Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday September 8, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 9.8.21
Good Wednesday morning.
Gov. Ron DeSantis will be the top-billed speaker at the 2021 Future of Florida Forum, the Florida Chamber of Commerce announced Wednesday.
The Future of Florida Forum, scheduled this year for Oct. 27-28, is an annual Chamber event focused on the long-term outlook of the state’s economy and business environment. The past few editions have homed in on ways to bring Florida’s economy into the Top 10 (if measured as a separate country).
In an announcement, the Chamber noted that Florida’s economy has begun to thrive again despite the continuing pandemic. DeSantis deserves a large share of the credit, the Chamber says, for “following the facts and not the fear” while navigating the state’s reopening.
“Under the strong leadership of Gov. Ron DeSantis, Florida’s momentum continues to move forward toward becoming the 10th largest economy in the world by 2030,” said Florida Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Mark Wilson.
“The actions taken by Gov. DeSantis have kept Florida open for business, Floridians safe, our economy moving and continuing to build our brand nationally as the Florida Model.”
At the Future of Florida Forum, DeSantis will speak directly to Florida’s business community about his vision for the state’s future.
The 2021 Florida Chamber Annual Meeting and Future of Florida Forum will be held at the Hyatt Regency Grand Cypress Orlando. DeSantis will be the distinguished lunch keynote on the first day.
He will be one of more than 80 notable speakers who will address the state’s business leaders during the two-day event focused on how business leaders are engaging in the Florida Chamber’s Six Pillars Framework and the 39 goals of the Florida 2030 Blueprint.
More details and registration information for the 2021 Future of Florida forum are available online.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@CruziChips: Texas won’t force a 12 yrs old to wear a mask, but they will force that same 12 yrs old to have a baby.
—@MaryEllenKlas: On Aug. 26, @GovRonDeSantis said antibody treatments have: “been politicized, particularly by a lot of national corporate media outlets, and it’s got to stop.” Now, @ChristinaPushaw wants you to compare COVID #s to a “Democrat-run State.” So, is it okay to politicize? Confused?
—@CarlosGSmith: LAWSUIT UPDATE: Judge (John) Cooper has officially been assigned our case in our lawsuit against the #DeSantis administration seeking public health records and transparency in COVID-19 data reporting. @FLCTRGA and I have asked for an immediate hearing and eagerly await a formal date!
—@OmariJHardy: I KID YOU NOT — Gov. DeSantis says that NFL players who test positive for COVID should still be able to play.
Tweet, tweet:
—@NikkiFried: Elect yourself a Governor who is honest and transparent about COVID-19 and the safe, free, lifesaving vaccine.
Tweet, tweet:
—@AngieNixon: Clickbait was good until the last episode. Y’all on here lying cause y’all don’t wanna admit y’all wasted time on that series. It literally spiraled out of control and jumped the shark at the end.
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
NFL regular season begins — 1; Bucs home opener — 1; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 6; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 6; Apple launch event for new iPhones — 6; Alabama at UF — 10; Dolphins home opener — 11; Jaguars home opener — 11; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 12; The Problem with Jon Stewart premieres on Apple TV+ — 22; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 23; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 23; MLB regular season ends — 24; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 25; World Series Game 1 — 38; ‘Dune’ premieres — 42; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 49; Florida TaxWatch’s annual meeting begins — 49; Georgia at UF — 52; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 55; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 55; The Blue Angels 75th anniversary show — 58; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 58; ‘Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 60; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 61; Miami at FSU — 66; ExcelinEd’s National Summit on Education begins — 71; FSU vs. UF — 80; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 84; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 93; ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 100; ‘The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 105; ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 108; NFL season ends — 123; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 125; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 125; NFL playoffs begin — 129; Super Bowl LVI — 158; Daytona 500 — 165; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 198; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 242; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 261; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 267; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 303; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 315; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 394; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 429.
“Florida Realtors scrap affordable housing amendment, look for legislative solution” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Affordable housing advocates are set to scrap a proposed constitutional amendment to protect affordable housing funds from sweeps for other purposes, instead opting to work with lawmakers to reach a consensus. Realtors is abandoning its attempt to put the question to Floridians whether to prevent the Legislature from raiding money meant for housing into the state’s general pool of cash. That comes after legislative leadership applied pressure on the group to end the campaign. The group will work with legislative leaders for a solution, including new homeownership opportunities targeted at front-line workers. Realtors President Cheryl Lambert said leadership has committed to working with the group to solve the housing crisis.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Tuesday Florida COVID-19 update: No deaths and 10,162 new cases, almost 53% vaccinated” via Michelle Marchante and David J. Neal of the Miami Herald — Florida on Tuesday reported to the CDC 10,162 more COVID-19 cases on Monday. The state also reported no new deaths. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,364,998 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 46,973 deaths. On average, the state has added 345 deaths and 16,364 cases to the cumulative total each day in the last seven days. About 11,548,538 eligible Floridians, 53.8% of the state’s population, had completed the two-dose series of Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna or have completed Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine.
“Ron DeSantis hopes to add Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline to monoclonal antibody arsenal” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis hopes more COVID-19 treatments, including Eli Lilly’s and GlaxoSmithKline’s antibody cocktails, will soon be readily available in Florida. The Governor has spent more than a month in a hard push to promote Regeneron’s monoclonal antibody treatment. Despite previously downplaying Eli Lilly’s version for not being as effective against the delta variant, DeSantis was more optimistic about the option as he spoke in St. Cloud. Florida is looking into how it could make those options readily available. As produced by Regeneron, monoclonal antibody therapy is a therapeutic available when a person at high risk for severe infection tests positive for COVID-19 or is exposed to the virus.
“DeSantis and the worst fallacy about vaccine skepticism” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — With the DeSantis’ response again under a microscope thanks to a big surge in cases and deaths in Florida, he has repeatedly offered curious comments about how all of this works. His most recent: suggesting that vaccinated people need not really be concerned about others choosing to remain unvaccinated. The reality for anyone who has truly digested the data and the realities of vaccination campaigns or a pandemic, though, is clear: It does have a substantial impact. The fact that DeSantis would go down that road in favor of justifying the decisions of the unvaccinated says a lot about where the Republican Party is on this issue.
Happening today — U.S. District Judge K. Michael Moore will hear arguments in a lawsuit challenging the ban on school mask mandates, alleging it violated laws designed to protect the rights of students with disabilities, 1 p.m., United States Courthouse, 400 North Miami Ave., Miami.
“COVID-19 is nation’s No. 1 cop killer, but many Florida officers still say no to vaccines” via Eileen Kelley and Lisa J. Huriash of the Orlando Sentinel — Even though COVID-19 is the No. 1 killer of cops in the country, lots of officers are refusing to be vaccinated against the virus. As of Friday, there have been at least 622 deaths in the U.S., according to the National Fraternal Order of Police. That’s more than one a day since the pandemic began. In Florida, 56 officers have died so far, including five from South Florida in one week. California has also suffered 56 deaths. Only Texas, with 143 deaths, has had more. But most agencies say vaccine mandates are not under consideration, including Coral Springs, which has no plans for mandates for any city employees, including police, even though they just buried one of their own.
“Florida universities shy from stronger COVID-19 rules. They won’t say why.” via Divya Kumar of the Tampa Bay Times — Repeatedly in recent days, university leaders have pushed aside calls for safety measures like mask mandates, stronger action to encourage vaccinations, or the ability to teach online temporarily. University officials say the state has legally tied their hands from taking stronger action. But they have declined to explain exactly what rules or laws prevent them from challenging the state as many school districts have. Although universities aren’t specific about the legal barriers that limit their options in tackling the virus, faculty leaders have an idea. They’ve pinpointed two factors that are likely at play — a new state law that bans vaccine passports and a May 3 executive order that formally suspended “all local COVID-19 restrictions and mandates.”
“Volusia County Councilman Fred Lowry ‘in the hospital wrestling with COVID-19’” via Mary Helen Moore of The Daytona Beach News-Journal — Volusia County Councilman Lowry is hospitalized with COVID-19, County Chair Jeff Brower announced Tuesday. “He is in the hospital wrestling with COVID-19. It’s been about three weeks now,” Brower said as Tuesday’s council meeting kicked off with Lowry’s chair empty for the second week. Lowry missed last week’s special meeting on the budget. He last attended a meeting on Aug. 17. Lowry, a 66-year-old registered Republican, is midway through his second four-year term on the Volusia County Council, representing Deltona, Enterprise, and parts of DeBary and Osteen.
— CORONA LOCAL —
“COVID-19 death toll reaches 2,237 among Duval County residents” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — The latest wave of COVID-19 infections raised the death toll among Duval County residents to 2,237 fatalities, with one-third of those deaths coming this summer when Northeast Florida became one of the nation’s most heavily hit regions. The surge is showing signs of being on the downside, but health officials are nervously looking ahead to the winter and hoping vaccinations will become more widespread by then to head off a repeat of last year’s post-holiday increase. “Vaccination is the only way we can hope to get out of this,” UF Health Jacksonville CEO Russ Armistead said Tuesday during a teleconference call with community leaders.
“Pasco schools stick with voluntary masks despite growing calls for action” via Jeffrey S. Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — After watching 13 school districts around Florida adopt strict mask requirements — despite the possibility of state sanctions — a growing number of Pasco County parents have wanted to know if their School Board would do the same. Several came to the board’s meeting Tuesday in Land O’Lakes to urge action. They got none, as the board listened to pleas but did not discuss the subject of masks beyond receiving their lawyer’s report about the current status of mask rules and lawsuits across the state. Superintendent Kurt Browning said he was reluctant to recommend a change in the district’s mask-optional policy. “We’re doing what our charge is to do, and that is to educate kids,” he said. “That is in spite of COVID.”
“After 13 colleagues die from COVID-19, Miami-Dade teachers union sets up vaccine pop-up” via Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — Thirteen unvaccinated Miami-Dade County Public School employees have died from COVID-19 since the 2021-2022 school year began on Aug. 23, including teachers. Now, United Teachers of Dade is hosting a vaccine pop-up Tuesday at Lillie C Evans K-8, 1895 NW 75th St. in Miami in hopes of encouraging school district employees and residents of Liberty City, Brownsville and the surrounding communities to get vaccinated. The pop-up will run from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and will offer all three vaccine options, the two-dose Pfizer and Moderna and the single-dose Johnson & Johnson.
“Orlando VA has the most COVID-19 cases in the U.S., despite decreased hospitalizations statewide” via Caroline Catherman of the Orlando Sentinel — The Orlando Veterans Affairs health care system as of Tuesday has more COVID-19 cases than any other VA in the nation, a week after it began caring for patients in a mobile intensive care unit. The system serves one of the highest veteran populations in the nation, about 125,000, with over 5,000 staff members, said spokesperson Heather Frebe. This large population combined with COVID-19’s fourth wave and a high number of at-risk patients brings the system’s active case count to 506 as of Tuesday. The Orlando VA health care system has also recorded the largest total number of COVID-19 cases of any VA, 7,167. There have been 151 known deaths, putting it at about 27th.
“COVID-19 patients drop further over weekend at Alachua County hospitals” via Danielle Ivanov of The Gainesville Sun — UF Health Shands CEO Ed Jimenez said there were 161 in the hospital on Tuesday, including five children, down significantly from the 197 there on Thursday. “My enthusiasm continues,” he said, calling the decrease great progress. However, the lower numbers do not necessarily mean an easier time for exhausted employees. UF Health had around 80 additional patients on Tuesday who had previously tested positive for COVID-19. He said they either stayed, still receiving treatment after no longer being infectious or returned to the hospital after going home, keeping staff extraordinarily busy. “It is something to pay attention to,” Jimenez said. “The second category really is something that we need to keep an eye out on — the lasting impacts of COVID.”
“No mask, no show: Broward Center will require negative COVID-19 tests for audiences, vaccines for staff” via Arlene Borenstein-Zuluaga of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — In one of the toughest public safety moves made by a South Florida destination this year, The Broward Center for the Performing Arts is requiring masks at all times for all of its partner venues including The Parker. Theatergoers must also provide a negative COVID-19 test result or proof they’ve been fully vaccinated. Vaccinations are also required for staff, volunteers and crew working performances. The new guest entry policies come on the heels of the delta variant’s spike in COVID-19 cases that bottlenecked South Florida hospital beds. However, the new guidelines defy DeSantis’ hard-fought wishes to avoid mask mandates and proof of vaccines at any establishment in the state, including cruise ships and schools.
“Duval School Board approves threshold to end mask mandate as campus COVID-19 cases pass 2,000” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — Superintendent Diana Greene said that after consulting with the Duval County Health Department and other local medical experts, the threshold that the district would need to meet to discontinue its current mask mandate is a “moderate” transmission rate. The health department defines the moderate transmission rate as a 5% to 7.99% positivity rate or 10 to 49.99 new cases per 100,000 persons in the past seven days. In Duval County, the transmission rate remains substantial both countywide and within the school community. According to Greene, Duval County is currently witnessing a rolling positivity rate of 13% to 14% to date, which would be considered “high” — two levels above where the district would need to land for the discontinuation to go into effect.
“FSU ‘disappointed’ that more fans did not wear masks at Sunday’s opener vs. Notre Dame” via Jim Henry of the Tallahassee Democrat — Florida State will continue to follow health protocols for the Seminoles’ second home football game of the season Saturday against Jacksonville State. The FSU administration also voiced its disappointment that the vast majority of fans did not wear a mask inside Doak Campbell Stadium at Sunday night’s opener against Notre Dame. “We were disappointed with the fact that a very low percentage of the fans, particularly our students, chose to wear masks,” Associate Athletics Director for Communications Rob Wilson said in a statement to the Democrat. “We will continue to work to educate our fans regarding the expectation that masks will be worn on campus and for all athletic events.”
— STATEWIDE —
“Odds increase for tropical system projected to pass over Florida this week” via Joe Mario Pedersen of the Orlando Sentinel — An area of interest out in the Gulf of Mexico, and forecast to pass over Florida this week, has improved odds of developing into the next tropical depression before landfall, the National Hurricane Center said. As of 2 p.m. Tuesday, the trough has a 30% chance of becoming the next tropical depression by Thursday and a 40% chance of doing so by Sunday, the NHC said. The system is expected to be met with resistance from “unfavorable” upper-level winds keeping the system from developing properly. If the storm were to develop into a tropical storm, it would be the 13th named storm of the season and take on the name Mindy.
“‘Pro-life’ DeSantis hasn’t committed to following Texas example on abortion” via Michael Moline of Florida Phoenix — The U.S. Supreme Court’s acquiescence in Texas’ de facto ban on abortions has given DeSantis another chance to burnish his “pro-life” bona fides ahead of next year’s gubernatorial election and a possible run for the presidency in 2024. It’s not clear whether he will take that chance. Last week, during a news conference, the Governor didn’t exactly pledge to follow Texas’ lead, as Senate President Wilton Simpson wants to do. But he seemed intrigued at the prospect. “I’m pro-life; I welcome pro-life legislation,” DeSantis said.
Happening today — The annual three-day Florida Governor’s Conference on Tourism begins. GC is the premier educational conference for the Florida tourism industry, with professionals, advertising agencies, travel experts, and state leaders examining the latest trends and opportunities for the industry. Registration begins at 2 p.m., Diplomat Beach Resort Hollywood, 3555 S Ocean Dr., Hollywood.
Assignment editors — Attorney General Ashley Moody will promote the law enforcement mentoring program Bigs in Blue, a part of Big Brothers Big Sisters of America. Joining Moody are Big Brothers Big Sisters Association of Florida CEO Dan Prinzing, Big Brothers Big Sisters of Miami President and CEO Gale Nelson, and retired Miami-Dade Schools Chief of Police Ian Moffett, 2:30 p.m., Big Brothers Big Sisters Carnival Center for Excellence, 550 NW 42nd Ave., Miami.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“$5K signing bonus among proposals DeSantis touts to recruit law enforcement personnel” via News4Jax — Law enforcement agencies nationwide have been having a hard time finding qualified candidates to fill vacancies in their departments. That issue extends to Florida, DeSantis acknowledged during a news conference Tuesday in Polk County. DeSantis and Moody announced three new policy proposals for next year’s Legislative Session to combat the issue and attract recruits. The proposals involve three separate programs, new officer signing bonuses, an academy scholarship program, and out-of-state relocation support. The signing bonuses would be a one-time $5,000 payment to sworn law enforcement officers who are new to the profession in Florida.
Happening today — Sens. Lauren Book, Jason Pizzo and Janet Cruz host a panel of experts to explore various facets of the pandemic, including Jared Moskowitz, former director of Floridas Division of Emergency Management; Alachua County Schools Superintendent Carlee Simon; Sarasota County School Board Chair Shirley Brown; critical care nurse Kevin Cho Tipton, small-business owner Jamaris Glenn; and Ed Montanaro, retired university professor, former state economist and director of the Office of Economic and Demographic Research. The virtual event begins at 6 p.m. Facebook Live link here.
“Tyler Sirois proposes tax-exempt rocket ships” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Rockets and the cargo they might lift into orbit would be tax-exempt when they’re launched from Florida, under a bill introduced by Rep. Sirois. “Zero-G, Zero Fee,” declares Sirois’ House Bill 65, filed last week. HB 65 would create a state and local sales tax exemption and other competitive incentives to give Florida more advantage when trying to entice aerospace companies to operate out of Florida. Florida may have the world’s premier launch center with the combined facilities of NASA’s Kennedy Space Center and Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. But competition is rising internationally and from several states, notably Virginia, Texas, California, New Mexico and Nevada.
Happening today — The Indian River County legislative delegation will meet: Sen. Debbie Mayfield and Rep. Erin Grall, 9 a.m., Indian River County Commission Chamber, 1801 27th St., Building A, Vero Beach.
Happening today — The Florida Public Service Commission meets to discuss electric, gas, water and telecommunications issues, 9:30 a.m., Betty Easley Conference Center, 4075 Esplanade Way, Tallahassee.
— 2022 —
DeSantis downplays 2024 rumors — DeSantis told reporters Tuesday that the rumors he will run for President in 2024 are “purely manufactured” and “nonsense.” Gary Fineout of POLITICO Florida reported that the comments come just a few days before the Governor’s scheduled appearance at a Nebraska Republican alongside several other rumored contenders for the 2024 GOP nomination. DeSantis, who is up for reelection next year, has so far avoided showing face in early presidential primary states. Still, he has made stops in several other states and courted donors who have pumped millions into his state-level political committee.
“Outlier? Poll shows voters still favor Charlie Crist over DeSantis” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A poll showing DeSantis trailing Crist suggests Floridians have turned on the Governor regarding mask-wearing. And while voters remain unhappy with DeSantis’ performance as Florida’s Governor, they dread the prospect he could run for President even more. If the election were held today with Crist as the Democratic nominee, he would take almost 54% of votes to the Republican incumbent’s 46%, with independents breaking for Crist by a 5-percentage-point margin. That’s a sizable lead outside the poll’s 3.1% margin of error, and more importantly, puts Crist well above the 50% mark. The same firm two weeks ago similarly found Crist up by a slightly wider 57%-43% margin.
Assignment editors — Crist continues on his GOTV (Get Out the Vaccine) tour, 1:30 p.m., Little Havana Community Health Center, Miami. RSVP to receive location at press@charliecrist.com.
Save the date:
“Miami Mayor on possible White House bid: I think people are ‘thirsting’ for a ‘next-generation candidate’” via Max Greenwood of The Hill — Miami Mayor Francis Suarez isn’t ruling out a potential presidential bid, saying he believes Americans are “thirsting” for a new generation of leadership in the White House. Asked in an interview on “The Carlos Watson Show” set to air Wednesday whether he would run for President, the Republican Mayor said that the prospects of a White House bid have become “more possible” since the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic and the stature that big-city Mayors have gained. “People know national Mayors a lot more than they did, you know, a generation ago, and so I think it becomes more possible,” he said.
Danielle Cohen Higgins racks up union endorsements for Miami-Dade Commission race — Cohen Higgins’ most recent union endorsement is UNITE HERE Local 355, which represents workers in airports, hotels, casinos, stadiums, and arenas across South Florida. Other recent backings came from South Florida AFL-CIO and Transport Workers Union Local 291, which currently operate under President Jeffrey Mitchell‘s leadership. “In this era of growing cynicism and disdain, Commissioners with Danielle Cohen Higgins’ attributes are critical, and we must find common ground and continue to move important issues forward,” Mitchell said in a statement. In December, Cohen Higgins was appointed to serve out Daniella Levine Cava’s term on the Commission representing District 8. She raised about $443,000 as of July.
“Drawing lines: Redistricting panel gets to work on County Commission, School Board boundaries” via Jim Thompson of Northwest Florida Daily News — Ten Walton County residents began work Wednesday on a math problem whose eventual answer will have 10 years of consequences. Those residents, appointed by the Walton County Board of County Commissioners and the Walton County Board of Education, are charged with reconfiguring the county commission and School Board electoral district boundaries to align with the latest federal census figures. As they began their work Wednesday, redistricting committee members got a broad look at the issues before them, starting with the fact that the county’s population has increased from 55,043 people in 2010 to 75,305 people in 2020 according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
— CORONA NATION —
“New ‘mu’ COVID-19 variant now found in 49 U.S. states” via Brandon Sapienza of MSN — Since being discovered in Colombia in January, the mu variant of COVID-19 has spread to nearly four dozen countries and has made its presence known in Hawaii and Alaska. It has been found in 49 states, with Nebraska being the only state not to have a mu variant case detected. Health officials believe mu is even more transmissible than the delta variant and can resist vaccines. California has reported the highest number of the latest variant with 384. A total of 167 of those cases were found in Los Angeles County.\
“Pediatric cases reach the highest point of pandemic” via Arielle Mitropoulos of ABC News — The U.S. reported 251,781 COVID-19 cases among kids during the week ending Sept. 2 — the highest week of pediatric cases since the pandemic began, according to the weekly report from the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association. After declining in the early summer, new cases among kids are rising “exponentially,” the organizations wrote, with the weekly figure now standing nearly 300 times higher than it was in June, when just 8,400 pediatric cases were reported over the span of one week. According to federal data, the rate of pediatric hospital admissions per 100,000 people is also at one of its highest points of the pandemic, up by 600% since the Fourth of July.
“Serving the most vulnerable, weary community health centers worry about COVID-19 vaccine booster shot demand” via Nada Hassanein of USA Today — As health centers across the country prepare to receive COVID-19 booster shots, many community health clinics serving vulnerable people are preparing for a slew of patients amid limited resources. Nationwide, community health centers serve about 30 million patients. Most are uninsured or on Medicaid, and about two-thirds live at or below poverty. About half are people of color, who disproportionately suffered throughout the pandemic. Experts say that the centers provide health care to underserved communities across the country and have been essential in vaccinating hard-hit populations and will continue to be key in ensuring the populations receive booster shots.
“The masked professor vs. the unmasked student” via Anemona Hartocollis of The New York Times — More than 1,000 colleges and universities have adopted vaccination requirements for at least some students and staff. In an indication of how political vaccination has become, the schools tend to be clustered in states that voted for Biden. But at some campuses, particularly in Republican-led states with high rates of contagion — such as Florida — vaccination is optional and mask-wearing, while recommended, cannot be enforced. Certainly, some professors are happy to go maskless. A smattering resigned in protest over optional mask policies. But the level of fear is so high that even at universities that do require vaccination and masks, like Cornell and the University of Michigan, professors have signed petitions asking for the choice to return to online teaching.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“COVID-19 resurgence clouds business travel rebound” via Alison Sider and Chip Cutter of The Wall Street Journal — Airlines and hotels had hoped that business travel would start to bounce back in the coming months. Those hopes are fading as the busy summer travel season peters out, and the spread of the Delta variant of COVID-19 postpones some companies’ plans to return to offices and resume in-person meetings and events. “I’d say it’s a pause, as compared to continued growth. That said, we understand why it’s paused,” Delta Air Lines Inc. DA Chief Executive Officer Ed Bastian said in an interview last week. Delta said U.S. corporate travel returned to about 40% of pre-pandemic levels this summer, and the airline was predicting it would climb to 60% by September.
“The U.S. expected an economic takeoff. It got a September slowdown.” via Eric Morath and Theo Francis of The Wall Street Journal — Earlier this summer, many economists saw the week of Labor Day as the moment when the economic recovery would kick into high gear. They expected that widespread vaccination would ease labor shortages. Schools and offices would reopen, which would mean a comeback for local businesses reliant on office workers. Instead, the rise of COVID-19’s Delta variant has the nation tapping the brakes. Businesses and consumers are reworking plans to adjust to renewed mask mandates, travel restrictions, event cancellations and delayed office reopenings. Consumers are pulling back on purchases and employers have slowed hiring.
“Jacksonville attorney: Volunteer lawyers needed nationwide to help COVID-19 eviction tsunami” via Steve Patterson of The Florida Times-Union — Jacksonville attorney Mike Freed has left his mark locally cultivating an annual series of marathons raising money for Jacksonville Area Legal Aid. Now he’s asking lawyers around the country to donate their time to help prevent a deluge of evictions rooted in the pandemic’s effect on jobs and incomes. “Sometimes, you have to give up your time without compensation for the greater good,” he said. Freed, an attorney at the Gunster law firm, used online messages to highlight a letter U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland signed last week asking lawyers to prevent an eviction tsunami. “ … [N]o matter where you live, lawyers and law students like you can apply your legal training and skills to help your community,” the letter reads.
— MORE CORONA —
“COVID-19 boosters are coming, but who will get them and when?” via Lauran Neergaard of The Associated Press — COVID-19 booster shots may be coming for at least some Americans, but already the Biden administration is being forced to scale back expectations. The initial plan was to offer Pfizer or Moderna boosters starting Sept. 20, contingent on authorization from U.S. regulators. But now administration officials acknowledge Moderna boosters probably won’t be ready by then — the FDA needs more evidence to judge them. Adding to the complexity, Moderna wants its booster to be half the dose of the original shots. Already the CDC is considering recommending the first boosters just for nursing home residents and older adults who’d be at the highest risk of severe disease if their immunity wanes — and to front-line health workers who can’t come to work if they get even a mild infection.
“What the Sturgis rally shows us about the delta variant” via Ashish K. Jha of The Washington Post — By bringing together hundreds of thousands of people, Sturgis helps answer a simple yet critically important question: Are we at a point in the pandemic where we can safely stage big-crowd events? The best data suggests that at least 75% of the entire South Dakota population has some degree of immunity against the virus. If it had gone off without big spikes in COVID-19 cases, it would have provided strong evidence that this level of population immunity, around 75%, would allow us to get back to the way we did things in 2019. But unfortunately, that’s not what happened.
— “Idaho hospitals begin rationing health care amid COVID-19 surge” via Rebecca Boone of The Associated Press
“North Carolina has 170 clusters in schools, centers” via The Associated Press — North Carolina health officials on Tuesday released a report showing 170 ongoing COVID-19 clusters in K-12 schools or child care settings. While the state Department of Health said it does not have data on the number of pupils quarantined statewide, districts without mask-wearing requirements are seeing substantially more spread of the virus and hours of lost learning among students. Union County Public Schools, which voted down a proposal last month to require mask-wearing in the state’s sixth-largest public school district, reported about one in 8 of the more than 41,000 students in the district were under quarantine, as of Friday. More than 5,200 students were placed under quarantine after 337 pupils tested positive for the virus last week.
“An Ohio judge reverses an earlier order forcing a hospital to administer ivermectin” via Becky Sullivan of NPR — A judge in Ohio has reversed an earlier emergency order that required a hospital to administer ivermectin to a COVID-19 patient against the hospital’s wishes. The anti-parasitic drug is most commonly used in the U.S. as a dewormer in animals. Federal agencies and medical associations alike have cautioned against the use of ivermectin to treat COVID-19, as there is little evidence it is effective. But prescriptions — and related calls to poison control centers — have skyrocketed in 2021 as right-wing media have hyped it as a treatment for COVID-19. A previous ruling by a different judge had ordered the hospital, West Chester Hospital near Cincinnati, to administer the drug to a patient after his wife brought suit over the hospital’s refusal.
“Americans face new restrictions in the Netherlands and other European countries” via Annabelle Timsit and Reis Thebault of The Washington Post — As of Saturday, U.S. travelers seeking to enter the Netherlands must be vaccinated or qualify for an E.U. exemption. Regardless of vaccination status, they have to quarantine 10 days — unless they test negative for the coronavirus on their fifth day in the country. As of Monday, they also have to bring a negative test result even if they are vaccinated or have recovered from COVID-19. As the hyper-contagious delta variant drives up coronavirus cases in the U.S., the Netherlands is the latest in Europe to downgrade the country’s sorting systems for travel restrictions. The E.U. recommended in August that member states reinstate “temporary restrictions on nonessential travel” from the U.S. and five other countries.
“Cuba will reopen its borders in November, hoping its vaccines will keep COVID-19 cases down” via Nora Gámez Torres of the Miami Herald — Despite an ongoing COVID-19 surge that has overwhelmed its health system, Cuban authorities will reopen the country’s borders starting in mid-November, saying that the country will have vaccinated 90% of its population by the beginning of the high season for tourism. COVID-19-related measures at airports will be relaxed and “focused on symptomatic patients and taking the temperature,” Granma, the Communist Party’s newspaper, said. Travelers will no longer be required to show a recent PCR test, and “vaccination certificates will be recognized,” the paper said. It is unclear if this means certificates are mandatory. The borders will start reopening “gradually” on Nov. 15. Authorities will also allow domestic tourism.
—TWENTY YEARS —
“‘Clear the skies’: Behind the unprecedented call to stop air travel on 9/11” via Alan Levin, Marilyn Adams and Blake Morrison of USA Today — Empty the skies. Land every flight. Fast. No one can be certain how difficult this task will prove. But for an air traffic control system sometimes paralyzed by a patch of bad weather, the order seems overwhelming. Almost 4,500 planes will have to land within hours, many at airports hundreds of miles from where they were headed. The situation could be worse. On this day, the weather is pristine over most of the nation. And the early hour means most West Coast flights haven’t even taken off. Still, the skies have never been emptied before, and controllers, pilots, and aviation officials have never faced such pressure. And no one knows how many terrorists might still be in the air.
“How 9/11 changed members of Congress” via Rhonda Colvin of The Washington Post — Some lawmakers who were on Capitol Hill on Sept. 11, 2001, remember it as a turning point that has served as a basis of their work today, from which committees they sit on to how they draft legislation. Others said it was an event that changed the course of their careers and ultimately led to them running for Congress. Sen. Susan Collins said her current focus on power-grid vulnerabilities and cybersecurity is something she traces back to 9/11. Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney spent years advocating for the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund Act.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Joe Biden surveys deadly storm damage in New York, New Jersey and talks climate change” via Aamer Madhani and Darlene Superville of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Pointing accusingly at climate change, President Biden toured deadly Northeast flood damage Tuesday and said he was thinking about the families who suffered “profound” losses from the powerful remnants of Hurricane Ida. Biden was in New Jersey and planned to visit New York City to survey the aftermath and call for federal spending to fortify infrastructure to better defend people and property from future storms in the region and far beyond. “Every part of the country, every part of the country is getting hit by extreme weather,” Biden said in a briefing at the Somerset County emergency management training center attended by federal, state and local officials, including New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy.
“Biden greeted, and jeered, on tour of Ida flood damage in Manville” via Mike Deak, Alexander Lewis and Cheryl Makin of My Central Jersey — When Biden was touring flood-ravaged Manville on Tuesday and consoling victims of the flood, most people welcomed him and were happy to see the leader of the free world in their neighborhood. But others were not as welcoming. Protesters congregated on South Main Street in Manville to greet the President with banners, some with obscene messages, and others jeered him as he walked the streets lined with belongings damaged in the flood. Hillsborough resident Edward Bellotti said he came to see Biden, who he called an “illegitimate President.” … “He hasn’t done the right thing once,” Bellotti said. “We’re hoping he’ll do the right thing here so we can just say ‘thank you’ and move on.”
“Amid surge in COVID-19 cases, Biden to outline plan for decreasing spread of delta variant heading into fall” via Eugene Scott of The Washington Post — Biden plans to give a speech Thursday outlining his plan to stop the spread of the delta variant as autumn approaches. “As he has said since Day One, his administration will pull every lever to get the pandemic under control,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday aboard Air Force One. “And on Thursday, he will lay out a six-prong strategy that will help us to do just that.” … “We’re going across the public and private sectors to help continue to get the pandemic under control. We’ll have more to preview on that, I would expect, in the coming days.”
“Biden escalates shutdown stare-down with hurricane aid, Afghan resettlement plea” via Caitlin Emma of POLITICO — The White House asked Congress on Tuesday to include hurricane relief and money for Afghan resettlement in a package to fund the government later this month, upping the ante in the latest shutdown scare. Those special requests will increase the political pain for any lawmaker planning to oppose the funding patch Congress needs to pass this month to keep government agencies open beyond Sept. 30. Top Democrats have also been flirting with the idea of adding action on the debt limit to that package. The combination would present a triple threat, daring GOP lawmakers to go on record in opposition to aid for disaster-hit communities, staving off a debt default that could throw financial markets into chaos and preventing a government shutdown.
“Cory Mills evacuates Americans from Afghanistan, says Biden admin wrongly wants credit” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Mills went to Afghanistan to successfully rescue Americans still on the ground in the war-torn nation. Now he’s upset President Biden’s administration wants credit. Mills, an Army combat veteran, spoke to Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade about what the news network billed the first ground evacuation of American citizens. He became involved with rescuing family through communications with U.S. Rep. Ronny Jackson, a Texas Republican. “Congressman Jackson and I know each other,” Mills said. “There’s a mutual respect there.”
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“When will Donald Trump answer the big 2024 question?” via Reid J. Epstein of The New York Times — Last week, Trump dodged a half-dozen opportunities to say whether he is planning to run for President once again in 2024. For months the best working theory had been that he would wait as long as possible. Trump is still very much invested in his own false claims about the 2020 election, pushing local Republican officials to audit their ballots and voting machines while trumpeting the phony idea that any election that Democrats win is a fraud.
“Trump builds ‘turnkey’ campaign operation for 2024” via Meridith McGraw of POLITICO — With a flurry of activity from his super PAC and hints dropped in private conversations with confidants and advisers, Trump is signaling a heightened interest in reclaiming the White House — and laying the necessary groundwork to do it. Since his November defeat, Trump and his allies have fanned the notion that he will seek a rematch in 2024. That’s nothing new — before his first bid for President, Trump feinted and flirted with runs for President for decades without pulling the trigger.
“Former Trump adviser Jason Miller briefly detained in Brazil as political tumult grips country” via Felicia Sonmez and Terrence McCoy of The Washington Post — Miller, a former senior adviser to Trump, said Tuesday that he was briefly detained and questioned by Brazilian authorities on a day in which the South American country inched yet closer to a full-blown constitutional crisis. In a statement, Miller, the chief executive of the social media site Gettr, said that he and other members of his traveling party were “questioned for three hours at the airport in Brasilia, after having attended this weekend’s CPAC Brasil Conference” before eventually being released to fly back to the United States.
— CRISIS —
“‘Keep your head on a swivel’: FBI analyst circulated a prescient warning of Jan. 6 violence” via Betsy Woodruff Swan of POLITICO — An FBI intelligence analyst warned days after the 2020 election that Stop the Steal rallies — one of which metastasized into the ransacking of the Capitol — could turn violent. The emailed warning from an analyst at the FBI’s school for bomb technicians circulated through the Bureau and to some of its state and local partners on Nov. 9, 2020. “As Joe Biden is declared the victor in the 2020 Presidential Campaign, chatter from the far-right indicates the belief the election was stolen from President Trump,” the analyst wrote, urging recipients to “keep your head on a swivel.” The message indicates that federal law enforcement officials saw ample signs before Jan. 6 that right-wing efforts to overturn the election results could result in violence.
“GOP effort to hamstring the Jan. 6 investigation enters a new phase” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — A group of 11 House Republicans sent letters to various technology company CEOs last week warning them against complying with subpoenas from the House Jan. 6 select committee. The letters were notable for a couple of reasons. One was that the signatories included a murderer’s row of fringe figures in the House GOP. The second was that the letter to Yahoo was incorrectly addressed to a former CEO who left the company in 2017, Marissa Mayer. The letters were, in many ways, emblematic of the GOP’s increasingly pitched and slapdash efforts to prevent the committee from gaining information about the historic attack on the U.S. Capitol.
“Kevin McCarthy is the O.J. Simpson of Jan. 6” via Dana Milbank of The Washington Post — “I will pursue as my primary goal in life the killer or killers who slaughtered Nicole Brown and Ron Goldman,” said Simpson, vowing to find the real killers. “We will run our own investigation,” said McCarthy, vowing to find the real insurrectionists. Now McCarthy embodies the corruption of truth that has consumed the GOP. He led the effort to kill an independent, bipartisan Jan. 6 commission negotiated by his own point man. He then marshaled Republican votes against the bill creating the House select committee to scrutinize the attack. Rest assured: He’s still seeking the real culprits, just like O.J.
“GOP’s promised Jan. 6 probe has one problem: No one wants it” via Sam Brodey, Matt Fuller and Asawin Suebsaeng of The Daily Beast — The day that Speaker Nancy Pelosi booted two Republicans from a panel to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, House Minority Leader McCarthy pledge the GOP would run its own investigation. More than six weeks later, and well into the official Jan. 6 committee’s own work, there’s no sign that McCarthy and the House GOP will make good on that pledge. For most of the GOP, those crickets sound good. Most Republicans would be happy to never talk about Jan. 6 again, and with the party increasingly focused on Biden’s handling of the end of the war in Afghanistan, some are baffled that McCarthy might lift any finger to remind the public of the low point of Trump’s presidency.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“With bulk of their agenda on the line, Democrats gird for battle over $3.5 trillion budget package” via Tony Romm of The Washington Post — The fate of Biden’s $3.5 trillion economic agenda hinges on work that’s slated to resume on Capitol Hill this week, as Democrats attempt to overcome their internal divisions and craft what could be the largest spending package in U.S. history. The next few days could prove daunting for top lawmakers in the party tasked with assembling a bill that can satisfy their past promises to remake broad swaths of the American economy. The work is set to unfold primarily in the House beginning Thursday when the chamber has scheduled a series of grueling marathon legislative sessions to toil over the finer details of its plans.
“Defense budget proposal pitches $600 million for Northwest Florida military projects” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Military projects in Northwest Florida may soon get a $600 million boost under a defense-spending bill OK’d by the U.S. House Armed Services Committee. Under the House’s version of the National Defense Authorization Act, roughly $359 million is slated for Eglin Air Force Base construction projects. Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz highlighted the passage Friday, saying the money will support facility upgrades and more. “Our community is proud of our contribution to the fight. With this historic financial commitment to Eglin, we are poised to attract even more military mission, strengthening our local economy and our nation’s defenses,” he said.
Staffing shuffle for Ted Deutch — Jason Attermann, who has served in Rep. Deutch’s office for eight years, is moving on this week, according to an announcement by Attermann Tuesday. Aviva Abusch will succeed Attermann in the press secretary role following Attermann’s final day on Thursday, Sept. 9. Attermann has served in several roles in Deutch’s office since joining the team in June 2013, such as a legislative aide, press secretary and policy adviser. Attermann says he’ll be stepping away from government for now but that his work with Florida “likely won’t end.” Abusch has worked as a legislative aide in Deutch’s office since Jan. 2020.
“How the rise of POLITICO shifted political journalism off course” via Perry Bacon, Jr. of The Washington Post — At its start, POLITICO rightly identified two shortcomings in political media: It was too slow and too dull. POLITICO pioneered the fast-paced coverage of Capitol Hill and campaigns that now thrives on Twitter and cable news. And it recognized that there is a real audience of people who love the behind-the-scenes machinations of politics. The POLITICO approach is probably fine if you cover parties and politicians who share some values and norms. The newly POLITICO-ized press spent much of the Barack Obama years acting as if his opposition was solely because he had liberal policy ideas.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“‘This guy was totally off his rocker’: DeSantis condemns massacre of Lakeland family” via Nathaniel Rodriguez of WFLA — DeSantis praised Lakeland police officers and Polk County deputies Tuesday for their work in arresting the suspect in the Lakeland massacre Sunday morning. This past Sunday, deputies got into a firefight with an armored gunman who authorities say murdered four people, including a baby, and injured an 11-year-old girl. “This is an outrageous crime,” DeSantis said. “This guy was totally off his rocker.” DeSantis said tragedies like the Lakeland massacre and the Surfside condominium collapse highlight the importance of supporting first responders and law enforcement agencies across the state. “These are the folks that you call upon, and they’re there for you time and time again,” he said.
“Woman running late for flight at Florida airport arrested for bomb threat, police say” via Angie Dimichele of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A Chicago woman was arrested Monday night after telling airport employees that her luggage on the plane had a bomb in it, according to Broward Sheriff’s Office. Marina Verbitsky, 46, of Chicago, and other people were running late for their flight from Terminal 3 at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport. Three airport employees told the group they could not board the plane because they were late. Verbitsky then claimed there was a bomb in her checked bag, deputies said. She was arrested. The plane, already moving on the runway, was evacuated, and Sheriff’s Office detectives and FBI agents found no threat, the Sheriff’s Office said.
“Labor Day Weekend Biscayne Bay fish kill highlights urgent need for action” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — A fish die-off has again struck Biscayne Bay, this time over Labor Day weekend near the 79th Street Basin in Miami Beach. While Miami-Dade crews and environmental groups are still working to quantify the number of dead marine life, the cause is assumed to be similar to that of past fish kills: severely depleted oxygen in the bay. “Early evidence indicates that the cause is a combination of extreme heat with numerous rainy days, which reduces oxygen levels in our waterways,” a city press note said. A Miami-Dade spokesperson said the county’s Department of Environmental Resources was aware of hundreds of dead fish on the bay’s eastern side along Miami Beach’s coastline.
“A year after expanding to South Florida, local TV streaming service Locast suspends operations” via Ron Hurtibise of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Locast, an internet service that streamed local broadcast TV signals to viewers in the stations’ coverage areas, has suspended its operations a year after expanding into South Florida. And it’s unclear whether it will ever come back. The nonprofit service, launched in January 2018, was being sued by ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX and their parent companies for copyright infringement. Last week, a federal judge in New York granted the networks’ motion to dismiss Locast’s defense that it was exempt from liability under U.S. copyright law.
“Buchholz High School all-clear after fourth bomb threat disrupts school day” via Gershon Harrell of The Gainesville Sun — Buchholz High School has received its fourth bomb threat, disrupting day-to-day school operations. Students were evacuated off-campus at about 1:30 p.m. Tuesday. Those who walk or drive to school left freely, while students who take a bus home were sent to the nearby Boys and Girls Club. No further details about the threats were provided because it’s an active investigation. After the third bomb threat, Alachua County Public Schools sent a letter to Buchholz High School students and families detailing the severity of the situation if the threats continue. According to the letter, a false bomb threat is a felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison and a $10,000 fine.
“$125K in double-red flag fines? 1,700 rescues? Swimmers have kept PCB busy this year” via Nathan Cobb of the Panama City News Herald — According to James Tindle, code enforcement manager of Panama City Beach, more than 250 people have been ticketed $500 each in the city so far this year for entering the Gulf of Mexico under double-red flags. His department began citing people for the offense in July 2020, when officials who were desperate to reduce water-related emergencies approved the ordinance to crack down on unruly beachgoers. Wil Spivey, beach safety director for Panama City Beach Fire Rescue, said that his lifeguards had rescued more than 1,700 swimmers so far this year. That is about 1,150 more than during all of 2020. He also said there had been five drownings this year in PCB — four less than during 2020.
“In Tampa Bay, it takes three minimum wage jobs to make rent, report says” via Margo Snipe and Emily L. Mahoney of the Tampa Bay Times — Rent increases across Tampa Bay this year aren’t just breaking records. They’re obliterating them. As of late August, asking rents for apartments have increased since the beginning of the year by 21.7%, according to data from CoStar Group, a real estate data firm, and aren’t showing signs of slowing. Both analyses include Pinellas, Hillsborough, Pasco and Hernando counties. Rents in Tampa Bay have been shooting up at an especially fast clip — with the highest increase in the first half of this year of any metro area in the country, CoStar Group found. But the situation here is hardly unique and exacerbates an issue that was already deeply impacting lower-income workers.
“Troubled Citrus County road builder, U.S. 19 contractor files bankruptcy” via Mike Wright of Florida Politics — D.A.B. Constructors, which abandoned $250 million in state and local highway projects when it suddenly shut down in July, announced Tuesday it had filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The Inglis-based road builder had been in business for 33 years, company President Debora Bachschmidt said in a statement. Its closing left 400 people, many living in Citrus and surrounding counties, suddenly without work. D.A.B. was the contractor on the much-maligned $31.8 million U.S. 19 widening project in Homosassa, which was more than a year behind schedule as of the business’s closing in late July. The company had similar scheduling issues with the Florida Department of Transportation on other state projects as well.
— TOP OPINION —
“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 COVID-19 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, Gov. 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. And it’s the opposite of what he says. COVID-19’s spread actually is a community problem, and solving it starts with vaccines.
— OPINIONS —
“Florida’s health care system is in pandemic crisis. Who will come to its rescue?” via Nicholas X. Duran of the Miami Herald — In the year and a half since its savage debut in the United States, the coronavirus pandemic has stretched our health care system nearly to the breaking point. Florida has a workforce shortage that started well before the pandemic and accelerated in the past 18 months because of it. Hospitals are contending with burnout among physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists and support staff. We’re seeing right now in the United States a health care system that is stressed to the brink in terms of its capacity and pushed to the limit in terms of how it can remain afloat money-wise.
“We don’t know what caused Surfside collapse, but we know something else that’s gone wrong” via the Miami Herald editorial board — The collapse of the Champlain Towers South in Surfside cracked open Florida’s condominium regulations, once the topic of interest of a few lawyers and association-board volunteers. In the months since the June tragedy, as committees and tasks forces were created to scrutinize our current laws, we have learned that Florida must do a better job of regulating condos and high-rises. “It’s a wild, wild West out there, with not a lot of accountability,” state Sen. Book said. Book, a Democrat, sits on the Broward County Condominium Structural Issues Committee created to make reform recommendations.
“Reinstate Lake-Sumter State College professor, whose dismissal stinks of union-busting” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — By nearly any measure, the pay for teaching at Lake-Sumter State College is awful. No wonder Lake-Sumter’s faculty voted overwhelmingly in 2018 to form a union over the opposition from the college administration. Now, one of the faculty’s lead contract negotiators is fighting to get his job back after being summarily dismissed in June. Dr. David Walton, who was fired by college President Stanley Sidor on what look to be flimsy grounds. If the board has any sense of fairness, it will give Walton his job back. Upholding his dismissal would send the wrong message to a faculty that already feels like it’s under attack for simply exercising its right to organize so they can earn a decent salary.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
It looks like Gov. DeSantis’ claim that the vaccine is a mere personal choice — without impact to others — is drawing rebuke from experts across the country, including Dr. Anthony Fauci.
Also on today’s Sunrise:
— Meanwhile, Broward and several other school districts have mounted a new legal challenge against the state’s mask mandate.
— DeSantis announced a three-part proposal to recruit law enforcement but took the opportunity to criticize those calling for police reform.
— That hit a nerve with groups like the Tallahassee Chapter of the NAACP saying it’s the Governor’s own rhetoric that’s making it hard to recruit those who want to serve.
— Imagine being a health care reporter during a pandemic; we hear from one looking ahead to the 2022 Legislative Session. On the Sunrise Interview is Christine Sexton, a returning health care reporter for Florida Politics.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Florida State-Notre Dame football game attracts massive TV audience” via Jim Little of the Tallahassee Democrat — Florida State’s showing against Notre Dame Sunday night at Doak Campbell Stadium was a win-win for the Seminoles. For starters, FSU drew plenty of praise for its effort in the 41-38 overtime defeat. While the program and fans will never be satisfied with moral victories, it was one of the Seminoles’ best and most enjoyable performances in years. FSU rallied from an 18-point deficit in the fourth quarter, forced overtime with a field goal in the final minute and nearly knocked off a Top-10 team before an energized crowd of 68,316 at Doak Campbell Stadium and national television audience on ABC.
“The ballad of Omar Little, Michael K. Williams’s enduring role” via Travis M. Andrews of The Washington Post — Omar Little was portrayed by Williams, who was found dead in his apartment on Monday. As tributes to the 54-year-old actor poured out on Twitter, one thing was clear: It wasn’t only the characters in “The Wire” who knew Omar simply by his first name. Nearly everyone in the real world did, too. “I’ll never forget Omar,” tweeted author William Gibson. “Omar might be the best character of all time,” tweeted Rep. Jamaal Bowman. Portraying a murderous stickup man wasn’t necessarily the most natural fit for Williams. On the first day of filming the show, he was confused by Omar’s iconic shotgun.
“Publix is opening its first store in Kentucky” via Bernadette Berdychowski of the Tampa Bay Times — Publix Super Markets is heading to Kentucky, the grocer announced Tuesday. The Lakeland-based supermarket chain signed a lease for its first store in the Bluegrass State in Louisville. Publix is now operating in eight states, with the majority of its locations still in Florida. Publix began its expansion outside of Florida in the 1990s when it opened stores in Georgia and later South Carolina and Tennessee. But that accelerated in 2014 when the grocer entered North Carolina. “Moving into Kentucky is a natural progression for our company,” said Publix CEO Todd Jones in a statement. “We are excited to serve and be a part of this vibrant community.”
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Best wishes to former U.S. Rep. Mark Foley, former Sen. Anitere Flores, Rep. Thad Altman, former Rep. Ed Narain, former St. Petersburg City Councilman Jeff Danner, former Rep. Karen Castor Dentel, and Sean Phillippi.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Good Wednesday morning! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,193 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
⚡ A powerful earthquake struck near the Pacific resort city of Acapulco, causing buildings to sway 200+ miles away in Mexico City. The latest.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Companies are hiring chief medical officers and consulting firms are adding pandemic practices as American business adapts to COVID’s long haul, Axios business editor Kate Marino reports.
- In the absence of a federal mandate on vaccines, companies are trying to find their way through a combination of government data, partnerships with hospitals and universities, and outside consultants.
What’s happening: Consulting firms are evolving and adding practices to focus on remote work strategy, workflow technology and employee burnout.
Case in point: EY appointed Susan Garfield to the newly created position of chief public health officer last December. Garfield has worked in public health and life sciences for 25 years.
- She and her team advise clients on getting ready for the next health catastrophe.
Another example: Wells Fargo is in the process of recruiting its first chief medical officer.
- Amtrak has been working with George Washington University on its pandemic response since August 2020.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Most of today’s tech giants are run not by their founders, but by a new breed of successor CEOs tasked with holding true to the mission while continuing to pump up growth, writes Axios managing editor Scott Rosenberg, who has been covering the web for 27 years.
- Why it matters: Silicon Valley has long embraced a “founders know best” philosophy. But eventually, successful founders get old and tired and rich — and lose interest in the meetings, the management messes, and the sheer hard work of running a company.
The rundown:
- Amazon founder Jeff Bezos handed the reins to new CEO Andy Jassy in July. Bezos remains chairman, and has been busy visiting the edge of space and founding a new “fountain of youth” biotech startup.
- Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin continue to own a controlling share of Google and its holding company, Alphabet, and sit on its board. Both stepped back from day-to-day responsibilities in 2019, leaving the company under CEO Sundar Pichai’s command.
- Apple founder Steve Jobs died back in 2011 (the tenth anniversary of his passing is next month), leaving Apple in the hands of Tim Cook. Cook has brought the firm to new heights of profitability and power.
- Microsoft founder Bill Gates stepped down as CEO in 2000, left the company’s full-time employ in 2008, resigned as board chairman in 2014 and left the board last year. Satya Nadella took over from Gates’ successor, Steve Ballmer, in 2014 and has led a renaissance in profile and valuation.
That leaves Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg as the last founder standing atop any of tech’s five trillion-dollar giants.
- Facebook is the youngest company in the bunch. Zuckerberg, 37, is the youngest of the founders.
- His enthusiasm for running Facebook has shown little sign of lagging.
In the next tier down in size and valuation, some tech firms still have founders at the helm (Marc Benioff at Salesforce). Others from a previous generation (Oracle’s Larry Ellison, Adobe’s John Warnock) have stepped back.
60% of college students were women, an all-time high, and 40% were men at the end of the 2021 academic year, The Wall Street Journal’s Doug Belkin reports (subscription):
- “U.S. colleges and universities had 1.5 million fewer students compared with five years ago, and men accounted for 71% of the decline.”
- “This education gap, which holds at both two- and four-year colleges, has been slowly widening for 40 years.”
What’s next: In the next few years, if the trend continues, two women will earn a college degree for every man, Douglas Shapiro of the National Student Clearinghouse told The Journal.
Composite of two images. Photo: NASA/JPL-Caltech via AP
The Mars rover completed its first sample grab — a core slightly thicker than a pencil, from a briefcase-size rock nicknamed “Rochette,” NASA announced.
- During Perseverance’s first sampling attempt last month, the unexpectedly soft rock crumbled, AP reports. Flight controllers found harder rock for the second try.
The rover has 40+ sample tubes. Future spacecraft will collect the specimens and deliver them to Earth a decade from now.
President Biden — on a tour of New Jersey and New York damage from Ida, which killed 50 people in six Eastern states — warned in Queens after walking past buildings with water-level marks high on their walls:
[W]e got to listen to the scientists and the economists and the national security experts. They all tell us this is code red; the nation and the world are in peril. And that’s not hyperbole. That is a fact.
They’ve been warning us the extreme weather would get more extreme over the decade, and we’re living it in real time now.
Biden, saying his climate infrastructure plans would create “good-paying jobs,” added that fires in the West “sent smoke all the way to the Atlantic.”
- “The storm in the Gulf, as you’ve now figured out, can reverberate 10 states away … devastating industries all over America.”
The World Health Organization is keeping up the pressure on wealthy nations not to hoard vaccines.
- “Less than 2% of adults are fully vaccinated in most low-income countries compared to almost 50% in high‑income countries,” the WHO says.
- “These countries, the majority of which are in Africa, simply cannot access sufficient vaccine to meet even the global goals of 10% coverage in all countries by September.”
Cover: One Signal Publishers
The first Miss America Pageant was 100 years ago today, on the boardwalk of Atlantic City, N.J.
- “Atlantic City’s Inter-City Beauty Contest” was started by local businessmen to extend the shore tourism season past Labor Day, Miss America says. The winner was crowned “Golden Mermaid.” In 1922, the Boardwalk contest became “Miss America!”
The Washington Post’s Amy Argetsinger is out this week with “There She Was,” a history of Miss America:
How had this pop-culture relic of the 1920s survived so far past its natural shelf life? The answer seemed to lie with the women who competed for its crown … The women’s movement had set out to vanquish Miss America — and ended up accidentally resuscitating it instead.
Mark Cuban, the entrepreneur and Dallas Mavericks owner, has purchased a stunning set of drawings of the World Trade Center — and is giving them a permanent home in New York by donating them to the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum.
- The drawings — dating to 1963, ahead of the 1973 dedication — are by the late architectural illustrator Carlos Diniz (den-EEZ), known for large scale, story-telling drawings.
Above: the “Superman View.”
- After the artist’s family offered the WTC drawings for sale, Cuban gifted them to the Smithsonian ahead of Saturday’s 20th anniversary of 9/11.
- “It strikes an emotional chord with every American,” Cuban told me. “I wanted the actual drawings to be where any American can see them, and the Smithsonian was the right home.”
World Trade Center blueprints … WTC timeline … 9/11 Memorial & Museum.
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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
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16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Chicago surpasses 2019 murder and shooting numbers after violent weekend
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Biden’s Senate bias rankles the House
DRIVING THE DAY
A SCOOP ON THE TRUMP REVENGE FRONT: Marc Caputo and Alex Isenstadt report that DONALD TRUMP is set to endorse Wyoming attorney HARRIET HAGEMAN in her expected primary against GOP Rep. LIZ CHENEY, the former president’s top target in his attempt to purge the Republican party of his fiercest critics. Caputo and Isenstadt call it “the most important political endorsement yet in Trump’s post-presidency,” while noting that not too long ago Hageman was a staunch supporter of Cheney. As of Tuesday night, Hageman “still had a photo of the two of them together on [her] website.”
BIDEN’S SENATE BIAS COLLIDES WITH RECONCILIATION: On Tuesday, Rep. RICHARD NEAL (D-Mass.), the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, released a major batch of legislation that he wants stuffed in the Dems’ $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill, including proposals on family and medical leave, retirement, child care, trade, elder care, nursing and an expansion of Medicare to include dental, hearing and vision coverage. Progressives cheered.
But in no time, a source close to the negotiations reached out to us to dampen the celebration on the left: “Neither the White House or Senate Dems approved the Ways & Means package released today. Negotiations are ongoing.”
It is the latest example of a frequent complaint from House staffers: that Biden and his White House have a Senate bias.
From the top down, the White House is stuffed with Senate veterans. It starts, of course, with JOE BIDEN (36 years) and VP KAMALA HARRIS, who served four years in the Senate but with the current 50-50 split plays a crucial role as the tiebreaker giving the Dems a majority. The Senate bent extends to their closest aides. RON KLAIN, ANITA DUNN, LOUISA TERRELL, JAKE SULLIVAN and REEMA DODIN, to name just a few, are all former Senate staffers. STEVE RICCHETTI is also a Senate guy: he was the executive director of the DSCC and later BILL CLINTON’s liaison to the Senate.
There are, of course, West Wing aides with House experience: Klain did a stint as legislative director for then-Rep. ED MARKEY (D-Mass.), SHUWANZA GOFF is a well-respected former aide to Majority Leader STENY HOYER (D-Md.), and top Biden adviser CEDRIC RICHMOND was a congressman himself. But the Senate is the most common launch pad for service in this White House.
House complaints about the tilt toward the Senate have been apparent all year, but it’s now becoming a major source of angst among House staffers trying to hammer out the reconciliation bill.
Other examples:
— The White House has sided with Sen. BERNIE SANDERS, who’s pushing to expand Medicare benefits, over Speaker NANCY PELOSI, who thinks health care priority no. 1 should be shoring up Obamacare.
— On Tuesday, we reported that the White House has sided with the Senate’s framework for paid leave over Neal’s just-released version.
— On prescription drug pricing reform, insiders are looking to language being crafted by Senate Finance Chair RON WYDEN (D-Ore.) rather than using the House’s preferred version, H.R. 3.
The White House’s love and attention for senators is partly driven by necessity: the upper chamber’s 60-vote threshold makes senators more high-maintenance partners. It’s not unusual for the House to get rolled, and it’s not party-specific (House GOP members often whined when Republicans controlled Washington).
But there are lots of reasons for the House to feel snubbed by Biden:
— The Covid relief bill originated in the Senate with hand-holding from the White House. And a measure to boost competitiveness with China was crafted by the Senate with the support of the White House (it’s now stalled in the House).
— The White House worked almost exclusively with the Senate to craft the bipartisan infrastructure bill, infuriating House Democrats like Transportation Chair PETER DEFAZIO (D-Ore.).
— The low point in relations between House Dems and the White House came earlier this summer over the expiration of the eviction moratorium. House Dems were blindsided by Biden’s refusal to extend the moratorium unilaterally. Pelosi then scrambled to pass legislation to extend it but couldn’t secure a majority — a rare defeat for her. (Biden then acted on his own but the Supreme Court blocked his extension.)
— While Biden seems especially adept at meeting the demands of needy senators, like Sanders and JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.), he’s been less successful managing House moderates like Rep. JOSH GOTTHEIMER (D-N.J.), who threatened to derail the budget vote, and Rep. STEPHANIE MURPHY (D-Fla.), who still defied Biden, even after a one-on-one phone call with the president.
When Biden and Pelosi did finally resolve the moderate revolt in the House, it only served to strengthen the Senate’s hand: they promised Gottheimer that the House reconciliation bill had to be crafted to pass the Senate.
The White House’s tilt toward the Senate has become so blatant that even some Senate Dems have started looking for easy ways to mollify the House. Senate aides told us they were surprised to read in Playbook how far along Neal’s family and medical leave bill was. They say they will now likely hand the House chairman a win by embracing the outlines of his plan rather than one written by Sen. KIRSTEN GILLIBRAND (D-N.Y.).
Good Wednesday morning, and thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY:
— 10 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 11:20 a.m.: Biden will deliver remarks on labor unions with Labor Secretary MARTY WALSH in attendance in the East Room.
— 2:45 p.m.: Biden will receive a briefing from the White House Covid-19 Response Team.
HARRIS’ WEDNESDAY:
— 9:05 a.m. EDT: The vice president will depart D.C. en route to Oakland, Calif.
— 12:40 p.m. PDT: Harris will attend an event for Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM in San Leandro, Calif.
— 2:30 p.m. PDT: Harris will depart California to return to D.C.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI, Agriculture Secretary TOM VILSACK and NEC Director BRIAN DEESE will brief at 2 p.m.
THE HOUSE and THE SENATE are out.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
— The White House’s plan to deal with the end of September government funding deadline became clearer Tuesday. Biden asked Congress for billions of dollars in “urgent” funding for natural disasters — like Hurricane Ida — and Afghanistan refugee resettlement. And he wants the money attached to legislation to keep the government open past Sept.30, effectively daring Republicans to vote against aid for Louisiana and New Jersey and the Afghan evacuees some of them have championed. CNN’s Betsy Klein, Ella Nilsen, Priscilla Alvarez, Nikki Carvajal and Manu Raju
— Alex Thompson goes inside the CIA’s “least covert mission,” the agency’s new social media campaign to boost its image: “The team has harnessed social media tropes and hashtags including Girl Boss-y posts touting ‘Women Crush Wednesday,’ #KnowYourValue, pumpkin spice lattes, cat photos, #TuesdayTrivia, and a recurring ‘Humans of CIA’ series modeled on the popular ‘Humans of New York’ photography project that went viral just over a decade ago.” POLITICO
— From 30,000 feet, David Siders looks at how a series of crises this summer — Covid, Afghanistan, wildfires in the West and Hurricane Ida in the East — has Biden confronting a make-or-break next few months. POLITICO
— On Thursday, Biden will present a new plan to curb the pandemic: “a six-pronged strategy intended to fight the spread of the highly contagious coronavirus Delta variant and increase U.S. COVID-19 vaccinations.” Reuters’ Steve Holland and Jeff Mason and Nandita Bose
— First lady JILL BIDEN is headed back to teaching in person at Northern Virginia Community College. AP’s Darlene Superville
— What the White House is reading: “The U.S. Expected an Economic Takeoff. It Got a September Slowdown,” by WSJ’s By Eric Morath and Theo Francis
CONGRESS
Here are some key details from the NYT’s Jonathan Weisman, Alan Rappeport and Jim Tankersley’s take on Dem resistance to tax increases in the reconciliation bill:
— Former Sen. HEIDI HEITKAMP (D-N.D.) was “recruited” to fight an inheritance tax hike proposal “by the Democratic former senator-turned-superlobbyist JOHN BREAUX.”
— “Lobbyists expect the top individual income tax rate to return to 39.6 percent.”
— The corporate income tax, which was lowered from 35% to 21% under Trump, will likely not be raised to Biden’s proposed level of 28%. Betting is on a hike to about 25%.
— “Capital gains tax rates are expected to rise somewhat.”
— Some Democrats are skeptical of Biden’s plan for the U.S. to be a part of a global corporate minimum tax agreement.
— The IRS enforcement proposal cut from the infrastructure bill is likely to make it into the reconciliation bill.
— The carried interest loophole, a Chamber of Commerce priority, may once again survive efforts to close it.
— Warning shot from Rep. DON BEYER (D-Va.): “No one wants to throw the House away. We’re all mindful of our frontline candidates.”
The latest leak from Manchin-world has the senator demanding a reconciliation bill no larger than $1.5 trillion. Interesting stuff but unless he goes public with a number or specific policy demands it doesn’t mean all that much yet. Axios’ Hans Nichols
Encryption used on devices that are subject to the Jan. 6 commission’s recent records requests could be a problem for the panel’s investigators. POLITICO’s Nicholas Wu
TALIBAN TAKEOVER
— The fate of evacuees in Afghanistan blocked from leaving an airport in Mazar-e-Sharif remained unresolved Tuesday as Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN said the administration was negotiating with the Taliban to allow the plane loads of Afghans to take off. AP’s Matthew Lee, Ellen Knickmeyer and Robert Burns
— The Taliban announced a caretaker government composed mostly “of senior figures who served in similar roles decades ago, a sign that the group’s conservative and theocratic core remains largely unchanged.” Several of the new leaders “are listed by the United States and United Nations as global terrorists.” NYT’s Jim Huylebroek and Matthieu Aikins
POLITICS ROUNDUP
Alex Isenstadt writes in: Former Vice President MIKE PENCE is slated to host a fundraiser tonight for Indiana Sen. TODD YOUNG. The event, which has so far raised $150,000, comes ahead of a weekend fundraiser that Pence is holding for Nebraska Rep. DON BACON. Pence is also scheduled to raise money next week for Virginia gubernatorial candidate GLENN YOUNGKIN.
— “South Dakota governor orders restrictions on abortion meds,” by AP’s Stephen Groves
— “Abbott orders third special session to address redistricting, vaccine mandates,” by Austin American-Statesman’s Madlin Mekelburg:
— “Texas GOP bets on hard right turn amid changing demographics,” by AP’s Will Weissert and Paul J. Weber
THE PANDEMIC
— ”U.S. Reaches 75% of Adults With at Least One Vaccine Dose,” by Bloomberg’s Josh Wingrove
— “Flu season is coming fast and could be miserable, studies warn,” NBC
PLAYBOOKERS
Reps. Tom Malinowski (D-N.J.), Mike Kelly (R-Pa.), Jim Hagedorn (R-Minn.) and Alex Mooney (R-W.Va.) are under investigation by the House Ethics Committee.
Chuck Schumer, speaking at a press conference in New York on Tuesday, said, “From Archie Bunker to LL Cool J to Awkwafina, Queens literally has it all.” He also hailed the borough’s “arepas, vindaloo, moussaka, carbonara, and Guinness.”
Monica Lewinsky said Bill Clinton “should want to apologize” to her.
Donald Trump will spend the evening of the 20th anniversary of 9/11 providing color commentary on the Evander Holyfield vs. Vitor Belfort boxing match.
Jason Miller had some trouble leaving a CPAC conference in Brazil.
Ron DeSantis said talk of him running for president is “purely manufactured” and “nonsense.”
James Comer, the top Republican on the House oversight committee, quoted a New York art adviser saying the prices of Hunter Biden’s paintings are “insulting to the art ecosystem.” Comer called on his panel to investigate.
Britney Spears’ father, Jamie Spears, petitioned to end the 13-year-old conservatorship that’s drawn international outrage, including among some members of Congress.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The University of Chicago Institute of Politics announced its fall fellows: Catherine Bertini, Ertharin Cousin, Tony Fabrizio, Janice Jackson, Mitch Landrieu, Russell Moore and Lotfullah Najafizada.
— Mosaic Strategy Group and Talavera Strategies are merging and appointing Ginette Magaña Salas as a partner. She is president and founder of Talavera Strategies and is an Obama White House alum.
— Joel Bailey is joining BGR Group as a VP in the health and life sciences practice. He most recently was chief of staff to Rep. Jimmy Panetta (D-Calif.).
— Alethea Group has hired Lee Foster to be SVP, Nina Jankowicz to be director of external engagement and Kate LaVail as VP of impact. Foster previously was with FireEye, Jankowicz is a global fellow at the Wilson Center, and LaVail most recently was senior director of performance and intelligence for McDonald’s global impact function.
— Hannah Lindow is now head of policy comms at Cruise. She previously was comms director for Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.).
TRANSITIONS — Ilyse Hogue is joining Purpose, a social impact organization, as president. She previously was president of NARAL. … Amy Hasenberg is now deputy comms director for Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.). She previously was deputy comms director for the House Oversight GOP. … Stephen DeMaura is now VP in Targeted Victory’s corporate practice. He most recently was a senior director at Walmart and is a Carly for America alum. …
… Bill McQuillen is joining Invariant’s public affairs and comms practice. He most recently was an EVP and Washington earned media lead at Burson Cohn & Wolfe, and is a Bloomberg alum. … Rachel Gantz is now media relations adviser at the Electric Power Research Institute. She previously was comms director at the National Pork Producers Council. … The Messina Group is acquiring Segal Communications, Sarah Segal’s consumer tech and lifestyle firm, expanding TMG’s West Coast presence.
WEEKEND WEDDINGS — Carly Hagan, a Fox News alum soon to be director of strategic comms and publicity for MediaDC/Washington Examiner, and Grant Brogan, a realtor in D.C., got married Sunday evening in Charleston, S.C. They were high school sweethearts in East Lansing, Mich., and dated long distance for five years before reuniting in D.C. in 2019. Pic
— David Tafuri, a partner at Arent Fox and a State Department alum, and Anastasia Vakula, a Ukrainian model, got married Sunday at Oatlands Plantation in Leesburg, Va. Pic … Another pic … SPOTTED: Fox News’ Bret Baier, Rep. Michael Waltz (R-Fla.), Qubad Talabany, Suzanne Kianpour, Tom Davidson, Damon Wilson, Vinay Chawla, Jonathan Peccia, John Sandweg and Nelson Peacock.
— Molly Lowe, COS for Rep. Mark Amodei (R-Nev.), and Dante Cutrona, COS for Rep. John Joyce (R-Pa.), got married over Labor Day weekend at the Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul in Philadelphia with a reception after at the Union League. Pic … SPOTTED: Rep. John Joyce (R-Pa.), former Rep. Ryan Costello (R-Pa.), Madison Smith and Jason Pray, Rebecca Keightley, Ian and Emily Hytha Foley, Natalie and Mark McLaughlin, Elle Ciapciak and Ian Whitson, Josh Brown, Brian Looser, Logan and Cody Tucker, Amy Surber Eklem, Hannah Anderson, Andrew Furman, Ken Brooke, Stephanie DeMarco, Courtney Eubanks, Ryan Dierker and Katelyn Williams, Patrick Rooney, Brandon Leggiero, Bill Hibbs, Mike Stober, Jess Cameron, Claire Benjamin DiMattina, Tara Robertson, Whitney Mello, Marisa Kovacs, and Sarah Fagin Cutrona.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — John Caddock, legislative director for Rep. Alex Mooney (R-W.Va.), and Kate Caddock, federal affairs manager at the Foundation for Government Accountability and a Mark Meadows alum, welcomed Cecilia Kendall Caddock last Tuesday. Pic … Another pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) (8-0) … Rep. Mike Simpson (R-Idaho) … Purple Strategies’ Steve McMahon … BerlinRosen’s Jonathan Rosen … Richard Cullen … Sharon Páez of Potomac Waves Media, Shatter and Hilltop Public Solutions … Zack Ford … POLITICO’s Jeremy White … Axios’ Alayna Treene … Alexis Marks Mosher of Apple … Gabby Deutch … Charlotte Ivancic … Andrea Hoffman … Jaime Lennon … Mike Danylak … Will Batson … Ali Pardo of the House GOP Conference … Cheddar’s J.D. Durkin … Jillian Harding … Jess Tocco of A10 Associates … Carey Hickox … Michael Johns … Lenore Cho … former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis … former Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.) … Scripps’ Samantha Osborne Reynolds … former NEC Director Al Hubbard … Michael Pratt … NBC’s Maura Barrett
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: California Is Probably Too Stupid to Recall the Tyrant Newsom
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Wednesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. My free time is spent adapting Swan Lake for Jean-Claude Van Damme and Charles Barkley.
We look westward for our kickoff discussion today, to my once-beloved California. I say “once-beloved” because the California that brings on bouts of fond reminiscence no longer exists. Sadly, I remain deeply skeptical that it will ever make a return.
As we get closer to the recall election in the Golden State, the eternal west coast weirdness that I miss makes it too difficult to call. I still have a lot of conservative friends who are active in California politics and they all seem to be cautiously optimistic. If you put a gun to my head right now and asked for a prediction I would say that Newsom survives. Then I’d tell you that we really could have done that without the gun.
My RedState colleague Jennifer Oliver O’Connell is in California and has an update on a lot that’s going on leading up to the event.
I wrote last week that Newsom and his team were nervous about a big Latino turnout for the recall because they are no longer a reliable Democratic voting bloc. That was so early September though. Yesterday, Axios cited a poll saying that Latinos were opposed to the recall. On the same day, however, The New York Times lamented the fact that so many Latinos are sitting this one out.
Nobody knows what’s going on.
Newsom is getting a little help from the top of the party, or what is meant to be anyway. Matt wrote yesterday that Joe Biden will go to California while everything is crumbling around him in an effort give Newsom an assist with the faithful. This will follow a trip by our rarely seen vice-president, which is generating a laugh or two:
From the outside, it may seem absurd that the thoroughly beleaguered Biden could help Newsom right now. It might be in any other state. California, however, marches to the beat of a drummer that the rest of the country will never meet. Things are so nonsensical there that Kamala Harris was able to rise to power. As soon as Democrats from other places in America got to know her it took them about 14 seconds to realize that they couldn’t stand her.
So throw out any ideas you may have about how things should work out.
What will probably save Newsom is the fact that the Democrats are the real racists in America. They are absolutely apoplectic over the thought of Larry Elder becoming governor. Nothing terrifies a Democrat more than a Black Republican. The party’s racist roots will probably change enough hearts and minds to keep Newsom in office.
This is one I’d love to be wrong about though.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
Me: Pathetic Mask Nazi Prof Whines About ‘Emotional Hellscape’ of Unmasked Students
‘Do I Have to Sue?’ Joe Rogan Blasts CNN for ‘Making Sh*t Up’ About His COVID Treatment
Your Labor Day Weekend Mass-Shooting Round-Up
‘THIS Is CNN’: Dr. Fauci Gets a Complete Pass Following Bombshell Report on Wuhan Research
Biden Immigration Policies Becoming Trump’s Second Term
Satanists Claim Their Religious Rights Are Being Denied in Texas Because They Can’t Kill Babies
Let Them Eat Salami: Biden Marks Labor Day By Handing Out Sandwiches to Union Members
SHOCKER: 9/11 Masterminds Finally Go on Trial—20 Years After the Attack
The Real ‘Structural Racism’ Is In America’s Union-Run Schools
Townhall Mothership
Weak tea, I say! Dr. Scott Atlas, Others Throttle Bangladesh Mask Study: ‘Extremely Weak Tea’
Kristi Noem Issues Executive Order Banning Telemedicine Abortions
Two Victims of 9/11 Attacks Have Been Identified
One College Campus Is Peddling Total Science Fiction Regarding Their COVID Vaccine Mandate
‘Feminists’ Soon to Be Hardest Hit by an Accidental Pro-Life Admission From the New York Times
Michigan Men Try To Get Their Guns Back From Sheriff
Massachusetts Town Seeks To Limit Where Gun Stores Can Open
David Frum Beats His Discordant Drum, Again
SF School Board member drops $87 million lawsuit, board probably won’t pursue legal costs
“He will leave you behind!”: Biden heckled over Afghanistan during hurricane photo op
This Thomas Friedman column on China made me feel hopeful and then made me lose hope
NBC News says schools have become a political battlefield, looks to Randi Weingarten for comment
Merriam-Webster defines ‘anti-vaxxer’ as someone who opposes laws that mandate vaccination
VIP
Kruiser’s ‘Worst Week Ever’—COVID Panic Porn Peddlers Have Killed My Travel Bug
More Evidence That Fauci Is a Liar
The Left’s Sad Segregation of Movies Just Creates Division
Will Joe Biden’s Approval Ratings Recover?
Why Is a Generation of Men Giving Up on College?
GOLD Biden Now Polling Somewhere Between Toe Fungus and The Lincoln Project
GOLD List Service With Kira Davis: The ‘Babies Schmabies’ List
Around the Interwebz
Original ‘Blues Clues’ Host Steve Burns Appears In Touching 25th Anniversary Video – Watch
Deadly quake hits southwest Mexico, shaking buildings in capital
The 25 Most Pet-Friendly Cities in the U.S.
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Comedy
Big Silverware is just ripping us off with the salad fork nonsense.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Meet the New Taliban, Same as the Old Taliban
Plus: The conflict in Tigray spills to neighboring regions.
The Dispatch Staff |
Happy Wednesday! Today seems as good a day as any to remind you that The Dispatch has a merch store replete with Yeti tumblers, Morning Dispatch mugs, T-shirts, and more. Spread the word!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Taliban unveiled its interim government for Afghanistan on Tuesday, returning many hardliners to roles similar to the ones they held from 1996 to 2001. No women or members of Afghanistan’s fallen government were selected for the cabinet, but it includes former Guantanamo detainees and members of the al-Qaeda-aligned Haqqani Network.
- A Burmese shadow government on Tuesday declared war against the military junta that overthrew former leader Aung San Suu Kyi in February’s coup. National Unity Government Acting President Duwa Lashi La called on Burmese citizens “in every corner of the country” to rebel against military rule.
- In the wake of Hurricane Ida, the U.S. Coast Guard said it is investigating approximately 350 reports of oil spills in the Gulf of Mexico, and the Louisiana Department of Health reported 141 hospitalizations—and four deaths—due to carbon monoxide poisoning. Approximately 400,000 customers in Louisiana remained without power as of Tuesday night.
- The United Nations’ International Atomic Energy Agency said Tuesday that Iran is refusing to grant inspectors access to nuclear-related sites in the country while continuing to bolster its nuclear activity.
- Mexico’s supreme court ruled Tuesday that a law in the state of Coahuila imposing up to three years of prison time for women who received abortions was unconstitutional, effectively decriminalizing the practice nationwide.
- Adlai Stevenson III—former U.S. senator from Illinois and descendant of both a vice president and governor—died on Monday at the age of 90.
Taliban’s Interim Government is a Return to the Old Guard
In the days since the United States completed its military withdrawal from Afghanistan, the Biden administration has reiterated time and time again that it will “judge the Taliban by its actions, not its words.” But it’s barely been a week, and its actions are already failing to live up to the group’s flowery promises of reform.
On Saturday, the group cracked down on protests in Kabul, assaulting women with rifle butts, tear gas and metal clubs. It cemented its stranglehold over the country by overcoming resistance forces in Panjshir Province. Reports have emerged in recent days that the Taliban is preventing a handful of charter flights with Americans and Afghan allies from leaving Mazar-i-Sharif because, as Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters yesterday, there are some people “without valid documents” aboard that the Taliban says “at this point can’t leave.”
The starkest reminder that this is still the same old Taliban, however, came Tuesday when the group announced a governing team headed by many of the very same figures from the Taliban’s past—including one terrorist with a $10 million bounty on his head from the U.S. government.
The Taliban’s emir is Haibatullah Akhundzada, who has led the group since 2016, when he ascended to power after a U.S. drone strike in Pakistan killed former leader Akhtar Mohammad Mansour. Akhundzada is a shadowy, reclusive figure who has avoided the public eye for years, and is one of the Taliban leaders not on the United Nations sanctions list. His son Abdur Rahman died as a suicide bomber in 2017 at an Afghan military base in Helmand.
The group tapped U.N.-blacklisted Mullah Mohammad Hassan Akhund to lead the interim government as prime minister of the council of ministers. Akhund is a founding member of the Taliban and served as deputy prime minister and foreign minister when the group was last in power from 1996 to 2001.
Tigray Situation Worsens
Almost a year after Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s offensive in the northern Tigray region began—and two years after Abiy won the Nobel Peace Prize—civil war persists. While government forces and Tigrayan paramilitaries boast thousands of “enemy” deaths amid new clashes, Tigray’s civilian population faces food shortages, gender-based violence, mass detentions, extrajudicial executions, and displacement.
When we wrote to you back in June about Ethiopia’s mounting humanitarian crisis, the UN had recently deemed the risk of famine in the region the single worst a country has faced in the last decade. Many of their warnings are now coming to pass: At least 150 people in Tigray died of starvation last month, the Tigray External Affairs office said in a Twitter briefing Monday.
The briefing accused the federal government of orchestrating a blockade in violation of U.N. Security Council resolution 2417, which classifies tactical starvation in conflict as a war crime. Its leadership has unequivocally denied the charge.
The region of six million people has been effectively without food assistance since last month, with the government delaying or halting incoming UN and non-governmental aid convoys out of concern they’ll reach rebel forces. Tigray’s more than two million internally displaced people are particularly vulnerable to the food and water shortages. The memo also noted that nearly 20,000 children currently face severe malnutrition.
Civilians in hiding and witnesses in neighboring Sudan have also alleged mass detentions and killings in the Tigrayan town of Humera, which is currently under the control of government forces, sparking fear that Abiy is carrying out a deliberate campaign of ethnic cleansing against the ethnic minority.
Worth Your Time
- BuzzFeed News editor Katherine Miller wrote an excellent essay about the ways this summer failed to live up to post-pandemic expectations, and why the country seems so angry as a result. “Is there something that connects all this?” she asks. “The flight attendants having to duct-tape passengers to seats, AND the undercurrent people invoke about the deep/quiet/silent anger of the collective body, about the division between the vaccinated majority of American adults and the unvaccinated minority, whose anger often predominates, AND the despairing anger about schools and who should be inside and outside them, AND the despairing anger about people left behind in Afghanistan, AND the people tearing each other apart over the second season of a TV show. It’s wrong to shout at someone making $8 an hour behind a counter about an inconvenience, and there’s a deep human dimension to the inner anger of some hospital nurses and doctors in a pandemic; these are not the same. But this is a society soaked through with anger, and unpredictably so.”
- Esteemed actor Michael K. Williams was found dead on Monday, reportedly from a drug overdose. The man behind The Wire’s Omar Little had long struggled with addiction, but got clean about a decade ago with the help of a minister in New Jersey. “I thought, ‘Why me? Why did I get spared?’ I should’ve been dead,” Williams told Kevin Manahan in 2012 when asked why he decided to go public with his own struggles. “I have the scars. I’ve stuck my head in the lion’s mouth. Obviously, God saved me for a purpose. So, I decided to get clean and then come clean. I’m hoping I can reach that one person.”
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Also Presented Without Comment
Lil Uzi Vert says he was doing some crowd-surfing at a recent music festival when someone yanked out the jewel embedded in his forehead
Toeing the Company Line
- Sarah dove into redistricting and Gen-Z’s politics in yesterday’s Sweep before turning the newsletter over to Chris Stirewalt on Republican legal activism and Andrew on Gov. Kristi Noem and the intra-GOP fights over vaccine mandates. “Republicans have gone from being the party of tort reform to becoming the party of legislation by litigation,” Stirewalt writes.
- Jonah’s Remnant guest on Tuesday was some guy named David French. The two chat for an hour-and-a-half about Texas’ new abortion law, Supreme Court history, and the 20th anniversary of 9/11. Stick around to the end to get their thoughts on the new Spider-Man trailer.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Biden Lies His Head off and Attacks Americans Who Yelled at Him About Afghanistan
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
September 8, 2021 THE LATEST This week, millions of Americans saw the federal unemployment benefits that had been a lifeline since the start of the pandemic expire. These benefits end at a time when workers are still at risk from the delta variant and cases of Covid-19 are on the rise again — and not long after the federal eviction moratorium was overturned. “For now, at least, America’s working poor are on their own again,” Hayes Brown writes.
“It didn’t have to be this way,” Brown writes. “Instead, it was a choice from Congress and the White House to let the three unemployment programs tucked inside the CARES Act expire.”
Read Hayes Brown’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Wednesday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES ‘American Crime Story: Impeachment’ gives Monica Lewinsky back her humanity. Read More The Supreme Court is finally giving Republicans what they’ve always wanted. Read More The tactics to block these records are bizarre — even for Kevin McCarthy. Read More TOP VIDEOS 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 on the past two decades. Watch “Memory Box: Echoes of 9/11” commercial-free, tonight at 10 p.m. ET, and stream it exclusively on Peacock.
Immediately after the film, join Jonathan Capehart, the filmmakers and a panel of experts for first reactions to the film and an in-depth look at the political, military and societal relations, as well as the mental health lessons from Sept. 11 over the past 20 years.
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News WEDNESDAY, September 8, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Democrats are engaged in a flurry of negotiations to push through President Joe Biden’s massive social safety net bill by the end of the month. Singer Britney Spears has scored a major victory in the battle to end her conservatorship. And Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes’ long-anticipated criminal trial is set to start today.
Here’s what we’re watching this Wednesday morning. In a race against the clock, Democratic leaders in Congress are working frenetically to craft a multitrillion-dollar bill to expand the social safety net with plans to hit the gas and start moving it through the House this week.
The bill would include 12 weeks of paid family and medical leave for all workers; expanded Medicare benefits to add dental, hearing and vision coverage; and new investments to bolster nursing homes and long-term care, among other provisions.
Behind the scenes, Democratic leaders are engaging in a flurry of negotiations with lawmakers and committees in both chambers to write policies that can unify the party, with the White House swooping in at times to resolve disagreements, two sources familiar with the emerging bill said.
“We’re at a place where the rubber is hitting the road in terms of shaping the policy and fine-tuning everything and really racing toward those deadlines,” said a senior Democratic aide, adding that the Senate hopes to vote on the bill by Sept. 27.
Read the full story here. Wednesday’s Top Stories
The earthquake was felt in Mexico City, which is around 180 miles from the coastal resort city of Acapulco. President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said Tuesday night that the damage appeared limited, but images showed damaged buildings in Acapulco. After holding the reins of his daughter’s estate for 13 years, Jamie Spears filed a petition to end his daughter’s conservatorship Tuesday, asking the court to “now seriously consider whether this conservatorship is no longer required.” The Theranos’ founder and former CEO’s meteoric rise to black-turtlenecked cover girl and media darling is matched only by her catastrophic fall from grace. She faces federal charges of defrauding patients and investors with claims of a revolutionary blood-testing technology in a blockbuster trial set to start Wednesday and expected to last four months. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
It should be the trial of the century, but most Americans long ago stopped paying attention. What went wrong? It’s all about how the justice system at Guantanamo was set up, says one national security expert: “The system is set up to fail.” Shopping
New and notable launches in earbuds, furniture, appliances and more. One Fun Thing
First he demoted the much-beloved Pluto from the ninth planet of our solar system into just one of its many dwarf planets.
Now astronomer Michael Brown hopes to fill the gap he created with what he predicts will be the discovery of a “Planet Nine.”
He claims the whole thing wasn’t deliberate.
“If I were prescient enough to have had all these ideas ahead of time and then demoted Pluto and found a new Planet Nine, then that would be brilliant — but it really is just a coincidence,” says the professor of planetary astronomy at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena and the author of the memoir “How I Killed Pluto and Why It Had It Coming.”
Read the full story about the astronomer’s ongoing search for the elusive “Planet 9” here. Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: September is set to be a defining month for Biden White House, congressional Dems
After a rough August for President Biden and his party, September – as well as the rest of the fall – will answer some important questions on Biden’s legislative agenda, the Covid situation and the Democrats’ political outlook heading into the 2022 midterms.
1. Just how big will the Dems’ budget reconciliation package be?
Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and the left want it at $3.5 trillion, while Axios is reporting that Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., isn’t going to budge above $1.5 trillion. The price-tag answer will determine how ambitious the package will be, as well as the size of the tax increases to pay for it.
Also worth asking here: Is Manchin by himself? Or is there a silent bloc of Dem senators supporting him?
2. Can Dems finish their reconciliation work before Sept. 27?
Remember, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi agreed to put the Senate’s bipartisan infrastructure bill to a vote by Sept. 27. Can Senate Dems complete their reconciliation by this date – to keep both measures on the same track? And if not, would progressive House Dems really vote against the infrastructure package?
3. Which congressional investigations/hearings get more attention – Jan. 6 or Afghanistan?
Before last month, the House’s Jan. 6 investigation was certain to be main congressional event, at least outside of the infrastructure/reconciliation work. But after Afghanistan’s fall to the Taliban and the chaotic U.S. withdrawal, bipartisan senators and members of Congress have plenty of questions for the administration.
AP Photo/Evan Vucci
4. Will the Labor Day travel, packed football stadiums and the new school year lead to another increase in Covid cases?
The positive news regarding the Delta variant is that U.S. Covid cases have begun to flatline.
But does all of the increased activity (travel, school, sporting events) change that?
5. Was last month’s disappointing jobs report a temporary blip? Or something that lasts at least another month?
We’ll find out with the next monthly jobs report, in early October.
6. How many states follow Texas’ lead on abortion?
And could it include battlegrounds like Georgia, or even quasi-battlegrounds like Ohio?
7. And can Dems survive the upcoming gubernatorial recall in California, as well as November’s gubernatorial contest in Virginia?
Both contests will tell us a lot about how engaged the Dem electorate is in both of these blue/blue-leaning states, especially with Biden’s overall job rating now in the low 40s, per recent national polls.
Vice President Kamala Harris today campaigns for Gov. Gavin Newsom in California.
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Calendar watch
By the way, here’s a helpful clip-and-save calendar for the political events we’ll be watching throughout September.
- Today, Sept. 8: Vice President Harris campaigns with California Gov. Gavin Newsom, while NBC10 Boston co-hosts a Boston mayoral debate in the contest to replace Marty Walsh (who is now Biden’s Labor secretary).
- Thursday, Sept. 9: Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie speaks at the Reagan Foundation and Institute, plus another Boston mayoral debate.
- Saturday, Sept. 11: 20th anniversary of 9/11.
- Sept. 14: Election Day in California’s gubernatorial recall, as well as the free-for-all preliminary contest for Boston mayor.
- Sept. 16: Democrat Terry McAuliffe and Republican Glenn Youngkin square off in their first general-election debate.
- Sept. 17: Arkansas GOP Sen. Tom Cotton speaks at the Pottawattamie County GOP’s Lincoln Reagan Dinner in Iowa.
- Sept. 26: Germany holds its federal elections.
- Sept. 27: The House’s self-imposed deadline to pass the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
- Sept. 28: McAuliffe and Youngkin face off in their second debate, this time in Northern Virginia.
- Sept. 30: Congressional deadline to fund the government to avoid a government shutdown.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: A time to remember? Or rumble?
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
7.0: The magnitude of the earthquake that hit Mexico last night that killed at least one person.
$30 billion: How much the White House is requesting for disaster relief and to resettle Afghans.
40,405,525: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 257,662 more since yesterday morning.)
654,748: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,526 more since yesterday morning.)
371,280,129: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 1,068,102 more since yesterday morning.)
53.2 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
64.3 percent: The share of all U.S. adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
75 percent: The share of all U.S. adults at least 18 years of age who have received at least one Covid vaccine dose, per CDC.
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Youngkin’s trio of new TV ads
In Virginia’s race for governor, Republican nominee Glenn Youngkin is out with a trio of new TV ads.
The first is a spot featuring testimonials from sheriffs who say they support Youngkin and oppose Democrat Terry McAuliffe.
The second has Youngkin saying to camera that he’ll eliminate Virginia’s grocery tax. “Saving a little extra on milk and bread and all of this, it adds up,” he says in the ad.
And the third ad – similar to a digital spot he’s already released – is Youngkin talking about the COVID-19 vaccine. “I’m a business guy who loves numbers, and the numbers show Covid vaccines save lives. That’s why I chose to get the vaccine. It’s your right to make your own choice. And I respect that. I do hope you’ll choose to join me in getting the vaccine.”
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Democrats are hitting the gas on the multitrillion-dollar bill to expand the social safety net.
President Biden is set to announce a new, six-pronged strategy on fighting the Delta variant, Reuters reports.
Monica Lewinsky told NBC’s “Today” that former President Bill Clinton “should want to apologize” to her.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed the state’s controversial elections bill into law on Tuesday, and also defended the state’s new restrictive abortion law not having a specific exception for rape victims by arguing Texas “eliminate all rapists.”
The New York Times profiles six families whose lives were uprooted by recent wildfires.
Richmond is set to remove its Robert E. Lee statue Wednesday morning.
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50.) CBS
51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
It was a rough Tuesday for Joe Biden. Someone at the White House must have forgotten to mash up the donepezil in his rice pudding. It’s always good to give him a double dose when Biden has a day’s … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
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58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
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60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Wednesday, Sept. 8, and we’re covering the long-awaited trial of one of the 9/11 masterminds, the dismantling of Richmond’s contested Robert E. Lee statue, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOW9/11 Trial The mastermind of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, appeared in court yesterday for pretrial proceedings nearly 20 years after the attacks. Known as KSM, he is accused of being the principal architect of the 2001 terrorist attacks that killed 2,977 people. KSM is on trial alongside Walid bin Attash (hijacking trainer), Ramzi bin al-Shibh (middleman), Mustafa al Hawsawi (travel arrangement), and Ammar al-Baluchi (financials), all accused of plotting and executing the attacks. The trial, held in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, has had numerous delays (see timeline), most recently caused by the pandemic shut down. Defense teams are seeking to throw out confessions obtained by the FBI; the five men were reportedly subjected to enhanced interrogation techniques, such as waterboarding, while in CIA custody. The proceedings will run through Sept. 17, with an additional pretrial hearing expected in November. All five suspects face the death penalty if convicted. Separately, in Paris, 20 ISIS-affiliated militants go on trial today for the 2015 attack on the city’s Bataclan nightclub that left 130 people dead. Lee Statue Comes DownA statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee located in downtown Richmond, Virginia, is scheduled to be dismantled today following a yearlong court battle over whether the state government had the legal right to remove the monument. The 131-year-old statue became the focus of demonstrations following the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, with calls for its removal gaining steam amid last summer’s social and racial justice protests. Gov. Ralph Northam (D) announced plans to remove the monument last June, but the decision was blocked by lawsuits arguing Virginia pledged to “faithfully guard” the statue when the land was originally given to the state in 1890. The Virginia Supreme Court found the initial agreements void in a decision last week. The future of the 12-ton, 21-foot statue is still to be determined. See photos of the monument and the surrounding protests here. Afghanistan’s New GovernmentThe Taliban announced the formation yesterday of an interim government, naming a number of militant leaders to ministerial posts. Two longstanding leaders of the group, Muhammad Hassan Akhund and Abdul Ghani Baradar, are acting as prime minister and deputy prime minister, respectively. Analysts say the tapping of the group’s hardline senior members signals the government is likely to resemble the strict Islamist regime seen during its previous rule from 1996 to 2001. Notably, the country’s acting interior minister will be Sirajuddin Haqqani, leader of the infamous Haqqani network. Haqqani is on the most wanted list, with the agency placing a bounty on his capture of up to $10M. His network of insurgent fighters is believed to be responsible for dozens of attacks in the country, including a 2017 bombing near the German embassy in Kabul that killed more than 150 people. Sheikh Haibatullah Akhundzada, yet to make a public appearance, reportedly remains the group’s supreme authority. In partnership with The AscentTHE EXPERT’S CHOICEWhen people recommend products or services, a good thing to look for is, do they actually use it? It’s why we always test our advertisers’ products before promoting to you, and also why our ears perked up when we saw The Ascent is promoting a credit card that their co-founder, Nathan Hamilton, uses personally. For starters, it offers up to 5% cash back on purchases, 0% interest on purchases and balance transfers until nearly 2023, and—somehow—a $0 annual fee. The Ascent estimates this card to be worth about $1,148 in value for the first year—but some have even managed to secure over $1,200! With cash back earnings like that, it might just be what you need in your wallet. Check it out today and see what all the fuss is about. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & CultureBrought to you by Fly By Jing > Britney Spears’ father asks judge to end her 13-year conservatorship; request to be addressed at Sept. 29 hearing (More) | Spears’ conservatorship explained (More) > Sam Cunningham, College Football Hall of Famer who helped integrate the sport while at Southern Cal, dies at 71 (More) > Kanye West’s “Donda” lands 23 songs on Billboard Hot 100; West becomes the seventh artist with 10 No. 1 albums (More) From our partners: Hot, spicy, crispy, numbing, and deliciously savory. We’re talking about Fly By Jing’s Sichuan Chili Crisp. It’s the first and only 100% all-natural Sichuan chili sauce—intensely flavorful, but not off-the-charts spicy. Throw it on everything (from noodles to ice cream) to instantly electrify any dish. Go ahead and try Sichuan Chili Crisp or Fly By Jing’s other delicious sauces for $5 off today. Science & Technology> Fur patterns in cats linked to a gene known as DKK4, the same gene responsible for the difference between cheetahs and king cheetahs; study provides insight on feline evolution (More) > Facebook says it’s planning to release Novi, a blockchain-based digital payments platform, by the end of the year (More) | Apple announces iPhone 13 streaming release event, scheduled for Sept. 14 (More) > Scientists pinpoint gene that influences the severity of colon cancer; the absence of a gene known as TCF-1 allows immune system T-cells to turn harmful, promoting tumor growth in the gut (More) Business & Markets> US stock markets mixed (S&P 500 -0.3%, Dow -0.8%, Nasdaq +0.1%) as Big Tech leads Nasdaq to a fresh record high (More) > El Salvador officially becomes first country to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender, but government takes Bitcoin wallet offline after tens of thousands of download requests overload servers (More) > Toyota to invest $13.5B in electric vehicle facilities and battery production by 2030 with goal of selling 2 million electric cars annually by the end of decade (More) Politics & World Affairs> At least one person dead after a 7.0 magnitude earthquake strikes 10 miles outside of Acapulco, Mexico (More) > Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) signs voting and election reform bill; opponents file at least five lawsuits challenging the bill, arguing it unfairly limits access for minority and elderly voters (More) > Mexico’s Supreme Court decriminalizes abortion, paving the way for individual states to legalize the procedure; country becomes the fifth Latin American nation to make such a decision (More) YOUR NEW GO-TO CARDIn partnership with The Ascent Nathan Hamilton, the co-founder and credit card expert from The Ascent, has reviewed hundreds of credit cards over the years. And this incredible one—offering 0% APR until nearly 2023, up to 5% cash back on purchases, and a lucrative sign-up bonus—has earned a coveted spot in Nathan’s wallet. The application is shockingly quick—he managed to finish it in two minutes. Check it out yourself to secure up to $1,148 in value for no annual fee. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERANew study says ducks can swear at you. Recreating the infamous 1904 Olympic marathon. (via YouTube) This mushroom documentary took 15 years to film. Futuristic plans for a US-based $400B desert city. Extreme swimmer crosses near-frozen five-mile fjord. Science explains the most common recurring dreams. A burning meteor, as seen from the International Space Station. Israeli doctors separate twins conjoined at the head. Clickbait: Palestinian prisoners break out of jail using a rusty spoon. Historybook: Michelangelo’s David statue unveiled to the public (1504); St. Augustine, Florida, becomes first permanent European settlement (1565); Singer Patsy Cline born (1932); HBD Bernie Sanders (1941); HBD Ruby Bridges, first Black student to attend an all-white school in Louisiana (1954). “When you start a new trail equipped with courage, strength, and conviction, the only thing that can stop you is you.” – Ruby Bridges 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
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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
Never underestimate the Teflon-Don…NEVER!
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TOP STORIES:
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Trump Gets Revenge Against Republican Who Voted To Impeach Him
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Joe Biden to Leave the White House For Insane Reason
- Mother of Marine Killed In Afghanistan Bestows Massive Honor To Donald Trump
- Joe Biden Relies on Notecards During Remarks on Hurricane Ida, Still Gets Lost…
- South Florida Doctor Says She Won’t Treat Unvaccinated Patients
- FAUCI BOMBSHELL DROPS — CAUGHT RED HANDED
- BREAKING: Donald Trump Aide Jason Miller Detained At Airport
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Biden’s DOJ Intervenes… Makes Major Announcement…
- Joe Biden Rocked With Bad News — They Are Leaving
- Biden Admin Caught Stealing Valor
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Top FBI Official Arrested…
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IN DEPTH:
- Psaki: Americans Stuck in Afghanistan Totally Not a Hostage Situation
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Rand Paul formally requests DOJ investigation into Fauci 44 mins ago
- Biden asks Congress for $6.4 billion to relocate Afghan refugees54 mins ago
- Biden wants to move on from the Americans he abandoned in Afghanistan2 hours ago
- Monica Lewinsky: Bill Clinton Should ‘Want To Apologize’ For His Role In Affair3 hours ago
- Dem Senator Richard Blumenthal ‘Furious’ That Biden Admin Stranding Americans In Afghanistan3 hours ago
- EXC: Biden’s National Security Council China Director Is Former Fellow At Chinese State-Funded Group Advising Communist Officials Sanctioned For Human Rights Abuses.3 hours ago
- Trudeau swarmed again in Ontario, protestors throw gravel and debris at prime minister3 hours ago
- Biden to stump for Newsom in recall fight3 hours ago
- House Oversight Republicans probe Hunter Biden’s art dealings3 hours ago
- Texas leader slams Portland’s ‘depraved’ officials for boycotting state over pro-life law3 hours ago
- Blinken ‘Not Aware’ Of Any ‘Hostage-Like Situation’ In Afghanistan, ‘Assured’ By Taliban Americans Being Allowed To Leave3
- Rutgers bars unvaccinated student from attending virtual classes4 hours ago
- Mexican Feds Scatter Four Migrant Caravans in One Week4 hours ago
- ‘Unprecedented’: Idaho rations hospital care due to ‘massive increase’ in COVID patients4 hours ago
- Jim Jordan gets a badly needed fact-check after claiming that ‘vaccine mandates are un-American’4 hours ago
- Taliban announce formation of caretaker Afghan government4 hours ago
- Biden to Announce “Six-Pronged Strategy” to Combat Delta Variant4 hours ago
- New Fear Mongering: Mu Variant Is Now In 49 States4 hours ago
- FEC Votes on Complaint Against Hillary Clinton Breaking The Law 7 mins ago
- Biden’s DOJ Intervenes… Makes Major Announcement… 17 mins ago
- Legal expert maps out how Texas’ anti-abortion law will pave the way for more threats to the US Constitution 25 mins ago
- Son of 9/11 Victim Sends Warning To Biden… 52 mins ago
- A tweet praising Alex Jones shows J.D. Vance’s ‘desperate’need to prove he’s an ‘authentic MAGA man’: conservative
- Wall Street Sets Its Sights On S&P 5000 1 hour ago
- FOIA Release Proves US Funded Research of “Bat Coronaviruses Likely to Infect Humans” in Wuhan 2 hours ago
- ‘A dumpster fire’: Texas Lt. Gov. loses it over ‘depraved’ Portland leaders after city floats plan to boycott state 2 hours ago
- Rooftop Arabs defend their businesses from looters in New Orleans… 2 hours ago
- Pfizer Rolls Out New “Daily Pill” to fight COVID, Similar to Ivermectin 2 hours ago
- Italy Mandates Vaccine Cards To Fly, Take A Train, Or Go To University 3 hours ago
- Mexico City to swap Columbus statue for one of indigenous woman 3 hours ago
- Six Palestinian Prisoners Escape Jail Through A Tunnel In Israel 3 hours ago
- World Trade Center ‘surfer’ struggles to comprehend his survival 20 years later 3 hours ago
- Delta variant detected in all Philippine regions 3 hours ago
- Taliban invite 6 nations for Afghan govt formation event. What role do they play? 3 hours ago
- Texas A&M fans recreate 9/11 tribute at Kyle Field 3 hours ago
- Singer, Perez lead Royals to 6–0 win over White Sox 3 hours ago
- Jean-Pierre Adams, ex-soccer player, dies after 39 years in coma 3 hours ago
- T.J. Watt could miss Steelers’ opener vs. Bills amid contract dispute, per report 3 hours ago
- Lawmakers sound alarm over Americans stranded in Afghanistan 3 hours ago
- Food Network disowns host over abortion stance: ‘We regret giving him a platform’ 4 hours ago
- Democrats stare down nightmare September 4 hours ago
- REPORT: Biden Might Keep ‘More Humane’ Version Of Trump Immigration Policy 4 hours ago
- Senate Democrat ‘Furious’ at Biden Administration’s Delay in Getting Americans Out of Afghanistan 4 hours ago
- Court-packing is back in vogue 4 hours ago
- Right to Work economies are recovering faster from COVID, here’s why 4 hours ago
- Congressman Helping Americans in Afghanistan: Biden Administration’s Claims Are ‘100 Percent, Boldfaced Lie’ 4 hours ago
- Explosive Report Reveals New Details On Coronavirus Research In Chinese Labs, Including Third Lab 4 hours ago
- Newsom supporters outraised California recall backers ahead of election 4 hours ago
- Video game developer CEO said he supported Texas’ pro-life law. It sparked an outcry, and now he’s gone from the company
- No Events for Joe Biden on Labor Day as Vacation Continues 5 hours ago
- BLM Career Thug Who Nearly Kicked a Man to Death Gets Early Release 5 hours ago
- Brushing off Supreme Court rulings, Calif. county fines church as commercial enterprise 5 hours ago
- Feds don’t want to resettle Afghan refugees in California because it is too expensive 5 hours ago
- Top Wuhan Lab Theory Denier Reverses Stance, Reveals He Knew Of Virus Weeks In Advance. 5 hours ago
- AP corrects article claiming 70 percent of calls to Mississippi Poison Control were about ivermectin ingestion 5 hours ago
- GOP Rep. Kevin Brady: Manchin is ‘asking exactly the right questions’ on $3.5 trillion budget plan 5 hours ago
- El Salvador Buys $21 Million Worth of Bitcoin Ahead of Formally Adopting It as Legal Tender 5 hours ago
- Complaints on STOCK Act violations stack up against members of Congress 5 hours ago
- European Stocks Have Record in Sight on Hopes Stimulus Will Stay 5 hours ago
- BMW Orders Up $24 Billion of Batteries as EV Demand Grows 5 hours ago
- Global Gas Price Surge Threatens to Dent the Economic Recovery 5 hours ago
- The FairTax’s simpler approach benefits everyone 11 hours ago
- 28,821 Authorized 5G Cell Sites Despite Increasing Opposition and Risks (France) 16 hours ago
- California Admits Grid At Risk Amid Push To Greenify Economy 17 hours ago
- Maddow Doesn’t Delete Tweet Promoting False Oklahoma Story 19 hours ago
- Biden AG Merrick Garland pledges to fight against Texas pro-life law 20 hours ago
- ALERT: They Just Announced It Will NEVER BE OVER! 20 hours ago
- Its Like They Really Want You To Be Sick and Unhappy~! 20 hours ago
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TOP STORIES:
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Mother of Marine Killed In Afghanistan Bestows Massive Honor To Donald Trump
-
FAUCI BOMBSHELL DROPS — CAUGHT RED HANDED
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Biden’s DOJ Intervenes… Makes Major Announcement…
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Top FBI Official Arrested…
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Joe Biden Rocked With Bad News — They Are Leaving
- Joe Biden Relies on Notecards During Remarks on Hurricane Ida, Still Gets Lost…
- South Florida Doctor Says She Won’t Treat Unvaccinated Patients
-
BREAKING: Donald Trump Aide Jason Miller Detained At Airport
- Biden’s DOJ Intervenes… Makes Major Announcement…
- Joe Biden Rocked With Bad News — They Are Leaving
- Biden Admin Caught Stealing Valor
- Dems Nervous After Trump’s Latest Move
- Son Of 9/11 Victim Issues Warning To Biden Ahead Of Upcoming Anniversary
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IN DEPTH:
- Rand Paul formally requests DOJ investigation into Fauci44 mins ago
- Biden asks Congress for $6.4 billion to relocate Afghan refugees54 mins ago
- Biden wants to move on from the Americans he abandoned in Afghanistan2 hours ago
- Monica Lewinsky: Bill Clinton Should ‘Want To Apologize’ For His Role In Affair3 hours ago
- Dem Senator Richard Blumenthal ‘Furious’ That Biden Admin Stranding Americans In Afghanistan3 hours ago
- EXC: Biden’s National Security Council China Director Is Former Fellow At Chinese State-Funded Group Advising Communist Officials Sanctioned For Human Rights Abuses.3 hours ago
- Trudeau swarmed again in Ontario, protestors throw gravel and debris at prime minister3 hours ago
- Biden to stump for Newsom in recall fight3 hours ago
- House Oversight Republicans probe Hunter Biden’s art dealings3 hours ago
- Texas leader slams Portland’s ‘depraved’ officials for boycotting state over pro-life law3 hours ago
- Blinken ‘Not Aware’ Of Any ‘Hostage-Like Situation’ In Afghanistan, ‘Assured’ By Taliban Americans Being Allowed To Leave3
- Rutgers bars unvaccinated student from attending virtual classes4 hours ago
- Mexican Feds Scatter Four Migrant Caravans in One Week4 hours ago
- ‘Unprecedented’: Idaho rations hospital care due to ‘massive increase’ in COVID patients4 hours ago
- Jim Jordan gets a badly needed fact-check after claiming that ‘vaccine mandates are un-American’4 hours ago
- Taliban announce formation of caretaker Afghan government4 hours ago
- Biden to Announce “Six-Pronged Strategy” to Combat Delta Variant4 hours ago
- New Fear Mongering: Mu Variant Is Now In 49 States4 hours ago
- FEC Votes on Complaint Against Hillary Clinton Breaking The Law 7 mins ago
- Biden’s DOJ Intervenes… Makes Major Announcement… 17 mins ago
- Legal expert maps out how Texas’ anti-abortion law will pave the way for more threats to the US Constitution 25 mins ago
- Son of 9/11 Victim Sends Warning To Biden… 52 mins ago
- A tweet praising Alex Jones shows J.D. Vance’s ‘desperate’need to prove he’s an ‘authentic MAGA man’: conservative
- Wall Street Sets Its Sights On S&P 5000 1 hour ago
- FOIA Release Proves US Funded Research of “Bat Coronaviruses Likely to Infect Humans” in Wuhan 2 hours ago
- ‘A dumpster fire’: Texas Lt. Gov. loses it over ‘depraved’ Portland leaders after city floats plan to boycott state 2 hours ago
- Rooftop Arabs defend their businesses from looters in New Orleans… 2 hours ago
- Pfizer Rolls Out New “Daily Pill” to fight COVID, Similar to Ivermectin 2 hours ago
- Italy Mandates Vaccine Cards To Fly, Take A Train, Or Go To University 3 hours ago
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- Six Palestinian Prisoners Escape Jail Through A Tunnel In Israel 3 hours ago
- World Trade Center ‘surfer’ struggles to comprehend his survival 20 years later 3 hours ago
- Delta variant detected in all Philippine regions 3 hours ago
- Taliban invite 6 nations for Afghan govt formation event. What role do they play? 3 hours ago
- Texas A&M fans recreate 9/11 tribute at Kyle Field 3 hours ago
- Singer, Perez lead Royals to 6–0 win over White Sox 3 hours ago
- Jean-Pierre Adams, ex-soccer player, dies after 39 years in coma 3 hours ago
- T.J. Watt could miss Steelers’ opener vs. Bills amid contract dispute, per report 3 hours ago
- Lawmakers sound alarm over Americans stranded in Afghanistan 3 hours ago
- Food Network disowns host over abortion stance: ‘We regret giving him a platform’ 4 hours ago
- Democrats stare down nightmare September 4 hours ago
- REPORT: Biden Might Keep ‘More Humane’ Version Of Trump Immigration Policy 4 hours ago
- Senate Democrat ‘Furious’ at Biden Administration’s Delay in Getting Americans Out of Afghanistan 4 hours ago
- Court-packing is back in vogue 4 hours ago
- Right to Work economies are recovering faster from COVID, here’s why 4 hours ago
- Congressman Helping Americans in Afghanistan: Biden Administration’s Claims Are ‘100 Percent, Boldfaced Lie’ 4 hours ago
- Explosive Report Reveals New Details On Coronavirus Research In Chinese Labs, Including Third Lab 4 hours ago
- Newsom supporters outraised California recall backers ahead of election 4 hours ago
- Video game developer CEO said he supported Texas’ pro-life law. It sparked an outcry, and now he’s gone from the company
- No Events for Joe Biden on Labor Day as Vacation Continues 5 hours ago
- BLM Career Thug Who Nearly Kicked a Man to Death Gets Early Release 5 hours ago
- Brushing off Supreme Court rulings, Calif. county fines church as commercial enterprise 5 hours ago
- Feds don’t want to resettle Afghan refugees in California because it is too expensive 5 hours ago
- Top Wuhan Lab Theory Denier Reverses Stance, Reveals He Knew Of Virus Weeks In Advance. 5 hours ago
- AP corrects article claiming 70 percent of calls to Mississippi Poison Control were about ivermectin ingestion 5 hours ago
- GOP Rep. Kevin Brady: Manchin is ‘asking exactly the right questions’ on $3.5 trillion budget plan 5 hours ago
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- Complaints on STOCK Act violations stack up against members of Congress 5 hours ago
- European Stocks Have Record in Sight on Hopes Stimulus Will Stay 5 hours ago
- BMW Orders Up $24 Billion of Batteries as EV Demand Grows 5 hours ago
- Global Gas Price Surge Threatens to Dent the Economic Recovery 5 hours ago
- The FairTax’s simpler approach benefits everyone 11 hours ago
- 28,821 Authorized 5G Cell Sites Despite Increasing Opposition and Risks (France) 16 hours ago
- California Admits Grid At Risk Amid Push To Greenify Economy 17 hours ago
- Maddow Doesn’t Delete Tweet Promoting False Oklahoma Story 19 hours ago
- Biden AG Merrick Garland pledges to fight against Texas pro-life law 20 hours ago
- ALERT: They Just Announced It Will NEVER BE OVER! 20 hours ago
- Its Like They Really Want You To Be Sick and Unhappy~! 20 hours ago
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
September 08, 2021 Hello! Every Wednesday, our internet culture staff discusses the world of streaming entertainment. In today’s Insider:
REST IN PEACE The unforgettable roles of Michael K. Williams I think The Wire was the first show I ever binged. This was probably before we were even saying “binge-watched”; I’m pretty sure I saw it on DVD. But I definitely remember Michael K. Williams’ Omar Little was the character I always waited for.
Williams, who was found dead on Monday, leaves behind much more than just The Wire, though it is certainly the role that introduced many people to him. HBO’s Boardwalk Empire, Lovecraft Country, and The Night Of, as well as Netflix’s When They See Us showed what a range of characters he was capable of playing. (And all these titles are available via streaming.) In a 2018 video for an Atlantic/HBO collaboration, which recirculated in the wake of the news, Williams ponders the roles he’s played and whether he was typecast. It’s a powerful watch, even more so now, and it speaks to the empathy and humanity he gave his characters and roles. Omar has one of the most memorable introductions in TV history.
It’s hard to put into words what his loss means, so here’s The Wire co-star Wendell Pierce saying everything that needs to be said. Senior Writer
CHECK OUT THE LATEST FROM THE BAZAAR Peacock’s incredible variety makes it ideal for families with diverse interests
No matter whose turn it is to control the remote, Peacock is sure to please the whole family. From the world of WWE wrestling, to sitcoms like The Office and AP Bio, to incredible movies from the Universal library, it’s packed with content.
Peacock even goes beyond what you’ve come to expect from other services. There’s live sports, live news, and more. There’s too much to talk about here, so keep reading to learn everything that makes Peacock great.
REVIEWS ‘Shang-Chi’ is an exciting, action-packed entry in the MCU Origin stories can be something of a slog, even in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Many of them tend to hit the same beats even if the heart of their stories couldn’t be any more different from each other, so it takes a lot to make them stand out; they’re also often tasked with exposition dumps left and right.
With none other than legendary actor Tony Leung in its pocket, an enticing family drama at its core, and some great fight sequences, Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings soars past those (admittedly low) bars, giving us one of the MCU’s better origin movies even as it runs into a few familiar roadblocks.
The history behind Marvel’s Shang-Chi, who was created by Steve Englehart and Jim Starlin in the early 1970s, is, to put it lightly, complicated. In bringing Marvel’s first Asian superhero to the big screen, Shang-Chi tries to remix, course-correct, and reshape parts of that legacy. Shang-Chi’s father in the comics was a racist caricature, but the MCU creates a new character who carries the Mandarin moniker. In a conversation about the importance of names (and an attempt by Marvel to rectify its own past missteps), there’s a reference to Iron Man 3’s Trevor Slattery (Ben Kingsley), an actor who was hired to play the Mandarin, alongside a bit of commentary on cultural appropriation.
The all-star cast truly carries the film, even in some of its clunkier moments. Leung, who already found success for decades in Hong Kong cinema, knows just how to showcase with little more than his eyes. Simu Liu, who many viewers will know from beloved Canadian sitcom Kim’s Convenience, brings a relatable empathy. And while Awkwafina is reliable as the comic relief, it’s Meng’er Zhang who steals the show portraying a character who’s just as worthy of wielding the Ten Rings as Shang-Chi. Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings is now playing in theaters. Staff Writer
VIRAL Video of Oscar Isaac and Jessica Chastain sparks discourse about on-screen chemistry A clip of Oscar Isaac and Jessica Chastain on the red carpet took Film Twitter by storm this past weekend, prompting a discussion about sexual chemistry in modern cinema.
Chastain and Isaac were at the Venice Film Festival, promoting their new HBO miniseries Scenes from a Marriage, which premieres Sept. 12. Reuniting after their critically-acclaimed collaboration in 2014’s A Most Violent Year, they’re playing (as you can probably infer from the title) another married couple. And while the series doesn’t look notably sexy, Chastain and Isaac definitely display a certain vibe. In this 52-second clip, we see Oscar Isaac give Jessica Chastain a smoldering look before kissing her arm, with the two actors embracing each other and laughing for the cameras.
That Chastain/Isaac clip illustrates the way Hollywood fails to utilize sexual charisma—particularly in the case of Oscar Isaac, whose capacity for red-hot smoldering is typically kept under wraps. This reaction definitely folds back into the “people have forgotten what sexual chemistry looks like” thing, because Jessica Chastain and Oscar Isaac… are actors! They’re promoting a project together! Something similar happened a couple of years ago with Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga, who played up their romantic vibes while promoting A Star Is Born. The chemistry was real, but it was also a central element of the film’s marketing campaign. Staff Writer
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Wednesday 09.08.21 Britney Spears’ fight to end her conservatorship has taken an unexpected turn, with her father and the conservator of her estate, Jamie Spears, filing a petition to end the arrangement. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. A Taliban fighter stands guard yesterday as Afghan women shout slogans during a protest rally in Kabul. Afghanistan
The Taliban announced the formation of a hard-line interim government for Afghanistan, filling top posts with veterans of the militant group who oversaw the 20-year fight against the US-led military coalition. No women or members of Afghanistan’s ousted leadership were selected for acting cabinet positions, in spite of the Taliban’s promises of an inclusive government and a more moderate form of Islamic rule than when it was last in power, from 1996 to 2001. The lineup of senior leaders includes former Guantanamo inmates, members of a US-designated terror group and subjects of international sanctions lists. Sirajuddin Haqqani, who will be the acting interior minister, is on the FBI’s “most-wanted” list, with a $10 million bounty on his head. The leadership announcement came on the same day that the Taliban used gunfire, detentions and beatings to crush dissent, as scores of Afghan protesters marched through the capital, Kabul.
Coronavirus
President Biden is set to deliver a major address tomorrow on the next phase of his pandemic response, sources familiar with the speech tell CNN. While officials are still finalizing specifics, the speech is expected to touch on schools, private companies and requirements for federal employees. Climbing Covid-19 case numbers — and particularly the increasing proportion of cases reported in children — are causing many health experts to worry about the outlook as the school year gets underway across the entire country. But Dr. Anthony Fauci said there shouldn’t be a big uptick “if we do it right.” Meantime, 13 school employees in Miami-Dade County Public Schools have died from Covid-19 since August 16, the Florida school district and local teachers union said. Among the 13 were four teachers, one security monitor, one cafeteria worker and seven school bus drivers. All were unvaccinated.
Climate
Biden pledged his administration’s full support for Hurricane Ida relief efforts and made his case for using his infrastructure plan to take immediate action to address the effects of the climate crisis. “We’ve got to listen to the scientists and the economists, and the national security experts: They all tell us this is code red. The nation and the world are in peril,” Biden said. The Northeast is still reeling from Ida’s remnants, and California could be dealing with massive wildfires until the end of the year. The Dixie Fire in Northern California is on its way to becoming the largest wildfire in the state’s history, officials say. Meanwhile outside the US, a dangerous weather system is heading toward Taiwan and China. Typhoon Chanthu rapidly intensified in the past 36 hours and is expected to make landfall this week. Additionally, Europe experienced its hottest summer on record this year, and temperatures in the Mediterranean smashed records by large margins.
Voting rights
Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott signed into law a bill that bans 24-hour and drive-thru voting, imposes new hurdles on mail-in ballots and empowers partisan poll watchers. The restrictive voting measure adds Texas to the list of Republican-controlled states that have seized on ex-President Trump’s lies about widespread voter fraud and clamped down on access to the ballot box this year. Already, Florida, Georgia and other states have enacted new voting laws. A leading Democratic elections lawyer said immediately after Abbott signed the bill that he had sued on behalf of Texas groups challenging the law, arguing it violates the Voting Rights Act. Here’s a look at what the new Texas law does. “The Texas law isn’t an exception,” writes CNN’s Chris Cillizza. “It is the rule when it comes to Republican-controlled state legislatures and bills they have pushed into law so far this year.”
Mexico
Mexico’s Supreme Court has unanimously ruled that penalizing abortion is unconstitutional, a decision expected to set precedent for the legal status of abortion nationwide. “Today is a historic day for the rights of all Mexican women,” said Supreme Court Chief Justice Arturo Zaldivar. The court ruled against a law in the state of Coahuila that threatened women who undergo abortions with up to three years in prison and a fine. “I’m against stigmatizing those who make this decision (to undergo an abortion), which I believe is difficult to begin with, due to moral and social burdens,” said Supreme Court Justice Ana Margarita Ríos Farjat, one of only three women among the court’s 11 justices. The vote comes as US states just north of the border, most notably Texas, move to restrict abortion access.
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Builders discover stash of 239 gold coins worth up to $356,000 ‘9/11, 20 years later: Remembrance & Ramifications’ Join Dana Bash, Wolf Blitzer, Jim Sciutto and Clarissa Ward tomorrow at 12 p.m. ET for a virtual discussion about the ongoing ramifications 20 years after the 9/11 attacks. You can submit your own questions during this special edition of CITIZEN by CNN. Register here. 4 That’s how many activists from a Hong Kong pro-democracy group that organizes the city’s annual Tiananmen Square vigil were arrested after the group refused to comply with a police order to submit information on national security grounds. Police had sought details concerning the group’s funding and membership in relation to an accusation it was working as a “foreign agent,” in violation of the city’s sweeping national security law, according to a letter seen by CNN late last month. If these people would have ended up here in Ukraine, the details of their criminal acts would have become known around the world.
A Ukrainian source, lamenting the failure by the country’s intelligence officials to lure suspected war criminals out of Russia to face prosecution for atrocities committed in eastern Ukraine where separatists backed by Moscow have been fighting for years. Ukrainian spies tried to ensnare the criminals in an elaborate international sting. Brought to you by CNN Underscored 18 comfortable pairs of sneakers to walk all day in Comfortable sneakers are truly unmatched. From brands like Allbirds, Rothy’s, Adidas, Nike and more, these are the most comfortable sneakers for men and women to shop right now, according to experts and reviews. Life lessons from 100-year-olds 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- College Men and the Turtle Theory
- Goodbye to Coal? Not So Fast!
- The Taliban forms a pro-al Qaeda government
- A novel idea for combatting the violent crime epidemic
- Crown Heights at 30
College Men and the Turtle Theory
Posted: 07 Sep 2021 04:37 PM PDT (Steven Hayward)The Wall Street Journal has a long feature up today on the fact that in larger and larger numbers men have decided not to go to college. But despite its length and depth, the story is too chicken to investigate what may be the leading cause of this trend. Let’s take in some excerpts:
But the really interesting detail is conveyed in this bit:
So it is not just men, but specifically white men, who are bailing out of college most. But the Journal is too terrified to look deeper into what this fact might mean. The best they can do is:
Yes, I can imagine no one is willing to risk their position on a college campus asking, “I’m wondering if it might be something we said?” I’m sitting here scratching my head, wondering if there could be any reason why young white men might find today’s college experience unappealing? By coincidence, former Hollywood starlet Ellen Barkin chose yesterday to post this timely and related tweet:
That’s a pretty good summary of the official attitude and campus climate for white males today. I don’t think I really need to repeat the catechism about “whiteness,” patriarchy, Title IX enforcement mechanisms that deprive males of due process, “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (which pointedly does not and cannot “include” white males”), the mandatory training sessions that are in essence Maoist confessionals, and all the rest of the woke vocabulary do I? This sent me back to an old essay by Aaron Wildavsky, the legendary Berkeley political scientist who noticed starting back in the 1980s that the Democratic Party was increasingly turning away from white males; not just turning away, but making them into the premier oppressor class (or scapegoat) on whom blame—and remedial taxation—should be heaped (and keep in mind that Wildavsky was a lifelong loyal liberal Democrat):
At which point they vote for Donald Trump, can cause liberal elites to lose their damn minds. And wonder why males doesn’t want to attend Woke University and signup for their classes. P.S. There is this additional paragraph late in the Wall Street Journal story worth noting:
And colleges think young white men don’t notice this?
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Goodbye to Coal? Not So Fast!
Posted: 07 Sep 2021 04:28 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)The obituary of coal as an energy source has been written many times, but rumors of coal’s death are premature, as two stories in the news show. In the U.K., Britain is forced to fire up coal plant amid record power prices and winter squeeze. Like the U.S., Britain has been relying increasingly on wind power. Funny thing about that–it doesn’t work when the wind stops blowing.
A global natural gas shortage? The U.S. might do something about that, if we had an administration that was not determined to shut down one of our cleanest energy sources, along with nuclear power. More:
Coal has its faults, but unlike wind and solar, it is reliable and cheap. Global demand for coal continues to grow, and Australia is a major exporter. A representative of the United Nations requested or demanded that Australia stop producing and selling coal. The government told the U.N. to pound sand.
Support for “green” energy is a mile wide and an inch deep. Most people express favorable opinions of “green” energy, which is not surprising since the propaganda begins in kindergarten. But support for wind and solar evaporates quickly when energy prices triple or quadruple, and most of all, when blackouts begin.
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The Taliban forms a pro-al Qaeda government
Posted: 07 Sep 2021 12:38 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)The Taliban has announced the formation of the government that will rule Afghanistan. According to the Wall Street Journal, the Taliban gave no positions of power to other political forces, religious minorities, or women. And it pledged to implement strict Islamic rule. Of course it did. That’s what the Taliban is all about. Did the Taliban at least exclude al Qaeda-linked elements from its government? No, it did not. The Journal reports:
In addition, the new prime minister, Mullah Hassan Akhund, served as foreign minister and as deputy prime minister in the previous Islamic Emirate — the one we toppled because it hosted al Qaeda. This gentleman, who is on the United Nations sanctions list, was part of the leadership that turned down offers from George W. Bush whereby the U.S. would stay out of Afghanistan if the Taliban would turn Osama bin Laden over to the U.S. after 9/11. Mullah Hassan was having none of it. The Journal notes that the Taliban had “assur[ed] foreign diplomats, journalists and Afghan politicians that [it] sought to create an inclusive administration that represents all parts of the Afghan society.” No person of at least ordinary intelligence believed a word of this. Even Joe Biden, of ordinary intelligence at best, probably didn’t believe much of it. He just didn’t care. The new Taliban government isn’t even ethnically diverse. According to the Journal, “just as in the Taliban administration of the 1990s, almost all top members of the new government are ethnic Pashtun.” The Shiite Hazara community, whose representatives held important positions during the republic and which accounts for more than a fifth of the nation’s population, was excluded altogether. Frankly, this doesn’t matter to me. But the Taliban promised an ethnically diverse government, so the absence of one is further confirmation that its promises are meaningless. These promises were the stated basis for Donald Trump’s decision to agree to a pullout. Trump’s decision, in turn, became Joe Biden’s stated basis for pulling out. Biden’s pullout leaves him relying on the good faith of the Taliban to protect stranded Americans and to prevent Afghanistan from becoming the launching pad of terrorism against the West. The Taliban’s string of broken promises confirms that this reliance is badly misplaced.
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A novel idea for combatting the violent crime epidemic
Posted: 07 Sep 2021 11:48 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)According to the Washington Post, homicides are up 15 percent in Washington, D.C. compared to this time last year. Homicides reached a 16-year high last year. This past weekend, three men were shot to death in Brightwood Park, a middle-class neighborhood in Northwest D.C. that not long ago was considered safe. Violent crime is up about 23 percent in Brightwood Park this year. The Post reports that neighborhood residents are struggling to find solutions to this crime epidemic. One woman, a former member of the local Advisory Neighborhood Commission, came up with a novel idea. She told the Post:
They do, indeed. I’ve been saying for years that America has an under-incarceration problem. Unfortunately, the prevailing thinking holds just the opposite. The prevailing view, reflected in the bipartisan, Trump-supported First Step Act jailbreak legislation, is that too many Americans are already in jail. And even if politicians came to understand that more “dudes need to go to jail,” that aspiration would be thwarted absent a police force with the resources needed to effectuate it. Here too, liberal dogma — defund the police — stands in the way. In Washington, D.C., the police force has 200 fewer officers than last year, according to the Post. The mayor proposed to hire 150 new recruits to compensate partially for this reduction. However, the city council allowed her to add only 40. Many on the council prefer to fund what they consider alternatives to the police force, “violence interrupters,” for example. But according to the Post, violence interrupters are present in Brightwood Park. Yet, violent crime is soaring there. I have nothing against violence interrupters. However, as the Brightwood Park resident quoted by the Post says, that’s “not working.” “Some of these dudes need to go to jail,” and only a fully-manned police force backed by serious prosecutors and mayors can make that happen.
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Crown Heights at 30
Posted: 07 Sep 2021 05:30 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)Observing Rosh Hashanah today, I scheduled this otherwise tardy post to appear this morning. For some reason or other, little note was taken of the thirtieth anniversary of the Crown Heights riots of August 1991 that kicked off with the murder of Yankel Rosenbaum. Anticipating the silence, the Washington Free Beacon assembled a package of stories and columns to commemorate the event. The pieces are assembled here. I commend to your attention: • Fred Siegel, “Reflections on Crown Heights, 30 Years Later.” • Alana Goodman, “30 Years Later: Remembering Crown Heights.” • Drew Holden, “Media Ghosts of the Crown Heights Riot. • Charles F. Lehman, “The Last Acceptable Hate Crime.” • Andrew Stiles, “From Anti-Semitic Agitator to Democratic Power Broker: The Preposterous Resurrection of Al Sharpton.” • Andrew Stiles, “The Crown Heights Riot, In Context, Explained.” • Joseph Simonson, “Crown Heights Killer Lemrick Nelson Remains a Free Man.” The Free Beacon also posted the video flashback below with this text: “On August 19, 1991, anti-Semitic riots erupted in Brooklyn’s Crown Heights neighborhood. For three days, mobs chanted Nazi slogans, looted businesses, and attacked the neighborhood’s Jewish residents. Thirty years later, the community is remembering one of the worst episodes of anti-Semitic violence in American history.”
I also commend to your attention from Tablet and JNS, respectively: • Armin Rosen, “A Brother’s Death.” • Jonathan Tobin, “Why the Crown Heights pogrom still matters.” And this blast from National Review’s past (issue dated March 20, 2000): • Jay Nordlinger, “Al Sharpton: Power Dem.”
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99.) MARK LEVIN
September 7, 2021
On Tuesday’s Mark Levin Show, We still have American citizens behind enemy lines in Afghanistan and the elites in the Democrat Party don’t care. Why is there no committee on Americans left behind enemy lines in Afghanistan? Planes on the runway at the Kabul airport are being prevented from leaving, yet the White House refuses to call them hostages. The media ignores the presence of Iran, Russia, and China in the region. Meanwhile, the Biden administration still can’t produce the nearly 5,000 children that they can’t account for. And every time there’s a natural disaster it’s We The People that become the problem for causing climate change, or for White supremacy, or anything else. Then, the New York Times’s Paul Krugman has taken aim at Levin’s book “American Marxism” taking cheap shots, instead of accepting the public challenge to debate the substance of the book’s premise on a live broadcast of this program. Later, Nicholas Wade, the former science editor of the New York Times, broke the COVID origin story earlier this year. Now, the New York Post is reporting that Anthony Fauci has been caught in a lie regarding his alleged ignorance on animal testing and gain of function experiments at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in China. Afterward, Marx was a pagan and as much as they’d like it, there’s never been a right to abortion in the U.S Constitution.
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Satellite Photo Emerges Of 6 Airplanes Set To Carry Americans That Taliban Won’t Let Leave: Report
Issues & Insights
Biden Loses 4,890 Migrant Children, And The Left Yawns
NY Times
Wonking Out: A Very Austrian Pandemic
Stanford
Herbert Marcuse
NY Post
Wuhan lab documents show Fauci ‘untruthful’ about gain-of-function research: critics
Zero Hedge
Traffic Deaths Surged To 38,680 In 2020 Despite Americans Driving 13% Less Miles
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Image used with permission of Getty Images / HOSHANG HASHIMI
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Kudlow shreds Dems over 10,000 page spend and tax billThe more than 10,000-page Democrat spending bill allegedly amounts to $3.5 trillion in spending, but it is actually more than $5 trillion when all is said and done. A bill… | |
Very confused Biden is asked about hostages in AfghanistanPresident Biden spent Labor Day at his home in Wilmington, Delaware, far away from the death and destruction he helped arrange in Afghanistan. Biden went to the local union hall… | |
Cali Board of Ed sued over forcing kids to pray to Aztec godsThe Thomas More Society filed suit against The California Board of Education over their new ‘ethnic studies’ curricula and the prayer to the gods of the Aztec Empire. Late last… | |
Schumer claims all Americans who wanted to leave Afghanistan leftSenate Majority Leader Charles Schumer claimed in a clip now online that all Americans who wanted to get out of Afghanistan were evacuated. He casually mentioned that there will be… | |
National Archives put a harmful language warning on the ConstitutionWe saw this next story on The National Pulse and thought it couldn’t possibly be true, but it is. If you go to the Constitution page of the National Archives… | |
Alex Berenson on The Moving TargetDid you know that we have double the number of cases of Delta are up 300% from this time last year? Dr. Fauci has pushed the vaccine at the expense… | |
Ew! Jeb Bush makes a squirm worthy Tik Tok as Biden blows up the worldBelow is a cringe-worthy Jeb Bush video to lure conservatives into joining the climate movement. Jeb seems oblivious to hundreds of thousands of anonymous people pouring through our open borders,… | |
Bidenism: We don’t call a tornado ‘tornado’ any moreJoe Biden, the pretender to the presidency, continued to confuse millions of Americans this week when he discussed the recent severe weather that struck the Gulf and Northeastern United States.… | |
AI roams around in Singapore scouting out vaccine violatorsThis looks funny and harmless, but it’s not. This little metal creature is the tool of the totalitarian. It’s checking you out through facial recognition and then monitoring your vaccine… | |
900 pages of data on Wuhan: Fauci funded pathogen enhancementNEWLY RELEASED documents provide details of US-funded research on…coronaviruses at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. Rand Paul wants an immediate investigation. The Intercept has obtained more than 900 pages of… | |
Obama’s Taliban Five-exchanged for a deserter-have top jobs in AfghanistanAll five ex-Guantanamo detainees exchanged for Bowe Bergdahl in 2014 have senior positions in the Taliban’s resurrected Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, Tolo News reports. The Taliban Five or GITMO Five:… | |
We need NFL helmets that say ‘Stop the Marxist NFL’The NFL has aligned 100% with a violent Soros-funded communist organization — Black Lives Matter — and with the false narrative about systemic racism. We won’t be turning football games… | |
US rushes to legitimize Taliban as they appoint a global terrorist to run the interiorThe UN and the US are rushing to recognize the Taliban government and give them ‘humanitarian’ aid. Biden’s government has already negotiated with these terrorists which is against the law.… | |
Blinken: Taliban won’t let stranded Americans leave over paperwork! Unbelievable!Secretary of State Antony Blinken actually said on Tuesday that Taliban can’t let Americans fly out of Afghanistan from the Mazar-i-Sharif airport because the US citizens and SIVs lack the… | |
Unbelievable! LA’s colossal violent crime wave with Soros DAAlex Villanueva, the Los Angeles Sheriff tweeted about the man who threatened a Sheriff’s Deputy with a knife in April. The man was arrested, and released, charged only with a… | |
Al Qaeda and ISIS will try to exploit the flood of Afghan refugeesUS intelligence officials expect foreign terrorist organizations to exploit the upcoming 20th anniversary of 9/11 in their messaging. According to a joint intelligence bulletin, recent media publications linked to Al Qaeda… | |
Another potential pandemic in India kills up to 75% of the afflictedA different virus classified by the World Health Organization has ‘pandemic potential’ and is spreading more than usual due to care shortages in India caused by COVID. The London Telegraph reports that… | |
Hardened criminal, released early-no bail, molests, murders woman, kills her dogs, sets fire to her homeTroy Davis, 51 (aka Troy Davies) was let out from prison early on parole, having served only half his sentence. He stole a car and was released without bail despite… | |
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… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) BECKER NEWS
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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110.) RIGHT & FREE
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America’s leading “fact-checkers” describe themselves as “independent.” But watching their energetic defenses of President Joe Biden’s politically damaging…
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There is almost no way this child should have survived.
111.) UNITED VOICE
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112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
America’s leading “fact-checkers” describe themselves as “independent.” But watching their energetic defenses of President Joe Biden’s politically damaging…
We found him. The most entitled person in the world.
Insurgent Conservatives
PO Box 8161 Greenwood, IN 46142
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114.) WAKING TIMES
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