landing, newspaper in space” via USA Today — The story of humankind’s journey to the moon can’t be captured in a single frame. That’s why visual journalist Pat Shannahan did it in 105,147 frames. With hundreds of photos, graphics, illustrations and newspaper front pages collected from across our national network’s history of covering space, he built a one-of-a-kind picture-of-pictures. Deep inside the image, you’ll discover heavy rockets that lifted experimental payloads, renderings of real and experimental space vehicles, even hand-signed letters from Alan Shepard. A copy of this newspaper went to the moon in 1971, making this story both a triumph of technology and a work of art.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to Rep. Joy Goff-Marcil, Bill Horne, Danielle McGill, and Kate Wallace.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Good morning. Sometimes good things do happen: Carl Nassib, the Raiders player who on Monday became the first active NFL player to come out as gay, has had the top-selling jersey across the Fanatics network for two days straight, per ESPN.
Markets: So far, so good this week. The Nasdaq hit an all-time high thanks to all Big Tech names climbing at least 1%. Bitcoin bungee-jumped down below $30,000, wiping out all its gains for the year, before springing back up in the afternoon. And Peloton gained after launching a corporate program to court B2B clients.
Politics: Brooklyn borough president Eric Adams opened a wide lead in the NYC Democratic mayoral primary, and Andrew Yang bowed out of the race.
Yesterday, Tinder announced some of the biggest changes since its 2012 launch to adapt to a pandemic-altered dating landscape. Some new features…
Videos: Tinder is letting users attach up to nine short videos to their profiles.
Hot Takes: Users can discuss their spiciest opinions before matching, available 6pm to midnight on weekdays.
Explore: A mode that lets you scan the virtual room before going in and striking up a conversation.
If this all sounds like Tinder attempting to become the next TikTok, you’d be half-right. Gen Z accounts for over 50% of Tinder’s user base, and adding videos and opportunities to display an “authentic” self is intended to attract more young adults to the app.
But CEO Jim Lanzone stressed that the company isn’t trying to become a social media platform for friends. The end goal is still to foster romantic relationships, but with pandemic-era tweaks.
Users coming out of Covid “just want to slow things down and get to know people first a lot more before they decide to match, let alone before they decide to go meet someone offline,” Lanzone told the BBC.
Some dating apps are taking a different approach
Bumble, an app known for requiring women to make the first move, is doubling down on its “Bumble BFF” feature to help nurture IRL friendships. Bumble BFF accounted for 9% of the app’s monthly active users in September 2020, CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd told Reuters.
And Match Group, which owns Tinder, recently acquired a South Korean company, Hyperconnect, that promotes conversations across borders and languages.
Bottom line: With lockdowns mostly over, people are turning to dating apps to find new friends, benefits included or not.
Yesterday, the Biden administration acknowledged that it’ll come up just short of reaching its goal of partially vaccinating 70% of US adults by July 4. If the current pace of vaccinations continues, 67% of adults will have at least one shot of a Covid vaccine by the time the fireworks start, according to the NYT.
People around Biden say, “Ehhh, close enough,” as they talk up the big rebound in the economy, which is projected by the Fed to grow 7% this year. But the miss reflects significant vaccine hesitancy in the US and the waning power of financial incentives to get people off their couch and into Walgreens.
And a major threat looms
Covid’s hottest variant is delta, a more transmissible strain spreading around the globe that Dr. Fauci called the “greatest threat” to eliminating the pandemic in the US. Vaccines have been shown to protect against delta, but experts are warning of surges in regions with lower vaccination rates—like the South—this fall and winter.
Bottom line: Health officials are painting a portrait of “two Americas,” one in regions with high immunization rates and the other where they lag.
Blackstone is getting back into the rough-and-tumble business of arguing about where to hang the photos. The investment firm is spending $6 billion to acquire Home Partners of America, a rental company with 17k+ properties that gives tenants the opportunity to eventually buy their house.
Getting back into? After the 2008 crash, Wall Street firms like Blackstone scooped up foreclosed homes on the cheap. Their investments are credited with helping to stabilize local housing markets and prop up prices.
Blackstone bought tens of thousands of units and rented them out through Invitation Homes, now the US’ largest single-family home renter.
But without a crystal ball to predict the pandemic-induced scramble for housing, Blackstone sold Invitation Homes in 2019. Now, the firm (and others) want back in on the soaring housing market, where last month median home prices rose almost 24% annually to break $350k.
Big picture: Institutional investors only account for an estimated 2% of single-family rentals. But all-cash offers from Wall Street suits are frustrating some would-be homebuyers who are already up against short supplies, record-high prices, and intense competition.
They can be hard to make. Go hiking or hang out on your couch all weekend? Make some easy brownies or try to make a cheesecake? Buy or sell a stock?
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Stat: 5.2 million people around the globe became dollar millionaires last year despite the pandemic, according to a new report from Credit Suisse. 90% of millionaires currently have a net worth of $5 million or less, while 0.4% are worth $50 million or more.
Quote: “Very, very unlikely.”
In testimony before Congress, Fed Chair Jerome Powell dismissed the idea that the economy could experience 1970s-esque hyperinflation.
Read: The rise of the $10 million disc golf celebrity. (The Ringer)
Sure, flight attendants might be trained in handling a drunk bachelorette party or two. But abusive passengers have become so common on flights that on Monday airline groups pleaded with the Justice Department to prosecute the worst cases.
Since the beginning of the year, the FAA has received 3,000 reports of unruly passengers—2,300 of whom were people who refused to follow mask requirements.
“It’s out of control. It’s really coming to the point where we have to defend ourselves,” Paul Hartshorn, spokesperson for the Association of Professional Flight Attendants, told CNBC.
In one instance, a passenger was fined $52k for hitting a crew member in the face and trying to open the cockpit door.
No one’s 100% sure why people increasingly want to fight someone who hands out Biscoffs, but experts point to entitlement, anxieties from the pandemic, and politicized mask-wearing for the unruly behavior.
Big picture: In general, airlines are struggling to accommodate the rebound in demand. American is cutting 1% of July flights and Delta announced plans to hire 1,000 more pilots by next summer.
While we’re here…Someone needs to take away the FAA’s photoshop.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
GameStop stock jumped after the company raised more than $1 billion in a share sale.
McDonald’s will introduce its first-ever loyalty program nationwide on July 8.
Nursing home deaths among Medicare patients rose 32% last year, according to a new government report.
Connecticut became the 19th state to legalize recreational marijuana.
BREW’S BETS
How are you spending the long summer days? Your first thought might not be “saving on home and auto insurance,” but it should be. Policygenius can help you compare rates and look for a lower rate quickly—leaving you plenty of time to hang poolside. Learn more here.*
Finally, a cure for hiccups? This L-shaped straw stopped hiccups in almost 92% of cases, according to a new study. Stop holding your breath and check it out.
Your columella nasi is looking especially shiny today! Not sure what that means? Check out this list of the names of things you probably didn’t know. (Btw, it means the space between your nostrils.)
Behind the scenes at the Brew: We’re looking for passionate readers who want an inside scoop on what we’re brewing next. Want to beta test never-before-seen features? Sign up here.
Tech enthusiasts—or even cool dads and moms who have a kid working at Google—you need to make Emerging Tech Brew part of your weekly routine. Every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, our reporters tackle tech topics like drone delivery, virtual reality, electric/driverless/flying cars, and even Twitter. It’s like talking to your most in-the-know friend, without having to hear about their tattoos all the time. Subscribe to Emerging Tech Brew here.
Word search: We can guarantee this is the cutest word search you’ll ever do.
Trivia: With the arrival of Luca, it is once again time to test your knowledge of Pixar. Two Pixar movies consistently come in last on lists ranking Pixar films, such as Rotten Tomatoes. Which two movies are they?
ANSWER
Cars 2 and Cars 3
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All 50 Senate Democrats voted to advance the federal legislation and open debate on other competing voting bills. All 50 Republicans united to deny it the 60 votes needed to overcome the filibuster. For now, it will largely be left to the Justice Department to decide whether to challenge any of the state laws [restricting voting] in court.
…
Democrats’ bill, which passed the House in March, would have ushered in the largest federally mandated expansion of voting rights since the 1960s, ended the practice of partisan gerrymandering of congressional districts, forced super PACs to disclose their big donors and created a new public campaign financing system.
…
Liberal activists promised a well-funded summertime blitz to pressure the few Senate Democrats opposed to [removing the filibuster]. Without the rule there to force broad consensus, [moderate Democrat Kyrsten Sinema] argued Congress could swing wildly every two years between enacting and then reversing liberal and conservative agenda items.
Why did Australia reject the UN’s warning to list the Great Barrier Reef as “in danger”?
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) committee warned that “urgent” action is needed to combat the effects of climate ch…
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How are some technology companies responding to employee burnout?
One senior executive revealed on Twitter that founder Whitney Wolfe Herd had made the move “having correctly intuited our collective burnout.” Its 700 staff worldwide have been told to switch off and foc…
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All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLShould college athletes be paid directly?
Yes
53%
No
35%
Unsure
12%
338 votes, 46 comments
Context: Supreme Court rules college athletes can get education-related benefits.
HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS
“Yes – Between the sports they participate in and the class work, these athletes don’t (and in some cases, aren’t allowed anyway) have time for a job to earn spending money. On top of that, all the big conference schools have been raking in millions and millions in profits on the backs and likeness (in the case of video games) of the student athletes.”
“No – As a former college athlete, I think many have lost sight of the big picture. These are students, whose job is to learn. Playing the …”
“No – Football, basketball, and womens fastpitch are the only college sports that make a profit. That prof…”
“If they’re going to politically weaponize religion by ‘rebuking’ Democrats who support women’s reproductive choice, then a ‘rebuke’ of their [the Catholic Church] tax-exempt status may be in order.”
-Rep. Jared Huffman (D-CA)
Is a Trump and DeSantis Union on the Horizon? – LNTV
With the defeat of the For the People Act in the Senate, the media machine is lamenting that President Biden can’t get more done. CNN posits that the small majority for Democrats is holding them back from passing more radical legislation. Rather than come right out in the open, the aforementioned outlet and others are tacitly suggesting that the time has come to remove the filibuster. Here’s a suggestion for media activists: If you want to control what laws are made, get out there and ask folks to vote for you instead of hiding behind the desk and spinning partisan positions as straight news.
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
The New York mayoral primary voting is done, and although the final candidate for the Democratic Party is not yet known, there is a pattern that seems to be emerging from the fog. Taking a strong lead (latest figures suggest 12%) is former Republican Eric Adams. Adams carries a gun and says he doesn’t believe in the mayor having a security detail at all times; he has vowed to tackle serious crime in the city if elected, and – as a former NYPD officer – he is a vocal supporter of the police. On the Republican side, Curtis Sliwa – founder of the Guardian Angels – won the nomination. Is there a theme here that political pundits are missing? Could it be that residents of the Big Apple want someone who is tough on crime rather than focusing on the morass of woke politics?
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Republicans use filibuster to block debate on Democrats’ ‘rotten’ election reform bill
Senate Republicans on Tuesday blocked sweeping legislation on election and campaign finance reforms that Democrats argued was crucial to ensuring voting rights and saving democracy but the GOP blasted as a partisan power grab.
The “For the People Act” needed 60 votes to clear a procedural vote in the Senate, but Republicans filibustered and killed the legislation from advancing to debate. No Republicans joined with the 50 Democrats on the motion to proceed.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Republicans won’t stand for Democrats’ attempt to impose new voting standards on states that would “rig” elections in their favor. He called the substance of the nearly 900-page bill “rotten” to its core.
Republicans took issue with imposing federal standards on state elections that they said would weaken state ID requirements. They also oppose starting a new public financing system for congressional elections and politicizing the Federal Elections Commission that enforces campaign finance laws.
Democrats, with the White House on their side, framed the legislation as an urgent priority to save democracy in the face of GOP efforts in state legislatures around the country to pass “voter suppression laws” in the wake of former President Trump’s 2020 election loss and unsubstantiated claims of widespread voter fraud.CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Sen. Kennedy slams Dems’ ‘cynical’ election bill: The ‘Screw the People Act’
– MSNBC guest compares Senate GOP blocking Democrat’s voting bill to apartheid
– AOC slams filibuster after Republicans block voting rights bill: ‘Call me radical’
– Kamala Harris breaks tie as Senate confirms Kiran Ahuja, Biden nominee with critical race theory ties
– Manchin strikes deal with Schumer to vote ‘yes’ on advancing voting reform bill
Virginia’s Loudoun County School Board silences public comment after raucous meeting, 2 men arrested
The embattled school board of Virginia’s Loudoun County cut off public comment during a fiery meeting Tuesday as residents traded barbs over new transgender policy proposals.
The meeting came after weeks of protests from district parents who opposed to some of the measures, which they have criticized as potential left-wing indoctrination and a violation of parental rights.
The policies affect transgender student rights, privacy and restroom accommodations and would require Loudoun County Public Schools employees to use students’ preferred names or pronouns. An official school board vote on the proposal is not expected until at least Aug. 10.
But it has become a hot-button issue in the district, where 259 residents signed up to speak during the public comment session and people lined up at the doors early to get seats in the packed auditorium. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Virginia parents torch Loudoun County school board over critical race theory, ‘pornographic’ books in school
– Loudoun County, Va., parents call out ‘wokest and worst school board in America’ after meeting erupts into chaos
– Minnesota girl slams school board over BLM posters after ‘no politics’ promise
– Every Black Life Matters president knocks Black Lives Matter movement as ‘too narrow’ in scope
Michigan cop breaks down in tears after killing woman who shot at him during Juneteeth parade
New video shows a Flint Police Department officer breaking down in tears after shooting and killing a 19-year-old woman who authorities say opened fire on him during a parade on Saturday.
The officer was directing traffic during the city’s Juneteenth Celebration Parade when Briana Sykes pulled up to him and fired a gun at 2:14 p.m., according to Michigan State Police.
Video of the incident shows the officer walking along Sykes’ car as he gives her orders.
“Let me see your hands,” the officer can be heard yelling several times.
After the gunfire, Sykes’ car slowly creeps forward as the officer appears to collapse to the ground in tears. Other nearby officers rushed to assist him. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Police union says media, politicians ‘gaslighting’ public into supporting defund movement
– Austin shooting update: New suspect ID’d, charges against 2 juveniles dropped, police say
– California driver charged with murder after suspected DUI crash kills young sisters, 11 and 8: report
– Reno man, who was homeless, to likely get probation in mother’s hot car death
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Eric Adams takes lead in Dem NYC mayoral primary race, Yang concedes; Sliwa wins GOP nod
– Vanessa Bryant, families reach settlement in helicopter crash that killed Kobe Bryant, daughter
– Portland police officers will no longer make certain traffic stops, must follow new consent search guidelines
– Biden pledge to end cash bail unchanged amid violent crime surge
– Tucker Carlson: Scientists want to use human engineering to solve climate change
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Some used vehicles now cost more than original sticker price
– Powell says Fed will wait for ‘actual inflation’ before raising interest rates
– US watchdog to adopt mortgage moratorium rule: report
– FAA proposes unmasked passengers, staff assaulters pay hefty fines
– US seizes internet domains tied to Iran’s government
#TheFlashback:CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Greg Gutfeld and his panel discussed transgender athletes in women’s sports on Tuesday’s “Gutfeld!”
“I live by a very simple rule,” Gutfeld said. “Don’t get angry about anything if the people closer to the issue aren’t angry first. If the people directly impacted by this stuff aren’t willing to speak up, then why should I?”
“They’re pissed off ’cause they’re scared,” he continued, “for the same reasons everyone is scared today – they don’t want to be ostracized for their beliefs.”
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The Twitter post referred to a Wall Street Journal article that reported on Monday that former Trump bodyguard Matthew Calamari was under investigation. Read more…
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11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
AEI’s daily publication of independent research, insightful analysis, and scholarly debate.
Danielle Pletka and Brett D. Schaefer | Heritage Foundation and American Enterprise Institute
The United States should work with the future secretary general to modernize the International Civil Aviation Organization, restore neutrality, improve safety, and condemn rule violations.
Instead of merely dismissing the faux science that lends support to climate alarmism as a “hoax,” conservatives must do more to engage with and reclaim the growing body of scientific evidence that supports their climate change realism.
After a year of violence and unrest, large American cities serve as a cautionary tale for the progressives in Washington who want to move the country further to the left.
“Iran’s president-elect [Ebrahim Raisi] staked out a hard-line position Monday in his first remarks since his landslide election victory, rejecting the possibility of meeting with President Joe Biden or negotiating Tehran’s ballistic missile program and support of regional militias.” AP News
Both sides condemn Raisi’s human rights record:
“During his two years at the helm of Iran’s judiciary, Raisi has expanded the scope of the death penalty, wielding the sentence as a tool of repression against dissenting political voices and ethnic and religious minorities. According to Amnesty International, Iran is now second only to China in absolute number of executions. In a high-profile case from last year, authorities executed Navid Afkari—a well-known Iranian wrestler and participant in the 2018 anti-government protests—for confessions obtained under sustained torture…
“But Raisi staked his claim to notoriety long before he became involved in national politics. As prosecutor of Hamedan, he led his province in the torture and execution of thousands of political prisoners in the 1980s. Between July and December 1988, the state carried out the systematic killings of dissidents, activists, militants, mothers, and children imprisoned across Iran. Hussein-Ali Montazeri, deputy supreme leader-turned-dissident, named Raisi as one of the four officials intimately involved. Estimates vary, but reports indicate that more than 30,000 prisoners were extrajudicially killed over the course of only five months.” Charlotte Lawson, The Dispatch
“Raisi’s victory marks the first time Iran has elected a leader who is under sanctions by the United States. The US Treasury Department detailed Raisi’s brutality in 2019, citing a United Nations report that found Iran’s judiciary approved the execution of at least nine children in 2018 and 2019. In his previous role as a prosecutor, Raisi also ‘participated in a so-called ‘death commission’ that ordered the extrajudicial executions of thousands of political prisoners in 1988,’ the Treasury Department stated…
“More than half of Iran’s more than 59 million voters boycotted the election after the Guardian Council, the powerful clerics who vet potential candidates, disqualified nearly all of Raisi’s competitors. His victory was seen as a foregone conclusion and the 48.8% voter turnout was the lowest since the establishment of the Islamic Republic in 1979. Raisi, who is a confidant of Supreme Leader Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei with close ties to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, won with 17.9 million votes — less than 30% of the eligible electorate. Another measure of voter discontent was the record 3.7 million ballots left blank.” David A. Andelman, CNN
Other opinions below.
From the Left
“A Raisi government will almost certainly continue Iran’s support for Shiite militias in Iraq and Lebanon and for the Palestinian Hamas movement… that will make a new [nuclear] deal more difficult, as U.S. officials have said it should depend on Iranian agreement to follow-on talks on those issues. Iranian negotiators are also demanding that the U.S. sanctions on Mr. Raisi, imposed by the Trump administration, be lifted; complying would be an embarrassment for a Biden White House that portrays human rights as central to its foreign policy…
“President Biden nevertheless has a good case for going forward. Mr. Trump’s ‘maximum pressure’ campaign against Iran failed to force the regime to accept tighter curbs on its nuclear activity. On the contrary, Tehran increased its stockpile of enriched uranium by a factor of 15, and reduced the time it would need to produce a nuclear weapon to well below the one-year standard set in the accord. While the curbs in a restored deal will expire by the end of this decade, the failure to put them back in place could leave military action as the only means of stopping Iran from producing bombs.” Editorial Board, Washington Post
“Unlike Mr Rouhani, [Raisi] shows no interest in courting foreign investment; there are fewer carrots to dangle. But there is suspicion that the glacial pace until now has been partly due to hardliners slow-rolling talks before the elections to prevent reformists gaining any credit, and hope that a deal might be reached before Mr Raisi takes power in August – which would allow him to reap the benefit of loosened sanctions, while blaming his predecessor for problems… a more unified Iranian leadership may make it easier to implement a deal.” Editorial Board, The Guardian
“Having consolidated power, hard-liners are now likely to start purging any internal opposition (as they did in the past) to their plans for the post-Khamenei era. That will not be easy. Iran has witnessed recurring social unrest in the past few years as the system has failed to reform and respond to widespread grievances. It’s not a stretch to presume many are likely to resist hard-line policies. Iran’s leaders have finite resources, so they will want to ensure they face relative calm outside their borders, to focus on a seamless transition at home. After all, self-preservation trumps all else…
“In the aftermath of Ali Khamenei’s re-election as president in 1985, Iran’s leaders agreed to a cease-fire that ended the eight-year Iran-Iraq war and started a constitutional reform process. While war exhaustion inside Iran was real, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini vowed to carry on until victory was achieved. Instead, he accepted the cease-fire in 1988. He equated the concession to a poisoned chalice, but it also allowed the government to pursue a domestic consolidation of the Islamic Republic…
“Those who thought that Iranian politics would ultimately move in a more moderate direction were wrong. The regime is doubling down on religion, repression and revolution. The Biden team will make the argument that, whatever its flaws, the deal on the table in Vienna is still the best option for dealing with Iran’s nuclear program, on the view that military action is unthinkable and the Trump administration’s policy of maximum sanctions didn’t stop Iran’s uranium enrichment drive…
“The argument makes a certain amount of sense — at least if the true goal of U.S. policy is to find a face-saving exit from the Middle East, akin to what the 1973 Paris Peace Accords did for the U.S. and Indochina. But if long experience in the Middle East has taught us anything, it’s that the region doesn’t easily leave the rest of the world alone. A less-restricted Iran means more regional mayhem. It means Arab states more likely to acquire nuclear capabilities of their own. It means a nervous Israel, more willing to take its chances. Whatever else happens in Vienna, Raisi’s presidency means that the 42-year crisis with Iran is about to get worse.” Bret Stephens, New York Times
“Mr. Raisi expects the U.S. to return to the Obama deal that would help finance its conventional weapons arsenal and promotion of regional terrorism. All the U.S. gets is a delay in Iran’s ability to develop a nuclear bomb, though it is probably also continuing to research a bomb in secret. President Biden ought to use the election of Mr. Raisi, an acolyte of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, as an opening to maintain sanctions until Iran agrees to a deal that truly restricts its weapons program and terrorist support. Instead he seems bent on repeating the 2015 blunder.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“It is less than obvious what Biden’s collegial approach to international affairs has to offer over Donald Trump’s more acerbic diplomacy. For a man whom many consider to be a pariah, Trump ended up achieving a lot…
“For all the conflict-resolution attempted by earnest, well-meaning presidents such as Jimmy Carter and Barack Obama, they left the Middle East in a worse state than when they took office. Trump, by contrast, was denounced as a warmonger — and yet became the first president in modern times not to be sucked into a foreign war. Moreover, he achieved the diplomatic coup of persuading four Arab states to recognize Israel, as well as dialing down tensions between North Korea and the west…
“With Iran, Trump managed to strike — ordering the assassination of Qasem Soleimani — without triggering an all-out war. He then took Iran’s halfhearted retaliations on the chin, thus depriving Iran of a malign asset while allowing both sides to back down without wider conflict. Afterwards, Iranian attacks on western ships in the Gulf declined. Trump was lucky, no doubt, but he was original in his approach to foreign affairs — and bold.” Editorial Board, Spectator World
🐪 Good Wednesday morning.Smart Brevity™ count:1,488 words … 5½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
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1 big thing: The Democrats’ wake-up call
Democrats, in private and public, are warning that rising crime — and the old and new progressive calls to defund the police — represent the single biggest threat to their electoral chances in 2022.
Why it matters: There has been a big spike in big-city crime, a dynamic increasingly captured in local coverage and nationally on CNN and Fox News.
The latest: Democrats say it’s no coincidence that Eric Adams, the leader in the New York City mayoral race, ran against defunding the police.
Adams, who retired as an NYPD captain after a 22-year law-enforcement career, held a lead in yesterday’s Democratic mayoral primary. Final results could take weeks because of the election’s complex ranked-choice voting. Andrew Yang conceded.
The big picture: Homicide rates in large cities — many of them run by Democrats — were “up more than 30 percent on average last year, and up another 24 percent for the beginning of this year,” foreshadowing a violent summer, the N.Y. Times reported June 1.
President Biden sees this rising threat, and plans to roll out anti-crime plans at 3:30 p.m. ET today. (See next item).
The N.Y. Times’ Tom Friedman, one of Biden’s favorite columnists, writes today under the headline “Want to Get Trump Re-elected? Dismantle the Police”:
“As for policing, this issue could really sink Democrats. For example, big swaths of my old hometown, Minneapolis, have been turned into a dangerous and dystopian ghost city, wracked by gun violence, since the police murder of George Floyd.”
What’s next: Republicans plan to use Dems’ defund-the-police rhetoric as a major issue in next year’s midterms.
President Biden’s new strategies on gun violence include a plan to revoke licenses from gun dealers the first time they violate federal law, Axios’ Shawna Chen reports.
Why it matters: The U.S. is experiencing mass shootings (at least four people shot) on a weekly basis this year, the Gun Violence Archive shows. Homicides jumped 30% in large cities in 2020.
Biden’s proposals include:
Setting aside $350 billion of the COVID relief package’s state and local funding to help community policing, including investing in new technologies and bolstering prosecutions of gun traffickers.
Expanding summer programs, employment opportunities and other services for young people so they are “productively engaged” and less likely to commit crime.
Small businesses may turn out to be one of the most unexpected pandemic winners, Axios’ Felix Salmon writes.
The number of entrepreneurs starting a business easily hit a record high in 2020 despite the calamity, according to a new analysis by University of Maryland economist John Haltiwanger.
A Fed paper suggests that about 130,ooo firms went out of business in the first year of the pandemic — up between a quarter and a third from normal levels, but much lower than many economists feared.
What’s happening: It’s now much easier than it was in 2008 to start a small business selling goods or services online.
By far the largest single sector of new business formation is “nonstore retailers,” who account for one of every three new businesses formed over the pandemic. They were helped by e-commerce platforms like Shopify and Stripe, founded in 2009.
Physical businesses have been booming too, but largely in states where rents are relatively low — Texas, Florida and Georgia.
Sectors seeing a lot of new openings include laundromats, trucking, and, surprisingly, restaurants.
The 50-50 Senate, GOP-controlled state legislatures, gerrymandering and a conservative Supreme Court are blunting Democrats’ ability to fight back against historic efforts to restrict voting in states across the U.S.
Why it matters: Voting rights advocates say the moves could artificially prop up conservative, white power structures for a decade or longer, Axios’ Stef Kight and David Nather write.
Senate Republicans yesterday stalled a sweeping federal voting rights bill — and Democrats don’t have enough support in their own caucus to end the legislative filibuster.
What’s next: Democrats’ next best move may be to turn to state-by-state fights in Texas, Arizona, Florida, Georgia and beyond.
“Plan B looks a lot like the status quo, which is hand-to-hand combat,” said Matt Miller, a DOJ official during the Obama administration.
Several states averaged seven or fewer new COVID cases per 100,000 people over the past week, while Missouri had 76 new cases per 100,000 people, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes.
For context: At peak COVID, South Dakota saw more than 160 new cases per 100,000 people each day. It logged 4 over the last week.
Between the lines: The wide variation in states’ vaccination rates means that stark disparities in case rates will be America’s norm.
6. Scoop: New book says Trump talked of COVID killing John Bolton
Cover: Harper
“Nightmare Scenario,” a book out next week on President Trump’s handling of COVID, reports that he said he hoped it would take out his former national security adviser, John Bolton, who had just written an explosive tell-all about his time in the White House.
Here’s the passage by Washington Post journalist Yasmeen Abutaleb and Damian Paletta in “Nightmare Scenario,” out Tuesday:
Trump had tried to joke about the virus for months, sometimes even mocking people who had become ill. … At one meeting several months [before Trump got sick], NEC director Larry Kudlow had stifled a cough. The room had frozen.. … Trump had waved his hands in front of his face, as if to jokingly ward off any flying virus particles, and then cracked a smile. “I was just kidding,” he’d said. “Larry will never get COVID. He will defeat it with his optimism.” …
“John Bolton,” he had said … “Hopefully COVID takes out John.”
🥊 When asked about the quote, Bolton gave Axios’ Jonathan Swan this classic reply: “Fooled me — I thought he was relying on his lawyers.”
7. First look: Trump book’s secret title revealed
Cover: Penguin Press
The Washington Post’s Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker will be out July 20 with “I Alone Can Fix It: Donald J. Trump’s Catastrophic Final Year,” Penguin Press announced.
Why it matters: With the swelter of Trump books that begins this summer, authors have been keeping their publishing plans secret. This publishing date puts Leonnig and Rucker a week ahead of the juggernaut Michael Wolff, whose “Landslide” is scheduled for July 27.
Leonnig and Rucker, both Pulitzer winners, are authors of a No. 1 bestseller on Trump, “A Very Stable Genius.” Leonnig wrote the current bestseller “Zero Fail: The Rise and Fall of the Secret Service.”
For the new book, the two interviewed Trump at Mar-a-Lago.
8. “Axios on HBO” interview becomes major issue in Pakistan
Photo: “Axios on HBO”
Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan faced growing criticism after his “Axios on HBO” interview with Jonathan Swan, where Khan seemingly blamed a rise in sexual violence on women wearing “very few clothes.”
Khan’s comments drew nationwide condemnation from human rights activists and the country’s opposition, which sought an apology, AP reported from Islamabad.
“If a woman is wearing very few clothes it will have an impact, it will have an impact on the men, unless they’re robots,” said Khan, a former playboy cricket star. “I mean it’s common sense.”
Asked directly by Swan whether the way that women dress could provoke acts of sexual violence, Khan said: “It depends on which society you live in. If in a society where people haven’t seen that sort of thing, it will have an impact on them.”
Watch a clip. … The “Axios on HBO’ episode is available on HBO and HBO Max.
9. Hammer blow for Hong Kong’s free press
A worker packs copies of the Apple Daily in Hong Kong on Friday. Photo: Kin Cheung/AP
Apple Daily — the pro-democracy Hong Kong newspaper founded by jailed media tycoon Jimmy Lai — will close this week, in print and online, after the government froze its assets.
Why it matters: It’s a hammer blow to the city’s free press, the Financial Times notes (subscription).
10. Tabletop computing returns
A couple plays Scrabble on the Infinity Game Table. Photo: Tastemasters
Axios’ Ina Fried writesthat she has been trying out the Infinity Game Table, a touchscreen tabletop PC dedicated to playing card and board games, including popular titles like Scrabble and Monopoly:
“One sign the game’s makers are on to something: The only time my mother-in-law stops playing solitaire on it is when my son and I are playing a game of Sorry.”
The Game Table will be available for preorder from Best Buy beginning July 17. Pricing hasn’t been set. But when they were on Kickstarter, the 24-inch screen version cost $500 and the 32-inch model was $700.
It comes with several dozen included games, featuring Hasbro classics such as Monopoly, Trivial Pursuit, Scrabble, Sorry and Operation.
Democratic lawmakers and racial justice advocates have kept quiet about Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse’s membership in a racially exclusionary organization, seemingly satisfied with the Rhode Island Democrat’s explanation that it is nothing more than “a long tradition.” [READ MORE]
President Joe Biden’s renegade dog Major could be primed to unleash a reign of terror following the death of Champ, the elder and much-better-behaved German Shepherd widely believed to be the only thing keeping the vicious Major at bay. [READ MORE]
The federal government is steering small businesses to do more business with Amazon to help them recover from the economic crisis prompted by the pandemic. [READ MORE]
Catholic activists are rallying behind church leaders after Democratic politicians attacked bishops for reviewing church teaching on abortion and the Eucharist. [READ MORE]
Paul Hastings, the law firm run by Lincoln Project donors that was hired to review the Lincoln Project’s “operations and culture” following the John Weaver sex pest scandal, has concluded its investigation.
The Senate confirmed a nominee tied to Chinese tech giant Huawei to an intelligence post, prompting Republicans to introduce a bill barring outgoing government officials from working with some state-owned Chinese companies.
President Joe Biden’s administration on Tuesday announced its support for bipartisan legislation that would end the sentencing disparity among drug offenses involving crack and powder cocaine.
While many Democrats and liberal activists insisted the fight is not over, they face long odds, as key lawmakers have said they are not willing to eliminate the chamber’s supermajority filibuster rule for legislation.
President Joe Biden plans to tackle escalating crime rates on Wednesday, a politically charged issue that has rarely been a winning one for Democrats. And once a president addresses any issue, they own it.
President Joe Biden’s forthcoming strategy for rising crime rates across the nation primarily hinges on providing states the “flexibility” to redirect funds previously allocated in the American Rescue Plan toward gun violence and other crime prevention programs.
President Joe Biden’s pick to lead the Bureau of Land Management is facing staunch opposition from Republican senators accusing her of past affiliation with an “ecoterrorist” organization and deception regarding a three-decade-old “tree spiking” criminal case.
President Joe Biden has said he wants to use foreign policy to advance the interests of working people, approaching global affairs as an extension of domestic policy. But the administration faces criticism it is attempting to formulate policy to address its top political aim at home: to reach voters in the hotly contested industrial base.
A coal-state Republican and a centrist Democrat are pitching a compromise alternative to one of President Joe Biden’s signature proposals to address climate change.
A small-town fire department is increasingly responding to calls to rescue migrants who have been abandoned or injured while crossing remote spots on the border in southeastern New Mexico and is only anticipating more calls as triple-digit temperatures set in for the summer.
A troubling rise in violent crime, including a surge in homicides in major cities across the country, has the potential to upend the emerging bipartisan consensus in favor of policing and criminal justice reform.
CHEYENNE, Wyoming — Liz Cheney’s vocal criticism of former President Donald Trump and her vote to impeach him cost her not only her leadership position as the No. 3 Republican in the House but has prompted a rush to challenge her in a primary in hopes of unseating the third-term congresswoman.
Investigators hired by the Lincoln Project concluded their investigation into the group’s handling of sexual misconduct allegations against one of its co-founders.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
June 23, 2021
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AP Morning Wire
Good morning. Here is today’s selection of top stories from The Associated Press at this hour to begin the U.S. day.
WASHINGTON (AP) — When New York Democratic Rep. Mondaire Jones was at the White House for the signing of the proclamation making Juneteenth a national holiday last week, he told President Joe Biden their party needed him more involved in passing…Read More
TOKYO (AP) — The Tokyo Olympics, already delayed by the pandemic, are not looking like much fun: Not for athletes. Not for fans. And not for the Japanese public. They are caught between concerns about the coronavirus at a time when few are vacci…Read More
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran likely conducted a failed launch of a satellite-carrying rocket in recent days and now appears to be preparing to try again, the country’s latest effort to advance its space program amid tensions with the …Read More
NEW YORK (AP) — Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams appeared to take a fragile lead Tuesday in New York City’s Democratic mayoral primary, but it could be weeks before it becomes clear who is actually on top in the first citywide election to u…Read More
HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong’s pro-democracy Apple Daily newspaper will close by this weekend, its parent company said Wednesday, following last week’s arrest of five editors and executives and the freezing of $2.3 million in assets under the city…Read More
LOS ANGELES (AP) — In the most anticipated hearing in the case in years, Britney Spears is expected to address a judge overseeing the conservatorship that has controlled th…Read More
BIG SUR, Calif. (AP) — A group of firefighting monks was ready to defend a Buddhist monastery being threatened Tuesday by a wildfire burning in the rugged central coast mou…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Without speaking a word or scratching a pen across paper, President Joe Biden drove up the pressure on Big Tech companies already smarting under federal a…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is signaling that she is poised to create a new committee to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol, pushing closer…Read More
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Mark Twain
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Yesterday, health officials said there have been 84 cases of the Delta coronavirus variant detected in Illinois, with at least 70 of those here in Chicago. With this more contagious variant taking root in the city — and primarily affecting unvaccinated people — city officials launched new incentives to get the shot. They expanded the at-home inoculations to include people ages 12 and up, and are also dangling $50 GrubHub gift cards as a reward.
Meanwhile, now we’re in phase 5, fewer businesses are requiring masks and fewer people are wearing them. But some residents have chosen to keep the protective layers on their faces. Here’s why.
Are you still wearing a mask? How do you feel about it now that the state has reopened? Send me an email and let me know.
— Nicole Stock, audience editor
Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day.
Meteorologists with Chicago’s National Weather Service generally spend their days sitting in their Romeoville office, looking ahead — analyzing data and trends to warn some 10 million area residents what conditions to expect in the future.
Since Sunday night’s devastating thunderstorms, however, roughly half or more of the 14 meteorologists who work in the office have spent their shifts in the field, working on damage-surveying teams in Naperville, Woodridge, Darien, Burr Ridge and Willow Springs. They are trying to quantify past events to answer lingering questions about the strongest, most devastating tornado to hit the Chicago area in at least six years.
The Chicago Bears’ bid to move to Arlington Heights seems legitimate, and not a bluff, the village mayor said Tuesday, after local officials acted to prohibit certain uses but allow a football stadium.
“I don’t think this is a negotiating tactic,” Mayor Tom Hayes said. “I do think the Bears are serious about this. It may not come to fruition, but I think they’re seriously considering this.”
A possible late City Council compromise would name Chicago’s iconic lakefront roadway for the city’s Black founder, Jean Baptiste Point DuSable, but keep the beloved “Lake Shore Drive” moniker as well.
Preservationists fear two Illinois agencies will oppose having the James R. Thompson Center added to the National Register of Historic Places, which the groups see as a key to saving the Helmut Jahn-designed building in the Loop.
Brian Rock has a vision: He wants to make pizzas for people at natural disaster sites.
So when Rock, of Merrillville, Indiana, heard about the tornado that tore through the Naperville area Sunday night, he packed up his dough, sauce and cheese, and headed toward the wreckage.
For nearly two years, R&B star R. Kelly has been awaiting trial in Chicago’s downtown Metropolitan Correctional Center, where he was attacked by a fellow inmate and endured the coronavirus pandemic along with hundreds of other detainees.
Now, with less than two months until he is set to face trial on racketeering charges in New York, Kelly has been moved to a metropolitan detention center in Brooklyn. Jon Seidel has the full story…
Lightfoot offered a compromise to rename Chicago’s most iconic roadway “DuSable Lake Shore Drive.” Ald. David Moore was willing to entertain the compromise because he’s not certain he has the 34 votes needed to override a veto. But, the deal fell apart.
Amid the storm’s wreckage, longtime residents, firefighters and Red Cross volunteers in the western suburbs step up to serve the communities they love.
The judge presiding over his case in New York said last week she wanted to question Kelly in person about a potential conflict of interest involving one of his lawyers.
The Biden administration wades into the crime issue as Chicago’s chronic gun violence problem was dramatically underscored when 52 people were shot, seven fatally, over the last weekend.
Some drivers aren’t coming back because of an uptick in violent carjackings and a lack of support during the pandemic, says the group Chicago Rideshare Advocates.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Wednesday! 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 each morning this week: Monday, 601,825; Tuesday, 602,092; Wednesday, 602,462.
The Senate rejected Democrats’ signature voting rights and election reform bill on Tuesday, delivering a blow to President Biden and the Democratic agenda as lawmakers and negotiators concurrently push to reach a bipartisan deal on an infrastructure package.
Senate Democrats were unable to overcome a filibuster by Republicans on the wide-ranging For the People Act, a sweeping elections bill that was loudly opposed by all corners of the Senate GOP, a culmination of weeks of partisan bickering and behind-the-scenes talks across the upper chamber (The Hill).
“Make no mistake: Democrats will not let this go,” said Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), arguing that Senate Republicans “signed their names” alongside former President Trump and his push to overturn the 2020 election. “This will not be the last time that voting rights legislation comes up for a debate in this Senate.”
The result was never in doubt. Senate Democrats never had a prayer of getting the needed 60-votes to start debate. Instead, the main question surrounded whether they would have their entire conference on board. That was clinched Tuesday afternoon when Schumer announced that Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) would vote with his party after a last-minute deal where his amendment to the legislation would have been brought up first if they had gotten the needed votes to break the filibuster.
“The right to vote is fundamental to our American democracy and protecting that right should not be about party or politics,” Manchin said in a statement, criticizing Republicans for not even allowing debate on the issue.
In a show of importance for the White House and Democrats, Vice President Harris was on hand to preside over debate. In a statement, Biden lauded Democrats for remaining united “for democracy.”
“They stood against the ongoing assault of voter suppression that represents a Jim Crow era in the 21st Century. Unfortunately, a Democratic stand to protect our democracy met a solid Republican wall of opposition,” Biden said. “I’ll have more to say on this next week. But let me be clear. This fight is far from over — far from over. I’ve been engaged in this work my whole career, and we are going to be ramping up our efforts to overcome again — for the people, for our very democracy.”
The Washington Post: Senate Republicans block debate on elections bill, dealing blow to Democrats’ voting rights push.
Hanna Trudo, The Hill: White House draws ire of progressives amid voting rights defeat.
The setback comes as GOP state legislatures around the country have debated and passed new voting rules, piling pressure on congressional Democrats who believe trying to counteract those restrictions is a top legislative priority.
Tuesday’s vote was always considered a showpiece by the Senate majority because even the most moderate GOP senators panned the bill. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) labeled the legislation “wholly partisan,” while Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) criticized Democrats for their “over the top” rhetoric on the subject (NBC News).
The Hill: ‘Killibuster’: Democratic angst grows as filibuster threatens agenda.
Elsewhere on Capitol Hill, top White House officials huddled with Senate moderates Tuesday afternoon while lawmakers plow ahead toward a bipartisan deal on an infrastructure proposal. The negotiators met in Sen. Kyrsten Sinema’s (D-Ariz.) office to try to hammer out differences over how to pay for the package, which would cost $974 billion over five years, and $1.2 trillion over eight years (The Hill).
White House press secretary Jen Psaki labeled the sit-down a “productive meeting,” adding that more work needs to be done and that more meetings are expected in the coming days (The Hill). Among those is one between White House officials, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Schumer later today (Politico).
However, the pay-fors remain the sticking point in discussions. Sen. John Thune (S.D.), the top GOP vote counter, said that the White House rejected many of the G-21 group’s suggestions on how to fund a potential bill.
“It’s gotten more complicated with the pay-fors,” Thune said. “There’s a number of things they ruled out previously, and there’s even a bigger hole now” (Politico).
More in Congress: Pelosi found herself in a swirl of confusion on Tuesday when sources said she told Democratic colleagues she would create a select committee to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. She later stepped out of her office to deny it, saying, “No, I did not make that announcement. Somebody put out a false report.” The downside of such a panel would be that its findings would be perceived as partisan following Congress’s failure to adopt legislation to establish a bipartisan Jan. 6 commission (The Hill). … The House Judiciary antitrust subcommittee is under pressure today to slow down a bill that targets tech giants, with industry groups, Amazon and a group of moderate Democrats calling for more hearings to weigh proposals ahead of a committee markup (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
POLITICS: Early returns this morning in the New York City Democratic mayoral primary show Eric Adams, a former police captain, leading while far short of a majority, followed by Maya Wiley, a former counsel to Mayor Bill de Blasio (D), and Kathryn Garcia, a former sanitation commissioner, in third place. Andrew Yang, a tech entrepreneur and former presidential candidate, dropped out. New York City’s ranked-choice voting system and June 29 absentee ballot deadline mean the primary winner will probably not be announced for weeks. Curtis Sliwa won the Republican primary for mayor (The New York Times).
> Critical race theory: The culture war being waged by Republicans has a new leading subject as lawmakers and officials seek to ban critical race theory from being taught in schools and plan to use the topic as a wedge issue ahead of the 2022 midterm elections.
As The Hill’s Reid Wilson writes, Northern Virginia has taken hold as the epicenter of the debate ahead of the state’s gubernatorial contest in November. Politically active parents in wealthy Loudoun County, Va., including some professional GOP strategists, are leading a recall effort against school board members there and have earned the attention of Fox News and other conservative news outlets.
While GOP nominee Glenn Youngkin has used his opposition to the theory to paint himself as a defender of traditional American values, Democrats dismiss the debate as a right-wing creation.
“That’s another right-wing conspiracy,” former Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) said in audio apparently recorded by a tracker and reported by Fox News. “This is totally made up by Donald Trump and Glenn Youngkin. This is who they are. It’s a conspiracy theory.”
The Texas Tribune explainer: What is “critical race theory”? It emerged in the 1970s and 1980s with a focus on racial inequities and why they persist in the United States. Last year, conservative activist Christopher Rufo began using the term to denounce anti-racist education efforts. Since then, conservative lawmakers, commentators and parents assert that children are being taught in history and other courses that the United States is a racist country. Educators deny that children in grades K-12 are taught critical race theory in school.
The Hill: GOP governors embrace culture wars with White House in mind.
> 2022 watch: In Arkansas, Chris Jones is a Democratic entrant in a governor’s race dominated by Sarah Huckabee Sanders (R). Jones received some favorable press and Twitter chatter after he introduced himself in a video released last week (Arkansas Times and The Hill).
Politico: Trump fuels Herschel Walker Senate hype in Georgia.
*****
CORONAVIRUS: Biden on Thursday will visit Raleigh, the capital of battleground state North Carolina, to echo messages from Harris, first lady Jill Biden, Cabinet officials and public health experts who are encouraging Southerners to get COVID-19 shots. The president set a Fourth of July goal to see at least 70 percent of U.S. adults inoculated with at least one dose of vaccine. It’s a goal the nation will not meet, but the president wants to show he’s using his megaphone in a state he hasn’t visited since his election.
News & Observer: The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services reports that as of June 18, just 55 percent of adults in the state have received a dose of the vaccine.
The White House acknowledges it will miss key vaccination benchmarks as the government worries about the spread of the highly infectious delta coronavirus variant, which could be the dominant strain in the U.S. in two to three weeks (The Wall Street Journal). The government says the U.S. reached a 70 percent vaccination threshold for those age 30 and older and expects to meet it for those age 27 or older by the July 4 holiday (The Hill). Biden and his team want to get more teens vaccinated, in part because younger people infected with COVID-19 are now showing up in hospitals in greater numbers (The Associated Press).
> COVID-19’s origin: Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines says it’s possible the intelligence community will never have “high confidence” or a smoking gun on the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic. The director told Yahoo News in a Monday interview that the administration has tasked dozens of analysts and intelligence officials with searching for an answer to whether the pandemic began when COVID-19 leaped from an animal to a human and began to spread in China or when the coronavirus escaped a laboratory research setting in Wuhan, which might also involve a leap from an animal to a human (a lab worker).
“I don’t know between these two plausible theories which one is the right answer,” Haines said. “But I’ve listened to the analysts, and I really see why it is that they perceive these two theories as being in contest with each other and why it’s very challenging for them to assess one over the other.”
The findings of a Biden-ordered 90-day review of available intelligence, due at the end of August, will be made public.
More coronavirus headlines: Vaccines can ensure that adult deaths from COVID-19 are “at this point entirely preventable,” according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. So far, COVID-19 vaccines in the United States have been effective against the known variants of the coronavirus.… Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, warned on Tuesday of “localized surges” in COVID-19 infections in areas with low vaccination rates and populations unwilling to be inoculated (The Hill). … Americans living abroad in certain countries are either waiting months for a COVID-19 vaccine, requesting the United States send doses to citizens abroad, or risking travel back to the United States to get shots ASAP (The Hill). … The Hill’s Karl Evers-Hillstrom reports on the survival of the cruise industry despite receiving no revenue during the worst of the pandemic and losing out on help from Congress. … Delta says it will hire 1,000 pilots as part of its recovery as the flying public begins to crowd onto airplanes again (Atlanta Journal-Constitution).
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
ADMINISTRATION: Biden today will unveil a mixing bowl of policies aimed at responding to a hike over the last year in the worst sorts of crimes by bolstering police departments and training, and cracking down on America’s illegal gun trafficking.
The administration’s strategy, meant to respond to a sharp upward trajectory in murders and violent crimes, navigates the political touchstones for many Democrats of fewer guns, better policing, and federal support for troubled neighborhoods.
The president today will describe how he will tap available federal funds to “put more police officers on the beat – with the resources, training, and accountability they need to engage in effective community policing – in addition to supporting proven Community Violence Intervention programs, summer employment opportunities, and other investments that we know will reduce crime and make our neighborhoods safer.”
One element of Biden’s policy, announced by the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives on Tuesday, will create “multijurisdictional firearms trafficking strike forces” to try to halt illegal guns crossing state lines. In New York City, for example, nearly 9 in 10 firearms come from out of state.
The president will say the administration wants to “support local law enforcement” to “put more police officers on the beat” with improved training and resources. His call for additional police and expanded police departments will not sit well with some progressives but is a direct rebuke to criticism that Democratic lawmakers and the administration seek to “defund” police departments to shift funds to community-based programs.
Conservative news media outlets assert a loss of public order under Democrats, especially involving some of America’s largest cities in blue states. The president and members of his party worry that increased murders and violent crimes will cost them politically, writes The Hill’s Niall Stanage. Democratic voters living under the same roof are often divided about crime and safety, depending on their generation and race, where they live, their view of policing and guns, and the roles of the federal government and Congress in addressing causes of violent crime.
Biden is navigating an activist base that argues for policing reforms while remaining skeptical about “law and order” sloganeering by politicians, Stanage reports. The president’s authorship as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee of the 1994 crime bill, now blamed for aggravating a trend in mass incarcerations, drew criticism during his campaign last year and remains a sore point with many left-leaning activists.
According to 2019 FBI data on violent crimes, more than twice as many murders and manslaughters occurred in the South, the most populous region of the country, than in the Midwest or the West. There were more than four times as many murders in the South in 2019 than in the Northeast.
>The Hill’s Laura Kelly reports on the latest efforts by the Biden administration and Canadian officials to improve bilateral ties following the unpredictability of the Trump era; trade and border squabbles; Biden’s rejection of the embattled Keystone XL pipeline, which was to originate in Canada’s tar sands and stretch 1,200 miles to U.S. refineries; and the effects of the pandemic.
> Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Tuesday said the Pentagon will work with Congress to amend the Uniform Code of Military Justice, removing the prosecution of sexual assaults and related crimes from the military chain of command, letting independent military lawyers handle them instead. It was the first time the secretary said he will support such a move and comes after he received the final recommendations and complete report of the Independent Review Commission on Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment (The Hill).
OPINION
The Democrats’ dead end on voting rights, by Russell Berman, staff writer, The Atlantic. https://bit.ly/3vWeJPG
The bishops, Biden and the brave new world, by Ross Douthat, columnist, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/3d1yjmY
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.
TheSenate meets at 2 p.m. and will resume consideration of the nomination of Deborah Boardman to be a U.S. district judge for the District of Maryland. FBI Director Christopher Wray will testify before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies at 2 p.m. about the president’s 2022 budget request and other topics.
The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:50 a.m. Biden and first lady Jill Biden will attend a funeral at Washington National Cathedral for former Sen. John Warner (R-Va.). Biden will deliver remarks at the service at 11 a.m. The president and Harris will have lunch at the White House. Biden and Attorney General Merrick Garland will meet with stakeholders at the White House at 2:15 p.m. to discuss crime and safety, and Biden and Garland at 3:30 p.m. will describe an administration crime strategy focused on reducing firearms used in violent crimes and bolstering police departments and police training.
Second gentleman Doug Emhoff will travel to Chicago to visit a vaccination site and encourage people to get COVID-19 vaccine doses as soon as possible.
The White House briefing will take place at 12:45 p.m.
➔ INTERNATIONAL: Incoming Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi rejected a key U.S. goal of expanding on the nuclear deal if negotiators are able to salvage the old one. At the same time, Raisi is likely to raise Iran’s demands for sanctions relief in return for Iranian compliance with the deal, as he himself is already subject to U.S. human rights penalties. The Associated Press reports that Iran’s election of a hard-liner president severely complicates the Biden administration’s goal to revive the 2015 nuclear deal with Tehran. On Tuesday, the United States blocked several dozen websites linked to Iran, including Iran’s state-owned Press TV (The New York Times). … In France, the trial of former President Nicolas Sarkozy concluded on Tuesday, and a verdict will be announced on Sept. 30. Sarkozy, who denies wrongdoing, was alleged to have committed campaign finance violations during his 2012 campaign (The Washington Post).
➔ ECONOMY: Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell told the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday that high U.S. inflation is temporary and will “abate” (The Associated Press). The Fed is facing growing pressure from Republicans to pull back some of the central bank’s monetary buffer as inflation rises (The Hill). Although consumer prices rose 5 percent in May compared with a year earlier, Powell’s view is that prices fell at the onset of the pandemic last year, which makes current inflation figures appear much larger in comparison.
➔ STATE WATCH: Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont (D) on Tuesday signed legislation legalizing recreational marijuana for adults, becoming the 18th state to embrace the policy change. Recreational marijuana in Connecticut will be legal for all adults aged 21 and older starting July 1 (The Hill).
THE CLOSER
And finally … Doing laundry in space has been a distinctly human problem without a solution. NASA can perform the miraculous calculations to get astronauts to the International Space Station, but the astronauts have to wear the same apparel, over and over, until the revolting clothes are discarded in receptacles to be burned up in the atmosphere.
Enter Procter & Gamble, maker of Tide, which said on Tuesday that it has some detergent and stain removal experiments up its sleeve for the space station this year and next (The Associated Press).
With billionaires now space-bound and colonized bases planned for the Moon and dusty red Mars, resolving the clean-underwear conundrum seems an absolute must.
A 2013 NASA YouTube video in which astronaut Karen Nyberg demonstrated squirting and rubbing her dirty locks in lieu of shampooing underscored the challenges in space of scarce water supplies and the absence of gravity.
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Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse has written reports and essays, introduced bills, filed briefs, gone on cable TV and made presentations at confirmation hearings in his campaign to curb conservative anonymous donors and their influence on the Supreme Court. But the Rhode Island Democrat hasn’t been as convincing as he’d hoped. Read more…
As expected, Republicans on Tuesday opposed a procedural vote that would have let the Senate begin debating Democrats’ signature overhaul of elections, campaign finance and ethics laws and given West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin III a chance to change a sweeping bill he had said earlier this month he would vote against. Read more…
OPINION — Republicans must understand that Hispanics, by and large, aren’t conservatives but rather centrists behaving more like independents than Democrats and are open to a center-right economic message. This is a growing voter group with the potential to become an important part of the GOP coalition. Read more…
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ANALYSIS — Joe Biden’s closer-than-expected victory in 2020 might have been the last straw for people looking for a reason to ignore polling in future elections. But while polling has its flaws, looking at imperfect quantitative data beats trying to forecast elections based on anecdotes, elections analyst Nathan L. Gonzales writes. Read more…
As Senate Democrats focused Tuesday on sweeping legislation to overhaul election and campaign finance law, President Joe Biden’s only scheduled public appearance was at a meeting about severe weather preparations and response. The president did endorse the bill on Twitter, but the White House didn’t give it a singular focus. Read more…
The Pentagon’s top civilian and the entire Joint Chiefs of Staff expressed resistance Tuesday to legislation that would alter how commanders decide which allegations of major crimes to prosecute, putting the military brass directly in the middle of a political fight that transcends party lines. Read more…
Vice President Kamala Harris broke two tie votes Tuesday on President Biden’s choice to lead the Office of Personnel Management, marking her fifth and sixth votes as tiebreaker since assuming the vice presidency. Harris cast the votes on a procedural move and on final approval of the nomination of attorney Kiran Arjandas Ahuja. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: ’90s throwback edition: Monica talks and Biden takes on crime
Adams all but declared victory, though it will take some time to sort this out because of the city’s new ranked-choice system.
THE BIG RIDDLE: Infrastructure talks are getting real — but time may be running out.
President JOE BIDEN’S infrastructure negotiating team — STEVE RICCHETTI, LOUISA TERRELL and BRIAN DEESE — spent the day on the Hill on Tuesday in three separate meetings with a bipartisan group of 10 senators led by KYRSTEN SINEMA (D-Ariz.) and ROB PORTMAN (R-Ohio).
Forgive us if it seems like Groundhog Day around here, but how to pay for $579 billion in new spending is still the big problem.
On the one hand, the two sides were reported to be drifting farther apart.JOHN THUNE (S.D.),theNo. 2 Senate Republican, sent reporters into a tizzy when he said the White House had retreated on backing an infrastructure bank, previously a bipartisan idea.
But the flurry of meetings —coming a day after Biden met separately with Sinema and Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) — also suggests a deep level of engagement and eagerness from both sides. It’s no surprise there were some hiccups. Tuesday was the first time the group of 10 senators met with the White House team.
Two key meetings to watch for today:Per our Laura Barrón-López and Sarah Ferris, White House negotiators — Ricchetti, Terrell, Deese, plus acting OMB Director SHALANDA YOUNG and White House Domestic Policy Council chief SUSAN RICE — will meet with Speaker NANCY PELOSI and Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER.
Later in the day, we’re told, White House aides will resume their talks with the group of 10 senators. (In the morning, most of the key players will be at the late Sen. JOHN WARNER’S funeral at Washington National Cathedral, where Biden is scheduled to deliver remarks.)
The puzzle of the pay-fors may never be solved. But from our reporting Tuesday night, there are two potential pots of money that remain promising:
— Tax gap enforcement. We’re told Republicans are not going to embrace the more onerous regulatory aspects of this Biden proposal — beefed-up reporting requirements for banks — but they are open to some stepped-up enforcement and modernization of IRS customer service if it comes with proper guardrails. The White House says spending $80 billion on this could yield $325 billion in revenue. Republicans point to a CBO study that says $40 billion in enforcement spending can net $63 billion in revenue.
— Covid relief funds. Thune estimates there’s some $700 billion in unspent Covid relief funds. Much of that is off limits, but Republicans have their eyes on clawing back unobligated unemployment benefits. The “G-10” is waiting to hear how flexible Biden is on this issue.
— Finally, the most intriguing and least discussed proposal for funding this infrastructure deal came from Sen. BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.), who made a simple recommendation Tuesday: Forget all the debate about complicated pay-fors and deficit-finance the entire package. (Interest rates are low!)
While Washington is obsessively focused on this little bipartisan side deal, Sanders is busy quietly assembling a monster $6 trillion reconciliation bill. It includes almost every major Democratic priority: the PRO Act (the top priority for labor unions), major elements of immigration reform (more on this from the L.A. Times), Medicare expansion, prescription drug pricing reform, a partial restoration of the state and local tax deduction and most of Biden’s American Jobs Plan and his American Families Plan. (See this Bloomberg piece for an excellent rundown of what Bernie is cooking up and how it compares to what Biden has proposed.)
FWIW, Sen. MITT ROMNEY (R-Utah), a member of the G-10, sounds bullish: “There are a number of pay-fors that we’ve been able to add to the list and I think we’re going to get there,” he told Bloomberg.
THE VIEW FROM THE WEST WING: The talks “continue, which is a good thing,”a senior White House aide tells us. “And I think there is general agreement that end of the week is reasonable for figuring out whether or not there will be a deal. Close but not quite there yet.”
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Former Sen. CORY GARDNER (R-Colo.) has joined the board of advisors at Michael Best Strategies, the lobbying shop where REINCE PRIEBUS is president and STEVE ISRAEL sits on the board of advisers. Gardner will “collaborate with the firm on business development and public policy, while providing strategic advice and counsel to clients,” according to a release on their latest hire.
‘CRITICAL’ POLL RESULTS — With critical race theory — the idea that racism is embedded throughout society and institutions, not just the acts of individuals — grabbing headlines, the latest POLITICO/Morning Consult weekly tested what Americans think. Lots of people aren’t tuned in to the controversy, but those who are tend to break down along partisan lines.
Some 54% of Republicans think critical race theory negatively affects society, vs. 13% of Democrats who believe that. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they either didn’t know or didn’t have an opinion; a third of Republicans were in the dark. Those figures suggest that the issue has struck a chord among conservatives in the culture wars.
More than six in 10 Republicans (63%) oppose critical race theory being taught in K-12 schools, vs. 13% of Democrats and 38% of independents in opposition.Toplines …Crosstabs
WEDNESDAY LISTEN — RACHAEL is the guest on today’s “Dispatch” episode, discussing the cases for and against the filibuster in the wake of the voting rights bill going down Tuesday. Listen and subscribe
BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY:
— 9:50 a.m.: The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 11 a.m.: Biden and first lady JILL BIDEN will attend the funeral ceremony for Warner at the Washington National Cathedral, where the president will deliver remarks.
— 12:45 p.m.: The president and VP will have lunch together.
— 2:15 p.m.: Biden and A.G. MERRICK GARLAND will meet with stakeholders to discuss ways the Biden administration is acting to keep cities and neighborhoods safe.
— 3:30 p.m.: Biden and Garland will deliver remarks on the administration’s gun crime prevention strategy in the State Dining Room.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:45 p.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at 10 a.m., with first votes expected between 1:15 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. and last votes between 4:30 p.m. and 6 p.m. Defense Secretary LLOYD AUSTIN and Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. MARK MILLEY will testify before the Armed Services Committee at 10 a.m. HUD Secretary MARCIA FUDGE will testify before the Budget Committee at 10 a.m. Interior Secretary DEB HAALAND will testify before the Natural Resources Committee at 10 a.m. NASA Administrator BILL NELSON will testify before the Science Committee at 10 a.m. FEMA Administrator DEANNE CRISWELL will testify before a Transportation subcommittee at 2 p.m.
THE SENATE is in. Testifying before Appropriations subcommittees today: Energy Secretary JENNIFER GRANHOLM at 10 a.m., VA Secretary DENIS MCDONOUGH at 10 a.m., Treasury Secretary JANET YELLEN at 2 p.m. and FBI Director CHRISTOPHER WRAY at 2 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
ANTI-CRIME DAY FOR BIDEN
SETTING THE STAGE — “‘Staggering’: Biden breaks from agenda to grapple with bloodshed plaguing big cities,”by Natasha Korecki and Chris Cadelago: “On Tuesday, the Justice Department announced five strike forces that will target the flow of illegal firearms into places like New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington, D.C. While Chicago, for example, has its own gun control measures in place, it has historically contended with the illegal trafficking of weapons from nearby Indiana, as well as southern states.
“The DOJ announcement was in advance of Biden’s speech Wednesday on the rise of shootings and other violent crime. The president is expected to unveil additional measures targeting guns and crime, including giving cities the ability to tap funding from his American Rescue Plan to help combat violence, imposing a new zero tolerance policy toward gun dealers who break the law, and investing in community policing, among other initiatives, according to a senior administration official.”
VOTING RIGHTS BILL GOES DOWN IN FLAMES
As expected, Republicans filibustered S. 1 on Tuesday, dashing Democratic hopes for a muscular response to GOP voting crackdowns across the country. And there’s no apparent Plan B. Our Senate duo of Burgess Everett and Marianne LeVinehas a smart look at just how lost Democrats are on an issue the liberal wing of the party is demanding action on.
“After months of build-up, Democrats are boxed in on their party’s signature election reform plan. And there’s no apparent escape route. Senate Republicans blocked Democrats’ sweeping ethics and elections legislation on Tuesday, a filibuster that many in President Joe Biden’s party hoped would turbocharge the demise of the chamber’s 60-vote threshold for most bills. But Democratic moderates’ support of the filibuster has only hardened in recent days …
“It gets worse for Biden’s party: Now that the GOP has rejected debating the legislation that would overhaul federal elections, Democrats are without a new strategy to show party activists some momentum before the 2022 midterms. At the moment, the party doesn’t have a backup plan on elections and Democratic senators acknowledged their internal maneuvering over the filibuster has only begun after months of dominating their time in control of Washington.”
IF AT FIRST YOU DON’T SUCCEED … “Pelosi to Decide Whether to Create Committee to Probe Jan. 6 Capitol Riot,” WSJ: “A person familiar with her remarks previously said Mrs. Pelosi (D., Calif.) had told the House Democratic Steering and Policy Committee she had decided to create a select committee, something Mrs. Pelosi denied after that meeting. Two other people familiar with the meeting said the speaker had signaled she was headed toward creating a select committee, but that Mrs. Pelosi had stressed that she would make a formal announcement later in the week.”
POLITICS CORNER
SCOOP: “Tom Perez preps Maryland governor announcement,” by Ruby Cramer, Sarah Ferris and Zach Montellaro: “TOM PEREZ, the former chairman of the Democratic National Committee and former Labor secretary under BARACK OBAMA, is expected to launch a bid for Maryland governor as early as Wednesday, two sources with knowledge of his campaign told POLITICO. The gubernatorial election in 2022 will be an open contest because Republican Gov. LARRY HOGAN is term-limited.” It’s official now: Here’s the launch video
BACK TO WORK — “Texas Gov. Abbott calls special session, setting stage for GOP to revive voting restrictions,”by NBC’s Jane Timm: “The governor’s office did not confirm that the July 8 session would include election legislation, but [Texas Gov. GREG] ABBOTT had previously said he planned to call two special sessions: one focused on elections and bail reform, followed by a second session in September or October focused on redistricting and allocating federal coronavirus funds throughout the state.”
K STREET FILES — “Tech Giants, Fearful of Proposals to Curb Them, Blitz Washington With Lobbying,”by NYT’s Cecilia Kang, David McCabe and Ken Vogel: “In the days after lawmakers introduced legislation that could break the dominance of tech companies, Apple’s chief executive, TIM COOK, called Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other members of Congress to deliver a warning. …
“Executives, lobbyists, and more than a dozen think tanks and advocacy groups paid by tech companies have swarmed Capitol offices, called and emailed lawmakers and their staff members, and written letters arguing there will be dire consequences for the industry and the country if the ideas become law. … The companies, which have long faced accusations of holding too much power, are now scrambling to find their footing with Democrats in control of Congress and the White House.”
WHAT THE E-RING IS READING
PAGING GILLIBRAND — “Austin backs change in military sex assault prosecution,”by AP’s Lolita Baldor: “In a statement, obtained by The Associated Press, Austin said he supports taking those sexual assault and related crimes away from the chain of command, and let independent military lawyers handle them. The Pentagon has long resisted such a change, but Austin and other senior leaders are slowly acknowledging that the military has failed to make progress against sexual assault, and some changes are needed.
“Austin pledged to work with Congress to make the changes, saying they will give the department ‘real opportunities to finally end the scourge of sexual assault and sexual harassment in the military.’ His public support for the shift has been eagerly awaited, sending a strong signal to the military and boosting momentum for the change.”
BUT, BUT, BUT … “Joint Chiefs Warn Against Bill Overhauling Military Justice System,”by WSJ’s Nancy Youssef and Lindsay Wise: “The military leaders, members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, provided their arguments to Sen. JIM INHOFE … The military chiefs argued taking all serious crimes out of the chain of command would undermine military leadership and potentially lead to unintended results, including a possible erosion of prevention efforts. …
“While military service leaders are required to answer questions from legislators, it is unusual for military leaders to offer such detailed arguments against pending legislation. … Some service chiefs said that removing all serious cases would erode troops’ trust in their commanders, imposing a solution that goes beyond the scope of the problem. … The service chiefs wrote the letters in May in response to questions from Mr. Inhofe, but the letters haven’t been publicly released until now.”
THAT ’90s PARTY — It was a flashback to the ’90s at Molly Jong-Fast’s Upper East Side home Tuesday night. Supermodel Paulina Porizkova, Monica Lewinsky and James Frey mingled with Jong-Fast, who’s host of the new podcast “The New Abnormal” and also happens to be writing a book about the ’90s — how its excesses brought us to where we are today. Lewinsky, a producer on Ryan Murphy’s “Impeachment: American Crime Story,” remarked that most of the books on the Clinton impeachment are written by men. Now that she’s finally being embraced on her own terms, Lewinsky sees a future producing stories through the perspective of the marginalized. Also spotted: Noah Shachtman, Jon Allen, Elizabeth Spiers, Ryan Heath, Zach Bishop, Nick Gillespie, Kevin Doughten, Jesse Cannon and Davis Richardson.
SPOTTED at an NYC election night gathering hosted in D.C. by House Democratic Caucus Chair Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), a prominent Maya Wiley backer:Caucus Vice Chair Pete Aguilar, DCCC Chair Sean Patrick Maloney (N.Y.), Reps. Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.), Yvette Clarke (D-N.Y.), Mondaire Jones (D-N.Y.), Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) and Joe Morelle (D-N.Y.), Del. Stacey Plaskett (D-U.S. Virgin Islands), David Bond, Regina Eberhardt, Cedric Grant, Jennifer Haas, Brian Lemek, Ann Miller, Nana Nyanin, Dontai Smalls, Arshi Siddiqui and Hasan Solomon.
SPOTTED at a party hosted at the home of Swanee Hunt for Peter Canellos’ new book,“The Great Dissenter: The Story of John Marshall Harlan, America’s Judicial Hero” ($32.50): Adam Green, Alicia Daugherty, Angélique Gakoko Pitteloud, Aviva Kempner, Ben Schreckinger, Carrie Budoff Brown, Claudia Gonzalez, Dan Diamond, Elizabeth Ralph, Indira Lakshmanan, Jonquilyn Hill, LaNita King, Patrick Steel, Linnaea Honl-Stuenkel, Margy Slattery, Matt Kaminski, Nadine Hoffman, Rev. Rob Schenck, Roberta Baskin, Blake Hounshell, Toby Stock, Tory Gavito and Vic and Lisa Wolski.
IN MEMORIAM — The Hill’s Steve Clemons (@SCClemons): “Very sad news that @thehill and I lost an excellent and hardworking colleague Thomas Moore. I will miss him. Life is fragile. Hug your loved ones. Will miss you Thomas. RIP.”
MEDIAWATCH — Katherine Tully-McManus is joining POLITICO to author Huddle, our must-read morning newsletter on all things Congress. Tully-McManus, a 10-year veteran at CQ-Roll Call, knows the Capitol “complex like the back of her hand” and is “someone who [can] balance humor with deep experience understanding the rhythms of Congress,” congressional editor Elana Schor writes in an announcement, adding: “Stay tuned for more exciting announcements about Huddle’s growth…”Read the full announcement here
MODEST PAD ON THE MARKET — “Dianne Feinstein’s $41M Tahoe Compound Up for Sale,” Realtor.com: “A rustic retreat in California’s vacation mecca of Lake Tahoe linked to Sen. Dianne Feinstein and her investment banker husband, Richard C. Blum, has surfaced on the market for $41 million. The property is owned by an LLC tied to Blum’s investment management firm, Blum Capital.
“The waterfront compound briefly tested the market in October 2020 with a $46 million asking price. … Located on Lake Tahoe’s picturesque West Shore, the spread was last renovated in the 1990s. It offers 278 feet of white sand beach, along with a 172-foot pier extending into the water, plus a boatlift and two buoys. The three homes on the coveted piece of property encompass 10,343 square feet, seven bedrooms, and seven bathrooms.”
STAFFING UP — The White House announced a few new nominations: David Uhlmann as assistant EPA administrator for enforcement and compliance assurance, Celeste Wallander as assistant Defense secretary for international security affairs and David Prouty as an NLRB member.
TRANSITIONS — Building Back Together has added a slate of new hires: Berenice Murguia will be COO, Bart Rutherford will be state partnerships director, Mariana Castro will be deputy digital director, Angela Herrera will be comms and digital associate, and Trent Allen will be research manager. …
… Mike McCollum and Alyssa Miller are joining the Progressive Turnout Project. McCollum is federal political director and most recently was campaign manager for Rep. Dan Kildee (D-Mich.). Miller is legislative political director and most recently was associate director of campaigns at NARAL. … Jack Kalavritinos is launching JK Strategies. He most recently was a senior adviser at APCO Worldwide, and is a Trump HHS and transition alum.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Justice Clarence Thomas … Chasten Buttigieg … WaPo’s Philip Bump … Kaelan Dorr of the America First Policy Institute … Aaron Cutler of Hogan Lovells … Paul Tewes … Greg Hale … Facebook’s Amber Moon … Robert Palladino … J.P. Fielder … Robert Kaplan of CNAS and Eurasia Group … Judy Lemons … Steven Cheung of Solgence … Niskanen Center’s Louisa Tavlas Atkinson … POLITICO’s Usha Sahay, Lauren Rutt, Ryan Kohl and Daniel Han … Nick Weinstein … Atanu Chakravarty … Bradley Engle … Harbinger Strategies’ Steven Stombres … Joe Duffy … Emma Whitestone of Blueprint Interactive … Brian Pomper … Christopher Barnard of the American Conservation Coalition … AU’s Sylvia Burwell … former Reps. Baron Hill (D-Ind.), Bob Dold (R-Ill.) and Cresent Hardy (R-Nev.) … Lisa Einstein (3-0)
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.
Sultan Mehmed IV sent the message to the Catholic Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I:
“We order you to await us in your residence city of Vienna so that we can decapitate you …
We will exterminate you and all your followers …
Children and adults will be equally exposed to the most atrocious tortures before being finished off in the most ignominious way imaginable.”
The Muslim Ottoman warriors were defeated at the Battle of Vienna, September 11, 1683.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the world, the Quaker Christian leader William Penn made a peace treaty with the Delaware Indians on JUNE 23, 1683.
Along the Delaware River, Indians called themselves “Lenape,” meaning in Algonquin “the people,” and consisted of three clans:
Turkey, Wolf and Turtle.
Lenape “Turtle” clan Chief Tamanend met with William Penn, who they called “Miquon” meaning quill, under an elm tree in what became Philadelphia.
They made a peace treaty which lasted over 70 years.
In 1688, Christians in Pennsylvania began the abolitionist movement when Quakers, Pietist Lutherans and Mennonites issued the first document in America to oppose slavery of blacks — the Germantown Petition of 1688.
“How fearful … are many on sea, when they see a strange vessel, –being afraid it should be a Turk, and they should be taken, and sold for slaves into Turkey …
Negroes are brought hither against their will and consent, and that many of them are stolen …
There is a saying that we shall do to all men like as we will be done ourselves; making no difference of what generation, descent or color they are …
There are those oppressed which are of a black color …
We … are against this traffic of men-body. And we who profess that it is not lawful to steal, must, likewise, avoid to purchase such things as are stolen …
Then is Pennsylvania to have a good report … in what manner ye Quakers do rule in their province.”
Back in Europe, 100,000 Muslims invaded Serbia, but were defeated at the Battle of Zenta, September 11, 1697.
In Pennsylvania, that same year, 1697, Chief Tamanend gave his last message before he died:
“We and Christians of this river have always had a free roadway to one another, and though sometimes a tree has fallen cross the road, yet we have removed it again and kept the path clear.”
Chief Tamanend was held in such high respect that patriotic Americans in Philadelphia formed Tammany Societies.
Chief Tamanend was the namesake of Tammany Hall, founded in 1786, which became New York’s Democrat political machine.
During the Civil War, the New York 42nd Infantry was referred to as the Tammany Regiment.
In Europe, in the year 1700, Count Nikolaus Ludwig “Lewis” von Zinzendorf was born.
He was a descendant of Maximillian I, who was the Holy Roman Emperor from 1493 to 1519.
Zinzendorf’s father died when he was six weeks old, leaving him an estate in the area of Germany called Saxony.
Raised by his pietist Lutheran grandmother, Zinzendorf became friends with Lutheran Pastors Johann Andreas Rothe of Berthelsdorf and Melchior Schäffer of Görlitz.
They, together with friend Friedrich von Watteville, sought to spread “pietism,” a religious revival movement similar that led by Jan Hus three centuries earlier.
In 1722, at the age of 22, Count Ludwig “Lewis” von Zinzendorf opened up his Berthelsdorf estate to be a place of refuge for persecuted Christians of Moravia and Bohemia (area of the Czech Republic) who were displaced after religious conflicts of the Thirty Years War.
On a corner of his estate, Zinsendorf helped them build a village called Herrnhut, meaning “The Lord’s watchful care.”
Disagreements and discord almost ended this experiment of Christian unity in 1727, but a communion prayer service was held on August 13th bringing forgiveness and reconciliation.
The prayer service continued, with believers taking turns praying, day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, uninterrupted for over 100 years!
It began what was known as the Great Moravian Revival.
During this time, the small Moravian congregation sent out hundreds of Christian missionaries to share the message of God’s love for all mankind to places as far away as:
Arctic;
Africa;
Far East;
Caribbean;
Central America’s Mosquito Coast;
South America; and
North America.
Moravians were the first Protestant denomination to minister to slaves.
Moravian missionaries first settled in Savannah, Georgia, in 1735, where they influenced John and Charles Wesley, and through them indirectly influenced Rev. George Whitefield, the famous preacher who spread the Great Awakening Revival across the American colonies.
Moravian missionaries settled Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, in 1740.
In 1741, Count Zinzendorf traveled to America and visited with leaders, including Ben Franklin.
He spent seven weeks visiting Indian tribes in forests of Pennsylvania, being the first person of European nobility to meet with Indian chiefs.
Frederick C. Johnson wrote in the 1894 report, Count Zinzendorf and The Moravian and Indian Occupancy of the Wyoming Valley, (Pennsylvania) 1742-1763:
“The Delawares called themselves Lenni Lenape, signifying ‘original people’ …
While on the way from Philadelphia to Bethlehem, Zinzendorf had felt drawn by some irresistible influence to go to Tulpehocken (“land of the turtles” near Reading, PA), where dwelt his interpreter and guide, Conrad Weisser, who was to accompany him to the Susquehanna …
Here he met the deputies of the Six Nations, then on their return from their conference with Governor George Thomas in regard to the Delawares remaining east of the Blue mountain …
… The Count (Zinzendorf) became acquainted with the chiefs, gained their good will, and ratified a covenant with them in behalf of the (Moravian) Brethren as their representative; and a belt of wampum was given him as a token of their friendship, which was used ever afterwards in the dealings of the Moravians with the Iroquois.
By this treaty the Count (Zinzendorf) believed the way would be opened for the spread of the gospel among the Northern Indians …
His hope of Christianizing the fierce warriors of the northern border was not realized, but the Moravians would never have been able to accomplish as much as they did among the Delawares and Mohicans if they had not secured by this interview the amity of those who held sway over the enfeebled clans near the sea coast.”
The Diary of Moravian Brother John Martin recorded:
“1744. April 13th … We immediately found the Chikasaw Indian, Chickasi, with whom we had been acquainted two years ago when Brother Lewis Zinzendorf was there. He was very friendly toward us and gave us something to eat.
He asked where Brother Lewis (Ludwig von Zinzendorf) and his daughter were. I told him they were gone to Europe. He asked if they arrived safe there. I said yes. He was much rejoiced at that. He said he had thought much on him and his daughter.
We lodged with his cousin, who received us in much love and friendship and gave us of the best he had …
… How often did I call to mind how Brother Lewis (Ludwig von Zinzendorf) said at that time:
‘The Shawanese Indians will all remove in a short time, and our Savior will bring another people here who shall be acquainted with His wounds, and they shall build a City of Grace there to the honor of the Lamb.’
How my heart rejoiceth now at the thoughts of it because I see that everything is preparing for it …”
The Diary of Moravian Brother John Martin continued:
“We visited carefully all the places where our tent had been pitched two years ago, and where so many tears had been shed. The Lamb has numbered them all and put them in His bottle. (Psalm 56:8)
We stayed there four days. The Indians loved us. Our walk and behavior preached amongst them and showed that we loved them.
They could heartily believe and realize that we had not come amongst them for our own advantage, but out of love to them. We visited them often.
I asked the Indian with whom we were acquainted, if they would like a brother whom they loved much to come and live amongst them some time or other, and tell them sometimes of our great God who loved mankind so much? They answered yes, they should be very glad.”
The Lenape “Wolf” clan converted to Christianity, being called Christian Munsee.
The Moravian Historical Society has preserved records of many Moravian missionaries, such as David Zeisberger and Conrad Weisser.
One account read:
“‘Hungry savages,’ says Pearce, ‘in times of scarcity, flocked to Gnadenhutten (House of Grace), professing Christianity and filling themselves at the tables of the pious missionaries.
When the season for hunting came, they would return to the wilderness in the pursuit of game, and with the profits of the chase would procure liquor from heartless traders. Some, however, were sincere in their professions and died in the faith.
The Moravian missionaries were given Indian names, and proclaimed the Gospel on both branches of the Susquehanna, on the Lackawanna and throughout northeastern Pennsylvania wherever the smoke ascended from the rude bark wigwam.”
Another account read:
“In October, 1748, Baron John de Watteville, a bishop of the Moravian Church, son-in-law and principal assistant of Count Zinzendorf, arrived from Europe on an official visit, and one of the first things he undertook was a visit to the Indian country …
‘Exploring the lovely valley which opened to their view, they found the plain of Skehantowano, where Zinzendorf’s tent had first been pitched; the hill where God had delivered him from the fangs of the adder (snake), and the spot where the Shawanese had watched him with murderous design.
The very tree was still standing on which he had graven the initials of his Indian name.
Among the inhabitants, however, many changes had taken place. The majority of the Shawanese had gone to the Ohio, and but few natives of any other tribe remained, with the exception of Nanticokes.
Watteville faithfully proclaimed the Gospel, and on the 7th of October was celebrated the Lord’s Supper, the first time the holy sacrament was administered in the Wyoming Valley (Pennsylvania).
The hymns of the little company swelled solemnly through the night, while the Indians stood listening in silent awe at the doors of their wigwams.
And when they heard the voice of the stranger lifted up in earliest intercession, as had been Zinzendorf’s voice in that same region six years before, they felt that the white man was praying that they might learn to know his God.'”
In 1750, Quaker in Pennsylvania, Anthony Benezet began a school to teach black children.
He advocated for Indian Natives and started the first school for girls in America in 1754.
In 1758, at the yearly meeting, Benezet led Quakers to officially oppose slavery.
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Moravian missionaries settled Winston-Salem, North Carolina, in 1752.
In addition to founding missions among the Lenape in Pennsylvania, Moravians also founded missions with the Mohican Indians in New York, and the Cherokee in Georgia.
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Whereas missionaries were motivated by the Gospel, there were political forces motivated by greed.
Unfortunately, native American Indians were repeatedly lured into larger global conflicts.
During the French and Indian War, 1754-1763, the Lenape “Turkey” clan was persuaded to side with the French in attacking English settlers.
When the French lost the war, their Indian allies lost land.
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Some tribes sided with the British during the Revolutionary War, 1776-1783, and when the British lost, their Indian allies lost more land.
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Tragically, in 1782, near the end of the Revolutionary War, renegade vigilantes retaliated for hostile Indian attacks.
They mistakenly blamed the peaceful Christian Munsee (Lenape “Wolf” clan) and mercilessly killed 96 of them.
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Later, during the War of 1812, some tribes sided with the British, and when the British lost that war, their Indian allies again lost more land.
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During the Revolutionary War, Lenape “Turtle” clan Chief Gelelemend signed the first written Indian treaty ever with the U.S. Government in 1778, the Treaty of Fort Pitt, present-day Pittsburgh.
Chief Gelelemend later converted to Christianity through the ministry of German Moravian missionaries.
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On May 12, 1779, General George Washington was visited at his Middle Brook military encampment by the Chiefs of the Delaware Indian tribe.
They had brought three Indian youths to be trained in the American schools. Washington assured them:
“Brothers: I am glad you have brought three of the Children of your principal Chiefs to be educated with us.
I am sure Congress will open the Arms of love to them, and will look upon them as their own Children, and will have them educated accordingly.
This is a great mark of your confidence and of your desire to preserve the friendship between the Two Nations to the end of time, and to become One people with your Brethren of the United States …
You do well to wish to learn our arts and ways of life, and above all, the religion of Jesus Christ. These will make you a greater and happier people than you are.
Congress will do everything they can to assist you in this wise intention; and to tie the knot of friendship and union so fast, that nothing shall ever be able to loose it …
And I pray God He may make your Nation wise and strong.”
In 1766, Anthony Benezet published a book condemning slavery:
“Slavery … contradicted the precepts and example of Christ? … Bondage … imposed on the Africans, is absolutely repugnant to justice … shocking to humanity, violative of every generous sentiment, abhorrent utterly from the Christian religion.”
In 1770, he founded a Negro School at Philadelphia, encouraged by Methodist founder John Wesley.
In 1775, Benezet helped Quakers to found the first abolitionist society in America dedicated to ending slavery, with Ben Franklin as President.
In 1780, Pennsylvania passed a law in 1780 ending slavery in the state:
“Negroes, and mulattos, as others … after the passing of this Act, shall not be … slaves.”
In 1790, Franklin petitioned the U.S. Congress to end slavery in America.
The Great Moravian Revival, and the First and Second Great Awakening Revivals, resulted in young people being “woke” with a compelling desire to become missionaries, and share God’s love to people across the world.
Due to encroachment on Indian lands, outbreaks of hostility, and the Democrat Party’s infamous Indian Removal Act of 1830, some Christian Lenape fled to Canada, and from there migrated to Wisconsin, Kansas, and finally to Oklahoma.
The great-grandson of the Christian Chief Gelelemend was John Henry Kilbuck, born in 1861 in Kansas.
He attended the Moravian Seminary.
John Henry Kilbuck became the first Lenape to be ordained as a Moravian minister.
In 1884, John Kilbuck, and his wife Edith, became some of the first Christian missionaries to the Yupik Indians in Alaska, along the Kuskokwim River.
They founded Bethel four hundred miles west of Anchorage.
The Kilbuck Mountain range, as well as Kilbuck Elementary School in Bethel, Alaska, are named in their honor.
Thus, through the influence of Quakers, such as William Penn and Anthony Benezet, and Moravian missionaries, such as Count Ludwig von Zinzendorf, the Gospel of Jesus Christ inspired the abolitionist movement to spread from Pennsylvania, and the missionary movement to spread from Saxony to America, sharing the message of God’s love for all mankind to native populations across the world, even as far away as Alaska.
“He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will abide in the shadow of the Almighty. I will say to the Lord, ‘My refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust,'” (Psalm 91:1-2, ESV).
Shane Vander Hart: It is important to recognize that all of these resolutions are non-binding, but they reflect the direction and attitude of Southern Baptists.
Shane Vander Hart: The Supreme Court provided a narrow victory for Catholic Social Services, but it didn’t solve the problems created by its 1990 Smith decision.
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing Wednesday then he will . President Biden’s Itinerary for 6/23/21: All Times EDT 9:50 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office11:00 AM Attend funeral for Senator John Warner – Washington North Catherdral12:45 PM Have another lunch with the vice president – …
House Oversight Committee Republican Jody Hice demanded a watchdog investigation of the federal government’s potentially illegal hiring practices. Hice, the ranking member of the Subcommittee on Government Operations, asked Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Inspector General Mark Bialek to urgently open an investigation into reports that the agency has used …
Former Pope Benedict XVI warned in a 2004 memo that high profile politicians who persist in their public support for abortion should be denied Communion. “Regarding the grave sin of abortion or euthanasia, when a person’s formal cooperation becomes manifest (understood, in the case of a Catholic politician, as his …
A former “Miracle on Ice” U.S. hockey team captain said Tuesday that he “couldn’t even imagine the mindset” of a transgender Olympic athlete who said they would burn the American flag at the podium, Fox News reported. “I mean, first of all, burning the American flag anywhere is disgusting. To …
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis repealed Colorado’s preemption laws on firearm regulations following a mass shooting in Boulder. Preemption laws have faced challenges in recent months, with several states partially repealing them and a number of lawsuits contesting their constitutionality. Gun control groups applaud these challenges, while gun rights groups view …
The Biden administration admitted it won’t reach its July 4 goal of vaccinating 70 percent of American adults with at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine at Tuesday’s White House COVID-19 press briefing. “Today I want to drill down on the numbers that show where we have made the most …
Legacy media misrepresents the Catholic faith in its defense of President Joe Biden, pitting “conservative” bishops against the pope and accusing the bishops of politicizing Catholic teaching on the reception of the Eucharist. The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) overwhelmingly approved a measure Friday to draft a statement discussing …
A conservative watchdog group filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit for records related to an incident in which President Joe Biden’s nominee to lead the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms allegedly made a derogatory comment about black ATF agents. American Accountability Foundation President Tom Jones said he spoke …
Climate change protesters were arrested for demonstrating on Republican Texas Senator Ted Cruz’s property, Houston Police announced Monday evening. Eight out of the 60 to 70 protesters were taken into custody for trespassing on Cruz’s property, Houston Police said in a video posted to Twitter. “The large majority of the …
ProPublica didn’t include its largest donors in its report on how the wealthiest billionaires avoid paying large amounts of taxes for years, the Washington Free Beacon reported Monday. ProPublica published an investigation June 8 showing the wealthiest Americans paid $13.6 billion in taxes between 2014 and 2018 while their wealth …
A challenge to a California law requiring publicly traded companies headquartered in the state to include at least one woman on their board will proceed, a federal appeals court ruled Monday. The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals gave Creighton Meland Jr., a retired corporate attorney and a shareholder in Hawthorne, California electronics …
Sen. Joe Manchin released a 423-page energy infrastructure package on Friday that will be discussed this week, according to the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. The West Virginia Democrat, who serves as the committee’s chairman, introduced the discussion draft amid growing debates on a larger bipartisan infrastructure bill. …
Our aged and ailing president is ignoring obvious suffering along our southern border after reversing the successful and humane policies that President Trump put in place related to illegal immigration. The shame of the horrific events occurring in our southwest states is inhuman and must not be allowed to continue. …
The Trump Organization filed a lawsuit against New York City, alleging that Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio had no right to terminate the company’s contracts earlier this year. The company, which former President Donald Trump led until he took office in 2017, argued that de Blasio terminated the contracts for …
A 9-year-old girl was seen on video criticizing her school board for putting Black Lives Matter posters around her school, despite a ban on political posters. The student, who said her name was Novalee, spoke at a Lakeville Area School Board meeting in Minnesota on June 8 where she said …
A Seattle gay pride event is taking an interesting, illegal, approach to charging admission. The event, TAKING B[L]ACK PRIDE, is scheduled to be held this Saturday in what is billed as “Seattle’s first and only Black and Brown Queer and Trans pride event.” But it’s not the event that is …
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki holds a briefing today. The briefing is scheduled to start 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.
When I was a student at Georgia Tech in the mid-1960s, Atlanta was a clean, safe and vibrant city. Then along came a well-intended, but horribly misguided, war: the war on poverty. After my wife and I married in 1966, we often visited an area of town known as Buckhead, …
Happy Wednesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I’ve got peanut butter in my synapses this week. Crunchy.
Well, the Senate saved us from the horrors of the “For the People Act,” and the United States of America will now chug on for a little while longer. Bryan had a post yesterday about a Dem who admitted that the whole thing was only about a federal power grab, which is what a said at the conclusion of yesterday’s Top O’ the Briefing section. I also wrote yesterday that this is the kind of thing that the Democrats will keep going after, but that will be a fight for another day.
It’s 2021 though, kids, and there is always another fight right around the corner.
Because the Democrats have convinced themselves that their smoke and mirrors bare majority means that they have a mandate, they’re a bit upset. Strap in for some loud shrieks of “RAAAAAAACISM” issuing forth from the usual suspects for the next several weeks.
With Soviet election reform dead and buried for the moment, the focus for them is now on ending the filibuster, which John Sexton wrote about over at HotAir. John’s post has a lot of examples of the diaper-filling exhortations coming from the left, like this one:
Maxine Waters used to be my representative, I’m pretty sure that she does awful things to hamsters when she’s away from cameras.
Their anguish is entertaining, of course, but we can’t let our delight distract us from the fact that they’re actually serious about all of this stuff.
Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) has been the poster girl for keeping the filibuster alive, and one of the more delicious aspects of this battle has been watching progressive activists spend over a million to harass her to no avail. As I wrote yesterday, and last month, Sinema isn’t easily swayed by the toddler-esque wailing of the Democrats who surround her. My money is still on Joe Manchin caving, but I think Sinema will hold fast and spoil her Democratic colleagues’ fun.
The Democrats could be enjoying some bipartisan victories that might actually be good for the American people, but they’re slavishly devoted to the radical progressive agenda that they mistakenly think most of America is interested in. They’d rather be rabidly partisan and myopic than responsible.
It’s making them miserable, so let’s sit back and enjoy that while it’s happening.
Help Us Give the Finger to Zuck and Dorsey
I will be sprinkling in these reminders more often going forward. MY PJ and Townhall media colleagues and I have been getting groin-kicked by Mark Zuckerberg, Jack Dorsey, and the rest of the leftist Big Tech Gestapo for a while now. Our choices our to either just put up with the incremental de-platforming until the Big One comes along and be out of work, or to find a way to fight back.
As our livelihoods depend on it, we’ve chosen the latter, which is what our VIP subscription program does.
Let me be very clear about the fact that we aren’t ever going to put everything behind the paywall — there will always be plenty of free content. However, we need to prepare for whatever fickle ruination Big Tech wants to visit on us. Trust me, I am VERY well aware that there a those of you who are adamant about not paying for content and I respect that. All I ask in return is that you respect the fact that I kinda like having a job.
Our VIP subscribers get a LOT of stuff from all of our writers. Each week I do two podcasts, and 3-5 columns. I am about to launch another weekly podcast called with my old friend and new colleague, Kevin Downey Jr. In a few weeks, I’ll be doing a weekly video called “Beyond the Briefing.”
VIP Gold subscribers get access to all of the VIP content across the Townhall Mothership (PJ Media, Townhall, RedState, Bearing Arms, HotAir, and Twitchy). Part of that package is a ticket to the “Five O’Clock Somewhere” chat that VodkaPundit, Bryan Preston, and I do for three hours every Thursday. We have our own MeWe group and we swap recipes now. It’s a thing.
Oh, VIP people don’t have to deal with ads on the site.
Thank you for your time, now let us get back to the mental jacuzzi that is the Kruiser Morning Briefing, and which will always firmly reside on this side of the paywall.
Na Zdrowie, L’Chaim, and Chorizo Taco to all of you, my friends.
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
The honeymoon is over for Biden as approval numbers drop, disapproval numbers spike . . . Joe Biden’s approval numbers have been steadily declining of late — and some pollsters see worse to come for the president. “It’s not a good sign for Joe Biden,” said Republican pollster Jim McLaughlin of McLaughlin & Associates. “What we’re seeing right now are approval numbers in the low 50s … and the intensity level is only about 32% of people say they strongly approve of the job he is doing.” In the Real Clear Politics average, Biden’s approval rating has drifted down to 52.3% as of June 22, which equals his previous low as president. Meanwhile, his current disapproval average has spiked to 43.6%, just shy of his previous high, and up from 36% at the close of his first week in the White House. (One caveat: The majority of the polls factored into his latest averages do not reflect his recent performance in Europe.) Just the News
Candace Owens: US government is engaged in criminal actions through massive expansion of power . . . Conservative commentator, author, and podcaster Candace Owens ripped the Biden administration and Democrats during a Fox News segment Monday, claiming both are using crime, COVID, and other mechanisms to further enhance their power. Owens said that Democrats have purposely implemented policies in American cities that have led to spikes in violence and criminal behavior with the ultimate objective of empowering a federal leviathan with expanded authorities in a resultant crackdown. “I will say it, I’ll spell it out plainly: The United States government, at this point, is engaged in criminality.” she continued. “[Democrats] know exactly what they are doing. They’re using black people and racism as pawns to distract people from what’s actually going on, which is our government has increased its power exponentially over the last two years,” Owens continued. Business & Politics Review
Politics
Biden: Republicans support ‘a Jim Crow era in the 21st Century’ . . . Biden’s art of healing and uniting the nation includes calling your opponents a bunch of racists. The voting “rights” measure failed to make the 60-vote cloture threshold, with 51 Democrats, including Vice President Kamala Harris as the tie-breaking in support versus 50 Republicans against. From Biden’s statement: Today, Democrats in Congress unanimously came together to protect the sacred right to vote. In supporting the For the People Act and defending the rights of voters, they stood united for democracy. They stood against the ongoing assault of voter suppression that represents a Jim Crow era in the 21st Century. White House Dossier
Catholics Rally Against Dem Attacks on Church . . . Catholic activists are rallying behind church leaders after Democratic politicians attacked bishops for reviewing church teaching on abortion and the Eucharist. The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) approved creating a committee to clarify the doctrine of the Eucharist—which Catholics believe to be the body and blood of Jesus Christ—and is expected to settle debate over whether pro-abortion leaders can receive the sacrament. High-profile Democrats, including President Joe Biden and Sen. Dick Durbin have sometimes been denied communion in the past, and lawmakers were quick to condemn the effort. Washington Free Beacon
‘Killibuster’: Democratic angst grows as filibuster threatens agenda . . . Democrats are confronting the reality that absent any seismic shifts, their top agenda items face long, if not impossible, odds in the Senate amid growing frustration with the legislative filibuster. After achieving a unified government for the first time since 2010, Democrats pledged to go “big’’ and “bold” after four years of the Trump administration. But they are watching as their wish list of bills runs straight into a familiar buzzsaw: the Senate’s own rulebook. Now, Democrats are vowing that the fight over the filibuster isn’t over even as their two biggest holdouts to procedural changes — Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) — are showing no signs of backing down from their opposition to nixing the 60-vote requirement for most legislation to pass the Senate. The Hill
DeSantis Signs Bill Requiring Students Learn ‘Evils Of Communism And Totalitarian Ideologies’ . . . Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill on Tuesday requiring high school students to learn about the evils of communist ideologies. During a press conference at Three Oaks Middle School in Fort Myers, Florida, DeSantis signed three education bills designed to foster civic literacy in schools. “It’s crucial to ensure that we teach our students how to be responsible citizens,” DeSantis said during the press conference. “They need to have a good working knowledge of American history, American government and the principles that underline our Constitution and Bill of Rights.” Daily Caller
Primary Source for Steele Dossier Is Accused of Fabricating Information . . . The primary source for the infamous Steele dossier fabricated information out of whole cloth, a group of Russian nationals is alleging. The allegations emerged in court filings released this week in a dossier-related lawsuit. The Russians say U.S.-based analyst Igor Danchenko falsely identified them as sources for information he passed to former British spy Christopher Steele. Danchenko served as a contractor for Steele during the ex-spy’s investigation of the Trump campaign. The FBI used the Steele dossier to obtain surveillance warrants against former Trump campaign aide Carter Page. The Russians’ statements further call into question the credibility of the dossier, which has been largely disproven in the four years since it was released. The Justice Department inspector general identified numerous issues with the dossier in a December 2019 report. Washington Free Beacon
Shocking.
National Security
Nellis Air Force Base Is a Drag . . . The historic Air Force base recently hosted a drag queen show at one of their on-base dining and entertainment clubs. Nellis AFB is the home of the Thunderbirds, the home of the U.S. Air Force’s Warfare Center, and the place whose mission has historically been to train the best combat aviators and air crews in the world. Here’s how the leaders of the air force base explained their rationale in a statement: Nellis Air Force Base and the 99th Air Base Wing hosted its first-ever drag show Thursday, June 17, at the Nellis Club. The event was sponsored by a private organization and provided an opportunity for attendees to learn more about the history and significance of drag performance art within the LGBT+ community. Ensuring our ranks reflect and are inclusive of the American people is essential to the morale, cohesion, and readiness of the military. Nellis Air Force Base is committed to providing and championing an environment that is characterized by equal opportunity, diversity, and inclusion. Patriot Post
Wow. We are so screwed (pardon my French), facing the threat of two wars, potentially, with China and Russia, plus dealing with the nuisances, like the Rocket Man and the Ayhatollahs.
Can we somehow get General Patton back in here, to ‘straighten out’ our military, back into performing its mission?!
Virginia’s Loudoun County School Board silences public comment after raucous meeting, 2 men arrested . . . The embattled school board of Virginia’s Loudoun County cut off public comments during a fiery meeting Tuesday as residents traded barbs over new transgender policy proposals. The meeting followed weeks of protests from district parents who oppose some of the measures, which they have criticized as potential left-wing indoctrination and a violation of parental rights. The policies affect transgender student rights, privacy and restroom accommodations and would require Loudoun County Public Schools employees to use students’ preferred names or pronouns. An official school board vote on the proposal is not expected until at least Aug. 10. But it has become a hot-button issue in the district, where 259 residents signed up to speak during the public comment session Tuesday and people lined up at the doors early to get seats in the packed auditorium. Fox News
This is how all this nonsense gets started. Our poor kids. By the time they go into the military, their brains have already rewired by the leftist teachers, who have normalized all kinds of perversion in the adolescent minds.
Biden crime strategy to include community policing, focus on guns . . . President Biden’s crime prevention strategy will include an emphasis on community policing, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Tuesday. “He‘s supported giving funding to states and localities around the country including through his American Rescue Plan because he believes there is an essential role to play for community policing.” Biden has touted community policing as critical to overhauling law enforcement in America. He has called for increased community policing, a strategy that focuses on relationships between officers and members of the communities they serve. The thinking is that better relationships will build trust between law enforcement and residents, reducing police brutality and increasing public safety. It was a hallmark of the Obama administration’s police reform package. Washington Times
Drug dealers in poor neighborhoods can’t wait to build better relationships and trust with police officers and residents. Candace Owens is right. Biden and USG are now involved in criminality.
Background checks blocked a record high 300,000 gun sales . . . The number of people stopped from buying guns through the U.S. background check system hit an all-time high of more than 300,000 last year amid a surge of firearm sales, according to new records obtained by the group Everytown for Gun Safety. The FBI numbers provided to The Associated Press show the background checks blocked nearly twice as many gun sales in 2020 as in the year before. About 42% of those denials were because the would-be buyers had felony convictions on their records. The increase in blocked gun sales largely tracks with the record-setting surge in sales that took hold along with the coronavirus pandemic and has continued into this year, through historic demonstrations against police brutality, deep political divisions and an insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. Fox Business
Biden to outline efforts to combat crime, with focus on gun violence . . . President Biden on Wednesday will lay out his administration’s agenda to cut down on crime, with a particular focus on addressing gun violence as action in Congress remains elusive. The president will deliver remarks and meet with local leaders at the White House, devoting the day’s messaging to the issue of rising crime in U.S. cities that has coincided with the coronavirus pandemic. Biden will highlight Department of Justice efforts to reduce the number of firearms circulating, as well as federal funding available to cities to invest in policing and community programs. The Hill
Now that we’ll have to rely on social workers and community policing, to fight crime, I’ve decided to refresh my skills on how to ‘build trust’ with criminals, that Joe Biden wants us to do. Yesterday, I took my weapons training with my buddy and fellow former DIA intel officer, John Murphy who founded and runs FPF training. John is an amazing weapons instructor. His self-defense training, which – in addition to firearms, includes knives, pepper spray, and all sorts of other things, but most importantly, a self-defense mindset – is available across the country. Highly recommend. It’s a real treat. And a must these days. Check out FPF training
International
US seizes websites linked to Iranian groups . . . US authorities have seized dozens of websites linked to Iranian groups, including the Revolutionary Guards, accusing them of spreading misinformation and operating in the country without licenses. In a statement on Tuesday evening, the US Department of Justice said 36 websites had been taken down, 33 of which were operated by the Iranian Islamic Radio and Television Union. A further three of the seized websites were operated by Kata’ib Hizballah, which the state department has designated a terrorist organisation. In October, the US Treasury department imposed sanctions against the IRTVU for being “owned or controlled” by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and for its role in targeting the 2020 presidential election with what officials described as “brazen attempts to sow discord among the voting populace by spreading disinformation online”. All of the websites seized were owned by US companies. Financial Times
Coronavirus
Illicit Covid-19 Drugs Bound for Mexico Seized by U.S. Authorities . . . Federal authorities have seized at U.S. airports unauthorized versions of the Covid-19 treatment remdesivir destined for distribution in Mexico, the latest effort by the government to root out criminal activity related to the pandemic. Counterfeit or generic versions of remdesivir, an antiviral are arriving in the U.S. by plane from Bangladesh and India and being smuggled by individuals to Mexico for patients willing to pay top dollar for the drugs. In recent months, U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers have captured more than 100 shipments that they referred to U.S. Department of Homeland Security special agents for further investigation. Counterfeit prescription drugs typically include fraudulent labeling on a container, with another drug or simply water or a saline solution inside. The counterfeit prescription drug market is valued at more than $200 billion annually. Wall Street Journal
Americans living abroad plead for COVID-19 vaccine . . . Americans living abroad are pleading with the U.S. government to provide them with COVID-19 vaccine doses, particularly as demand is waning domestically with a majority of adults getting their shots. Expats living in places like Germany, India and Thailand are finding they have to choose between waiting until a vaccine is available in their country of residency or risk a trip to the U.S. or elsewhere to get vaccinated, potentially contracting the coronavirus en route. Through letters to officials and lawmakers, advocacy groups have called attention to the dilemma faced by some of the estimated 9 million private U.S. citizens overseas, pointing out that they remain subject to federal tax laws just like Americans living in the U.S. who have already received the vaccine. The Hill
With all his demagoguery about the importance of vaccination, Joe is leaving our fellow Americans abroad to fight for themselves.
Money
Biden economic strategy: Put America last . . . President Joe Biden’s performance at the meeting with foreign leaders in Britain last week was a disgrace. Biden cut deals with Britain that sold out America’s interests, and for doing so, he won the worshipful accolades of the Europeans, the Brits, and the Canadians. Biden was popular at the party in Europe, where he pays everyone’s bills. Except Biden isn’t spending his own money, of course. He’s spending ours. The Euroland leaders weren’t big fans of Donald Trump. Trump went to the G-7 meetings and told his international peers that there was a new sheriff in town and that his foremost mission was to put America first. He canceled bad trade deals in which other countries were cheating. Trump insisted that the Germans, the French, and the Italians paid more of the NATO bills for their own defense. Now, the Euroland leaders of the G-7 are beside themselves with joy over Biden’s “cooperative tone” and concessions at the meetings in Britain this weekend. A Reuters headline captured the euphoria of the foreign heads of state: “G7 Sources Praise Biden after ‘Complete Chaos of Trump.” Washington Examiner
Amazon warehouse destroys 130,000 unsold items per week . . . An Amazon warehouse in Scotland reportedly destroys millions of unsold products every year, according to undercover footage and anonymous employees at the facility. British news outlet ITV obtained footage from inside the e-commerce giant’s Dunfermline facility that showed laptops, books, jewelry and other still-packaged products being sorted into boxes marked “destroy.” The items, some of which were new and others which were returned, were then sorted into trucks and taken to recycling centers or landfills, according to the outlet. “From a Friday to a Friday our target was to generally destroy 130,000 items a week,” a former employee at the site told ITV. New York Post
You should also know
Martin Luther King III, Al Sharpton to hold nationwide march against voter suppression . . . Martin Luther King III and Al Sharpton will hold a nationwide march against voter suppression on Aug. 28 — the 58th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington. The event, dubbed the “March On for Voting Rights,” comes as legislatures across the country move to tighten up voting rules. Just under 390 bills have been introduced across 48 states aimed at restricting voting access in some form in the wake of the 2020 presidential election, the march’s organizer March On said in a statement. In a statement, King said his father, Martin Luther King, Jr., would be “greatly disappointed in where we are at this particular moment, but he would not give up on the nation.” The Hill
Wouldn’t you love to see Candace Owens debate Al Sharpton? Not sure what I’d prefer – to see another Khabib Nurmagomedov vs. Connor McGregor MMA duel or a Candace vs. Sharpton match. What do you all think? 🙂
Guilty Pleasures
Wild boar takes a ride on two Hong Kong subway trains . . . A wild boar caused a stir on the Hong Kong subway when it took a ride on a train — and switched trains at a station to evade its pursuers before being captured. Witnesses said the boar boarded the train at the Quarry Bay station and transit employees chased after the wild pig, but it darted off the train a few stations away and boarded a second train.
A video of the chase was posted to Facebook by the Hong Kong Wild Boar Concern Group, a nonprofit dedicated to preserving the animals. The second train was diverted to a depot where Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department officers were able to safely capture the boar and return it to the wild. UPI
Watch the video 🙂
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Happy Wednesday! For a midweek pick-me-up, check out this video of Wander Franco’s dad watching the 20-year-old Tampa Bay Rays’ rookie phenom hit a home run in his first major league game.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
A federal appeals court on Monday issued a stay on U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez’s ruling earlier this month that overturned California’s “assault weapons” ban. The move will allow the state tocontinue enforcing its current gun control regime, at least temporarily.
The United States will likely fall short of President Joe Biden’s goal of having 70 percent of American adults at least partially vaccinated by July 4, Jeffrey Zients—head of the White House COVID-19 response team—said yesterday. According to Centers for Disease Control, 65.5 percent of Americans older than 18 have received at least one vaccine dose, and 56 percent are fully vaccinated.
The Democrats’ “For the People Act” stalled in the Senate on Tuesday, with Senate Republicans using the legislative filibuster to prevent the legislation—which would fundamentally overhaul how elections are run nationwide—from advancing to debate.
Voting in New York City’s mayoral primaries concluded yesterday. Activist and talk show host Curtis Sliwa won the Republican nomination, and former police officer Eric Adams holds an early, substantial lead over Kathryn Garcia and Maya Wiley on the Democratic side—though those results will likely not be finalized for weeks due to the city’s implementation of ranked-choice voting. Erstwhile Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang conceded the race late Tuesday night.
The United States confirmed 10,341 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 1.29 percent of the 802,520 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 363 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 602,455. According to the CDC, 12,633 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 647,403 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 177,635,067 Americans having now received at least one dose.
S.1 For the Money, Two for the Show
The “For the People Act”—a Democratic-backed bill that would massively overhaul how elections are run nationwide—did not survive its encounter with the legislative filibuster on Tuesday, with Democrats failing to pick up the 10 Republican needed to reach the 60-vote threshold required to advance the legislation for debate.
Lawmakers and congressional analysts alike knew well before Tuesday’s vote that the legislation would likely fail entirely along partisan lines, and it did exactly that. Still, both sides tried to claim victory: Republicans, for blocking the “dangerous legislation” from advancing; Democrats, for securing Sen. Joe Manchin’s support and presenting a united front.
“We achieved a preliminary part of our strategy, which was to unite the Democrats,” Sen. Brian Schatz, a Democrat from Hawaii, told The Dispatch.
We broke down the contents of the For the People Act in detail back in March, but the legislation is divided into three main sections: Voting rights, campaign finance, and lawmaker ethics.
The first would create a set of federal requirements mandating how states administer their elections, automatically registering eligible citizens to vote, allowing voters to meet voter ID requirements with a “sworn written statement,” establishing Election Day as a national holiday, implementing no-excuse absentee voting, and requiring states to create independent redistricting commissions to curb gerrymandering, among other things.
The second would require Super PACs to make their donor lists public and establish a six-to-one federal matching program, using taxpayer dollars to supplement candidates’ war chests. The third would require all presidential and vice presidential candidates to disclose at least 10 years of tax returns, and tighten restrictions on lobbyists.
Manchin—ever the thorn in his party’s side—was the sole Democratic hold-out on S.1, arguing for bipartisan solutions and opting not to join onto the bill as a co-sponsor. But the West Virginian softened his stance last week, releasing a list of narrower election and voting reform provisions he would support. He proposed instituting a nationwide voter ID requirement (with “allowable alternatives” like a utility bill) and scrapping the provision that would fund campaigns with taxpayer money.
Dr. Anthony Fauci didn’t mince words in his virtual press briefing yesterday afternoon: “The Delta variant is currently the greatest threat in the U.S. to our attempt to eliminate COVID-19.”
Whether that sentence induces panic or an eyeroll, listen to Fauci’s next one: “Good news: Our vaccines are effective against the Delta variant.”
Coronavirus variant B.1.617.2—which was given the “Delta” moniker after being discovered in India several months ago—is “unquestionably” more transmissible than the original SARS-CoV-2 or Alpha variant, Fauci said yesterday. He added that itis “associated with an increased disease severity as reflected by hospitalization risk.”
Don’t believe him? Check out what’s happening in the United Kingdom, where the Delta variant made up approximately 90 percent of new COVID cases confirmed last week. The variant has caused Britain’s first sustained resurgence of the virus since December, which led Prime Minister Boris Johnson to extend into late-July lockdown measures that were originally set to be lifted this week.
The United States is not there yet—we’re currently averaging just more than 11,000 new COVID cases per day, a record low since the pandemic began. But as the total number of new cases falls, the percentage caused by the Delta variant continues to rise: 1.3 percent on May 8, 2.3 percent on May 22, and 9.5 percent on June 5. Fauci said yesterday the latest figure—not yet on the CDC’s website—is 20.6 percent, and CDC Director Rochelle Walensky predicted Friday that Delta will “probably” soon become the United States’ dominant strain.
News organizations depicting both Republicans and Democrats in a fair light are few and far between. Fortunately for the “politically homeless,” more Americans have begun to break free of their echo chambers, actively seeking out multiple perspectives on any given issue. Matt Fuchs chronicles this growing phenomenon in a piece for Wired. “The majority of US adults say one-sided information on social media is a major problem, though many might mean only information that counters their own beliefs,” Fuchs writes. “Visitors to sites like AllSides seek out views at odds with their own; they enjoy discussing political differences more than the fleeting satisfaction of tribal disputes on Facebook. Some are troubled by how their friend circles and social media followers mirror their own beliefs. A few… are looking to understand friends or acquaintances with differing political stances.”
Ross Douthat’s take on the Catholic bishops/President Biden situation is well worth your time. “There are many good reasons to avoid a political confrontation over communion and abortion right now, many reasons to expect that any effort will backfire or just fail,” he writes. “But if, over the next few generations, we move into a world where the liberalism of Catholic politicians requires them to support not just abortion rights but a brave new world of human life manufactured, commodified, vivisected and casually snuffed out—well, then the bishops of tomorrow may look back on today and wish they’d found a way to say ‘enough.’”
Friend of The Dispatch and Manhattan Institute fellow Andy Smarick takes on the “take it seriously, not literally” line of defense in his latest for National Affairs. “Most people who care about American public life would admit that our political rhetoric is in a bad way. We seem to no longer understand the role veracity should play in the public sphere,” he writes. The “seriously, not literally” phenomenon, he argues, is a key reason why. It “rests on the idea that there exists a difference between fact and gist—that we can advance the latter without obsessing about the former. … Do we look past the factual inaccuracies in the 1619 Project and just take seriously its overarching point about centuries of American racism? Do we ignore the false claims undergirding the Trump campaign’s election lawsuits and just take seriously their primary claim that institutional forces sought to undermine his presidency? Do we discount the lack of evidence for an accusation of sexual assault and simply take seriously the underlying point about sexism, abuse, and privilege?”
With voting in New York City’s mayoral race coming to a close yesterday, Sarah wrote her latest Sweepabout the trendlines she’ll be looking at—and why we likely won’t know the final results for weeks. Plus, Chris Stirewalt on Ron Johnson and Chuck Grassley’s impending retirement decisions, and how they’ll affect the GOP’s chances of retaking the Senate next year.
Scott Winship, director of poverty studies at the American Enterprise Institute, joined Jonah on Tuesday’s Remnant to discuss the history of poverty in the United States. Is the success sequence outdated? Should America be based on bourgeois morality? And how should conservatives approach solutions to racial disparities?
On the site today, Tripp takes a look into the surge in murder and violent crime since 2020. While some have cited the pandemic as a cause, statistics show that murder rates have actually been increasing since 2014. What’s going on?
When Abiy Ahmed became prime minister of Ethiopia in 2018, he was hailed as a reformer and pioneer for democracy. Yet this week he is widely expected to be named the winner of a parliamentary election in which whole regions of the country could not or would not vote. Emma reports.
William Jacobson: “TORMENTOR OF NICOLE SOLAS has resigned from School Committee. Story will run on the website today.“
Kemberlee Kaye: “The incest in the Biden administration makes the Obama administration look saintly. Almost. Sort of. You know what I mean.”
Mary Chastain: “I hope Manchin and Sinema stick to their guns. They will face even more pressure from Democrats and progressives to eliminate the filibuster after the Republicans used it to block the election reform bill. I offer praise for Sinema in my piece because the swamp has not damaged her. She has remained true to herself and won’t pledge loyalty to the party instead of the Constitution.”
Vijeta Uniyal “On Friday, the Palestinian Authority rejected an Israeli offer to supply up to 1.4 million Pfizer vaccine doses to support its fledgling coronavirus vaccination program. The rejection came after the PA already received 100,000 doses, news reports confirm.”
David Gerstman: “Stacey Matthews blogged that the The Washington Post was forced to correct an hit piece it ran on Critical Race Theory critic, Christopher Rufo. A subsequent communication, though, shows that the paper lacks even the basic self-awareness that it did anything wrong. The Federalist’s Gabe Kaminsky tweeted a response he received from the Post’s director of communications asserting that the article was “accurately and fairly reported.””
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“One hundred and forty-six people in Halifax, Nova Scotia wait on a list to borrow a library book. A question hangs over them: Will activists let them read it?
The book is mine — Irreversible Damage — and it is an investigation of a medical mystery: Why is the number of teenage girls requesting (and obtaining) gender reassignment skyrocketing in the United States, Canada, Scandinavia and Europe? In Great Britain, it’s up 4,400% over the last decade.
Though it shouldn’t be, this has become a highly controversial area of inquiry…
Yet since publication, I have faced fierce opposition — not just to the ideas presented, challenged, or explored — but to the publication of the book itself. A top lawyer for the ACLU called for it to be banned. Powerful organizations like GLAAD have lobbied against it and pressured corporations — Target and Amazon among others — to remove Irreversible Damage from their virtual shelves.
There’s a pattern to such censorship campaigns. A fresh example presented itself this past week at Science-Based Medicine, which bills itself as “a group blog exploring issues and controversies in the relationship between science in medicine.”
On Tuesday, one of the blog’s long-time contributors, Dr. Harriet Hall — a family physician and flight surgeon in the Air Force with dozens of publications to her name — posted a favorable review of my book…
Within a day, Dr. Hall’s article was flooded with nearly 1,000 comments, mostly, she says, from activists demanding the article be stripped from the site, but also from some readers expressing their appreciation. Angry emails from activists swamped the blog’s editors. Within two days, those editors had given Dr. Hall an ultimatum: retract, rewrite, or allow them to add a disclaimer…
Fear of ostracism is rational. But we are now living in a world in which evolutionary biologists are threatened with losing their platforms for engaging in debate about the source and treatment of a deadly virus; in which prize-winning composers have been professionally ruined for saying arson is bad; in which authors are editing already-published books to placate online mobs. That should scare us far more than losing friends or status.
So look to the Halifax Library. Summon what faith you can in those things you know to be right and true: a person is not defined by her race; biological sex is real; scientific research requires ideologically unencumbered investigation; activists shouldn’t bully libraries; and books should not be banned.”
NYC Mayoral Race
Sadly, the whole game here in my city of residence is the Democratic primary.
As of 11 pm last night, the results looked like this: Andrew Yang’s bid is basically over, but former cop Eric Adams holds a sizable lead over lunatic anti-cop challenger Maya Wiley. My standards are admittedly low, but I would count these results as sanity from the Big Apple.
“The leading Democratic contenders include Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, former New York City Sanitation Commissioner Kathryn Garcia and former presidential candidate Andrew Yang, three centrists, and civil rights lawyer Maya Wiley, who is backed by many progressive lawmakers and advocacy groups…
A rise in violent crime in New York City has taken center stage in the primary, with the top four contenders touting their policies regarding law enforcement to gin up support among their respective bases.
Adams, Garcia and Yang have all portrayed themselves as allies of police, saying law enforcement would be critical in combating the rise in crime while also facing reforms. All three have advocated for a rise in the number of cops on the streets, including in the city’s subways.
Meanwhile, Wiley has pushed for the city to divert funds away from law enforcement and invest more in alternative community programs to try to reduce crime.”
Podcast Update
This week’s guest is none other than occasional BRIGHT editor Emily Jashinsky. We chatted about the future of the right, the primacy of culture over economics, and barriers to a cross left-right realignment.
Later this week, I’ll be talking with Robert Pondiscio, an education policy colleague. Pondiscio has been critical in letting the CRT warriors of the world know that their work is far from over even if they succeed in passing state laws. He writes in Commentary Magazine:
“But these battles, however earnestly fought, betray a fundamental misunderstanding about what gets taught, and how difficult it is to keep inaccurate and even pernicious ideas out of American classrooms. Curricula are not handed down to teachers on stone tablets. Indeed, they are seldom, perhaps never, taught as written. What gets in front of students in most American classrooms is largely up to teacher discretion, making it nearly impossible to control—or even monitor—the content of children’s education or the ideals and values being valorized by their teachers. If the many factions battling over California’s model curriculum did so believing the fight would determine the shape that ethnic studies will take in classrooms, they were almost certainly mistaken.”
Fashion Moment of the Week
I’ll be honest, shorts are not my favorite item of clothing. It’s hard to pull them off in a sophisticated way; something about shorts always screams preteen to me. BUT as summer has officially hit us with high temps and humidity, I’ve found the short to be a key wardrobe staple, even against my sartorial instincts. This Vogue roundup runs through your options, from sporty lounge or bike shorts, to sleeker and more tailored options, at every price point.
Wednesday Links
The dangers of “action civics.” (The Federalist)
Josh Hawley nails the Biden administration, calls CRT its “animating ideology.” (Fox News)
Anti-CRT warrior Christopher Rufo wins battle with WaPo over error-ridden hit piece. (The Federalist)
It’s important that Rufo is fighting back against the smears, because in our schools, the revolution proceeds undeterred. A school in Iowa implemented teacher trainings that included MAGA and Columbus Day as examples of “white supremacy.” (The Federalist)
Speaking of the wokes, trans Olympian Chelsea Wolfe vows to burn a US flag on the podium if he medals while representing his country. (The Federalist)
And Black Holes are officially racist. (City Journal)
Culture editor extraordinaire Emily Jashinky on the end of a Kardashian era. (The Federalist)
Make sure you get yourself some White Boy Juneteenth energy. (American Mind)
Inez Feltscher Stepman is a senior policy analyst at the Independent Women’s Forum and a senior contributor to The Federalist. She is a San Francisco Bay Area native with a BA in Philosophy from UCSD and a JD from the University of Virginia. She lives in Washington, D.C. with her husband, Jarrett Stepman, her puggle Thor, and her cat Thaddeus Kosciuszko. You can follow her on Twitter at @inezfeltscher and on Instagram (for #ootd, obvi) under the same handle. Opinions expressed on this website are her own and not those of her employers. Or her husband.
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Jun 23, 2021 01:00 am
While holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must, also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become captive of a scientific-technological elite. Read More…
Swastikas in the brickwork
Jun 23, 2021 01:00 am
If you look for something hard enough, you’ll eventually find it — even if it’s not really there. Read more…
Keeping the faith with America
Jun 23, 2021 01:00 am
To those who worry that America’s best days are over, take heart. Our unique heritage and love for constitutional liberty can still prevail. Read more…
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A Florida woman said that she recently visited a Chase Bank ATM to withdraw $20 — but believed her balance was impossibly high at nearly $1 billion. What are the details? Julia Yonkowski of Largo, Florida, visited an ATM on Saturday to withdraw the small sum when she found herself agog over her what she believed was her balan … Read more
Progressive environmentalists have taken advantage of an Alaskan tribe’s hypocritical grievances to ban drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
It’s no wonder the left and its defenders and scribes in corporate media don’t understand Catholicism. Through the lens of American politics, how could they?
‘No job is worth my overall health and safety,’ one nurse told The Federalist. ‘I worked throughout this pandemic and was not as afraid as I am of this.’
‘My goal is to win the Olympics so I can burn a US flag on the podium,’ wrote transgender BMX freestyle rider Chelsea Wolfe in a March 2020 Facebook post.
Republican senators barely managed to block Democrats’ election overhaul bill on Tuesday night that would have ended voter ID, allowed multiple weeks of voting, legalized ballot harvesting, and more.
The more we’re able to litigate certain question in the public square, the more radical leftist notions of sex, race, and more will fade back to the fringe.
It’s an old trope of sexism to brush off women’s sincere opinions, patting them on the head with condescending assurances that their superiors know better.
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
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40.) REUTERS
The Reuters Daily Briefing
Wednesday, June 23, 2021
by Linda Noakes
Hello
Here’s what you need to know.
Biden’s Justice Department may defend Trump, the end of an era for Hong Kong’s media, and could an anti-parasitic drug treat COVID?
Today’s biggest stories
People fill out ballots during voting in the New York mayoral primary election at a polling site in Brooklyn, June 22, 2021. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
U.S. POLITICS
Democrats in the U.S. Congress suffered a bruising defeat in their drive to pass a major election reform bill but said there are more tools at their disposal to overcome Republican efforts in several states to roll back expanded voting procedures.
Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, a former police captain who put public safety at the center of his campaign for New York City mayor, is leading a field of 13 Democratic candidates in the primary election, though the outcome likely won’t be known for weeks. Here’s what you need to know about New York City’s mayoral contest.
Alvin Bragg, a former federal prosecutor and civil rights lawyer, is leading the Democratic nominating contest for Manhattan district attorney, putting him in position to become the first Black person to lead one of the country’s highest-profile prosecutor’s offices.
Former U.S. President Donald Trump may have an unlikely ally to defend him against lawsuits alleging he incited the U.S. Capitol insurrection: President Joe Biden’s Justice Department.
A supporter gives a flower and card to employees of Apple Daily at Next Digital’s headquarters in Hong Kong, June 23, 2021. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
HONG KONG CRACKDOWN
Hong Kong’s pro-democracy tabloid Apple Daily says it will print its last edition tomorrow, after a stormy year in which it was raided by police and its tycoon owner and other staff were arrested under a new national security law.
Apple Daily has been a thorn in Beijing’s side since owner Jimmy Lai, a self-made tycoon who was smuggled from mainland China into Hong Kong on a fishing boat at the age of 12, started it in 1995.
An air strike has killed dozens of people in the town of Tagogon in Ethiopia’s Tigray region, an eyewitness and a medical official told Reuters, a day after residents said new fighting had flared in recent days north of the regional capital Mekelle.
Officials in Ethiopia are counting ballots after a parliamentary election billed as the first free vote in the country’s history but marred by an opposition boycott and reports of irregularities in some areas.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed hopes the vote will show the success of democratic reforms he launched after being appointed by the ruling coalition in 2018.
But war has displaced 2 million people in Tigray, where Abiy sent troops last November to battle regional authorities that once had dominated the federal government in Addis Ababa.
Men suffered bigger jobs losses across the euro zone during the pandemic, a European Central Bank study found, confounding some earlier predictions that women would take a bigger hit as they are overrepresented in the most affected sectors.
British pilots, cabin crew, travel agents and other workers are urging politicians to save the summer holiday season by reopening routes abroad or risk destroying tens of thousands of jobs as companies fail.
The University of Oxford is testing anti-parasitic drug ivermectin as a possible treatment for COVID-19, as part of a British government-backed study that aims to aid recoveries in non-hospital settings.
Quote of the day
“We are striving to make the Tokyo Games safe and secure, so it won’t be full of celebration”
The man behind the mask turned out to be Mattia Villardita, 27, from northern Italy. He was given a place in the VIP section because of his work dressing up in superhero costumes and visiting sick children in hospitals.
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‘To tell members of the public they are not allowed to say the Pledge of Allegiance during public comment and threaten to have them removed that it was one strike and you’re out policy violates every single one of their First Amendment rights.’Read more…
The Twitter post referred to a Wall Street Journal article that reported on Monday that former Trump bodyguard Matthew Calamari was under investigation.Read more…
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45.) CONSERVATIVE BRIEF
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47.) ABC
June 23, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Biden to let communities repurpose COVID relief money to stop gun crime: As homicide rates have increased across the country, President Joe Biden plans to announce today a range of actions targeting gun violence, according to the White House. The White House said the president will lay out a “comprehensive strategy” that will target law-breaking gun dealers, provide federal resources to police departments for gun-crime enforcement and allow communities to repurpose millions of dollars of federal coronavirus relief funding for programs proven to prevent gun violence. For communities that received funding as part of this spring’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill, a senior Biden administration official said Tuesday that some of that funding could be used to help combat gun crime such as investing in summer jobs programs for youth, hiring more police officers and court personnel and spending on gun-violence enforcement. Guns are at the center of rising homicide rates nationwide. According to a study released earlier this year by the National Commission on COVID-19 and Criminal Justice, homicides spiked by 30% in 2020 compared to the year before. And in the first three months of 2021, the number of homicides increased by 24% compared to the same period in 2020.
Senate Republicans block voting rights reform bill despite unified Democratic support: Republicans on Tuesday blocked the Senate from moving forward on a sweeping elections reform bill known as the For The People Act. The bill, which is a top priority for congressional Democrats and President Joe Biden, seeks to expand voter access to ballots through automatic registration, increased absentee ballots and early voting. It would also broaden campaign finance disclosures, limit partisan gerrymandering and institute federally financed campaigns. Republicans called the bill a blatant power grab, but Democrats insisted that a federal response was needed as Republicans in 14 red states have enacted laws which critics say curb voting for minority voters who tend to support Democrats. Despite winning over the last-minute support of Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W. Va, on a possible new version of the bill, the Democrats’ 50 votes fell 10 short of the 60 needed under Senate rules to advance legislation. Vice President Kamala Harris said “the fight is not over” and that Americans should have the right to vote, “unfettered.”
Students sue over COVID-19 vaccine requirement: One week after Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey issued an executive order prohibiting public universities and community colleges from requiring students to get COVID-19 vaccines or showing proof of vaccination, students at Indiana University filed a federal lawsuit, suing the school over its COVID-19 vaccination requirement. The lawsuit alleges that the university violates students’ rights as well as Indiana’s vaccine passport law prohibiting state and local governments from creating or requiring them. The lawsuit also claims that students are being coerced into vaccination, and if they refuse to comply or provide the school with a medical or religious exemption, they could have their class schedules canceled or student IDs deactivated.
Organization provides safe spaces in ‘hardest places to grow up LGBTQ’: One Utah woman is helping LGBTQ+ youth in the state, which she says is “one of the hardest places to grow up LGBTQ.” Stephenie Larsen, CEO at Encircle, an organization that focuses on suicide prevention, helps provides a safe space for LGBTQ+ youth. “Encircle is like a library — you can walk in and out of it as you please,” she told “GMA.” Larsen, who grew up in a Mormon household, said her views on homosexuality were shaped by her teachings from the church and her education. But after meeting her husband’s uncle, who identifies as an openly gay man, her views on the LGBTQ+ community changed. Through Encircle, guests can attend group discussions, therapy sessions with trained counselors and daily programs to connect with LGBTQ+ youth, parents and family. Since launching in 2017, Larsen said her team has welcomed more than 30,000 guests. “It’s a safe haven for LGBTQ+ youth,” said Ana Chavarri, Encircle Provo’s home director.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Billy Crystal joins us to talk about his role in the Disney+ series, “Monsters at Work.” And Kaylee Hartung went behind the scenes with celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck to prepare some of his famous dishes! Plus, Janai Norman sat down with Mary J. Blige to talk about her new documentary “My Life,” about her mega hits and struggles in the spotlight. All this on and more only on “GMA.”
This morning we take a closer look at the scourge of police violence across the country, the results of the New York City mayoral primary race and a welcome surprise in a Tokyo Zoo.
Here’s what we’re watching this Wednesday morning.
In the national conversation about policing over the past year, public attention has focused on those who die at the hands of officers. Americans know the names of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Tamir Rice and others killed by cops.
Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that since 2015, more than 400,000 people have been treated in emergency rooms because of a violent interaction with police or security guards.
Yet even as the rate of injuries goes unacknowledged in the national conversation about police reform, it has strained the relationship between officers and the people they aim to serve — particularly in Black and brown neighborhoods.
“There is a withering away of community trust,” said Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve, an associate professor of sociology at Brown University who has researched the Chicago Police Department. “The police are not seen as enforcing the law, they are seen as outside the law.”
Meanwhile, later today President Joe Biden is expected to announce his strategy for tackling gun violence amid the recent surge in violence in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.
Andrew Yang, the former 2020 presidential contender and businessman, bowed out of the race for New York City mayor Tuesday night, as votes among the other Democratic contenders continued to be counted and Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams held the lead.
The pop star’s scheduled testimony in a Los Angeles court Wednesday will be her first public statement on the 13-year conservatorship since the #FreeBritney movement began in 2019.
Fans of “The Apprentice,” along with everyone who’s ever held a job in America, recognize the words “at will” mean a job or a contract can be terminated for any reason. That’s precisely what happened with a Trump-run golf course in New York City, MSNBC legal analyst Danny Cevallos argues.
The Teamsters announcement comes during Prime Day, Amazon’s annual sales event and one of the busiest times of the year for workers in the company’s warehouses.
Giant panda Shin Shin gave birth to twin cubs at Tokyo’s Ueno Zoo Wednesday — the first pandas born there in four years.
Pandas are notoriously difficult to breed in both the wild and in captivity. The fact that Shin Shin was expecting twins came as a surprise to zoo keepers.
“When I heard the news that the second baby was born, I couldn’t help but whoop,” Ueno Zoo director Yutaka Fukuda told reporters.
And the bipartisan infrastructure talks haven’t produced a clear way to pay for the increased spending.
But there has been some movement on each story.
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., voted with all other Senate Democrats on the voting-rights bill to create a unified Dem front (though one that still can’t get past a GOP filibuster).
Frontrunner Eric Adams holds a strong lead in the New York Democratic primary for mayor, but we won’t see the final results until next month (see below).
And tonight, per NBC’s Mike Memoli and NBC’s Capitol Hill team, top Biden White House officials will be meeting with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to discuss how to proceed on infrastructure and voting rights.
There’s one other link to these three different storylines: Democratic progressives and activists find themselves unable to fundamentally change a party where their leaders’ and voters’ instincts remain rooted in pragmatism and seeking consensus.
The Senate legislative filibuster is still alive; the progressive candidate in New York (Maya Wiley) is trailing Adams; and Democrats still haven’t figured out a way to move on infrastructure without GOP votes.
Adams leads in New York, but final results won’t be released for weeks
With the early and day-of votes counted, Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams has 31.7 percent of the first-preference votes in New York City’s Democratic mayoral race – followed by former NYC mayoral counsel Maya Wiley at 22.3 percent and former Sanitation Commissioner Kathryn Garcia at 19.5 percent.
Former presidential candidate Andrew Yang got a disappointing 11.7 percent of first-preference votes, and he’s already bowed out of the race.
But the count isn’t over: New York is still waiting on late-arriving absentee ballots, and then there’s the ranked-choice tallying, which could all take weeks to sort out.
Still, Adams appears to be driver’s seat. As the Cook Political Report’s Dave Wasserman observes from the limited number of ranked-choice counts he’s covered, a 9-point in first preference is difficult for the opposition to overcome.
The Democratic winner will face Republican Curtis Sliwa, who easily won the GOP’s two-person contest.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Adams’ big bet on crime
Biden to discuss gun violence
As mentioned above, President Biden today discusses crime when he and Attorney General Merrick Garland deliver remarks at 3:30 pm ET on the administration’s gun/crime prevention strategy.
NBC’s Lauren Egan says Biden’s strategy will address five key areas – “stemming the flow of firearms used to commit violence; providing law enforcement with more resources; investing in community violence interventions; expanding summer programs and employment opportunities, especially for young people; and helping formerly incarcerated people re-enter their communities.”
Before that speech, Biden will deliver remarks at the funeral of the late Sen. John Warner, R-Va., at 11:00 am ET.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
46 percent: The share of Americans who say there is “a lot” of discrimination against transgender people in society today, per a new CBS poll
31 percent: The share who say there is a lot of discrimination against gays and lesbians.
153: The number of employees of a Houston hospital system who have been fired or resigned after refusing to get the Covid vaccine
33,709,858: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 8,349 more than yesterday morning.)
606,002: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News.(That’s 315 more than yesterday morning.)
319,223,844: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
41.7 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per NBC News.
56 percent: The share of all American adults over 18 who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Former DNC chair Tom Perez is running for governor in Maryland.
State senator Sonia Chang-Díaz is in to run for governor of Massachusetts.
After what looks like a major upset, Buffalo may be the first major city to have a socialist mayor since 1960.
The Biden administration will look into the role the federal government played in the dark history of boarding schools for Native American children.
Okay, what’s actually next for voting legislation after the demise of the For the People Act in the Senate yesterday?
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is considering whether to launch a House select committee to investigate January 6, although her spokesman says her preference is still a bipartisan commission.
Joe Manchin says he’s open to some of Biden’s “human infrastructure” ideas — and to rolling back some of the Trump tax cuts.
New York prosecutors who are probing the Trump organization are looking into Matthew Calamari, a former Donald Trump bodyguard who’s now the Trump Organization’s chief operating officer.
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The White House admits it won’t meet the president’s COVID vaccine goal by the 4th of July. Also, the U.S. defense secretary announces he will remove decisions on prosecuting sexual assault cases from military commanders. The recommendation would need congressional approval. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Dr. Anthony Fauci joins “CBS This Morning” to talk about the country missing President Biden’s vaccine goal, how to address vaccine hesitancy and the growing danger from the Delta COVID-19 variant in the U.S.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said for the first time he is supporting changes to the military justice system that would move prosecuting sexual assault cases out of the military chain of command to independent military lawyers. Norah O’Donnell joins “CBS This Morning” to discuss.
The mother of a biracial teen says her son was “profiled” by a state trooper who used his taser on the 16-year-old. The trooper said he suspected him of burglary. Surveillance video shows what happened in a Florida backyard. Manuel Bojorquez reports.
Millions of families will receive monthly cash payments thanks to the new Child Tax Credit plan. CBS News business analyst Jill Schlesinger joins “CBS This Morning” to explain who qualifies and how much they’ll get.
Plus: Trans girl sports ban vetoed, Connecticut legalizes marijuana, and more…
Recent years have seen a string of high-profile deaths brought on by police officers restricting people’s breathing during arrest, leading some cities to reconsider cops’ use of chokeholds and similar tactics. For instance, last summer, in the wake of George Floyd’s death, New York City passed a law banning police from “restraining an individual in a manner that restricts the flow of air or blood by compressing the windpipe or the carotid arteries on each side of the neck, or sitting, kneeling, or standing on the chest or back in a manner that compresses the diaphragm.”
But New York City cops and their unions objected to the law, which made such actions a misdemeanor crime. Police unions sued over the law last August, saying it was too vague and had a “chilling effect” on their conduct (um, isn’t that the point?).
Now, a state judge in New York has partially taken their side.
In a Tuesday ruling, Judge Laurence Love struck down the portion of the law related to compressing a suspects’ diaphragm, calling it “unconstitutionally vague.” The diaphragm language “cannot be adequately defined as written,” he opined.
Love’s ruling did not affect the first portion of the law, related to restricting compressing the windpipe or the carotid arteries.
Notably, the NYPD has banned the use of chokeholds by police since 1993. But advocates of the new law argued that the NYPD’s internal ban on chokeholds was ineffective, as they were still widely used (and abused) by city cops with little consequence—a practice tragically showcased by Officer Daniel Pantaleo’s 2014 killing of Eric Garner.
Both the New York City law and a state law passed last summer (Senate Bill S6670B) attempt to actually set consequences for cops who don’t follow that policy. The state law made it a crime for police officers or peace officers to obstruct breathing or blood circulation, or use a chokehold or similar restraint, that results in serious physical injury or death.
FREE MINDS
Trans girl sports ban vetoed. Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, vetoed a ban on transgender girls participating in women’s sports teams. Edwards called the law—which cleared the state’s Senate 29–6 and the House 78–19—a “solution in search of a problem that does not exist in Louisiana.” The measure could still become law, however, as the margins of victory are wide enough to override Edwards’ veto. But “the Legislature has never in its history called itself back to Baton Rouge for a special veto override session,” notesThe Advocate.
FREE MARKETS
Connecticut just became the 19th state to legalize recreational marijuana. Gov. Ned Lamont, a Democrat, signed the new legislation into law on Tuesday. “People age 21 and older will be allowed to possess and consume marijuana beginning on July 1 under the new law, which also lays the groundwork for a new cannabis industry in the state and attempts to address racial inequities stemming from the nation’s war on drugs,” reportsUSA Today.
Though the 19th state to legalize it and the fourth this year,
Connecticut is one of the only states whose law clears marijuana convictions under certain conditions (it will automatically clear records from Jan. 1, 2000 through Sept. 30, 2015).…Montana, Michigan, New York, Utah, Vermont and Virginia are the only others that automatically clear marijuana convictions with conditions. Arizona will begin expungements next month.
QUICK HITS
• Senate Republicans used a filibuster to block a voting bill yesterday. “Democrats’ best remaining hope to enact legal changes rests on a long-shot bid to eliminate the legislative filibuster, which Republicans used on Tuesday to block the measure, called the For the People Act,” notes The New York Times.
• A federal judge has permanently struck down an Iowa law passed in 2020 mandating a 24-hour waiting period for people seeking abortions. “In a 28-page ruling on Monday, Judge Mitchell E. Turner found that the law violated the state’s constitution because it was passed as an amendment to an unrelated measure. He also found that the measure was similar to a 72-hour waiting period on abortions that the Iowa Supreme Court struck down in 2018,” notesThe Hill.
• The worst-case COVID-19 predictions turned out to be wrong. But so did the best case predictions, points out Ron Bailey.
• A new study suggests that not only can stress lead to graying hair, reducing stress can also lead to re-pigmentation of hair. “Our data add to a growing body of evidence demonstrating that human aging is not a linear, fixed biological process but may, at least in part, be halted or even temporarily reversed,” said senior study author Martin Picard.
• State attorneys general are reportedly filing another antitrust lawsuit against Google, this one concerned with its Play Store. “The investigation by the state attorneys general is being led by Utah, Tennessee, North Carolina and New York. It is unclear how many states will participate,” says Reuters. The lawsuit would follow a federal lawsuit against Google filed by the Department of Justice and joined by prosecutors from 13 states last year.
• In other antitrust news…
Tim Wu, father of net neutrality, is Biden’s top tech & competition policy guru. But @superwuster was and is still wrong about what makes the internet great https://t.co/ZsRpDvr1UU
• Andrew Yang has conceded in his bid to become New York’s next mayor. In a test of ranked choice voting, Democrats had 13 candidates on their ballots and could choose their top five, ranking them in order of preference. Results that came in late Tuesday showed Yang in fourth place, with Eric Adams leading among Democrats. On the GOP side, Curtis Sliwa took the lead.
In the most cop-critical NYC mayoral election ever, the two most likely contestants in the general will be:
A right-wing talk radio guy who cosplayed as a vigilante in the 80s and 90s.
An ex-GOP retired police captain who almost certainly doesn’t live in NYC.
• Buffalo, New York, could be getting a socialist mayor (though this depends on the direction of a large number of still-uncounted absentee ballots).
Buffalo had a ****90%**** increase in shootings between 2019 and 2020 and a socialist, anti-police brutality organizer is looking like she just won the mayoral primary. This is only to say the politics of all this stuff is not obvious or automatic. https://t.co/goPBPz8PbN
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.
Republicans on Wednesday were successful in blocking Democrats’ “Corrupt Politicians Act” in the Senate. It’s commonly referred to in the media as the “For the People Act” and is claimed to be for vot … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
06/23/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Sidelined Athlete; Joyless in Seattle; Doubting Thomas
By Carl M. Cannon on Jun 23, 2021 09:06 am
Good morning, it’s Wednesday, June 23, 2021, a lovely day on the East Coast and the 73rd birthday of Clarence Thomas.
In a less polarized world, the accomplishments of this man would be universally acclaimed, irrespective of one’s politics: Thomas was born into grinding poverty in a small Georgia town and raised by a single mother and her parents. His maternal grandfather emphasized the value of physical labor — Thomas began working on the family farm when he was 10 — and education. Raised Catholic, he attended parochial schools, went to college at Holy Cross and Yale Law School and, in 1991, became the second African American to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court.
By that time, however, Roe v. Wade had turned high court appointments into pitched battles between Republicans and Democrats. Until that 1973 decision, abortion had not been a partisan issue. But by the time George H.W. Bush announced his intentions to elevate Clarence Thomas from the First Circuit Court of Appeals, both major political parties — and the Supreme Court itself — occupied opposing warring camps over it. It didn’t help that the relatively inexperienced Thomas was being named for the seat vacated by a liberal hero, Thurgood Marshall, a lawyer who had achieved fame and legal acclaim even before being named to the nation’s highest court.
As if that wasn’t enough, at the 11th hour, accusations of sexual harassment were leveled at Thomas, allegations that Judiciary Committee Chairman Joe Biden handled with uncertainty. And so even today, when Clarence Thomas’ name is mentioned, many liberals think “Anita Hill,” while the phrase that runs through conservatives’ minds is “high-tech lynching.”
But that was three decades ago, so let’s look ahead. Sooner or later, the Supreme Court will be forced to tackle the question of censorship by monopolistic tech giants Facebook, Twitter, Apple, and Amazon.
Until now, most legal scholars have understood the First Amendment to mean protections against government, and not private companies, curbing free speech. “The bottom line remains that Facebook is a private company, and it has its own First Amendment rights to decide what it wants to put on its service,” free speech scholar Ken Paulson recently told USA Today.
But there are exceptions here and there: The Supreme Court itself has carved out exemptions for company towns (a 1946 ruling known as Marsh) and shopping malls (a 1980 case). As Facebook and Twitter ban a former U.S. president from their platforms — while censoring discussion of issues ranging from election integrity to COVID treatments — the issue of free speech appears once again to be headed for judicial oversight.
That’s where Clarence Thomas comes in. In an October 2020 case and again two months ago while weighing a case brought by critics whom President Trump had blocked on Twitter, Thomas has wondered aloud whether the social media giants wield too much control over America’s political discourse.
“Today’s digital platforms provide avenues for historically unprecedented amounts of speech, including speech by government actors,” he wrote. “Also unprecedented, however, is the concentrated control of so much speech in the hands of a few private parties. We will soon have no choice but to address how our legal doctrines apply to highly concentrated, privately owned information infrastructure such as digital platforms.”
So, stay tuned. And with that, I’d point you to our front page, which aggregates, as it does each day, an array of columns and stories spanning the political spectrum. Today’s lineup includes Ibram X. Kendi’s critique of “post-racism” (The Atlantic); Ben Shapiro on critical race theory (Daily Wire); and Tammy Bruce on the violent crime spike in America’s big cities (Washington Times). We also offer a complement of original material from RCP reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Will Biden Level the Playing Field for Naval Academy Athlete? Susan Crabtree highlights the White House response to new developments on the college sports front.
Joyless in Seattle Over Federal Cop Control. Police consent decrees are making a comeback under President Biden, Eric Felten reports for RealClearInvestigations, and riot-torn Seattle illustrates their unwelcome consequences.
Journalists Betray a Source. J. Peder Zane has a bone to pick with New York Times media columnist Ben Smith, among others.
Ohio Confronts Rampant Unemployment Fraud. At RealClearPolicy, Joe Horvath spotlights the state’s efforts to rein in abuses.
Explaining Trump’s Bizarre Responses to the Coronavirus. At RealClearMarkets, Jeffrey Tucker considers the revelations in a new book about the great cage match of Donald Trump vs. COVID-19.
Arming the Pentagon to Manage Environmental Liabilities. At RealClearDefense, a trio of authors argue for an updated, systematic process for managing chemical hazards.
Beware the Self-Appointed Drug Pricing Czar. At RealClearHealth, Terry Wilcox and William Smith assail the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, which they say wants to weaken incentives for investment in new medical treatments.
Pipelines Help Power Pennsylvania — and the U.S. At RealClearEnergy, Stephanie Catarino Wissman warns that halting pipeline projects weakens the nation’s energy security and economic recovery.
How Abraham Lincoln’s Wisdom Helped Preserve the Nation. At RealClear American Civics, the staff of the Jack Miller Center explore the “Great Emancipator’s” political statesmanship.
Last week the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley, testified in the U.S. Senate that China has “a ways to go” before it can take Taiwan by military force. In other words, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) isn’t capable of it yet.
The Biden administration is withdrawing several air defense assets from countries across the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, and Jordan.
Good morning. It’s Wednesday, June 23, and we’re covering slowing vaccine rates, a pop star’s fight to control her finances, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
The Biden administration acknowledged yesterday it is likely to miss its goal of having 70% of US adults at least partially vaccinated against COVID-19 by July 4. Officials instead noted 70% of Americans aged 30 and over have received at least one shot. Americans aged 27 and over are expected to reach the threshold by Independence Day.
The admission comes as vaccination rates have dipped to an average of 1.1 million per day, down by two-thirds from mid-April. The slowdown partially reflects the difficulty of health officials in reaching younger adults—roughly 43% of those aged 18 to 24 have received at least one dose, more than 20 percentage points below the average for US adults (65%).
The seven-day rolling average of new COVID-19 cases in the US has settled near 11,000 per day (see data), with average deaths near 300 per day. More than 602,000 total deaths have been reported in the US. Explore vaccine hesitancy by demographic here.
Separately, data suggest countries that relied on a Chinese-developed COVID-19 shot are experiencing a surge in new cases, undermining China’s efforts around vaccine diplomacy.
#FreeBritney
Britney Spears will make a virtual appearance today in a Los Angeles court to testify about her 13-year conservatorship. The pop star’s father, Jamie Spears, was appointed her conservator in 2008 following high-profile public struggles with mental health (conservatorship 101). The conservatorship now includes two arms: One to oversee her personal matters, which is controlled by a care manager, and one to manage her $60M fortune, run by her father alongside wealth manager Bessemer Trust.
Recently unearthed records from The New York Times revealed the 39-year-old performer has been trying to end the conservatorship (NYT, paywall) for years. The younger Spears expressed concerns over her father as early as 2014, citing his drinking as a primary issue.
Public interest in the case was renewed following “Framing Britney Spears,” a documentary that explored her career and the arrangement, and rekindled the popular #FreeBritney social media movement. Catch the testimony here (12 pm ET).
Pardons in Spain
The Spanish government yesterday pardoned nine Catalan separatists jailed over sedition charges following a failed 2017 secession. Officials said the move was needed to help mend the rift between the central government in Madrid and the semiautonomous region. Those pardoned had initially received sentences of between nine and 13 years in prison.
Home to almost 8 million people, the northeastern region largely enjoys self-rule and accounted for roughly 20% of the country’s prepandemic economy. It is also home to Barcelona, the country’s second-largest city. With a distinct cultural identity, Catalonia’s separatist movement peaked in 2017 with a successful—but unofficial—independence referendum that prompted Madrid to establish temporary direct rule over the region.
Carles Puigdemont, who led the region during the secession attempt but fled the country in the aftermath, did not receive a pardon.
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Building a healthy morning habit can give you daily momentum. Moving, planning, meditating—it’s all good for the body, mind, and productivity. But why not add in a nutrition routine?
Athletic Greens tastes great and makes us feel good. Their single scoop superfood powder includes a proportionate mix of 75 essential vitamins, minerals, and whole food-sourced ingredients that make covering your nutritional bases much simpler than taking multiple pills. We add a scoop every day at home or on the road with the travel packs so we get daily support for our energy, gut health, immune system, and stress recovery.
> Vanessa Bryant settles wrongful death lawsuit with helicopter company in death of her husband and daughter (More) | Martin Luther King Jr.’s estate reaches international deal with publisher HarperCollins for rights to King’s literary archive (More)
>Detroit Pistons, Houston Rockets win top two picks in NBA draft lottery (More) | Las Vegas Raiders defensive end Carl Nassib, who came out as gay Monday, has the top-selling jersey in the NFL (More)
>Jim Bessman, beloved music journalist, dies at 68 after reportedly suffering an aneurysm (More) | Emmy-nominated producer and CBS executive Norman S. Powell dies at 86 (More)
>Reports say the Food and Drug Administration approved Biogen’s Alzheimer drug despite statisticians claiming insufficient proof of effectiveness (More) | See our previous write-up on the drug’s approval (More)
>NASA’s Hubble telescope remains in safe mode as the agency attempts to restart a crashed computer; the 1980s device is believed to have a malfunctioning memory module (More)
>Australia pushes back on United Nations report recommending the Great Barrier Reef be reclassified as a World Heritage Site in Danger due to the effects of climate change on its coral (More)
Business & Markets
>US stock markets up (S&P 500 +0.5%, Dow +0.2%, Nasdaq +0.8%); tech companies lead Nasdaq to fresh record high (More) | Microsoft briefly passes $2 trillion market cap, becoming second US public company after Apple to reach milestone (More) | Eyewear startup Warby Parker files for confidential initial public offering, last valued at $3B (More)
>European Commission launches antitrust investigation into Google’s advertising practices (More) | Federal Trade Commission will reportedly review Amazon’s proposed $8B acquisition of MGM (More)
>US existing home sale prices rise a record 23.6% over last May to $350,300; existing home sales decrease for fourth straight month (More)
Politics & World Affairs
>Senate voting rights bill fails to clear procedural hurdle, with a party-line 50-50 vote; 60 votes were required to break a filibuster (More) | House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D, CA-12) signals she will form a select committee to probe the Jan. 6 storming of the US Capitol (More)
>New York City holds primaries to select nominees to run for mayor, other city officers; new ranked-choice voting system could take weeks to yield results (More) | Check here for real-time updates (More)
>An estimated300,000 US gun purchases were blocked by background checks last year, with 42% due to prior felony convictions (More) | Forty million guns were purchased legally in 2020 (More) | Slain Colorado police officer Gordon Beesley was ambushed, officials say; two others were killed in Denver-area shooting Monday (More)
Historybook: Computer scientist Alan Turing born (1912); Track and field great Wilma Rudolph born (1940); Title IX enacted, bans gender discrimination in public education and sports (1972); RIP polio vaccine developer Jonas Salk (1995); United Kingdom votes to leave the EU (2016).
“The reward for work well done is the opportunity to do more.”
– Jonas Salk
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief.
Good morning, it’s June 23. On this day in history, Mafia boss John Gotti, nicknamed the “Teflon Don,” was sentenced to life in prison after being found guilty on 14 accounts of conspiracy to commit murder and racketeering (1992); 34-year-old Nik Wallenda became the first person to walk a high wire across the Little Colorado River Gorge near Grand Canyon National Park (2013); and a 25-year-old Thai youth soccer coach and his team got trapped in a cave after monsoon rains flooded the entrance. They were all rescued two weeks later by Thai Navy Seals (2018).
TOP STORIES
Hungary Has Blocked LGBTQ Content from Children in Their Fight Against Pedophilia
Kids and teens in the U.S. have mostly unfettered access to pro-LGBTQ entertainment, propaganda, education or “re-education,” depending on how one views it. In Hungary, lawmakers approved legislation that would prohibit the sharing of any content portraying homosexuality or sex reassignment with minors.
Supporters of the new law say the move will help fight pedophilia. Human rights groups are denouncing the legislation as being anti-LGBTQ.
In a sweeping vote, Hungary’s National Assembly approved the bill 157-1. According to Conservative Party Fidesz State Secretary Csaba Domotor the goal is “the protection of children.” A particularly noteworthy addition to the bill includes a searchable registry of convicted pedophiles.
“Pedophiles won’t be able to hide anymore — there are similar solutions in other countries too,” stated Domotor. “The criminal code will be even more strict. Punishments will be more severe. No one can get away with the atrocities with light punishments and parole.”
So if the vote was nearly unanimous, why has there been opposition and pushback? It turns out the opposition parties boycotted the vote as a protest. Human rights groups believe it is wrong to conflate LGBTQ people with pedophilia.
Although there has been quite a bit ofdissension andresearch to the contrary, theevidence that there is at least someoverlap ishard to completely deny. One could argue there is overlap in the heterosexual community as well, and that’s certainly accurate.
The primary goal of the Conservative Fidesz Party in passing this legislation was to fight pedophilia. “It included amendments that ban the representation of any sexual orientation besides heterosexual as well as sex reassignment information in school sex education programs, or in films and advertisements aimed at anyone under 18,” according to theAssociated Press.
Additionally, the Fidesz Party passed a law last year that makes it impossible for transgender people to legally change their official gender on identity documents.
ATP comment: Sex between consenting adults is in a very different category than sex with minors. When actions are taken to normalize sex with minors or meant to influence or re-educate children, it becomes problematic. Furthermore, when unsuspecting children are entrusted to adults with a sexual agenda, it opens them up to all sorts of abuse and manipulation. We can look at “Drag Queen Story Hour” as a glaring example of this type of inappropriate indoctrination.
Freedom of Religion Wins the Day, Thanks to the Supreme Court
The U.S. Supreme Court last week ruled that a Catholic foster care agency has every right to turn away gay and lesbian couples as potential caregivers.
The First Amendment protects the freedom of religion, and this case was determined based on that basic principle.
Catholic Social Services (CSS) argued the organization’s religious views meant that same-sex couples would not be candidates for fostering the children placed in their care. CSS said it “shouldn’t be blocked from its work because of those views.”
The Supreme Court agrees.
In the case of the Catholic agency, their goal is to find accommodations for kids that will be consistent with their religious beliefs and, in Chief Justice John Robert’s words, “it does not seek to impose those beliefs on anyone else.”
Roberts also stated, “The refusal of Philadelphia to contract with CSS for the provision of foster care services unless it agrees to certify same-sex couples as foster parents … violates the First Amendment.”
While the decision may seem controversial, with LGBTQ and Leftist groups undoubtedly up in arms, even the three Liberal members of the Court joined with Roberts on the opinion. It’s important to remember the Supreme Court’s responsibility. Their job is to interpret the laws based on the U.S. Constitution. They don’t make decisions based on pressure from outside groups.
USA Today’s article quoted Richard Garnett, director of the University of Notre Dame law school program on church, state and society. “It is striking, and telling, that the court’s more Liberal justices joined the court’s decision,” he stated. “Today’s ruling illustrates that respect for religious freedom should not be a partisan, or Left-Right issue.”
ATP comment: The Court’s decision is a victory for religious organizations that have struggled with a number of activist challenges to their basic tenets. While America is celebrating Pride Month, religious organizations who don’t affirm same-sex coupling are at a crossroads. The pressure to accept these alternative lifestyles is gaining steam at an exponential rate.
This latest Supreme Court ruling will help to keep those who insist that everyone should accept and accommodate a particular lifestyle in check. There is a difference between general discrimination and religious freedom. Thankfully, the Supreme Court has recognized that and set new precedent.
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
Google funded research conducted by Peter Daszak’s EcoHealth Alliance – a controversial group which has openly collaborated with the Wuhan Institute of Virology on “killer” bat coronavirus research – for over a decade, The National Pulse can today reveal.
Last week, the Federal Reserve announced it will maintain an interest rate target of zero to 0.25 percent for the rest of 2021. The Fed said it will also continue its monthly purchase of 120 billion dollars of Treasury and mortgage-backed securities.
As the government reviews several hundred reports of heart inflammation in young people following COVID vaccination, high-profile medical and legal scholars are calling on colleges to scrap their COVID vaccine mandates, calling them unnecessary and potentially harmful to students.
Hello! Every Wednesday, our internet culture staff discusses the world of streaming entertainment in this newsletter. In today’s Insider:
The best of the 2021 Tribeca Festival
There’s a better story hiding in pregnancy thriller False Positive
Star Wars showrunner explains why the franchise was always political
FESTIVALS
The best of the 2021 Tribeca Festival
I’ve always had a soft spot for the Tribeca Festival. It’s the first film festival I professionally covered, it never felt too unapproachable for a novice film critic, and it gave me the avenue to spend a couple of weeks up in New York to watch a ton of great movies. In its 20th edition, Tribeca is among the first film festivals to bring back in-person screenings since the pandemic started. Here are a few films I enjoyed at this year’s festival:
Catch the Fair One: In director Josef Wladyka’s revenge thriller, there’s nothing glamorous about the depths to which Kaylee (boxing champion Kali Reis, who co-wrote the film) will go to extract her sister from the human trafficking ring that abducted her two years prior. But Kaylee isn’t afraid to fight dirty in this dark journey into a woman’s attempt to take down some of the forces that tore her family apart.
No Man of God: You don’t have to go far to find a movie or TV show about Ted Bundy, one of America’s most famous serial killers. In No Man of God, director Amber Sealey focuses on the final years of Bundy’s (Luke Kirby) life through the eyes of FBI analyst Bill Hagmaier (Elijah Wood). It doesn’t attempt to romanticize Bundy, but it doesn’t shy away from his allure, either.
The Novice: Before making her directorial debut, Lauren Hadaway had a decade-long career working in sound departments. In The Novice, which won three jury awards, the fact is evident as it harnesses sound and a surreal atmosphere like a weapon that will invoke the likes of Black Swan or Whiplash in a tense and thrilling character study.
7 Days: I’ve seen my fair share of COVID-centric projects over the past 15 months of the pandemic, and 7 Days, Roshan Sethi’s rom-com set in the early days of the pandemic, is easily among the better ones. After a disastrous date set up by their parents on an arranged marriage site, COVID forces one of them to crash at the other’s place. (But you may have to hold a lot of suspension of disbelief around its COVID depictions.)
The world of streaming is overcrowded with options, but there are some classics that never go out of style. That’s why we love Disney+, a service that mixes the best of today’s content with a massive library of iconic classics. From the MCU to the Apple Dumpling Gang, here’s everything you need to know about Disney+.
There’s a better story hiding in pregnancy thriller ‘False Positive’
False Positive doesn’t waste any time showing us where it will end up: In the first scene, protagonist Lucy (Ilana Glazer) wanders down the street, drenched in blood. But the journey there is complicated by a meandering script.False Positive concerns Lucy, an advertising exec who’s been trying to get pregnant for two years. Her surgeon husband Adrian (Justin Theroux) is supportive of her desire for a child, but doesn’t really have much of a personality or point of view. He does, however, have a direct line to the best fertility specialist in the city, Dr. Hindle (Pierce Brosnan). Hindle is Adrian’s medical school mentor, but somehow Lucy has never heard of him until now. False Positive is now streaming on Hulu.
New ‘Star Wars’ Disney+ showrunner explains why the franchise was always political
Further details of The Acolyte, writer/producer Leslye Headland’s new Star Wars series at Disney+, are still under wraps, but a new AV Club interview shed some light on Headland’s attitude to the franchise—and it sounds like she’s very invested in Star Wars‘ political side. “When I do go on social media,” said Headland, “The feedback is ‘Don’t make Star Wars political,’ I’m like, ‘George Lucas made it political. Those are political films.’ War is, by nature, political.’” After all, the original movies are full of political allegories, most obviously the fascist imagery of the Empire.
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‘Our family name was DRAGGED in the media. We get NO royalties, nothing. Wanna hold someone accountable? Ask Kamala Harris why she came for my family,’ Nina Simone’s granddaughter wrote on Twitter. Read more…
To the extent that political polling can be taken seriously after the last election cycle, this sampling is quite telling. According to a poll conducted by Monmouth University and released… Read more…
The Trump Organization is suing New York City, charging a contract was wrongfully terminated when Mayor Bill de Blasio gave the company the ax after the Jan. 6 incursion of… Read more…
An ex-senior adviser to former President Donald Trump and current Newsmax contributor Jason Miller tweeted on Tuesday that an investigation into Trump’s bodyguard is an attempt “to prevent President Trump… Read more…
Former President Donald Trump has offered to support a Republican primary challenger to replace New York GOP Rep. John Katko who voted to impeach him following the events of Jan…. Read more…
Despite the head start given it by the Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed, the Biden administration is admitting it will not hit its goal of vaccinating 70 percent of the… Read more…
Ken Bennett, Senate liaison to the Maricopa County, Arizona, election audit, said that auditors were informed by county election workers that the signature verification standards for mail-in ballots were at… Read more…
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82.) CNN
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Wednesday 06.23.21
The Amazon rainforest may be headed for another devastating fire season. After a destructive 2020 and with drought conditions in Brazil, the forest has rarely been drier than it is right now. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day.
By AJ Willingham
Demonstrators hold up signs at a rally this month in Washington, DC, calling on the Senate to pass the For the People Act.
Voting rights
The sweeping voting rights bill championed by Democrats failed to advance in the Senate yesterday after a dead-even 50-50 vote, falling short of the 60 votes needed to move it forward. This wasn’t too much of a surprise, since Senate Republicans signaled they wouldn’t support it. Still, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer called Republicans’ united block of the bill “indefensible” and “ridiculous.” The bill aimed to counter efforts by GOP-led state legislatures to pass restrictive voting laws after the 2020 presidential election. Now, Democrats will take on the issue from other angles. The Senate Rules Committee plans to hold a series of hearings, including in Georgia, calling for passage of new legislation. Dems also may look to push the John Lewis Voting Rights Act, a different bill that shores up provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Violence & policing
Violent crime is on the rise in cities across the US, and the White House has listened with alarm as local authorities warn of an even deadlier summer. President Biden is due to address the spike in shootings, armed robberies and assaults today after a meeting with state and local officials, law enforcement representatives and other experts. The Biden administration hopes to come up with a comprehensive crime reduction plan to curtail any Republican efforts to use the spike as a reason to run a “law and order” campaign during next year’s midterm elections. Major American cities saw a 33% increase in homicides last year alone. Some police officers say they’re worried about increased scrutiny of their profession and how it will affect police responses to the predicted rise in violence.
Apple Daily, Hong Kong’s biggest pro-democracy newspaper, has announced it will close after several of its journalists were arrested and millions of dollars in assets frozen. The closure is the latest consequence of the national security law imposed last year by Beijing, and it has sent a deep chill through Hong Kong’s media industry. The law punishes anything the authorities deem to be subversion, secession, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces with up to life in prison. While Hong Kong’s leaders assured that press freedom would be protected, for many journalists in the region, a closure like this seemed all but inevitable. Since the law took effect, Apple Daily’s founder has been arrested and charged with collusion, police officers have twice raided the publication’s newsroom and its bank accounts were recently frozen.
Brexit
It’s been five years since the UK’s Brexit vote sent shockwaves across the globe and put the country on a divisive and rocky path out of the European Union. Many of those divisions remain, including tensions with Northern Ireland and an ongoing independence push by Scotland, which voted overwhelmingly against Brexit. Meanwhile, the UK government has begun talks on joining a Pacific trade partnership that it sees as one of its biggest opportunities to forge economic alliances beyond Europe after Brexit. However, trade experts say such alliances will yield only modest economic benefits and won’t make up for the hit to Britain’s trade caused by its break fromthe European Union.
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Carl Nassib’s jersey instantly became Fanatics’ top seller after the NFL player announced he’s gay You love to see it.
Man arrested after 42,000 pounds of pistachios are stolen
Apparently this isn’t the first time someone has tried to make off with a truckload of pistachios. You really do learn something new every day.
That’s how much the US birth rate fell last year, much of it likely due to the pandemic. It’s “the largest annual decline in the number of births since 1973,” CDC researchers said.
Students across all grade levels have experienced learning loss. And it’s not just the learning loss for this current year. Many of them have lost ground developmentally, particularly younger kids.
We tested carry-on luggage from top-rated travel brands like Away, Calpak, Samsonite and more to find the best on the market. After weeks of packing — and unpacking — these four stood out.
How the sound happens
What, you think splashing water and footsteps in movies just sound like that? No way — thank a Foley artist! (Click here to view.)
(Steven Hayward)John writes below of the role of Derrick Bell in the development of Critical Race Theory back in the 1970s and 1980s, and in 1992 he published a short story called “Space Traders” that quickly became a staple in the black grievance literature about how hopelessly racist America is. You can read the whole thing at the link above, or just go with the Wikipedia summary:
Extraterrestrials arrive on Earth and offer to the United States gold, safe nuclear power and other technological advances in exchange for the government’s handing over of all black US citizens. The story posits that the people and political establishment of the U.S. would make such a transaction and pass a referendum to enable it.
The story takes place over seventeen days and follows a prominent black, conservative economics professor, Gleason Golightly, who is asked by the President to join his cabinet’s discussion of the proposed trade. He is adamantly against the trade, but the completely white cabinet believes the trade will fix the United States’ environmental and economic problems.
At this point, I can safely assume that whether Bell knew or intended it or not, the President and his cabinet in this scenario had to be all Democrats, because they are the only ones whose premises make this trade work. Ask yourself a simple question: Who is it that believes that in the balance sheet of society, humans are a liability (in other words, who believes the “population bomb” hypothesis?) while “natural resources” are the superior asset? It is liberals who believe this most fervently, not the advocates of free markets and individual liberty.
Liberals have long hooted at Julian Simon and others who argue that people are the “ultimate resource,” and not physical matter, especially not gold. So, what the Derrick Bell story really makes clear is which segment of opinion thinks African-Americans are a liability on America’s balance sheet, and, by implication, who the real racists are at the present moment. Only a liberal would find “Space Traders” to be a plausible scenario. Perhaps “liberal guilt” isn’t so silly after all. But they need to stop insisting that the rest of us have to join their collective guilt madness.
(Paul Mirengoff)Last night, I wrote about the Democratic mayoral primary in New York City. Steve wrote about the same subject today.
Both of us pointed out that Eric Adams, a former cop who promises to increase the city’s police presence, is the frontrunner. An Adams victory, we thought, would send a strong message to Democrats. The message? Voters want more, not less, policing.
Tonight, the results are coming in, and with around 80 percent of the city’s precincts reporting, Adams holds the lead. He’s at 31 percent. Maya Wiley, the hard-left candidate endorsed by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, is second at 21.5 percent. Just behind her at 20.5 percent is Kathryn Garcia, the choice of much of the city’s Democratic establishment. Andrew Yang lags way behind at 12 percent.
Adams is killing it in the Bronx, where he’s captured about 45 percent of the vote. He also leads in Queens, Brooklyn (where he’s from), and Staten Island. Harris leads in Manhattan, where Adams is running a distant third.
As Steve and I noted, the election process isn’t straightforward, given the use of ranked-choice voting. But however that plays out, I think it’s significant that the relatively moderate law and order candidate has outpolled his rivals; that his vote and that of the establishment candidate exceeds 50 percent; and that the radical candidate endorsed by Ocasio-Cortez barely cleared 20 percent.
It seems the mood of the city’s Democratic electorate has changed significantly since Bill de Blasio prevailed in 2013 and 2017.
(John Hinderaker)Critical Race Theory is said to have originated in the law schools; in particular, at Harvard Law School in the early 1970s. This is somewhat ironic. In those days, Harvard was considered a conservative law school, attended by people who actually wanted to be lawyers. Yale was the liberal alternative for people with political ambitions. Harvard Professor Derrick Bell is often identified as the founder of CRT. I knew Professor Bell, who taught my first year Criminal Law course. He seemed like a decent enough guy, if somewhat unorthodox in his methods. He did not give full rein, then, to his anti-Americanism.
The CRT movement apparently spread out from the law schools to academia in general. From there it has infected public schools down to the elementary school level. Meanwhile, the liberal attitude toward this viciously racist, divisive and ahistorical movement has evolved. We can see this in the case of the New York Times. In 1997, the Times ran a piece on CRT headlined, “For Black Scholars Wedded to Prism of Race, New and Separate Goals.” That article is not easily available online, but Unz has lengthy excerpts which I rely on here.
In 1997, the Times’s view of CRT was balanced and, on the whole, negative. It begins, appropriately for CRT, with an anecdote:
Taunya Lovell Banks, a law professor at the University of Maryland, was traveling by train to Baltimore a few years ago when a man exposed himself to her and then ran into the next car.
Professor Banks and the conductor discussed what to do, including whether to have the man arrested. The conductor suggested just letting him off at the next stop. And that set Professor Banks to thinking about the circumstances.
She and the man were black; the conductor was white. Would the conductor have treated the matter differently had she been white? What if the conductor had been black? And was the man mentally disturbed because, as a black man, society had pressed him too hard and provided too little help?
A relatively minor black-on-black crime, but of course it must be the white man’s fault.
Critical race theorists, who are on the faculty at almost every major law school and are producing an ever-growing body of scholarly work, have drawn from an idea made popular by postmodernist scholars of all races, that there is no objective reality.
No one in the world actually believes that there is no objective reality. To take one of countless illustrations, imagine that you bet with a friend on the outcome of the World Series. You win the bet and try to collect. Your friend tells you that there is no objective reality, and according to his “lived experience,” his team won the Series. There is no subculture in the world in which this works. When someone says there is no objective reality, what he means is that he intends to exercise power over you, and no facts or arguments you might present will dissuade him.
While they do not disapprove of integration that occurs naturally, critical race theorists reject the classic liberal view of integration as the ultimate goal. They deride the concept of a colorblind society.
This is the fundamental conflict, still. Should we disregard race as irrelevant, or should we permanently balkanize our society along racial lines and institutionalize racial preferences that favor one group (blacks, which is the only point) over all others?
One important battleground in critical race theory is the criminal justice system: Why, the theorists ask, are a disproportionate number of the men in America’s jails black? Many critical race theorists say it is because the system is infected with racism at every level, from prosecutors’ offices to judges’ chambers.
Physical descriptions of perpetrators by victims say the reason is that blacks commit a disproportionate number of crimes. That has been proved over and over, in every possible way. But, hey, that is just “objective reality.” We now begin to understand why CRT advocates are at war with the truth.
Back in 1997, the Times was willing to give equal time, and implicit approval, to a University of Minnesota law professor who took a dim view of CRT:
Critics of critical race theory, like Prof. Suzanna Sherry of the University of Minnesota law school, contend that it defies common sense and abandons intellectual principles in an effort to promote the political standing of blacks in society.
That sums it up very well.
”The problem with denying any objective reality,” she said, ”is that there is no way of mediating among the competing perceptions of reality except power. And what they ultimately want is more power for their perceptions.”
Bingo. CRT advocates want power. See, for example, H.R. 1, justified on the absurd (and racist) ground that blacks can’t figure out how to get a driver’s license or how to vote, but obviously intended to facilitate voter fraud so as to perpetuate the Democratic Party’s power.
There is much more, which you can read at the Unz link above. The notable point, I think, is that in 1997, the New York Times could run a balanced and, on the whole, negative article on Critical Race Theory. That could never happen today. Why?
To be sure, the Times has gotten more radically left-wing in the last 25 years. But I think the more salient point is that in 1997, the Democratic Party had not yet adopted CRT and, in fact, was broadly suspicious of it. That is what has changed. Today, the Democratic Party is all-in for CRT. Times reporters and editors, slavish followers of the Democratic Party Line, can only comply. So if you want to read intelligent discussion of CRT, you will have to go somewhere else.
(John Hinderaker)Where I live, the number one issue is exploding violent crime. The number two issue is Critical Race Theory in the schools, which the overwhelming majority hate. I posted here a video that has gone viral of a 15-year-old boy addressing my own local school board on the evils of CRT, which is deeply embedded in the public schools. Now, here is another one: a nine-year-old girl in a suburb just South of mine calling her school board to account for reneging on its promise to ban political posters, including BLM posters, from the schools:
It is this kind of grass roots activism that will drive the scourge of racism from our public schools.
(Paul Mirengoff)Black law school graduates fail the bar exam in disproportionate numbers. That’s not surprising when one remembers that, thanks to racial preferences, Blacks are admitted to law schools with worse credentials — college grades and LSAT scores — than are Whites and Asian-Americans.
Bar passage rates are unequal, but there’s nothing inequitable about them. Blacks and Whites take the same exam and the grading is color blind. What’s inequitable is two sets of standards for law school admission — one for Whites and Asians and another for Blacks.
Nonetheless, Eileen Kaufman, a law professor, is calling for an end to the bar exam. She wants it replaced by something called a Lawyers Justice Corps.
Instead of gaining entrance into the profession by demonstrating knowledge of the law, graduates would gain it by providing legal services for “poor and under-represented communities.”
Kaufman’s proposal would achieve two objectives. It would provide foot soldiers for left-wing causes and would increase minority representation in the legal profession somewhat.
Kaufman isn’t cagey about the first objective. She states:
Lawyers are needed to challenge racist practices, design new initiatives, and help communities overcome persistent bias,. While laws alone cannot solve the persistent and deep-seated problems endemic to our society, enforcing the laws we have and working for legal change is critical to progress, and lawyers are essential to every such effort. . . .
[T]he Lawyers Justice Corps. . . would serve the public while playing a key role in dismantling the status quo.
(Emphasis added)
As to the second objective, law school graduates would be admitted to the bar upon certification by attorneys in the “social justice” outfits to which they are assigned. It’s all but free passage except, perhaps, for conservative attorneys who don’t show their lefty bosses enough enthusiasm for “dismantling the status quo.”
Forcing law school grads to work for causes they may not believe in as a condition of becoming a lawyer should be a non-starter. So should permitting grads to enter the legal profession without demonstrating through objective measurement that they know the law.
Will Kaufman’s proposal gain traction? One would think not, but who knows? There are probably some state bar associations radical enough to be tempted by the idea.
And soon enough, we may see proposals for allowing med school grads who cannot pass certification exams to instead get credentialed by serving minority communities.
The war on standards proceeds on front after front.
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
NYC Mayor Primary Results, A Candidate Announces For A District That Doesn’t Exist (yet), Troubling Times For Election Workers
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DDHQ News Round Up
Yesterday was primary day across New York state. The most watched race was for the Democratic nomination for mayor of New York City. Due to the way they count absentee ballots in the state and the city’s Ranked Choice Voting system (more on that below), it’s not possible to call a winner in the race but Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams has a significant lead in first round votes among early in-person and election day voters.
We were however able to call the winner of the GOP mayoral primary for public safety advocate and radio host Curtis Sliwa.
Given the huge disparity in partisan enrollment, the winner of the Democratic nomination is the overwhelming favorite to win in November.
While NYC’s mayor often enjoys a large national and even international profile, the job itself is historically a political dead-end.
In western New York, Democrats are on the verge of ousting longtime Democratic Mayor Byron Brown in favor of self-described socialist India Walton.
Oregon is getting a sixth congressional district starting with the 2022 elections. The borders for the new district haven’t been determined yet but former Democratic Multnomah County Commissioner Loretta Smith has announced her candidacy for the seat.
Oregon isn’t the only state running behind in drawing new lines due to delays in the release of census data. Republican governors from 15 states are calling on the Biden administration to speed up delivery of the information.
The delayed census data isn’t stopping Colorado’s redistricting commission from releasing a first draft of the state’s updated boundaries today.
Election officials across the country are reporting concerns about their safety, being overworked, and unsure if they want to continue in their jobs.
The honeymoon period may be ending for President Joe Biden. He’s now underwater in a potentially key battleground state, Iowa. Former President Donald Trump carried the state but post election surveys had the current President with a positive approval rating until this point.
Why We Don’t Know Who Won the NYC Mayoral Primary, And How Long It Could Take To Find Out
By Nick Field
It’s the morning after New York City held its Mayoral primaries. Yet we still won’t know who the Democratic nominee, and thus the overwhelming favorite to be the next Mayor, will be.
The final polls had Eric Adams as the front-runner, Maya Wiley and Kathryn Garcia surging, with Andrew Yang fading and conceding he won’t be the winner. Nevertheless, a victory by any one of the remaining three candidates remains plausible, though Adams is in the driver’s seat.
It’s actually a similar situation to last year’s Iowa Caucus. In those final days Biden, Buttigieg, Sanders and Warren all seemed capable of pulling off a victory. Another connection between New York and Iowa is that both processes are needlessly complicated, and actually counting the votes will take quite a long time.
Thanks to a 2019 referendum, most of New York’s contests will involve ranked-choice voting. So instead of voting for one candidate, voters are instructed to select their top five choices. Since this will be the first time for voters, there’s likely to be significant confusion, especially given that the ballot features 13 candidates in the Democratic Mayoral primary.
Under the ranked-choice system, the candidate who gets the least votes is eliminated and their votes then go to those who were ranked second. This process continues, with the lowest-performing candidate being dropped and those ballots being allocated to the highest ranking candidate left, until one candidate is left with a majority of the vote.
If this whole complicated process sounds familiar, that’s because it’s essentially the same method used to determine the Best Picture category at the Oscars. The difference, of course, is that we always know exactly when and how the Oscar winner will be revealed (well almost always). For a variety of reasons, we have no idea when we’ll know the winner in this case.
Some states have especially egregious reputations when it comes to elections. GOP complaints about JFK and Chicago resonate more than a half-century later, while Florida remains the butt of jokes twenty years after that infamous recount. When it comes to election administration, however, New York is an under-appreciated contender for the worst state in the nation.
The Empire State was humiliated last year when it took weeks to count the votes for both the primary and general 2020 contests. Furthermore, despite much more favorable COVID conditions, another lengthy delay is anticipated.
Why? Well, there are a number of factors. While New York will tally the unofficial first round results on Election Night, they won’t begin to release ranked choice results until June 29 (a full week after Election Day). Not only that, but since absentee ballots in New York aren’t set to be counted right away either, it is quite possible that a winner won’t be determined until the week of July 12.
We at least have the initial round of results. Adams is in the lead, as polling predicted. He’s the heavy favorite going into the absentee and Ranked Choice counts but it’s still going to take a while to find out if he can hold on to become the next Mayor of New York City.
Nick Field is a Contributor to Decision Desk HQ.
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Ballots are counted in the NYC mayoral primary, the latest in Britney Spears’ conservatorship battle and more to start your Wednesday.
Good morning, Daily Briefing readers! Eric Adams is in the lead and Andrew Yang has dropped out in the New York City mayoral primary. Meanwhile, President Joe Biden is launching a full-scale government effort to curb gun violence, as gun deaths so far his year are up more than 20% over 2020. And it’s an important day for Britney Spears – the pop star is expected to make a rare court address in the ongoing battle over her years-long conservatorship.
New this morning: Behind the historic vaccine effort in America is the FDA’s Peter Marks. And he named the project in a nod to Star Trek: Warp Speed.
🔵 Millions of people with felonies can now vote after widespread reform. And most don’t know it.
🔴 Vanessa Bryant has reached a confidential settlement to end her lawsuit against those she blamed for the death of her husband Kobe Bryant and daughter Gianna.
🏀 The Phoenix Suns snatched a last-second 104-103 win over the Los Angeles Clippers in Game 2 of the Western Conference finals.
😴 One in four couples sleep in separate bedrooms. But “there’s still shame attached to it for some people,” says one expert.
🛒 It came, it saw, it conquered. Amazon Prime Day may be over, but you can still get tons of amazing deals.
🎧 On today’s5 Things podcast, hear the latest from the New York City mayoral race. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
Here’s what’s happening today:
It’s a waiting game in New York City’s mayoral race
With a new ranked choice voting system and absentee ballots still trickling in after polls closed in New York City’s mayoral race late Tuesday, it may take several weeks to determine the winner. Partial results showed Brooklyn Borough President and former police captain Eric Adams ahead of the pack. Entrepreneur turned political hopeful Andrew Yang has already conceded, as he trailed at 12% with 90% of the votes counted. With more than 96% of the first choice preferences of early and in-person votes counted, Adams had 31%; former counsel to Mayor Bill de Blasio Maya Wiley had 22%; and former sanitation department head Kathryn Garcia had about 20%.
President Biden to address efforts to curb gun violence
President Joe Biden will deliver remarks Wednesday on his administration’s efforts to curb gun violence . The speech comes as Republicans intend to seize on a surge of crime to attack Democrats in their bid to take back control of the House and Senate in the 2022 midterm elections. Specifically, public safety experts fear gun violence will worsen this summer, when it historically spikes with the arrival of warm weather. Biden’s renewed effort builds off an initial set of actions he took in April strengthening regulations on ghost guns, stabilizing braces that make firearms more lethal, and investing money in community violence intervention programs. The president has also supported additional funding for community policing.
Britney Spears set to make rare remarks at conservatorship hearing
In the most anticipated hearing in the case in years , Britney Spears is expected to address the court Wednesday in the ongoing battle over the conservatorship that has controlled her money and affairs for 13 years. The 39-year-old pop star has not been in total control of her finances and other important life decisions since 2008, after she suffered a mental breakdown. Her status has come under renewed scrutiny following the release of The New York Times’ documentary “Framing Britney Spears” and by the #FreeBritney movement. In recent court filings, Spears has sought a greater say over who runs the conservatorship, and has asked that her father James Spears be removed.
What else people are reading:
🔵 Lorde is officially back! The Grammy Award-winning singer, who recently released song “Solar Power,” shared details about her upcoming album.
🔵 Speaker Nancy Pelosi told Democratic House members she will create a select committee to probe the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, a source told USA TODAY.
🔵 ‘Love is love:’ Sesame Street is making history with the first married same-sex couple to be recurring characters on the longtime favorite children’s series.
🔵 Savannah Boehrer dreamed of the father-daughter dance at her wedding. But her dad Sam Schmidt couldn’t walk. On her big day, however, she saw something remarkable: Her father walking toward her to dance.
Sam Schmidt dances with his daughter, Savannah, at her wedding.
Braedon Flynn Photography
Democratic lawmakers need new path forward for voting rights legislation
Democrats will have to find a new way to pass voting rights legislation after the Senate failed to advance the For the People Act on Tuesday . The bill received 50 votes in the Senate, short of the 60 needed to overcome a GOP filibuster. Earlier in the week, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the Biden administration would continue its push to make voting more accessible. The legislation aims to counter regulations that make it difficult to vote – especially among people of color. It includes provisions Democrats say would make it easier for people to register and cast their ballots such as expanding early voting and allowing for same-day registration.
ICYMI: Some of our top stories yesterday:
🏃🏽♂️ Donavan Brazier, the reigning world champion, failed to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics at the 800 meters.
⚖️ An Indiana woman will plead guilty for her role in the Capitol riot after saying she has learned from movies and books such as “Schindler’s List” and “Just Mercy.”
💉 The Biden administration won’t reach its goal of getting 70% of adults at least partially vaccinated for COVID-19 by the Fourth of July, a White House official said.
NBA Playoffs continue with Eastern Conference Finals
The march to an NBA championship continues for two more teams Wednesday, as the Milwaukee Bucks and Atlanta Hawks face off in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals. Both the Bucks and the Hawks are coming off of taxing Game 7 road upsets in the last round, with Atlanta beating the Philadelphia 76ers and Milwaukee upending the Brooklyn Nets. The No. 3 seeded Bucks will return home to host the No. 4 seeded Hawks at 8:30 p.m. ET. In the regular season, Milwaukee took home wins in two of its three matchups with Atlanta.
📸 Dazzling photos from the Hubble Space Telescope 📸
NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has unveiled in stunning detail a small section of the Veil Nebula – expanding remains of a massive star that exploded about 8,000 years ago.
NASA
Does this sound familiar? NASA has spent more than a week trying to fix the Hubble Telescope’s computer hardware issues. The problem: a 1980s-era payload computer. “This is similar to your laptop periodically freezing and needing a reboot,” the telescope operations team said.
While it’s being fixed, check out this gallery of some of the brightest stars in our galaxy – and beyond.
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93.) ABSOLUTE NEWS
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The conservative non-profit legal group America First Legal (AFL) is demanding that the Department of Homeland Security provide it with records pertaining to the Biden administration’s immigration policies. An AFL spokesperson says the Biden administration’s approach to illegal immigration since January can only be explained by an “open border” policy coupled with the intentional dismantling […]
More than a dozen states have won a temporary injunction against the Biden Administration over its blocking of new oil and gas drilling leases on federal land. President Biden had halted the sale of oil and gas leases in the Gulf of Mexico by executive order shortly after taking office. Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry […]
A group of Republican senators is asking the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for unreacted documents related to the Covid-19 origins scandal and the role of Dr. Anthony Fauci and EcoHealth Alliance, a nonprofit headed by Peter Daszak. Watch Sharyl Attkisson’s original investigation on Covid-19 origins separating fact from rumor. According to the letter, “so […]
– June 22, 2021 – Statement by Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States of America The story that I asked the Department of Justice to go after ratings-challenged (without Trump!) Saturday Night Live, and other late-night Losers, is total Fake News. It was fabricated, there were no sources, and yet the Lamestream […]
Fellow American,There is a growing movement to teach young Americans that our nation’s history is oppressive and shameful-that the essential fact of American history is not freedom but slavery.To counter this false and destructive narrative, Hillsdale College has produced a new free online course, “Civil Rights in American History,” which is now available in a special DVD box set.This course covers the Founders’ understanding of equality, natural rights, and civil rights; the quest for justice in America through the Civil War, during Reconstruction, and in the 20th century; and the danger posed to freedom and civil rights today by identity politics.
You can help promote “Civil Rights in American History” and receive a DVD box set of this timely and important new course by giving a tax-deductible gift of $100 or more today.
We produce free online courses, as we do all of our work, while refusing to accept government funding-even indirectly in the form of federal or state student grants or loans. We rely entirely on the support of private citizens who agree with our mission on behalf of liberty.
Please help promote Hillsdale’s free online courses and other educational outreach efforts in this critical time for America by giving your best gift today. I’ve included a secure link for you to make your tax-deductible donation below:
There are only a limited number of “Civil Rights in American History” DVD box sets available, so reserve your copy before they are gone.
Thank you for partnering with Hillsdale in its educational mission on behalf of liberty.
Warm regards,
Larry P. Arnn
President, Hillsdale College
Pursuing Truth and Defending Liberty Since 1844
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The Top 3 ‘Super Ager’ Habits And The 1 Thing You Can Do At Home To Snap Back Sagging Skin.
Looking younger was once thought to be a luxury that only women who had access to plastic surgery and costly professional treatments could enjoy. But now, a game-changing discovery is finally leveling the playing field, as more and more women learn to fight back against their body’s “aging switch.” According to experts, not only is it possible to slow down the appearance of aging — it turns out, women can easily do it themselves. That’s why the latest anti-aging trend isn’t plastic surgery or expensive creams, but a simple daily ritual.
New video: Why won’t anybody in the Biden administration answer whether or not they believe an unborn baby is a human being?
It’s a straightforward question.
The president of the Philippines is pretty serious about the Covid vaccine: “You choose, vaccine or I will have you jailed”
Okay, so this escalated quickly:
Buckle up as we dismantle an MSNBC opinion columnist’s attempt to take down Ted Cruz over his recent speech on Critical Race Theory.
In a clearly desperate attempt to maintain the illusion that Critical Race Theory (CRT) is only about diversity and racial healing, author Kevin Kruse pulls out nearly every trick in the book to try to counter Ted Cruz’s plain-talk truth telling.
Biden’s America: 41% increase in cops killed so far this year
This is horrible.
Texas power companies are changing people’s smart thermostats without them knowing to save energy amid shortage
Thanks to all those next-gen solar and wind farms, Texas is having a hard year when it comes to energy. They couldn’t keep residents warm during what we northerners would call a little cold snap, and now in the summer they’re running out of energy to keep people cool.
Beauty queen drops straight fire on pageant: “Our generation is experiencing an epidemic of censorship and entitlement” 🔥
Watch this Miss New Jersey contestant absolutely demolish our victim-praising cancel culture while she stands unequivocally for free speech:
A female soccer star just came out as a man but is still playing in the women’s league and I have questions
So a few weeks ago I had my mind boggled by a great man by the name of Dan Dillon, who asked:
Portland takes out full-page NYT ad pleading for people to come visit
It’s not every day that you see a major U.S. city taking out a full-page ad in The New York Times to beg people to return, especially with the selling point that they aren’t that bad.
Jeff Bezos Gets Trolled – Over 85,000 Sign Petition to Stop Him From Returning to Earth
Earlier this month, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos announced that he will be blasting off with his brother for a space tourism trip on July 20th. 🚀
The world still hasn’t seen the 10 babies this South African woman apparently gave birth to earlier this month and the conspiracy theories are building
Several weeks ago, a South African woman was reported to have broken a world record by giving birth to 10 babies at the same time.
CNN’s Brian Stelter has lost 72% of his viewers this year
It’s almost like a certain Orange Man was the main reason people were watching CNN:
Intense video shows Florida police saving a teen about to jump off a bridge by handcuffing her to the railing
This is just a video of police and other heroic first responders doing what they do every dang day:
Yes, this gay pride event in Seattle is charging white people a “reparations fee” to enter
Well this is racist and sadly not entirely surprising:
WATCH: Psaki Won’t Say if Biden Believes a “15-Week-Old Unborn Baby Is a Human Being”
Watch this video of White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki dodging and refusing to answer the simple question, “Does the president believe that a 15-week-old unborn baby is a human being?”
Members of NSYNC and the Backstreet Boys have started a band called “Back-Sync” and now can someone please hold my hair back while I vomit
Okay people, this might sound crazy…
Washington Post headline says “Zoom fatigue hits women harder than men,” because of course it does.
This story reminds me of an old joke about what the headlines would be in the nation’s major newspapers should the world be ending:
Yes, this is a children’s book about abortion
So this is about the stupidest thing I’ve seen all week and I can’t believe someone thought this could even be a real idea.
I thought this trailer for “Karen” was an SNL skit the first time I saw it. It’s actually a real movie about a white woman terrorizing her black neighbors and it’s the craziest thing ever.
Seriously, how is this NOT an SNL skit???
Is CRT a cult? This video makes me feel like CRT is a cult…
Is it just me, or are the people in this video emitting super strong Jonestown vibes?
John Legend should speak out about his wife, and say this
There are a handful of things that you are not very likely to ever catch me doing. At the top of that list, right alongside watching a soccer game, is riding to the defense of a Hollywood/entertainment elitist who routinely relishes the opportunities his platform gives him to lecture ordinary Americans on culture and politics.
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com
Ric Grenell on ‘Wake Up America’ All This Week: 6:30am to 9am ET watch Ric Grenell on ‘Wake Up America’ as a special co-host with Rob Finnerty. Ric is talking about President Trump, Gov. Ron DeSantis, critical race theory, Iran, the California recall, and so much more! Watch Newsmax via Directv 349, Xfinity 1115, Dish 216, Uverse 1220, Fios 615, Optimum 102, Mediacom 277, Spectrum, Cox, Suddenlink, WOW!, or on FREE OTT via Roku, YouTube, Xumo, Pluto, Apple TV, more! Find all channels: More Info Here
You might have missed this earlier…This is important!
Have you looked up your name yet? This new search engine exposes public records of millions of Americans, with a simple computer search.
You could be surprised by what’s publicly available on you.
Look up your own name to see what others could potentially see about you, or search anyone you know.
The process is quick and easy:
Step 1) Enter Name and State
Step 2) See Results.
This might be the most important web search that you do.
NOTICE: This site contains REAL police records, background reports, photos, court documents, address information, phone numbers, and much more. Please be careful when conducting a search and ensure all the information you enter is accurate.
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99.) MARK LEVIN
June 22, 2021
Posted on
On Tuesday’s Mark Levin Show, Rather than get rid of the filibuster, we should get rid of the democrat party. It’s the democrat party that fought for slavery and abused the filibuster in the name of slavery and Jim Crow, and yet the Democrat party stands despite its support of racism. If HR-1 had been in the original Constitution, we wouldn’t have had a Constitution. Limits were intentionally placed out of grave concern that the federal government would take over the election process because the centralization of the voting process would lead to tyranny. The Bill of Rights, the thing meant to protect us from government, is constantly under attack from democrats and the media. Also, parents across the country are speaking out against Critical Race Theory. We are going to have to lead the movement against racism being taught in our schools. School districts are spending our tax dollars to train professionals to spread CRT. The American Marxists don’t understand that we won’t bow down to them because we are proud of our history, which is something most countries can’t say. Later, President Biden and the democrats don’t have the answers for gun violence in inner cities, because they’ve been running them for decades. They are too busy attacking police and law-abiding citizens, and will never talk about black-on-black crime despite it being a horrific fact. The evil is in the person using the gun, but democrats will always attack the gun and the manufacturer.
America cannot survive this coup….. It was the love of this country – individual rights, freedom of speech and expression and equality for all before the law — that bound us together. Not race, creed or colour but an enlightened idea of …
‘Some of the core tenets of the “woke” ideology spreading around the country mimic ideas used to justify many of the most horrendous atrocities of the past century, according to several experts.’
‘An advisory opinion from an obscure official may complicate the Biden administration’s efforts to push trillions of dollars in new taxes and spending.” Democrats will either have to jettison elements of the Biden agenda, or cram their entire …