Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday August 17, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
August 17 2021
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Good morning from Washington, where President Biden says he doesn’t regret pulling out of Afghanistan, sparking the Taliban’s rapid takeover just before the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks plotted there. Fred Lucas reports on the fallout, while Luke Coffey assesses the chaos and consequences, both in a commentary and as today’s podcast guest. Virginia Allen samples reaction on social media. Plus: the left’s manipulation of children to open our borders; thousands are left vulnerable by the Colonial Pipeline hacking; and what America has that China doesn’t. On this date in 1998, President Bill Clinton becomes the first sitting president to testify before an independent counsel as the subject of a grand jury investigation.
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 8.17.21
Good Tuesday morning.
Ballard Partners is making inroads into California, entering into a partnership with one of the lobbying firms in the nation’s largest state.
The Florida-based firm will team up with RESOLUTE Co. to ensure that Ballard Partners’ extensive roster of clients has access to an on-the-ground team in California.
“Ballard Partners is committed to fully serving our clients’ needs wherever they may arise,” firm founder and President Brian Ballard said. “With hundreds of premiere clients already being served in seven offices in Florida and Washington, DC, this strategic alliance now allows us to provide our clients with greater advocacy reach in the largest state in the nation. I am pleased to be affiliated with the top-notch team of professionals at Resolute.”
RESOLUTE Co. has a team of nine veteran lobbyists — all partners — in Sacramento, and the firm has extensive expertise in a wide range of issue areas, including high-tech/social media, finance, energy, education, water, health, education and gaming.
The RESOLUTE Co team, whose partners are consistently named among the most influential advocates in California, provides clients with strategy development, policy analysis, relationship-building, campaign consulting, public communications and direct lobbying services.
“Our firm is honored to forge this strategic alliance with one of the nation’s top lobbying firms,” said David Quintana, a founding partner at RESOLUTE Co. “With our new relationship with Ballard Partners, Resolute can offer our clients the significant highest-level bipartisan reach that Ballard brings both in Washington, DC and the megastate of Florida.”
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The Florida Ports Council announced Monday that it’s brought on Emily Fisher as vice president of programs and planning and promoted Christy Gandy to vice president of operations.
Fisher brings a wealth of business, economic development, and member relations experience to FPC. Her resume includes positions at the Florida Chamber of Commerce and the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity. She is a graduate of Central Michigan University, where she earned a degree in communications and Spanish.
In her new role, Fisher will lead programmatic efforts related to the Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic Development Program, as well as managing seaport relations.
“We’re pleased to have Emily join the seaports team and are excited about her ability to transfer her business and economic development experience to help benefit Florida’s seaports,” FPC President and CEO Michael Rubin said.
Gandy is a 15-plus year veteran of the FPC, assisting with daily operations of the Tallahassee-based office and leading all event planning for regularly scheduled meetings with executives from Florida’s 15 seaports. She is actively involved with the Florida Society of Association Executives.
“Christy is a dedicated team member, routinely helping ensure we provide the best meetings and events for our members and stakeholders and she is well-deserving of this promotion,” Rubin added.
Fisher and Gandy will report to Rubin, who recently took over as president and CEO. He has worked at FPC since 1998.
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Breaking overnight — “U.S. to advise boosters for most Americans eight months after vaccination” via Sharon LaFraniere of The New York Times — The Joe Biden administration has decided that most Americans should get a coronavirus booster shot eight months after they completed their initial vaccination, and could begin offering the extra shots as early as mid-September, according to two administration officials familiar with the discussions. Officials are planning to announce the decision as early as this week. Their goal is to let Americans know now that they will need additional protection against the delta variant. The first boosters are likely to go to nursing home residents and health care workers, followed by other older people who were near the front of the line when vaccinations began late last year. Officials envision giving people the same vaccine they originally received.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
Tweet, tweet:
—@SenRickScott: After the disastrous events in Afghanistan, we must confront a serious question: Is Joe Biden capable of discharging the duties of his office, or has time come to exercise the provisions of the 25th Amendment?
—@DavidAstinWalsh: Honestly, the Twitter freakout over the Biden speech from across the political spectrum is based on disbelief that an American President could actually take active steps to end the forever war.
—@FordM: Biden is pretty confident that the American public’s view of Afghanistan is closer to his own than to a lot of other folks in D.C. and on Twitter, and he has few reasons to think otherwise.
—@AlexThomp: Worth remembering that some (Donald) Trump-aligned Republicans argued last fall that Biden was the candidate who’d continue wars in the Middle East and Trump was the withdrawal candidate.
Tweet, tweet:
—@LoriBerman: @GovRonDeSantis has considerable influence over his vaccine-hesitant Republican base. Most would also agree that preventing severe illness is preferable to treating severe illness, particularly as our hospital capacity wanes. So, where’s his vaccine campaign?
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 1; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 7; Boise vs. UCF — 16; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 17; Notre Dame at FSU — 19; NFL regular season begins — 23; Bucs home opener — 23; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 28; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 28; Alabama at UF — 32; Dolphins home opener — 33; Jaguars home opener — 33; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 34; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 38; ‘Dune’ premieres — 45; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 45; MLB regular season ends — 47; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 52; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 70; World Series Game 1 — 71; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 71; Georgia at UF — 74; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 77; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 77; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 82; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 83; Miami at FSU — 88; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 94; FSU vs. UF — 102; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 106; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 115; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 122; NFL season ends — 145; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 147; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 147; NFL playoffs begin — 148; Super Bowl LVI — 180; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 220; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 264; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 289; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 325; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 337; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 416; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 451.
— TOP STORY —
“Early COVID-19 counts push Hillsborough schools to consider stronger mask rules” via Marlene Sokol and Jeffrey S. Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — With alarming numbers of COVID-19 cases reported in Hillsborough County public schools during the first week of classes, the School Board will hold a special meeting Wednesday to discuss additional protections against the virus. “We’re at that place. It’s unavoidable,” Board Chair Lynn Gray said Monday. Hillsborough’s case count stood at 731 at midday, nearly 20 times higher than after the first week of classes in 2020. As of 7 a.m., the district said 5,599 students and 316 employees were either in isolation, tested positive for COVID-19, or quarantine, which means they had close contact with a positive case.
—“5K+ Hillsborough Co. students in quarantine/isolation, emergency meeting called for Wednesday” via WFLA
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida COVID-19 hospitalizations drop, intensive care patients and cases rise” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union — After breaking records daily for two weeks, Florida hospitals reported Monday that the number of COVID-19 patients dropped for the second consecutive day. But the number of coronavirus patients in intensive care continued to rise, as did the number of new cases and deaths, including one Jacksonville hospital that saw 19 COVID-19 patients die over the course of three days at its two area campuses.
“Florida hospital ‘stacking patients in hallways,’ report says” via WFLA — Capacity issues are continuing to plague Florida hospitals as the surge of COVID-19 patients puts a strain on staff and resources. A paramedic out of Sumter County said issues have escalated to the point where they were “stacking patients in the hallways, stacking patients in the waiting room.” The paramedic, Stew Eubanks, said that usually, his calls would be minor situations, but now it’s mostly severe cases. In The Villages, the retirement community that he serves, there’s been an increase of patients who were sicker than others before. Data showed that 83.9% of 251 Florida hospitals’ inpatient beds are in use. About 28% of those were being used for COVID-19 cases.
“Ron DeSantis continues to promote early COVID-19 treatment as critics call for prevention” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis is promoting a COVID-19 treatment that could reduce hospitalizations for the disease. The Governor’s push for monoclonal antibody treatment in Orlando comes as Florida continues seeing heightened hospitalization rates with the delta variant. Meanwhile, other officials are focusing their messages on wearing masks and getting vaccinated. Earlier this month, the FDA approved the injectable antibody cocktail as an early treatment for COVID-19 infections in people at high risk for severe infections, such as those who are immunocompromised. “At the end of the day, reducing hospital admissions has got to be a top priority,” DeSantis said.
“Nikki Fried calls on DeSantis to declare state of emergency, accept fed help” via Laura Cassels of Florida Phoenix — Citing new state and federal COVID-19 statistics, Fried called on DeSantis to declare a state of emergency and draw down federal disaster assistance. In her daily announcements of updated COVID-19 data, Fried said conditions in Florida are becoming dire. Yet, DeSantis has shown no interest in issuing emergency orders other than to block local restrictions such as mask-wearing mandates. “Our hospitals and our health care workers are overwhelmed. We’re hearing reports that pediatric and rural hospitals across the state are filling up and some already at capacity,” Fried said during a Zoom event later posted on her department’s social media pages.
Assignment editors — Agriculture Commissioner Fried will hold a briefing ahead of the State Board of Education’s emergency meeting on mask requirements, 3:15 p.m., the Cabinet Room. The briefing will also be livestreamed on The Florida Channel. Press RSVP to Caroline.Stonecipher@fdacs.gov.
“No more J&J for Florida’s mass vaccination sites” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Johnson & Johnson one-shot vaccines will no longer be available at Florida’s mass vaccination sites, at least not anytime soon. That’s because the federal government has stopped shipping that vaccine to Florida, DeSantis said Monday. “No sites are getting them now because we haven’t gotten a shipment from the federal government since May 2. That was the last time the state got J&J,” DeSantis said Monday in Orlando. DeSantis explained after Orange County officials announced that effective Monday, they could no longer offer the Johnson & Johnson vaccine at Camping World Stadium, the mass-vaccination site that DeSantis was visiting in Orlando.
“Still no plans for daily COVID-19 reports from Florida as DeSantis says CDC’s are the ‘same thing’” via WTSP — During a news conference Monday promoting one of the state’s rapid response sites administering monoclonal antibodies to patients, DeSantis shed some light about daily case reporting and the status of Florida’s supply of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. In the past, the Governor’s Office said there were “no plans to resume the daily reports” that became commonplace during the pandemic and into 2021. The Florida Department of Health switched to releasing reports once a week in early June as new COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations dropped.
“Norwegian Cruise Line makes 1st return to Florida, proof of COVID-19 vaccination required” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — Norwegian Cruise Line has joined the sailing party from Florida with only COVID-19 vaccinated guests, thanks to a federal court injunction over a new state law that prohibits proof of inoculation. The company’s return to the state was uncertain as it wanted to stick with its vaccinated-only guest policy despite the passage of the law July 1 in Florida that would fine companies $5,000 per instance for demanding so-called vaccine passports. A federal judge earlier in August granted a preliminary injunction against enforcing the law while the case continues. With the ruling, NCL was able to move forward with Sunday’s departure of Norwegian Gem as planned from the company’s new terminal at PortMiami.
“Despite rising COVID-19 cases, FL public college students will be back on campuses this fall” via Issac Morgan of the Florida Phoenix — Florida’s 12 public universities are strongly recommending but not enforcing any vaccine or mask requirements for students, faculty, and staff — even though COVID-19 cases have been skyrocketing. Still, sporting events and other campus activities that bring large crowds will resume as well on Florida’s public campuses. The Florida Board of Governors recently issued health guidance to university officials, recommending everyone on campus get fully vaccinated, wear a mask indoors regardless of vaccine status, administer regular COVID-19 testing, and other safety practices. Meanwhile, the private Bethune-Cookman University in Daytona Beach has a different plan: “Faculty, staff, students, and visitors, regardless of vaccination status, are REQUIRED to wear masks both indoor and out while on campus,” according to its latest campus announcement.
“As Florida colleges near fall semester, students and staff question forced return to ‘normal’” via Danielle Ivanov of The Gainesville Sun — When colleges and universities across Florida resumed classes a year ago as COVID-19 cases spiked, most instruction was online, students who came to campus were required to wear masks and social organizations were under strict guidelines. Not so this year, despite a surge led by the delta variant of COVID-19 that strikes the young harder. The Board of Governors has told campus administrators to return to pre-pandemic operations within the bounds of CDC guidance. UF used similar language Friday when it said: “We expect everyone to wear a mask at all times when inside any UF facility, even if you are vaccinated.” But it’s not a mandate; many were unmasked at the summer graduation ceremony in the basketball arena the next day.
“Florida schools struggle to find bus drivers as virus surges” via Terry Spencer and Kelli Kennedy of The Associated Press — Many of Florida’s largest school districts are finding it difficult because of the pandemic to hire enough bus drivers, with some using managers and other stopgap measures to get students to class as the new school year begins. The Associated Press contacted most of the state’s 20 largest districts Monday, and many said they have not been able to fully fill their openings, forcing some drivers to handle extra routes. Other districts are asking parents to drive their children to and from school when possible to reduce the numbers requiring busing or putting transportation department managers back behind the wheel.
— CORONA LOCAL —
“Jerry Demings says state quit supplying J&J vaccines to Orange County” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Orange County can no longer provide Johnson & Johnson vaccinations as an option at its mass-vaccination site because the state of Florida has stopped supplying that brand to the county, Mayor Demings said Monday. At his Monday news conference on COVID-19, Demings expressed some concern that people in Orange County wishing to get the quickest protection might not be able to get the protection in time to prevent a COVID-19 infection. The Johnson & Johnson vaccine provides full protection after just one shot, while the other two brands, Pfizer and Moderna, require two shots, given at least three weeks apart.
“Orange County wastewater samples hint at continued surge in COVID-19 infections, hospitalizations” via Stephen Hudak and Ryan Gillespie of the Orlando Sentinel — The onslaught of new COVID-19 infections isn’t showing signs of letting up yet, with Orange County officials projecting continued high caseloads and new hospitalizations. That expectation stems from high concentrations of viral fragments found in wastewater samples, which showed about a 674% increase last week compared to May when COVID-19 was thought to be contained. “It’s a great barometer of where the coronavirus is located,” said Mayor Jerry Demings in a news briefing at the Eastern Water Reclamation Facility. Testing of wastewater is said to give between a four and 10-day preview of outbreaks.
—”‘I would not wish COVID-19 on anyone:’ Teacher hospitalized for 72 days pushes vaccine” via Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel
“Tallahassee’s grim COVID-19 record; 200+ new cases, 4 children” via Casey Chapter of the Tallahassee Democrat — Leon County broke a record with COVID-19: 208 people, including four children, according to hospital data. Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare reported 86 inpatients positive for COVID-19, a decrease of nine patients since Friday. Four of the patients are children, a spokesperson confirmed. Of the 86 patients, 11 are vaccinated, according to the hospital’s online dashboard. Capital Regional Medical Center reported 122 COVID-19 patients were in the hospital Monday, increasing 29 patients since Friday.
“Miami-Dade COVID-19 task force recommends mandatory student masks” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Miami-Dade County Schools’ health experts will recommend the School Board approve mandatory masks for the district’s 334,000 public school students when school starts Aug. 23, it was decided Monday. If the School Board approves the Medical and Public Health Task Force’s recommendation Wednesday, Miami-Dade will become the third school district in conflict with DeSantis’ emergency order that prohibited mask mandates for students. Taskforce members cited advice from the American Academy of Pediatrics, which recommends masks for all students when indoors, especially since students younger than 12 can’t get vaccinated. The decision was unanimous among task force members.
“Manatee schools make masks mandatory, but parents can opt out” via Ryan McKinnon of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — The Manatee County School Board voted to make masks mandatory in schools, with the option for parents to opt out, during an emergency board meeting Monday morning. The new policy is not dramatically different from the mask-optional policy currently in place, but board members hope the additional step of requiring parents to opt out officially will result in more children wearing masks, as cases of COVID-19 in schools continue to increase. The motion passed in a 3-2 vote, with board members Charlie Kennedy, James Golden and Mary Foreman voting in favor. Gina Messenger and newly appointed board member Chad Choate voted in opposition.
—”Manatee County Commissioner hospitalized with COVID-19, thanks community for support” via WFLA
“Declare state of emergency over COVID-19, Palm Beach Commissioner says; health official calls case spike ‘dire’” via Jane Musgrave of The Palm Beach Post — With hospitals straining under the deluge of COVID-19 patients, Palm Beach County Commissioner Melissa McKinlay is asking that a state of emergency be declared to deal with the ever-worsening pandemic. In a letter to County Mayor Dave Kerner and Administrator Verdenia Baker, McKinlay said a Belle Glade resident had to be taken to Orlando for treatment Sunday because Lakeside Medical Center was full and no hospital in the county had available beds. Earlier, a patient was transferred to a Miami hospital, she said. “We have an emergency on our hands, and we need to declare it,” she wrote.
“South Florida health care giant mandating COVID-19 vaccines for workers and volunteers” via Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — Baptist Health of South Florida, the region’s largest health care organization, announced Monday that all employees, medical staff and volunteers will need to get the COVID-19 vaccine by Oct. 31. “The last year and a half has challenged us all, and our community, in ways that we could have never imagined before. Our front-line caregivers continue to feel the strain of COVID-19 surges and continue to selflessly dedicate themselves to caring for our community, and we are grateful,” Baptist Health said in a statement. Baptist has 11 hospitals, including the flagship in Kendall, and nearly 24,000 employees, including 4,000 physicians.
“Kids as young as two weeks old hospitalized with COVID-19 in Pensacola as pediatric cases surge” via Emma Kennedy of the Pensacola News Journal — As COVID-19 hospitalizations in Escambia County climb to levels not seen so far in the pandemic and schools are back in session, the growing number of children hospitalized with the coronavirus has experts worried. Studer Family Children’s Hospital Pediatrician-in-Chief Jason Foland said he saw a two-week-old baby with COVID-19 go into cardiac arrest and has recently seen more children, from newborns to teenagers, in the intensive care unit or need critical care due to COVID-19. On Friday, 12 children under the age of 18 were being treated for COVID-19 at Escambia County hospitals.
“Two new COVID-19 testing sites will open this week in Santa Rosa County” via the Pensacola News Journal — Two new COVID-19 testing sites will open later this week in Santa Rosa County. Starting Aug. 19, NOMI Health will offer testing at two locations: Clyde L. Gracey Community Center and Midway Flea Market. Both sites will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Sunday. Testing at the Milton community center will take place outside in the south parking lot. Those who want to be tested will need to park in the south lot and walk up to the testing center.
— STATEWIDE —
“Tropical Storm Fred makes landfall in Florida Panhandle near Cape San Blas” via Cheryl McCloud of the Tallahassee Democrat — Tropical Storm Fred made landfall near Cape San Blas in Florida’s Panhandle Monday afternoon. Heavy rainfall and a dangerous storm surge are expected in the Panhandle and along the Big Bend area throughout the afternoon and evening. Dangerous storm surge inundation is ongoing along portions of the coast of the Florida Panhandle and the Florida Big Bend region. At 4 p.m. CT, the center of Tropical Storm Fred was located about 25 miles northwest of Apalachicola. Fred is moving toward the north-northeast near 9 mph, and this general motion is expected through tonight.
White House approves Tropical Storm Fred emergency declaration — Biden approved Florida’s emergency declaration issued for Tropical Storm Fred, which hit Northwest Florida on Monday. The declaration authorizes the Department of Homeland Security and Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate disaster relief efforts. “Specifically, FEMA is authorized to identify, mobilize, and provide at its discretion, equipment and resources necessary to alleviate the impacts of the emergency,” a White House news release said.
“Florida’s unemployment system was improving, but cybersecurity issues are new setback” via Lawrence Mower of the Miami Herald — When the pandemic hit last year, Florida’s unemployment system was in turmoil, with Floridians spending hours on hold with call centers and waiting weeks or months to receive benefits. Sixteen months later, Floridians using CONNECT face some of the same problems, but the state says cyberattacks, not the pandemic, are to blame. At least 58,000 applicants had their personal information, including Social Security numbers and bank information, stolen during a data breach, and some haven’t been able to get benefits since.
Happening today — The Revenue Estimating Conference meets to discuss funding for education, health programs, prisons and other state programs, 9 a.m., 117 Knott Building.
“Florida fears rain, hurricanes could cause Piney Point pollution to overflow” via Zachary T. Sampson of the Tampa Bay Times — State officials fear summer rains and hurricane season could cause the polluted reservoirs at the old Piney Point fertilizer plant property to overflow. That’s why the Florida Department of Environmental Protection is asking a Manatee County circuit judge to hold an emergency hearing and appoint an independent receiver to oversee the site, which is owned by a company called HRK Holdings. The state sued Piney Point’s owner earlier this month, seeking damages and help to shut down the site. It is now trying to accelerate that process.
“NCAA wants nondiscrimination vow from event hosts. What does that mean for Florida?” via Kirby Wilson of the Miami Herald — On Aug. 3, the NCAA made a statement that could have major ramifications for Florida, one of at least nine states to have banned transgender females from participating in women’s and girls’ scholastic sports. The NCAA Board of Governors asked hosts of future collegiate championships to “reaffirm their commitment to ensure a nondiscriminatory and safe environment for all college athletes.” In April, while legislatures around the country were debating transgender athlete proposals, the NCAA warned lawmakers that it could pull championships from states that passed the laws. When asked about the NCAA’s statement, state Rep. Chris Latvala, a vocal supporter of the transgender athlete bill as it cleared the Legislature, said he believes the organization is bluffing.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Keaton Alexander, Silver Palm Consulting: Oakley Transport
Phillip Ford: Lee Building Industry Association
Jennifer Kelly, Jonathan Steverson, Foley & Lardner: Envision Healthcare Corporation
Karl Rasmussen, Metz Husband & Daughton: Emerald Coast Utilities Authority
— 2022 —
“Al Fox, Tampa voice on normalizing Cuban relations, files to run for U.S. Senate” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — Fox, Tampa’s long-standing advocate for normalizing Cuban American relations, has officially filed to run in the 2022 Senate race. Fox had hinted at a run earlier this summer when he formed an exploratory committee but announced he had filed the paperwork to run in the Democratic primary on Monday. In Tampa, Fox founded the nonprofit Alliance for Responsible Cuba Policy Foundation. Through that organization, he took several politicians, religious leaders, and others to Cuba to inform people about what the island was really like.
“Teacher Teresa Tachon introduces CD 10 candidacy” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Tachon announced her Democratic candidacy to Congress, launching a run for the Orlando-based open seat in Florida’s 10th Congressional District. Tachon, who opened a campaign account on July 11, seeks to succeed Democratic Rep. Val Demings, running for the U.S. Senate rather than for a fourth term in the House. Tachon has served a 35-year career as a math teacher, track coach, mentor, club sponsor, union representative and adjunct college professor. She also pointed out she is the daughter of a police officer and said she learned the value of public service as a young girl while observing the positive impact her father had on his community.
Fresh off embargo — Three progressive House Democrats back Omari Hardy in CD 20 contest — Hardy has secured endorsements from three of his Democratic House colleagues as he looks to replace the late U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings in Florida’s 20th Congressional District. Democratic Reps. Anna Eskamani, Travaris McCurdy and Carlos Guillermo Smith — who all align with the party’s progressive wing — are backing Hardy’s bid. “This is a Special Election for the soul of our party,” Eskamani said in an early Tuesday statement announcing her endorsement. “Omari Hardy has been one of the strongest voices pushing back against special interests that dominate Florida politics. He’s been willing to risk his political career to do what’s right, and we need more people like him in Congress.”
“Major labor union endorses Dale Holness in crowded race to replace Alcee Hastings” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — The Florida chapter of the Service Employees International Union is backing Holness as he pursues the seat in Florida’s 20th Congressional District. Holness is competing in a crowded Democratic Primary for the chance to succeed the late U.S. Rep. Hastings, who died earlier this year after a battle with cancer. Holness was one of 11 Democrats who qualified for the race earlier this month. Add Republican and third-party candidates, and 17 people are running in the Special Election to replace Hastings. SEIU Florida is one of the state’s largest unions, making the endorsement a significant get in the Democratic Primary. The organization represents more than 55,000 active and retired workers in the state.
“Jason Fischer files for Duval Property Appraiser” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Fischer, who currently represents House District 16 in the southern part of Duval County, filed for Property Appraiser on Monday. Fischer folded his Senate campaign last week, endorsing Rep. Clay Yarborough after Senate Republicans coalesced around the incumbent from HD 12. One Republican is already filed. In his second term representing much of southern Duval County, Jacksonville City Council member Danny Becton filed months ago and has close to $100,000 on hand. Fischer, however, has fundraised much more aggressively, as his plan for years was to pursue Sen. Aaron Bean‘s Senate seat. Between his campaign account and two political committees, Fischer has roughly $1 million on hand.
Save the date:
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— CORONA NATION —
“Delta surge drives home painful truth: COVID-19 isn’t going away” via Julie Bosman and Mitch Smith of The New York Times — Americans have entered a new, disheartening phase of the pandemic: when they realize that COVID-19 is not disappearing anytime soon. A country that had been waiting for the virus to be over has been forced to recalibrate. Scientists had warned for months that the coronavirus was likely to become endemic and that herd immunity was increasingly unlikely. The virus has mutated and spread at a pace that has surprised some experts. “I think we all took a step back and thought things were getting better,” said Anthony Monteiro, 30, of Tampa, whose job in medical device sales frequently brings him into hospitals. “There are so many COVID patients; I feel like COVID is in the air everywhere I go now.”
“COVID-19 hospital deaths hit previous peaks in hot-spot areas” via Jonathan Levin of Bloomberg — The number of people dying with COVID-19 in U.S. hospitals is hitting previous highs in some hot-spot states with low-to-average vaccination rates, upending hopes the virus has become less lethal. In Florida, an average of about 203 people a day are dying in the hospital with confirmed or suspected COVID-19, matching the state’s November peak. That’s a daily average of about 9 per million residents, the data show. Louisiana, Arkansas and Missouri have also seen deaths among patients with COVID-19 soar in the past two weeks.
—“‘We are on fire’: Five U.S. states set records for COVID-19 cases as hospitalizations rise” via Rich Mendez, Robert Towey and Nate Rattner of CNBC
—“New York, D.C. to require health care workers to be vaccinated” via Adela Suliman, Kendra Nichols, Brittany Shammas and Lateshia Beachum of The Washington Post
—“Texas Supreme Court temporarily blocks mask mandates in two counties” via Jordan Frieman of CBS News
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“S&P hits record amid rising concerns about pandemic” via Damian J. Troise and Alex Veiga of The Associated Press — A choppy day on Wall Street ended Monday with the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average notching new highs after recovering from an early slide. The indexes each rose 0.3%, extending their winning streak to a fifth day, while the Nasdaq fell 0.2%. Technology and health care stocks accounted for much of the gain in the S&P 500. Despite the latest gains, there are signs that investors have turned cautious with the market at all-time highs amid rising coronavirus infections in the U.S. and around the globe. “Delta is ending up being a cascading concern,” said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA. “It seems the market really doesn’t want to make a commitment for the intermediate or long term.”
“Nearly a third of U.S. workers under 40 considered changing careers during the pandemic” via Heather Long and Scott Clement of The Washington Post — Nearly 1 in 3 U.S. workers under 40 have thought about changing their occupation or field of work since the pandemic began, conducted July 6 to 21. About 1 in 5 workers overall have considered a professional shift, a signal that the pandemic has been a turning point for many, even those who did not contract the coronavirus. Many people said the pandemic altered how they think about what is important in life and their careers. It has given them a heightened understanding that life is short and that now is the time to make the changes they have long dreamed of. The result is a great reassessment of work.
“Food stamp benefits to increase by more than 25% in October” via Ashraf Khalil and Josh Boak of The Associated Press — Starting in October, average benefits for food stamps — officially known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP — will rise more than 25% above pre-pandemic levels. The increased assistance will be available indefinitely to all 42 million SNAP beneficiaries. The increase coincides with the end of a 15% boost in SNAP benefits that was ordered as a pandemic protection measure. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said that with the change, the U.S. “will do a better job of providing healthy food for low-income families.” The aid boost is being packaged as a major revision to the USDA’s Thrifty Food Plan, which estimates the cost to purchase groceries for a family of four and guides the way the government calculates benefits.
“Global supply chains are being battered by fresh COVID-19 surges” via Enda Curran and Michelle Jamrisko of Bloomberg — The snarls in Asia — where the United Nations estimates around 42% of global exports are sourced — risk twisting their way through global supply chains just as shipments would usually ramp up for the Christmas holiday shopping season. As earlier snags have shown, problems that start in Asian ports can ripple slowly, showing up later as delays in places like Los Angeles or Rotterdam and higher prices for consumers. The flare-ups also worsen an already tortured year for exporters, with shipping costs sky-high due to a shortage of containers and as raw materials such as semiconductors become pricier and difficult to source amid red-hot demand.
“Fed officials weigh ending asset purchases by mid-2022” via Nick Timiraos of The Wall Street Journal — Federal Reserve officials are nearing an agreement to begin scaling back their easy money policies in about three months if the economic recovery continues, with some pushing to end their asset-purchase program by the middle of next year. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said at a July 28 news conference that the Fed was still “a ways away from considering raising interest rates. It’s not something that is on our radar screen right now.” A recent run of strong hiring reports has strengthened the case for the Fed to announce at its next meeting, Sept. 21-22, its intentions to start tapering, potentially as soon as its following meeting in November.
— MORE CORONA —
“Babies and toddlers spread virus in homes more easily than teens, study finds” via Emily Anthes of The New York Times — Babies and toddlers are less likely to bring the coronavirus into their homes than teenagers are, but once they are infected, they are more likely to spread the virus to others in their households. Experts said the findings can be explained, at least in part, by behavioral factors, including the fact that very young children require lots of hands-on care and cannot be isolated when they are sick. The study does not resolve an ongoing debate over whether infected children are as contagious as adults, and it does not suggest that toddlers are driving the pandemic. But it demonstrates that even very young children can still play a role.
“The world may never reach herd immunity against COVID-19” via Michelle Fay Cortez of Bloomberg — As COVID-19 surged last year, governments worldwide touted the hope of “herd immunity,” a promised land where the virus stopped spreading exponentially because enough people were protected against it. That’s now looking like a fantasy. The thinking was that the pandemic would ebb and then mostly fade once a chunk of the population, possibly 60% to 70%, was vaccinated or had resistance through a previous infection. But new variants like delta, which are more transmissible and have been shown to evade these protections in some cases, are moving the bar for herd immunity near impossibly high levels.
“Antibody cocktails to treat COVID-19 take off as delta surges” via Carey Goldberg of Bloomberg — Outside, in letters a foot tall, the wall of the trailer reads: “GET TESTED. GET TREATED. CRUSH COVID.” Inside, leathery recliners cradle patients as a freshly mixed concoction drips into their veins: a combination of two monoclonal antibodies once used so rarely that when Trump got it last October, it ignited accusations of special treatment. Now, amid the delta variant surge, the cocktail is rapidly becoming a more common, even routine medical response to a positive coronavirus test in a high-risk patient. Now, amid the delta variant surge, the cocktail is rapidly becoming a more common, even routine medical response to a positive coronavirus test in a high-risk patient.
“Why no one really knows how bad Facebook’s vaccine misinformation problem is” via Sharin Ghaffary of Vox — Over a dozen independent researchers who regularly study Facebook, including six who are specifically researching the spread of information about COVID-19, said the company makes it difficult for people studying the platform to access vital information, including how many times people viewed COVID-19-related articles, what health misinformation Facebook takes down, and what’s being shared on private pages and groups. Researchers aren’t just clamoring for more information about Facebook, either. YouTube, Twitter, and other social media networks also have troves of data about COVID-19 misinformation that could help researchers. But because Facebook is the largest social media platform for sharing news, the company is central to the debate about transparency in Big Tech and the societal impacts of its products.
“COVID-19 vaccines produced in Africa are being exported to Europe” via Rebecca Robbins and Benjamin Mueller of The New York Times — Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine was supposed to be one of Africa’s most important weapons against the coronavirus. The New Jersey-based company agreed to sell enough of its inexpensive single-shot vaccine to eventually inoculate a third of the continent’s residents. That has not happened. South Africa is still waiting to receive the overwhelming majority of the 31 million vaccine doses it ordered from Johnson & Johnson. At the same time, Johnson & Johnson has been exporting millions of doses that were bottled and packaged in South Africa for distribution in Europe. Many Western countries have kept domestically manufactured doses for themselves. That wasn’t possible in South Africa because of an unusual stipulation in its contract with Johnson & Johnson.
“Forget beating COVID-19. Europe is preparing to live with it.” via Jason Douglas and Eric Sylvers of The Wall Street Journal — The battle against COVID-19 is shifting into long-term, low-intensity mode in Europe, as countries including Germany, Italy and France go from seeking to end the pandemic to preparing to live with it. Unlike in the U.S., where some states were quick to drop restrictions amid optimism the virus was in retreat, there was never much expectation that the pandemic was over in Europe, where infections have spiked sporadically through spring and summer. The seven-day average of daily new coronavirus cases in the European Union and the U.K. was 95,500 Sunday, or around 186 cases per million people. Average cases per million in the U.S. are around twice that level, following a sharp upswing this summer as the virus penetrated largely unvaccinated states.
“Australia’s worst day of pandemic sees restrictions tighten” via Rod McGuirk of The Associated Press — Australia’s most populous state on Monday reported its worst day of the pandemic with 478 new infections and seven COVID-19 deaths as pandemic restrictions tightened in other parts of the country. The previous record daily tally in New South Wales was 466 new cases reported on Saturday. Two of the dead had received a single dose of a two-shot vaccine. The rest were unvaccinated, New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian said. Only 26% of Australians aged 16 and older had been fully vaccinated by Saturday. The first shipment of 1 million Pfizer doses that Australia bought from Poland arrived in Sydney overnight.
“Pregnant mom on oxygen months after getting COVID-19: ‘Had I gotten vaccinated, I wouldn’t be in this position’” via Arezow Doost of KXAN — Carolina Martinez remembers being rushed to the hospital. It was April 28. She was in her second trimester of pregnancy and had been diagnosed with COVID-19 after getting a fever and feeling fatigued. Martinez, who goes by Caro, said she was not vaccinated. She said it was because of “ignorance and fear.” “Had I gotten vaccinated, I wouldn’t be in this position that I am now,” she said. “I kind of woke up on June 2 thinking it was still April 28. I was not aware that, you know, a whole month had gone by. So I don’t remember much.”
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“How Republicans are slamming Joe Biden on Afghanistan” via Amber Philips of The Washington Post — Biden’s decision to end the U.S. military presence in Afghanistan was popular with Americans, but it precipitated a disaster for Afghanistan. What will it mean for him and his party politically? It’s hard to say because the political lines on Afghanistan have changed so much over the past few decades. Republicans used to be the hawkish party, and many prominent lawmakers still are. But Trump campaigned and won on a policy of ending America’s longest war. Still, Republicans are trying to capture both chambers of Congress in elections next year, and they see an opening to attack Biden, where he has traditionally been very strong, on foreign policy.
“The Washington Post and other major newspapers rush to evacuate their Afghan employees” via Sarah Ellison and Elahe Izadi of The Washington Post — The Washington Post and other major American newspapers have asked Biden for help in facilitating the departure of their Afghan staffers in the wake of the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan. Even as they covered the crisis in their own country, local staff who work for The Post, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, along with their families, were at the airport in Kabul on Monday, awaiting transfer out of the country. The group numbered 204 people. The publishers requested “support for our colleagues and … an unequivocal signal that the government will stand behind the free press.”
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Donald Trump hopes no one remembers he pushed for a full Afghanistan withdrawal in June” via Bess Levin of Vanity Fair — As you’ve no doubt heard by now, the Biden administration’s decision to leave Afghanistan has become an unmitigated disaster thanks to the shocking speed with which the Taliban have taken control of the country. Biden’s three presidential predecessors aren’t exactly in a position to criticize. Of course, understanding why they should keep their thoughts on the matter to themselves at this time requires self-awareness — something Trump was born without, hence his absurd call over the weekend for Biden to resign. Weirdly, Trump did not note in his statement that less than two months ago, he was bragging about how he started the Afghanistan withdrawal process and claiming the Biden administration was powerless to stop it.
“Trump is curiously quiet on mask mandates” via Sam Stein and Meridith McGraw of POLITICO — Trump’s relatively muted approach to the masking debates may be owed to his other obsessions — predominantly, spreading the false idea that the 2020 election was rigged. But it still stands in contrast to a number of top Republican elected officials. DeSantis and Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas have both openly championed laws prohibiting mask mandates in schools. Trump can hardly be described as a paragon of sound public safety conduct. As President, his opposition to masking was so pronounced that he became an emblem for anti-masking behavior — confidently whipping one off his face just moments after returning from the hospital with a serious COVID-19 diagnosis. In his post-presidency, he has not been pictured wearing a mask.
“Title, cover and details of new Trump book from Bob Woodward and Robert Costa revealed” via Jamie Gangel and Elizabeth Stuart of CNN — First, it was “Fear,” then it was “Rage,” now it is “Peril.” That is the title of the highly-anticipated third book about Trump from Woodward, this time written with co-author Costa, a Washington Post national political reporter. “Peril” is scheduled for release on Sept. 21, and will closely examine the tumultuous time spanning the November 2020 election, the Jan. 6 insurrection, and Biden‘s inauguration. The book will reveal how the transition period was “far more than just a domestic political crisis” and “one of the most dangerous periods in American history.”
“This pro-Trump lawyer was a rising ‘stop the steal’ star. His firm erased him.” via Adam Rawnsley and Asawin Suebsaeng of The Daily Beast — As Trump was waging a multi-front campaign to cling to power, a little-known attorney and self-described former special ops commander began working on Trump’s behalf, badgering senior Justice Department officials in an effort to rope them into the plot. In the months since Trump’s failed coup, government documents and emails have further revealed the extent of Kurt Olsen’s behind-the-scenes crusade to try to keep him in power. The twice-impeached former President had clearly taken a shine to Olsen and his work. But since the fallout from the 2020 presidential election, it appears that Olsen’s former colleagues want to distance themselves from him — to the point where his onetime law firm has effectively disowned him and airbrushed him from its history.
— CRISIS —
“A former Trump State Department-appointee is among 9 alleged rioters charged with assaulting cops in the Capitol tunnel” via Erin Snodgrass of Business Insider — Federico Klein, 42, of Annandale, Virginia, is the first known Trump appointee facing charges related to the Capitol insurrection. Prosecutors allege that Klein was “among the first wave of rioters” to storm the Capitol building on Jan. 6 and physically fought against the front line of officers. Klein, who previously worked on Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, joined the State Department as a staff assistant shortly after Trump was inaugurated in 2017. At the time of the Jan. 6 siege, Klein held a “top secret” security clearance. He resigned on Jan. 19, one day before Biden was inaugurated. Prosecutors say Klein remained at the front of the mob “battling” officers, before shoving a stolen riot shield into police bodies.
“Guilty plea for Proud Boys supporter over Jan. 6 Capitol riot threats” via Jonathan Stempel of Reuters — A Proud Boys supporter pleaded guilty on Monday to making social media threats tied to the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol, including a threat to kill Democratic U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock of Georgia. The defendant, Eduard Florea, also admitted to storing a large collection of ammunition at his home in the New York City borough of Queens. Prosecutors said Florea used the moniker “LoneWolfWar” on Parler, a social media platform used by conservatives, to make threats before and during the riot. An FBI search of Florea’s home in Queens later uncovered more than 900 rounds of ammunition, 72 military-style combat knives, two hatchets and two swords, prosecutors said.
“Nancy Pelosi suggests Jan. 6 committee scrutinizing Jim Jordan, Jim Banks” via Andrew Solender of Forbes — House Speaker Pelosi on Monday suggested a select committee tasked with investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol is examining the actions of GOP lawmakers who “participated in the ‘big lie’,” specifically Republican U.S. Reps. Jordan and Banks, both of whom she blocked from serving on the panel. Pelosi said she vetoed them because they are “clowns” and “not serious.” Pelosi added of the two lawmakers, whose rejection from the committee prompted House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy to withdraw his other three appointments, “We’ll see what the committee finds out about them.”
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Marco Rubio, Rick Scott, others react to chaos of Taliban’s takeover in Afghanistan” via Steve Contorno of the Miami Herald — With Afghanistan in turmoil and growing fears of a humanitarian crisis, Florida’s two U.S. senators joined others in pointing blame at Biden for the Taliban’s swift return to power. U.S. Sen. Rubio, vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, accused Biden of failing to heed the intelligence community’s warnings when the administration pulled ground troops out of Afghanistan in May. U.S. Sen. Scott on Twitter questioned Biden’s capabilities to lead the country, adding: “Has time come to exercise the provisions of the 25th Amendment?” Scott refers to Section 4 of the 25th Amendment relating to succession of power that outlines how a President could be removed from office. It has never been invoked.
“Scott raises removing Biden from office over Afghanistan” via Marianne Levine of POLITICO — Sen. Scott, the chair of the Senate GOP campaign arm, questioned whether Biden‘s cabinet should remove him from office, a near impossibility, over the sudden collapse of Afghanistan. Scott, who is widely viewed as a potential 2024 presidential candidate, tweeted: “We must confront a serious question: Is Joe Biden capable of discharging the duties of his office or has time come to exercise the provisions of the 25th Amendment?” The Florida Republican’s remarks echo calls from Trump and his allies for Biden to step down, which began as the Taliban took control of the country and toppled the Afghan government.
“Charlie Crist announces nearly $500K in federal assistance for Tampa Bay’s manatee crisis” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — U.S. Rep. Crist announced on his congressional Twitter account Monday that federal dollars are headed to the Tampa Bay area to help save the area’s dying manatees. Crist said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is providing nearly $500,000 to help stave off manatee deaths occurring at unprecedented levels across the state. Much of that funding, according to Crist, will go toward Tampa Bay organizations working to save the manatees. July closed with an additional 61 manatee deaths, bringing the state’s total recorded manatee deaths for 2021 as of Aug. 6 to 905.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“South Florida organizations working hard to collect relief items and get them to Haiti” via Terrell Forney of Local 10 News — Many in South Florida have been looking for ways to help following Saturday’s catastrophic, deadly earthquake in Haiti. Five containers of food and two trucks filled with medical supplies are already on the ground in some of the earthquake-ravaged areas of Haiti, thanks to Food for the Poor. Bishop Oge Beauvoir is in Port-au-Prince. He felt his own home shake on Saturday. “Whenever there is a crisis, we are among the first to show up and help,” he said. Now he’s on the ground, helping coordinate disaster relief efforts. It’s a mission that has been nonstop since the initial deadly quake in 2010. “Once again, we count on you to help us, not only for the relief, but to help us with the affected, to rebuild their lives,” Beauvoir said.
“SFWMD reports continued progress on phosphorus reduction in Everglades Agricultural Area” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Phosphorus is one of several elements that can contribute to the growth of toxic algae in Florida’s waterways. Data from SFWMD shows phosphorus discharges dropped 59% in the 2021 water year — which ended April 30 — as compared to the base period established in the 1994 Everglades Forever Act. Each year, officials measure the amount of phosphorus loads at points of discharge in the EAA against “the total phosphorus load that would have occurred during the 1979-1988 base period,” according to the Act’s language. The 1994 law set up incentives to keep phosphorus discharges at least 25% below the levels seen during that base period. Water year 2021 saw a reduction more than double that target number.
“Tampa’s Weatherford Capital closes $355 million investment fund” via Jay Cridlin of the Tampa Bay Times — Weatherford Capital, the Tampa private equity firm managed by former Florida House Speaker Will Weatherford and his brothers, has closed its first investment fund at $355 million, well above expectations. The firm’s Weatherford Capital Fund I, launched in April 2020, exceeded its $300 million target and $350 million hard cap. Most of the investors are high-net-worth families from around the country, Weatherford said. The investment gives Weatherford Capital, which manages some $700 million in assets, what’s known as a “blind pool” of capital they can invest more nimbly, rather than finding a startup to invest in and then raising funds around that deal. The company aims to invest about $100 million to $150 million per year.
— TOP OPINION —
“COVID-19 is again the story none of us wanted to have to tell” via Mara Bellaby of Florida Today — Groundhog Day. If that’s how you feel, let me tell you: We do, too. You’ve probably seen that sentiment sprinkled in stories and columns as, once again, we’re redeploying our newsroom to focus on COVID-19 and its impact on Brevard County. From overtaxed hospitals to anxious restaurant owners to the school mask debate, we’re reporting on how the Space Coast is coping or not. According to the most recent data, Brevard added 4,344 new cases over the last seven days, an average of 620 new cases a day. That’s record-breaking in a bad way. It’s frustrating to be back here again.
— OPINIONS —
“Biden could still be proved right in Afghanistan” via Thomas L. Friedman of The New York Times — For years, U.S. officials used a shorthand phrase to describe America’s mission in Afghanistan. It always bothered me: We are there to train the Afghan Army to fight for its own government. That turned out to be shorthand for everything that was wrong with our mission: the idea that Afghans didn’t know how to fight and that just one more course in counterinsurgency would do the trick. The early signs, all sorts of Taliban abuses, are not promising. But we need to watch how, and if, they fully establish control. The Taliban’s main beef with America is that we were in their country. Let’s see what happens when we’re gone.
“Young people must vaccinate to compensate for DeSantis’ pandemic failures” via Ken Evans of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Summer is a special time; I know this after 40 years in the camping industry. I observe my campers’ progress every year, and it never ceases to amaze me. They develop respect for themselves, respect for others, and the confidence to face new challenges. Indeed, a lot can happen in the space of a single summer. Since this summer began, the COVID-19 vaccination rate in Florida has slowed by more than half compared to the preceding seven weeks, and the state is now reporting the most cases ever, accounting for one in five nationwide.
“Follow the dark money in Florida’s ghost candidate scandal” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — Watergate taught us to follow the money in politics. No wonder so many of its practitioners take elaborate steps to cover their tracks. A horrific example is the laundering of $550,000 that promoted three “ghost” candidates in last year’s races for the Florida Senate and manipulated the results in one. It’s fairly well-known who handled the dirty-trick dark money but not who originally gave it or whose interests were served.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
High school student JJ Holmes is pleading with the Governor to let districts adopt masking policies so he can go back to school. JJ has cerebral palsy; he uses a wheelchair and can’t go back to school if the other kids don’t have to wear a mask.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— JJ appeared courtesy of Agriculture Commissioner Fried, who continues to attack the Governor’s entire response to the COVID-19 crisis.
— The Governor held a news conference in Orlando Monday to talk about treating COVID-19 patients with Regeneron treatment … a monoclonal antibody cocktail for people who already have this disease. He even brought one of his top health bureaucrats because her daughter was treated with monoclonal antibodies.
— But Democrats in the Legislature says there is so much more the Governor should be doing to help hospitals deal with the new wave of COVID-19 cases.
— And finally, two stories: A Florida Man who can steal your catalytic converter in 90 seconds flat and a Florida Woman arrested for exposing his breasts to her husband … in jail.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Though delta variant spreads, Florida tourism skyrockets with 31 million visitors” via Alessa Dufresne of Inside the Magic — During the pandemic, travel slowed down … a lot. Still, now, as vaccination rollout has been made available and travel restrictions begin to loosen, Florida’s tourism rates are nearly back to a pre-pandemic state. During the second quarter of the quarter of 2020, Orlando International Airport only saw 700,000 passengers visit. This quarter, the airport has seen 5.4 million tourists enter the state. This totaled a 677.9% increase for Orlando International Airport alone. The total amount of tourists is only 2.2% less than in the pre-pandemic state, showing that tourism is almost completely back to normal. While tourism numbers jump, however, so are the state’s COVID-19 case numbers.
“The Nanny could be immortalized as a LEGO Ideas set” via Rachael Davies of Brick Fanatics — The latest LEGO Ideas set to achieve 10,000 supporters was created as an homage to the 90s TV show, The Nanny. The eponymous build is the second creation from Castor-Troy to make it to the LEGO Ideas review period, joining Movie Set in the second 2021 review. Made from about 2,900 parts, The Nanny is a recreation of Maxwell Sheffield’s house from the TV show on 7 East 75th Street NYC. It includes some of the main sets of the series, and of course, the main characters, with nine minifigures included. The rear has a removable facade, so you can interact with the characters inside.
“‘Like back-to-back championships’: Two more baby albino alligators at this Florida zoo” via Madeleine Barr of the Miami Herald — Welcome to the world, little ones. Wild Florida in Kenansville announced the birth of two albino alligators last week. Their proud parents, Blizzard (dad is 16) and Snowflake (mom’s 27), actually had four hatchlings last year. One of the little guys (or gals) appeared in the Facebook video announcing the recent birth. “That’s like back-to-back championships,” said a Croc Squad worker who showed off the adorable newborns next to their older sibling for size comparison. The two smallest, whose names haven’t been released, will be available for the public to see in the Gator Park area in the coming weeks.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Best wishes to Sen. Ben Albritton, Rep. Vance Aloupis, and former Rep. Sharon Pritchett. Also celebrating today is photographer Kim DeFalco and the “Grim Reaper” Daniel Uhlfelder.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Good Tuesday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,191 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
📈 Please join Axios’ Dan Primack and Courtenay Brown tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET for a virtual event about IPOs, and how companies go public. Guests include Nasdaq President Nelson Griggs and famed venture capitalist Bill Gurley. Register here.
Photo verified by AP
Above, you see hundreds of desperate Afghans running alongside a U.S. Air Force C-17 transport plane as it took off from Kabul yesterday.
- The amateur video played around the world, and this photo is atop front pages across America, making it a defining image of the exit debacle — and, many Democrats fear, Joe Biden’s presidency.
A legendary Democratic operative, and strong Biden supporter, told me: “Americans also wanted the Vietnam War to end. But its ending was traumatic and scarring, and definitely contributed to the impression that [President] Ford was bumbling and not in control of events.”
- Leon Panetta, SecDef and CIA director under President Obama, told CNN’s John King: “I think of John Kennedy and the Bay of Pigs [botched Cuba invasion in 1961]. It unfolded quickly and the president thought that everything would be fine. And that was not the case.”
- David Axelrod tweeted after Biden’s speech yesterday that the president “made a compelling case for WHY we are leaving Afghanistan … He didn’t do as well taking responsibility for HOW we got out, and the obvious failure to anticipate events.”
A senior national security official expressed deep frustration to Axios’ Hans Nichols about withdrawal plans left behind by President Trump.
- “There was no [Trump] plan to evacuate our diplomats to the airport,” the official said. “When we got in, on Jan. 20, we saw that the cupboard was bare.” Keep reading.
Some House and Senate Democrats want part of their $3.5 trillion budget plan to go to refugee resettlement for those fleeing Afghanistan, Axios’ Sarah Mucha, Alexi McCammond and Hans Nichols report.
- Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) called for the U.S. to “marshal an international coalition to evacuate every Afghan citizen who is fleeing for their lives.” Keep reading.
📺 Coming attractions: President Biden sits down tomorrow with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos. Tonight at 9 p.m. ET, Fox News’ Sean Hannity interviews former President Trump on Afghanistan and other topics.
- Catch up quick: Biden’s speech yesterday, which led Axios PM.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
The Biden administration is expected to recommend as soon as this week that most Americans get a booster shot eight months after their second Pfizer or Moderna dose, Axios’ Caitlin Owens reports.
- Officials also expect to recommend an additional dose of the single-shot J&J, but are still waiting for more data.
- The first boosters would likely be prioritized for those vaccinated early in the initial rollout, including nursing home residents, people 65 and older, and health care workers.
Most Americans support mandating masks in schools, and vaccinations to return to the workplace — and oppose state bans on either, managing editor Margaret Talev writes from the Axios/Ipsos Coronavirus Index.
- But Republicans go against that grain so disproportionately that it helps explain the defiant postures of many red-state governors.
57% of Republicans support state prohibitions against local mask mandates, like those in Florida and Texas, compared to 16% of Democrats.
- Midwesterners are most critical of mandates.
This stunning photo shows 640 passengers crammed into a U.S. Air Force C-17 that safely evacuated them from Kabul on Sunday, after the panicked Afghans rushed the massive cargo plane’s half-open ramp.
- Instead of trying to force the refugees off, “the crew made the decision to go,” a defense official told Defense One.
God bless that crew — and these Afghans abroad!
Former President George W. Bush, who began the 20-year war in Afghanistan, said in an overnight statement with Laura Bush: “Our hearts are heavy for both the Afghan people who have suffered so much and for the Americans and NATO allies who have sacrificed so much.”
- “The Afghans now at greatest risk are the same ones who have been on the forefront of progress inside their nation,” they continued.
- “The United States government has the legal authority to cut the red tape for refugees during urgent humanitarian crises. And we have the responsibility and the resources to secure safe passage for them now, without bureaucratic delay. “
Speaking to the military and veterans, the Bushes said:
Many of you deal with wounds of war, both visible and invisible. … You kept America safe from further terror attacks, provided two decades of security and opportunity for millions, and made America proud. We thank you from the bottom of our hearts.
Axios Visuals
In season two of our hit investigative podcast, “How it Happened,” Axios space reporter Miriam Kramer will take listeners inside the story of the Inspiration4 mission — the first space flight to orbit without professional astronauts.
- The podcast will chronicle the selection of four civilians and their training at SpaceX headquarters, ahead of a planned launch date of Sept. 15.
- Kramer brings listeners into conversations with the crew as they grapple with the risks of space travel and prepare their families for a mission that will shape the future of private space travel.
Listen now to the prologue, and subscribe to hear the new season when it launches on Aug. 31.
- Sign up to receive an email alert when the first episode drops.
Photos: Maxar Technologies
These are satellite images of Boulder Harbor Launch Ramp at Lake Mead in Boulder City, Nev., on May 18, 2020, and on July 17 this year.
Via CNN
CNN’s Chris Cuomo told viewers in his first show back from vacation that “when the time came,” he urged his brother, Gov. Andrew Cuomo, to resign over his sexual harassment scandal.
- Why it matters: Cuomo took part in a series of calls with the governor’s team strategizing how to respond.
Cuomo said during last night’s close: “I’m not an adviser. I’m a brother. I wasn’t in control of anything.”
- “[M]y advice to my brother was simple and consistent: Own what you did, tell people what you’ll do to be better, be contrite, and finally, accept that it doesn’t matter what you intended.”
Cover: Simon & Schuster
For “Peril,” coming Sept. 21, Bob Woodward and Washington Post colleague Robert Costa interviewed 200+ people at the center of the transition from President Trump to President Biden, which the authors call “one of the most dangerous periods in American history.”
- “‘Peril’ is supplemented throughout with never-before-seen material from secret orders, transcripts of confidential phone calls, diaries, emails, meeting notes and other personal and government records,” Simon & Schuster says in its announcement.
The title comes from Biden’s inaugural address, which referred to “this winter of peril and possibility.”
Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios
High Christmas demand is expected to clog already backed-up shipping channels, Linh Ta of Axios Des Moines reports.
- Why it matters: This year, procrastination could leave you giftless.
Companies will suffer bottleneck supply and demand through 2021 as they scrounge for raw materials, shipping containers and labor, says Jennifer Blackhurst, University of Iowa professor of business analytics.
- Nintendo Switch is among the “at risk” items.
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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
GOP claims Illinois census data shows new political maps are ‘unusable’
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Biden’s big bet on Afghanistan
DRIVING THE DAY
BIDEN’S POLITICAL CALCULATION, AND FALSE CHOICE, ON AFGHANISTAN — Before President JOE BIDEN took the podium to address the deteriorating situation in Afghanistan on Monday, senior Obama White House adviser DAVID AXELROD was on CNN giving him some free advice: “You cannot defend the execution here. … This has been a disaster,” he said. “He needs to own that failure. … He’s the commander in chief.”
As Axelrod said after, Biden did anything but. In an almost Trumpian speech from the West Wing, he admitted no tactical errors and said he had no regrets. Even as he asserted that “the buck stops with me,” Biden pointed fingers at everyone but himself: DONALD TRUMP tied his hands with his deal with the Taliban, the Afghan army wasn’t willing to fight, and some civilians didn’t initially want to leave.
Most of all, he defended the pullout he’s been advocating for years.
“I stand squarely behind my decision,” he said. “American troops cannot and should not be fighting in a war and dying in a war that Afghan forces are not willing to fight. … How many more generations of America’s daughters and sons would you have me send to fight Afghanistan’s civil war when Afghan troops will not?”
Of course, that’s not the issue. And Republicans — as well as many in the media — were quick to point that out that he seemed to be suggesting a false choice between an indefinite presence in Afghanistan and a bungled evacuation.
But Biden is making a political calculation here: that everyday Americans care more about getting out of Afghanistan than the fate of Afghans left behind. That the more he focuses on the larger message of ending the longest war in U.S. history, the quicker this foreign policy black eye will heal.
How that gamble turns out for the president hinges on how bad the situation gets over the next few days. Biden promised that “we intend to transport out thousands of American citizens” as well as Afghans and their families who need to be evacuated. Will there be more scenes of chaos and death, or can the military bring some semblance of order to the evacuation mission?
Here’s one bad sign for Biden: A new POLITICO/Morning Consult poll conducted amid the chaos in Afghanistan shows an eye-popping plummet in the percentage of voters who support the U.S. withdrawal. Details from Maeve Sheehey: “The poll, conducted from Aug. 13-16 among a sample of 1,999 registered voters, indicated that just 25 percent of American voters think the withdrawal from Afghanistan is going well. Just 49 percent of voters continued to support the withdrawal, down from 69 percent in April.”
THE STEP BACK — There’s already a lot of talk about how this will affect Biden’s presidency long-term. As our Natasha Korecki, Christopher Cadelago and Ally Mutnick write, “the cataclysmic series of events over the last several days marked the most devastating period of the Biden presidency, and it comes at the precise moment when a growing number of Americans were already fearful of inflation and doubting Biden’s handling of the Covid-19 pandemic and the economy. Now, Biden’s credibility on the world stage is on the line.
“It all adds up to a troubling political scenario for Democrats, who had held up their president as a seasoned international statesman, the ‘adult in the room’ who promised to reverse what they viewed as the reckless policies of Trump. Republicans are moving quickly to try and ensure the foreign policy blunder sticks, in an attempt to undermine one of Biden’s core political selling points — his steady hand — and to bludgeon down-ballot candidates in tough districts who believe the best way for their party to hold power is to pitch themselves as ‘Biden Democrats.’”
Meanwhile, Hill Democrats are stewing over the fiasco, as CNN’s Lauren Fox, Jeremy Herb and Annie Grayer report — especially after several warned the administration about such a crisis. Said Rep. CHRISSY HOULAHAN (D-Pa.), an Air Force veteran: “These past few days have been difficult to process, and not because the Taliban’s progress was surprising … In fact, the opposite. We sounded the alarm, and our dire warnings fell on deaf ears.” Rep. TOM MALINOWSKI (D-N.J.) was clearly peeved about White House talking points tone-deafly blaming Afghans when he told them this: “Anyone writing goddamn talking points should get on the visa line,” he told them.
— In the Senate, Intelligence Chair MARK WARNER (D-Va.) has vowed his own investigation that asks “tough but necessary questions about why we weren’t better prepared for a worst-case scenario involving such a swift and total collapse of the Afghan government and security forces.”
— Related: “‘Cut the bureaucratic b.s.’: Inundated lawmakers call for speeding up Afghanistan evacuations,” by Sarah Ferris, Heather Caygle, Olivia Beavers and Nicholas Wu: “Dozens of members of Congress are joining the scramble to evacuate people trapped in Afghanistan, urging President Joe Biden’s administration to expedite the relocations.”
In Europe, our allies are watching closely and don’t like what they see. Per John Harris and Ryan Heath, “the original euphoria among most traditional allies about the departure of Donald Trump from the White House is now commonly tempered by concern about whether his successor is sufficiently commanding and reliable to restore the United States to being a constructive force in a chaotic and interdependent world. The timeless ambivalence about U.S. presumptions of being the world’s policeman looks different at a moment when the policeman may have scant ability or interest in keeping the streets safe in any of the world’s most dangerous precincts.” More from POLITICO EU’s Matthew Karnitschnig: “Disbelief and betrayal: Europe reacts to Biden’s Afghanistan ‘miscalculation’”
A SOBERING READ — “He spent his adult life helping U.S. soldiers. Now, he’s desperately fleeing Afghanistan,” by Wesley Morgan for WaPo, with quotes like these from an Afghan interpreter talking to a U.S. soldier over the phone: “If I don’t make it, thanks for everything … Thank you, brother. It was an honor working side-by-side with the U.S.”
A SOBERING DETAIL, via WaPo’s Karen DeYoung, Dan Lamothe and Susannah George: “People familiar with the situation said the pilots declared an emergency when they could not put their landing gear up. The crew diverted and landed in a nearby third country, and some human remains were found in the wheel well when it was inspected, they said.”
VIDEO OF THE DAY — Former CIA analyst and Afghanistan war veteran MATT ZELLER, co-founder of SIV nonprofit No One Left Behind, rips Biden for suggesting Afghans chose to stay behind willingly. “We had all the people and equipment in place to be able to save these people months ago and we did nothing … I’m appalled that he thinks we only need to take 2,000 people. There are 86,000 people who are currently left behind … I have no idea why they — he — claims people don’t want to leave Afghanistan. I have a list of 14,000 names right now of people who want to get out of Afghanistan.”
— CBS’ Fin Gómez (@FinnyGo): “NEW – @POTUS officially authorizes $500M additional funds for Afghan refugee relocation including for SIV applicants.”
COMING ATTRACTION — @GStephanopoulos: “I’m sitting down with President Biden on Wednesday for an exclusive interview. What would you ask him?”
WHAT WENT WRONG — “Departure of Private Contractors Was a Turning Point in Afghan Military’s Collapse,” by Foreign Policy’s Jack Detsch: “Military analysts trying to understand the stunning collapse of the Afghan military are increasingly pointing to the departure of U.S. government contractors starting a month ago as one of the key turning points.”
MORE — “Afghans who helped the West left in limbo as evacuation turns chaotic,” WaPo … “NYT, WSJ and WaPo newsrooms ask Biden for support for journalists in statement … “U.S. Veterans View Afghan Collapse With Anguish, Rage and Relief,” NYT
Good Tuesday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
BIDEN’S TUESDAY — The president is at Camp David, where he’ll receive the President’s Daily Brief in the morning.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 1:30 p.m. with national security adviser JAKE SULLIVAN.
THE HOUSE and THE SENATE are out.
PLAYBOOK READS
PANDEMIC
MAJOR NEWS — “U.S. to Advise Boosters for Most Americans 8 Months After Vaccination,” by NYT’s Sharon LaFraniere: “The Biden administration has decided that most Americans should get a coronavirus booster shot eight months after they completed their initial vaccination, and could begin offering the extra shots as early as mid-September … Officials are planning to announce the administration’s decision as early as this week. …
“The first boosters are likely to go to nursing home residents and health care workers, followed by other older people … Among other worrisome signals, Biden administration officials are particularly concerned about data from Israel suggesting that the Pfizer-BioNTech’s protection against severe disease has fallen significantly for elderly people who were vaccinated in January or February.”
— WaPo’s @emilyrauhala: “Two thoughts: (1) Almost certainly horrible news for people outside of US, most of whom are still scrambling for 1st dose (2) Considering admin’s previous statements on this issue and (+timing of news) hope WH will quickly share data behind this turnaround.”
FEELING DELTA’S WRATH — “Texas requests five mortuary trailers in anticipation of Covid deaths,” by NBC’s Jonathan Allen and Laura Strickler: “With Covid-19 surging across the state, Texas has requested five mortuary trailers from the federal government in anticipation of an influx of dead bodies.
“The mortuary trailers from FEMA will be stationed in San Antonio and sent around the state at the request of local officials. Department of State Health Services spokesperson DOUG LOVEDAY said the trailers were requested Aug. 4 after officials reviewed data about increasing deaths as a third wave of the coronavirus struck the state.”
— “Georgia to boost hospital funding to fight new coronavirus surge,” by Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Greg Bluestein: “Facing intense pressure to combat a surge in new coronavirus cases, Gov. BRIAN KEMP announced steps Monday to expand capacity at regional hospitals, increase health care staffing and shutter state offices on Sept. 3 to encourage public employees to get vaccinated.
“The Republican said he will create an impromptu state holiday on the Friday before Labor Day weekend in hopes of spurring state staffers to schedule their shots during their time off. … He also said the state will spend $125 million financing 1,500 additional hospital staffers, bringing the total number of state-supported health care workers to 2,800. And officials are readying 450 beds in nine regional hospitals for coronavirus patients.”
— “Louisiana’s health care system nearing ‘major failure’ under COVID surge, says Gov. John Bel Edwards,” by Baton Rouge Advocate’s Blake Paterson.
CURIOUSER AND CURIOUSER … “Probe finds evidence fired Tennessee vaccine official bought dog muzzle sent to her,” by Axios’ Nate Rau and Adam Tamburin: “A Tennessee investigation found evidence that the state’s fired vaccine chief, MICHELLE FISCUS, purchased a dog muzzle that she previously claimed someone had mailed in an attempt to intimidate her. Fiscus, who denied sending herself the muzzle in a Monday tweet, has characterized her firing as a political move driven by Republican state officials after she shared a memo citing state law about whether adolescents can seek medical care, including a COVID vaccine, without their parents’ permission.”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
HAITI EARTHQUAKE IMPACT — “Haiti quake death toll rises to 1,419, injured now at 6,000,” by AP’s Mark Stevenson and Evens Sanon: “The quake, centered about [80 miles] west of the capital of Port-au-Prince, nearly razed some towns and triggered landslides that hampered rescue efforts in a country that is the poorest in the Western Hemisphere. Haiti already was struggling with the coronavirus pandemic, gang violence, worsening poverty and the political uncertainty following the July 7 assassination of President JOVENEL MOÏSE when the earthquake sent residents rushing to the streets.
“And the devastation could soon worsen with the coming of Tropical Depression Grace, predicted to reach Haiti on Monday night with strong winds, heavy rain, mudslides and flash flooding. Rainfall could reach 15 inches in some areas, the agency said.”
— “U.S. sends aid to Haiti after quake but much more needed,” by Jonathan Custodio: “USAID has rushed in a search and rescue team from Fairfax, Va., helicopters and more than 50,000 pounds of equipment. And an assessment team is on the ground to determine what more the U.S. should do after Saturday’s quake, said SARAH CHARLES, a spokesperson at USAID.
“Members of Congress are also keeping a close eye on the situation on the ground in Haiti, said Rep. FREDERICA WILSON, who represents the Little Haiti area in Miami. The Congressional Haitian Staff Association is working with the House Appropriations Committee and the Haitian Consulate General’s office in Miami to assess how much funding should be directed to disaster response efforts in the southern part of the country, which has suffered the most damage, Wilson said.”
ECHOES OF 2017? — A new website called StoptheTravelBan.com? No, it’s not a flashback to Trump’s move to prevent people from mostly Muslim-majority countries from entering the U.S. It’s actually about the travel ban now overseen by Biden — the pandemic one, which has prevented many Europeans from visiting the U.S. for well over a year now. A group of affected families and couples launched the site Monday to tell their stories as part of an effort to pressure the Biden administration to let them reunite.
TRUMP CARDS
WHAT STEVE BANNON IS(N’T) UP TO — “Mystery shrouds nonprofit linked to wealthy Chinese exile: Steve Bannon leaves, records kept secret,” by CNBC’s Brian Schwartz: “The mystery surrounding a nonprofit group tied to wealthy Chinese exile GUO WENGUI, reportedly the key figure in a network accused of spreading disinformation about Covid vaccines and elections, has grown over the past year.”
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
PLEADING GUILTY — “Man Pleads Guilty to Threatening to Kill Newly Elected U.S. Senator,” by NYT’s Eduardo Medina: “The man, EDUARD FLOREA, 41, of Queens, pleaded guilty to posting violent threats against [RAPHAEL] WARNOCK, who had just won a runoff election in Georgia for the Senate and was later sworn in on Jan. 20. ‘Warnock is going to have a hard time casting votes for communist policies when he’s swinging with the fish,’ Mr. Florea posted online on Jan. 5, using an expletive before fish.”
BRINGING A NEW RALLY TO THE CAPITOL — “A Short-Lived Trump Campaign Staffer Is Now At The Head Of The Far Right’s Jan. 6 Counternarrative,” by BuzzFeed’s Sarah Mimms: “MATT BRAYNARD has been showing up throughout the far right’s push against the 2020 election. Now he says he’s raising big money and preparing for a new rally in Washington.”
MEDIAWATCH
CHRIS CUOMO SPEAKS — “CNN’s Chris Cuomo Addresses His Brother, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo: ‘I Did Urge Him to Resign, When The Time Came,’” by The Hollywood Reporter’s Alex Weprin
END OF AN ERA — “CBS Sells Black Rock Headquarters Building in NYC for $760 Million,” by The Wrap’s Thom Geier: “The network, which has occupied the 38-story, 491-foot-tall building since it opened in 1964, plans to lease back its space on a short-term basis. The transaction is expected to close before the end of the year. … [Buyer] Harbor Group plans a significant capital program to pursue a long-term leasing plan, with updates to the lobby, cafeteria and other tenant amenities.”
PLAYBOOKERS
STAFFING UP — “Lt. Gov. Kate Marshall to resign, accept White House post,” by the Nevada Independent’s Jackie Valley and Tabitha Mueller
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Enxhi Myslymi is now senior director of executive and corporate comms at Morning Consult. She most recently was director of media relations at the Milken Institute.
TRANSITIONS — Aaron Groce is now senior legislative assistant for Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.). He previously was legislative assistant for Rep. Jason Crow (D-Colo.). … Kevin Pérez-Allen is now VP for issue advocacy at BerlinRosen. He is a National Security Leaders for Biden and NALEO alum. … Scott Tittle will be managing director and head of government relations and external affairs at VIUM Capital. He previously was executive director of the National Center for Assisted Living. …
… Hilary Ranieri will be director of government affairs for national security at Planet Labs Federal. She previously was deputy chief of staff for Rep. William Timmons (R-S.C.) and senior adviser for the Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress. … McGuireWoods Consulting is adding Jessica Woodie as a VP for digital (previously at the Republican National Convention), Kate Zaykowski as VP for comms (previously at the Texas Railroad Commission) and Ellie Barmish as a grassroots and digital specialist.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Reps. David Price (D-N.C.), Jackie Walorski (R-Ind.) and Jay Obernolte (R-Calif.) … Louisa Terrell of the White House … Jon Lovett of Crooked Media … former Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.), now of the American Action Network and Hogan Lovells … Yahoo’s Brittany Shepherd … Ron Bonjean of Rokk Solutions … Sonali Dohale … Jamie Smith of WestExec Advisors … Jamie Gillespie of House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s office … Savannah Holsten of LMI … Carl Sceusa of Revv … Daniel Penchina … Sabrina Schaeffer of the White House Writers Group … Mike Buczkiewicz of “Morning Joe” … David Kusnet … Caroline Boothe of Liz Cheney world … Philip de Vellis of Beacon Media … HuffPost’s Elise Foley … Fox News’ Will Ricciardella … Jessica Gail … Michael Bekesha … Tyler Nickerson … Nick Hawatmeh … Andrea Christianson … Sam Haass … Katie McCarthy of Booz Allen Hamilton … Robyn Garnett … Diane Shust … Carlee Griffeth … Alyson Chadwick … Kensey Johnson … Alexis Williams … Matt Mittenthal of BuzzFeed comms … Dave McCormick of Bridgewater Associates
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.
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Oldest President Ever, But There’s No Adult In Charge
Top O’ the Briefing
This Puppet President Show Is Getting Old
Happy Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Let’s just say that my Benihana career was very short-lived.
There is so much to unpack on a daily basis with this clown car of an administration. We can’t really say that Joe Biden is inept or incompetent, because Joe Biden isn’t really there anymore. True, if Original Joe were in charge, things would still be a mess. He was a paste-eater too. However, he wasn’t quite as anti-American or commie as the cabal that is running his brain now.
I recently read something that referred to America as being “rudderless” at the moment. That’s not entirely true. The above-mentioned cabal of progressive special interests is in charge, but it’s focused on a lemming run off the leftist cliff.
Progressivism isn’t a grown-up approach to politics. As I wrote several years ago in my book Don’t Let the Hippies Shower, it’s the toddler mentality manifested as a political philosophy. No matter who is pulling President Puppet’s strings on any given day, we can’t really say that there are any adults in charge.
The rapid pace at which things are unraveling is proof positive that there aren’t any big people in the room making decisions. Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana tweeted a quick rundown of the low points yesterday:
It’s 16 months until the next election. At this pace, the Republic might not last 16 weeks.
Biden’s speech yesterday had the feel of an eight-year-old kid making excuses for breaking a lamp rather than a president stepping up during a time of international crisis.
Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas had some choice words after Biden’s slurring blame-fest:
Sen. Tom Cotton, a potential presidential opponent of Biden’s in 2024, called the speech “dangerously disconnected from reality.”
“The president seemed totally oblivious to conditions on the ground. He acts as if the withdrawal is going in an orderly fashion,” Cotton claimed on Fox News. “Yet surely he can see what’s happening on the ground in Afghanistan right now, which is a direct consequence of his ill-planned, disorganized decision to withdraw.”
The alleged president was so terrible yesterday that, for the second day in a row, CNN’s Jake Tapper couldn’t find it in his heart to slobber all over him.
After his grueling 10-minute workday, Ol’ Gropes was immediately whisked back to Camp David for some warm milk and the resumption of his leadership coma. He gets a little cranky when his afternoon nap time is disrupted by president stuff.
This is the third Briefing in a row where we’ve been going over this Afghanistan fiasco that — make no mistake about it — is all Joe Biden’s fault. We may have a theme for the rest of the week here. What transpired with the Taliban these last several days may have happened far away from here, but it is a perfect example of just how quickly things can fall apart when Joe Biden and his handlers are crafting policy with a Play-Doh fun factory.
Today’s headline was taken from a line in my most recent VIP column. I was pondering the fact that the lack of coherence and constant flailing we’re seeing from this administration never convey the feeling that there are any mature heads involved.
Only in Joe Biden’s America would I be the voice complaining about a lack of maturity.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
VodkaPundit: Food Stamps Get a 25% Raise While Your Paycheck Shrinks
FACEPALM: Pelosi Praises Biden After His Shameful Remarks on Afghanistan
Who ‘Zoombombed’ a Family Court Hearing with Screaming Naked People—and Why?
BREAKING: Defiant Biden Emerges to Defend His Catastrophe in Afghanistan
Biden’s Speech on Afghanistan Was Terrible, But This Part Made the Least Sense of All
OUCH: Biden Lost CNN’s Jake Tapper After Afghanistan Speech ‘Full of Finger Pointing and Blame’
Cotton Slams Biden’s Speech on Afghanistan: ‘Dangerously Disconnected From Reality’
This Week in History: Constantinople Saves Western Civilization From Islam
Social Services Nightmare: Did CPS Just Kidnap an American Idol Finalist’s Newborn?
Biden Goes Full America-Last, Won’t Prioritize Getting Americans Out of Kabul Over Afghans
EVERYTHING’S FINE. OPEC+ Rejects Biden’s Call to Pump More Oil
Zito: Trevor Donovan’s Approach to Hollywood and Celebrity Is a Much-Needed Throwback
Prager: ‘This Is Manifestly Not Saigon’ and Our Society of Lies
Shoot Somebody and Get $1,000 Per Month to Play Nice. Way to Go, de Blasio.
Family Feud. Even the New York Times Is Blaming Biden for Afghanistan
Townhall Mothership
Larry O: Biden’s Incredibly Shrunken Presidency
‘Squad’ Member Who Wanted to ‘Cancel Rent’ Received Thousands in Rental Income in 2020
Well, It Looks Like MSNBC Has Become the Taliban’s Voice in America
Biden Approval Average Plummeting, Under 50% for the First Time
Eyes Roll as State Dept. Issues Bizarre Statement After Taliban Receives Coveted Hamas Endorsement
Defund public indoctrination. More Than 160 Minnesota Principals Plot to ‘De-Center Whiteness’
Wait, they’re Democrats? Taliban Now Confiscating Guns From Civilians In Kabul
Cam&Co. Biden Not Cutting And Running From His Gun Ban Plans
Oral Arguments Set In SCOTUS Showdown Over Right To Carry
NBC: The real story is how Republicans “seized” on Kabul-Saigon parallel, you know
Poll: Majority in NY now want to see Cuomo charged with a crime
Um…Chris Cillizza: Seven months in, Biden isn’t looking so competent
NY assembly Dems: On second thought, we’ll issue a report on Cuomo after all
VIP
Kruiser’s ‘Worst Week Ever’—Living In a World That Has Killed Satire
VodkaPundit, Part Trois: Oh God, Not Like This
The Price of Incompetence: Biden Is Losing the Never-Trumpers
Is the Kamala Harris Takeover Coming Soon?
Trump Lawyer Jenna Ellis Suspended From Twitter
GOLD Schlichter: ‘Where’s Joe?’
GOLD Monday Mood Weekly Forecast: Chaotic
Around the Interwebz
Fat bear champ eats so many fish he can barely walk
The 36-Pound Comic Scrapbook That Chronicles the Great Depression
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
I’ve never signed anything in blood. As far as I know.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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Cut to the News
8409 Lee Hwy #3984
Merrifield VA 22116-9998
USA
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Biden Defends Afghanistan Strategy
Plus: A look at the demographic data from last year’s census released last week.
The Dispatch Staff |
Happy Tuesday! Congrats to the Atlanta Falcons, the first NFL team to be 100 percent vaccinated against COVID-19. Who’s next?
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- President Joe Biden addressed the nation Monday on the fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban. He defended his decision to withdraw, blamed the situation on his predecessor, criticized Afghanistan’s political leadership, and said, “It is wrong to order American troops to step up when Afghanistan’s own armed forces would not.”
- The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is opening an investigation into Tesla’s autopilot system, citing 11 incidents in which Teslas have crashed into emergency vehicles that were responding to earlier accidents.
- Malaysian Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin and his cabinet have resigned after Yassin lost majority support in the country’s parliament. Yassin had governed with a slim majority since March 2020. The country is experiencing a surge in COVID-19 cases, the economy has suffered because of lockdowns, and Yassin has had to contend with infighting in his governing coalition.
- Starting in October, food stamp recipients will see their monthly benefits boosted by more than 25 percent. The Biden administration announced the increase, which is permanent and the largest in the program’s history, on Monday.
- A rocket was fired from Gaza into Israel on Monday, the first since the 11-day conflict between Hamas and Israel in May. No one claimed responsibility, but various outlets reported it could be in retaliation for a clash between Israeli police and Palestinians Monday that left four Palestinians dead. The rocket was intercepted by Israel’s Iron Dome defense system.
- The Judiciary Committee of the New York State Assembly will continue its sexual harassment investigation of Gov. Andrew Cuomo even after he resigns, lawmakers said Monday. Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, a Democrat, had previously said that the investigation would end when Cuomo stepped down.
- Federal officials have declared a water shortage in Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the Colorado River basin, triggering reductions in supply to Arizona, Nevada, and northern Mexico starting in 2022.
- The death toll from the Haitian earthquake topped 1,400 on Monday. Search and rescue teams are continuing to look for survivors, but they are also preparing for Tropical Depression Grace, which could dump up to 15 inches of rain in some areas by the end of Tuesday.
Biden Speaks on Afghanistan
As chaos unfolded on the streets of Kabul Sunday, the U.S. commander in chief was nowhere to be found. President Biden spent the weekend at Camp David, where other than a paper statement from the White House Saturday he was out of the public eye.
When the president finally addressed the nation Monday—more than 24 hours after the fall of Afghanistan’s capital—the final words of his prepared remarks were met with a cacophony of reporter inquiries. None were answered, but many need addressing.
In his speech, Biden blamed former President Donald Trump for allegedly tying his administration’s hands, indicted the Afghan security forces for lacking resolve, declared ostensible victory over al-Qaeda, and—perhaps most baffling—placed responsibility on Afghan refugees now trapped under Taliban rule for their own plight. “I know that there are concerns about why we did not begin evacuating Afghans—civilians sooner,” Biden said. “Part of the answer is some of the Afghans did not want to leave earlier—still hopeful for their country.” Even if this dubious claim were true, it might be explained by the many times Biden himself—or others speaking on his behalf—reassured Afghans that a Taliban takeover was highly unlikely and that Afghans who had worked with U.S. and coalition forces would be protected. Still, before Biden spoke, more than 80,000 Afghans had applied for special U.S. visas to facilitate their departure from the country.
The scenes of despair and confusion at Hamid Karzai Airport suggest many Afghans were desperate enough to risk their lives to escape. Thousands of Afghan families fled on foot, jumped guarded walls, and crowded the tarmac in an effort to escape jihadist advances. At least seven people have been killed in the turmoil, some by U.S. troops and others by attempting to cling to departing jets. In addition to reports of Taliban fighters going door-to-door to execute and arrest those with ties to the Afghan government or foreign entities, there have also been stories of rampant sexual violence.
“I stand squarely behind my decision,” Biden said.
What to Make of the Latest Census Data
The U.S. census is one of our most venerable institutions—a great national bean-counting enshrined in the original text of the Constitution and carried out every 10 years since. But the 2020 census—our 24th, for those keeping score—has had a hard time catching a break. First, there were the attendant difficulties of trying to tally the population amid a global pandemic, which significantly delayed the results and has caused massive headaches for congressional candidates across the country who still aren’t quite sure where their districts are going to lie by 2022. And now the findings are finally coming out, in the typically slow news month of August—only to be immediately buried by a slew of newsier happenings, from multitrillion-dollar legislative fights in Congress to the collapse of Afghanistan.
The Census Bureau released its first batch of topline numbers, the raw headcount used to determine how many congressional seats belong to each state, back in April. (A quick refresher: The U.S. topped 331 million people, up from 308 million in 2010. California, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, and New York each lost one seat, while Florida, North Carolina, Colorado, Oregon, and Montana each picked up one; Texas gained two.)
But most of the information of particular interest to demographers and political strategists wasn’t released until last week, when the Census Bureau shared a much more detailed batch of data on age, race, and other demographic factors. Accordingly, we know now that America hasn’t just gotten larger—it’s also gotten older and more diverse.
The age data is straightforward. We already had a sense from April’s data that U.S. fertility had continued to slow over the last decade; the overall population growth of just north of 7 percent over 10 years was the slowest on record. But the latest age data shone a glaring spotlight on that phenomenon: Over the last 10 years, the total number of children living in America actually decreased, from 74.2 million in 2010 to 73.1 million in 2020. By comparison, the U.S. has 258.3 million adults, up from 234.6 million a year ago.
The census’s racial data was equally striking, although somewhat harder to parse. Here, increased diversity across the board was the story of the decade. The share of Americans who identified themselves as white only dropped to 57.8 percent of the population. As in prior years, America’s growing minority population was primarily driven by growth among Hispanics, who since 1990 have gone from 9 percent to 18.7 percent of the U.S. population. Asians, too, have roughly doubled their share of the population since 1990, and now make up 6.1 percent of Americans.
Worth Your Time
- When photojournalist Lynsey Addario first traveled to Afghanistan in 2000, she documented women running secret schools for girls and families staging underground weddings—music, dancing, and mixed-gender gatherings were banned under the Taliban. Ten years later, she recalls, she rode around with an Afghan actress whose hair and makeup were on full display as ”she blasted Iranian music and danced with her hands around the steering wheel.” In a piece for The Atlantic, Addario wonders how women will fare under the Taliban this time around. “The Taliban cannot take away who Afghan women have become in the past 20 years—their education, their drive to work, their taste of freedom,” Addario writes.
- In a piece for The National Interest, Michael Rubin argues that the Taliban’s ability to maintain control over the territory it has claimed might not be permanent. He points to the fact that Afghanistan’s neighbors (aside from Pakistan) live in fear of the Taliban and so will likely back militias and warlords who could take control of border regions and create a buffer. And then there’s Iran, which could seek to install a proxy in the culturally Persian city of Herat. “Get ready for the next phase in the Afghan civil war,” he writes.
- Late last week, the Biden administration told Americans that Kabul was not in imminent danger of takeover by the Taliban. On Sunday, we woke up to the news that President Ashraf Ghani had fled the country and collapse was imminent. In the Washington Post, Susannah George details how the Taliban took advantage of the uncertainty created by its 2020 deal with the Trump administration, which left many Afghan soldiers demoralized. Afghan police officers who hadn’t been paid in months were only too happy to take bribes from the Taliban.’ “‘Without the United States, there was no fear of being caught for corruption. It brought out the traitors from within our military,” said one Afghan police officer.”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- Is President Biden to blame for the collapse in Afghanistan? Did he ignore warnings that withdrawal would result in a Taliban takeover? Eli Lake joins Jonah on The Remnant to answer those questions and more.
- On the website today, Matthew Kroenig and Jeffrey Cimmino argue that the debacle in Afghanistan isn’t just bad for the obvious reasons, but also because it will undermine the Biden administration’s own foreign policy goals.Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
Tuesday, August 17, 2021
‘Counting Their Final Hours’: Taliban Conducting ‘Door To Door’ Searches For U.S. Allies, Journalists, Reports Say
Navy SEAL Who Killed Osama Bin Laden Calls For General Milley To Resign, Blasts Biden: ‘A Worthless Politician’
U.S. Suspends Flights At Kabul Airport After Afghans Swarm Runway, Cling To Departing Planes
Trump Hammers Biden: ‘Someone Should Ask Him’ What He’ll Surrender Next ‘If They Can Find Him’
U.S. Troops Kill Two Armed Men At Kabul Airport As Evacuation Stalls Amid Chaos
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34.) DESERET NEWS
Tuesday, Aug. 17, 2021 |
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35.) BRIGHT
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
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40.) REUTERS
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43.) REDSTATE
The Worst Part? The Democrats Can’t Use the 25th Amendment
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
August 17, 2021 THE LATEST The harrowing images out of Kabul on Monday as Afghans tried to flee the Taliban takeover immediately drew to mind the the fall of Saigon. Despite the scenes of Vietnamese clinging to U.S. helicopters as American forces left the country, Americans weren’t exactly eager to take in refugees. But America did it anyway — and that’s what needs to happen now, Hayes Brown writes.
“It’s imperative that Congress take the next step and move forward in accepting more Afghan refugees into this country,” Brown writes. “It’s the most honorable way to protect yet another group of people whose lives have been inextricably tied to the whims of the United States.”
Read Hayes Brown’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Tuesday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Biden’s Afghanistan withdrawal won’t kill his presidency. But it’ll stain his legacy. Read More This history of discrimination and exclusion has left devastating consequences. Read More He celebrated plans to withdraw from Afghanistan a month ago. Now he’s complaining about it. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC Trymaine Lee speaks with Dewey Bozella, a man who was arrested at age 18 and convicted of a murder he did not commit, becoming one of the estimated tens of thousands of people wrongfully incarcerated. Listen now.
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Afghans’ desperate race to escape the Taliban takeover continued Tuesday despite President Joe Biden’s defense of the chaotic U.S. exit from their country.
Here’s the latest from Kabul this morning. President Joe Biden on Monday defended his decision to continue with the U.S. military drawdown in Afghanistan, blaming the U.S.-backed Afghan government and military for allowing the Taliban to seize power.
Speaking to the American public from the White House, Biden said he stood firmly by his decision and acknowledged that the Taliban’s takeover of the country happened “more quickly” than expected.
Still, he argued that he was faced with a choice to either follow through with the withdrawal or escalate the conflict into its third decade and ultimately sacrifice more American lives.
“I stand squarely behind my decision,” Biden said. “After 20 years, I’ve learned the hard way that there was never a good time to withdraw U.S. forces. That’s why we’re still there.” (Watch video of Biden’s statement).
New Analysis: While Biden has tried to frame endless war as the only alternative to the chaotic withdrawal, so far Republicans and Democrats are just not buying it, NBC News senior national politics reporter Jonathan Allen writes in a news analysis.
Here’s the latest on the withdrawal :
Tuesday’s Top Stories
The recommendation would apply only to people who have gotten the two-shot Pfizer or Moderna vaccines. Scientists say a combination of natural weather patterns and human-driven climate change is fueling the historic drought and dwindling water levels. California’s largest utility, Pacific Gas and Electric, warned about 39,000 customers across 16 counties Sunday that they could lose power when operators shut down equipment to prevent wildfires. Also in the News
Shopping
Never heard of National Rum Day? That’s OK, you can still toast to experts’ favorite bottles, as well as rituals and cocktail inspiration. One Crazy Thing
An animal trainer who was attacked by an alligator during a child’s birthday celebration in Utah over the weekend was saved in a bold rescue.
A bystander leapt onto Darth Gator after the 8 1/2-foot male alligator bit on a trainer’s arm and helped subdue the animal at Scales and Tails in suburban Salt Lake City.
Watch the nail-biter of a video. Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Biden faces the most perilous moment of his presidency so far
President Biden on Monday defended the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, blamed Afghan security forces for the Taliban’s takeover of the country, but also admitted that the takeover happened faster than he anticipated.
And now comes the hard part for the president: He’s got to withstand what promises to be a rough and messy next six weeks.
The fallout from Afghanistan is part of the challenge. Can the administration get more Afghan allies out of the country? Are there violent videos and images that become fixtures in the U.S. news? What about security threats tied to the new regime? And can Biden keep Democrats united – not on why the U.S. withdrew from Afghanistan, but how it withdrew?
Then there’s the upcoming 20th anniversary of 9/11, which will obviously get tied into the unfolding story in Afghanistan.
Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
Next comes the Sept. 14 California gubernatorial recall against Gov. Gavin Newsom, which Democrats should win, but which also has become a lot closer than originally expected.
There’s the situation at the border, where the monthly number of detained migrants in July was at its highest level in 21 years.
Then comes the tricky two-track infrastructure / reconciliation talks, where Biden and Democratic leaders are walking an ideological and procedural tightrope to pass an agenda that they see as key to the upcoming midterms.
And last but not least, you have the surging Delta variant of the coronavirus, which is weighing on the returns to school and work, the economic recovery and the country’s divides over vaccines and masks.
Biden can definitely survive all of these challenges. But it won’t be pretty.
And the question we have is what the president and his party look like AFTER it all.
Especially as we enter the home stretch of Virginia’s gubernatorial contest – and the real start of the 2022 political season.
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The competency question
Back to Biden’s speech yesterday… Politically, he probably made the best argument he could have given the circumstances.
If he retreated on his Afghanistan withdrawal, he would have shown weakness. So that’s why he blamed Afghans for the Taliban takeover and for their inability to leave their country earlier.
And it’s why he focused his remarks on why the U.S. is leaving Afghanistan instead of how it’s leaving the country.
But the danger for Biden here is on competency.
The core reason he’s president today is that more voters thought he could get the job done – on the coronavirus, on foreign policy, on dealing with allies – better than his predecessor could.
Yet the chaos and disorder out of Afghanistan could hurt him when it comes to competency.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: That sure escalated quickly
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
640: The number of Afghan evacuees on board a military plane that fled Afghanistan, according to Defense One’s account of the rescue mission.
3: The number of storm systems threatening Haiti (which is still reeling from last weekend’s devastating hurricane) and the southeastern United States.
575,897 acres: The current estimated size of the Dixie Fire, per the Redding Record Searchlight.
36,989,786: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials.
625,955: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News.
357,292,057: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC.
50.8 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
61.8 percent: The share of all American adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
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VA-GOV: Youngkin plays “defund the police” card
In Virginia’s gubernatorial contest, Republican Glenn Youngkin is out with a new TV ad linking Democrat Terry McAuliffe to “defund the police” advocates in his party.
“Crime in Virginia is skyrocketing. The murder rate is at a 20-year high,” the ad goes. “Former Gov. Terry McAuliffe is running again, but how can he keep us safe? His record as governor – murder jumped 43 percent, and now he refuses to even meet with Virginia police officers. Instead, he’s touting endorsements by extreme left-wing groups that want to defund the police, abolish ICE and close prisons.”
The McAuliffe camp responded to the Youngkin ad with this statement: “We know Glenn struggles with it, so here’s the truth: As governor, Terry McAuliffe made Virginia the fourth safest state in the nation. He put in place one of the toughest laws in the country to combat domestic violence, and he has released a detailed plan to keep Virginians safe, including keeping guns out of dangerous hands. Glenn Youngkin’s right-wing agenda would only make Virginia less safe — he’s bragged about opposing any common-sense gun safety measures, and the Washington Post says his Trumpian economic plan would defund the police.”
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Federal health officials are expected to recommend people receive a Covid vaccine booster eight months after their second dose.
The Taliban is claiming that there will be a general “amnesty” in Afghanistan and want women to join the government, as many Afghans are trying to flee the country out of fear of reprisal for their views or past work with the American government.
Members of Congress are pressuring the Biden administration to speed up the evacuations from Afghanistan.
The Las Vegas Raiders are the first NFL team to require all fans attending home games to be vaccinated for Covid.
A New York man has pleaded guilty to threatening to kill Georgia Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock.
Texas requests five mortuary trailers in anticipation of Covid deaths.
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53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
What happened over the weekend in Afghanistan is an example of the consequences when you elect an idiot to be Pre … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning, it’s Tuesday, Aug. 17, and we’re covering the chaotic evacuation from Afghanistan, a water shortage declaration in the West, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWChaos in KabulAt least seven people are dead and dozens injured after crowds of Afghan citizens rushed the tarmac at the Kabul airport in a frantic attempt to escape impending Taliban rule in the country. Two people were reportedly shot and killed at the airport’s perimeter by US forces attempting to keep order during the evacuation. At least three others were said to have fallen to their deaths as they attempted to cling to a departing US military transport jet. See footage of the chaos here. The rush came one day after the Taliban seized Kabul, the country’s capital, effectively completing a long guerilla campaign to retake Afghanistan (see photos). Roughly 3,000 US troops—rising to 6,000 in the coming days—are at the city’s airport while officials process paperwork for those eligible to leave. Pictures of a packed C-17 transport plane went viral yesterday. President Joe Biden yesterday stood by the decision to withdraw troops while admitting the speed of the Taliban takeover took his administration by surprise. The Taliban have called for calm, saying they would not exact revenge on those who assisted Western efforts. Experts are dubious, and the claim has been contradicted by emerging reports of atrocities. Here’s what may come next in the country as the Taliban assume power. Western Water Cuts Federal officials declared a water shortage at Lake Mead yesterday, the first time such a designation has been made within the Colorado River basin. The declaration is expected to trigger cuts in water allocation in southwestern states beginning next year. Under the Tier 1 cuts (paywall, WSJ), Arizona will see its allocation fall by 18%, Nevada by 7%, and Mexico by 5%. If water levels continue to fall, other states, including California, will see reductions. The nation’s largest reservoir by capacity, Lake Mead has become a visual symbol of the decadeslong drought affecting the broader region (see photos). The lake currently sits at 35% of its full capacity, the lowest on record. The Colorado River, which feeds the lake, recorded its driest 12-month period on record between May 2020 and April 2021. The river system fuels the Hoover Dam, producing hydroelectric power for roughly 1.3 million users. The dam will keep producing electricity—at lower efficiencies—until the water level hits 950 feet (current depth is around 1,070 feet, down from the maximum of 1,220 feet). Bama Stays on TopThe annual Associated Press college football preseason rankings were released yesterday, with defending champion Alabama capturing the top spot after earning 47 of 63 first-place votes. It marks the fourth time in the past six seasons Alabama will begin the season ranked No. 1 and comes despite the Crimson Tide having to replace 11 starters, including starting quarterback Mac Jones and Heisman-winning wide receiver DeVonta Smith. Oklahoma, coming off its sixth straight Big 12 title—and eying a jump to the SEC—was ranked No. 2, followed by Clemson at No. 3, who must replace star QB Trevor Lawrence. Ohio State, who beat Clemson but fell to Alabama in last year’s playoffs, came in No. 4, followed by Georgia at No. 5. The season formally kicks off Saturday, Aug. 28, with an abbreviated slate of games before getting into full swing the following week (see schedule). This year is the first that athletes will be able to earn income under updated name, image, and likeness rules. See early data on compensation earned here. In partnership with The AscentA LAUNDRY LIST OF PERKSHow does a credit card earn its spot on an expert-curated list of all-around cards? Generally: strong welcome bonus, 0% intro APR period, high cash back rate, or competitive annual fee. Or, all of the above. Thanks to a laundry list of perks, this card earned its distinction as one of the top credit cards for a one-card wallet, according to The Ascent’s team of independent financial experts. Combine a $200 welcome bonus after spending $500 within three months, 0% intro purchase APR for 15 months, unlimited 1.5% cash back, and zero annual fee to create a card for just about any spending behavior. With perks estimated to be worth $607 in the first year alone, you should see for yourself why this card scores top marks across the board. Learn more and apply for a decision today. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & CultureBrought to you by Tenzo > Bob Dylan sued for allegedly drugging, sexually assaulting a 12-year-old girl in 1965 (More) | The UK’s Prince Andrew named as “person of interest” in Jeffrey Epstein investigation (More) > Madonna announces partnership with Warner Music Group to bring her entire catalog spanning 40 years under the label’s umbrella (More) > Soccer legend Carli Lloyd announces retirement from US women’s national team after 16-year international career (More) | Tokyo Paralympics, which begin Aug. 24, to bar spectators over continued pandemic concerns (More) From our partners: Clean, green, energy machine. If you drink coffee, you know some of the side effects: crashes, jitters, anxiety, stomachaches, the works. But there’s another way you can energize in the morning. Tenzo makes high-quality matcha for energy (36mg caffeine), focus (l-theanine), and immune support (antioxidants) to help kick-start your day. 100% organic, non-GMO, and keto-friendly, you won’t believe how delicious and pure it is. Shop today for $10 off your first order with code TENOFF. Science & Technology> Study finds mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines like those from Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech produce a strong response from the immune system’s T-cells, which are capable of a more durable response than antibodies alone (More) | What are T-cells? (More) > Facebook and Google partner on a subsea fiber-optic cable connecting Japan, Singapore, and other Asia-Pacific countries; network to launch in 2024 (More) | See a map of the world’s undersea cable networks (More) > Astronomers infer the size of Saturn’s core from the movement of the planet’s outer rings; core is roughly 50 times the size of Earth (More) | Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin sues NASA over the sole selection of rival SpaceX to develop a lunar lander under the agency’s Artemis program (More) Business & Markets> S&P 500 index doubles from pandemic low on March 23, 2020; 354 days is the fastest doubling since data were first captured following World War II (More) > US safety officials announce investigation into Tesla’s Autopilot system; shares fall 4% (More) > Chinese economy sees slowing growth with lower industrial output and decreased retail sales (More) Politics & World Affairs> Haitian earthquake death toll rises to 1,419, with 6,000 injured, as Tropical Storm Grace disrupts search and rescue efforts (More) > Pfizer submits data seeking US authorization for a COVID-19 booster shot for the general population (More) | Average US COVID-19 cases at roughly 134,000 per day; total current hospitalizations fall slightly to 76,600, deaths pass 700 per day (More) > New York lawmakers to continue investigating Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), despite Cuomo announcing his resignation amid a sexual harassment scandal (More) IN-DEPTHLetter From KabulPolitico | Anonymous. An on-the-ground report from an Afghan journalist, now in hiding with his family in Kabul as the Taliban sweep through the country’s capital. (Read) … and read this letter from a female college student in Kabul. America’s Diabetes CrisisReuters | Staff. Roughly 40% of COVID-19 deaths in the US occurred in patients battling Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes. The sobering statistic reveals Americans’ struggle to fight the chronic disease well before the pandemic began. (Read) $607 IN VALUEIn partnership with The Ascent Thanks to its highly competitive welcome bonus, intro purchase APR, cash back, and annual fee, this card—recommended by The Ascent’s team of independent financial experts—is estimated to earn you $607 in your first year alone. There’s no surprise it’s secured a position as one of the top picks for a one-card wallet. Learn all about it today and apply for a decision. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAAmerica’s incarceration rate hits a 25-year low. Watch the Washington Monument get struck by lightning. A visual history of Rickrolling. Polluted pink lagoon tops this month’s best science images. Some tech workers are cashing multiple full-time paychecks. US children get most of their calories from ultra-processed food. Study confirms the obvious; finds cats prefer not to work for food. Clickbait: Americans are suffering from the Sunday Scaries. Historybook: Actress Mae West born (1893); HBD Robert De Niro (1943); “Animal Farm” published (1945); President Bill Clinton admits to improper relationship with Monica Lewinsky (1998); Michael Phelps becomes first person to win eight gold medals in single Olympics (2008). “You only live once, but if you do it right, once is enough.” – Mae West Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
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73.) POPULIST PRESS
China has seized upon Biden’s apparent inaction and inability to respond to the Taliban’s total takeover
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TOP STORIES:
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China Seizes on Collapse of Afghanistan — Goes After Joe Biden With Latest Move
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Fight Breaks Out At White House — Jill Biden Steps In
- WOKE MILITARY: FULL BLOWN CHAOS…MANY DEAD
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Jen Psaki Makes Surprising Move Amidst Afghanistan Crisis
- Biden Admin Unveils Potential Catastrophic Plan as Afghanistan Falls
- Shots Fired At US Troops At Kabul Airport
- RINO Liz Cheney Says the Unthinkable About the Collapse of Afghanistan
- Biden Gives Infuriating Instructions to Americans Trapped in Afghanistan
- Supreme Court Delivers 5–4 Ruling That Has Democrats Fuming
- Fight Breaks Out At White House — Jill Biden Steps In
- WOKE MILITARY: FULL BLOWN CHAOS…MANY DEAD
- Jen Psaki Makes Surprising Move Amidst Afghanistan Crisis
- Biden Rejects Advice, Thinks He Has All The Answers
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IN DEPTH:
- U.S. Suspends Evacuation Flights From Kabul as Airport Descends Into Chaos 23 mins
- Biden Faces Intense Backlash Over Plans To Address Nation In ‘Next Few Days’: ’25th Amendment Time’ 2 hours
- Afghan military jet was shot down by Uzbek air defences — RIA 2 hours
- Biden Photo at Camp David Raises Red Flags as Questions Swirl About President’s Whereabouts 2 hours
- World Leaders React to Taliban Taking Kabul 3 hours
- Senate Republicans tout ‘difficult position’ they’ve put House Democrats on infrastructure 3 hours
- Redistricting commission supported by Democrats could hurt party in Michigan 3 hours
- ‘To Be Commended’: Nancy Pelosi Praises Biden After Taliban Advances Into Kabul 3 hours
- Don’t Ignore the CIA’s Intelligence Failure on Afghanistan 3 hours
- Blinken Says Kabul Embassy Evacuation ‘Orderly’ 3 hours
- EXCLUSIVE: China building third missile field for hundreds of new ICBMs 3 hours
- ‘We Lost Everything’: As Kabul Falls and More US Troops Rush to Aid the Evacuation, Time Runs Out for Afghan Interpreters 3 hours
- Boris in July: ‘There Is No Military Path to Victory for the Taliban’ 3 hours
- Flashback: Joe Biden ‘overruled’ top military commanders on Afghanistan withdrawal, VP Harris played ‘key role’
- Afghan President Ghani Claims He Left Country In Order to Avoid Bloodshed 3 hours
- Petraeus: Biden Owns ‘Catastrophic’ Afghanistan Withdrawal 3 hours
- Taliban officials: there will be no transitional government in Afghanistan — Metro US 3 hours
- Vulnerable Democrats Blast Biden for Failed Afghan Withdrawal 3 hours
- Beware the Street Name Police, by Debra J. Saunders 3 hours
- Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Milley says terrorist groups could regroup in Afghanistan sooner than he thought
- The Pitiful Fall of Western Principle 3 hours
- Larry David says he was ‘relieved’ to be uninvited from Barack Obama’s controversial 60th birthday party 3 hours
- Biden inches toward YIMBYism 3 hours
- Broadway Superstar Laura Osnes Reportedly Fired from Show After Refusing Vaccine 3 hours
- Americans left behind in Afghanistan respond to Senator Tom Cotton’s offer to help them get home 3 hours
- Live Nation to require vaccines for concertgoers ‘everywhere possible’ 3 hours
- Giants’ first-round draft pick Kadarius Toney sits out vs. Jets 4 hours
- ‘How Did President Biden Get This So Wrong?’: Jake Tapper Presses Antony Blinken On Afghanistan Exit 4 hours
- Little League World Series to Ban General Admission Due to Coronavirus 4 hours
- D‑backs’ Gilbert throws no-hitter in first career start 4 hours
- Returning Gerrit Cole mystified by Yankees’ outbreak: ‘Not like we’re going out to grimy bars and grinding’ 4 hours
- Muhammad Ali’s grandson Nico Ali Walsh wins pro boxing debut after ’emotional journey’ 4 hours
- Afghanistan ‘intelligence failure’ debate begins as Taliban takes Kabul 4 hours
- Taijaun Walker’s heroics not enough as Mets fall to Dodgers in 10 4 hours
- Rural Population Losses Add to Farm and Ranch Labor Shortage 4 hours
- Nunes scores major win as judge orders defamation case against Washington Post to proceed 4 hours
- Fauci: ‘Put Aside All of These Issues of Concern About Liberties’ 4 hours
- California’s scorched earth: More than 1 million acres burned 4 hours
- Masking school children is abuse 4 hours
- Harvard professor says flag waving Kristi Noem ‘unserious,’ Kabul crisis is ‘what happens’ when US not serious
- Robinhood gets boost as Congress declines ban – for now – on sales tactic 4 hours
- Biden admin to announce historic increase in food stamp benefits: reports 4 hours
- Cuomo successor Kathy Hochul vows to ‘fully cooperate’ with COVID nursing home probe 4 hours
- NYC’s Vaccine Mandate Presents Latest Challenge for Restaurants 4 hours
- More Cuban officials sanctioned by US in response to protest crackdown 4 hours
- Unemployment Isn’t Falling for Black and Hispanic Workers in the Biden Economy 4 hours
- Dems Look to Expand Medicare in $3.5 Trillion Budget Plan 4 hours
- Fed officials weigh ending asset purchases by mid-2022 4 hours
- Crypto Market Tops $2 Trillion in Value for First Time Since May 4 hours
- Biden infrastructure pitch puts labor unions in the spotlight 4 hours
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Welcome to the Tuesday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect tech and politics unfolding online. Today:
BREAK THE INTERNET Amazon’s palm print-scanning devices are raising concerns in Congress A group of senators is asking Amazon about how the company plans to use—and secure—data it collects from the palm print payment system that it uses in some of its stores.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), and Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) sent a letter to Amazon CEO Andy Jassy asking questions about Amazon One.
Amazon One is a device that uses a palm print scanner to allow people to pay for things at its stores instead of using a credit card. The company says the palm print scanner is being used at Whole Foods and other stores throughout the country.
In their letter, the senators raise concerns about the company’s future plans to use the biometric reading technology and how the retail giant is storing that data.
Specifically, the senators asked Amazon to provide answers on how Amazon One will expand to other locations; how the company uses the data collected through Amazon One; what measures it has taken to securely store the user data collected through the device; and if the company plans to use Amazon One devices to “personalize advertisements, offers, or product recommendations to users.”
The senators also asked whether Amazon One data is ever paired with data collected through the company’s facial recognition system. The retail giant’s facial recognition software, Rekognition, has faced immense criticism. Deputy Tech Editor
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BIG TECH Jack Dorsey reinvents Twitter in apparent self-own Twitter, the website, is constantly tinkering with itself, much to the consternation of its user base.
All most users want is a return to a simpler time, when tweets appeared chronologically and antisemitism didn’t dominate the platform.
Well, Twitter’s CEO Jack Dorsey appears to have addressed one of those complaints (no, not the Nazi one), in an extremely convoluted way.
“I used @getvicarious to create and sync a list of all accounts I’m following, set that list to be reverse chron, named it ‘Latest’ and pinned it, and now I can quickly swipe between ranked (algorithm) and all tweets as they happen (inspired by an idea from team),” Dorsey wrote the other day.
Dorsey himself, as CEO, has the power to return his and yours and everyone’s timeline to its “latest” glory, instead of its algorithmically weighted current iteration, which displays posts in erratic fashions that people struggle to comprehend.
After he posted it, Twitter users were stupified by the lengths he’d go to return his personal timeline to its prior state or convinced it was a perfectly executed troll job. —David Covucci, senior politics and technology editor
INTERNET RIGHTS Infrastructure bill will make Emergency Broadband Credit permanent—but with a price reduction As part of the massive infrastructure bill passed by the Senate, a Federal Communications Commission (FCC) program aimed at helping low-income families afford broadband service will extend indefinitely.
The infrastructure bill includes $65 billion allocated for broadband that will go to deployment and affordability issues. The bill sets aside $14.2 billion of the total broadband money to extend the FCC’s “Emergency Broadband Benefit” (EBB).
The legislation would rename the EBB to the “Affordable Connectivity Program,” and would see some changes to the current EBB program.
The EBB, which was launched in response to the coronavirus pandemic, lets eligible Americans get a discount on their monthly internet bills to help them pay for service. The EBB offers $50 discounts per household, or $75 on Tribal lands
The massive infrastructure package, which still needs to pass through the House before heading to Biden’s desk for a signature, would lower that monthly discount to $30.
The program, which millions of people have signed up for since it launched in May, was scheduled to end shortly after the government marked an end to the pandemic or the $3.2 billion Congress allocated for it last year ran out.
—A.W.
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Tuesday 08.17.21 Grace has strengthened into a tropical storm again, threatening the Caribbean with mudslides and flooding. That includes vulnerable Haiti, which just suffered an earthquake and may now face driving rains. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. People climb atop a plane as they wait at the Kabul Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan. Thousands of people mobbed the city’s airport trying to flee the Taliban’s rule. Afghanistan
Fear, tumult and confusion are gripping parts of Afghanistan in the aftermath of the Taliban’s takeover of the capital city of Kabul. People flooded the city’s airport in an attempt to leave the country and escape Taliban rule. Countries around the world, like India and Australia, are fast-tracking immigration pathways to accept Afghan people trying to flee. In Washington, among Biden administration members and longtime national security professionals, there has been fierce debate over how the swift, catastrophic end to the US’ 20-year presence in the country came to be. In a speech to the nation yesterday, President Joe Biden admitted Afghanistan’s collapse “did unfold more quickly than we had anticipated,” but stood behind his withdrawal plan.
Coronavirus
The Biden administration is expected to release guidance advising people to get a Covid-19 booster shot eight months after their final initial dose. The plan, which is still being developed, would be put into action beginning in mid- to late September, pending FDA authorization. Pfizer has submitted initial data to the FDA that supports the use of a booster dose, and claims such a step would help protect against the virus and, importantly, its variants. Meanwhile, New Zealand has announced a nationwide lockdown after a single reported coronavirus case — its first locally transmitted case since February. In Tokyo, Paralympics organizers say the games, which start next week, will go on without spectators as the country continues to struggle with new coronavirus outbreaks. Extreme weather
Wildfires and droughts are still relentlessly ravaging the western US. Dry wildfire conditions are expected to continue through the next month, the National Interagency Fire Center says. Right now, there are 97 large fires burning in the US, scorching a total of 2,147,446 acres. In total, more than 4 million acres of US land have been scorched by fires in 2021. Evacuations and power shutoffs could affect tens of thousands of citizens in Western states in the coming days. Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the US by volume, has been pushed to historic lows by severe drought in areas around the Colorado River, which feeds it. The US government has declared a water shortage on the river for the first time ever, triggering mandatory water consumption cuts for states in the Southwest. Cybersecurity
T-Mobile has confirmed it was hit by a data breach after hackers claimed they were selling personal information obtained from some 100 million people. The company has not said whether any personal information from customers was accessed or how widespread the damage may be. These kinds of breaches are becoming more of a threat to US security, and can have long-lasting consequences for individuals as well as the companies affected. Colonial Pipeline, one of the largest fuel pipelines in the US, says the breach that caused it to go offline in the spring also compromised the personal information of nearly 6,000 individuals, who are mostly current or former company employees and their family members. India
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has renewed a pledge to spend more than $1 trillion on infrastructure to boost the economy and create hundreds of thousands of jobs. Modi made the announcement on India’s Independence Day, which is a holiday he often likes to use to make ambitious promises (he made a similar infrastructure pledge last year). As Asia’s third-largest country and home to nearly 1.4 billion people, things like railways and emissions regulations are a big priority for India. The country is also clawing its way out of its first recession in a quarter century, spurred on by the pandemic. Modi did not give a timeline for the infrastructure plan, called “Gati Shakti,” which means momentum. Sponsor Content by SmartAsset This tiny startup just raised another $110M to help people retire more comfortably. With 20 million Americans projected to retire in the next 5 years, it’s already changing the retirement industry. Learn more.
People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. US National Parks are requiring masks again
Debra Winger quit ‘A League of Their Own’ because of Madonna
Ripples in Saturn’s rings reveal the planet may be ‘fuzzy’ and slushy at its core
Meet the ‘ecosexuals’ hosting joyful weddings to the Earth
Being a better listener for your loved ones might protect their brain health, study finds $5.9 billion That’s how much Jeff Bezos’ aerospace company Blue Origin offered to be a part of NASA’s Human Landing System project, which is focused on sending people back to the moon. However, NASA has awarded a contract to SpaceX instead, and Blue Origin is now suing the US government. I never wanted to take anything for granted, especially knowing how hard it is to get to the top, but even harder to stay at the top for so long.
US Women’s National Team soccer star Carli Lloyd, who has announced her retirement. Brought to you by CNN Underscored CNN Underscored’s Days of Deals ends tonight: Here’s what to buy Whether you’d prefer 20% savings on our favorite coffee subscription service from Blue Bottle Coffee or 40% savings on all the pet supplies you need from Chewy, one thing is for sure: These exclusive deals on reader-favorite products will be gone by tomorrow. Badgers, swans and hedgehogs, oh my! 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Biden blames Afghans for his desertion of them
- America’s Suicide Attempt—The Sequel
- Pelosi’s mush on Afghanistan
- Exit from Kabul
- Biden’s muddled thinking on Afghanistan
Biden blames Afghans for his desertion of them
Posted: 16 Aug 2021 02:30 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)This afternoon, Joe Biden tried to defend not only his decision to pull out of Afghanistan, but also the way his team carried it out. As to the former, Biden said, “American troops cannot and should not be fighting in a war and dying in a war that Afghan forces are not willing to fight for themselves.” But Afghans were willing to fight against the Taliban and to die doing so. That’s why the Taliban was never able to take over major population centers, not even when the U.S. force diminished to somewhere between 2,500-3,500. All they required of us was that we maintain something like that level of commitment. Moreover, if this is Biden’s rationale for the pullout, it’s inconsistent with what he has been saying about the situation. Biden famously said things wouldn’t deteriorate to the point where they resembled Vietnam. This prediction entails a scenario in which the Afghans would fight reasonably hard. So which is it? Did we quit because we thought the Afghans could resist or did we quit because we should not help an army that isn’t willing to resist? I say we quit because Biden decided we should without giving the matter much thought. As for the way the disaster is playing out in Kabul, Biden again blamed the Afghans:
This implies that we at least got all of the Americans out safely. Did we? We’ll see. As for the Afghans, Biden’s excuses were contradicted by No One Left Behind, an advocacy group for former interpreters. Its chairman said:
I believe him. For one thing, Biden is a liar. For another, it’s implausible to believe that an appreciable number of those who helped the U.S. to the point where they could receive the special visas wanted to hang around. Biden might have been stupid enough to believe they had a future in Afghanistan, but I doubt many of the interpreters and others who helped us believed this. Images and facts on the ground speak louder than words, and certainly louder than the utterances of someone like Joe Biden. If Biden thinks he can talk his way out of responsibility for this debacle, he’s likely to be disappointed.
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America’s Suicide Attempt—The Sequel
Posted: 16 Aug 2021 02:15 PM PDT (Steven Hayward)The scale of failure in Afghanistan is hard to overstate. Our “intelligence” services (who deserve to be referred to in scare quotes until they display some actual intelligence some day) were incapable of picking up any signs that the Taliban were arming and organizing on a large scale for their swift takeover of the entire country, or if they did gather any on-the-ground signals, their interpretive process (a polite term for “groupthink”) prevented them from drawing accurate and meaningful conclusions. This is the opposite of intelligence: it is the product of an establishment that simply lacks the capacity to think at all. Never mind the “finding” that the Taliban would take 90 days to reach Kabul. How about the reassurances that we had trained an Afghan army of 300,000 (and provided them with lots of materiel that is now in the hands of the Taliban)? Doesn’t inspire much confidence that our military knows how to train a foreign army at all. Perhaps our military should be excused to some extent, as the entire “training” program was politically driven by our genius foreign policy establishment, people like the Agency for International Development and similar goo-goo entities. Remember the huge federal budget last year that included $10 million in the State Department budget for “gender programs” in Pakistan? This is the kind of establishment that thinks what we need is a now-abandoned $700 million embassy in Kabul (and an even more expensive embassy in Baghdad), with a staff of 5,000. Taxpayers should be furious not just about the profligate waste and extravagance of such an establishment, but at the bottomless idiocy of a class of credentialled people who think that the answer to every foreign problem is to spend absurd amounts of money, hire endless case officers and private contractors/consultants, outreach coordinators to tweet out rainbow flag celebrations, issue endless white papers analyzing the situation that bear little or no relation to reality, and an apparatus that has proven unable to process visas for the Afghans who worked for us, let alone have a plan for evacuating Americans. Despite Biden’s pathetic defense of the outcome, he ought to be furious with the whole upper echelon of our military-diplomatic complex. There ought to be mass firings. Of course, we all know that no one will be fired, and no senior person in this apparatus of disaster will have the honor to resign. Finally there is the incompetence of the withdrawal itself. It is one thing to decide to end our presence in Afghanistan, and take your chances that the Taliban can be deterred or contained some other way (does anyone think our military-diplomatic complex has a serious plan to do this?). It is another thing to make the announcement that set the Taliban’s timeline in motion. So vagueness and misdirection were called for, but no one seemed to have the guile for it. When the British decided to end the Gallipoli misadventure in early 1916, it made no public announcement that it was planning to end the offensive and withdraw, because they knew doing so would encourage the Turks to attack the retreating British and ANZAC forces and turn the retreat into a slaughter. So the withdrawal was done in a stealthy way that effectively disguised that the Allied forces were leaving the scene. The ingenious British went as far as to improvise rifles that fired from the abandoned trenches automatically, with makeshift firing mechanisms that pulled rifle triggers when water ran out a hole in a bucket, for example. We should have been using that kind of legerdemain in Afghanistan. At the very least, we should be mined and booby-trapped equipment we were abandoning. The only people more feckless than our military-diplomatic elite are the media, led, naturally, by CNN. One of CNN’s reporters actually said, “They’re chanting ‘Death to America’ but seem friendly at the same time. It’s just bizarre.” I suspect a university education is behind this level of cluelessness. In his great book Modern Times, the historian Paul Johnson called the period of the late 1960s through to the end of the 1970s as “America’s Suicide Attempt.” We seem to be repeating every folly of that era just now. To paraphrase slightly something M. Stanton Evans once said, when I think of the calibre of our DC elites, one looks with a certain degree of new respect at the Roman Emperor Caligula: at least he appointed his whole horse to the Roman Senate.
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Pelosi’s mush on Afghanistan
Posted: 16 Aug 2021 12:44 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Nancy Pelosi issued the following statement regarding the debacle in Afghanistan:
One can sympathize deeply with the girls and women of Afghanistan without carrying identity politics as far as Pelosi does in her statement. It’s almost as if she would be okay with the Taliban if it inflicted misery equally, without regard to gender. When Pelosi tells members of her caucus what they “must” do, she can make it stick because she has power. She knows that this word, used repeatedly in her statement, is meaningless without the force to back it up. Pelosi also knows that, with the U.S. having given up in Afghanistan, any statements by her, Joe Biden, or any other American about what must happen there, including to Afghan women, are empty. However, she apparently believes that her words on this subject are sufficient to keep American feminists from balking at Biden’s betrayal of women and girls. Is Pelosi wrong? I doubt it. But Pelosi is almost certainly wrong if she believes that her “acknowledgement” of the sacrifices by our men and women in uniform will satisfy them. The question is how deep the military’s disgust with Biden’s withdrawal will run — both among the rank-and-file and at the upper levels. Our military has been drifting leftwards for years — at least its leadership has. Will the re-run of Saigon in Kabul change the dynamic? General Milley, who has helped push the military leftward, looks awful now. His predictions about the military state of play in Afghanistan are embarrassing. Milley thus would make a good fall guy, as would Lloyd Austin, the retired general in charge of the Pentagon. But they would be miscast in that role. Both reportedly advised Biden not to pull out of Afghanistan. It’s probably true that we could have folded a little bit better than we did. But quitting is losing, and this is what losing to an opponent like the Taliban looks like. It looked like this when Nixon pulled us out of Vietnam and very likely would have looked pretty much like this had Obama or Trump pulled us out of Afghanistan. That’s probably why neither of these presidents, both considerably smarter than Biden, could bring himself to pull us out. The military leadership isn’t just being groomed for the fall guy role in connection with the disaster brought about by our withdrawal. It’s being attacked in connection with almost our entire stay in Afghanistan — for all but the very beginning when we routed the Taliban. The military makes mistakes in every war of more than very brief duration. But the military didn’t fail in Afghanistan. It drove the Taliban from power and kept it from regaining power for nearly 20 years — until Joe Biden decided to hand the country over. It’s true that the military didn’t re-defeat the Taliban. Its main attempt to do so was destined to fail because Barack Obama put a time limit on the duration of our offensive. The Taliban knew if it held out for a bit, it would avoid defeat. It’s certainly possible that the military would not have defeated the Taliban even without the absurdity of Obama’s approach. But it did stalemate the Taliban, and did so in the end with a small U.S. force. In sum, any effort to pin the Afghan disaster on the “generals” is largely unfair. But maybe a consensus can form around that narrative, which serves Biden and apparently isn’t uncongenial to most conservatives.
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Exit from Kabul
Posted: 16 Aug 2021 06:35 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)Politico Playbook reports the White House talking points on what was then the imminent fall of Kabul: – TALKING POINT 1: “This is not Saigon.” Rebutted by the video below. — TALKING POINT 2: The White House was prepared for this. Rebutted by the video below. — TALKING POINT 3: We couldn’t wait any longer. A variation of farcical talking point 4. — TALKING POINT 4: This is all Trump’s fault. Even the operatives at Politico note this: “You can’t argue both that pulling out was good and the right thing to do, and that Trump gave you no choice but to pull out.” There is much more to be said, but the searing videos below are more than enough for now. What an abject disgrace.
And this, via Yahoo News/ANI.
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Biden’s muddled thinking on Afghanistan
Posted: 15 Aug 2021 07:57 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)The New York Times reports on Joe Biden’s decision making regarding Afghanistan. The article is accessible here. The whole report is worth reading, but I want to highlight this passage:
I think the honest answer to Biden’s question is that the Afghan government can hold off the Taliban on its own when the South Koreans can hold off North Korea without the U.S. presence, or when the West Germans could have held off Warsaw Pact forces without us. In other words, not in the foreseeable future. Maybe not ever. But that doesn’t mean the Afghans couldn’t have held off the enemy with the help of a relatively small U.S. force. In fact, they were doing so. Nor does it mean we should have abandoned them. That’s not what great nations — or good, honorable ones — do. It’s interesting, too, that Austin and Milley reminded Biden of what happened when we pulled out of Iraq. The reminder was pointed, or should have been, because Biden was an architect and perhaps the prime mover of the disastrous decision to withdraw from that country. That Biden withdrawal led to ISIS capturing much of Iraq, establishing a caliphate, and terrorizing the West, including America. Obama had to bring our troops back to Iraq. (I don’t recall anyone objecting that if, after all the training and equipment we provided the Iraqis, they couldn’t defend themselves, too bad for them.) We won’t be sending troops back to Afghanistan to fight the Taliban again. And maybe this time around, the Taliban won’t allow Afghanistan to become a launching pad for worldwide terrorism. But there was no need to take this risk, to suffer a massive national humiliation, and to allow the Taliban to have its bloody way with the Afghans who supported us or who simply want to enjoy basic human rights and freedoms. Biden’s rationale for doing so apparently was nothing more than the fact that the generals couldn’t tell him that our limited troop commitment would not be open ended. This, then, was the case of an unintelligent president basing a crucial policy decision on an answer to the wrong question.
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
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93.) JUST THE NEWS
Just The News: Daily Newsletter
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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
Sen. Lindsey Graham to Newsmax: Biden Only ‘Person to Blame Here’
Special: Former Hedge Fund Manager: My #1 Stock for the Second Half of 2021 Trump Slams ‘Grossly Incompetent Way’ Biden Left Afghanistan Afghan Americans Protest at White House: ‘They’re Killing All My People’ |
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99.) MARK LEVIN
August 16, 2021
On Monday’s Mark Levin show, President Biden has just reversed 20 years of enormous progress in Afghanistan, which was not a 20-year war. The US has been supplying air power and intelligence to the Afghan forces since 2014. The Taliban is not known to be one of the world’s strongest armies, but when Biden makes the mistake to end all of that abruptly you get an emboldened enemy who didn’t have an air force but might certainly have one now, given the number of helicopters and equipment left behind by Biden’s rapid troop withdrawal. Biden’s response was dishonest, he blamed Donald Trump, and it was outrageously political. The disastrous scene caused by Biden’s petulance is something we’d never seen during Trump’s tenure. Allies around the world are watching and surely this does not inspire confidence. Then, Sen. Tom Cotton, a veteran of the Afghanistan war, joins the show to explain why Biden made such a strategic blunder leaving Americans behind enemy lines. Cotton added that irrespective of your thoughts on the withdrawal we must recognize that it was gravely incompetent to do it this haphazardly and against the advice of all military leaders. Later, Col. Richard Kemp (Ret.) commander of the United Kingdom’s military forces in Afghanistan, calls in to articulate that the execution of this US withdrawal is a disaster. The morale of the brave men of the fledgling Afghan military has collapsed more devastatingly than the country itself; what Biden’s done is a disgrace. Afterward, Sean Parnell, a retired Army infantry captain, and veteran of Afghanistan calls in to highlight how Biden hasn’t even spoken with the Prime minister of Pakistan about the exfiltration and this blame falls squarely on the ‘suits, not the boots.’
THIS IS FROM:
Wall St Journal
Taliban Take Over Kabul as Afghan President Flees Country
Twitter
Chaos at Kabul airport in Afghanistan.
Washington Examiner
Number of white people declines for first time — and other census data takeaways
Jerusalem Post
Hamas congratulates Taliban for ‘defeating’ US
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Anadolu Agency
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Biden rushed back to vacation after his calamitous addressWe’re led by fools and now they’re causing unnecessary death and destruction in other countries, not only ours. Biden and only Biden and his administration are responsible for the catastrophic… | |
Speaker Pelosi schemes to push her Marxist revolution with 2 billsHouse Speaker Nancy Pelosi has proposed a procedural vote this month that would set up future passage of two economic measures destined to turn the United State into a Marxist… | |
Uh oh, 25th Amendment’s trending but Biden can still read off teleprompters25th Amendment trended for hours on Twitter today but it will likely go nowhere. Joe Biden is a national disgrace. He went into hiding as Afghanistan fell into the hands… | |
Leon Panetta tells Biden, take responsibility & compares Afghanistan to Bay of PigsJoe Biden spoke for about 16 minutes today about how he isn’t responsible for Afghanistan, pretending it was all about leaving and not leaving badly. That’s what is known as… | |
Aussies have to drink with masks on in bars & they have National Resilience CentersAustralians will no longer allow citizens to remove their masks to drink inside a bar, and the Aussies are going along with this. They are allowed to drink outside. They… | |
Biden said they were “prepared for every contingency”During his approximately 15- to a 16-minute press conference today, Biden said his administration was “prepared for every contingency” in Afghanistan. So, why are U.S. troops pushing Afghans out of… | |
Watch Biden lie about Afghanistan, live – it’s the fault of Bush, Obama, Trump, Afghan government-president-armyJoe Biden, puppet President, is reading lies from the teleprompter and re-writing history. Biden wants everyone to believe he had to follow through on Donald Trump’s peace agreement or go… | |
Obama’s Afghanistan Amb. “grave questions…about his ability to lead our nation’While Ryan Crocker is no friend of Donald Trump’s, he has “grave concerns” about Joe Biden’s ability to lead. That’s quite an admission from a left-wing partisan diplomat. It looks… | |
Intel community anonymously reports they warned Biden about AfghanistanOn July 8th, Joe Biden told Americans in a presser that it was not true that intelligence agencies warned of a potential Afghanistan disaster. Even though we don’t have a… | |
CNN: Taliban are chanting ‘death to America’ but they “seem friendly’ [as death & rape toll mounts]They’re chanting ‘death to America’ but they seem friendly at the same time, says CNN. It sounds about right coming from CNN. This took place out of the Kabul embassy.… | |
Pompeo nukes Biden’s ‘pathetic blame shifting’ as Taliban ‘run free and wild’During a “Fox News Sunday” interview with Chris Wallace, former secretary of state Mike Pompeo said that Biden had no excuse but to pretend it was Donald Trump’s fault. Chris… | |
Trump’s plan for withdrawal: Lt Gen Kellogg, former DNI Ratcliffe, former DHS WolfPresident Trump’s plan, if followed, would have kept this current disaster from taking place. This catastrophe that will haunt us in the future could have been avoided. Unfortunately, we have… | |
State Dept and DoD: thousands of Americans left behind in AfghanistanThe State Department and Department of Defense issued a joint statement on Sunday saying that they are trying to get thousands of American citizens out of Afghanistan. The Americans were… | |
Texas Supreme Court upholds Gov Abbott’s mask prohibitionsThe Texas Supreme Court on Sunday ruled in favor of upholding Texas GOP Gov. Greg Abbott’s order prohibiting mask mandates, a win for the governor after local entities across the… | |
Islamofascist Taliban collect citizens’ weaponsThe first thing dictators do when they take over a country is disarm the population. That is what communist Democrats are trying to do in the United States. In Afghanistan,… | |
Joe Biden, the vessel ‘American Marxists have been waiting for their entire lives’“Joe Biden is the vehicle, the vessel that American Marxists have been waiting for their entire lives to advance their radical program.” ~ Stephen Miller, American Legal Foundation Stephen Miller… | |
WSJ BLASTS Biden for trying to blame Afghanistan on TrumpThe editorial board of The Wall Street Journal issued a forceful rebuke of President Biden’s response to the crisis in Afghanistan, a calamity that Biden over the weekend suggested is partly the… | |
Afghans cling to US planes in Kabul, some fall to their deaths – videosThere are heart-wrenching scenes at Kabul airport as desperate Afghans cling onto a U.S. plane taking off. The planes are designed to take 102 people. Sources on the ground say… | |
Psaki’s taking a lid, her emails are on auto-reply, & Biden’s still vacationingJen Psaki’s taking a lid at the same time as Joe Biden has gone into hiding and as Afghanistan is falling into the hands of the Taliban. Questions to Psaki’s… | |
Speaker Pelosi: Biden’s ‘to be commended for clarity of purpose and wisdom of his actions’ (not satire)Speaker Pelosi is not fit to lead. In her statement on Afghanistan today, she actually commended the President for clarity of purpose and wisdom. Is she kidding? He has caused… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) UNCOVER DC
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108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
110.) BECKER NEWS
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111.) RIGHT & FREE
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MURRYSVILLE, Pennsylvania — Elaine Noll is standing in front of the cherry white and blue stand for Billy’s Country Smokehouse at the local farmers market….
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Right & Free
PO Box 455, Leesburg, VA 20178
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112.) DENNIS PRAGER
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