Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday September 7, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
|
2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
SIGN UP September 7, 2021 READ ONLINE WORDS OF WISDOM “A goal should scare you a little, and excite you a lot.” JOE VITALE MORNING BRIEF TOP NEWS This Labor Day weekend, many of us will gather with friends and family to celebrate the men and women who work outside paving our roads, delivering our goods, collecting our garbage, and making America the great country it is. From The Epoch Times staff, we want to say thank you for your hard work. Your sheer grit and determination are what makes this country the place we are proud to call home. And as a way of saying thank you, sign up today and get Epoch TV FREE with a digital subscription, and get your first 4 months for just $1. NOTE: This is our best offer ever, and it expires soon.
POSITIVE NEWS EPOCH OPINION A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR Get #1 Retirement Playbook [Free]. A combination of unprecedented events will crush Wall Street and swiftly force the “economy to sputter in the next several months” You can protect your IRA and 401(k) accounts from a catastrophic stock market correction. Find out how Gold & Silver can help protect you from inflation, economic uncertainty, and stock market sell-offs. EPOCH TV PUZZLE CENTER If this email has been forwarded to you and you would like to sign up, please click here. Copyright © 2021 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved. The Epoch Times, 229 W 28th St, Fl.5, New York, NY 10001
With social media censorship sidelining many important headlines, our Morning Brief email is how we make sure you get the latest developments that our reporters have curated from around the world. It’s our way of keeping you truly informed so that you can make the decisions that align with your values. We hope you enjoy our coverage. Manage your email preferences here.
|
3.) DAYBREAK
|
4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 9.7.21
Good Tuesday morning and Shana Tova. Rosh Hashanah began at sundown Monday. For those observing two days, it ends at sundown on Wednesday.
L’shanah tovah tikatev v’taihatem.
___
John Thrasher won’t be presiding over FSU’s homecoming this year. He’ll have one of his own instead.
Thrasher assumed the FSU presidency in 2014 and, to borrow a turn of phrase from former Gov. Jeb Bush, he brought a pair of “Big Hairy Audacious Goals” with him.
The first: pilot FSU from the No. 43 public university to a Top 25 ranking in U.S. News & World Report’s highly regarded annual listing. The second: Raise $1 billion.
He had accomplished both five years into his seven-year tenure.
After going out on top as FSU president, the former House Speaker, Senator, lawyer and veteran is revisiting one of his other careers, lobbying.
His landing spot: The Southern Group.
Thrasher was there at the firm’s beginning. After capping off his term as House Speaker in 2000, he joined The Southern Group founder and chairman Paul Bradshaw to launch the firm in 2000. He exited when he ran for Senate in 2009 and, later, became FSU’s 15th President.
In his absence, The Southern Group has become one of the top lobbying shops in Florida and has proved to be the most lucrative in recent quarters.
Thrasher’s return bolsters an already stacked roster of lobbying talent at TSG, bringing an unmatched level of state government knowledge, invaluable business connections, and lifelong relationships to the firm.
___
The Florida Chamber Foundation embarked on a national search to find its next executive vice president.
After combing through numerous top-flight applicants, the Foundation announced Tuesday that it had found the right man for the job: retired U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. David Gillespie.
“Florida is at a crossroads, and the Florida Chamber Enterprise is continuing to make intentional changes to align our talent to the Florida 2030 Blueprint and our mission to secure Florida’s future. The addition of David Gillespie, a battle-tested, senior intelligence officer is the right leader at the right time to continue unifying Florida’s business community toward the Florida 2030 Blueprint goals,” said Florida Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Mark Wilson.
As the new EVP, Gillespie will help the Florida Chamber Foundation work through the goals outlined in its Florida 2030 Blueprint — the group’s research-backed plan to bring the state economy into the Top 10 if it were ranked as a country.
The former U.S. Air Force intelligence officer has served in six major operational global conflicts or campaigns, including being deployed to Kabul, Afghanistan and charged in part to advise the Commanding General of NATO’s International Security Assistance Force, the ISAF Director of Intelligence, and international staff on threats to nation-building and coalition forces.
He also has experience with the U.S. Department of Defense’s intelligence apparatus, has worked with the U.S. Department of Justice, and has served as a projects leader for management consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton.
“As a veteran of our United States military, David is a seasoned leader who understands the importance of putting the mission above self,” said Todd Powell, Chair of the Florida Chamber Foundation.
“As a Florida Chamber Board Member and Florida Chamber Foundation Trustee, I have watched the Florida Chamber Enterprise evolve and grow over the last year,” said Karen Moore, founder of Moore Inc. “The new addition of David Gillespie will continue to capitalize on this momentum.”
___
RSA Consulting Group welcomes Melody Arnold to the team, naming her Director of Government and Community Affairs at the Tampa-based firm.
Arnold is an experienced lobbyist and health care advocate who spent the past seven years working for the Florida Health Care Association, where she held the title of Associate Director of Government Affairs. In that role, she represented more than 500 long-term care facilities, facilitating FHCA’s advocacy, member relations, and political fundraising initiatives.
“Expanding our close-knit team was a big decision, and we knew it would have to be just the right person to fit into the culture we have built at RSA,” Ron Pierce, the firm’s president and CEO, said. “We weren’t actively hiring, but when we met Melody, we knew right away that she would be an incredible addition to our team.”
As Arnold moves in-house to the boutique consulting firm, she will lead state-level health care advocacy efforts and continue her work with FHCA from her position within RSA.
___
GrayRobinson has promoted Joseph Salzverg to shareholder.
Salzverg, who has been a part of the political and public policy arenas for more than a decade, came to GrayRobinson as a member of former House Speaker Dean Cannon’s Capitol Insight when the two firms joined forces in 2016.
Since 2018, he has been based in the firm’s Miami office (splitting his time between Miami and Tallahassee). He has played an integral role in growing the firm’s government affairs presence and client base in the South Florida region.
“I am incredibly proud of Joseph and know how hard he has worked to become a shareholder at GrayRobinson,” said Cannon, president and CEO of GrayRobinson. “It is always great when you get to see a talented team member like Joseph rise to a new level. Joseph has an incredibly bright future ahead of him.”
Salzverg, who lobbies both the legislative and executive branches on various issues, is also known for representing clients before local governments on procurements, land use, and government matters. Salzverg also assists corporate and nonprofit interests in market entrance strategies and community engagement initiatives throughout South Florida.
Tweet, tweet:
___
Rashad D. Thomas is AT&T Florida’s new Regional Director of External Affairs for Miami-Dade.
In his new role, Thomas will be responsible for external and legislative affairs activities in Miami-Dade County and parts of Broward. His responsibilities will include working with local and state government officials and enhancing AT&T’s presence throughout the region.
“Miami is a key driver for our business in Florida, so we’re excited to have someone as talented as Rashad to help guide our efforts with elected officials and stakeholders in the area,” said AT&T Florida President Joe York. “His experience in Miami-Dade Government and roots as a lifelong Miamian make Rashad a strong addition to the AT&T Florida team.”
Thomas came to AT&T from Port Miami, where he served as Manager of Strategic Partnerships and Community Relations. The position saw him collaborate with local businesses and organizations to connect them with opportunities at one of Florida’s biggest economic engines.
Thomas has held positions from Deputy County Mayor’s assistant to a VP post on the Miami Super Bowl Host Committee ahead of Super Bowl LIV through his nearly two decades in the Miami-Dade County government.
___
Welcome back — Florida Politics proudly announces health care reporter Christine Sexton is returning as our newest staff member, continuing a beat she has covered for more than two decades. During that time, Sexton wrote on health care issues for a wide range of print and online sites: POLITICO Florida, Bloomberg, The New York Times, The Associated Press, Florida Current, Florida Medical Business, and trade publications such as Florida Lawyer and National Underwriter. She recently served as a reporter for the News Service of Florida and had earlier worked here at Florida Politics. “I am looking forward to this opportunity, and I am ready for the next chapter of my career covering Florida health care policy,” Sexton said Monday. We are all excited to have her back.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@MaryEllenKlas: .@GovRonDeSantis is asked about vaccine passport penalties and suggests vaccines aren’t intended for public health: “It’s about your health, and whether you want that protection or not, it really doesn’t impact me or anyone else.”
—@SullyDish: Offering citizens bounties to hunt down other citizens for “crimes” is pure evil. It is a form of illiberalism that’s truly poisonous.
Tweet, tweet:
—@Munzenreieder: NY Media loves to focus on climate change in Miami like that city will eventually be lost while pretending NYC will magically be saved somehow. Dangerous attitude.
Tweet, tweet:
Horrible tweet —@OmariJHardy: Non-political post: If I hear one more reference to McKenzie Milton‘s reconstructed knee, I promise you — I will vomit. I don’t give one tarnation that Milton has a great story. He still plays for FSU. 🤢🤢
—@Eric_Adelson: The original quote came from John McKay, legendary coach of the creamsicle Bucs: “What do you think of your team’s execution, coach?” asked a reporter. McKay replied, “I’m in favor of it.”
—@WendallPierce: The depth of my love for this brother can only be matched by the depth of my pain learning of his loss. An immensely talented man with the ability to give voice to the human condition portraying the lives of those whose humanity is seldom elevated until he sings their truth.
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
NFL regular season begins — 2; Bucs home opener — 2; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 7; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 7; Alabama at UF — 11; Dolphins home opener — 12; Jaguars home opener — 12; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 13; The Problem with Jon Stewart premieres on Apple TV+ — 23; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 24; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 24; MLB regular season ends — 25; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 26; World Series Game 1 — 39; ‘Dune’ premieres — 43; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 50; Florida TaxWatch’s annual meeting begins — 50; Georgia at UF — 53; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 56; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 56; The Blue Angels 75th anniversary show — 59; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 59; ‘Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 61; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 62; Miami at FSU — 67; ExcelinEd’s National Summit on Education begins — 72; FSU vs. UF — 81; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 85; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 94; ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 101; ‘The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 106; ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 109; NFL season ends — 124; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 126; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 126; NFL playoffs begin — 130; Super Bowl LVI — 159; Daytona 500 — 166; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 199; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 243; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 262; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 268; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 304; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 316; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 395; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 430.
“In Florida, a summer of death and resistance as the coronavirus rampaged” via Saundra Amrhein, Fenit Nirappil, Jared Leone and Jacqueline Dupree of The Washington Post — As Florida appears to be turning the corner from a coronavirus rampage, its residents and leaders are surveying the damage left from more than 7,000 deaths reported since July Fourth and the scars inflicted by feuds over masks and vaccines. New infections were averaging more than 22,000 a day in the last days of August but have fallen to about 19,000. Yet recovery could prove fleeting: Holiday weekends such as Labor Day have acted as a tinderbox for earlier outbreaks, and late summer marks the return of students to college campuses. And hospital leaders exhale as COVID-19 admissions appear to have subsided from a peak of more than 17,000 in late August, dipping to about 15,000. Epidemiologists say Florida taught the nation important lessons as the highly transmissible delta variant of the virus accounts for nearly all new cases. Experts attribute Florida’s high death count to its substantial population of older residents, which means even an unvaccinated minority includes hundreds of thousands of susceptible victims. But this wave spared no age group. With so much virus in circulation, disease trackers fear the emergence of more fearsome threats.
“Florida’s long, hot, ‘sad’ COVID-19 summer” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The delta variant of COVID-19 hit Florida hard, harder than any other state except possibly Louisiana, catching off guard a Sunshine State that began the summer confident the pandemic was in the rearview mirror. Since Memorial Day, more than 1 million Floridians have come down with COVID-19. Since Memorial Day, the Florida Department of Health has reported 9,455 deaths from COVID-19. Until Memorial Day, it was known as the variant from India. It was May 31 when the World Health Organization dubbed it delta. By then, DeSantis had effectively ended the emergency, at least as far as the state was concerned. “I think it’s a really sad thing,” DeSantis said of the rising death toll last week.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“In Florida, new COVID-19 cases have dipped among adults but not for people under 20” via Daniel Chang of the Miami Herald — Over the past two weeks, Florida’s health department has reported a downturn in new cases of COVID-19 among nearly every adult age group while hospitalizations for the infectious disease also have declined, positive indicators that the state may have turned the corner on the latest wave of the pandemic. Still, new cases and hospitalizations in Florida are at their highest since last winter. For at least one group of Floridians, the pandemic is still surging: People under 20, who made up nearly 1 in 3 of all new COVID-19 cases during the week ending Aug. 26.
“Ron DeSantis rebukes vaccine passports: I don’t want ‘two classes of citizens’” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis championed himself Friday as Florida’s defender against a “biomedical security state.” Speaking to reporters in Pensacola, the Republican Governor mounted yet another offensive against vaccine passports. Florida will soon levy a fine on businesses, schools and government agencies that require visitors to show proof of vaccination. The $5,000 fines will begin on Sept. 16. When asked by a reporter about the rights of business owners, DeSantis portrayed vaccine passports as the foundation of a “biomedical security state.” While other states like New York have instituted mandatory vaccine policies, DeSantis maintains they are ideologically and medically fruitless.
“Florida official wants DeSantis to make the controversial and unproven COVID-19 treatment ivermectin more widely available” via Yelena Dzhanova of Business Insider — Polk County Commissioner Neil Combee called ivermectin a “wonder drug … We are hearing from many of our citizens that larger hospital chains and some pharmacies are refusing to prescribe safe and effective therapeutics like hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin,” Combee’s letter said. “When a citizen is facing a potentially life-threatening case of COVID-19, he or she should receive the ‘right to try’ potentially lifesaving therapeutics.” Commissioners in Polk are expected to vote on whether to send the letter to the Governor on Tuesday. Health agencies like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration have repeatedly warned that the drug can cause adverse side effects in humans, like dizziness and nausea.
“Florida school mask debate headed for appeals court battle” via Curt Anderson of The Associated Press — The battle over mask requirements to guard against coronavirus in Florida schools headed for a new legal phase Friday following an appeal by Republican DeSantis of a judge’s ruling that a blanket ban on mask mandates exceeds the state government’s authority. The case heads next to the 15 judges on the 1st District Court of Appeal in Tallahassee and could ultimately wind up in the state Supreme Court. The issue is whether the freshly minted Parents Bill of Rights law means parents have sole authority to decide if their child wears a mask or permits a school board to impose a broad mask requirement.
— CORONA LOCAL —
“Miami-Dade Mayor’s father, 87, dies of COVID-19. ‘We are just one more family affected.’” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Paul Levine, a retired globe-trotting paper executive who saw his oldest daughter elected the first female Mayor of Miami-Dade County, died Thursday from complications related to COVID-19, Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said. He was 87 and fully vaccinated. “It just goes to show this new variant is so pernicious when you’re vulnerable,” said Levine Cava, who also contracted COVID-19 in the fall of 2020. “We are just one more family affected by COVID.”
—”Mentor to young men among 15 MDCPS staff to die of COVID-19 in 10 days” via Johnny Archer of NBC Miami
“How many people have died of COVID-19 in Palm Beach County? The state won’t tell you” via Frank Gluck and Chris Persaud of The Palm Beach Post — For those wanting to know how many people are dying every day in their own communities, good luck. The state of Florida won’t say. Nor will most local public health officials. At least one county acknowledged it doesn’t know. Federal websites show either incomplete or inconsistent data for Florida’s counties. We know that Florida last week reported 2,345 COVID-19 deaths for the state. But, almost uniquely throughout the United States, Florida has not reported deaths at the county level for three months. The intensity of this worst wave of the pandemic in a given locale is anyone’s guess.
—“‘We lost a good one’: Fort Pierce pastor, former Palm Beach teacher dies of COVID-19” via Catie Wegman of Treasure Coast Newspapers
“Lee Schools accused of breaking FDOH rule regarding parents’ rights” via Adam Regan of the Fort Myers News-Press — The Florida Department of Education is investigating the School District of Lee County’s mask mandate implemented this week, citing a violation of a parent’s right to opt-out of their child wearing a face covering at school. In a letter sent from Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran to Lee Schools Superintendent Ken Savage and Lee County School Board Chair Debbie Jordan, Corcoran said he intends to recommend the department of education withhold the salaries of school board members as well as other sanctions recommended by law until the district complies.
—“Lake school board to vote on mask policy at next week’s special meeting” via Sarah Oulman of the Daily Commercial
—”Lake City fire chief dies from COVID-19” via First Coast News
“One landlord is making tenants get vaccinated. Whether it’s legal is still undecided.” via Ron Hurtibise of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — If you’re not vaccinated for COVID-19, you can forget about moving into any of eight apartment complexes in Broward and Miami-Dade counties owned by Santiago A. Alvarez and his family. And if you’re still unvaccinated when it comes time to renew your lease, you’ll have to find someplace else to live. Alvarez, who controls 1,200 units in the two counties, is the first large-scale landlord known to national housing experts to impose a vaccine requirement for employees and tenants. They’ll be required to produce documentation that they’ve received at least an initial vaccine dose.
“Tom Brady says he contracted COVID-19 shortly after Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Super Bowl parade” via Jenna Laine of ESPN — The Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback not only had a scare last year when both of his parents tested positive for COVID-19 — he himself was diagnosed with it too in February. In February, Brady revealed that he tested positive for the virus, just after the Bucs’ Super Bowl boat parade. Brady also said that he believes the coronavirus will be even more of a challenge this year, despite the Bucs now having a 100% vaccination rate — becoming just the second NFL team to reach that threshold, behind the Atlanta Falcons.
— STATEWIDE —
“Florida’s budget ‘in great shape’ as revenue beats pre-COVID-19 marks” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Florida’s budget is in great shape despite initial projections, according to legislative budget leaders. Last year, state budget leaders expected Florida to face lingering effects of that summer’s drastic COVID-19 recession for years to come. But the state now looks like it has more than recovered. Speaking Friday at the Joint Legislative Budget Commission, House budget leader Jay Trumbull credited Florida’s swift reopening and history of prudent budgeting for getting the state’s finances back on track and even above pre-pandemic estimates. All three years in the budget projection the Commission approved Friday show significant signs of improvement.“
“Florida Senate will be open to public despite surge in COVID-19 numbers” via CBS Miami — With committee meetings starting this month in advance of the 2022 legislative session, the Florida Senate is not planning to limit public access as the state continues battling the COVID-19 pandemic. Senate President Wilton Simpson sent a memo Friday to senators acknowledging questions about COVID-19 protocols. “At this point, I anticipate the Senate will remain open to visitors during our interim committee weeks,” the memo said. During the 2021 session, the Senate took a series of steps, including preventing members of the public and lobbyists from attending committee meetings in person, to try to stem the spread of COVID-19.
“Florida sees substitute teacher shortage during pandemic” via Brianna Andrews of News 4 Jax — The coronavirus pandemic altered how students learn in the classroom. Now, it’s the main factor behind a statewide substitute teacher shortage. “We have a shortage everywhere in the Duval County school system like they do all over the state, and we have a shortage of teachers, paraprofessionals bookkeepers, custodial workers, bus drivers,” said Terrie Brady, President of the Duval County Teachers United, the district’s teachers union. Brady said the surge in COVID-19 cases makes it more difficult to find substitute teachers. “The company that our district uses went out and recruited an additional 100-plus teachers,” Brady added. The Duval County School Board issued a mask mandate for students with a medical opt-out going into effect on Tuesday.
What Stephanie Smith is reading — “Florida’s managed care providers quietly prepping for $70 billion war” via Brian Burgess of The Capitolist — There’s been subdued chatter over the ultimate health care future of an estimated 6.6 million Florida citizens. Government affairs executives, public relations specialists, and their lobbyist counterparts have been quietly prepping plans for lobbying one-upmanship over the spoils of a Medicaid managed care procurement fight. Privately, lobbyists and health care pros are all saying the same thing: the shenanigans are about to begin. Some of the biggest and smallest players in the business have instructed their teams to do all they can in the months before the procurement process officially begins to tilt the playing field as much as possible. From geographic changes to nearly imperceptible tweaks to algorithms that determine reimbursement rates, the stakes are high.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Chris Sprowls rolls out updated House committee assignments” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Sprowls on Friday issued committee and subcommittee assignments for the 2022 Session. Sprowls’ announcement to members provided the full committee assignment lists for 39 committees and subcommittees. The list is largely the same as last year’s but contains a handful of changes, including assignments to the three redistricting committees and subcommittees. As before, Sprowls noted that he attempted to accommodate all members’ preference requests. After Democrats make their ranking leader recommendations, that information will go live on the House website. The Speaker announced changes to his leadership team on Thursday.
“Sprowls names new committee Vice Chairs for 2022 Legislative Session” via Florida Politics — Sprowls also made some switches to Vice Chairs and committee memberships on Friday. On tap to be Vice-Chair of the Pandemics & Public Emergencies Committee is Rep. Mike Caruso. He’ll be No. 2 to future House Speaker Danny Perez, named chair of that committee. Five Appropriations subcommittees are getting new Vice-Chairs. Under the Judiciary Committee umbrella, Rep. Mike Beltran will serve as the second in command for the Civil Justice & Property Rights Subcommittee. At the same time, Rep. Spencer Roach will be the new Vice-Chair for the Criminal Justice & Public Safety Subcommittee.
“Tyler Sirois, Cord Byrd heading Florida House’s redistricting subcommittees” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Sprowls rounded out his chamber’s redistricting team Thursday. Rep. Sirois will head the Congressional Redistricting Subcommittee, while Rep. Byrd will chair the State Legislative Redistricting Committee. Rep. Tom Leek had already been tapped to head the full Redistricting Committee in the House. The assignment of Sirois and Byrd means the Space Coast and Northeast Florida will boast outsized pull drawing maps for Florida’s soon-to-be 28 congressional districts and its state House and Senate seats.
Happening today — The Suwannee County legislative delegation meets: Sen. Jennifer Bradley and Rep. Chuck Brannan, 9:30 a.m., Live Oak City Hall, 101 White Ave. S.E., Live Oak.
Happening today — The Columbia County legislative delegation meets: Bradley and Brannan, 1 p.m., Columbia County School Board Administration Building, 372 West Duval St., Lake City.
Happening today — The Baker County legislative delegation meets: Bradley and Brannan, 4 p.m., Macclenny City Hall, 118 East Macclenny Ave., Macclenny.
— 2022 —
“Democrats say DeSantis stumble gives hope, but campaign needs work” via John Kennedy of USA Today Network — With recent polls showing DeSantis losing support among Floridians as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to surge, Florida Democrats sense a political opening. But DeSantis’ stumbles also are being greeted with a cold dose of reality among Democrats exiled from state leadership for more than two decades and dealing with a host of internal problems. Still, voters give DeSantis middling approval ratings and are similarly mixed about reelecting him next year. The findings encourage his opponents. With a third Democrat looking poised to enter the Governor’s race this month, activists acknowledge that beating DeSantis will happen only with a full-cylindered effort by a party whose history shows it more often sputters to the finish line on Election Day.
“DeSantis net approval falls 14 points among Florida voters as COVID-19 cases soar” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — DeSantis’ popularity among Florida voters is waning as COVID-19 continues to rip through the state, according to newly published polling results showing he’s suffered a double-digit drop in approval since July. A Morning Consult survey of nearly 4,200 voters in the Sunshine State revealed the pronounced negative shift in public perception of the first-term Florida Governor, who over the last two months has overseen an unprecedented surge in COVID-19 cases. During that time, his net approval rating, the share of voters who approve of his job performance minus the share who disapprove, fell 14 percentage.
“GOP megadonor gives DeSantis a pass on immigration — and tons of cash” via Matt Dixon of POLITICO — Billionaire GOP donor David MacNeil has said his political checkbook is closed to Republicans who oppose immigration reforms. But he’s making an exception for Gov. DeSantis. MacNeil, who founded Illinois-based WeatherTech but now lives in Florida, told POLITICO in 2018 that he would stop donating to GOP opponents of the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which grants protection from deportation to more than 600,000 young immigrants brought to America as children. Florida is home to over 24,000 DACA recipients, the fifth most of any state in the country.
Assignment editors — Charlie Crist will hold events as part of a GOTV (Get Out the Vaccine) tour; Midas vaccine site and meet and greet with Ron Katz, 3 p.m., Palm Beach; a Hispanic community center and vaccine site, 5 p.m., Lake Worth. RSVP to receive locations at press@charliecrist.com.
First on #FlaPol — “Wilton Simpson makes bid for Agriculture Commissioner official” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Simpson officially filed for a chance to become the state’s next Agriculture Commissioner, ending months of speculation surrounding his plans following his final Senate term. Simpson has long been rumored to want to mount a run for Agriculture Commissioner. Simpson earned much of his fortune in the farming industry before joining the Legislature. Simpson will enter the contest as a favorite to earn the GOP nomination. Simpson will have a decade of experience in that body to tout, including his current term as the 2020-22 Senate President. In addition, he has already secured the endorsement of former President Donald Trump.
“Ashley Moody starts reelection bid in a strong position” via Kevin Derby of the Florida Daily — While it did not get much attention, state Attorney General Moody formally kicked off her bid for a second term. It’s easy to lose sight of Moody as the likes of Gov. DeSantis, Sens. Marco Rubio and Rick Scott and Rep. Matt Gaetz garner the headlines. But she has been a consistent conservative since winning office in 2018, working with other Republican attorneys general on several high-profile cases. So far, there aren’t any Democrats in the race though Panhandle lawyer Daniel Uhlfelder, best known for dressing up as the Grim Reaper, and State Attorney Andrew Warren have garnered some buzz.
“Dems bash ‘hypocritical’ Maria Elvira Salazar for gift from lawyer linked to Nicolás Maduro” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — A Democratic committee is bashing U.S. Rep. Salazar for again shirking Federal Elections Commission rules on campaign contributions, including collecting an over-the-limit gift from a Colombian lawyer tied to socialist Venezuela President Maduro. The Federal Elections Commission flagged Salazar’s political committee, Salazar for Congress, for accepting more than $147,000 in excessive campaign donations. Among the illegally excessive contributions: $5,700 from Colombian lawyer and permanent U.S. resident Abelardo de la Espriella, who until 2019 represented Colombian businessman Alex Saab, the subject of a money-laundering investigation into crooked deals with the Venezuelan government.
“Rep. Angie Nixon: Dems losing in 2022 would lead to ‘full-scale assault on a woman’s right to choose’” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Rep. Nixon is warning Floridians who support women’s reproductive rights to start looking hard at next year’s elections if they aren’t already, citing word from a top state Republican that GOP lawmakers are now developing a Texas-style abortion bill. During a television interview Thursday, Simpson said his party was “already working on” a so-called “heartbeat bill,” which would ban abortion as early as six weeks into a pregnancy when many women aren’t yet aware they’re pregnant. It remains to be seen how closely Florida’s version resembles the restrictive Texas bill.
“Neal Dunn gives Griff Griffitts ‘wholehearted’ endorsement in HD 6” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Griffitts added another endorsement for his campaign for House District 6. The latest pratique comes from U.S. Rep. Dunn, a medical doctor representing Florida’s 2nd Congressional District since 2017. His sprawling seat encompasses HD 6. Griffitts is one of two candidates running to succeed term-limited Rep. Trumbull in the coastal Northwest Florida district and has established himself as the preferred candidate among current elected leaders. Two weeks ago, his campaign touted an endorsement from CFO Jimmy Patronis. He had previously earned nods from Panama City Mayor Greg Brudnicki and others, while his donor sheet includes the likes of Trumbull and Sen. George Gainer, also a Panama City Republican.
For your radar — “Democrats see consequences from redistricting reform push” via The Associated Press — Democrats argue that the once-a-decade process of redrawing political maps shouldn’t be a partisan cage match. In the name of good government and balance, they’ve pushed for independent commissions to do the work of rebalancing population changes into congressional districts. They’re about to feel the consequences of their focus on fairness. In Democratic-controlled Colorado, Virginia and Oregon, new congressional maps drawn by commissions or bipartisan power-sharing agreements are unlikely to give the party the sort of political advantages it could have otherwise enjoyed. Republicans, meanwhile, haven’t given up their power, controlling the process in 20 states, including Florida, Texas and North Carolina.
— CORONA NATION —
“COVID-19 deaths surge across a weary America as a once-hopeful summer ends” via Mitch Smith and Julie Bosman of The New York Times — A summer that began with plunging caseloads and real hope the worst of COVID-19 had passed is ending with soaring death counts, full hospitals and a bitter realization that the coronavirus is going to remain a fact of American life for the foreseeable future. Vaccination rates are ticking upward, and reports of new infections are starting to fall in some hard-hit Southern states. But Labor Day weekend bears little resemblance to Memorial Day when the country was averaging fewer than 25,000 cases daily.
“U.S. COVID-19 death toll hits 1,500 a day amid delta scourge” via Ariana Eunjung Cha, Dan Keating and Jacqueline Dupree of The Washington Post — Nationally, COVID-19 deaths have climbed steadily in recent weeks, hitting a seven-day average of about 1,500 a day Thursday. What is different about this fourth pandemic wave in the United States is that the growing vaccination rates and natural immunity have broken the relationship between infections and deaths in many areas. Florida, for example, where more than 53% of the population is fully vaccinated, is the worst hit state in terms of daily deaths. Virtually every time that humans have underestimated the virus and let down their guard, deaths surged.
“Child COVID-19 cases rise in states where schools opened earliest” via Yoree Kohof The Wall Street Journal — The recent spread of the highly contagious Delta variant has thrown back-to-school plans into disarray, temporarily driving tens of thousands of students back to virtual learning or pausing instruction altogether. Since the school year kicked off in late July, at least 1,000 schools across 31 states have closed because of COVID-19, according to Burbio, a data service monitoring school closures at 1,200 districts nationwide, including the 200 largest. The shutdowns are hitting classrooms especially hard in the Deep South, where most schools were among the first to open, a possible warning of what’s to come as the rest of the nation’s students start school this month.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Delta surge means this is as good as global growth gets” via Enda Curran of Bloomberg — The pandemic’s summer resurgence is slowing the global economic recovery as the delta variant dogs efforts to rev up factories, offices and schools. Instead of entering the final months of 2021 confident that the acute phase of the pandemic is over, it’s becoming clear that booster shots may be needed for fading vaccines, workplace re-openings will be delayed, and border closures remain. Data over the past week captured a worldwide weakening as infections hit travel and spending and worsen supply bottlenecks that dampened manufacturing and trade. Surging gas prices are also emerging as a threat.
“At odds with boss, some Joe Biden aides privately alarmed as millions of workers head over jobless benefits cliff” via Jeff Stein of The Washington Post — Biden administration officials have been at odds over the consequences of allowing unemployment benefits to expire for millions of workers next week. In private conversations, senior officials across multiple parts of the government have made clear they think the cutoff of benefits poses a serious danger to millions of Americans who remain out of work, according to two senior administration officials and five people in frequent communication with administration officials. That belief conflicts with the administration’s stated position that the emergency federal program is “appropriate” to end.
—“Federal programs giving thousands of Floridians billions in unemployment aid end Labor Day” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
“Why America has 8.4 million unemployed when there are 10 million job openings” via Heather Long, Alyssa Fowers and Andrew Van Dam of The Washington Post — A mystery sits at the heart of the economic recovery: There are 10 million job openings, yet more than 8.4 million unemployed are still actively looking for work. The job market looks, in some ways, like a boom-time situation. Business owners complain they can’t find enough workers, pay is rising rapidly, and customers are greeted with “please be patient, we’re short-staffed” signs at many stores and restaurants. But the nation remains in the midst of a deadly pandemic, with COVID-19 hospitalizations back at their highest rates since January.
“With moratorium gone, wave of eviction orders awaits Central Florida renters” via Kate Santich and Desiree Stennett of the Orlando Sentinel — At a nonprofit aid office in Longwood, a half-dozen renters line up for a last-gasp chance to avoid eviction. They bring piles of personal documents — leases, past-due utility bills, birth certificates for their children, and, in some cases, letters warning them to pay long-overdue rent immediately or face being put out on the street. “It has been like this all afternoon,” says Nina Yon, CEO of The Sharing Center, which hosted the rental assistance event. “As soon as one chair opens up, the next person moves in. … And we have still not seen the worst.”
— MORE CORONA —
“Needle phobics want COVID-19 vaccines, if they can avoid fainting or fleeing” via Elise Young of Bloomberg — They trust the vaccine. They want the vaccine. But millions of U.S. residents who pass out or beat feet at the sight of a hypodermic needle are risking COVID-19 rather than getting a shot in the arm. Even while most coronavirus deaths are among the unvaccinated, the phobics are digging in. They’re often first to say that their deepest dread makes no sense: Shots are brief and usually minimally painful, after all. But traumatic memories trump COVID-19 maybes. As many as 66 million Americans may suffer from needle fear so severe that they threaten to delay herd immunity.
“The delta variant may be slowly killing the family movie” via Steven Zeitchik of The Washington Post — Last November, the movie business was in desperate need of good news when an unlikely savior appeared in “The Croods: A New Age.” When many movie theaters were closed, DreamWorks Animation’s sequel about a family of outspoken cave men defied the vaccine-less moment and opened strongly in fewer venues, selling an average of nearly 800 tickets at each screen it played. The data sent a clear and reassuring message: no matter what hurdles moviegoing faced, it could always count on family films. Nearly 10 months later, a tougher reality is unfolding: People have stopped buying tickets to family films. In a striking development, the great all-ages unifier of American pop culture is struggling.
— 20 YEARS —
“Biden to attend 9/11 ceremonies at all three sites on 20th anniversary of attacks” via Mary Kay Linge of The New York Post — Biden will travel to all three sites of the 9/11 terror attacks on their 20th anniversary next Saturday, despite last month’s call from grieving families asking him not to come. “The President and the First Lady will honor and memorialize the lives lost 20 years ago with travel to all three sites of the 9/11 attacks: New York City, New York, Shanksville, Pennsylvania and the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia,” the White House said. But last month, a group calling itself “Members of the 9/11 Community” called on Biden to stay away from this year’s solemn commemorations, because he has not released documents the group claims would show links between the Saudi government and the al-Qaida terrorists who carried out the attacks.
“They lost their fathers on Sept. 11. Then they found each other.” via Leslie Brody if The Wall Street Journal — The first time they met, Edward Seaman and Julia Coombs were attending a camp in Belfast, Ireland, for teenagers who had lost parents to terrorism. Within a year, they had fallen in love. Now they are planning a wedding by the ocean in Newport, Rhode Island, in October. The ceremony will include tributes to their fathers, both killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center.
“Pretrial hearings for alleged 9/11 plotters set to resume at Guantánamo this week” via Ellie Kaufman of CNN — Pretrial hearings in the case of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, accused of being the lead plotter behind the Sept. 11 attacks, and four other detainees held at Guantánamo Bay are set to resume on Tuesday. The last in-person hearing was held in February 2020. Along with Mohammed, Walid Muhammad Salih Mubarak Bin ‘Attash, Ramzi Bin al-Shibh, Ali Abdul Aziz Ali, and Mustafa Ahmed Adam al Hawsawi are also charged. If convicted, all five could receive the death penalty. The charges against them announced in 2012 include “terrorism, hijacking aircraft, conspiracy, murder in violation of the law of war, attacking civilians, attacking civilian objects, intentionally causing serious bodily injury, and destruction of property in violation of the law of war.”
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“As coronavirus fears spike, Biden’s ratings sag and workers split on vaccine mandates” via Scott Clement, Dan Balz and Emily Guskin of The Washington Post — The delta variant’s two-month surge has generated a sharp rise in public fears about contracting the coronavirus, undermined confidence in Biden’s leadership and renewed divisions over vaccine and mask mandates. Among unvaccinated workers who are not self-employed, about 7 in 10 say they would likely quit if their employer required them to be vaccinated and did not grant a medical or religious exemption. President Biden’s approval rating for handling the pandemic has dropped to 52% from 62% in late June.
“In Invoking Beau Biden, Biden broaches a loss that’s guided his presidency” via Katie Rogers of The Washington Post — The Biden administration, seeking to avoid a public rift with Gold Star families, has not pushed back on criticism other families who have said the President brought up his own son too often and acted distant during the ceremony at Dover. But the moment crystallized just how much Biden is still haunted by the memory of a son he had always described to confidants as “me, but without all the downsides,” and how his anguish over that loss can clash with the political realities of being President.
“Biden mulls ‘lite’ version of Donald Trump’s ‘Remain in Mexico’ policy” via Anita Kumar of POLITICO — The Biden administration is debating restarting what it describes as a more humane version of a controversial Trump-era program for asylum-seekers. The new proposal — what some have dubbed “Remain in Mexico lite” — would require a small number of asylum-seekers to wait in Mexico for their cases to be processed but give them better living conditions and access to attorneys, according to three people familiar with the discussions. The administration is starting talks with Mexico to strike a balance between abiding by federal court orders and making good on the President’s campaign promises.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Kevin McCarthy and Paul Ryan, divided over Trump, see different futures for the Republican Party” via Paul Kane of The Washington Post — Ryan and McCarthy promoted what they said were Trump’s foreign policy achievements and critiqued Biden’s withdrawal from Afghanistan, including the Pentagon’s shuttering of Bagram Air Base, north of Kabul, before all Americans had left the country. “Which was never President Trump’s plan,” McCarthy said of closing the air base, claiming that Trump ordered punishments of the Taliban if they broke their word. “I watched the past administration. When conditions were broken, you cut it off; you punished them. So, they learned not to do it.”
“Heeding Steve Bannon’s call, election deniers organize to seize control of the GOP — and reshape America’s elections” via Isaac Arnsdorf, Doug Bock Clark, Alexandra Berzon and Anjeanette Damon of ProPublica — One of the loudest voices urging Trump’s supporters to push for overturning the presidential election results was Bannon. “We’re on the point of attack,” Bannon pledged. When the insurrection failed, Bannon continued his campaign for his former boss by other means. The solution, Bannon announced, was to seize control of the GOP from the bottom up. Listeners should flood into the lowest rung of the party structure: the precincts.
“Trump nears deal for D.C. hotel” via Jonathan Swan of Axios — Trump is in advanced talks to sell rights to his Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C. The removal of Trump’s big, golden name from Pennsylvania Avenue would be a symbolic bombshell savored by opponents. The historic building became a prop and symbol for both sides in the political wars. During his chaotic presidency, the hotel was a central setting with Trump preening at his personal table, and supporters and supplicants thronging the lobby bar and restaurants to curry favor. Trump would sell the leasing rights to a real estate developer, who in turn would negotiate with hotel companies that would manage the property and rebrand it.
— CRISIS —
“He was one of the first Jan. 6 defendants to plead guilty to a felony. Now he wants to take it back.” via Rachel Weiner of The Washington Post — The first person to be sentenced for a felony in the Jan. 6 Capitol attack now says he was bullied by his attorney into pleading guilty and would like to take it back. Paul Hodgkins was sentenced in July to eight months in prison after pleading guilty to one felony count of obstructing a joint session of Congress meeting to confirm the results of the 2020 presidential election. While he did not engage in violence, he carried a Trump flag onto the Senate floor after lawmakers had been forced to flee. The deadline for Hodgkins to appeal his sentence has passed, but his attorney argues that he was not fully informed of his rights and should be granted more time.
Lawyer for Southwest Florida man arrested in connection with Capitol riot reportedly hospitalized with COVID-19” via Jake Allen of the Naples Daily News — The status of the attorney for an East Naples man suspected of participating in the U.S. Capitol riot is unclear, even as the defense team continues filing motions to revoke the suspect’s detention pending trial. Christopher Worrell, 50, was arrested after FBI agents executed a search and arrest warrant at his home on March 12. Worrell’s defense attorney John M. Pierce represents 17 of the more than 500 people charged in the Jan. 6 insurrection. According to a notice filed by the prosecution in Worrell’s case, Pierce is possibly ill with COVID-19, on a ventilator and unresponsive.
— D.C. MATTERS —
Happening today — Rubio and U.S. Rep. John Rutherford will hold a joint news conference about legislation to aid first responders and teachers who are first-time homebuyers, 1:30 p.m., Jacksonville Fire Rescue, Station 50, 3275 Tamaya Blvd., Jacksonville.
“Ballard reps jailed-for-sedition Bassem Awadallah” via Kevin McCauley of O’Dwyer PR — Ballard Partners represents Awadallah, the U.S. citizen and former adviser to Jordan’s royal court and Saudi crown prince, who was sentenced to 15 years in prison in July for working to plot against Jordan’s monarchy. Awadallah was Jordan’s envoy to Saudi Arabia and later became an economic adviser to crown prince Mohammed bin Salman. After his arrest, the head of Saudi intelligence rushed to Jordan to press for his release. The lawyer for Awadallah, a citizen of Jordan and Saudi Arabia, claims that he was beaten and tortured in person and held in solitary confinement. Ballard represents Awadallah as a subcontractor to Ashcroft Law Firm, established by former Attorney General John Ashcroft.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Four dead, including a baby, after Florida war goes on a seemingly random shooting spree, deputies say” via Robin Webb and Austen Erblat of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A U.S. Marine Corps veteran is accused of killing four people, including a mother and her 3-month-old baby in her arms, while high on meth in what appears to have a been a random shooting spree east of Tampa. The suspect was identified Sunday as Bryan Riley, a 33-year-old former U.S. Marine Corps sharpshooter who served in Afghanistan and Iraq. Riley was taken into custody after being shot in a shootout with deputies, then came out with his hands up.
“Dontrell Stephens, West Palm Beach man who was left paralyzed in PBSO shooting, dies at 28” via Julius Whigham II and Jane Musgrave of The Palm Beach Post — Stephens, the West Palm Beach man who won a multimillion-dollar lawsuit after being shot and left paralyzed by a Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office deputy in 2013, has died, his attorney said Thursday. Stephens died Sunday from complications associated with his paralysis, said attorney Jack Scarola, who represented Stephens in a lawsuit against PBSO. Stephens was 28. “It was a variety of issues, including bedsores,” Scarola said. Stephens had been in a hospital for about three weeks when he died.
“Who was behind Fort Lauderdale’s $1 million goof? The answer may hide in a trail of texts and emails” via Susannah Bryan of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A mystery man approved nearly $1 million in work after an epic sewage spill spoiled Rio Vista, one of the toniest parts of town. Just one problem: The restoration work should have gotten approval from the city commission. Now Fort Lauderdale wants to know who’s to blame. City leaders say the answer about how the colossal mistake happened will require some investigating. An outside firm has been tapped to conduct a $60,000 forensic audit to make sense of things.
“Judge rules Nassau County violated Florida public records law in lawsuit filed by Rayonier” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — Nassau County officials violated the state’s public record law when they did not provide text messages sought by Rayonier in connection with a battle between the county and the company over who would pay for parks and recreational facilities in the Wildlight mega-development, a state judge has ruled. Circuit Judge James H. Daniel granted summary judgment on Aug. 24 to Rayonier after finding the county did not give Rayonier 147 pages of text messages exchanged by county commissioners and county employees.
— TOP OPINION —
“The COVID-19 endgame: Is the pandemic over already? Or are there years to go?” via Marc Fisher of The Washington Post — With children returning to classrooms, in many cases for the first time in 18 months, and as the highly contagious delta variant and spotty vaccination uptake send case numbers and deaths shooting upward, many Americans wonder what exactly has to happen before life can return to something that looks and feels like 2019. The answers come in a kaleidoscopic cavalcade of scenarios, some suggested with utmost humility, others with mathematical confidence: The pandemic will end because deaths finally drop to about the same level, we’re accustomed to seeing from the flu each year. Or it will end when most kids are vaccinated. Or it will end because Americans are finally exhausted by all the restrictions on daily life.
— OPINIONS —
“Democratic infighting can have only one winner: The Trumpist GOP” via Colbert I. King of The Washington Post — While the Democratic National Committee leadership spent August on a “Build Back Better” bus tour across the country and House Democratic factions were engaged in a war over their party’s direction, Republicans have been prepping to launch their presidential nominee, presumptively Trump or a Trump-blessed standard-bearer, toward a November 2024 victory. However, to achieve that goal, the GOP is counting on a combination of a shredded Biden agenda and polarized and dispirited Democrats. This is no time for political standoffs or cheap shots at Biden that only provide fuel for his political enemies. It’s time for united Democrats to stand up to a united Republican opposition singularly focused on reclaiming power.
“DeSantis’ spokesperson’s attack on judge ‘unfounded and inexcusable’” via Maria Santoro for the Tallahassee Democrat — County Circuit Judge John Cooper conducted a trial in a case filed by the parents of school-aged children against various government officials challenging the Governor’s executive order prohibiting school boards from requiring masks. As he does in every case, Cooper gave all parties a thorough and complete opportunity to present their evidence and make their arguments. The Governor’s spokesperson’s insinuation that Judge Cooper issued a partisan decision is wrong, and improperly attacks the independence of the judiciary. Her statement that he ruled “in favor of elected politicians” is ironic; the only politician in the case was the Governor.
“Farewell, Dr. Scott Rivkees. Florida needs a true public health expert” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — Dr. Rivkees resigned. Scott who? you ask. That’s the whole point. He was in charge of health, but his true skill was stealth. As Florida’s chief public health officer, Rivkees held the dual titles of Surgeon General and secretary of the Department of Health at a salary of $140,000 a year. But Floridians rarely saw him or heard from him. His last day is Sept. 20. Then his office will be empty. Will anyone notice? No. Rivkees is accused of violating Florida’s public records laws by refusing to release daily COVID-19-related case numbers, deaths, hospitalizations and positivity rates.
“Corcoran COVID-19 mask sanctions of school boards peanuts, part of Florida farce” via Laurence Reisman of TC Palm — Some folks might think Florida Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran is a big, bad bully for withholding funds from school districts requiring masks in defiance of the Governor’s executive order. But despite all the bluster coming from Corcoran and anti-mask crusaders, the penalty is much ado about peanuts: around $51,866 a month total from two school districts, if figures from the Florida Legislature’s Office of Economic and Demographic Research are accurate. Corcoran announced Monday he would withhold salaries of the 12 women and 2 men on the Alachua (5 members) and Broward (9 members) school boards.
“Your ‘personal choice’ not to get COVID-19 vaccine is putting our ‘health care heroes’ at risk” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Getting the vaccine is not a ‘personal choice.’ It never was, really, but the onslaught of cases fueled by the delta variant has removed any doubt. And yet, that’s not what Florida’s Governor would have you believe. On Friday, DeSantis actually uttered these incredible — and incorrect — words about the vaccine: “It’s about your health and whether you want that protection or not. It really doesn’t impact me or anyone else.” Doesn’t impact anyone else? Talk about a profile in selfishness. Almost 46,000 have died of COVID-19 in his state since the pandemic began.
“Congress must pass Equality Act to counter wave of anti-LGBTQ legislation” via Joe Saunders for the Orlando Sentinel — LGBTQ Floridians have experienced quite a bit of whiplash this year. We began 2021 with a victory that meant every single one of the nearly 886,000 LGBTQ people living in the Sunshine State was protected from discrimination. But it became clear that DeSantis didn’t seem to hold the Supreme Court or the FCHR in high regard. DeSantis spearheaded an anti-LGBTQ agenda that sought explicit ways to harm our community. It’s clear that a comprehensive, explicit federal law protecting LGBTQ people from discrimination is needed. That’s why Congress must pass the Equality Act.
“The Florida Supreme Court once again bows to corporate interests” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Relentlessly and remorselessly, the Florida Supreme Court is hollowing out the state constitution’s guarantee that “The courts shall be open to every person for redress of any injury, and justice shall be administered without sale, denial or delay.” For the third time in barely two years, the court has made it more difficult to win against corporate defendants over such issues as faulty brakes, exploding tires, consumer swindles, environmental pollution, dangerous drugs, or any other hazards. This time it was a 6-1 decision to change Florida’s judicial rules to help corporate CEOs avoid pretrial depositions that might embarrass them.
“Thanks, but no thanks, to government subsidizing news” via Bill Cotterell of the Tallahassee Democrat — No matter how sweet the intention, some things just don’t mix. Right now, there’s a serious nationwide dilemma involving local news, a commodity often described in bovine terms. Everyone agrees covering local news is good for a community, but nobody knows how to make much money at it. Hundreds of newspapers have shut down, cut publication days, or have been swallowed by big hedge funds that sell off assets and lay off staff to bolster the bottom line. One solution seemingly gaining bipartisan traction in Congress is the Local Journalism Sustainability Act, which might become part of that infrastructure and economic-recovery spending binge in Washington.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Sunrise welcomes new host Trimmel Gomes, reporting from the Florida Capitol, where the Governor and Republican legislators are gearing up to steal a page out of the Texas playbook when it comes to abortion.
Also on today’s Sunrise:
— Republican Rep. Anthony Sabatini says there is no question Florida will mimic Texas, as he’s already working on filing a heartbeat bill himself.
— Meanwhile, a chorus of women leaders are fighting back, Democratic Rep. Anna Eskamani.
— On Monday, Florida reported 46,105 more COVID-19 cases and 1,064 additional deaths to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; DeSantis continues his statewide campaign for monoclonal antibody treatments.
— In non-COVID-19 news, several Florida groups rally to help resettle Afghan refugees.
— On the Sunrise Interview is Matt Schmitt, associate director of Catholic Charities Jacksonville, preparing to handle a surge of over 150 Afghan refugees to the region.
— And finally, the stories of two Florida Men … with guns.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“First-ever Disney specialty plate now available” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Disney magic can now follow you wherever you go with the first-ever Walt Disney World-inspired specialty plate. The new plates have been delivered to tax collector offices and license plate agencies statewide. More than 10,000 Floridians have already preordered the $25 plate depicting the Cinderella castle since it became available for presale last October. “With the more than 10,000 presale orders alone, it’s already performing better than plates that have been on the road for years,” said Jessica Kelleher, a spokeswoman.
“The personal and the political intersect at this thought-provoking exhibit in Miami Beach” via Michelle F. Soloman of the Miami Herald — In a small project room on the second floor of Oolite Arts on Lincoln Road, a monitor displays a circle that resembles a sonar. Below that, a printer sporadically releases a large, colored abstract work on paper. It’s meant as a visual representation of the continuous flow of digital data moving between Miami Beach and Havana, Cuba. The work by Rodolfo Peraza, entitled “Pilgram: Naked Link 3.0,” is part of “Where there is power,” which is on view through Sept. 19 at the Miami Beach gallery.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Belated best wishes to Anita Berry of Johnston & Stewart, Abel Harding, former U.S. Rep. Kendrick Meek, Joe Mobley of The Fiorentino Group, and Bobby Olszewski. Celebrating today are Sen. Bobby Powell, Chris Cate, Mike’s much-better half, Melanie Griffin, journalist Chris Hong, and Jenna Sarkissian.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
5.) MORNING BREW
|
BECOME SMARTER IN JUST 5 MINUTES
Get the daily email that makes reading the news actually enjoyable. Stay informed and entertained, for free.
6.) THE FACTUAL
|
7.) LIBERTY NATION
|
|
|
8.) FOX NEWS
|
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
|
9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
10.) THE FEDERALIST PAPERS
|
11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
|
12.) THE FLIP SIDE
13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Welcome back, and happy Tuesday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,190 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
⚡ Situational awareness: Richmond’s Robert E. Lee statue will come down from its Monument Avenue pedestal tomorrow.
- Gov. Ralph Northam made the announcement four days after the Virginia Supreme Court ruled that the commonwealth could remove what Northam called “Virginia’s largest monument to the Confederate insurrection.”
Afghan refugees at Dulles on Aug. 29. Photo: Kent Nishimura/L.A. Times via Getty Images
An influx of Afghan refugees is worsening America’s broken immigration system, Axios’ Stef Kight writes.
- The Pentagon needs to add 50,000 spots to bases by next week to provide temporary housing for Afghan refugees.
- That may sound like a lot, but there have been more than 1.2 million undocumented border crossings since October.
The big picture: Afghanistan is the latest in a string of migration emergencies facing President Biden.
- COVID, poverty and violence in Central America, an earthquake that rocked Haiti, actions by the Trump administration and by federal courts, and agencies that are understaffed and underfunded have left the administration jumping from one fire to the next.
What’s happening: The same HHS agency scrambling to fund and build emergency sites for unaccompanied kids from south of the border is also charged with funding services for resettled Afghans.
- Paperwork, including work authorization for Afghans and Central American asylum-seekers alike, all flows through U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, which has long struggled with backlogs.
What we’re watching: An unknown number of unaccompanied Afghan kids will join the record numbers of migrant children who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border without their parents or guardians.
- As military bases prepare to house tens of thousands of Afghans, one base — Fort Bliss, Texas — has already been criticized for holding hundreds of unaccompanied minors in unfit conditions.
Goldman Sachs cut its U.S. growth forecast, citing a “harder path” ahead for consumers.
- 2021 expansion is now pegged at 5.7%, economist Ronnie Walker told clients yesterday — down from 6% at the end of August, Bloomberg reports.
- That follows Friday’s report showing a massive slowdown in job creation.
The bank’s projected unemployment rate is 4.2% at the end of this year — ticking up from a prior estimate of 4.1%.
- But Goldman raised its growth forecast for 2022 to 4.6% — up from 4.5%.
🌐 The Delta effect is global. “Delta Surge Means This Is as Good as Global Growth Gets,” warned a Bloomberg headline over the weekend.
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios
59% of parents with school-age children back mask mandates in schools, Axios health care editor Tina Reed writes from an Axios/Momentive poll (38,251 adults).
- 85% of Democrats, 66% of independents and 32% of Republicans support mask mandates for students and staff.
Here’s the surprise: Opposition to school mask mandates is highest in Colorado (37%), Iowa (44%), Minnesota (38%), and Ohio (43%) — not in Texas and Florida, where mandates have been banned.
- Fewer than half (46%) of Republicans in Texas — which has been hit hard by COVID in recent weeks — oppose mask mandates.
- By contrast, 70% of Colorado Republicans oppose mandates.
Look at these gender and age gaps:
- More mothers than fathers (66% vs. 50%) support mask mandates for students and staff.
- Republican parents under age 35 are 10 points more likely than older ones to back requiring masks at school.
Marine One approaches the South Lawn last night as President Biden and Dr. Jill Biden return from Labor Day weekend in Delaware.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
🎧 Just dropped: Part 3 of Axios’ “How it Happened: The Next Astronauts” podcast, following the first all-civilian space crew as they prepare for launch on Sept. 15. Axios Space author Miriam Kramer has the backstory:
The training for the all-civilian crew of SpaceX Inspiration4 is a reality check on the industry’s goal of sending ordinary people to space.
- For a future where millions of people live and work in space, the trip will need to take far less preparation.
The crew has spent hours in simulators learning how to run the Dragon capsule.
- They ate what they’ll eat in space — and sat through a simulated launch delay caused by weather.
🍕 The crew will eat cold pizza on the first day in orbit.
- The crew is picking out movies.
- SpaceX has installed a huge bubble window — called a cupola — at the top of their Dragon capsule to give the crew incredible 360° views of space and Earth.
The Texas House in May, during the abortion debate. Photo: Eric Gay/AP
Attorney General Merrick Garland said DOJ is “urgently” exploring ways to challenge the Texas abortion law, and vowed to “protect those seeking to obtain or provide reproductive health services.”
- “The department will provide support from federal law enforcement when an abortion clinic or reproductive health center is under attack,” Garland said.
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios
More than 100 companies are expected to go public on U.S. stock exchanges by year-end, capping off what’s already been the busiest year for IPOs since 2000, Axios Pro Rata author Dan Primack writes.
- 279 companies already completed U.S. IPOs in 2021, topping last year’s 218.
- Neither total includes the deluge of SPAC IPOs — 423 in 2021 vs 248 in 2020), per SPAC Research — nor the smaller number of direct listings.
Notable companies going public include Warby Parker, Fresh Market, iFit, Toast, Sportradar, Allbirds, Sweetgreen and Authentic Brands Group.
- Yogurt maker Chobani and electric car maker Rivian are among those that have filed confidentially with the SEC.
- Reports persist that Reddit, Discord, Flipkart and Instacart are still considering 2021 listings.
Auto shows are coming back, and now feature hands-on experiences like automated parking, Axios’ Joann Muller writes from Detroit.
This week’s IAA international auto show in Munich is the first major industry event in two years, showcasing everything from bikes to e-scooters to cars, Reuters reports.
- A “Blue Lane Road” dedicated to clean vehicles and autonomous shuttles will ferry you between show venues while you listen to lectures or music, or immerse yourself in virtual reality worlds.
Later this month, Detroit will revive its international auto show with Motor Bella, outdoors at an 87-acre motorsports track.
- You’ll be able to “cruise in an electric car on a mile-long track, take an exhilarating ride in a utility vehicle up rocky terrain, or feel the G’s of a sports car taking you from 0 to 60 in 3 seconds.”
Michael K. Williams, 54, played a criminal with a strict moral code as Omar Little in “The Wire,” creating one of the most beloved and enduring characters in a prime era of TV.
- Williams was found dead by family members in his Brooklyn penthouse apartment, AP reports. His death was being investigated as a possible drug overdose, the NYPD said.
Williams was a ubiquitous character actor in other shows and films for more than two decades: He created another classic character as Chalky White in HBO’s “Boardwalk Empire,” and appeared in the films “12 Years a Slave” and “Assassin’s Creed.”
- He’s up for an Emmy for his role in HBO’s “Lovecraft Country.”
Jake Tapper is still writing 5781 on his checks …
📱 Invite your friends, family and colleagues to sign up here for Axios AM and Axios PM.
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
|
|
|
17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
|
Copyright © 2021 MEDIADC, All rights reserved.Washington Examiner | A MediaDC Publication 1152 15th Street NW Suite 200 | Washington, DC 20005 |
You received this email because you are subscribed to Examiner Today from The Washington Examiner. Update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive.We respect your right to privacy – View our Policy Unsubscribe |
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
|
21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
4-year-old killed, seven other children wounded, total of 65 shot in Labor Day weekend violence
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
|
23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Biden’s ‘cradle to grave’ agenda
DRIVING THE DAY
A busy week to start a busy month: Unemployment benefits have ended for millions of Americans … Biden visits storm-damaged areas of New Jersey and Queens today … House committees continue to work on the Dems’ reconciliation bill in advance of a Sept. 15 deadline … The Producer Price Index, a key measure of inflation, is released Friday … The 20th anniversary of 9/11 is Saturday
WHAT TO WATCH THIS MONTH: One challenge in covering the Dems’ $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill is conveying the sheer enormity of it.
Nobody really even knows what to call it. Is it a jobs package? A human infrastructure bill? A climate bill? Social welfare legislation? Yes.
Because Dems aim to pass into law every major domestic priority on which they can find agreement, it is all of those things and more.
The NYT’s Jonathan Weisman today has one of the better distillations of the breadth of this legislation by looking at its “cradle to grave” qualities and how they would affect the relationship between Americans and the federal government:
“[C]onsider a life, from conception to death. Democrats intend to fund paid family and medical leave” — see Tara’s take on this below — “to allow a parent to take some time off during pregnancy and after a child’s birth.
“When that parent is ready to return to work, expanded funding for child care would kick in to help cover day care costs. When that child turns 3, another part of the bill, universal prekindergarten, would ensure public education can begin at an earlier age, regardless of where that child lives.
“Most families with children would continue to receive federal income supplements each month in the form of an expanded child tax credit …
“And at high school graduation, most students would be guaranteed two years of higher education through expanded federal financial aid, geared toward community colleges.
“Even after that, income supplements and generous work force training programs — including specific efforts to train home health and elder-care workers — would keep the government present in many adult lives. In old age, people would be helped by tax credits to offset the cost of elder care and by an expansion of Medicare to cover dental, hearing and vision services.”
Even this description doesn’t capture the bill’s ambitions when it comes to policies on taxes, climate and immigration.
While previous Democratic administrations shied away from emphasizing the “government” part of new government benefits, members of the White House staff are embracing it.
“If we get this passed, a decade from now, people are going to see many more touch points of government supporting them and their families,” HEATHER BOUSHEY, one of President JOE BIDEN’s top economists, tells Weisman.
Before Democrats pass any of this, they will need to deal with the September Scylla and Charybdis of keeping the government open after annual funding bills expire Oct. 1 and raising the debt limit.
There will be an enormous amount of parliamentary intrigue about how they navigate around those two legislative monsters, and we’ll be watching it carefully for you. (Take a shot every time you read “high-stakes political gamesmanship.”)
But we don’t believe a Democratic Congress and president will allow a government shutdown or a debt default. How Biden, Speaker NANCY PELOSI and Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER find the votes will be interesting, but keep your eye on what’s more important: the substance of the reconciliation bill, which is what this Congress will be remembered for.
Good Tuesday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. “Impeachment: American Crime Story,” which dramatizes the CLINTON-LEWINSKY saga, premieres tonight on FX. A couple of us have seen the first episodes already, and we anticipate a lively debate about this show in the coming days. Drop us a line and tell us what you think of it: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
POLICY-PALOOZA, PART 3: UNIVERSAL PAID LEAVE — IVANKA TRUMP clinched a version of it for federal workers. Democrats have been pining for it for years. Now, it looks like Congress is ready to make universal paid leave a reality as part of their reconciliation package.
Unlike other proposals that need to surmount pockets of Democratic opposition, this one seems to be sitting pretty. The biggest bones of contention are over how many weeks of leave to offer and which federal agency should run it: the Social Security Administration or Treasury Department. If it happens, Democrats are optimistic they’ll be rewarded in next year’s midterms, particularly by female voters.
WHAT WE’VE GOT NOW: The Family Medical Leave Act, enacted in 1993, requires that companies with 50 or more employees grant parents 12 weeks of leave to care for a new child. But it doesn’t guarantee pay. Only one in five private-sector workers now have access to employer-provided paid leave, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation.
WHAT DEMOCRATS HAVE IN MIND: There are two different frameworks, one from Ways and Means Chair RICHARD NEAL (D-Mass.), the other from Sen. KIRSTEN GILLIBRAND (D-N.Y.). They’re both aiming to provide paid leave for up to 12 weeks — approximately two-thirds of an employee’s wages, but no more than $4,800 per month — for the birth or adoption of a child, to care for a family member with a medical condition or for a personal serious health condition.
The differences: Gillibrand’s Family Act calls for Social Security to run the program, while Neal’s version of the bill would have Treasury administer it. Also, Neal is pushing for 12 weeks for everyone, while the Senate and the White House are considering a less expensive package with different benefits for different types of leave.
KEY FACTIONS: The AARP is throwing its weight behind Neal’s plan, saying Social Security is strapped as it is and shouldn’t be saddled with another program. The interest group also worries the Senate proposal could end up tapping Social Security funds.
The White House is backing Gillibrand’s plan. Supporters of that version say it would save money because existing Social Security staff could administer the program. They’re also wary of Treasury’s ability to manage it well.
SHOW ME THE MONEY: The CBO pegged the cost of Gillibrand’s at as much as $500 billion and Neal’s at closer to $600 billion over a decade. The Biden administration, however, estimates that by phasing in benefits over a longer period of time, the price tag would be about $225 billion.
STAR POWER: MELINDA GATES, the billionaire philanthropist, has been pressing members of the Ways and Means Committee and Senate HELP Committee to ensure paid leave makes it in the reconciliation bill.
THE TIMING: Expect federal paid family leave to be one of the first bills on the docket in the House Ways and Means Committee. That means we could see the text as soon as this week.
P.S. If you are enjoying these policy deep dives — ICYMI, the first two installments are here and here — and are a professional who’d like more, consider subscribing to POLITICO Pro.
BIDEN’S TUESDAY:
— 8:30 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 9:50 a.m.: Biden will depart the White House en route to Hillsborough Township, N.J., where he is scheduled to arrive at 11:40 a.m.
— 12:15 p.m.: Biden will receive a briefing from local leaders on the impacts of Hurricane Ida.
— 2:10 p.m.: Biden will tour a neighborhood affected by Ida in Manville, N.J.
— 3:10 p.m.: Biden will travel to Queens, N.Y., where he is scheduled to arrive at 3:35 p.m.
— 4 p.m.: Biden will tour a neighborhood in Queens and deliver remarks on the administration’s response to Ida.
— 5:40 p.m.: Biden will depart Queens to return to the White House, where he is scheduled to arrive at 7:15 p.m.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will gaggle on Air Force One on the way to Queens.
THE SENATE and THE HOUSE are out.
PLAYBOOK READS
TALIBAN TAKEOVER
— The Taliban claimed it has secured total control of Afghanistan, “releasing images they said showed the conquest of the provincial capital of Panjshir,” WSJ’s Saeed Shah reports.
— CNN’s Alex Marquardt, Chandelis Duster and Brianna Keilar report that the U.S. government “facilitated the departure of four American citizens from Afghanistan via an overland route to a third country.”
— The Journal’s Jared Malsin and Dion Nissenbaum tell the harrowing story of a 14-year-old girl and her 3-year-old sister’s “journey across Afghanistan to escape the Taliban.”
POLICY CORNER
— ABORTION LATEST: The DOJ says it is exploring “all options” to protect abortion clinics and people attempting to get an abortion or provide one. A.G. MERRICK GARLAND said the department is trying to figure out its “enforcement authorities,” WaPo’s Hamza Shaban reports. … The Portland, Ore., city council is voting Wednesday to ban the purchase of goods and services from Texas, and stop city employee travel to the Lone Star State. The AP has the latest.
— 7.5 million people lost expanded unemployment benefits to help people through the pandemic “without objection from President Biden and his top economic advisers,” NYT’s Jim Tankersley and Ben Casselman report.
POLITICS ROUNDUP
— The disparities between how Americans in blue states and red states vote is continuing to grow with Republicans tightening rules and Democrats working to make voting easier, WaPo’s Elise Viebeck reports.
— Our Zach Montellaro reports that “GOP legislative leaders in key battleground states” — including Wisconsin and Pennsylvania — are increasingly embracing 2020 election investigations that they once held at arm’s length, as Arizona Republicans await a long-delayed final report from their own conspiracy-tinged “audit.”
THE PANDEMIC
— Why’s it taking so long to get young kids vaccinated? WSJ’s Jared Hopkins looks at the “logistical dance” keeping the jabs out of their arms.
— The AP’s Stefanie Dazio takes a look at how “police officers and first responders are among” those most hesitant to take the Covid-19 vaccine. Last year, 241 law enforcement officials died from the virus, according to data from the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund.
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
— Senior living apartments in New Orleans are getting deeper inspections after it became clear many of them lacked working generators after Hurricane Ida. AP’s Kevin McGill and Jeff Martin have that story.
— New college enrollment data shows that at the end of last school year, women made up 59.5% of college students and men just 40.5%. WSJ’s Douglas Belkin looks at why American men are “abandoning higher education.”
TRUMP CARDS
— “Boots on the ground in Iowa. Accelerated fundraising. More national media interviews. A flood of new press statements. A rise in attack ads on the web”: DONALD TRUMP is acting a lot like a 2024 candidate, according to Meridith McGraw and Marc Caputo. They cite Trump associates saying “Biden’s declining political fortunes amid the resurgence of coronavirus and the Aug. 15 fall of Kabul have intensified the interest of the former president, who is already motivated by a burning sense of pride and grievance over his loss to Biden.”
— NYT’s Jack Nicas has an interesting long read on the “Freedom Phone” created by a 22-year-old, part of “a growing right-wing tech industry … relying more on their conservative customers’ distaste for Silicon Valley than expertise or experience.”
— The Daily Beast’s Jose Pagliery and Asawin Suebsaeng got their hands on 700 pages of emails from the Georgia secretary of state’s office that detail just how wild the recount era got in the state.
— Former FBI Director ANDREW MCCABE told CNN law enforcement need to take the upcoming Justice for J6 rally “very seriously.” CNN’s Paul LeBlanc has more on the rally that is meant to support the insurrectionists that ransacked the Capitol.
MEDIAWATCH
— A sea change for Murdoch? In a story datelined Sydney, Australia, the NYT’s Damien Cave reports that “RUPERT MURDOCH’s media outlets in his native Australia are planning an editorial campaign next month advocating a carbon-neutral future.” The move, which comes “after years of casting doubt on climate change,” could bring “pressure on Fox News and other Murdoch-owned outlets in the United States and Britain that have been hostile to climate science.”
PLAYBOOKERS
Alphonso David, president of the Human Rights Campaign, was ousted by the group’s board Monday night, Maggie Haberman reports.
Stormy Daniels is raising money for Houma, the Louisiana city devastated by Hurricane Ida.
Clarissa Ward of CNN shares her very personal experiences of covering the war in Afghanistan.
VP Kamala Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff wished a Happy New Year to those celebrating Rosh Hashanah.
Tommy Vietor, a former spokesperson for the NSC, learned about the existence of the country Andorra.
BOOK CLUB — David Rubenstein’s new book, “The American Experiment: Dialogues on a Dream” ($23), is out today. It features interviews with Jill Lepore, Madeleine Albright, Ken Burns, Henry Louis Gates Jr., Elaine Weiss, John Meacham, Walter Isaacson, David McCullough, John Barry, Paul Simon, Wynton Marsalis, Billie Jean King and Rita Moreno. The cover
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Daniel Kroese is now senior director of U.S. government affairs for the cybersecurity strategy and global policy team at Palo Alto Networks. He previously was staff director for the House Homeland Security GOP, and is a CISA alum.
TRANSITIONS — Britton Burdick is now comms director for Rep. Donald Norcross (D-N.J.). He previously was director of public affairs at Forbes Tate Partners. … Lizzie Messer is now a senior associate at Cornerstone Government Affairs. She most recently was legislative assistant for Rep. John Rutherford (R-Fla.). …
… Katharine Emerson is now chief of staff for World Food Program USA. She previously was director of Bayer’s political affairs team. … Erika Reynoso is now senior PR manager for sustainability at Amazon. She previously managed government relations PR and CSR storytelling at Wells Fargo.
ENGAGED — Christian Datoc, a White House correspondent for the Washington Examiner, proposed to Cailyn Kreitz, a senior systems analyst at Covington & Burling, on Saturday at Sfoglina Van Ness. The two met on Bumble in December 2017. Pic … Another pic
WEEKEND WEDDINGS — Ali Pardo, comms director for the House Republican Conference and a Trump campaign alum, and Michael Black, a Kelly Loeffler and Johnny Isakson alum, got married Sunday overlooking the Blue Ridge Mountains in Asheville, N.C. Pic … SPOTTED: Al Cardenas, Zach Parkinson, Ben Williamson and Natalie Johnson, Johanna Persing, Kerry Rom and Richard Sant, Ninio Fetalvo, Amanda Maddox, Becca Coffman and Mike Lurie, Hunter Mullins, Catherine Wilkins, Tyler Fields, Kristian Hemphill, and Kate and Brian Parnitzke.
— Kirsten Hartman, deputy chief of staff for Rep. Lauren Underwood (D-Ill.), and Lucas West, senior policy adviser for Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-Mo.), got married at Sequoia on the Georgetown Waterfront on Sunday. Pic
— Alison Council, legislative assistant for Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), and Jeffrey Liskov, an associate at BakerHostetler, got married Sunday in Chittenden, Vt., surrounded by clouds, the Green Mountain National Forest and friends and family. The couple met seven years ago when they were attending GW. Pic … Another pic
— Sean Simons, press secretary at Bono’s ONE Campaign and a Gabby Giffords and Mark Kelly alum, and Sarah Tagg, comms specialist at Northrop Grumman Corporation, got married Saturday at George Mason’s Gunston Hall in Lorton, Va. The couple met 10 years ago as students at the University of Mary Washington. Pic
— Fred Brown, a VP at Dezenhall Resources and an RNC alum, and Rebecca Schieber, managing director for political at Targeted Victory and a Carly Fiorina alum, got married Sunday at Holy Apostles Greek Orthodox Church. The reception was at the Mid-America Club on the 80th floor of the Aon Center building with views of downtown Chicago and a beautiful sunset. Pic … SPOTTED: Carly and Frank Fiorina (seen tearing up the dance floor), Sarah Isgur, Raffi Williams and Morgan Chalfant, Casey Enders, James and Cara Hewitt, Anna Epstein and Aaron Steeg, Frank Sadler, Brent and Cassie Scher, Natalie Strom Short and Michael Short, David Ray, Brian Parks, Kelly Klass, Daniel Lippman, Zach and Jaime Gregory, and Josh Culling.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Shawn McCreesh … Peggy Noonan … POLITICO Europe’s Zoya Sheftalovich … BuzzFeed’s Zoe Tillman … Meridian International Center’s Stuart Holliday … Joe Klein … IBM’s Chris Padilla … WaPo’s Michael Duffy and Bill O’Leary … Meredith Raimondi of the National Council of Urban Indian Health (35) … Robert Blizzard of Public Opinion Strategies … Sam Iacobellis … Jack Oberg of Charles River Associates … CBS’ Melissa Quinn … Erin Mendelsohn of Takeda … Elizabeth Fox … NEA’s Brandon Rettke … Cheryl Parker Rose … Craig Higgins of the House Appropriations Committee … Matthew Grill … Eric Kanter of Rep. Jared Golden’s (D-Maine) office … Caroline Chambers … Johan Propst of Rep. Brad Sherman’s (D-Calif.) office … MSNBC’s Stefanie Cargill … Emerson Collective’s Robin Reck … VOA’s John Walker … Locust Street Group’s Mia Saponara … Nick Ciarlante … Jeff Schrade … Kate Andersen Brower … Gayle Tzemach Lemmon … David Grant … Anthony Tata … former Rep. Ryan Costello (R-Pa.) … John Catsimatidis … Maralee Schwartz
Did someone forward this email to you? Sign up here.
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.
Follow us on Twitter
26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
|
29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: History Will Not Be Kind to the Biden Train-Wreck Presidency
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. The couple at table 12 are NSA agents and have a photo book of you in the shower.
Again, lighter fare today due to the holiday. The holiday that probably shouldn’t even exist.
We’re really getting soft.
Once again, it’s difficult to narrow down The Worst of Biden, even on a slow holiday news day. Sometimes it is best to take a broad view while we are still mid-disaster, then wander through and examine the detritus at a later date.
Whilst perusing the news of the day I found myself dreaming of the day when I would be looking back on this nightmare of an alleged presidency rather than waking up to its hideous face and fetid breath every day. While we don’t know exactly how long Joe Biden is going to be occupying the Oval Office, we do know that he is going to leave nothing but mess behind.
Biden’s mess count, just seven and a half months in, is so overwhelming that he has the party-focused college football crowd turning on him, which A.J. wrote about yesterday:
President Joe Biden endured a miserable August, and September hasn’t begun much better. One place you rarely hear criticism of Democrat politicians is among college students. But that was not the case over the weekend.
A profane three-word chant directed at the president was bellowed during several NCAA football games Saturday, from North Carolina and Virginia to Alabama and Texas.
College football crowds generally prefer raining down f-bombs on their opponents. They also tend to be quite jovial during opening weekend.
Welcome to Joe Biden’s America.
This administration will naturally continue to get everything wrong. It will also more than likely continue to treat American citizens like enemies while not calling the actual enemies any bad names.
As I wrote last week, there is absolutely no reason to believe that anything Biden does will be good for the country. We can only hope that the damage can be minimized.
Here in the modern media and academic malpractice era, Democrats have much of the havoc they wreak upon America rewritten, especially by historians. I’m getting the feeling that the drooling puppet in the White House might be such an overwhelming disaster that even the left-leaning hacks in academia won’t have the desire or skill to cover for him. It would truly be remarkable, given how things have been going on that front for so many decades.
But it’s only happening because the karma toilet is overflowing and even the most hardcore partisans can’t ignore the stench or deny who’s responsible.
We may finally get a little truth.
It’s gonna cost us though.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
#WINNING. College Students Hurl Profanity in Unison at Joe Biden
How You Can Tell the Delta Surge in Florida Is Waning
Why in the World Is the Government Disrupting the Distribution of Monoclonal Antibodies Now?
BLM Career Thug Who Nearly Kicked a Man to Death Gets Early Release
It Looks Like Biden’s Presidency Will Be as Disastrous for Black America as Obama’s Was
Biden’s National Security Advisor Refuses to Call the Taliban an Enemy of the U.S.
Fire all the brass. Woke Gen. Milley Takes a Victory Lap Over Afghanistan Disaster
No Surprise: Communist China Is Taking Advantage of Biden’s Weakness on the World Stage
Americans Trapped: Biden Admin Refuses to Allow Private Evacuation Planes to Leave Afghanistan
Afghan Evacuee Complains About the Quality of Meals He is Getting for Free at Fort Bliss
Biden Seems More Determined to Fight Texas Than the Taliban
Zito: The Negligence of Joe Biden
Prager: Colorblind Is the Moral Ideal
Townhall Mothership
‘This Is a Gift to Larry Elder’: Top Dem to Campaign with Newsom Ahead of Recall
GOP Senator Has a Prediction About SCOTUS and Texas’ Abortion Law
Fire ’em all. State Department Tries to Steal Credit for Rescue of Four Americans From Afghanistan
Inside an Australian COVID Internment Camp, a Dystopian Hell Awaits
DA Says Armed Citizen Saved Several Lives In NY Shooting
WSJ: Men appear to be giving up on college
New York Governor extends eviction moratorium to January, landlords despair
Film review: The Courier delivers a worthy Cold War thriller
VIP
On Labor Day, Some Devastating News for Private-Sector Unions
Has Biden Given Up on American Hostages in Afghanistan Already?
Pandemic-Related Unemployment Benefits End, Will a Surge in Employment Follow?
GOLD Gavin Newsom, Rep. Bass Appear at Rally Full of Racist Remarks About Larry Elder
Around the Interwebz
#RIP. Michael K. Williams Dies: Star Of ‘The Wire’ And ‘Lovecraft Country’ Was 54
Biden’s America. Automated hiring software is mistakenly rejecting millions of viable job candidates
#NewsYouCanUse. What the Color of the Tag on Your Bread Bag Really Means
Smells Like Onion
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
My neighbor has a red porch light and is that a thing anymore?
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Another Dreary Jobs Report
Plus: The ongoing surreptitious effort to get at-risk Afghans out from under Taliban control.
The Dispatch Staff |
Happy Tuesday! We might as well hand out the Dispatch fantasy football trophy already; the best team clearly belongs to D̶e̶c̶l̶a̶n̶ S̶t̶e̶v̶e̶ Andrew. [Editor’s note: You can tell who hits send on TMD in the morning.]
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Taliban completed its Afghanistan conquest over the weekend, overcoming the country’s National Resistance Front that had set up a base in the mountainous Panjshir province. Ahmad Massoud—one of the leaders of the resistance movement—vowed he would continue the fight against the Taliban, though his efforts at this point are likely doomed to failure. Taliban militants also cracked down on a protest in Kabul on Saturday, reportedly using tear gas, rifle butts, and metal clubs to beat women pushing for equal rights under the new regime.
- The Telegraph reported on Sunday that Ethiopia’s already bloody civil war has grown even more horrific: Ethnic Amhara forces have been going “door-to-door” rounding up thousands of ethnic Tigrayan men, women, and children and throwing them “into makeshift ‘concentration camps,’ cutting off limbs and dumping mutilated bodies into mass graves as part of an orchestrated ethnic purge.”
- Hurricane Ida’s death toll grew to more than 60 over the weekend, including at least 13 people in Louisiana, 27 people in New Jersey, and 17 in New York. About 430,000 customers in Louisiana remained without power as of Monday night, but New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell said over the weekend that city residents who had evacuated ahead of the storm should begin returning home. President Joe Biden visited Louisiana on Friday, and approved disaster declarations in New Jersey and New York over the weekend.
- The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday that U.S. employers added 235,000 jobs in August, significantly below the Dow Jones expectation of 720,000.
- Apple announced on Friday it will delay the implementation of its new software aimed at limiting the spread of Child Sexual Abuse Material after receiving “feedback from customers, advocacy groups, researchers, and others.” Critics had argued the change—in which artificial intelligence would, in some instances, scan photos directly on a user’s phone—posed a threat to privacy rights.
- A Texas judge granted a temporary restraining order on Friday preventing Texas Right to Life—and only Texas Right to Life—from suing Planned Parenthood under the provisions of Senate Bill 8, which went into effect last week. Attorney General Merrick Garland said Monday the Justice Department is “urgently explor[ing] all options to challenge” the law, and will use the FACE Act—which prohibits the use or threat of force that interferes with a person seeking reproductive health services—to “protect those seeking to obtain or provide” abortions.
- President Biden signed an executive order on Friday directing the Department of Justice to declassify certain documents related to the FBI’s investigation into the September 11 attacks.
- A former Marine broke into two homes in Lakeland, Florida on Sunday, shooting and killing four people—including a 3-month-old infant—and a dog, according to a criminal affidavit.
- General Motors said last week it is temporarily shutting down eight North American manufacturing plants for one to two weeks due to “the continued parts shortages caused by semiconductor supply constraints.”
- Michael K. Williams, the actor who played Omar Little in The Wire, was found dead in his apartment on Monday at the age of 54.
Job Creation Tails Off in August
After several consecutive months of U.S. businesses steadily chipping away at the pandemic-created employment crater—962,000 jobs added in June, 1,053,000 in July—economists were expecting a slightly diminished version of the same in August. The Dow Jones consensus projection for the month settled in at 720,000.
But when the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released its monthly Employment Situation Summary on Friday morning, Wall Street and Washington were met with an enormous miss. Total nonfarm payrolls rose by just 235,000 last month, leading the unemployment rate to tick down 0.2 percentage points to 5.2 percent. Average hourly wages rose 0.6 percent to $30.73, the labor force participation rate stayed level at 61.7 percent, and total employment remains 5.3 million jobs below its February 2020, pre-pandemic level.
According to the BLS, professional and business services (+74,000 jobs), transportation and warehousing (+53,000), private education (+40,000), and manufacturing (+37,000) accounted for the bulk of the gains. Retail employment fell by 29,000, and the number of jobs in the leisure and hospitality sector held steady after averaging gains of 350,000 per month dating back to February 2021.
“There’s no question the Delta variant is why today’s jobs report isn’t stronger,” President Biden said in remarks on Friday that quickly turned into promotion of his economic agenda. “[But] today’s report shows that the steps we’ve taken, passing the Rescue Plan and vaccinating 175 million people, make our economy capable of growing and adding jobs even in the face of this continuing Delta surge.”
American Civilians and Veterans Attempt a ‘Digital Dunkirk’ in Afghanistan
In the weeks to come, we will continue to learn more about the United States’ chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan. On the site today, Charlotte has a piece on the organizations that are working behind the scenes to evacuate as many allies from Kabul as possible.
“Thousands of volunteers, former government officials, journalists, and veterans have stepped up to patch holes in the U.S. evacuation plan,” she writes. “The collective efforts, dubbed ‘Digital Dunkirk’ in reference to the 1940 evacuation of Allied forces during World War II, include both established nonprofit organizations and private citizens who saw the writing on the wall as the Taliban closed in on Kabul.”
What do these efforts look like in practice?
In the weeks leading up to the fall of Kabul, teams working from afar and on the ground dispatched buses to bring Americans and Afghans to the airport, funded and organized charter flights, and secured seats on commercial airliners en route to Istanbul, Dubai, and elsewhere. When U.S. troops assumed control of the evacuation efforts, volunteers shifted gears to focus on getting as many individuals and families through the gates of Hamid Karzai International Airport (HKIA) as possible before the military withdrawal.
Most of the Americans involved in the mission are driven by their personal connections to the Afghans alongside whom they worked for two decades, against Islamist fighters whose brutality they understand more intimately than other non-Afghans.
The volunteers’ proximity to the crisis also positioned them to navigate evacuees through various obstacles en route to the airport. To get Afghans through Taliban checkpoints, groups called in favors from journalists with working relationships with the group. To get them through the gates of HKIA, contacts inside the U.S. military proved useful. To anticipate various security threats and get a clearer picture of the safest times and courses to travel, veterans and ex-officials pulled connections in what’s left of Afghanistan’s intelligence network.
Many longtime Washingtonians have access to all three, allowing them to work as intermediaries to facilitate communication and aid in transit across Kabul. But evacuation efforts were halted after after an Islamic State suicide bombing in crowds surrounding the airport killed 13 U.S. servicemembers and at least 170 Afghan civilians fleeing the Taliban. U.S. forces reportedly welded shut the gates enclosing HKIA following the blasts, leaving those outside stranded.
Worth Your Time
- Catholic archbishop of San Francisco Salvatore Cordileone argues in the Washington Post that it’s the Church’s duty to challenge Catholic politicians who are not pro-life, citing the precedent of former New Orleans Archbishop Joseph Rummel, who in 1962 excommunicated a handful of high-profile segregationists and racists. “Was that wrong? Was that weaponizing the Eucharist?” he asks. “No. Rummel recognized that prominent, high-profile public advocacy for racism was scandalous: It violated core Catholic teachings and basic principles of justice, and also led others to sin.” Politico’s Ruby Cramer expounded on this theme in an excellent magazine piece on the tensions inherent in Joe Biden’s public faith. “Biden was sworn into the Senate the same year that Roe v. Wade decision made abortion a constitutional right, deepening fissures inside his church over contraception, women’s rights, and premarital sex,” she writes of the president, who now opposes the Hyde Amendment. “The abortion case, he told the journalist Kitty Kelley in a 1974 profile, went ‘too far.’ At the start of the Reagan years, two years into his second term, he supported an amendment to allow states to overturn Roe.”
- Approaching the twentieth anniversary of the September 11 attacks, Kimberly Rex penned a reflection on what it was like to lose someone that day—in her case, her father, Vincent. “Losing someone on 9/11 was like watching them disappear. They were there, and then they weren’t,” she writes. “On Sept. 10, 2001, I ate dinner beside my father in our Staten Island home. I was 19 and sat at his left, as usual. I watched him shake spoonfuls of grated cheese onto his soup. He was right next to me: flesh and bones, salt-and-pepper hair and a sharp nose. The next day, the plane hit. Fire raged and smoke billowed. Then the floor where he stood, the walls, the ceilings and the windows crumbled away into dust. And the people inside disappeared.”
- For Bloomberg, Ramesh Ponnuru argues that political polarization is getting in the way of reining in qualified immunity for police officers, an idea which had—prior to last year—been growing in popularity in both parties. “Qualified immunity is not needed to give police officers leeway to make split-second, life-or-death decisions,” he writes. “The Fourth Amendment bars ‘unreasonable’ searches and seizures, and the courts interpret that word to give police officers latitude to exercise judgment. It’s only when officers are found to have acted unreasonably that qualified immunity makes a difference. It’s only then that it can shield them from civil liability for violating someone’s rights.”
Presented Without Comment
Taliban blames America for 9/11 in video celebrating its own suicide squads – longwarjournal.org/archives/2021/…
Toeing the Company Line
- Sarah and David couldn’t fit all their analysis of Texas’ abortion law into one episode of Advisory Opinions, so they had a follow-up conversation—focusing more on the politics of the situation than the legal issues—on Friday’s Dispatch Podcast. Where does the pro-life movement stand today? What will 2022 bring?
- Jonah begins Friday’s G-File by riffing on Karl Marx’s labor theory of value—noting that the “amount of time we work has been steadily declining” for centuries—before turning his attention to … attention. “When people are distracted by a zillion different things—many of them designed to prey on our lizard brains—the most reliable way to get them to look your way is to say crazy stuff,” he writes. “You want to make the people in your customer base angry at the people not in your customer base—and feel good about their anger.”
- Over the past 30 years, David writes in Sunday’s French Press, there has been one “profoundly negative” development for the pro-life movement and another “extraordinarily positive” one. “The legal and political debate over abortion has become purely partisan at exactly the time when our nation’s profound polarization means that party affiliation is becoming central to millions of Americans’ personal identities,” he writes. But at the same time, “the abortion rate is now lower than it was when Roe was decided (and yes, the data takes chemical abortions into account). That means it’s now lower than it was when abortion was illegal or sharply limited in most states in the union. The abortion rate decreased during pro-life presidencies and pro-choice presidencies.”
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
|
33.) THE DAILY WIRE
Tuesday, September 07, 2021
In Wake Of Cuomo Scandal, Entire Time’s Up Board Resigns, Including Eva Longoria And Shonda Rhimes
Christian Minister Denied Holding Prayer Vigil On Capitol Grounds On 9/11, Files Suit
Associated Press Adds Embarrassing Correction To Article Claiming 70% Of Calls To Mississippi Poison Control Were About Ivermectin Ingestion
Congressman Who Served In Afghanistan: Biden’s Actions Meet ‘Constitutional Definition Of Treason’
Biden State Dept Says It Has No Resources To Rescue Trapped Flights In Afghanistan, No ‘Reliable Means’ To Confirm Details: Report
Privacy Policy | Terms of use
You are subscribed as rickbulow1974@gmail.com.
Unsubscribe from The Daily Wire Newsletter | Unsubscribe from all email
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
|
36.) AMERICAN THINKER
|
|
37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
|
41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Joe Biden Infuriates Over Labor Day as American Hostages in Afghanistan Languish
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the RedState.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions |
44.) WORLD NET DAILY
|
45.) MSNBC
September 7, 2021 THE LATEST Why one of Trump’s most damaging legacies is somehow getting worse by Zeeshan Aleem There are a lot of harmful legacies that former President Donald Trump left behind after his single term in office. The upsurge of white nationalism that he inspired, the attacks on democracy, the racist immigration policies, all will affect U.S. politics for years to come. But while the Trump era exacerbated those trends, Zeeshan Aleem writes, there’s one shift that can most clearly be attributed to Trump himself — Republicans’ near total rejection of the mainstream media.
“After all, he made attacking the media — including encouraging assaults on members of the press — a central theme of his presidency, and popularized the term ‘fake news,'” Aleem writes. “Crucially, Trump not only promoted mistrust in most national media, he also oversaw the rise of mainstream media hatred as a critical part of right-wing identity.”
Read Zeeshan Aleem’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Friday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Americans have an unsustainable love for wide open spaces. Read More Jaime Herrera Beutler is a relative GOP moderate. Trump is desperate to see her lose. Read More TOP VIDEOS The Beat with Ari The Beat with Ari MORE FROM MSNBC MSNBC Films and Peacock will present “Memory Box: Echoes of 9/11,” a Yard 44 and NBC News Studios production. The feature documentary tells the story of Sept. 11 through personal recollections recorded from a video booth that have never been shown on film. The same eyewitnesses return to the booth to reflect upon the past two decades. Watch “Memory Box: Echoes of 9/11” commercial-free tomorrow at 10 p.m. ET, and stream it exclusively on Peacock.
Follow MSNBC
Check out the MSNBC channel on Apple News
Download the NBC News Mobile App and watch MSNBC
Privacy | Unsubscribe |
46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
|
|
47.) ABC
48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News Tuesday, Sept 7, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
It’s back to biz this post-Labor Day Tuesday. This morning we’re looking at schools becoming the new culture war battlefields, the Taliban consolidating power in Afghanistan and tributes pouring in after the sudden death of a gifted actor. As kids across the country pick up their backpacks and head back to school, the educational institutions are increasingly becoming political minefields.
Schools have become the focal point for culture war fights that animated former President Donald Trump’s base and have been advanced by conservative activists and influencers since he left office, NBC News’ political reporter Allan Smith writes.
Conservative grassroots activists have zeroed in on local education policy with a tea party-esque fervor for months — spanning debates about reopening, how to teach U.S. history and required masking.
Now, conservative personalities are urging followers to run for school board seats that have rarely generated much interest, while dozens of activist groups focused on schools have sprouted to advance the fights.
Longtime operators in the education world say they’ve never seen anything like it.
“Normally, our kids have been off-limits,” said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, one of the country’s largest unions. “Now, they are the battlefield.”
Read the full story here. Tuesday’s Top Stories
Almost 20 years to the day after the 9/11 attacks that precipitated the American invasion of Afghanistan, the Taliban said Tuesday that they were poised to unveil their new government. The announcement comes on the heels of the militant group declaring they were in control of Panjshir province, the last holdout of anti-Taliban forces in the country. The stakes are high for Democrats as Congress faces a daunting September to-do list with key deadlines piling up and legislative days in short supply. “Public policy should not and does not support allowing physicians to try ‘any’ type of treatment on human beings,” the judge wrote in a decision about the drug — which is primarily used to deworm horses and has not been approved for the treatment of Covid-19, but has been promoted by some Republicans, including popular podcast host Joe Rogan. The Emmy-nominated actor best known for his inimitable role as Omar Little on the HBO series “The Wire,” was found dead in his Brooklyn apartment on Monday. Also in the News
THINK
OPINION The first week on campus was as anxious and frustrating as it was exciting and moving, Dr. Emily Contois, an assistant professor at the University of Tulsa, writes in an opinion piece. One Amazing Thing
Police in Australia said Monday that they had found a 3-year-old boy alive and well after he vanished for three days in the bush on his parents’ rural property in New South Wales.
Dramatic video posted to Twitter by New South Wales police shows the boy apparently splashing in and drinking from a stream as rescue crews hover above.
His mother was overjoyed to be reunited with her son, Anthony “AJ” Elfalak, who has autism and is non-verbal.
“I can’t explain it. I’m so blessed. I’m so happy that he’s here,” she said. “I want to thank everyone.” Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
|
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Democrats make vaccine mandates their closing issue in California recall
Now one week to go until California’s gubernatorial recall, the closing message from Gov. Gavin Newsom and his Democratic allies has been on the coronavirus, vaccines and a vaccine mandate.
And also on how Republicans would govern during the pandemic if Newsom is recalled.
“Here’s what you need to know about the Sept. 14 recall: Voting ‘yes’ elects an anti-vaccine Trump Republican,” goes a recent ad from the main pro-Newsom advertiser in the recall, apparently referring to Republican replacement frontrunner Larry Elder. “Voting ‘no’ keeps Gavin Newsom fighting the pandemic based on science, compassion and common sense.”
The ad concludes, “And here’s the thing: If you don’t vote, we could have an anti-vax Republican governor of California. So do your part to stop the spread.”
(For the record, Elder is vaccinated; he believes the decision to vaccinate should be left to individuals and parents.)
Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
An earlier pro-Newsom ad leaned into a similar message: “With Delta surging, Gavin Newsom is protecting California, requiring vaccinations for health workers and school employees. The top Republican candidate? He peddled deadly conspiracy theories and would eliminate vaccine mandates on Day 1.”
It’s a bit ironic: The issue that helped propel the recall against Newsom (the governor’s earlier handling of the pandemic) could end up helping him win next week (by contrasting how Republicans would handle the pandemic).
And by the way, in Virginia, Democrat Terry McAuliffe is making pretty much the same argument in his gubernatorial race against Republican Glenn Youngkin.
“Youngkin opposes requiring vaccines for health care workers and teachers… Glenn Youngkin is against requiring masks in schools,” goes the latest McAuliffe ad.
In blue states at least, Democrats are playing up vaccines, masks and mandates.
|
TWEET OF THE DAY: Dems’ daunting September
|
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
Fewer than 500,000: The number of people still without power in Louisiana as of 6 p.m. on Monday, more than a week after Hurricane Ida hit.
About 600: The number of people evacuated from eight privately run senior centers in New Orleans on Saturday for having unacceptable conditions after the storm.
6 days: How long it took America to hit 40 million Covid cases after it surpassed 39 million.
160: The percent change between the number of Covid hospitalizations in America on Labor Day of 2020 and Labor Day 2021, despite the widespread availability of vaccines, per data from the Washington Post.
40,147,863: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials.
653,222: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News.
|
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Nearly 20 years after being toppled by American forces, the Taliban says they’re poised to unveil the new government of Afghanistan.
More Republican state lawmakers are beginning to embrace attempts to investigate the 2020 election results in their state.
The president of Human Rights Campaign was fired Monday after a reportfound he tried to help discredit an accuser of former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
The Wall Street Journal looks at the process of approving the Covid vaccine for children.
First Lady Jill Biden is returning to the classroom.
|
|
|
Download the NBC News Mobile App
|
50.) CBS
|
|
|
|
|
|
51.) REASON
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
College Football returned to American stadiums, tailgates, and televisions on Saturday. Tens of thousands of people ignoring social distance guidelines to the dismay of panic-porn addicted assclown … MORE
8275 S. Eastern Ave, Ste 200-245 Las Vegas, Nevada 89123 USA
Privacy Policy | Unsubscribe | View in browser |
54.) TOWNHALL
|
||
FACEBOOK TWITTER |
ADVERTISEMENT | ||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions You can unsubscribe by clicking here. Or Send postal mail to: * Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers. |
55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
|
||||||||||||
|
56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
|
57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Tuesday, Sept. 7, and we’re covering a mass shooting in Florida, a military coup in Africa, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWTragedy in Florida Four people were killed and at least one injured Sunday after a gunman opened fire in a residential community in Lakeland, Florida. The victims included a mother and her 3-month-old infant, along with two other adults. An 11-year-old girl was reportedly shot seven times but is expected to survive. Officials have not revealed a motive for the attack but suggested the shooter, 33-year-old Bryan Riley, had no connection to the victims. Early reports suggest Riley first arrived at the scene Saturday evening, saying he had been told by God to intervene in a suicide. Riley, a Marine veteran who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, was shot once in an extended firefight with police before surrendering. He is expected to survive. Riley, who later told deputies he was high on methamphetamines, was charged with four counts of murder and eight counts of attempted murder, along with arson and burglary charges. He was held without bond in his first court appearance yesterday. Ida’s AftermathThe death toll from Hurricane Ida rose to at least 60 over the holiday weekend, with more than half of the victims coming from the Northeast. At least 27 people were confirmed dead in New Jersey, 17 in New York, and five in Pennsylvania, with a number of isolated deaths reported up the Mid-Atlantic. As of this morning, 13 victims have been identified in Louisiana and two in Mississippi. Assessing the storm’s weeklong path of destruction from the Gulf to Massachusetts, analysts estimated Ida caused as much as $95B in total damage and economic loss. More than half a million customers remained without power in Louisiana, mostly in New Orleans and surrounding parishes, as of this morning. See before and after photos capturing the city’s power outages via satellite. Out in the Atlantic, Hurricane Larry is expected to strengthen into a Category 4 storm, but is not currently projected to make US landfall. Coup in GuineaGuinean special forces overthrew the government and seized power Sunday, detaining President Alpha Condé and dissolving the West African country’s constitution. The coup came after an hourslong gunfight near the presidential palace; Condé eventually appeared on a cellphone video in informal clothing, held by soldiers (watch here). In office since 2010, 83-year-old Condé was the country’s first modern democratically elected president. He won a controversial third term in 2020, claiming a national referendum allowed him to run despite a statutory two-term limit. Opposition parties claimed his victory was illegal, while arguing the vote was marred by fraud. Col. Mamady Doumbouya, a former member of the French Foreign Legion, appears to be the de-facto leader of the country following the coup. In partnership with RevtownA MATCH MADE IN HEAVENWhat do you get when you combine the best parts of workout clothes with denim? Think comfort, flexibility, and durability, paired with a fabric generally known for the opposite. The result: Decade Denim, by Revtown. After years in athletic apparel, Revtown’s founders created a proprietary blend milled in Italy for both style and comfort. Made with super-strong thread (like the stuff you might find in football pants or yoga leggings), Revtown jeans are tough as nails—but mobile when you need them to be. They’re unbelievably comfortable and stylish at a killer price. Take Revtown jeans for a spin and you’ll discover all the things you can do in them: sitting, squatting, sprinting, biking, roadtripping, happy hour-ing, and even just kicking it on the couch. Treat yourself to a pair today. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & CultureBrought to you by Golden Ratio > Tokyo 2020 Paralympics wrapped over the weekend; see photos of closing ceremony (More) | China tops medal count with 207; US finishes fourth in total medal count with 104, including 37 gold medals (More) > Michael K. Williams, Emmy-nominated actor known for role on “The Wire,” dies at 54 (More) | Longtime “Today” show weather forecaster Willard Scott dies at 87 (More) > Marvel’s “Shang-Chi” breaks all-time Labor Day record with $75.5M at box office, including $90M in first four days of release (More) From our partners: Have you tried gold coffee? Roasted at lower temperatures, gold coffee has five times less acidity than black coffee and no bitter taste. It satisfies the coffee urges but feels like a wonderfully rich, fancy tea—perfect if you have a sensitive stomach or want to switch to something lighter for your afternoon cup. Get it while it’s hot (or cold) for 15% off with code 1440. Science & Technology> NASA confirms its Perseverance probe successfully collected a rock sample from the surface of Mars; announcement comes weeks after the first attempt failed to secure any material (More) > Unusually cold recent winters in parts of the US may be linked to climate change-induced disturbances in the Arctic’s polar vortex (More) > Hospital-based sepsis infections linked to increased rate of birth complications, including a higher frequency of C-sections and preterm deliveries (More) | Read more about sepsis, responsible for 270,000 US deaths each year (More) Business & Markets> US economy adds 235,000 jobs in August, well beneath expectations of 725,000; unemployment rate falls from 5.4% to 5.2% (More) > Over 7 million Americans saw added federal unemployment benefits lapse yesterday after expiration of weekly jobless benefits driven by the pandemic (More) > After backlash over user privacy, Apple delays child protection laws including a feature that would scan photos for sexual abuse material (More) Politics & World Affairs> Taliban fighters say they’ve taken control of Panjshir Valley, the last pocket of resistance in the country (More) | An estimated 600-1,200 cleared evacuees are being detained at the Mazar-i-Sharif airport; sources suggest the Taliban are blocking flights to extract concessions from the US (More) > New US COVID-19 cases now averaging more than 163,000 per day; case count appears to be peaking, while daily deaths average around 1,550 (More) > Evacuation orders for the Lake Tahoe area downgraded as firefighters, weather conditions slow the advance of the Caldor Fire toward the popular resort region (More) IN-DEPTHHow to Grieve a Very Good DogOutside | Annette McGivney. Navigating the loss of a cherished pet—one of the most intense, but least acknowledged, traumas many families face. (Read) Bitcoin’s Power ProblemNYT | Staff. Mining Bitcoin—the process of entering new amounts of the digital currency into circulation—now consumes more power annually than many countries, and represents 0.5% of global power consumption. How did that happen? (Read, paywall) “WORK JEANS”In partnership with Revtown Heading back into the office and worried about losing that WFH comfort? Revtown’s got you covered. Look sharp but keep the comfort of your go-to sweats with the jeans that are the talk of the town. Revtown delivers directly to your door, which means no retail markup—just great jeans at a fair price, with free domestic shipping and exchanges. What do you have to lose? Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAWhy narcissists always nab the promotion. A scientist discusses the failed Nazi nuclear program. (via Reddit) What to know about Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish new year. Putting the size of the Earth’s atmosphere in perspective. New US Navy weapon can stop people from talking. Sept. 7, 2011, on the internet. A short history of ambergris, the world’s unlikeliest commodity. “Back to the Future” lands on the National Mall. Clickbait: Will the real Boris Vishnevsky please stand up? Historybook: Uncle Sam first used as nickname for the US (1813); First pilot death by airplane crash (1909); Rock and roll pioneer Buddy Holly born (1936); HBD “I Will Survive” singer Gloria Gaynor (1943); Rapper Tupac Shakur is shot, dies six days later (1996). “Self-esteem comes from what you think of you, not what other people think of you.” – Gloria Gaynor Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
|
|
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
TOP STORIES:
-
Biden Finally Gets Exactly What He Deserves
- URGENT UPDATE TO POP PRESS
-
Psaki Says The Quiet Part Out Loud Exposing The Huge Plan
-
Trump Election Bombshell
- BIDEN IS GUILTY OF TREASON
- Horrifying Update On The 6 Planeloads Of Americans In Afghanistan
-
Nancy Pelosi Gets The News She’s Been Dreading
- Biden Admin Issues Terrifying Response to Americans Trapped in Afghanistan
-
Biden Accused of Being ‘Schizophrenic’ After Sick Move He Just Made
- White House In Full Panic – Emergency Call Received
|
IN DEPTH:
- Over 7 Million Lose Unemployment Benefits as Pandemic Programs Expire Today Click here to see original article 10 mins ago
- Biden AG Merrick Garland pledges to fight against Texas pro-life law Click here to see original article 25 mins ago
- ALERT: They Just Announced It Will NEVER BE OVER! Click here to see original article 40 mins ago
- Its Like They Really Want You To Be Sick and Unhappy~! Click here to see original article 40 mins ago
- URGENT UPDATE TO POP PRESS 2 hours ago
- Afghan refugee allegedly stabs woman in the neck for ‘working’ Click here to see original article 3 hours ago
- Head of Afghanistan’s new government is Taliban co-founder Baradar Click here to see original article 4 hours ago
- Afghanistan DIY – Interview With John Bishop 4 hours ago
- Robocop Is Here: Singapore Deploys Robots To Detect “Undesirable Behavior” Including Groups Of “More Than Five People” Click here to see original article 5 hours ago
- Major U.S. Cities Are Becoming Fentanyl-Infested Cesspools As Millions Plunge Into Hopelessness And Despair Click here to see original article 5 hours ago
- “I Will Not Submit”: 140,000 French Citizens Protest Against Vaccine Passport Click here to see original article 5 hours ago
- China’s Military Jets Repeatedly Fly Into Taiwan’s Air Defense Zone Since Biden’s Afghanistan Withdrawal: Report Click here to see original article 7 hours ago
- Putting the “War” Back in War Colleges | City Journal Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- The Royal Navy’s Newest Aircraft Carrier Is Training with South Korea Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- This May Be First Step In Curing PTSD With A Pill Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- McCaul: Taliban Is Holding American Citizens, Afghan Allies ‘Hostage’ Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- On Labor Day 2021, the end of enhanced unemployment benefits bring hope to US small businesses Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- Blinken Looks to Intensify Afghanistan Diplomacy in Qatar, Germany After Humiliating Pullout Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- McCaul: Afghanistan Is ‘Worse’ than Pre‑9/11 because Taliban Has U.S. Weapons Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- Each COVID-19 surge poses a risk for healthcare workers: PTSD Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- Pollak: Biden Broke His Main Promise — to Control the Pandemic Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- Afghan opposition leader Massoud says he is ready for talks with Taliban Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- Not-So Conservative: Boris to Impose Highest Tax Burden for 70 Years Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- Mexican officials cut off new migrant caravan, breaking up main group Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- Ambassador Callista L. Gingrich and Speaker Newt Gingrich | Celebrating Labor Day Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
|
TOP STORIES:
- Son Of 9/11 Victim Issues Warning To Biden Ahead Of Upcoming Anniversary
-
Biden Takes Selfie At Horribly Inappropriate Time — What’s He Thinking?!
-
Top FBI Official Arrested…
- BIG Biden Chant Is Exploding Around The Country
-
Biden Finally Gets Exactly What He Deserves
- URGENT UPDATE TO POP PRESS
- Psaki Says The Quiet Part Out Loud Exposing The Huge Plan
-
Trump Election Bombshell
- Biden Is Guilty Of Treason
- Horrifying Update On The 6 Planeloads Of Americans In Afghanistan
|
IN DEPTH:
- 28,821 Authorized 5G Cell Sites Despite Increasing Opposition and Risks (France) Click here to see original article 52 mins ago
- California Admits Grid At Risk Amid Push To Greenify Economy Click here to see original article 2 hours ago
- Maddow Doesn’t Delete Tweet Promoting False Oklahoma Story Click here to see original article 4 hours ago
- Over 7 Million Lose Unemployment Benefits as Pandemic Programs Expire Today Click here to see original article 5 hours ago
- Biden AG Merrick Garland pledges to fight against Texas pro-life law Click here to see original article 5 hours ago
- ALERT: They Just Announced It Will NEVER BE OVER! Click here to see original article 6 hours ago
- Its Like They Really Want You To Be Sick and Unhappy~! Click here to see original article 6 hours ago
- URGENT UPDATE TO POP PRESS 7 hours ago
- Afghan refugee allegedly stabs woman in the neck for ‘working’ Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- Head of Afghanistan’s new government is Taliban co-founder Baradar Click here to see original article 8 hours ago
- Afghanistan DIY – Interview With John Bishop 9 hours ago
- Robocop Is Here: Singapore Deploys Robots To Detect “Undesirable Behavior” Including Groups Of “More Than Five People” Click here to see original article 10 hours ago
- Major U.S. Cities Are Becoming Fentanyl-Infested Cesspools As Millions Plunge Into Hopelessness And Despair Click here to see original article 10 hours ago
- “I Will Not Submit”: 140,000 French Citizens Protest Against Vaccine Passport Click here to see original article 10 hours ago
- China’s Military Jets Repeatedly Fly Into Taiwan’s Air Defense Zone Since Biden’s Afghanistan Withdrawal: Report Click here to see original article 12 hours ago
- Putting the “War” Back in War Colleges | City Journal Click here to see original article 13 hours ago
- The Royal Navy’s Newest Aircraft Carrier Is Training with South Korea Click here to see original article 13 hours ago
- This May Be First Step In Curing PTSD With A Pill Click here to see original article 13 hours ago
- McCaul: Taliban Is Holding American Citizens, Afghan Allies ‘Hostage’ Click here to see original article 13 hours ago
- On Labor Day 2021, the end of enhanced unemployment benefits bring hope to US small businesses Click here to see original article 13 hours ago
- Blinken Looks to Intensify Afghanistan Diplomacy in Qatar, Germany After Humiliating Pullout Click here to see original article 13 hours ago
- McCaul: Afghanistan Is ‘Worse’ than Pre‑9/11 because Taliban Has U.S. Weapons Click here to see original article 13 hours ago
- Each COVID-19 surge poses a risk for healthcare workers: PTSD Click here to see original article 13 hours ago
- Pollak: Biden Broke His Main Promise — to Control the Pandemic Click here to see original article 13 hours ago
- Afghan opposition leader Massoud says he is ready for talks with Taliban Click here to see original article 13 hours ago
|
|
You signed up for the Populist Press newsletter at www.Populist.Press We are the #1 Drudge Alternative. Visit our homepage for incredible news!
|
Click here to unsubscribe
Populist Press
7940 Front Beach Rd.
Panama City Beach, FL. 32407
74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Welcome to the Tuesday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect tech and politics unfolding online. Today:
BREAK THE INTERNET A quarter of Americans worry about paying their internet bills, survey finds Just over a quarter of Americans are worried about being able to pay their broadband and smartphone bills over the next few months, according to a new survey.
Pew Research Center published its findings in a large “The Internet and the Pandemic” report last week.
In the report, Pew found that 26% of those polled said they were worried about being able to pay their broadband internet bills over the next few months. Meanwhile, 24% of people felt the same about paying their smartphone bill.
The coronavirus pandemic highlighted the importance of internet connectivity as millions of people relied on it for work, school, and telemedicine. The pandemic also shined a bring light on the country’s long-standing digital divide, the gap between people who have access to affordable internet and those who don’t.
The findings are similar to other recent surveys. In August, Consumer Reports found that nearly half of Americans were “dissatisfied” to some degree about how much they were paying for their broadband service.
The same poll from Consumer Reports noted that 21% of people asked said it was “somewhat difficult” to afford their monthly internet bill, and 3% said it was “very difficult” to do so. Deputy Tech Editor
SPONSORED Your couple play deserves an upgrade, with Dame
Across the country, women aren’t enjoying sexy time when compared to men. Dame, a sexual wellness company seeks to make this unfortunate phenomenon called The Pleasure Gap a thing of the past. All its toys are developed and rigorously tested by real people, to bring solo and coupled play to new heights.
Best of all, Dame stands by its high-quality products. From its sex pillow to its vibrators, each come with a three year warranty and hassle-free returns within 60 days. Visit Dame, and save 10% on your order with the offer code DAILYDOT.
DISINFO Reddit responds to sitewide blackout by restricting over 50 communities pushing COVID disinformation Reddit has given in to some of the demands of a massive campaign asking it to remove COVID-19 disinformation from the platform.
Last month, the Daily Dot reported that hundreds of subreddits had issued a public plea for Reddit to do more to police COVID disinformation. Ultimately, more than 1,000 reposted the plea originally posted by VaxxHappened.
Reddit refused to take action. In response, dozens of subreddits went private in protest earlier this week. According to a list compiled by one redditor, roughly another 150 were going to set their subs to private.
Last week, Reddit announced that it was giving in to some of their demands.
It banned the NoNewNormal subreddit, which was specifically referenced in calls to police pandemic disinformation. It’s also quarantined 54 others, including subreddits like Ivermectin, vaccinelonghaulers, CovidIsAFraud, Wuhan_Flu, TrueAntiVaccination, and Covid Vaccinated Uncut.
Quarantining a subreddit means it doesn’t show up in public searches and doesn’t generate revenue. People who visit these subs are greeted with a notice that includes a link to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website about COVID. —Claire Goforth, contributing writer
BIG TECH Amazon’s purchase of MGM Studios should be blocked to stop its ‘growing dominance,’ leading advocates say A coalition of advocacy groups is urging Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chairwoman Lina Khan to have the agency block Amazon from acquiring MGM Studios to slow the retail giant’s “growing dominance.”
In May, Amazon announced that it had reached a $8.45 billion deal to acquire MGM Studios, which produces popular franchises like the James Bond films. The FTC is reportedly investigating the proposed deal.
Shortly after the announcement, Amazon pushed for Khan—who has massive support from progressives and has been critical of big tech companies—to recuse herself from antitrust cases involving the retail giant.
The more than 30 advocacy groups said in a letter to Khan that the proposed MGM deal was “the latest move in Amazon’s overarching strategy to create numerous interconnected points of dominance over businesses and consumers.”
“There is ample evidence already that Amazon uses the combined elements of its platform as a cudgel against its rivals,” the letter reads. “The proposed acquisition of MGM would give an already abusive monopoly even more weapons to use against consumers, businesses, and workers. We urge the FTC to halt this deal and to continue to investigate Amazon’s broad abuse of its ecosystem.”
—A.W.
HELP WANTED Help us choose personalized prizes for readers like you
Thanks for being a loyal reader. We’re whipping up some cool rewards for y’all and would love your input. Can you help us out?
How did you like this newsletter? Click an icon below to give us a rating! Copyright © 2021 The Daily Dot, All rights reserved.
Don’t want to hear from us anymore? Click here to unsubscribe.
Questions? Feedback? Contact us at info@dailydot.com. To view in your browser, click here. |
77.) HEADLINE USA
|
|
|
78.) NATURAL NEWS
|
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
|
82.) CNN
Tuesday 09.07.21 A toddler has been found three days after he went missing in the Australian wilderness, authorities confirmed. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Capitol riot
Law enforcement needs to take the upcoming right-wing rally in support of jailed January 6 rioters “very seriously” as concerns mount about more potential violence on Capitol Hill, ex-FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe said. “They should take it more seriously than they took the same sort of intelligence that they likely saw on January 5,” he told CNN. Law enforcement officials in Washington are steeling themselves against possible unrest at the “Justice for J6” rally — planned for September 18 — which aims to support the insurrectionists charged in the riot. Homeland Security intelligence chief John Cohen previously told CNN that recent online extremist rhetoric is strikingly similar to the buildup to the January 6 attack, with increasing calls for violence linked to conspiracy theories and false narratives. It’s still unclear how many protesters plan to attend next week’s rally, which falls on a Saturday when the House will be in recess, so far fewer lawmakers or staff will be around.
Coronavirus
Covid-19 cases have been on the rise in much of the US, and the seven-day average of new cases yesterday was more than 300% higher than Labor Day of last year, Johns Hopkins University data shows. The jump in cases has translated into overcrowded hospitals and a rise in infections among children — of particular concern as many students return to their classrooms. And experts fear the holiday weekend could make matters worse. Meanwhile, a potential outbreak of Covid-19 in Singapore is undermining the city’s plan to try to “live with” the virus. The number of new Covid-19 infections in Singapore doubled in the past week, according to the country’s Ministry of Health, rising to more than 1,200 cases for the week that ended Sunday.
9/11
Pretrial hearings in the case of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who has been accused of being the lead plotter behind the September 11 attacks, and four other detainees at Guantanamo Bay are set to resume today. The last in-person hearing in the case was in February 2020. The five are accused of plotting and executing the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. If convicted, all five could receive the death penalty. Charges against them announced by the US government in 2012 include “terrorism, hijacking aircraft, conspiracy, murder in violation of the law of war, attacking civilians, attacking civilian objects, intentionally causing serious bodily injury, and destruction of property in violation of the law of war.” The hearings come the week of the attacks’ 20th anniversary, and some victims’ relatives are in Guantanamo Bay to observe them.
Ida
City officials will go door to door to ensure people in New York get the federal relief benefits they need after torrential rain from Hurricane Ida’s remnants caused deadly flooding, Mayor Bill de Blasio said. The announcement came after President Biden approved a major disaster declaration for the area, which New York Sen. Chuck Schumer called “the fastest (he’s) seen a major disaster area declared.” Additionally, Louisiana’s lieutenant governor is promising changes after seven nursing home residents died after being evacuated before Ida to a warehouse with hundreds of other people. The temporary shelter, a warehouse in Independence, Louisiana, was overwhelmed after receiving more than 840 people on August 27 ahead of the Category 4 hurricane, officials said. “To pack that many people into one warehouse is just unthinkable,” Lt. Gov. Billy Nungesser told CNN.
Guinea
A Guinean military officer broadcast a statement on Sunday announcing that Guinea’s constitution has been dissolved in an apparent coup. An adviser to President Alpha Conde told CNN that Conde is under arrest and that a coup has taken place in the West African country. “We will no longer entrust politics to a man. We will entrust it to the people. We come only for that; it is the duty of a soldier, to save the country,” Guinean army officer Mamady Doumbouya says in a video. Doumbouya added that they have arrested 83-year-old Conde and suspended the constitution, the government and all other institutions. He also announced the closing of land and air borders. Aluminum prices have reached their highest level in more than a decade after the coup in Guinea, a major supplier of the main ore used to produce the metal. The location of Conde, who won a heavily disputed election last year, is still unclear.
Paid Partner Content A Credit Card With All the Right Perks Like a $200 bonus after spending $500 within three months. Don’t forget unlimited 1.5% cash back on literally every purchase, all with no annual fee.
Meet SimpliSafe Get 24/7 security from SimpliSafe in 30 minutes or less. Order online and set it up yourself in under an hour. After that, your home is protected 24/7. People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Divers find pipeline that likely triggered Gulf of Mexico oil spill
Michael K. Williams, ‘Wire’ actor, found dead
Kanye West grabs 10th No. 1 album on Billboard
Stanley Tucci had cancer and was successfully treated
Watch a plane fly through a tunnel (and set a Guinness World Record) A Chinese-Canadian national named Tse Chi Lop faces extradition after his arrest this year in the Netherlands on accusations he was running a methamphetamine cartel earning an estimated $17 billion a year in Asia. As prosecutors prepare their case against Tse, CNN has investigated his early years to better understand the man Australian authorities claim is one of the most successful meth masterminds of the 21st century. This is the story of Tse’s first syndicate: how it thrived in US prisons; how police from around the world tore it apart; and how, from its ashes, this seemingly unassuming man allegedly was able to lay the groundwork for a multibillion-dollar drug empire from a prison in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. 11 The number of years in prison to which a Belarusian court sentenced Maria Kolesnikova, a prominent opposition figure who led mass street protests against President Alexander Lukashenko, the latest move in a widespread crackdown on government critics following a contested election last year. Kolesnikova and another opposition activist, Maxim Znak, were charged in a trial held in the capital Minsk behind closed doors, Belarusian state media reported. This is a rare and complex operation performed so far in the world only about 20 times, and for the first time in Israel.
Mickey Gideon, director of pediatric neurosurgery at Soroka Medical Center, on the complexity of the surgery performed on twin girls in Israel. The two 1-year-olds were separated after being born joined back-to-back at the head. Brought to you by CNN Underscored We’ve tested dozens of WFH products: Here are 27 worth your money From standing desks and printers to ring lights and headphones, we’ve compiled the best office essentials we’ve tested this year to help you upgrade your work from home setup. Extreme $500,000 game of tag 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
No longer want to receive this newsletter? Unsubscribe. Interested in more? See all of our newsletters.
Like what you see? Don’t like what you see? Let us know. We’re all about self improvement. Did a friend forward you this newsletter? Sign up here.
Create CNN Account | Listen to CNN Audio | Download the CNN App
® © 2021 Cable News Network, Inc. A WarnerMedia Company. All Rights Reserved. One CNN Center Atlanta, GA 30303 |
83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- How Others See Us
- Two Questions About the Rolling Stone Story
- High Noonan
- Hostages (not hostages)
- This day in baseball history: J.R. Richard debuts
How Others See Us
Posted: 06 Sep 2021 04:02 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)The U.S. press is trying to pretend that everything is normal, Afghanistan is a blip on the screen, and Joe Biden has some idea what he is doing. The foreign press, and foreign commentators and politicians, have been much blunter in assessing recent events. Thus, the Telegraph reports: “Britain should ‘fill the void’ left by US as global leader after Afghanistan withdrawal.”
The Brits are correct that the Biden administration’s incompetence has created a power vacuum, but the idea that they will be the ones to fill it seems much too optimistic.
|
Two Questions About the Rolling Stone Story
Posted: 06 Sep 2021 12:12 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)Steve wrote about the latest Rolling Stone fiasco here. Basically, Rolling Stone picked up a local TV news story out of Oklahoma to the effect that large numbers of Oklahomans were overdosing on Ivermectin, to the point where hospitals were turning away gunshot victims and there were no ambulances to be had. Other leftists like Rachel Maddow picked up the story and ran with it, even though it was laughable on its face. Kyle Smith also has a good review of the story, and Iowahawk and others have fun at Rolling Stone’s expense at Twitchy. I think this is pretty funny:
For me, this episode prompts two questions. The first is, did anyone actually believe the Oklahoma story? In its original version, the TV news station quoted a single doctor but did not identify any of the hospitals that allegedly were turning away patients because of the supposed throng of Oklahomans overdosing on Ivermectin. Many have suggested that Rolling Stone must be thoroughly humiliated at being exposed peddling fake news, and that the magazine should have known better after the University of Virginia rape fiasco. I’m not so sure. The lesson Rolling Stone could have taken away from the Virginia case is that it should be careful about libeling identifiable people who may sue. In the Ivermectin story, there is no potential for defamation. And do leftists like Rolling Stone’s journalists and Rachel Maddow really care about getting facts straight? I question whether they are embarrassed at all. (For what it is worth, at last word Maddow had not deleted her tweet promoting the Rolling Stone story.) I wonder whether, instead, they are proud of being Liars For the Cause. After all, anyone can tell the truth, but to lie for leftism requires a higher level of commitment. This is a big topic, but another, more major instance is the Russia collusion hoax. Have any of the reporters or editors at publications like the New York Times and the Washington Post, along with many others, apologized for promoting a wholly made-up story? Not that I know of. Are they sheepish about it? Has being so grotesquely wrong prompted any trend toward humility? I don’t think so. My guess is that most of those who promoted the Russia hoax are satisfied that, while false, the story successfully served its intended purpose. My second question is, why has relatively little attention been paid to potential treatments for covid? The Rolling Stone story referred to “false claims [Ivermectin] could fight COVID-19.” Are such claims false? I don’t know, but I believe a number of practitioners have said that they got good results with Ivermectin. Similarly, early in the pandemic liberals violently denounced clinicians who reported that they saw good results with hydroxychloroquine when it was administered early, usually in combination with other drugs or supplements. The only treatment for covid about which liberals have ever shown any enthusiasm was ventilators. Remember when there was talk about commandeering automobile companies’ production lines to produce vast numbers of ventilators? But a ventilator can’t cure anything; at best, it can keep a patient alive for a few days to give another treatment a chance to work. But what treatment? Beyond ventilators, the only response to covid of which liberals seem to approve is vaccination. Liberals have tried to coerce everyone to be vaccinated, even in the face of evidence that the vaccines are not as effective as originally hoped. (For the record, I was among the first to be vaccinated and encourage others to do so as well.) Why the over-the-top insistence on vaccination, at the same time when little attention is being paid to treatment of the disease? Further, why is it that we constantly hear from bureaucrats like Dr. Fauci who likely haven’t seen a patient in decades, while the voices of actual practicing doctors–the physicians who in some cases have treated hundreds of covid patients–are silenced? Especially when they try to report positive results from a course of treatment? Granted, viruses are generally hard to cure or to treat. The conventional advice for covid is to treat it the same way you would a cold or the flu–a fact that seems revealing in itself. But I think the seeming disinterest in identifying practical remedies for covid, while we are awash in news stories about other aspects of the disease, is puzzling.
|
High Noonan
Posted: 06 Sep 2021 05:48 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)In “Joe Biden displays his wisdom,” Paul Mirengoff draws on Peggy Noonan’s current Wall Street Journal column for its insight into the failings of President Biden. I thought it was a good Noonan column and true even if it was Noonan speaking, but late and therefore hurried. Noonan is in a rush to make it clear she sees what everybody else has seen over the past few weeks. Noonan doesn’t mention her support for Biden in her September 2020 Wall Street Journal column when the choice was between Biden and Trump. Conrad Black observed that Noonan had gone full metal-jacket for Biden. Black’s column has stood the test of time. Noonan’s is already obsolete. Noonan is a sore subject of long standing with me. She makes my skin crawl. Noonan joined the crowd turning on George W. Bush in what I thought was (in Noonan’s case) a grossly unfair manner in 2008. Noonan wasn’t just unfair, she was also cowardly. I made my case against her in connection with the weekly Wall Street Journal column in which she identified with the public disapproval of Bush that April in “Season of the witch.” Having turned on George W. Bush, Noonan moved on to support the election of Barack Obama later that year. Noonan all but endorsed Obama in her 2008 column “Obama and the runaway train.” The anti-Bush and pro-Obama columns fit neatly together. She wrote of Obama just before the election:
In a sense, Obama delivered, but in another sense Noonan got everything wrong. Obama certainly changed the direction and tone of American foreign policy, yet the change failed to yield the results Noonan anticipated. He betrayed allies and sold out to enemies for good measure, but for nothing in return. Noonan then turned on Obama. In “The unwisdom of Barack Obama,” Noonan condemned Obama on one of the grounds she had supported him in 2008. It had dawned on her: “His essential problem is that he has very poor judgment.” In her defense, Noonan might have pleaded that she acknowledged the paltry evidence in support of her 2008 claim that Obama has “good judgment.” If “judgment” were the issue, perhaps the excuse would mitigate the verdict that Noonan herself is guilty of incredibly poor judgment. Well, I quit reading her. I don’t understand why the Wall Street Journal continues to turn over valuable editorial page real estate to her on a weekly basis. In August 2020 a reader drew my attention to a Noonan column that represented her return to the mode of her 2008 Obama love in “The Rise of Kamala Harris.” Subhead: “The daughter of East Bay professors grew up to become an excellent performer of politics.” The column elicited thousands of critical comments. They almost made the column worth reading. They were certainly more perceptive or more realistic than Noonan’s column. Here are four. Mark Pulliam:
Fred Scott:
Elise Nappi:
John O’Neill:
I gave O’Neill bonus points for concision. Noonan hasn’t yet turned on Harris based on her patent idiocy or her actual performance as vice president, but I am quite certain we can look forward to the column in which Noonan turns on her without mention of her previous adulation.
|
Hostages (not hostages)
Posted: 06 Sep 2021 05:03 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)Rep. Michael McCaul made news on FOX News Sunday yesterday morning. McCaul related the refusal of Joe Biden’s new partners among the Taliban to allow flights to leave from Mazar-i-Sharif Airport in northern Afghanistan. The blocked flights were to carry Americans others to safety out of Afghanistan.
The AP’s Kathy Gannon reported the story “Taliban stop planes of evacuees from leaving but unclear why.” The AP story paraphrases an unnamed State Department official to the effect that “the department will hold the Taliban to their pledges to let people travel freely[.]” NR’s Zachary Evans provided a useful round-up of the story. The Free Beacon’s Adam Kredo reports the comments he received from the State Department:
The State Department response approximates Freddie Prinze’s catchphrase: “It’s not my job.” Reports this morning add to McCaul’s disclosure:“State Dept blocking private rescue flights from leaving Afghanistan, organizers say: ‘Blood is on their hands’” (FOX News) and “Glenn Beck group-funded planes to be used for evacuations being grounded by Taliban” (New York Post).
|
This day in baseball history: J.R. Richard debuts
Posted: 05 Sep 2021 10:26 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)1971 was the year of Vida Blue. The 22 year-old lefty won 24 games and captured the American League Cy Young and MVP awards. But another African-American pitcher from Louisiana also made a splash in 1971. 21 year-old James Rodney Richard debuted in the majors on September 5. Blue threw extremely hard, but Richard’s heater was next-level. Only Nolan Ryan, his future teammate, was in the same class. Johnny Bench and Dale Murphy both say Richard was the toughest pitcher they ever faced. Standing 6-8 and possessing a violently dipping slider to go with his fast ball, Richards was even more intimidating than Ryan. Dusty Baker says:
Like Bench and Murphy, Baker considers Richard the toughest pitcher he ever faced. Richard’s first big league game was the backend of a double-header between the Astros and the San Francisco Giants. The Astros were languishing near the bottom of the standings, as usual. The Giants were well out in front in the NL West and headed to the playoffs. Their potent lineup included Willie Mays, Willie McCovey, and emerging star Bobby Bonds. McCovey picked up an injury in the first game and did not appear in the nightcap. But Mays and Bonds played, batting third and fourth, respectively. Between the two, they struck out five times (Mays three of them) against Richard, who fanned 15 Giants in his first game. This total tied Karl Spooner’s record for strikeouts in a debut game. Before the game, Mays, who know Richard’s reputation, reportedly told Richard, “young man, just don’t hit me.” The Giants did score two runs off of the rookie in the very first inning, though. Ken Henderson led off with a single. Richard then retired Tito Fuentes and Mays, the latter on a strikeout. However, Bonds singled and Alan Gallagher doubled home Henderson and Bond. These would be the only earned runs Richard allowed and the only runs of any kind he yielded until the eighth inning. By that time, the Astros led 5-2. In the eighth, Richard walked Mays to start things off. This was one of only three walks Richard gave up that day. Mays advanced to second on a passed ball. Bonds then popped out to first base in foul territory. Mays alertly took third on the out. After Richard struck out Gallagher, he induced what should have been an inning-ending grounder off the bat of Chris Speier. However, Denis Menke failed to handle it, and Mays scored. Pinch hitter Jim Ray Hart followed with a single, the last of the seven hits Richard allowed that day. This made another pinch hitter, Fran Healy, the potential tying run. But Richards struck him out. In the ninth inning, Richard closed strong. He fanned Dick Dietz, Henderson, and Hal Lanier to claim a 5-3 victory. Richard seemed destined for stardom, and he would attain it. But not for a while. In fact, Richard didn’t crack the Astros’ starting rotation until 1975. And when he finally did, wildness prevented him from excelling. He led the National League in walks and wild pitches that year, en route to a 4.39 ERA. Richard was still wild in 1976, but he threw enough strikes to win 20 games with a 2.75 ERA. Richard won 18 games in each of the following three seasons and led the NL in strikeouts in two of them with back-to-back 300-plus totals. In 1979, he also had the lowest ERA of any National League starter, 2.71. Richard was even better in 1980. Midway through the season, his record was 10-4 with an ERA of 1.90. Richard was the National League’s starting pitcher at the all-star game, where he pitched two scoreless innings. Nolan Ryan, by then a teammate, called Richard’s 1980 season “one of the best seasons a pitcher has ever had.” It was comparable to Vida Blue’s 1971 year. But a week after the all-star game, it all started to fall apart. Pitching against Atlanta, Richard had trouble picking up the catcher’s signs and difficulty moving his arm. He left the game in the fourth inning after throwing a fastball and feeling his right arm go “dead”. At that point, his fingers were numb and he couldn’t even grip the ball. A series of specialists checked Richard. They found a blocked artery in his throwing arm, but somehow concluded that no surgery was required. Richard returned to duty with the Astros. Less than a week after leaving the game with the Braves, Richard was warming up on the sidelines when he collapsed in the outfield from a stroke. It was latter determined that he had suffered three separate strokes from three different artery blockages. Doctors managed to save Richard’s life and, after a long recovery period and extensive rehab, he tried to revive his baseball career. He pitched some in the minor leagues, at times effectively, but never made it back to the majors. The Astros released him in April 1983. His career record was 107–71, with a 3.15 ERA and 1,493 strikeouts, then an Astros record. Richard’s post-baseball life began with a series of misfortunes — divorce, bankruptcy, and homelessness. He spent the winter of 1994 living under a highway overpass in Houston. But soon thereafter, he pulled himself out of this downward spiral with the help of a church and its minister. He started a business and became a minister himself. Richard became active in the Houston community, working to bring baseball to the city’s youth. He liked to say, “You can lay down and die or get up and keep living. I just chose to get up and keep on living.” Richard died last month due to complications from the coronavirus. He was 71. RIP. NOTE: Playing without Richard in the second half of the 1980 season, the Astros still managed to win the NL West. They faced Philadelphia in the playoffs. The Phillies won the hard-fought series 3 games to 2, with four of the five games going to extra innings. It seems probable that had Richards been available and healthy for the series, Houston would have prevailed.
|
You are subscribed to email updates from Power LinePower Line. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
|
Unsubscribe | ThePoliticalInsider.com | About | Contact | Privacy Policy | Terms of UseForward to a Friend The Political Insider, LLC | 1818 Library Street | Reston | VA | 20190
|
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Twitter • Facebook • Tumblr • YouTube Advertise on Digg digg.com • Unsubscribe© 2020 Digg Holdings 18 Shipyard Drive, Hingham, MA 02043 |
89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
|
92.) THE DAILY BEAST
Manage newsletters View in browser
Advertisement
When all hell breaks loose, we keep a grip on reality.
Support our newsroom by becoming a member.
Advertisement
Fever Dreams A podcast covering twisted tales of the new American right.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
© Copyright 2021 The Daily Beast Company LLC If you are on a mobile device or cannot view the images in this message, click here to view this email in your browser. To ensure delivery of these emails, please add emails@thedailybeast.com to your address book. If you no longer wish to receive these emails, or think you have received this message in error, you can safely unsubscribe |
93.) JUST THE NEWS
94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
|
96.) NOT THE BEE
|
|
Not the Bee Daily Newsletter |
Sep 7, 2021 |
|
Sponsored By: Gundry MD 3 Signs Your Olive Oil Is SpoiledIf you cook with or consume olive oil, it is very important that you read this carefully. There is a common risk that American’s are taking every time they cook with, or consume olive oil. The truth is, most American’s have no idea where their olive oil comes from or the quality of their oil, so they have no clue what they are eating. A lot of olive oil sold in stores could be old and spoiled, and now you’re potentially just eating unhealthy fat without receiving any of the nutritional benefits. Click Here To Find Out If Your Olive Oil Is Safe
This lady’s young son was being attacked by a mountain lion so she started punching it over and over and saved the kid’s lifeThis lady is the mom of the year hands down:
Can’t make it up: Leftists call for abstinence and waiting for sex until marriage following SCOTUS ruling approving Texas heartbeat law 😆All it took for lefties to discover chastity and virtue was outlawing child murder. Who would have known?
New video: YES, men should speak up about abortion
Ten quick replies to common (and dumb) pro-abortion arguments and assertionsMatt Walsh wrote a thread on Twitter responding to what he called “the seven most common (and dumbest) pro-abortion arguments.” You can read it here. I’ve added to those seven with some additional responses to claims that are just as common (and dumb).
It’s the race hustlers who aren’t ready for a post-racial future. Come along with me as I dissect CNN’s piece, “White supremacy, with a tan.”It always amazes me what people will unwittingly reveal if you just read what they write.
Check out this inspiring and awesome tribute that Tennessee police held for the 13 troops who were recently killed in KabulIn case the White House is wondering, THIS is how you honor the fallen:
24 people shot in 24 hours in ChicagoAt least 24 people were shot from Saturday night to Sunday morning in Chicago, leaving at least two dead.
This is apparently a video of the streets of Philadelphia but I swear it looks like a scene from The Walking DeadWhat is going on in the City of Brotherly Love?
Welp, Gavin Newsom is officially doomedTo maintain the power California Gov. Gavin Newsom has amassed over a long career, he is calling in [checks notes] VP Kamala Harris (?!) to help him win his bid for re-election in the state’s gubernatorial recall.
Rose McGowan to Hillary Clinton: “I’ve been in a hotel room with your husband and here comes the bomb” 👀Good morning everyone. What the actual heck is going on here???
|
Our mailing address is: PO Box 87044 |
You received this email because you are a subscriber to Not the Bee or you opted-in to our newsletter through a prompt on our website. If you no longer wish to receive these emails, click here to unsubscribe. |
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
Rescue Team: State Dept. Claims of Afghan Evac ‘Absolute Nonsense’
Special: Biden Voted to Steal From Retirees… Twice? Son of 9/11 Victim to Biden: Don’t Come to Ground Zero Virginia to Take Down Robert E. Lee Statue on Wednesday Gov. Abbott to Sign Texas Election Bill Tuesday Special: Alarming! Click to See What Forbes Says About Your IRA Now NY to Pay Youth to Get High School Diploma 9/11 ‘New York Values’ One of Trump’s 1st Great Moments
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
This email is never sent unsolicited. You have received this Newsmax email because you subscribed to it or someone forwarded it to you. To opt out, see the links below.
Remove your email address from our list or modify your profile. We respect your right to privacy. View our policy. This email was sent by: |
99.) MARK LEVIN
September 6, 2021
On Monday’s Mark Levin Show, We bring you the Best Of Mark Levin on Labor Day! A transcript reveals that President Biden pressured Afghan President Ghani to create the perception that the Taliban wasn’t winning, whether it was true or not. Can we now impeach this president over a phone call? Then, President Biden’s speech demonstrates his ignorance of the genocide he just unleashed on women, children, and the patriotic allies that stood up and fought with Americans in Afghanistan. Biden’s unaware or doesn’t care about the global implications with China, Iran, and other enemies of the United States now that the U.S has no presence in Afghanistan. Biden says every American that wanted to leave was given a chance. Lies! Biden says many of the Americans that stayed were once Afghan nationals and implied that we should not worry. More lies, more propaganda from the White House and the State Department. Now that the American media is gone the terrorists will do what they do and we will not hear the screams of the genocide that Biden has unleashed in Afghanistan. Afterward, Larry Elder, candidate for Governor of California in the recall election of Gavin Newsom, joins the show to discuss the issues. Elder highlighted that 75% of African American boys are reading below grade level. He also mentioned how Democrats are fearful of losing California because they need a Democrat governor to make important appointments, such as the U.S Senate should Kamala Harris ever assume the Office of the Presidency.
THIS IS FROM:
Politico
Biden tries to move past Afghanistan fiasco
Daily Wire
George Soros’ Donations To Fight Newsom Recall Hit $1 Million
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
|
102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
The State Department took credit for saving a Texas family who almost died more than once because of the State Department. The State is also holding up six planes chartered and sitting in an airport in Northern Afghanistan, waiting to rescue Americans and SIVs.
Panjshir Valley seems lost, fighting continues, Massoud is in TurkeyThe battle for Afghanistan in the Panjshir Valley appears to have failed in no small measure due to the Pakistan, China, Turkey intervention. It is rumored that Ahmad Massoud has… | |
State Dept. almost got rescuers & family killed, then took credit for saving themHero Cory Mills and his team were able to save a Texas family from the Taliban and bring them home. It took two weeks and several life-threatening attempts. Then, the… | |
3-star general thanks US troops, only they’re BritishThis weekend, US Army Lt. General Maria Gervais — a 3-star general — tweeted a photo of what she thought were US troops and thanked them for their efforts. She… | |
Dems preparing to push through radical socialist billsFloundering, feckless Joe Biden is quickly heading for his inevitable implosion and Democrats are racing to get their far-left agenda through while they still can. Joe Manchin announced that he… | |
As Americans are stranded at an Afghanistan airport, Biden cuts & runsJoe Biden is likely the laziest president in US history. If he does anything in a day, it’s surprising. When Kabul fell, Biden and all his staff were on vacation… | |
“National suicide…with such geometric speed against so little resistance”Seldom has so obvious a national suicide advanced with such geometric speed against so little resistance. True to form, the rot comes from within. We cannot survive without the defense… | |
MSNBC report: WH & State Dept block US citizens & SIVs from leaving MAZAccording to Senator Blumenthal’s office, the White House and the State Department are blocking 19 US citizens and 40 SIV holders from leaving Mazar-i-Sharif airport in Northern Afghanistan. This confirms… | |
Totalitarianism reaches a US territoryTotalitarianism has reached the US territory of Guam by way of the governor’s Executive Order No. 2021-19 and ‘health expert’ advice. The regulations are arbitrary and freedom-robbing plus they will be… | |
Breaking…AG to investigate & prosecute anyone stopping an abortion in TexasThe Biden Justice Department will protect abortion seekers in Texas by investigating and prosecuting anyone who tries to stop an elective abortion. Merrick Garland has put himself above the Supreme… | |
US-funded UN plans to fund the Taliban terrorists for ‘humanitarian’ affairsTaliban say U.N. promises aid after meeting with officials in Kabul. The US is looking for a way to fund them as well. The UN is expected to convene an… | |
Minneapolis looking to replace police department with public safety personnelA Black man who opened fire on the police was just acquitted in lawless Minneapolis because he claimed self-defense. It’s insane and it’s about to get a lot worse. Get… | |
Afghan stabs 2 in Berlin because woman was gardening, motive unknownAn Afghan national with “possible Islamist motivation” stabbed a female gardener in the neck because he didn’t believe a woman should be doing such a job, it has been claimed.… | |
College football fans are back and they don’t like JoeDespite the partisan CDC and ‘hysterical health experts’ warning against the surging new variants of coronavirus, college football fans across the country packed stadiums. The fans are free! Youth were… | |
NATO allies believe US put them at riskEuropean allies are concerned about the reverse engineering of military equipment left behind. They have our secrets. Allies see the US as putting them at risk. Biden has done more… | |
WH chief of staff will let Qatar save Americans in AfghanistanWhite House Chief of Staff Ron Klain revealed Sunday that the Biden administration has no plans to rescue abandoned Americans in Afghanistan. Instead, the U.S. will rely on Qatar to… | |
Report: State Department stops 6 rescue planes in Afghanistan from leavingWhy is this SITREP not secret? Because our best chance of getting Americans out is through Biden’s allies, the Taliban, and not through Biden. Department of State is the problem.… | |
Taliban victory in Panjshir? They might only have a road and an empty officeWe are in Panjshir and our Resistance will continue. ~ Ahmad Massoud, 7:11 am est The Taliban issued a statement Monday claiming that they have taken control of Panjshir province,… | |
Kimberly Strassel nails it with a tweet from fraud Liz CheneyIn a series of tweets, the WSJ’s opinion columnist Kimberly Strassel wondered how Liz Cheney — an alleged conservative — could justify “a committee plan to rifle through the emails/voicemails/texts/calls… | |
Texas A&M follows the science, refuses to travel, following CDC’s adviceThe Director of the CDC said people should not travel over the Labor Day Weekend to help stop the spread of COVID. The student body of TAMU at Midnight Yell… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
|
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||
|
|||||
106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) BECKER NEWS
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
|
|
||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||
|
||||||||||||||
|
|||||
109.) STARS & STRIPES
|
110.) RIGHT & FREE
111.) UNITED VOICE
|
112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
‘Biden must not dishonor their grace or patriotism, for he has none.’
One of the most morally revolting talking points taken up by Democrats in their effort to deflect attention from President Joe Biden’s deadly incompetence in Afghanistan…
American voters want a full accounting of what happened.
This story was a total fake, but here’s what readers got instead of a correction.
‘It is not the Taliban that is holding this up – as much as it sickens me to say that – it is the United States government.’
Insurgent Conservatives
PO Box 8161 Greenwood, IN 46142
If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe here.
114.) WAKING TIMES
|
115.) DENNIS PRAGER
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|