Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday August 20, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 8.20.21
Good Friday morning.
In case you missed our scoop, Sen. Ben Albritton has won the race to be President of the Florida Senate for the 2024-26 term.
After an intense, behind-the-scenes battle with Sen. Manny Diaz Jr., the Wauchula Republican secured the votes necessary to take over the gavel after Sen. Kathleen Passidomo, who is set to preside over the chamber for the 2023 and 2024 Legislative Sessions.
The two men buried the hatchet in statements to Florida politics, with Albritton saying he and Diaz “share a vision for the future of Florida, and we’ll work together in the years ahead to advance policies that are in the best interest of the state of Florida.”
Albritton becoming Senate President assumes Republicans will maintain control of the Senate after the 2024 election, which is likely.
While Senate Democrats, led by Plantation Sen. Lauren Book, will have two opportunities to trim the GOP advantage before Albritton takes the gavel, they will be doing so on new district maps approved by the Republican-controlled Legislature.
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On a new “State of Emergency,” Jared Moskowitz and I welcome Chief Financial Officer — and State Fire Marshal — Jimmy Patronis to talk about the collapse of Champlain Towers South, a 12-story beachfront condominium in the Miami suburb of Surfside.
Patronis recounts the middle-of-the-night phone call that informed him of the tragedy; as Fire Marshal, he immediately bolted to the scene, describing his first impression as looking like a “giant anthill crawling with first responders.”
Surfside was the third-largest building disaster in U.S. history (behind Oklahoma City and the twin towers), the largest that was not an attack. Jimmy and Jared discussed firsthand descriptions of the devastation and heartbreak in searching for survivors and comforting the victims.
Jared notes that FEMA “broke every rule” to get federal help to the scene. And as someone who represented the area in the Florida House, he took the Surfside disaster “in a personal way.”
As for politics, Jared and I talk about the latest polling in the Governor’s race and how it is only a “snapshot in time.” COVID-19 will probably not be a winning issue in 2022, Jared predicts. We also looked at the challenges of mixing COVID-19 and politics; how the national media helped Gov. Ron DeSantis politicize the pandemic response and Regeneron controversy.
For that and much more, check out the new episode live here.
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DeSantis’ odds of winning reelection are shrinking, according to betting aggregator US-Bookies.
That’s not to say the Governor is in dire straits — he still has a 75% chance to win a second term. But that’s an eight-point fall from where he stood a couple of months ago.
“The odds still point to DeSantis being a heavy favorite, but they took a noticeable hit during a time in which the state of Florida has seen quite a few challenges, and many have been openly critical of the Governor,” a US-Bookies spokesperson said.
Bookies say U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist is the second-most likely to win the election next year, with a 20% chance. Though slim, his current 4/1 odds represent a doubling in bettors’ confidence. Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, meanwhile, has seen her stock rise from 10/1 in June to 8/1 today.
U.S. Bookies also poured water on DeSantis’ 2024 hopes, noting he now holds a 9% chance of heading to the White House in three years. That puts him behind President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and Donald Trump.
Still, he could end up with a consolation prize.
“Though DeSantis’ chances at winning the next presidential election aren’t strong at the moment, it does seem like he’ll be the most likely pick as Trump’s running mate,” says a US-Bookies spokesperson. “With 14/1 odds, a Trump-DeSantis is currently the most likely Republican ticket we’ll see in 2021.”
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The public corruption investigation that has gripped Tallahassee for the last three years has expanded, according to law enforcement sources close to the investigation.
Now, it’s wrapped its tendrils around state courts in North Central and Northwest Florida.
It isn’t clear which judges have caught investigators’ eyes, but there is certainly some overlap with the investigation that snared Scott Maddox.
While judicial misconduct is typically investigated by Florida’s Judicial Qualifications Committee, the fact that federal investigators are now looking into cases in Tallahassee means the fallout from the ongoing public corruption investigation is far from over.
A hint on who may be in the crosshairs: one of the Leon County judges who was supposed to oversee Maddox’s disbarment was pulled from the case with no real explanation.
Some threads also connect back to the investigation that resulted in Jeff Siegmeister’s indictment earlier this year. The former State Attorney represented Florida’s 3rd Judicial Circuit, and sources say the feds are also digging into judges from that Circuit.
A refresher: Siegmeister was arrested for allegedly accepting payments to close criminal cases as serious as attempted murder.
Siegmeister’s circuit included Columbia, Dixie, Hamilton, Lafayette, Madison, Suwannee and Taylor counties. Other counties of interest in the probe: Alachua, Bay, Lake and Walton.
In many counties, investigators are poring over judges’ personal financial and business interests, as well as those of their family members, and cross-checking them with rulings that don’t pass the smell test — and there are quite a few.
It’s unclear what they’ve already found, whether they’ve honed in on a particular court, or just how many judges could be in hot water. What is clear, however, is that a lot of them are feeling the heat.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@Weijia: Big vaccine news today: 1.02M doses were reported administered today, including 562K newly vaccinated per WH official. This is the first 1M day reported in close to 7 weeks and a 31% week-over-week increase in the daily average of people completing their vaccine series.
—@MarcoRubio: I wrote this 13 months ago & both monoclonal antibody treatments & vaccines became reality in the time frame I predicted Both are widely available now Neither is a substitute for the other Get Vaccinated AND if you get really sick, get the antibody treatment EARLY
Tweet, tweet:
—@Aronberg: If only Florida leaders fought as hard to keep guns out of schools as masks, our schools would be a safer place.
—@HurleyWink: I live in a small beach town in FL, which is as retirement-aged as it sounds. Usually, the obits in our community newspaper are like, “104, served in Normandy landing.” Lately, though, they’ve been more like, “41, parent of three.” I hate this pandemic so much. Get vaccinated.
—@JayobTV: Florida. News. Is. National. News. But you should still get it from local FL papers and TV stations.
—@SteveLemongello: Remind me again when I cover a DeSantis news conference live that people watching online can hear every little conversation reporters are having up there
Tweet, tweet:
—@JoshCeb: Using other journalists as sources can be pretty annoying because some call you when the story is published and start critiquing your sentences as if they were your editor
—@DavoneMorales: No word works harder in modern journalism than the word “amid”
—@SShawFL: There are several Twitter conflicts that I want to jump into … but it’s hard to be mad while on the 🚤 and listening to #yachtrockradio on @SIRIUSXM.
— DAYS UNTIL —
St. Petersburg Primary Election — 4; Boise vs. UCF — 13; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 14; Notre Dame at FSU — 16; NFL regular season begins — 20; Bucs home opener — 20; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 25; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 25; Alabama at UF — 29; Dolphins home opener — 30; Jaguars home opener — 30; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 31; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 35; ‘Dune’ premieres — 42; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 42; MLB regular season ends — 44; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 49; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 67; World Series Game 1 — 68; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 68; Georgia at UF — 71; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 74; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 74; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 79; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 80; Miami at FSU — 85; ExcelinEd’s National Summit on Education begins — 90; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 91; FSU vs. UF — 99; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 103; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 112; ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 119; NFL season ends — 142; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 144; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 144; NFL playoffs begin — 145; Super Bowl LVI — 177; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 217; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 261; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 286; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 322; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 334; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 413; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 448.
“Florida parents’ lawsuit challenging Ron DeSantis’ school mask limits set for trial” via John Kennedy of USA Today Network — DeSantis was dealt another setback in his push to ban mask requirements in Florida schools when a judge refused to dismiss a lawsuit filed by parents challenging the order. Leon County Circuit Judge John Cooper rejected arguments by an attorney for the Governor that the parents from a half-dozen counties lacked legal standing to stop the state action. The case is now scheduled to go to trial Monday. “These parents and children have a right to have their case heard in court,” Cooper said. He cautioned, though, that his ruling “does not indicate I’ve decided anything” about whether DeSantis overreached with his no-mandatory-mask order, which is the central argument from the parents.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“DeSantis decries Joe Biden’s nursing home vaccination order as ‘massive hammer’” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — DeSantis called Biden‘s new requirement that nursing home staff get vaccinated against COVID-19 a “massive hammer,” lacking legislative backing. “The issue is these nursing homes could lose access to Medicare and Medicaid funding. So that is a massive hammer that they’re trying to bring down,” DeSantis said. DeSantis was at the Ormond Beach Senior Center to announce another state-supported monoclonal antibody treatment site, part of his current strategy to expand access to a treatment shown to keep people with early cases of COVID-19 from getting too sick.
“DeSantis: Regeneron monoclonal antibodies are best treatment” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis says monoclonal antibody treatment is a patient’s best bet for avoiding a severe COVID-19 case after exposure. DeSantis has spent much of this month raising public awareness of monoclonal antibodies, a therapeutic available when a person at high risk for severe infection tests positive for COVID-19 or is exposed to the virus. For people who test positive, regardless of whether they’re vaccinated or not, the Governor on Thursday said receiving the antibody cocktail is the best way to “nuke” an infection. “If you don’t do the monoclonal early, the fact of the matter is, there’s not a lot of great stuff out there for you,” DeSantis said.
“While DeSantis touts free Regeneron COVID-19 treatment, feds pick up the bill” via Skylar Swisher of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Much of DeSantis’ push to offer free monoclonal antibody treatment to Floridians sick with COVID-19 is being paid for by the federal government, which has spent billions of dollars on the drug cocktail made by Regeneron. DeSantis has been crisscrossing Florida to promote clinics from Orlando to Pembroke Pines offering the treatment. One of his big selling points: The drug is free to patients with no out-of-pocket costs. That wouldn’t be possible without the help of the federal government, promoting the use of monoclonal antibodies in states hit hard by the virus while stressing vaccination is the best protection against COVID-19. Vaccines are also available to Floridians for free.
“Feud over Tampa fairground COVID-19 treatment site erupts between top Florida officials” via Jeffrey Schweers of the Tallahassee Democrat — A territorial feud erupted between Agriculture Commissioner Fried and DeSantis over who claims credit for opening a monoclonal antibody treatment site in Hillsborough County. Fried announced that she “granted permission” to use the Florida State Fair Grounds as a treatment site. “For those who unfortunately test positive for COVID-19, monoclonal antibody therapy may help reduce symptoms when treated early, so we’re pleased to make the Florida State Fairgrounds available for those needing this treatment,” Fried said in a news release that went out at 9 a.m. Under state law, the Commissioner of Agriculture oversees the Florida State Fair Authority, which grants use of the Florida State Fairgrounds. “She’s jumping on the bandwagon,” claiming credit for a site that was already on the governor’s radar, said Taryn Fenske, communications director for DeSantis.
Assignment editors — Fried will provide a COVID-19 update joined by Sen. Shevrin Jones and Dr. Steve Gallon III, vice-chair of the School Board of Miami-Dade County, 11:30 a.m., 606 NW 183rd Street, Miami Gardens. The briefing will also be livestreamed at Facebook.com/FDACS. RSVP to Maca.Casado@fdacs.gov.
“DeSantis casts doubt on ‘experts,’ encourages people to evaluate third dose for themselves” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis encouraged Floridians to research before getting another COVID-19 booster shot. The Biden administration announced Wednesday that third Pfizer and Moderna vaccine doses will become available eight months after people received their second shot, beginning Sept. 20. The plan is pending an independent safety and effectiveness evaluation by the FDA and further analysis from the CDC, Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy said. DeSantis said the federal government had some of its guidance wrong throughout the pandemic, including keeping children away from classrooms last year. The data now “contradicts” that decision, he noted.
“Florida’s two largest health organizations launch vaccine PSAs” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Florida’s two largest health organizations, the Florida Hospital Association and the Florida Medical Association have partnered with the Florida Association of Broadcasters to roll out a new series of public service announcements promoting COVID-19 vaccines. The English and Spanish television and radio spots, which appear to target young Floridians hesitant to get the shot, will hit “every market in the state” through the end of November. According to the release, additional advertising will run online and on social media, which said the PSAs feature unscripted messaging from Florida physicians and nurses.
To watch one of the spots, click on the image below:
“Publix, Walmart, Winn-Dixie, Walgreens, CVS offer third COVID-19 vaccine to immunocompromised” via Austin Fuller of the Orlando Sentinel — Major retail pharmacies including Publix, Walmart, Walgreens, CVS and Winn-Dixie are now offering a third dose of the coronavirus vaccine to people who are immunocompromised. There is no cost to the customer. The CDC recommends individuals with moderately to severely compromised immune systems get an additional dose at least 28 days after receiving the second shot of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines. The third shot should be the same brand as the first two. Moderna vaccines are available at all in-store Publix pharmacies, and the Pfizer vaccine is available in pharmacies in Orange, Brevard, Polk and Duval counties.
— CORONA LOCAL —
“DeSantis announces Pasco, Hillsborough monoclonal antibody treatment centers” via Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times — The state will set up monoclonal antibody treatment sites in Hudson and Tampa, the Governor announced at a news conference in Hudson. Like other treatment sites set up across the state, the two new centers will be able to support about 300 patients per day, DeSantis’s office said in a news release. No prescription is required, and the treatments are free. Tampa’s site will be at Kings Forest Park, 8008 East Chelsea St. The site in Hudson will be at the Mike Fasano Regional Hurricane Shelter, 11611 Denton Ave. Both will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. seven days a week.
“Photo shows Jacksonville Regeneron Clinic overburdened with COVID-19 patients” via Sydney Boles of WJCT — A photo circulating on social media shows COVID-19 patients lying on the floor of the antibody treatment clinic at the Jacksonville Public Library Downtown. The photo shows a woman lying facedown on the library floor. She appears to be in distress. In the background, another person is also flat on the floor, being tended to by a loved one. The photo was posted on Reddit around midday Wednesday by user Suzieb2220, who wrote, “My husband (vaccinated, but positive) has been waiting 2+ hours for monoclonal therapy, and he says he has never seen people so sick. Moaning, crying, unable to move.” Reached Thursday afternoon, Louie Lopez, who took the photo, said the image was more dramatic in person.
—“Yes, this photo of severely ill COVID-19 patients lying on the floor in Jacksonville is real” via Harold Goodridge and Kailey Tracy of First Coast News
—”Jacksonville health system to offer monoclonal antibody treatment ‘for some high-risk patients’” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union
“Jacksonville fire lieutenant becomes JFRD’s first member to die from COVID-19 in line of duty” via Dan Scanlan of The Florida Times-Union — A 17-year veteran of the Jacksonville Fire and Rescue Department has become the first in the agency to succumb to the COVID-19 virus in the line of duty. Lt. Mario Moya, a U.S. Navy veteran who spent most of his firefighting career at Station 42 in Mandarin, died late Tuesday at Baptist Medical Center South, the fire department reported. The 51-year-old received a police and fire department escort as his body was taken to a funeral home from the hospital Wednesday, with firefighters saluting Rescue 42 as it and the procession went past. Fire officials did not release information on whether Moya had been vaccinated against the virus, citing privacy laws.
“COVID-19 in the workforce: Miami-Dade police, bus operators home sick as virus spreads” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Miami-Dade’s transit system is again feeling some strain from COVID-19’s spread — this time without the emergency measures that increased the cleaning of buses and decreased the number of passengers aboard. On Wednesday, the county’s Department of Transportation and Public Works said 63 bus operators were home due to COVID-19 and that a bus technician died from it Saturday. The technician was not named. The county’s transit union said a supervisor also recently died of the virus. Miami-Dade police, paramedics and firefighters also are staying home due to COVID-19, with the absences putting a logistical strain on two of the county’s largest agencies.
“More than 3,400 Palm Beach County students sent home due to possible COVID-19 exposure” via Sonja Isger of the Palm Beach Post — On the sixth day of the school year, one in every 50 students was directed to stay at home due to possible COVID-19 exposure in Palm Beach County, according to data released by the district Thursday. The stay-at-home rolls reached 3,472 midweek, not a couple of students at a time, but by leaps of hundreds, including 417 additions from Tuesday to Wednesday. Also growing daily, though considerably smaller, was the number of confirmed infections among students and staff. The first three days of this week, positive cases averaged 207 students and 24 employees per day. The total infections since the district’s dashboard went live on Aug. 10, hit 946 Thursday morning.
“Palm Beach County schools cancel mask opt-out for students, defying DeSantis” via Andrew Marra of The Palm Beach Post — Palm Beach County School Board members Wednesday removed parents’ ability to exempt their children from wearing masks on public school campuses, joining a growing number of school boards defying DeSantis’ ban on mask mandates. Under a new policy adopted late Wednesday, all students will have to wear a facial covering at school unless they have an exemption for a disability. The policy is expected to take effect Monday. The surprise decision does away with a parental opt-out that more than 10,000 district students use to attend school maskless.
“Palm Beach County schools can’t find subs for half their absent teachers. Now subs will get a raise.” via Andrew Marra of the Palm Beach Post — It’s become so hard to hire substitute teachers that Palm Beach County public schools can’t find one for half the hundreds of classrooms left empty each day when regular teachers go absent. In the second week of classes, school district officials say that thousands of students were being taught by counselors and school staffers or squeezing into other teachers’ classes while their classrooms sat unstaffed. Substitute shortages have hit the school district hard since the coronavirus pandemic began, and records show the problem has worsened from the spring, as more substitutes decline assignments amid skyrocketing coronavirus cases. Now, in an attempt to coax more substitutes back to campus, school district officials are giving them the biggest pay boost in years.
“Orange schools to consider face mask mandate, legal challenge to DeSantis order” via Leslie Postal and Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — The Orange County School Board could join five other Florida school districts defying DeSantis by requiring students to wear face masks as several Orange board members said Thursday they are convinced the governor’s order banning mask mandates is illegal and irresponsible in the face of rising COVID-19 cases. “I am fully in support of putting mandates back in place,” said Chair Teresa Jacobs as the board discussed COVID-19 safety protocols during a four-hour meeting. “I think we need to aggressively challenge the rule,” Jacobs said. “The only question is the right way to do it.”
“Nearly 300 COVID-19 cases reported in Collier’s first week of school; quarantine cases not shared” via Rachel Fradette of the Naples Daily News — Close to 300 positive COVID-19 cases were reported in Collier County schools during their first week back to class, according to the district’s coronavirus dashboard. Since classes started on Aug. 10, student and employee positive cases have been logged on the dashboard, updated daily. From Aug. 10 to Aug. 17, 234 student cases and 61 employee cases were reported on the dashboard, 295 cases in total. Based on a 180-day calendar, that’s 3.3% of the school year. Last school year, the district reported 1,582 student cases. Collier reached about 15% of that total in its first week.
“Full ICUs, daily deathwatch: A look at COVID-19, unvaccinated patients in Southwest Florida hospitals” via Frank Gluck of the Fort Myers News-Press — Aaron Renfroe lies semi-reclined in his hospital bed as he struggles to speak between labored breaths and bouts of tears. The 44-year-old Fort Myers man has been at Gulf Coast Medical Center for four days because of COVID-19 complications and can’t properly breathe without plastic tubing, known as a nasal cannula, sending extra oxygen into his lungs. His wife is also sick from the novel coronavirus, much worse than him, he worries, on another floor of the hospital. His son and daughter have it too but are well enough to recover at home.
“A ‘grim threat’ to region: Lee Health COVID-19 hospitalizations nearing 600, cases still increasing in Lee and Collier” via Frank Gluck of the Fort Myers News-Press — COVID-19 hospitalizations at Lee Health reached 598 on Thursday, another all-time high in cases that hospital system administrators said reflected the “grim threat to our community.” Six of them are children. Intensive care units within Lee Health’s four primary hospitals are now at 96% capacity. The entire health system is also at 96% of staffed bed capacity. Larry Antonucci, the hospital system’s president and CEO, said he worries cases will continue to go up for weeks, or longer. As a result, the organization hires more nurses and support staff and offers bonuses to employees volunteering for extra shifts.
“Patients with chest pains, head injuries wait for hours after initial triage at full ER amid COVID-19 surge” via Caroline Catherman of the Orlando Sentinel — From Aug. 8-14, 100% of ICU beds and 95% of hospital beds were full in Seminole County. Seminole’s Emergency Medical Services system is at “crisis level,” said Seminole county’s fire chief on Monday after he asked people to stop calling 9-1-1 for nonemergencies because of low ambulance availability. This pressure on hospital resources is due to the new wave of COVID-19 cases, fueled by the delta variant. About 37% of inpatient beds and 46% of staffed ICU beds in Seminole County were occupied by a COVID-19 patient.
“How Tampa Bay groups help connect Hispanics to COVID-19 vaccines, information” via Juan Carlos Chavez of the Tampa Bay Times — Doubts about vaccines in the Latino population continue to be a strong obstacle to curbing the high rate of infections. Even amid a new wave of hospitalizations and deaths linked to the Delta variant, the fear has not ceased. To allay fears and open the doors to mass vaccination, different Hispanic and national organizations such as UnidosUS reinforce their public health and education strategies. Unidos and Walgreens recently ran a three-day mobile tour called “Esperanza Hope for all” in Tampa and Lakeland.
“Orlando offers vaccinated employees cash, time off and other perks” via Ryan Gillespie of the Orlando Sentinel — Vaccinated City of Orlando employees are being offered cash payments, more time off, and other benefits, in hopes of driving up the number of people immunized against COVID-19. The incentives, announced in an email from Mayor Buddy Dyer to employees Thursday, will be for all employees who are fully vaccinated by Halloween and upload their Centers for the Disease Control and Prevention card to the city’s human resources platform by Nov. 5, it says. In exchange, vaccinated full-time workers will receive $150, and part-timers will get $75. Also, the city will offer extra paid leave to vaccinated employees and enter them into weekly drawings “of cash, tickets and other financial benefits up to $1,000,” it states.
“Republican Club of Lakeland, health department team up to host COVID-19 vaccination clinic” via Kimberly C. Moore of The Lakeland Ledger — In July, U.S. Army Reserve Chief Warrant Officer 3 James Ring, a retired Lakeland Police sergeant and president of the Republican Club of Lakeland, thought he was going to die from COVID-19. Now, he hopes to prevent others from suffering what he endured and maybe even save their lives. On Saturday morning, the Lakeland Republican Club is partnering with the Florida Department of Health Polk County to host a COVID-19 pop-up vaccination clinic from 8 a.m. until noon at Cleveland Heights Country Club at the corner of Edgewood Drive and Buckingham Avenue.
“An elected leader in the Keys has COVID-19 as cases spike and a new mask rule approved” via Gwen Filosa of the Miami Herald — A vaccinated Florida Keys politician was hospitalized Aug. 14 after testing positive for COVID-19. Meanwhile, Monroe County Commissioners voted to require masks inside local government buildings as cases spike along the island chain. According to friend Susanne Bloy, Monroe County Commissioner Mike Forster was in stable condition at Baptist Hospital in Kendall on Thursday. Forster had gotten the Johnson & Johnson single-dose vaccine, Bloy said. “We are all praying for you, Mike,” County Mayor Michelle Coldiron said Wednesday at a Commission meeting in Key West after reading a statement Bloy had sent to the Commission. “Stay strong for us.”
“Gulf Coast’s beloved ‘Redneck Riviera’ now a virus hotspot” via Jay Reeves of The Associated Press — Tourists and servers alike dance atop tables and in the aisles at one restaurant on the “Redneck Riviera,” a beloved stretch of towns along the northern Gulf Coast where beaches, bars and stores are packed. Yet just a few miles away, a hospital is running out of critical care beds, its rooms full of unvaccinated people fighting for their lives. On maps that show virus “hot spots” in red, this part of the U.S. coast is glowing like a bad sunburn. And a summer of booming tourism that followed the lockdowns and travel restrictions of 2020 is making the turn toward fall with only a few signs of slowing down.
— STATEWIDE —
“African dust to create haze over Florida and suppress hurricanes” via David Fleshler of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The dry, dusty air will arrive in South Florida this weekend, creating hazy conditions. The air could suppress hurricane formation across the Atlantic, a welcome development after a week that produced the second hurricane of the 2021 season and is expected to produce the third. Hurricane Grace struck Mexico Thursday and Hurricane Henri is expected to form Friday and pose a threat to the northeastern United States. Hurricanes and tropical storms thrive on humid air, which spins upward and forms the immense cloud structures that give them their characteristic whirling shape. Dry air impedes that upward movement.
“Woman paid to front group behind ‘ghost’ candidates says consultant used signature without permission” via Jeff Weiner, Annie Martin, and Jason Garcia of the Orlando Sentinel — Sierra Marie Olive, an unemployed 23-year-old Palm Harbor resident who had recently graduated from Florida State University, told prosecutors she was at the dentist last September when a former roommate texted her with an enticing offer. “Want to know if you want to be a chair for a political committee,” Alex Alvarado said. “You don’t do anything and make 2K.” She said she soon learned that Alvarado had sent documents to a bank, including account origination paperwork and an Internal Revenue Service Form, that bore her signature but which she didn’t sign. Meanwhile, the committee she agreed to front quickly began attracting scrutiny due to a scandal that has rocked Florida politics.
“Deerfield health care marketing company faces lawsuit for ‘bait-and-switch’” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — A new lawsuit alleges Insurance Care Direct (ICD), a health care marketing company based in Deerfield Beach, is engaged in a “bait-and-switch” scheme where customers are duped into buying limited-coverage health care plans they believe are far more comprehensive. McLaren Insurance Solutions and Maxim Health, based in California, are serving as plaintiffs in the lawsuit, which was filed in California. The suit was filed against ABS Healthcare Services and Health Option One, which collectively function as ICD, as well as My Agent Solution, an affiliate of ICD. Plaintiffs say they’ve lost revenue due to the defendants’ actions.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Tallahassee federal courthouse could be named after first Black state Supreme Court justice” via James Call of USA Today Network — All 26 members of Florida’s Congressional delegation are backing a bill to designate the U.S. Courthouse in Tallahassee as the “Judge Joseph Woodrow Hatchett U.S. Courthouse.” Joseph Hatchett, who died in April, was Florida’s first Black state Supreme Court justice. The 88-year-old was appointed to the court in 1975 by then-Gov. Reuben Askew. U.S. Rep. Al Lawson introduced the measure (H.R. 4771) to name the courthouse on North Adams Street. Lawson called Hatchett a social justice pioneer who devoted his career to advocating for civil rights.
“United Airlines cancels service to Tallahassee” via TaMaryn Waters of the Tallahassee Democrat — United Airlines will no longer fly to the capital after Oct. 1, according to a Facebook post by Tallahassee International Airport. In a March 2019 Air Service Update of Tallahassee’s airport, Houston ranked 15 out of the airport’s Top 25 markets. The air travel snapshot showed an average of 13 passengers each way each day between Houston and Tallahassee with an average fare of $244, which does not include passengers connecting to other markets at the IAH airport. The news comes after the Chicago-based airline expanded service here in November with direct flights to Houston through SkyWest, an affiliated carrier of United Airlines.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Brian Ballard, Jose Diaz, Ballard Partners: Yeilyn Quiroz Otero
Zachary Hubbard: Foresite, Skydio, Western Governors University
Lori Killinger, Kasey Lewis, Martin Lyon, Lewis Longman & Walker: Collier Mosquito Control District
Jonathan Kilman, Converge Government Affairs of Florida: BLOCKCHAIN
Georgia McKeown: Halifax Health
Karl Rasmussen, Metz Husband & Daughton: Columbia County Board of County Commissioners
Lori Rocky: City of Fort Pierce, School District of St. Lucie County, St. Lucie County
Patrick Steele, Lindsey Zander: Agency for Health Care Administration
— 2022 —
“Democrats challenging DeSantis in 2022 criticize his pandemic policies. What would they do?” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — “Dictator” is a word both Democrats vying for governor in Florida have used lately to describe the man they want to replace in 2022: DeSantis. DeSantis’ unabashed, unwavering approach to the pandemic has become the focal point of the campaigns of Fried and U.S. Rep. Crist in the weeks since Florida once again became the epicenter for the country’s coronavirus outbreaks. Fried recently accused DeSantis of catering to the “radical right” with his less restrictive pandemic policies. Crist called for “common sense” in a new campaign ad taking aim at DeSantis over masks.
Happening this weekend: Senate Democrats Disney Event — Florida Senate Democrats are holding a “Family Weekend” fundraiser at Disney World this weekend. A $15,000 contribution will get more details on the Aug. 20-22 event. Money raised this weekend will benefit the Florida Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee, which serves as the Florida Democratic Party’s main fundraising arm for Senate campaigns.
“Kamia Brown faces campaign fines as she finally kicks off SD 11 campaign” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Rep. Brown kicked off her 2022 campaign for Senate District 11 Thursday while facing fines from the state for late campaign treasurer reports from her former House reelection campaign. Late campaign treasurer reports for her previous House District 45 reelection campaign have put Brown in trouble with the Florida Division of Elections. She has been assessed more than $5,000 in fines for failing to file campaign paperwork on time in that previous campaign. Brown called it “an oversight” and said everything necessary has since been submitted and corrected. “We are currently working out a payment plan with the Division of Elections,” she said in a text to Florida Politics.
“Duval elections office asks city for millions to replace decade-old machines” via Hannah Lee of The Tributary — To prepare for redistricting and back-to-back elections in the fall of 2022 and spring of 2023, Duval’s county elections office is asking the City Council to boost its budget from $6.9 million to $9.4 million, a 35% increase. The new budget will allow the Duval County Supervisor of Elections office to replace what it says is outdated equipment, bring on a new employee, cut down on voting lines, notify residents of their new districts and begin purchasing mail-ballot envelopes. Despite the significant request, the office’s budget will continue to be lower than in peak years a decade ago. One of the biggest expenses is the replacement of voting machines. The AutoMARK ballot-marking machines are almost a decade old.
— CORONA NATION —
“CDC to create new information center to forecast disease threats” via Adela Suliman, Jacqueline Dupree, Yasmeen Abutaleb and Lena H. Sun of The Washington Post — The Center for Forecasting and Outbreak Analytics will accelerate access to data for public health decision-makers who need information “in real-time” to mitigate the effects of disease threats, both domestically and abroad. It will also serve as a hub for innovation and research on disease modeling, the CDC said. “This is an amazing opportunity for CDC and public health as we stand up the country’s first governmentwide public health forecasting center,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said in a statement Wednesday.
“Record delta wave hits kids, raises fear as U.S. schools open” via Lindey Tanner of The Associated Press — With the highly contagious delta variant spreading across the U.S., children are filling hospital intensive care beds instead of classrooms in record numbers, more even than at the height of the pandemic. Many are too young to get the vaccine, which is available only to those 12 and over. The surging virus is spreading anxiety and causing turmoil and infighting among parents, administrators and politicians around the U.S., especially in states like Florida and Texas, where Republican governors have barred schools from making youngsters wear masks. While pediatric COVID-19 hospitalization rates are lower than those for adults, they have surged in recent weeks, reaching 0.41 per 100,000 children ages 0 to 17, compared with 0.31 per 100,000, the previous high set in mid-January.
“GOP Governors embrace COVID-19 cocktails over masks as cases surge” via Dan Goldberg of POLITICO — Republican governors in some of the states hardest hit by the pandemic are pushing expensive COVID-19 cocktails over cheap masks. The governors in Florida, Missouri and Texas are promising millions of dollars in antibody treatments for infected people even as they oppose vaccine and mask mandates, saying they can potentially keep people with mild COVID-19 symptoms out of hospitals that are being swamped by new cases. But the treatments and cost of providing them are thousands of dollars more than preventive vaccines, and tricky to administer because they work best early in the course of an infection.
“Why didn’t officials recommend boosters for people who got the Johnson & Johnson vaccine?” via Emily Anthes of The New York Times — The federal government’s recent booster recommendation was based on data suggesting that the protection provided by the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines against infection and mild disease has been waning over time, officials said Wednesday. But less data is available on the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which was not authorized until the end of February, two months after Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna. In addition, Johnson & Johnson vaccinations were temporarily paused while health officials investigated reports that a very small number of people had developed a rare blood-clotting condition after receiving the vaccine. Without robust data on the long-term effectiveness of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, it is hard for health officials to recommend boosters, said John Moore, a virologist at Weill Cornell Medicine.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“U.S. jobless claims hit a pandemic low as hiring strengthens” via Paul Wiseman of The Associated Press — The number of people seeking unemployment benefits fell last week for a fourth straight time to a pandemic low, the latest sign that America’s job market is rebounding from the pandemic recession as employers boost hiring to meet a surge in consumer demand. The Labor Department reported that jobless claims fell by 29,000 to 348,000. The four-week average of claims, which smooths out week-to-week volatility, also fell, by 19,000, to just below 378,000, also a pandemic low. The weekly pace of applications for unemployment aid has fallen more or less steadily since topping 900,000 in early January.
“Mortgage delinquencies sink to pandemic low as U.S. jobs return” via Prashant Gopal of Bloomberg — The seasonally adjusted delinquency rate dropped to 5.47% of all loans outstanding, down from 8.22% a year earlier and the lowest since the first quarter of 2020, according to a survey by the Mortgage Bankers Association. The decline in the delinquency rate for loans for veterans and Federal Housing Administration mortgages — the affordable path to homeownership for many first-time buyers and low-income Americans — was the biggest in data going back to 1979. The federal government may have staved off a foreclosure crisis by allowing people who lost income during the pandemic to defer mortgage payments. They can have principal and interest tacked on as a lump sum that only needs to be repaid when they sell or refinance.
“The CEO wants his staff vaccinated. He also worries they will quit.” via Jesse Newman of The Wall Street Journal — An impasse over vaccinations is bedeviling the corporate world. On one side are employers and employees eager to see their co-workers be vaccinated, both out of health concerns and to head off the risk of an outbreak that slows production or shutters a workplace. On the other are workers who see it as their right to decide when and if to vaccinate. Some large companies, including Walmart, Microsoft, and Tyson Foods have imposed vaccine mandates. But the balance of power isn’t necessarily with every employer. Taylor Farm’s 14 U.S. plants, which supply restaurants such as Taco Bell and grocers like Whole Foods Market, are already short some 1,500 employees. The tight labor market means that Taylor and others must be careful not to alienate workers.
“Battered but not broken: movie theaters anxiously hold out hope for late box office rebound” via Rebecca Rubin of Variety — Operating a movie theater during a stubbornly persistent global health crisis means that returning to normal isn’t as easy as flipping a switch, rehiring employees and installing state-of-the-art air-filtration systems. Owners have made it through the worst of the pandemic, a devastatingly long period in which zero revenue was coming through the door, but they’ve emerged on the other side in a situation that remains uncertain. Businesses, especially of the indoor variety, have to navigate a world where unpredictable spikes in COVID-19 cases will impact their ability to function. Some cinema operators, for their part, have been willing to take financial hits to ensure their customers feel safe returning and sitting in a dark room full of strangers.
— MORE CORONA —
“In obituary for a vaccinated man, daughters share anger — and a plea” via Claire McNeill of the Tampa Bay Times — Danielle Allen sifted through the files on her dad’s computer. Her sister Nicole Allen-Gentile had packed up his scooter, which he’d used to visit a nature preserve during the long pandemic days. They knew he didn’t want a service. In the packet titled “Stuff to Do Upon the Death of Clark Allen,” it became clear that an obituary mattered very much. Clark Allen had taken the virus seriously. He knew he was vulnerable, and he desperately wanted to see his grandkids again. Nicole emailed Danielle a furious start. Clark died of COVID-19. Danielle rewrote the intro. “He was infected by someone who chose not to get vaccinated, and his death was preventable.”
“As delta variant spreads, some companies with vaccine mandates deploy tech to verify records” via Danielle Abril of The Washington Post — Google, which employs more than 144,000 people, has turned to membership-based health care provider One Medical as one of the services it uses to verify the U.S. vaccination records of its contract workers and employees, according to an internal email obtained by The Washington Post. San Francisco-based startup Superhuman recently paid for ReturnSafe to help verify the vaccination status of its workforce, which totals about 100 employees. After an employee uploads a vaccination card to the app, a human at ReturnSafe checks to make sure the record matches the employee, that the person had two doses of an approved vaccine, and that at least two weeks have passed since the last vaccination.
—“Inside Mississippi’s fourth COVID-19 wave: Younger patients, crying nurses and 7 ICU beds left” via Bracey Harris of NBC News
“Only 2% of Africans are vaccinated, WHO official says” via Hannah Knowles of The Washington Post — Only 2% of the African population is fully vaccinated against COVID-19, the World Health Organization’s regional director for Africa said Thursday as she reiterated the global health group’s criticisms that booster shot programs hog resources for wealthy nations. “As some richer countries hoard vaccines, they make a mockery, frankly, of vaccine equity,” Matshidiso Moeti said. Her statements came a day after the Biden administration said that pending reviews from health agencies, it plans to start offering booster shots in late September for Americans eight months into their second dose of either the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines. Israel is already giving the shots, and the country’s health minister said Thursday that they are expanding eligibility to people over 40 years old.
“Fox News told employees to report vaccination status” via Haley Messenger and Ben Kesslen of NBC News — As some Fox News stars continue to question the efficacy of the COVID-19 vaccines, the company has drawn its own line: mandating employees to tell the network if they have been vaccinated, according to an internal memo. It is not, however, requiring to employees to be vaccinated to come into the offices. CEO Suzanne Scott said in the memo, which was an updated version of a memo sent in June, that the mandate applies to all employees, including those working remotely. Fox News has also said masks are optional for vaccinated individuals but required for all in “small, confined spaces” like control rooms.
“Locked-up and fed-up: Australian voters put Prime Minister on notice” via Jonathan Barrett and Colin Packham of Reuters — On current polling, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s Liberal Party-led Coalition would likely lose its thin majority in the country’s 151-seat parliament at an election that must be held by the middle of next year. Australia’s exposure to the coronavirus pandemic remains small compared to many other developed nations, with a total of just over 41,400 cases and 971 deaths, and for several months it appeared to be emerging from the crisis. But the fast-moving Delta variant has exposed a major weakness; the country’s slow-moving vaccine program. “The problem is Morrison set expectations so high,” said John Hewson, a former Liberal Party leader. “Australia was riding high with few if any cases, and now he has to manage these lows.”
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden’s approval rating is slipping fast. Democrats should be nervous.” via Henry Olsen of The Washington Post — The media is hammering Biden over the chaotic fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban. That can only amplify what was already a slow but steady decline in his job approval numbers. Biden started his presidency in good standing with a healthy 55.5% approval rating. His net favorability began to decline in the late spring as previously undecided respondents said they disapproved of his performance, but his favorability ratings remained stable and high. That standing has been in steady decline recently. His job approval dropped to 53% by June 25 and 52.2% by July 25. As of Wednesday, it stands at 49.6%.
“Why didn’t the Biden administration evacuate Afghans sooner?” via Amber Phillips of The Washington Post — Why did the Biden administration fail to get Afghan allies of its 20-year war there out of Afghanistan before the Taliban took over? That, more so than Biden’s decision to withdraw, is shaping up as a main point of contention between Biden and Congress. The United States has only rescued a fraction of the thousands of interpreters, fixers and other allies, and those left behind are in danger in a Taliban-controlled Afghanistan. It’s looking like there will be investigations into this led by Democrats in Congress.
“Biden: Greater threats than Taliban-controlled Afghanistan” via Robert Burns, Ellen Knickmeyer, and Zeke Miller of The Associated Press — Biden says even with the Taliban in power in Afghanistan, he sees a greater threat from outposts of al-Qaida and its affiliated groups in other countries, and that it was no longer “rational” to continue to focus U.S. military power there. “We should be focusing on where the threat is the greatest,” Biden said. Biden has repeatedly said that America will not send significantly more forces to fight in Afghanistan. The U.S. has not had tens of thousands there for several years and had 2,500 to 3,000 deployed there when Biden took office.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Donald Trump’s Palm Beach County tax bills could hit $1.5 million, initial estimates show” via Darrell Hofheinz of The Palm Beach Post — Soaring real estate values were reflected in the estimated tax bills released Thursday for Palm Beach County properties whose ownership companies are controlled by Trump, including three houses next door to his Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach. All three of those Palm Beach houses, one on Woodbridge Road and two nearby on South Ocean Blvd, saw their estimated “total market values” rise, with a corresponding increase in their estimated taxes for 2021. That also held true at the Mar-a-Lago Club, which saw a $1 million hike in its estimated market value, from $26.6 million in last year’s estimates to $27.6 million this year.
— CRISIS —
“A judge said it was ‘concerning’ that Jan. 6 plea deals don’t allow more court oversight of Capitol rioters” via Zoe Tillman of BuzzFeed News — U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson raised the issue near the end of a plea hearing for a California man who briefly entered the Capitol Jan. 6. Mark Simon pleaded guilty to one count of parading, demonstrating, or picketing in the Capitol, a misdemeanor with a maximum sentence of six months in jail. Shortly before she accepted Simon’s plea, Jackson said she found it “concerning” that the specific charge Simon and others have pleaded guilty to remove the option of what’s known as supervised release. Supervised release comes with a series of conditions that defendants must follow or else risk more charges and prison time; those conditions can include a prohibition on drugs and guns, a curfew or anything else the judge considers “appropriate.”
“Watchdog group urges Jan. 6 committee to question Republican AGs” via Karl Evers-Hillstrom of The Hill — In a letter to Speaker Nancy Pelosi and members of the House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 riot, Accountable.US urged lawmakers to question the Republican Attorneys General Association and some of its key members about their involvement in a pro-Trump rally before the Capitol attack. The Rule of Law Defense Fund, RAGA’s policy arm, paid for robocalls encouraging Trump supporters to march to the Capitol on Jan. 6 to “stop the steal.” Revelations of RAGA’s involvement sparked outrage, triggering internal resignations and prompting some corporations to pause donations to the group. But earlier this year, RAGA named Peter Bisbee, the operative who approved the robocalls, as its new executive director.
“Man claiming to have bomb near U.S. Capitol is in custody after standoff, police say” via Lizzie Johnson, Ellie Silverman, Antonio Olivo and Peter Jamison of The Washington Post — Congressional office buildings and nearby homes were evacuated as authorities negotiated with the man, identified by law enforcement as Floyd Ray Roseberry, of North Carolina. Roseberry surrendered to authorities after about five hours and will face criminal charges, U.S. Capitol Police Chief J. Thomas Manger said. Before he was taken into custody, he delivered a tirade over a Facebook live video — watched by tens of thousands of people — in which he assailed President Biden and other Democrats, called for a revolt against the U.S. government and claimed there were other “patriots” waiting in vehicles elsewhere in D.C.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Three more Senators have tested positive for the virus; all are breakthrough cases.” via Zach Montague of The New York Times — U.S. Sens. Roger Wicker, Republican of Mississippi, Angus King, independent of Maine, and John Hickenlooper, Democrat of Colorado, said on Thursday that they had tested positive for the coronavirus, adding to the number of breakthrough cases among lawmakers. Several other vaccinated politicians have recently announced breakthrough cases of their own, including U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who said he tested positive for the virus after attending a gathering hosted by U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia. The surge and the rising frequency of breakthrough infections have prompted agencies to extend public health measures. On Tuesday, the Transportation Security Administration said that the mask mandate would remain in effect on public transportation through Jan. 18.
“As gun violence spikes in Miami and across Florida, where is Marco Rubio?” via Amit Dadon and Vivian Azalia of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — In COVID-19′s shadow, over 43,559 people were killed by guns in 2020, a record year for America’s long-running epidemic. Every day, 119 disproportionately Black and Latino lives are lost. With a gun death rate well-exceeding national averages, Florida is no exception. But the words and actions of Sen. Rubio would make you think gun violence never kills or injures his constituents, let alone 7,000 every year. It’s a bought-off silence. Between 2011 and 2019, gun violence killed 23,159 Floridians while Rubio was showered with an A+ rating and $3.3 million from the NRA. In other words, donations by gun lobbyists of $142.49 per victim are all it’s taken for Rubio to overlook the deaths of our fellow Floridians, our loved ones.
Tweet, tweet:
“Brian Mast said Biden ‘owns’ Afghanistan withdrawal chaos, cites tactical errors” via Antonio Fins of The Palm Beach Post — Congressman Mast said that the Biden administration bears the full blame for the chaotic collapse in Afghanistan. “He owns this one 100%,” Mast, a Republican representing a district that stretches from northern Palm Beach County north along the Treasure Coast, said. “President Biden chose to conduct the withdrawal, to do it how he did it, which was the most backward possible way that it could be done.” Mast is just one voice in Congress, but one that carries particular moral authority regarding the war in Afghanistan. He served in the country’s Kandahar region as part of his 12-year stint in the U.S. Army, a record of service that includes earning a Bronze Star.
“Alejandro Mayorkas announces Cuba sanctions, but no Haiti TPS extension during Miami visit” via Bianca Padró Ocasio, Nora Gámez Torres and Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — The U.S. will impose further sanctions on officials involved in quashing anti-government protests in Cuba, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Mayorkas said after a meeting with Cuban American activists in Miami on Thursday. “Later today, we will be announcing another set of sanctions against individuals who were responsible for the repression and the brutality in response to the Cuban people’s cry for liberty on July 11,” Mayorkas said. “This administration stands with the Cuban people,” he said, adding assurances that the administration will not develop a policy toward Cuba without the input of Cuban Americans.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Momentum builds for putting memorial to victims of Surfside condo at Miami Beach park” via Jay Weaver of the Miami Herald — A plan for building a memorial honoring the 98 people who died in the Surfside condominium collapse is gaining momentum — but the leading site is on donated land in a Miami Beach park a short walk from the now-vacant Champlain Towers South property. Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Michael Hanzman, who oversees the condo property’s fate at 8777 Collins Ave. and supports selling it to a private developer for luxury units, expressed his preference for the memorial site in Miami Beach during a court hearing on Wednesday. Hanzman said it would not be feasible for a government entity to buy the former 12-story condo property in Surfside at the going sales price of $120 million.
“No-party candidate in Miami election fraud case to enter plea, testify against Frank Artiles” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — Alexis Rodriguez, the no-party candidate involved in an alleged vote-siphoning scheme, will enter into a plea with prosecutors and serve as a witness in the state’s case against former Miami state Sen. Artiles, a dramatic move that distances himself from his former friend and delays the process by another 60 days. Rodriguez, an auto parts salesperson and acquaintance of the former state Senator, originally pleaded not guilty on charges related to the scheme, including taking donations that exceed the legal limit and lying on sworn campaign documents. Rodriguez will officially enter into a plea on Tuesday.
“‘It’s cost us hell’: Artiles had his hands in second Miami Senate race, records show” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — The former Miami Republican Senator who recruited an acquaintance to run in Miami-Dade’s Senate District 37 race was simultaneously guiding another spoiler no-party candidate in Senate District 39. Artiles, 47, walked 81-year-old NPA candidate Celso Alfonso and his wife, Maricela Cardenas, through the entire election process by giving them campaign filing paperwork to fill out, uploading campaign finance reports using Cardenas’ PIN and login information, and even flying to Tallahassee to hand-deliver Alfonso’s qualifying check to the Department of State on June 12, according to Cardenas’ testimony in court records released Thursday.
“Judge lets charges stand against Parkland deputy Scot Peterson” via Rafael Olmeda of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Peterson, the former deputy accused of taking cover while dozens were shot at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, will have to convince a jury that he’s not guilty of criminal negligence, a Broward judge ruled Thursday. On Wednesday, Peterson, 58, asked Broward Circuit Judge Martin Fein to dismiss the criminal charges he’s facing because he does not meet the legal definition of a caregiver as defined in Florida law. Peterson is charged with multiple counts of criminal neglect of a child by a caregiver. Peterson’s lawyer, Mark Eiglarsh, argued that the laws defining a caregiver explicitly omit law enforcement officers.
“Former player arrested, charged with 2006 murder of Miami Hurricanes star Bryan Pata” via David Ovalle and Susan Degnan Miller of the Miami Herald — Cell records, a key eyewitness, and a history of bad blood led authorities on Thursday to arrest a former University of Miami football player for the murder of Pata, a star Hurricanes defensive lineman who was gunned down in 2006 in what had been one of South Florida’s most infamous unsolved killings. Miami-Dade homicide detectives arrested Rashaun Jones, 35, a former Canes defensive back, in Marion County on a charge of first-degree murder. He’ll be extradited to Miami-Dade County to await trial. The arrest, 15 years after the homegrown football star was shot to death outside a Kendall apartment, was met with relief from family, fans and current and former members of the University of Miami program.
“‘My jaw dropped.’ Video raises questions about another Miami Beach arrest and a new law” via David Ovalle and Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Mariyah Maple, a visitor from New York, was arrested last month under a new Miami Beach ordinance intended to protect police officers from belligerent crowds interfering with their “lawful” duties. The arrest report described her as part of a group that “refused officers’ commands” to back away from cops making an arrest on South Beach on July 25. When a police sergeant used his bicycle to “create a physical barrier,” the report claimed, the crowd “stood their ground and refused to move” — forcing him to use pepper spray. A recording of the previously unreported incident obtained by the Miami Herald shows a much different sequence of events.
“Miami cop suspended over hand gesture. He’d also been dinged for a Trump campaign mask” via Charles Rabin of the Miami Herald — A Miami police officer has been relieved of duty for displaying a hand signal that some interpret as a white power message while posing for a picture. In October, Officer Daniel Ubeda was reprimanded after he strolled through a voting site at Miami’s Government Center in uniform and on duty while wearing a Trump campaign face mask. The latest incident happened last week. Not long after his unit took part in a large weapons bust, Ubeda was photographed standing in uniform at the end of a line with six other officers, openly displaying the last three fingers on each hand with his thumb and index finger touching and forming a circle.
“Family of man killed by BSO deps in psychiatric hospital, release video, seek answers” via Charles Rabin of the Miami Herald — Almost three years after her son was shot and killed by sheriff’s deputies in a hospital psychiatric ward hallway, Angela Randall said the only information she’s received from police and prosecutors was that her son was dead. The family has requested police reports, body camera videos, even a Florida Department of Law Enforcement report on potential criminal wrongdoing by three deputies who fired their weapons at the facility in Tamarac. It was completed two years ago. None of their requests have been fulfilled, they said. “We want justice for my son, and we want answers,” Randall said. “I’ve only talked to one detective since this happened, and that was one-and-a-half days after it happened.”
“Police officer suspended in handling of case involving gun, neighbor trouble, report shows” via Will Greenlee of Treasure Coast Newspapers — A Port St. Lucie police officer was suspended three days after an internal investigation found fault with the handling of a call involving neighbor trouble and a firearm. Officer Michael Connor received the suspension in connection with a July 17, 2020, incident in which a woman told 911 dispatchers about 6:40 a.m. her neighbor was outside with a gun, and she couldn’t go outside. Another person on the call said the “neighbor is drunk, stinks of liquor and is belligerent,” according to records released Wednesday to TCPalm. No arrests were made at the time, and a complainant later took issue with Connor, including alleging inaccuracies in his report about the incident.
“Florida educator fired over racist tirade at woman, sons” via Tiffini Theisen of the Orlando Sentinel — A Florida educator has lost her job after a video surfaced of her screaming racist rants at a woman and her sons. In addition to firing Patricia Schmidt, the Collier County School District sent the video of her profanity-laced tirade to The Florida Department of Education Office of Professional Practices Services. The victims were walking near a paved “residents only” path in an east Naples neighborhood Saturday when Schmidt is accused of driving by, blaring her horn, lowering her window, and screaming profanities and slurs at them. The incident was caught on video.
To watch the video, click on the image below:
“If you like Caribbean rum, food and music, then this is the festival for you.” via Rod Stafford Hagwood of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — There’s a lot of newness with the Caribbean Food and Rum Festival this year. First of all, there’s that name. The fête was formerly known as the Caribbean Village Festival when, in previous years, it was staged in Lauderhill and then Miramar. For this seventh edition, the event is making a move to downtown Hollywood’s ArtsPark at Young Circle. Back in the day, the festival was a part of Caribbean Heritage Month in June. This is the first time it will be held over Labor Day weekend, on Sunday, Sept. 5, from 3-10 p.m. But the thing that’s the same is the array of Caribbean cuisines and craft cocktails available.
— TOP OPINION —
“DeSantis has ‘made a monumental mess of masking in public schools’” via Mac Stipanovich of the Tampa Bay Times — DeSantis is a Governor uninterested in actually governing, a lawyer with little respect for the law, an anti-elitist with an Ivy League education and a hypocrite unbothered by inconsistency. Populist politics, not public policy, is his long suit. So it is not surprising that he has made a monumental mess of masking in public schools. When it became apparent that many of Florida’s 67 local school boards intended to require students, teachers, and staff to wear masks based on the recommendations of the CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics, plus the clear consensus of health care professionals generally, DeSantis did not see a serious public health issue. He saw an irresistible opportunity to pander to the MAGA peanut gallery on a grand scale.
— OPINIONS —
“Why I’m doing the Governor’s job” via Nikki Friend for Florida Politics — As I stood in the Cabinet Room of the Florida Capitol, delivering the grim details of the delta variant rapidly infecting, sickening, and killing Floridians, our actual Governor, DeSantis was on a fundraising vacation to Utah, Michigan and who knows where else. His ambivalence and worse during an emergency of sickness and death, including children, is disqualifying and discrediting. Going back through as many Governors as you can remember, when a hurricane is threatening Florida, Governors throw on the Division of Emergency Management jacket, get all the best experts in the room, and then, most importantly, they communicate clearly to the public. All to save lives, property, jobs, and everything else. During this crisis, DeSantis has done the opposite.
“Tax hikes on tobacco hurt Florida’s working-class” via Ned Bowman for the Orlando Sentinel — As Floridians, we live in one of the most tax-friendly states in the nation, where small businesses can thrive and families benefit from no state income tax. Unfortunately, the federal government is finding loopholes to raise taxes for low- and middle-income families despite their promises not to. On the campaign trail, Biden assured us there would be no tax increases for families making $400,000 or less a year. However, Congress is now considering tax hikes that will disproportionately impact America’s working class and small businesses to pay for a massive budget reconciliation package.
“Nation must follow Florida on first responder mental health care” via Lauren Book for the Tallahassee Democrat — Today, first responders are more likely to die by suicide than from a physical injury sustained in the line of duty. For Officer Jeffrey Smith, for three of his brave colleagues who also died by suicide following the Jan. 6 attack, and for so many other first responders who suffer on-the-job trauma, we must recognize, destigmatize and treat mental health illnesses before it is too late. Several years ago, I learned from a neighbor, a local first responder, that she had suffered through a traumatic event in the line of duty and needed help. It was especially disturbing that mental health benefits were only available if the first responder also suffered a physical injury. And because she suffered no physical injury, she was forced to go untreated and take an unpaid leave of absence.
“Cuba criminalizes criticizing regime on social media, thinking it will hide people’s discontent. It won’t” via Fabiola Santiago of the Miami Herald — The Cuban regime is a 21st-century abomination. In the middle of a deadly pandemic — with hospitals and clinics understaffed and lacking basic, lifesaving equipment like oxygen and people dying in ruinous conditions — Cuban leaders have decided the solution is to crank up the repression. In the midst of suffering, when people need the unrestricted flow of information to survive, the only thing the government of Miguel Díaz-Canel has to offer is a wholesale attack on free speech and internet communications. Cowards! They’re afraid of an unarmed people who staged historic protests across the island on July 11 and whose only weapon is the truth.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Three more school boards have rebelled against the Governor and imposed mandatory mask rules. Gov. DeSantis says it’s another sign of America’s decline.
Also on today’s Sunrise:
— He brought it all back to masks at the end … honestly. Meanwhile, the state Agriculture Commissioner has the latest stats from the CDC.
— The Governor opens two new centers where you can get the Regeneron treatment. And it’s free.
— And you just knew he would find a way to plug Trump.
— Pat Diaz talks about the staffing crisis in hospitals from COVID-19.
— And finally, a Florida Man ordered a life-size bronze statue of himself and billed taxpayers $75,000.
To listen, click on the image below:
— WEEKEND TV —
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFede on CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at South Florida politics and other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Moderator Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable featuring Hillsborough County School Board member Nadia Combs, Marine Corps veteran Kevin Belickis, parent/education advocate Veronica McDonald and Republican activist Vanessa Brito.
In Focus with Allison Walker on Bay News 9/CF 13: A discussion of high-rise oversight in Florida after the Surfside condo collapse and what state lawmakers are considering when it comes to safety. Joining Walker are Sens. Jason Pizzo and Jeff Brandes; and Erin Sykes, Chief Economist and Real Estate Weather Adviser, Nest Seekers International.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: A closer look at the situation in Afghanistan and how we got here; the latest on the fight between the state and school districts over mask mandates; and a preview of the 2021 St. Pete Municipal Elections.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: Congressman Bill Posey will discuss Afghanistan, the resurgence of the Space Coast, Cuba, and the infrastructure bill.
The Usual Suspects on WCTV-Tallahassee/Thomasville (CBS) and WJHG-Panama City (NBC): Host Gary Yordon speaks with Neighborhood Medical Center CEO Jeanee Freeman.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justice on Channel 4 WJXT: Talking Afghanistan with Ambassador Nancy Soderberg; Lt. Gen. Joe DiSalvo (ret.) U.S. Army and Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges (ret.) U.S. Army.
This Week in South Florida on WPLG-Local10 News (ABC): Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz discussing Afghanistan, COVID-19, DeSantis and Cuba.
— ALOE —
“Are you ready for sentient Disney robots?” via Brooks Barnes of The New York Times — The Walt Disney Co.’s secretive research and development division, Imagineering, had promised a walking, talking, emoting Groot, as if the arboreal “Avengers” character had jumped off the screen and was living among us. In the back, near a black curtain, a little wrinkled hand waved hello. It was Groot. He was about 3 feet tall and ambled toward me with wide eyes as if he had discovered a mysterious new life form. He looked me up and down and introduced himself.
To see what Disney Imagineers have cooked up, click on the image below:
Video Player
“New Mandalorian behind-the-scenes video shows Mark Hamill reprising his Star Wars role” via Eric Frederiksen of Gamespot.com — The Disney Gallery series, now into Season 2, gives us behind-the-scenes looks at Disney productions, with the current season focusing on The Mandalorian Season 2. Ahead of an upcoming installment titled “Making of the Season 2 Finale,” Disney has released a clip to prime us for the episode, featuring Hamill himself. The clip features Hamill entering through the ship doors, lightsaber lit, cut with clips of Filoni talking.
—”Star Wars, Marvel, wet Mickey and hidden stars: Disney Cruise Line offers up Disney Wish behind-the-scenes look” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel
“Black Panther 2 will introduce a new Marvel hero, and the choice is A+” via Adam Holmes of Cinema Blend — Because Marvel Studios decided not to recast T’Challa following Chadwick Boseman’s passing, someone else will take over the Black Panther mantle for next year’s Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. However, they won’t be the only new superhero to shine in the sequel. It turns out that Black Panther 2 will also feature the Marvel Cinematic Universe debut of Riri Williams, aka Ironheart. It was announced last year that Ironheart will star in her own Disney+ series, with Dominque Thorne being cast as Riri Williams.
“Amazon plans to open large retail locations akin to department stores” via Sebastian Herrera, Esther Fung and Suzanne Kapner of The Wall Street Journal — Amazon.com plans to open several large physical retail locations in the U.S. that will operate akin to department stores, a step to help the tech company extend its reach in sales of clothing, household items, electronics and other areas, people familiar with the matter said. The plan to launch large stores will mark a new expansion for the online shopping pioneer into bricks-and-mortar retail; an area Amazon has long disrupted. Some of the first Amazon department stores are expected to be located in Ohio and California, the people said. The new retail spaces will be around 30,000 square feet, smaller than most department stores
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Happy birthday to U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor, Mark Bubriski of Florida Power & Light, Matt Florell of St. Pete Polls, Janelle Hendren, and Bethany Swonson.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Happy Friday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,182 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
🚨 Breaking: The FBI has found scant evidence that the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol was the result of an organized plot, law enforcement officials tell Reuters.
- Federal officials have arrested more than 570 alleged participants. But the FBI believes the violence wasn’t centrally coordinated.
A baby is handed over the Kabul airport’s perimeter wall to the U.S. Army for evacuation yesterday.
The big picture: The U.S. is struggling to pick up the pace of evacuations, constrained by obstacles ranging from armed Taliban checkpoints to paperwork problems.
- Taliban fighters and checkpoints ringed the airport — major barriers for Afghans who fear that their work with Westerners makes them targets for retribution. (AP)
The latest: 18,000+ people have been flown out of Kabul since the Taliban took over, a NATO official told Reuters, pledging to work to speed evacuations as criticism of the West’s handling of the crisis mounted.
Hundreds of people gather outside Kabul airport. Photo: AP
An internal State Department memo dated July 13 warned of the potential collapse of Kabul soon after the Aug. 31 deadline for withdrawal of U.S. troops, The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
- Why it matters: “The classified cable represents the clearest evidence yet that the administration had been warned by its own officials on the ground that the Taliban’s advance was imminent and Afghanistan’s military may be unable to stop it.”
The cable was sent to Secretary of State Tony Blinken and Director of Policy Planning Salman Ahmed.
- Blinken reviewed it shortly after receipt, a person familiar with the exchange told The Journal.
The cable was in State’s dissent channel — a formal mechanism, established during the Vietnam War, allowing foreign service officers to raise concerns about policy, The Journal reports.
- State Department spokesman Ned Price said Blinken reads every dissent and reviews every reply.
Courtesy The Economist
“The fiasco in Afghanistan is a grave blow to America’s standing,” The Economist writes in its lead editorial (subscription):
If the propagandists of the Taliban had scripted the collapse of America’s 20-year mission to reshape Afghanistan, they could not have come up with more harrowing images.
“As a result,” The Economist writes, “America’s power to deter its enemies and reassure its friends has diminished”:
Its intelligence was flawed, its planning rigid, its leaders capricious and its concern for allies minimal. That is likely to embolden jihadists everywhere, who will take the Taliban’s victory as evidence that God is on their side. It will also encourage adventurism on the part of hostile governments such as Russia’s or China’s, and worry America’s friends.
⚡ Humanitarian crisis rises: 14 million people in Afghanistan face severe hunger following the Taliban takeover, the UN food agency says.
Illustration: Rae Cook/Axios
Conflicting policies, fiery political debates and the continued spread of Delta are sewing chaos and uncertainty into the back-to-school season, Axios Local reporters write from across the country.
- Why it matters: This will be the third school year in a row with COVID-related disruptions. Many students have already suffered severe learning loss. The gap between students could grow even wider, thanks to disparities in vaccinations and rising case counts.
Mask mandates for students aren’t universal, but they’re pretty common.
- The Texas Education Agency yesterday suspended enforcement in public schools of the ban on mask mandates by Gov. Greg Abbott (R).
- Schools in Palm Beach County, Fla., that didn’t require masks had to quarantine 440 students — just two days into the school year.
- Keep reading.
Sign up for the Axios Local near you.
- Live now: Charlotte … Denver … Des Moines … Northwest Arkansas … Tampa Bay … Twin Cities.
- Coming this fall: Atlanta … Austin … Chicago …. Columbus … Dallas … D.C. … Nashville … Philadelphia.
A school board meeting in Tampa lasted four hours, with a parade of emotional people trying to shoehorn elaborate political philosophy into one-minute speaking slots, Axios’ Ben Montgomery reports.
- Anti-mask moms wore T-shirts that said “Freedom Over Fear” and called masks “tyranny” and “oppression.”
The big picture: The major issues dividing the country have dropped like an anvil on schools, The New York Times reports (subscription).
- “From mask mandates to critical race theory and gender identity, educators are besieged.”
Now endangered: In 2015, Afghan girls study outside Jalalabad. Photo: Parwiz/Reuters
Prominent women’s rights advocates, including poet laureate Amanda Gorman, are calling on the Biden administration to protect and support Afghan women and girls and “honor its commitment to gender equity,” Axios’ Hans Nichols writes.
- Why it matters: The activists — including the actors Connie Britton and Charlize Theron, fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg, and Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg — are the latest advocates to try to increase pressure on President Biden to do more for Afghans who could face persecution from the Taliban.
- The letter was organized by Vital Voices and Women for Women International, a group of celebrities, policy experts, NGO leaders and activists.
The context: The U.S. now has enough aircraft available to meet its goal of getting 5,000 to 9,000 people out of Afghanistan each day, the Pentagon told reporters yesterday.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Heat-related deaths around the world increased by 74% from 1980 to 2016, Axios’ Marisa Fernandez writes from a study published yesterday in The Lancet.
More than 356,000 people died from extreme heat-related causes in just nine countries in 2019, a death toll that’s expected to grow as temperatures increase worldwide.
- 1.3 million deaths were related to cold — a 31% increase since 1990.
Heat stress can lead to stroke, organ and brain damage. A pair of studies out of the University of Washington found it also causes several types of heart disease, diabetes and chronic kidney disease.
Photo: RepairSmith
Just as the pandemic dragged car-buying into the 21st century, the repair business is also modernizing, Axios’ Joann Muller writes from Detroit:
- RepairSmith, a startup that lets you book an appointment online and then sends a mechanic to your home, is expanding after raising $42 million in new funding this week.
- The L.A.-based company, which launched in 2019 out of a Mercedes-Benz incubator program, is now in seven states and plans to expand to every major metropolitan area by the end of 2022. It serves all makes and models.
How it works: Customers enter a few details about their vehicle and can then get a price quote or schedule an appointment online.
- For an oil change or brake job, the mechanic will show up at the appointed hour in a RepairSmith van with the necessary parts.
- Customers who aren’t sure what’s wrong can schedule a one-hour diagnostic visit. The mechanic will offer a quote and schedule a follow-up visit. If a job’s too big, the car is towed to a repair shop.
- Mechanics are employed by RepairSmith, not independent contractors.
The big picture: Tesla and other newcomers offer at-home repair services because they don’t have traditional dealerships where customers can bring their cars for maintenance.
- Some luxury brands have been experimenting with similar services, and there are other startups in the space too, like YourMechanic.
📬 Please invite friends, family, colleagues to sign up here for Axios AM and Axios PM.
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Slain CPD officer Ella French remembered as ‘loud, fun and outgoing’
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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: Obama douses D.C.’s party scene
DRIVING THE DAY
A pair of must-reads on Afghanistan overnight:
— A WSJ scoop that casts perhaps the harshest light yet on the administration’s performance, by Vivian Salama: “An internal State Department memo last month warned top agency officials of the potential collapse of Kabul soon after the U.S.’s Aug. 31 troop withdrawal deadline in Afghanistan, according to a U.S. official and a person familiar with the document.
“The classified cable represents the clearest evidence yet that the administration had been warned by its own officials on the ground that the Taliban’s advance was imminent and Afghanistan’s military may be unable to stop it. … In all, 23 U.S. Embassy staffers, all Americans, signed the July 13 cable, the two people said. The U.S. official said there was a rush to deliver it, given circumstances on the ground in Kabul.
“The cable was sent to Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN and Director of Policy Planning SALMAN AHMED. Mr. Blinken received the cable and reviewed it shortly after receipt, according to the person familiar with the exchange, who added that contingency planning was already under way when it was received, and that Mr. Blinken welcomed their feedback.”
— A POLITICO tick-tock on “five days of panic” inside the Biden administration as Afghanistan unraveled and crisis ensued, by Alexander Ward, Lara Seligman, Andrew Desiderio, Alex Thompson and Bryan Bender: “[B]y Thursday morning in Washington, more population centers were falling to the Taliban by the hour, including the provincial capitals of Ghazni and Badghis.
“In the Situation Room, [Defense Secretary LLOYD] AUSTIN was now recommending that [President JOE] BIDEN send in troops to evacuate the embassy and protect the main international airport in Kabul. [National security adviser JAKE] SULLIVAN asked each Cabinet member in the meeting to weigh in. They unanimously agreed. That was the ‘oh, shit’ moment, said [a] U.S. official. It was now officially a crisis.”
PARTY POOPER — Did BARACK OBAMA ruin the party in D.C.?
His over-the-top 60th birthday party in Martha’s Vineyard first drew criticism for the size of the guest list during the Delta surge — and then after he slimmed it down, the former president was blasted for throwing an opulent party during a pandemic. It didn’t matter that he was following CDC protocols for an outdoor event.
The bashing of the bash is having a chilling effect on the D.C. party scene as (especially Democratic) pols and their staffers scramble to figure out when and where — or even if — they can party again.
“Who wants to throw a party right now when Obama hired a doctor to make sure everyone’s vaccinated and passes a Covid test and he still gets shamed for it?” said JOHN ARUNDEL, former associate publisher of Washington Life magazine and managing director of Perdicus Communications.
“I just think there’s a stigma to throwing any kind of event,” he added. “The optics of throwing the party or being at the party, it can be chilling.”
Just weeks ago, D.C. looked like it was back. The French, Italian and British embassies marked the return to life by opening their residences to hundreds of guests with Champagne and oysters. The Hill’s editor at large STEVE CLEMONS, lobbyist HEATHER PODESTA and French Ambassador PHILIPPE ÉTIENNE were planning to host another lavish party at the French ambassador’s residence in September, but they’ve decided to push it back to November. The U.K. embassy is holding smaller events in September.
“I thought this would give new dimension to what would be a masked ball,” Clemons said wistfully.
Obama’s party “created an awareness,” Clemons added, especially “when you see so many Americans struggling with [Delta], and hospitals filling up.”
The reticence is mainly among Democrats; broadly speaking, Republicans have been more willing to forge ahead with in-person events.
“What we could do six weeks ago, we can’t do now,” said Democratic strategist ADRIENNE ELROD, the director of surrogate strategy for JOE BIDEN’s 2020 campaign. “We have to be so cognizant because Republicans are looking for any reason to call us hypocrites or to call us liars.”
Elrod said their internal polling in 2020 showed that Biden’s handling of the pandemic during the campaign was key and that Democrats shouldn’t abandon their caution because they’re itching to go out.
Not all parties are being scrapped. Hill aides are advising their bosses on which ones to attend as event planners try to draw those luminaries to their parties. It can’t be a party just for a party’s sake, several of the advisers told us. There has to be a greater cause to justify going.
Event planner and political consultant KIMBALL STROUD is planning multiple galas this fall with 200 to 300 guests, including the March on Washington Film Festival gala on Sept. 30 and a Halcyon Awards gala to toast House Majority Whip JIM CLYBURN (D-S.C.) the following day. But she’s taking extra precautions like requiring proof of vaccination to attend. The spaces she’s reserving are large enough for social distancing.
“We’re not footloose and fancy free yet,” Stroud said.
As for fundraisers, we reported in late July that there was talk among Democratic donors of canceling various money events in the Hamptons. But so far the fundraisers have carried on without much of a peep. Tonight, incoming New York Gov. KATHY HOCHUL is being feted at a backyard tea dance at the Southampton home of financier JUDITH KASEN-WINDSOR. On Saturday morning, she’ll be at the Southampton Capri hotel for a breakfast hosted by supermarket billionaire JOHN CATSIMATIDIS.
One House Democrat warned that the Democratic Party can’t get so caught up in the optics of gathering that they give Republicans an edge in fundraising and campaigning.
“We can’t hide under the bed if we want to win the midterms,” the member said. “Look at how many races we lost in 2018 by fewer than a thousand votes. We decided it was better to campaign by Zoom than knock on doors. The GOP didn’t stay home, and our margins are thinner because of it.”
The pol added: “It doesn’t have to be all or nothing. You can adjust and be safe.”
That appears to be the thinking of Speaker NANCY PELOSI, who’s slated to hold an in-person event at the end of September for alumni of her office.
Some lobbyists are panicked about shrinking guest lists at fundraisers, especially with the infrastructure and reconciliation bills on the table. Fundraisers are prime opportunities to corner a member and press their interests.
Journalists might suffer too, with the Washington book party circuit in limbo. Lobbyist and D.C. hostess JULEANNA GLOVER was slated to have a book party at her Kalorama home in September for GAYLE TZEMACH LEMMON’s new tome, but she’s going to make the call the week before on whether to have the party based on the CDC’s guidance.
Happy Friday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
BIDEN’S FIRST TRUE FOREIGN POLICY TEST — The Taliban’s return to power marks the first real foreign policy crisis of the Biden administration — and a rare moment of bipartisan criticism of Biden. But will the bungled withdrawal from Afghanistan scramble American politics, or merely deepen long-building fissures across the political spectrum? On the right, attempts to save America’s Afghan allies have resurfaced fierce divides over immigration and diversity. On the left, the pullout is reigniting a debate over the United States’ “forever wars.” Rachael and Ryan talk Biden’s political pitfalls on today’s Playbook Deep Dive.
BIDEN’S FRIDAY:
— 10 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 10:45 a.m.: Biden and VP KAMALA HARRIS will meet with their national security team in the Situation Room to discuss Afghanistan.
— 1 p.m.: Biden will speak in the East Room about the evacuations from Afghanistan, with Harris attending.
— 2:05 p.m.: Biden will leave D.C. for Wilmington, Del., arriving at 3 p.m.
HARRIS’ FRIDAY: The VP will then leave D.C. at 9:15 p.m. en route to Singapore.
THE SENATE and THE HOUSE are out.
PLAYBOOK READS
TALIBAN TAKEOVER
LATEST HEADLINES …
— NYT: “Sluggish Visa Process Strands Thousands of Afghans Who Worked for U.S.” … “Hunted by the Taliban, U.S.-Allied Afghan Forces Are in Hiding” … “A 17-year-old Afghan soccer player died falling from a U.S. evacuation plane”
— WaPo: “White House orders for a speedy military withdrawal put pressure on beleaguered Afghans as the Taliban surged” … “Chaos persists at Kabul airport, imperiling Afghanistan evacuation effort”
— WSJ: “Putin Rejected Role for U.S. Forces Near Afghanistan at Summit With Biden”
— Reuters: “Taliban are rounding up Afghans on blacklist – private intel report”
— POLITICO: “U.S.-made weapons seized by Taliban could lead to regional arms bazaar”
TOP-ED — “President Biden’s democracy agenda is in trouble,” by WaPo’s Josh Rogin
THE WHITE HOUSE
DEBT RELIEF FOR THE DISABLED — “Biden To Automatically Cancel $5.8 Billion In Student Loans For Over 300,000 Disabled Borrowers,” by Forbes’ Adam Minsky: “The administration will be cancelling borrowers’ federal student loan debt through … [a] program [that] allows student loan borrowers who are unable to maintain substantial, gainful employment due to a physical or psychological medical impairment to get their federal student loans cancelled.
“However, to get student loans forgiven under the program, disabled student loan borrowers must submit a formal application, which can be challenging for those facing serious health issues, and many borrowers may not even realize that they qualify.”
CUBA LATEST — “White House sticks with hardline approach to Cuba,” by Sabrina Rodríguez and Marc Caputo
CAMPAIGNING FOR NEWSOM — According to CNN’s Jasmine Wright, Harris is slated to attend a campaign event the weekend of Aug. 27 for California Democratic Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM, who faces a recall election in the coming weeks. Wright notes in the tweet that a visit from Biden is to be determined.
POLITICS ROUNDUP
ELDER TROUBLE — “Elder’s ex-fiancee said he brandished a gun at her,” by Carla Marinucci: “ALEXANDRA DATIG, the former fiancee and longtime radio producer for California GOP gubernatorial candidate LARRY ELDER, says she broke off an 18-month engagement with the conservative talk show host in 2015 after he waved a gun at her while high on marijuana. Datig’s claim, which she regards as the culmination of a series of humiliating disputes that made her fearful for her safety and her ability to maintain her sobriety, comes as Elder has gained momentum in the recall to replace Newsom, with many observers counting him as the likeliest GOP alternative should voters decide to replace the incumbent.” After the story was published, Elder denied the allegation
AND THIS — “‘Women exaggerate the problem of sexism’: Top California recall candidate Larry Elder has a long history of making disparaging remarks about women,” by CNN’s Andrew Kaczynski, Em Steck and Drew Myers
HISTORY LESSON — “Jimmy Carter, trounced in 1980, gets fresh look from history,” by AP’s Bill Barrow in Atlanta
COMING THIS FALL — “Political Consultant Hank Morris Turns Battles With Andrew Cuomo Into Off-Broadway Musical,” by Variety’s Brent Lang
CONGRESS
MUCK READ — “Republican Rep. Diana Harshbarger failed to properly disclose more than 700 stock trades worth as much as $10.9 million in violation of federal transparency law,” by Insider’s Dave Levinthal: “Rep. DIANA HARSHBARGER, a Republican from Tennessee, failed to properly disclose more than 700 stock trades that together are worth at least $728,000 … Harshbarger’s late disclosures involved stock trades by herself and her husband, ROBERT HARSHBARGER, between early January and June.” Her office blamed the late disclosure on a financial adviser’s “gross oversight.”
FIGHTING WORDS — “‘Locate us a ring’: Louisiana Congressman Clay Higgins challenges Facebook user to a fight,” by The Advocate: “The Lafayette Republican, who has a long history of bizarre social media antics, told an Alaska man named JOEL DOLPHIN who commented on one of his posts that Higgins is ‘easy to find,’ and suggested he is prepared to fight the man when he visits Alaska next year.
“‘I’ll be in Alaska next year, with (U.S. Rep.) DON YOUNG,’ Higgins wrote after Dolphin said he’d be happy to reiterate his criticisms face-to-face with the congressman. ‘Like I said. I’m easy to find. Locate us a ring, or a dojo. I’ll give you a few rounds to make your point. Be seeing you. Higgins out.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
LOOK WHO’S BACK — “After a nearly six-week exodus over GOP voting bill, enough Democrats return to Texas House to resume work,” by Texas Tribune’s James Barragán: “For the first time in nearly six weeks, state officials said there were enough lawmakers present in the Texas House on Thursday for the chamber to conduct business — opening the door for the passage of the GOP priority elections bill that Democrats have been attempting to kill for the past several weeks by staying far away from the Capitol. The margin was razor thin on Thursday and it was unclear for hours before gaveling in whether Republicans had gotten enough members in the chamber to begin their work. Ultimately, 99 members voted that they were present with 49 stated absences.”
— “Texas can ban standard procedure used during second-trimester abortions, federal court rules,” by WaPo’s Emily Wax-Thibodeaux: “Texas can ban the abortion procedure most commonly used to end second-trimester pregnancies, a federal appeals court ruled Wednesday. The decision was hailed as a major victory by antiabortion advocates, even as doctors warned it could leave women less safe.
“And it comes as the Supreme Court prepares to hear arguments in another case, whether Mississippi can ban abortions after 15 weeks. The decision in that case could have far-reaching implications, further curbing the constitutional right granted under 1973’s landmark Roe v. Wade ruling. The Texas ruling on Wednesday could also end up in front of the Supreme Court, law experts predicted. It revolved around a procedure known as dilation and evacuation, or D&E.”
MEANWHILE IN ARIZONA … “Arizona ‘bracing for impact’ of Trump-driven election report,” by Zach Montellaro: “The controversial Arizona 2020 election review is almost over, but top officials in the state’s largest county and secretary of state’s office aren’t waiting for the conclusions, launching a pair of preemptive strikes against a report that could land as soon as next week. Secretary of State KATIE HOBBS, a Democrat, released a prebuttal laying out all of her office’s criticisms of the so-called election ‘audit.’ She detailed the pre- and post-election testing election equipment underwent in Maricopa County and called the state Senate-led effort ‘secretive and disorganized’ that routinely discarded best practices of an actual audit.”
TRUMP CARDS
THE INVESTIGATIONS — “Trump Organization and Prosecutors Spar Over Evidence—Out of Public View,” by WSJ’s Corinne Ramey and Rebecca Ballhaus: “Manhattan prosecutors are moving to advance their criminal investigation into former President DONALD TRUMP’s business affairs, fighting with his company over evidence and continuing talks with the lawyer of a Trump Organization executive who hasn’t been charged …
“Manhattan prosecutors and Trump Organization lawyers appeared at a secret court proceeding with New York State Supreme Court Justice JUAN MERCHAN last week to discuss a dispute over documents the Manhattan district attorney’s office has subpoenaed … In another sign of movement in the criminal probe, prosecutors have been holding talks with a lawyer for Trump Organization executive MATTHEW CALAMARI SR., partly to determine whether his cooperation would be helpful.”
VALLEY TALK
SPY GAMES — “The FBI’s warning to Silicon Valley: China and Russia are trying to turn your employees into spies,” by Protocol’s Biz Carson: “It’s not the Hollywood image of espionage. But the risk to tech companies is real, the FBI says: Employees are being persuaded, or more typically, coerced by foreign autocracies into stealing information or handing over login credentials. …
“After Protocol heard about the briefings from multiple sources, the FBI agreed to an interview about the content of the briefings and shared its framework, called the ‘Delta Protocol’ (no relation to COVID-19 or this publication), which the agency developed to distribute to startups so they can learn to protect themselves.”
MEDIAWATCH
SELLING THE KNEWZ — “Rupert Murdoch Sells Failed Website Knewz to Trashy Tabloid King Dylan Howard,” by The Daily Beast’s Lachlan Cartwright and Maxwell Tani: “RUPERT MURDOCH has sold his failed online aggregator Knewz to DYLAN HOWARD, the American Media Inc. executive who gained national notoriety and disgrace for his role in the scheme to ‘catch and kill’ stories about Trump’s extramarital affairs. NewsCorp CEO ROBERT THOMSON confirmed the news in a call with The Daily Beast.”
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Former CNN reporter MICHELLE KOSINSKI is partnering up with the former head of MI6 RICHARD DEARLOVE to host the “One Decision Podcast” on the seemingly small choices made by leadership that have a huge impact internationally. The podcast is being produced by NSC alum BRETT BRUEN’s comms firm Global Situation Room. First guests include: Baroness CATHERINE ASHTON, ALYSSA FARAH and Lt. Col. ALEXANDER VINDMAN. Episodes will be available Sept 9.
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week,” guest-moderated by Pete Williams: Peter Baker, Peter Bergen, Anne Gearan and Vivian Salama.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
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FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.). Panel: Gerald Seib, Dana Perino and Charles Lane. Power Player: Chloe Mitchell.
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MSNBC
“The Sunday Show”: Craig Whitlock … Patrick Gaspard … Melanie Campbell … Wade Henderson … Anne Applebaum … Evelyn Farkas … Kevin Baron … Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.).
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Gray TV
“Full Court Press”: Rep. Jake Auchincloss (D-Mass.) … Niloofar Rahmani … Craig Whitlock.
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CBS
“Face the Nation”: Nikki Haley … Ryan Crocker … Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan … Scott Gottlieb.
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CNN
“Inside Politics,” guest-anchored by Kaitlan Collins: Panel: Julie Pace, Jeff Zeleny, Vivian Salama and Heather Caygle.
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ABC
“This Week”: Panel: Terry Moran, Stephanie Ramos, Michel Martin and Craig Whitlock.
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NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Helene Cooper, Andrea Mitchell and Leo Shane.
PLAYBOOKERS
HOT JOB — Editorial assistant for NYT Opinion, supporting Maureen Dowd
DESSERT (LITERALLY) — “Jeff Bezos’ house has artisan soft-serve ice cream on tap now,” by the New York Post’s Sarah Paynter
ENGAGED — Katherine Foley, a reporter on POLITICO’s health care team covering the FDA, and Benjamin Daniels, a research fellow at Georgetown University, finally solidified their pandemic engagement with photos at the aquarium. They met at a housewarming party for mutual friends about four years ago. Pic … Another pic
— Erik Rust, VP of government affairs at the Bank Policy Institute, proposed to Jennifer Read, VP and counsel at Porterfield, Fettig & Sears. The couple met on opposite sides of the aisle as House Financial Services policy staffers for Reps. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas) and Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), respectively. Pic … Another pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Winston Bao Lord, founder of Lord Hospitality, and Stephanie Lord, term member at the Council on Foreign Relations, welcomed Xavion Bao Lord and Tyson Everett Lord on Tuesday morning. They were “MoMo” twins — a rare and high-risk scenario where twins share the same sac, with only about 300 sets born in the U.S. each year. They came in at 4 lbs, 3 oz and 16 1/2 inches and 4 lbs, 6 oz and 17 1/3 inches, respectively. Pics
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.) … Reps. Brad Schneider (D-Ill.) (6-0) and Kathy Castor (D-Fla.) … Katie Peters of the White House … Larry Kudlow … CNN’s Oliver Darcy … Eleni Roumel … CBS’ Fin Gómez … Ben LaBolt … Rachel Thomas of the Department of Education … Gina Keeney … POLITICO’s Doug Palmer, Natalie Fertig and Julia Kurzius … Targeted Victory’s Zac Moffatt and Ryan Meerstein … Jenny Backus … Michael Donaher of Rep. Andy Kim’s (D-N.J.) reelect … Matt Shapanka … Fox’s Tammy Bruce … Danielle Decker … Steve Pfrang … Jeffrey Norfolk … Elyse Ping Medvigy … Madeline Shepherd … Jeff Morehouse … Casey Badmington … Ari Goldberg of the Bipartisan Policy Center … Brad Fingeroot … Google’s Lauren Epshteyn … Susan Aspey … Jarrett Ray … Jim Hock of PSP Partners … Shannon Travis … Linnea Dyer Hegarty … Jordan Kittleson … Faryar Shirzad … David Ryan Adelman … former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell … Brianna McCullough … former Reps. Ron Paul (R-Texas) and Rubén Hinojosa (D-Texas) … Al Roker … former USTR Michael Froman, now at Mastercard … Connie Chung … Tarrah Cooper Wright of Rise Strategy Group … Lona Valmoro … Connor Shaw of the International Union of Journeymen and Allied Trades … Christie Edwards of the OSCE
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
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: ‘Team Optics Fail’ Is Sending Kamala Harris to Vietnam
Top O’ the Briefing
Someone Up There Really Doesn’t Like Kamala Harris
Happy Friday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I’m a Clamato kind of guy living in a Cran-Apple world.
Is it the end of the week already?
The end of the world?
OK…that was a little over the top with the gloom and doom, not really my style. Sure, it’s been super craptastic since last weekend, but I’ll be damned if I let the drooling idiot alleged president ruin my mood.
Joe Biden and his political posse have been operating under the complete protection of the Democrat sycophants in the mainstream media for so long now that they seem to have lost all sense of the importance of optics in the 24/7 media era. Otherwise, they would severely limit Biden’s time anywhere near a camera. America doesn’t need to keep seeing its purported leader slurring and disoriented all the time, or walking away from reporters in a huff.
As we discussed yesterday, it’s been a rough week for the administration and its relationship with the beloveds in the MSM. I mean, they made Rachel Maddow cry. Given that, one might assume that they’d be a little more aware of how they want themselves to appear to the public.
Which is why the trip that Kamala Harris is heading off on is a real head-scratcher.
A.J. Kaufman wrote about it yesterday:
Harris, who’s been declining interview requests from major news outlets all week, leaves Friday for a major junket. It won’t be to Europe, but rather Singapore and Vietnam. This is her second international sojourn as vice president, following a disastrous visit to Guatemala and Mexico City in June.
“The prospect of Harris visiting Vietnam at this particular moment raised the possibility of the worst photo op for an American in that country since Jane Fonda donned a helmet there in 1972,” Fox News reported.
Yowza.
After a week of being relentlessly battered with the images from Kabul that reminded everyone of our ignominious departure from Saigon in the 1970s, Team Biden is sending its Number Two off to Vietnam.
Yes, these trips are planned well in advance. They can also be canceled last minute, however. That would have been the prudent thing to do here if the administration had any interest in maybe not looking like complete idiots for once this week.
OR…it’s the kind of thing you go right ahead with if you’re not very fond of your vice president. Bryan, Stephen, and I were discussing that during our latest “Five O’Clock Somewhere” live chat. On the rare occasions that they do let Harris out in public, it’s only to give her thankless or embarrassing tasks, like punting the border mess to her.
Now she gets to be the topic of conversation for all the wrong reasons.
Maybe Biden’s inner circle is hoping this PR nightmare might actually divert attention away from his current display of ineptitude. That may seem outlandish to some, but politicos think like that. It won’t work, of course. Ol’ Gropes has really stepped in it this time. We all know that he’s not going to be remotely functional by the time the 2024 campaign kicks off. This Afghanistan horror might very well hasten the onset of reality for the Democrats. I wouldn’t be surprised if some of them are already planning a graceful early exit for him.
Meanwhile, Saigon Kamala has a busy week ahead of her.
Have a great weekend, kids.
Everything Isn’t Awful
My people! Na zdrowie!
PJ Media
Quinnipiac University Threatens Fines, Wi-Fi Ban for Students Who Won’t Vaccinate
WATCH: Wounded Chicago Police Officer Thanks His Partner on the Day of Her Funeral
VodkaPundit: Appalling: Biden Scrapped Trump Afghanistan Rescue Plan
Dear Leftists, I Hope You Can’t Live With Yourselves
VDH: Biden Can’t Escape Blame for Afghanistan Fiasco
VodkaPundit, Part Deux: Air Force Academy Cadets Forced to Watch BLM Video
The Biden Pentagon Doesn’t Know How Many Americans Are Stuck in Kabul and Has No Plan to Rescue Any
Trump Hints at His Plans for 2024
Bolton: Afghanistan Could Become a Haven for Terrorists Again
House Moderates Threaten to Blow Up Biden’s $3.5 Trillion Partisan Spending Plan
Joe Biden Walks Away From His Catastrophes. Is He a Moral Monster?
Seattle Hospital to Heart Transplant Patient: Get a Covid Shot or Drop Dead
Biden Is Tougher on GOP Governors Who Defy His Mask Guidance Than He Is on the Taliban
Townhall Mothership
It Turns Out All Those Plastic COVID Barriers Might Have Made Things Worse
An Alabama Doctor May Have Entered an Ethical Minefield Regarding Treatment and the COVID Vaccine
Did You Catch the Obama Dividend From the Taliban’s Takeover? It’s All Over the News…Literally
Judge Blocks Obamacare Requirement for Doctors to Perform Transgender Surgeries
‘Stacey Abrams Hardest Hit’ as Media/Dem Narrative About Georgia Being a ‘Jim Crow’ State Crumbles
Feds Bust Rapper For Being “Marijuana User In Possession Of A Firearm”
Cam&Co. DOJ Takes Aim At Missouri 2A Preservation Act
Please Stop Pretending American Guns Cause Mexican Violence
ASAP. Should ABC publish the full, raw video of the Biden-Stephanopoulos interview?
Desperate Americans turn to lawmakers for help in getting out of Kabul
Rachel Maddow breaks into tears describing efforts to get Afghan interpreters out of Kabul
Quorum: Three Texas Democrats return after six week stunt
It took just 7 months for Biden to completely sink his brag that ‘diplomacy is back’
VIP
‘Unwoke’ With Kevin and Kruiser #8: Can We Just Pretend Biden Isn’t Happening?
Ben Sasse Exposes Biden’s Failures of Morals and Leadership, Offers Advice on How to Proceed
WHERE’S KAMALA? VP Bragged She Was ‘Last Person in the Room’ When Afghanistan Withdrawal Decided
Only One Person Can Prevent Kamala Harris From Becoming President
GOLD ‘Five O’Clock Somewhere’ with Kruiser, Preston, VodkaPundit – Replay Available
GOLD They Are Who We Thought They Were
GOLD We’re in a “Forever War” Whether We Like It or Not
Around the Interwebz
‘We felt free’: Cubans remain defiant in face of protest crackdown
OnlyFans to prohibit sexually explicit content beginning in October
Stunning official trailer for Foundation whets the appetite for more
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Comedy
Whenever I make my own beef jerky and peanut butter I strut around as if I were a pioneer American.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Tripling Down on COVID Shots
Plus: How our exit from Afghanistan will affect U.S. military strategy in the far East.
The Dispatch Staff | 4 |
Happy Friday! When all those sci-fi novels promised virtual reality in the future, we’re not sure glorified conference calls are what they had in mind.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- A Pentagon spokesman announced Thursday that the United States had evacuated approximately 7,000 people from Afghanistan since Saturday—including 2,000 in the previous 24 hours, well below the Biden administration’s goal of 5,000 to 9,000 evacuations per day.
- The Department of Education announced Thursday it will wipe out more than $5.8 billion in student loan debt for approximately 323,000 borrowers deemed to have a total and permanent disability.
- The official death toll following Sunday’s earthquake in Haiti has risen to nearly 2,200. The U.S. Geological Survey’s Prompt Assessment of Global Earthquakes for Response (PAGER) tool, however, estimates the ultimate casualty count could end up being at least five times that.
- Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Labor Secretary Marty Walsh sent a letter to lawmakers on Thursday reiterating that President Biden believes it is “appropriate” for the federal $300-per-week unemployment insurance boost to expire on September 6 as planned. They added, however, that states can tap into the American Rescue Plan’s $350 billion in state and local aid to provide “a more gradual wind down of income support for unemployed workers” if they so choose.
- The Federal Trade Commission on Thursday filed an amended antitrust lawsuit against Facebook, arguing the company “resorted to an illegal buy-or-bury scheme to maintain its dominance.” A federal judge dismissed a similar FTC lawsuit against the tech giant earlier this summer, but gave the agency a chance to revise its arguments.
- Initial jobless claims decreased by 29,000 week-over-week to 348,000 last week, the Labor Department reported on Thursday—the lowest tally since the beginning of the pandemic.
- Toyota announced yesterday it will cut its worldwide production by 40 percent in September due to persistent global supply chain issues, particularly regarding microchips.
- Sen. Roger Wicker, Sen. Angus King, and Sen. John Hickenlooper each announced Thursday that they tested positive for COVID-19. All three are fully vaccinated, and experiencing only mild symptoms.
Is a Third Shot in Your Future?
While the world’s attention has been understandably focused on the situation in Afghanistan, the Delta variant has continued doing what it does best: spreading.
The sources upon which TMD had come to rely in compiling its daily COVID data have unfortunately stopped providing some of the more relevant statistics, but the New York Times’ Coronavirus in the U.S. data visualization has proven a worthy replacement.
The seven-day average for confirmed new cases has climbed to 143,792—a 44 percent increase over the past two weeks, reaching a level not seen in the United States since early February. Hospitalizations and deaths are following suit, with their rolling averages rising 53 and 108 percent over the past 14 days, respectively.
The current wave—of which, per CDC surveillance testing, the Delta variant now makes up nearly 99 percent—is absolutely pummeling the southeastern United States. The Alabama Hospital Association said there was not a single ICU bed available in the state on Wednesday, and Mississippi just opened its second emergency field hospital this week. Louisiana, Mississippi, and Florida are averaging about one daily COVID-19 death per 100,000 residents—nearly four times the national average of 0.27.
This isn’t happening in a vacuum. Alabama and Mississippi have the two lowest vaccination rates in the country, with just 36 percent of residents fully vaccinated, and Louisiana is fifth lowest at 39 percent. Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves last week labeled the shots safe, effective, and the “best tool we have moving forward to beat the virus,” but added a few days later he will “always defend” his constituents’ right not to get them.
But whether it’s the growing number of public- or private-sector mandates, or simply fear of the Delta variant, the pace of daily vaccination is once again on the rise. One month ago, the United States was averaging 497,000 shots per day. Now, that average is up to 823,000—and more than 1 million shots were administered yesterday, for the first time since July 1. All in all, slightly more than 70 percent of the nation’s eligible people have received at least one vaccine dose, and slightly less than 60 percent are fully vaccinated.
The definition of “fully vaccinated,” however, could soon be in flux. On Wednesday—just days after the FDA and CDC approved COVID-19 booster shots for immunocompromised individuals only (because they have been demonstrated to have a uniquely poor immune response to the vaccine)—the Biden administration’s top public health officials issued a joint statement announcing their plan to begin offering third doses to all Moderna and Pfizer vaccine recipients this fall eight months removed from their second dose, pending FDA and CDC approval. (They say Johnson & Johnson recipients will likely need a booster as well, but data will not be available for a few more weeks.)
Afghanistan and the Indo-Pacific
In the months and years preceding the United States’ departure from Afghanistan, the Biden and Trump administrations reframed the coming withdrawal as a “shift” to the Indo-Pacific. At best, our commitment to the Afghan government and people was a distraction from the far more pressing goal of combating Chinese aggression. At worst, the two foreign policy goals were mutually exclusive.
These were, of course, ludicrous claims, even without the benefit of hindsight. U.S. engagement abroad isn’t a finite resource—and Afghanistan occupies a critical geographic location, bordering China and former Soviet republics. Beijing and Moscow have responded predictably amidst the fall of Kabul, and great power competition analysts now have more to worry about than they did prior to the U.S. withdrawal.
When asked about American condemnations of China’s genocide in Xinjiang yesterday, foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying had this to say: “When the world is shocked and saddened by the chaos and misery at Kabul’s airport, a handful of politicians in the U.S. are turning a blind eye to the ongoing tragedy of its own making … Anyone that doesn’t shut his or her eyes can see it is the U.S. that has committed genocide and crimes against humanity and the U.S. is the biggest threat to democracy and human rights.”
While the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has concerns about safe haven for Islamic extremism in its own backyard, Beijing is nothing if not pragmatic. China’s foreign minister Wang Yi met with Taliban leader—and rumored Taliban-appointed president of Afghanistan—Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar more than three weeks ago. Many speculate that the Chinese government will seek to expand its Belt and Road Initiative to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan and exploit the country’s rare earth metals.
Worth Your Time
- Princeton security researchers Jonathan Mayer and Anunay Kulshrestha built an experimental child sexual abuse detection system two years ago very similar to the one Apple is rolling out this fall—and they concluded that the technology was dangerous. “We’re not concerned because we misunderstand how Apple’s system works. The problem is, we understand exactly how it works,” they write for the Washington Post. “Our system could be easily repurposed for surveillance and censorship. The design wasn’t restricted to a specific category of content; a service could simply swap in any content-matching database, and the person using that service would be none the wiser. A foreign government could, for example, compel a service to out people sharing disfavored political speech. That’s no hypothetical: WeChat, the popular Chinese messaging app, already uses content matching to identify dissident material. India enacted rules this year that could require pre-screening content critical of government policy. Russia recently fined Google, Facebook and Twitter for not removing pro-democracy protest materials.”
- National security columnist Josh Rogin has a stark warning for the Biden administration. “President Biden told the world that the most important struggle of the 21st century was between democracies and autocracies—and he promised that the United States would lead the fight,” Rogin writes. “Eight months into his presidency, the autocrats are the ones on the march. As democracies collapse, so do the aspirations of millions for greater dignity, agency and freedom. Afghanistan is just the latest example. … So far, autocracy has advanced in several places on Biden’s watch. In Myanmar, there was a military coup in February that the world’s democracies did little to avert or respond to. In Tunisia last month, President Kais Saied orchestrated a “self-coup,” in which he used anti-democratic means to consolidate his own power. Again, the free world shrugged.”
Presented Without Comment
Rashida TLAIB received between $15k-$50k as a landlord last year, even as she pushed for an eviction freeze that has hurt other small landlords. w/ @CAndersonMO @FreeBeacon
Toeing the Company Line
- In yesterday’s French Press (🔒), David pushes back against a narrative that is emerging in the wake of Afghanistan’s collapse: that the United States should have left Afghanistan in late 2001 after the military’s initial rout of the Taliban and al-Qaeda. “Surprisingly easy victories can be deceptive. The Taliban wasn’t destroyed. Al-Qaeda wasn’t destroyed. Mullah Omar was alive. Osama bin Laden was alive,” he writes. “If we left Afghanistan in early 2002, who would have returned to power? In all likelihood, the Taliban, al-Qaeda, Mullah Omar, and Osama bin Laden. The Taliban would have won. That would have been an utterly intolerable outcome to the American people. The purpose of our intervention into Afghanistan wasn’t merely punitive, it was protective.”
- Thursday’s episode of Advisory Opinions features Sarah and David discussing the Biden administration’s proposal to tie mask mandates to civil rights law, the latest “remain in Mexico” policy developments, and what a Texas Supreme Court ruling means for Democratic lawmakers from the state trying to avoid arrest.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
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32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Winning! Greg Gutfeld Now Dominates All Late-Night Hosts in Total Viewers
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
August 20, 2021 THE LATEST This fall, U.S. public health agencies announced on Wednesday, all Americans will be eligible for a third shot of the Covid-19 vaccine. The thinking is that an aggressive push to shore up protection against the delta variant will be needed before winter — an assumption that not all medical experts share. And with a massive global disparity in access to vaccine doses, it’s hard to bear the moral weight of the choice ahead, Hayes Brown writes.
In essence, “the U.S. government has taken a weighty moral decision, one with an international impact, and tossed it into the laps of its citizens.” Brown writes. “I know what I’m going to do — but I’m still trying to work out how I feel about it.”
Read Hayes Brown’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Friday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Anti-Muslim fearmongering at its finest. Read More He’s exactly who you think he is. Read More We can see what you wrote a year ago, Nikki. Read More TOP VIDEOS The Beat with Ari MORE FROM MSNBC
Watch the feature documentary ‘The Way I See It,’ from director Dawn Porter. The Emmy-nominated film offers an unprecedented look behind the scenes at two of the most iconic presidents, Barack Obama and Ronald Reagan, as seen through the eyes of renowned White House photographer, Pete Souza. Watch ‘The Way I See It,’ Sunday at 10 p.m. ET, and catch it streaming exclusively on Peacock.
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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 FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
As the battle over masking in school rages on, child Covid-19 hospitalizations are soaring. The U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan offers a window into President Joe Biden’s foreign policy. And another grim sign of climate change at a normally snowy summit.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Friday morning. As states argue about school mask mandates, children with Covid-19 are filling up hospital pediatric wards.
Around the country, child hospitalizations for Covid-19 have increased to levels not seen since January, when U.S. cases and deaths were at their highest levels, according to the latest government data.
Data released this week by the Department of Health and Human Services show the U.S. facing another peak in child hospitalizations as the delta variant hits communities hesitant to get vaccinated. And while unvaccinated adults are filling ICUs in parts of the South, minors in those areas are filling up the pediatric wings at an alarming pace.
“We went from single digits with not really sick kids to 28 kids in a matter of a few weeks, and some of them are quite sick,” said Dr. Nick Hysmith, a medical director at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.
See charts with the data here. The chaotic end to the war in Afghanistan, President Joe Biden’s first defining foreign policy decision alone in the driver’s seat, offers a window into how he believes the U.S. should wield its power: sparingly — especially when U.S. lives are at stake.
More on Afghanistan: Friday’s Top Stories
The rare rainfall was only the third time in less than a decade that above-freezing temperatures were recorded at the highest point on the ice sheet. The summer heat is most dangerous for low-income communities, where many lack air conditioning. Housing advocates want to change that. Few traces remain of the man who during the 1980s was considered one of the most powerful criminal leaders in the world. OPINION A day that should have been spent celebrating the Angels’ pitching-slugging phenom was instead overshadowed by the racist comments of a 66-year-old white man, sports writer Howard Megdal writes in an opinion piece. Also in the News
Shopping
Portable AC units are easier to install than traditional window AC units. Though they’re typically a pricier alternative, we found some affordable options. One Thankful Thing
The team, a group of girls ages 16-18 pursuing their love of engineering and robotics, safely arrived in Doha, Qatar, days after Kabul fell to the Taliban.
“Several members of the girls Afghan robotics team have safely arrived in Doha, Qatar, from Kabul, Afghanistan,” a statement from the Digital Citizen Fund and Qatar Ministry of Foreign Affairs said of the Afghan Girls Robotic Team.
Read the full story here. 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, Ben Kamisar and Benjy Sarlin
FIRST READ: Here’s how Democrats could pay for their big reconciliation bill
With Democrats already sniping at each other over the size of their budget deal, expect a lot of fights in the coming weeks over how much to spend and especially how to finance it.
Here’s the upshot for Democrats, according to a new analysis by the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania: The money is there. Under a straight reading of Biden’s own proposals for new taxes, revenue raisers and savings, there should be $4.2 trillion over the next decade to cover the $3.5 trillion budget framework.
But Democrats are unlikely to stick to Biden’s plan to the letter, so analysts used the Penn Wharton Budget Model to produce “medium” and “low” revenue scenarios as well.
Photo by Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
“We mostly defined the ‘high’ option to be what we think the administration’s most ambitious goals are,” John Ricco, Associate Director of Policy Analysis at PWBM, told NBC News.
The “medium” scenario is $1.8 trillion, which is technically the amount that Democrats could raise while still spending the full $3.5 trillion under the letter of the budget resolution. In practical terms, though, moderates could thwart attempts to spend too far beyond the pay-fors. The “low” is about $1 trillion, enough to finance a stripped-down compromise. There are also potential pay-fors outside the scope of their analysis.
Some areas already appear likely to fall short of Biden’s initial requests. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., has said he prefers a 25 percent corporate tax rate to Biden’s 28 percent (a $376 billion difference). There’s Democratic skepticism towards Biden’s call for taxing capital gains as regular income for high earners, which would set the top rate at 43.4 percent, as well as his plan to require heirs to large fortunes to pay taxes on the prior gains.
The PW analysis includes a 28 percent capital gains rate in its “medium” scenario ($128 billion less). There’s also a $300 billion-plus range of savings from potential drug pricing reform plans, an area where Democrats in areas with a strong pharmaceutical industry presence could resist more far-reaching changes.
What separates the high-end revenue generators from the lower ones is that they often require more significant changes to the underlying system, rather than just turning the dial on tax rates up a notch. That likely will take more political capital to pull off.
“The ‘low’ is tweaking around margins, it’s low-hanging fruit, it’s not any major reform to how things work,” Ricco said. “It’s when you get to the more fundamental reform aspects where there are clear winners and losers within industries and among types of taxpayers that it becomes more of an issue.”
So, for example, boosting IRS spending to audit high earners might raise up to $91 billion. But pairing it with new reporting requirements for banks to make it easier to spot taxable income could raise nearly half a trillion dollars. And Democrats might raise up to $728 billion by overhauling the way business profits abroad are taxed. No easy task, but the benefits are also clear: The more they raise, the more they can spend on items members want.
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Biden to speak again on Afghanistan
At 1:00 pm ET, President Biden will deliver remarks at the White House on the U.S. evacuation efforts of Americans and Afghans from the country after the Taliban takeover.
Vice President Harris, who heads tonight on her trip to Singapore and Vietnam, also will be in attendance.
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Three Texas Dems return to Lone Star State, ending boycott
A month ago, we asked if Texas Democrats who fled to DC to deny state Republicans a quorum were only delaying the inevitable – since those kinds of escapes can’t last forever.
Well, it turns out they were.
“The Texas House of Representatives got back to work Thursday evening after three members returned to the House floor — ending the boycott that paralyzed the chamber for five weeks as Democrats sought to block a sweeping elections bill from passing,” NBC’s Jane Timm writes.
Maybe the bigger defeat for Dems: In the past month since those Texas Dems fled to DC, the national party hasn’t gotten any closer to passing federal legislation protecting voting rights.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: Why yesterday’s security event at the Capitol is (again) so concerning
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
Approximately 3,000: The number of people the Biden White House says were evacuated from Afghanistan on Thursday.
More than 1,200 per day: The average amount of children in U.S. hospitals with Covid as of Wednesday, four times the number from the beginning of July.
Three: The number of U.S. Senators who announced yesterday they tested positive for Covid after being vaccinated, bringing the total in recent weeks to four.
More than 40 million: The number of people exposed in the recent T-Mobile data hack.
37,483,226: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 159,981 since yesterday morning.)
629,883: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,846 since yesterday morning).
359,623,380: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 1,023,545 since yesterday morning.)
51.1 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
62 percent: The share of all American adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
State Department officials in Kabul sent an internal cable a few weeks ago warning that the city could quickly collapse once American troops withdraw, calling for evacuations.
Politico reports that the ex-fiancé of surging California GOP gubernatorial hopeful Larry Elder claims Elder waved a gun at her, an allegation Elder has denied.
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
I’m actually okay with Joe Biden going back on vacation today and Jen Psaki not holding a press briefing. Because I’m running out of things to say about the debacle in Afghanistan other than “dafuq?” … MORE
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TOP STORIES:
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Huge Ruling Against The Biden Administration
-
Durham Puts Hillary’s Team On Notice — Grand Jury Now Involved
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Biden’s Woke General DONE After Latest Move In Afghanistan
- Biden Blames His Military Leaders After More Bad News
- Shocking Photo Of DC Bombing Suspect
- DC BOMB SUSPECT LIVE STREAM! “REVOLUTION STARTS TODAY JOE”
- Special Election Called — The Results Are Officially In
- BREAKING: Major Security Alert At US Capitol — Evacuation Underway
- Dems Push Dangerous New Bill Against Unvaxxed Americans
- Joe Biden Fully Exposed By New Video…
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IN DEPTH:
- Would a Republican House majority impeach Biden in 2023? 2 hours
- Miranda Devine: FBI Knew Ilhan Omar Married Her Brother 2 hours
- Defense Sec: We Don’t Have Capability to Rescue “Large Numbers of Americans” in Afghanistan 2 hours
- CNN’s Clarissa Ward In Afghanistan: ‘If This Isn’t Failure, What Does Failure Look Like Exactly? 2 hours
- Hill Democrats Launch Another Effort to Federalize Elections 2 hours
- White House pushes tax benefits for 3.9 million small businesses while lobbying for Biden’s $3.5 trillion reconciliation plan 3 hours
- Biden Administration Proposes Dramatic Change to Asylum System Amid Border Crisis 3 hours
- Active Bomb Threat Near Library of Congress Causes Evacuation 4 hours
- Harris approval sinks further, but most say she’ll replace Biden 4 hours
- Biden Gives Astonishing Answer To Afghanistan Disaster 5 hours
- HEARTBREAK Moment For American Soldier In Kabul Caught On Video 6 hours
- The Washington Post Is Assisting The Taliban… 6 hours
- WATCH: Ron DeSantis slams Biden for obsessing over masking school children while Afghanistan burns 6 hours
- Jimmy Carter Is Redeemed 6 hours
- Senate Republicans demand Durham report be made public 2 hours
- Hollywood Celebrities Scold Greg Abbott After He Tests Positive for COVID-19: ‘Eat S**t for Eternity’ 2 hours
- Anthony Mackie Closes Deal To Star In Disney/Marvel’s ‘Captain America 4’ Film 2 hours
- Facebook Sics Employees to Blacklist Users Mocking Lizzo After Pop Star’s ‘Fatphobic’ Comments Rant 2 hours
- Johnny Depp granted permission to proceed with $50 million defamation suit against Amber Heard 2 hours
- Alyssa Milano in Car Accident After Her Uncle Suffered Heart Attack While Driving 2 hours
- China eyeing power grab off chaotic US withdrawal from Afghanistan 2 hours
- Jay Cutler Hits Back After Being Dropped By Uber Eats Over Anti-Mask Stance 2 hours
- Toronto Maple Leafs Fire Coach for Liking Conservative Social Media Posts 2 hours
- VIDEO: MMA Champ Harrison Calls Out ‘Disrespectful’ Reporter for Calling Fighter ‘Pretty’ 2 hours
- WATCH: Tigers TV Announcer Jack Morris Apologizes After Using “Offensive” Accent To Joke About Shohei Ohtani
- Gen. Milley insists while US intelligence predicted Afghan government collapse, nothing suggested it’d be so fast
- Polish Olympian auctions off medal to help with infant’s heart surgery, but winning bidder won’t accept 2 hours
- A’s right-hander Chris Bassitt struck on head by line drive 2 hours
- FBI Investigating Deshaun Watson, Tony Buzbee Says 3 hours
- Nebraska, Coach Scott Frost Under Investigation For NCAA Violations 3 hours
- Brett Favre says children under 14 years old shouldn’t play tackle football 3 hours
- Biden Escalates School Mask Conflict, Using Civil Rights Office Against Anti-Mask Mandates 3 hours
- WATCH: CDC changes definition of ‘fully vaccinated’ in light of booster shots 3 hours
- Cuomo files for retirement days before his forced resignation over sexual harassment allegations 3 hours
- US Software Firm Accuses Huawei of Installing ‘Back Door’ to Spy on Pakistan 3 hours
- Witnesses grouse about Garland’s handling of Durham inquiry: Report 3 hours
- Pentagon says terrorist threats from Afghanistan could be worse than anticipated 3 hours
- The U.S. Military Forgot the Lessons of Vietnam in Afghanistan and Iraq 3 hours
- Is China Going to Invade Taiwan? Here is What Dwight Eisenhower Would Do. 3 hours
- White House says a ‘fair amount’ of US military equipment provided to Afghans is now in Taliban hands 3 hours
- New ballot initiative would require ID for all voting in Arizona 3 hours
- Biden: ‘I Don’t Know’ How You Could Leave Afghanistan ‘Without Chaos Ensuing,’ Don’t Think It Could Have Been Handled Better 3 hours
- Pentagon chief says U.S. troops currently unable to help people reach Kabul airport 3 hours
- IMF suspends Afghanistan’s access to Fund resources over lack of clarity on government 3 hours
- Pentagon: 2,000 Passengers Flown Out of Kabul, Just 325 Americans 3 hours
- Uganda to Take in 2,000 Afghan Refugees at U.S. Request 3 hours
- The Fight Over Identity, by Ben Shapiro 3 hours
- Charles Lipson: Troubles Mount for the Biden Administration 3 hours
- Trudeau tells Canadians to counter the ‘she-cession’ and turn it into a ‘she-covery’ 3 hours
- Biden’s Hostage Crisis of Epic Proportions 3 hours
- Former Obama official slams Biden’s foreign policy team: ‘needs to fire’ national security adviser 3 hours
- Coronavirus Censorship 3 hours
- The Tragedy in Kabul 3 hours
- July Minutes Say Fed Is Preparing to Taper Monetary Stimulus This Year 4 hours
- U.S. Blocks Taliban From Accessing Afghanistan’s Financial Assets in America 4 hours
- World’s No. 1 Wealth Fund Braces for Double Inflation Shock 4 hours
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🔥HOT!:FAA Reveals Where Biden Is Heading To Today, Not Good
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TOP STORIES:
-
BREAKING: Impeachment News Rocks White House
- Biden Under Heavy Fire For Telling Arguably The Worst Lie of The Year
- Battleground State Considers Power Move — GOP Considers Takeover
-
Huge Ruling Against The Biden Administration
- Biden Blames His Military Leaders After More Bad News
- Shocking Photo Of DC Bombing Suspect
- DC BOMB SUSPECT LIVE STREAM! “REVOLUTION STARTS TODAY JOE”
- Special Election Called — The Results Are Officially In
-
Durham Puts Hillary’s Team On Notice — Grand Jury Now Involved
- Biden’s Woke General DONE After Latest Move In Afghanistan
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IN DEPTH:
- Planes, guns, night-vision goggles and more: Here’s what Biden gave the Taliban
- Biden administration kept UK ‘in the dark’ on evacuation plans after Kabul fell: Report
- This is always who Biden has been
- Education Department eliminates student debt for those with permanent disabilities
- Would a Republican House majority impeach Biden in 2023? 2 hours
- Miranda Devine: FBI Knew Ilhan Omar Married Her Brother 2 hours
- Defense Sec: We Don’t Have Capability to Rescue “Large Numbers of Americans” in Afghanistan 2 hours
- CNN’s Clarissa Ward In Afghanistan: ‘If This Isn’t Failure, What Does Failure Look Like Exactly? 2 hours
- Hill Democrats Launch Another Effort to Federalize Elections 2 hours
- White House pushes tax benefits for 3.9 million small businesses while lobbying for Biden’s $3.5 trillion reconciliation plan 3 hours
- Biden Administration Proposes Dramatic Change to Asylum System Amid Border Crisis 3 hours
- Active Bomb Threat Near Library of Congress Causes Evacuation 4 hours
- Harris approval sinks further, but most say she’ll replace Biden 4 hours
- Biden Gives Astonishing Answer To Afghanistan Disaster 5 hours
- HEARTBREAK Moment For American Soldier In Kabul Caught On Video 6 hours
- The Washington Post Is Assisting The Taliban… 6 hours
- WATCH: Ron DeSantis slams Biden for obsessing over masking school children while Afghanistan burns 6 hours
- Jimmy Carter Is Redeemed 6 hours
- Senate Republicans demand Durham report be made public 2 hours
- Hollywood Celebrities Scold Greg Abbott After He Tests Positive for COVID-19: ‘Eat S**t for Eternity’ 2 hours
- Anthony Mackie Closes Deal To Star In Disney/Marvel’s ‘Captain America 4’ Film 2 hours
- Facebook Sics Employees to Blacklist Users Mocking Lizzo After Pop Star’s ‘Fatphobic’ Comments Rant 2 hours
- Johnny Depp granted permission to proceed with $50 million defamation suit against Amber Heard 2 hours
- Alyssa Milano in Car Accident After Her Uncle Suffered Heart Attack While Driving 2 hours
- China eyeing power grab off chaotic US withdrawal from Afghanistan 2 hours
- Jay Cutler Hits Back After Being Dropped By Uber Eats Over Anti-Mask Stance 2 hours
- Toronto Maple Leafs Fire Coach for Liking Conservative Social Media Posts 2 hours
- VIDEO: MMA Champ Harrison Calls Out ‘Disrespectful’ Reporter for Calling Fighter ‘Pretty’ 2 hours
- WATCH: Tigers TV Announcer Jack Morris Apologizes After Using “Offensive” Accent To Joke About Shohei Ohtani
- Gen. Milley insists while US intelligence predicted Afghan government collapse, nothing suggested it’d be so fast
- Polish Olympian auctions off medal to help with infant’s heart surgery, but winning bidder won’t accept 2 hours
- A’s right-hander Chris Bassitt struck on head by line drive 2 hours
- FBI Investigating Deshaun Watson, Tony Buzbee Says 3 hours
- Nebraska, Coach Scott Frost Under Investigation For NCAA Violations 3 hours
- Brett Favre says children under 14 years old shouldn’t play tackle football 3 hours
- Biden Escalates School Mask Conflict, Using Civil Rights Office Against Anti-Mask Mandates 3 hours
- WATCH: CDC changes definition of ‘fully vaccinated’ in light of booster shots 3 hours
- Cuomo files for retirement days before his forced resignation over sexual harassment allegations 3 hours
- US Software Firm Accuses Huawei of Installing ‘Back Door’ to Spy on Pakistan 3 hours
- Witnesses grouse about Garland’s handling of Durham inquiry: Report 3 hours
- Pentagon says terrorist threats from Afghanistan could be worse than anticipated 3 hours
- The U.S. Military Forgot the Lessons of Vietnam in Afghanistan and Iraq 3 hours
- Is China Going to Invade Taiwan? Here is What Dwight Eisenhower Would Do. 3 hours
- White House says a ‘fair amount’ of US military equipment provided to Afghans is now in Taliban hands 3 hours
- New ballot initiative would require ID for all voting in Arizona 3 hours
- Biden: ‘I Don’t Know’ How You Could Leave Afghanistan ‘Without Chaos Ensuing,’ Don’t Think It Could Have Been Handled Better 3 hours
- Pentagon chief says U.S. troops currently unable to help people reach Kabul airport 3 hours
- IMF suspends Afghanistan’s access to Fund resources over lack of clarity on government 3 hours
- Pentagon: 2,000 Passengers Flown Out of Kabul, Just 325 Americans 3 hours
- Uganda to Take in 2,000 Afghan Refugees at U.S. Request 3 hours
- The Fight Over Identity, by Ben Shapiro 3 hours
- Charles Lipson: Troubles Mount for the Biden Administration 3 hours
- Trudeau tells Canadians to counter the ‘she-cession’ and turn it into a ‘she-covery’ 3 hours
- Biden’s Hostage Crisis of Epic Proportions 3 hours
- Former Obama official slams Biden’s foreign policy team: ‘needs to fire’ national security adviser 3 hours
- Coronavirus Censorship 3 hours
- The Tragedy in Kabul 3 hours
- July Minutes Say Fed Is Preparing to Taper Monetary Stimulus This Year 4 hours
- U.S. Blocks Taliban From Accessing Afghanistan’s Financial Assets in America 4 hours
- World’s No. 1 Wealth Fund Braces for Double Inflation Shock 4 hours
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
August 20, 2021 Welcome to the Friday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect the week online. Today:
The news has been bleak. COVID-19 cases are rising, kids are returning to school while politicians fight over mask mandates, and people are fleeing Afghanistan after the Taliban’s takeover. It’s a lot to take in, which is probably why HBO’s latest Sunday night series, The White Lotus, became a heavily-memed obsession on the internet. The show premiered in July, and its finale aired on Aug. 15—a period that shifted from “Hot Vax Summer” to the Delta Variant canceling fall plans.
It’s not surprising that The White Lotus, a show created by Mike White that follows both the hotel workers and guests at a luxury resort in Hawaii, would inspire discourse on apps like Twitter and TikTok. People are memeing certain scenes, the score, and everyone’s favorite guest, Tanya (Jennifer Coolidge). Media Twitter also loves discussing Rachel (Alexandra Daddario), a freelance journalist feeling conflicted in her career after marrying a wealthy man. Maybe a show where no one is having a good time on their island vacation (OK, maybe like one character did) was the perfect mood for a summer that was overhyped. But now that it’s over, we need something else to fill the void. Although we live in an era where there’s almost too much content, only a handful of titles really take on a life of their own online.
Photo: Mario Perez/HBO Culture Editor
FROM OUR FRIENDS AT NAUTILUS Science, connected. If you’re fascinated by the myriad of ways our world evolves in every moment, Nautilus is for you. It focuses on scientific ideas that matter, featuring stories that will challenge and enrich the way you view the world. Discover new, surprising perspectives on how science interacts with all aspects of life—medicine and health, of course—but also politics, art, food, work, technology, and sports. Join a community of curious readers exploring scientific subjects in profound, unexpected ways.
TIKTOK What’s up with the Alabama sorority TikToks? #BamaRushTok is a TikTok trend dominated by young women competing to join the University of Alabama’s many sororities during rush week. This event sees potential new members (PNMs) attend a busy schedule of themed events relating to Greek life. It’s a week-long combination of job interview and party crawl, and Alabama’s rush week is particularly intense.
Alabama sorority TikTok is fascinating for the same reason as any other super-niche subculture. These women care about rush week in a way that’s fully incomprehensible to outsiders, dedicating a ton of time and money to presenting themselves as the perfect sorority girl. The fact that this is based around a week-long event turned #BamaRushTok into a kind of live soap opera. The women of #BamaRushTok represent the ultimate stereotype of sorority life: Rich, skinny girls who are almost all Caucasian, and who adhere to an incredibly specific type of polished femininity.
—Gavia Baker-Whitelaw, staff writer
DEBUNKS Correcting vaccine misinfo, one video at a time Tracy, who posts under @scitimewithtracy, is cutting through all the vaccine misinfo on TikTok. She has a Ph.D in microbiology and has worked as a scientist and senior lecturer; she joined TikTok because she “made a resolution in 2020 that I wanted to laugh every day.”
In her early videos, she broke down the mechanics of the vaccine and immunity in a way that’s easy to understand. But more recently, Tracy employed a rapid-fire debunk approach to address TikTok accounts spreading bad info. One series was posted to Twitter and blew up last week. The initial video has more than 5 million views.
—Audra Schroeder, senior writer
MEME OF THE WEEK Now Playing: 🎶 “Motion Sickness” by Phoebe Bridgers 🎶
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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
Friday 08.20.21 Grace weakened to a tropical storm as it slammed into Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula. But it’s still predicted to strengthen into a hurricane again as it makes a second landfall along the country’s Gulf coast. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Afghan people gather along a road in Kabul as they wait to board a US military aircraft to leave the country. Afghanistan
The Taliban regime is cracking down on opposition to its resurgent rule in Afghanistan. After protests broke out in the city of Khost, the militant group issued an indefinite curfew and banned movement within the city. Yesterday was Afghanistan’s Independence Day (marking the end of British rule in 1919), and Taliban militants clashed with citizens who waved national flags and gathered in defiance of the group’s rule. These incidents add to international suspicion that, despite portraying itself as more progressive and less reactionary in recent years, the Taliban group is still willing to resort to brutality to assert its power. Desperate Afghans are still trying to flee the country, and some have lost their lives in the process. The Biden Administration is trying to rapidly process the influx of Afghans headed for the US, but the already difficult visa process is barely keeping pace with demand. President Joe Biden said troops could remain on the ground in Afghanistan past the August 31 deadline to make sure all Americans are evacuated.
Coronavirus
More Americans made the decision to get vaccinated within the last six weeks, providing a small spot of hope as Covid-19 cases continue to rise. More than 1 million doses of the vaccine were reported administered Thursday, according to CDC data. That’s the first time since early July that the single-day change in reported doses has topped 1 million, and the average pace of new people getting vaccinated is more than 70% higher than it was one month ago. Meanwhile, other countries are cracking down even more in hopes of quashing outbreaks. New Zealand will extend a nationwide lockdown after uncovering several locally transmitted Covid-19 cases. In China, a “zero-Covid strategy,” supported by tight border closures and swift action on local infections, is being questioned by a prominent disease expert in the country. Capitol incident
Police were involved in a tense standoff near the US Capitol yesterday after a man posted several real-time updates on social media saying he had a bomb and referencing a “revolution.” The incident prompted multiple buildings in the area to be evacuated. Police said they eventually recovered bomb-making materials from the man’s car, but no bomb. The man, who police say is a 49-year-old from North Carolina, is in police custody. Though no official motive has been named, the man repeatedly referenced President Biden and Democrats in social media posts, calling for them to step down and demanding to speak to the President. On his Facebook page, which has been taken down, he frequently made pro-Trump comments and posted videos from former President Donald Trump’s “Million MAGA March” on November 14. Policing
More than a dozen officers with the Torrance Police Department in California have been relieved of their duties because of an ongoing investigation into messages that Torrance Police Chief Jeremiah Hart characterized as “racism and hatred.” In addition, two other officers from the department have been charged with vandalism for allegedly spray-painting an impounded vehicle with a swastika in 2020. (They were both terminated two months after the incident.) Now, the local district attorney’s office is reviewing hundreds of cases in which the officers were involved to make sure no other misconduct occurred. Student debt
The US Education Department has announced it will cancel $5.8 billion in outstanding student loans for borrowers who are unable to work because of permanent disabilities. About 320,000 people will benefit from the decision, and the relief process will become more or less automatic for those who qualify moving forward. The student loan program has been notoriously difficult for borrowers with disabilities, who must provide proof of their disabilities and be subject to three years of income monitoring. The Biden Administration has been under intense pressure from Democrats to enact broad student debt forgiveness. Paid Partner Content High Paying Cards For Americans With Good Credit $200 bonus offers. Up to 3% cash back. No annual fee. 0% interest for 15 months. Learn more. People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Elon Musk says Tesla is building a humanoid robot for ‘boring, repetitive and dangerous’ work
Febreze rolls out a scratch ‘n sniff-like fabric spray
Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos are arguing over the moon already.
Chipotle is testing plant-based chorizo
Rattlesnakes change their rattle frequency based on nearby threats, a study finds 74% That’s how much global heat-related deaths increased between 1980 and 2016, according to a pair of new studies. One author of the studies called the findings “very concerning.” In order to ensure the long-term sustainability of the platform, and to continue to host an inclusive community of creators and fans, we must evolve our content guidelines.
OnlyFans, which announced it is banning sexually explicit content after requests from “banking partners and payout providers.” The social platform has risen to prominence in great part due to the labor of sex workers and adult content creators, and its announcement was met with backlash. Brought to you by CNN Underscored We tested out 13 cooling fans and there were 4 clear winners If you’re looking to keep cool during the hottest months without running up your energy bill, a great cooling fan is your best bet. Over the course of four steamy summer weeks, we found four fans that *ahem* blew us away. I do my lil’ dancey dance 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 |
- Where’s Kamala?
- Annals of Liberal Cluelessness
- An encouraging result from Connecticut
- Wynken and Nod, no Blinken
- Kabul, Seen From London and Jerusalem
Where’s Kamala?
Posted: 19 Aug 2021 04:49 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)To my knowledge, Cacklin’ Kamala Harris hasn’t been seen since the Afghanistan crisis exploded. This silence contrasts with her attitude in April, when she suggested that she shared responsibility for Joe Biden’s Afghan policy, since she was “the last person in the room” when Biden made the decision to withdraw. So, where is Kamala? Preparing to depart on a trip to Singapore and Vietnam:
What message will she bring? At the beginning of this month, before the debacle in Kabul, she was arrogant:
I’ve never understood that theme. Was America somehow away during the four years of the Trump administration, some of the best years this country has ever experienced? Maybe she means the swamp is back. In any event, her speechwriters will have to tweak that message in light of recent events. Harris can’t pretend to ignore the fiasco in Afghanistan:
If Harris has had an “overwhelming focus” on Afghanistan over the past weeks, and has worked on “issues” relating to that country, her contributions have been kept quiet so far. I suppose that will change when she gets to Asia; she can’t possibly avoid answering questions about Afghanistan from local reporters. Can she? We will soon find out.
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Annals of Liberal Cluelessness
Posted: 19 Aug 2021 11:45 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)It is hard, actually it is impossible, to overstate the cluelessness of the contemporary liberal, as the Biden Administration demonstrates on an hourly basis. Let’s record it with some Tweets:
I’m sure the Taliban are siting around nervously, saying to themselves: “Oh no—a ‘strongly worded’ statement! Quick, get some intersectional Talibans on the phone right away!”
A simple “must not surrender” would have saved this Blinken idiot two musts. And who can forget this greatest hit:
But now the State Department seems to have more modest aims:
And do exactly what if they don’t? Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal reports that Biden asked Putin at their June summit if the U.S. could—pretty please—base some drones and other forces in central Asian neighbors of Afghanistan, and Putin naturally rebuffed the idea:
If Biden is not senile, then he’s just the dumbest president ever. And Tweet of the day:
Chaser:
I’ll update this post as fresh idiocies occur.
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An encouraging result from Connecticut
Posted: 19 Aug 2021 10:54 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)On Tuesday, the Republicans flipped a seat in the Connecticut state senate. Republican Ryan Fazio, a member of Greenwich’s local council, defeated Democrat Alexis Gevanter, a gun control advocate. The race was in Connecticut’s 36th district, a wealthy suburban pocket not far from New York City. The median household income in this district is around $160,000 per year. Joe Biden carried this district by 25 percentage points last year, a function of Donald Trump’s weakness in the suburbs. But Fazio, the Republican, carried it by 3 points. Republicans are hailing Fazio’s victory as a preview of the 2022 congressional midterms. They hope it signals renewed viability with suburban voters. That hope is reasonable because it’s reasonable to think that Biden’s margins in the suburbs were more a reflection of Trump’s unpopularity with upscale voters than a function of underlying Democratic strength. It’s also reasonable to think that Biden and his party, in trying to govern from the left, have eroded whatever strength they possessed with these voters less than a year ago. What did the Connecticut senate candidates advocate? According to the Daily Caller, the Democrat, in addition to his gun control positions, supported universal absentee voting and state funding for Planned Parenthood. The Republican reportedly focused primarily on government spending and deregulation. The victor says the result “is not a Connecticut-specific trend, this is a national trend.” Mayoral races in Texas, driven by Latino voters rather than wealthy suburbanites, suggest that he is right. In related news, a June poll showed that 78 percent of Capitol Hill staffers believe the GOP will take back the U.S. House in 2022. And this was before the Afghanistan debacle.
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Wynken and Nod, no Blinken
Posted: 19 Aug 2021 07:49 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley held a press conference yesterday to address the national humiliation in process in Kabul (transcript here, video below). Their performance aggravated the disgrace. One can’t help but wonder if these folks have misspent their time absorbed in CRT, “white rage,” vaccinations, and sundry other distractions. General Milley appears to have been struggling to suppress a little rage of his own. Austin and Milley are Wynken and Nod. A review of the transcript makes it clear that Blinken (Secretary of State Antony) should also have made an appearance. Whatever happened to resignation in the case of epic failure? Along with their boss, they have been weighed in the balance and found wanting. Slow Joe is not fully cognizant, period, let alone cognizant of the disgrace for which he is responsible. Austin and Milley are fully cognizant, but they appear to lack something in the shame department.
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Kabul, Seen From London and Jerusalem
Posted: 19 Aug 2021 07:28 AM PDT (John Hinderaker)Sometimes you have to turn to the foreign press to get the straight story on events in America, or events in which American actors feature. Like Joe Biden’s botched withdrawal from Afghanistan. Yesterday, per the Telegraph, “the Houses of Parliament delivered an unprecedented rebuke to a US president.” Parliament’s assessment of Joe Biden’s performance was, to put it mildly, unsparing:
It goes on and on. And this is interesting:
Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett is traveling to Washington next week to meed with Biden. The Jerusalem Post assesses the impact of the Afghan disaster on that meeting:
The Biden administration and its press allies can do their best to put a happy face on the Afghan fiasco, but our allies are not fooled. Neither, unfortunately, are our enemies.
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
96.) NOT THE BEE
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Sponsored By: The Patriot Post Liberty Isn’t CancelledFor 25 years The Patriot Post has provided solid conservative perspective on the most important issues. Now, we’ve made our Patriot’s Primer on American Liberty available as a free download for your use. Expand your knowledge and fortify your loved ones with this essential guide to understanding Liberty in the context of American history. Get our highly-acclaimed Patriot Primer when you confirm a free subscription to The Patriot Post.
Watch: U.S. soldiers pull Afghan baby over wall as crowd tries to pass kids to safety at Kabul airportThere aren’t many words to describe this: Children being lifted atop a crowd to make it over the gates at Kabul airport so they can get out of Afghanistan amid the Taliban’s takeover.
UNC forces students to wear masks outside but also allows hundreds of them to drink from the same water fountainLike many institutions of higher learning, the University of North Carolina this year is requiring all students, faculty and staff to wear face coverings in most campus spaces in the hopes that doing so will stop the spread of SARS-Cov-2.
Nothing to see here except a normal day in Seattle!This may be the perfect headline for this absurd point in history that we all find ourselves living in:
Kudos all around: An Olympian auctioned her 2020 medal to help pay for a boy’s heart surgery, then the winner gave the medal back to herEveryone deserves a pat on the back for this one.
In a surprise to no one except CNN fans, Biden’s poll numbers plummet after disastrous Afghanistan withdrawalHere’s the deets from a poll that was commissioned by the Daily Wire and conducted by a neutral third party:
That social justice warrior who slammed a white chef for cooking Asian food asked people to PAY FOR HER THERAPY when she was ridiculedIt’s not easy being a social justice warrior, especially on the Internet, where a situation can easily spiral out of control until you become, in the words of the great Obi-Wan Kenobi, “the very thing you swore to destroy.”
Facebook is debuting a virtual reality meeting room because Mark Zuckerberg thinks that’s what the world needs for some reasonWe can all agree that working from home is pretty great—overall it’s more relaxing, less harried, and if done right integrates easily with one’s work/life balance.
After year of keeping kids at home and inside, experts have discovered the health benefits of fresh airDon’t ever let anyone tell you that the scientific method is dead. After more than a year of bottling kids up in homes, keeping them glued to computer screens, shutting down playgrounds, and forcing them to wear heavy cloth face coverings while outdoors, experts have finally made a breakthrough discovery in the field of epidemiology, according to CNN:
Asked about Taliban chaos at Kabul airport, Biden said “No one’s being killed right now” then he literally knocked on woodThe situation in Afghanistan is so profoundly desperate at this point that President Joe Biden has busted out the big muscle guns, turning to what the foreign policy buffs call “the unilateral wood knock.”
A new report says the Taliban is going door-to-door looking for Christians and Bible apps on people’s phones. Learn how you can help local believers during this time.A new report says that Christians are being targeted by the Taliban after they seized control of Afghanistan and that local believers are fleeing to the mountains to escape certain death.
Socialist magazine fires workers who wanted their boss to share authority with themWho could have seen this coming???
In less than a minute, Ron DESAVAGE utterly clowned Biden’s obsession with masking kids while Afghanistan, the border, and the economy are falling to piecesBiden is apparently more concerned with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and little kids running around maskless than he is with a border crisis, mass inflation, and an entire nation being conquered by 7th-century neckbeards.
A Texas school was so determined to make its students wear masks that it added them to the dress codeYou know the friend or family member you have who’s, like, really, really into masks? Like the kind of person who you suspect might honestly wear a mask in the shower on the off-chance that a stray COVID molecule might somehow float up the drain?
Biden was asked about Afghans falling from planes and his response was “that was 4 days ago, 5 days ago” 🤨
Someone put a photo of Joe Biden eating ice cream in Afghanistan on a billboard and it’s just gorgeousYes y’all, someone paid for this photo to go up on a billboard in Wilmington, North Carolina and it’s just beautiful.
Clothing brand Chinatown Market changes its name to “Market” after accusations of cultural appropriationDid you know that it’s considered “cultural appropriation” to name your New York-based clothing company after a neighborhood in New York? Well, it is, and frankly it’s deeply problematic that you even had to wonder.
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
Sen. Blackburn to Newsmax: Where Is Kamala Harris on Plight of Afghan Women?
Special: Former FTC Attorney Exposes Impact Biden’s Taxes May Have on Your IRA/401k Dem Rep. Knocks State Dept Over Evac’s ‘Absurd’ Understaffing US Diplomats Warned State Dept. of Swift Taliban Takeover in July Special: Battery Companies Hate This – But You Save Thousands Rep. Brian Mast to Newsmax: Afghanistan ‘New Terrorist, Jihadist Club Med’ West Virginia AG, Citing Fentanyl Imports, Sues Over Remain in Mexico Policy Special: Bring Constitution 101 to Your Home New Dodgers Uniforms Strike Out With Latino Fans Terror Groups Primed to Benefit From Afghan Refugee Crisis
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99.) MARK LEVIN
August 19, 2021
On Thursday’s Mark Levin Show, Removing 2,500 non-combat personnel from Afghanistan that weren’t even in harm’s way was not necessary. The United States didn’t have a battalion of Marines on the ground because the Afghans were fighting for their country and our men and women were in intelligence and support roles. The 2,500 Americans withdrawn from Afghanistan prematurely were at no greater risk in an impenetrable base built by the soviets than if they were in downtown Chicago. The outcome in Afghanistan was as good of an outcome as one might expect until President Biden ruined it. Then, the Biden Administration is soft and allowing the Islamonazi regime in Tehran to do whatever they want. Trump was choking off the economy in Iran so they couldn’t enrich uranium. Now, due to Biden’s recklessness, the very same sons and daughters Biden says he wants to protect, will be more endangered than ever. There has been more death on this planet from totalitarians in the last 100 years than at any other time in history. Later, Biden argued that 1 trillion dollars over 20 years had to stop yet he’s signed away multiple trillions over the past eight months. Biden is a liar that doesn’t care. We know this from a newly-released confidential memo from July where the State Department indicates that Biden did in fact know that Afghanistan would collapse.
THIS IS FROM:
Wall St Journal
Confidential State Department Cable in July Warned of Afghanistan’s Collapse
AP
Europeans express ‘grave concern’ over IAEA report on Iran
Reuters
Planes, guns, night-vision goggles: The Taliban’s new U.S.-made war chest
Right Scoop
Here’s the worst highlights from Biden’s interview with ABC News about his epic failure in Afghanistan
Right Scoop
CNN reporter in Afghanistan drops a truth bomb on Biden’s ‘this isn’t a failure’ claim [VIDEO]
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Ahmad Sahel Arman
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Biden might start bombing but not to save AmericansThe Biden Administration is considering bombing Afghanistan, not to save Americans, but to destroy some of the massive troves of equipment and weapons we left behind. They’re afraid the Taliban… | |
Watch as mostly friendly Taliban charge CNN and Clarissa WardThe mostly friendly Taliban charged a CNN reporter and her crew for not hiding her face. They just happened to charge at reporter Clarissa Ward who said only this week… | |
Lt Col North: Thanks to the embassy, the Taliban is hunting down our alliesThanks to the US embassy, the Taliban has the disk drives containing all the personal information of Afghans who helped us. They have their addresses, phone numbers, even bio-data. Taliban… | |
Americans have to pay the government $2,000 for flights out of AfghanistanIllegal aliens get flown around the United States for free. They can go wherever they want. But, if you are an American citizen in Afghanistan, you get charged $2,000 for… | |
Woke General Milley says Taliban’s not interfering with evacuation as they shoot at peopleThe Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley, who is very WOKE, said the Taliban are not interfering with the evacuation. He said this as people who are… | |
Twitterati have #MAGATerrorists trending as Biden destroys the world#MAGATerrorists is trending. Could it be a distraction from Joe Biden destroying the USA and the world? They are referring to the nutjob who claimed to have a bomb in… | |
Biden said, “F* that…Nixon and Kissinger got away with it”The great humanitarian who leaves our borders open to the world because he cares doesn’t care about the women and girls in Afghanistan. We are talking about Joe Biden, the… | |
Garamendi says it’s “No way, not sensible” to extract stranded AmericansRep. John Garamendi — a member of the caring party, the humanitarian party, the party of love — doesn’t think we should send troops to attempt to save any of… | |
More good news! Biden brags about his withdrawal, it’s really a successRep. Guy Reschenthaler told Chris Salcedo on his Newsmax TV show today that the Taliban have hard drives that include the bio-data of every Afghan who helped us. They are… | |
UK Parliament unites to hold Biden in contemptThe U.K. Parliament has aligned to hold Joe Biden in contempt for his unilateral withdrawal from Afghanistan without discussing the issues with NATO. According to British media, Joe Biden would… | |
Pentagon: US is NOT coordinating evacuation with anyone, even alliesThe Pentagon confirmed that the US is not coordinating the evacuation with anyone else including allies. It’s a disaster as the US troops are banned from leaving the airport to… | |
Horror in Afghanistan thanks to Biden’s planning for every contingencyThere are horror stories coming out of Afghanistan thanks to all those Biden contingency plans. People having bibles on their phones are being killed. Taliban militants are even pulling people… | |
Biden’s every contingency plan included leaving 15,000 Americans behindPrideful, pathetic, and missing a few screws Biden doesn’t think he made any mistakes nor would he have done anything differently in Afghanistan. That is what he told George Stephanopoulos,… | |
DC bomb threat suspect surrenderedSeveral governmental buildings in Washington, D.C., were evacuated Thursday morning due to what Capitol Police call “an active bomb threat investigation” after a man drove a pickup truck onto a… | |
Biden made a deal with Taliban to not go get Americans & leave by 9/11!Biden told ABC News’ George Stephonopoulous that U.S. officials estimate there are between 10,000 to 15,000 Americans in Afghanistan and added that the “estimate we’re giving” is 50,000 to 65,000… | |
Chief: known/suspected terrorists crossing ‘at a level we’ve never seen before’Former Border Patrol Chief Rodney Scott retired, but not to leave the fight. He will fight in a different way although he didn’t say what that would be. One of the… | |
Training video of Afghan ‘soldiers’ after 7 years of training and billions of $$$During the twenty years the US was in Afghanistan, we were told the billions sent over to Afghanistan included allocations to train Afghan troops so they can defend their own… | |
Anti-rent activists Reps. Tlaib and Pressley collected rent during COVCommunist Squad members who pushed loudly and incessantly against rent collections during COV, collected rent for themselves. They collected thousands of dollars as they told others to go without. Cameron… | |
Sharia Law in London at the hands of British policeSPEAKERS’ Corner in Hyde Park is the oldest free speech platform in the world. It’s been around since gallows marked the square. An Act of Parliament in 1842 set the London space… | |
Marc Lamont Hill uses Afghanistan to spew hate against US and white menAccording to Marc Lamont Hill, America has no feelings, morals, or ethics — “America has interests.” America wants you to believe our “imperial theft and plunder is an attempt of… | |
Screaming matches between US & UK commanders over US-Taliban dealReporter Alex Tiffen reports that there is serious friction between the US and UK commanders. The American commanders won’t go out to find Americans and the Brits are going it… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) THE INTERCEPT
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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110.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
August 20, 2021
Taliban Going Door To Door Seeking Christians, Searching Through Phones For Bible Apps: Report
EXCLUSIVE: Americans Blame Biden, Not Trump, For Afghanistan Debacle: Poll
DeSantis Shreds Biden: America’s Enemies Know He’s Weak, Focuses On Kindergarteners While World Burns
‘That’s A Bald-Faced Lie’: Biden Panned For ‘Shameful’ ABC Interview
CNN Reporter In Kabul Blisters Biden: ‘If This Isn’t Failure, What Does Failure Look Like?’
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