Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday September 22, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
|
2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
SIGN UP September 22, 2021 READ ONLINE WORDS OF WISDOM “God gives every bird its food, but He does not throw it into its nest.” JOSIAH GILBERT HOLLAND MORNING BRIEF TOP NEWS Our world is full of misinformation. Keep yourself informed with the news reported in Truth and Tradition with a subscription to The Epoch Times today and get your first 2 months for just $1, and get Epoch TV for free: Limited time offer. Expires soon.
POSITIVE NEWS EPOCH OPINION A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR Puritang Green Vegetable Omega-3, 6, 7, 9 is made from purslane and perilla seeds. It contains over 90% concentration of Omega-3,6,7,9 – the highest possible without chemical additives. By using patented method of extraction, the original properties of the plants are preserved. The softgel is made of natural edible seaweed. It is 100% Organic and Vegan. EPOCH TV PUZZLE CENTER If this email has been forwarded to you and you would like to sign up, please click here. Copyright © 2021 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved. The Epoch Times, 229 W 28th St, Fl.5, New York, NY 10001
With social media censorship sidelining many important headlines, our Morning Brief email is how we make sure you get the latest developments that our reporters have curated from around the world. It’s our way of keeping you truly informed so that you can make the decisions that align with your values. We hope you enjoy our coverage. Manage your email preferences here.
|
3.) DAYBREAK
|
4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 9.22.21
Good Wednesday morning.
The Rays are up with 10 games left to go.
___
Breaking overnight — “Miami federal judge blocks Florida from enforcing ban on ‘sanctuary cities’” via Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald — A federal judge blocked Florida from enforcing a ban on so-called sanctuary cities, declaring portions of a law unconstitutional and tinged with “discriminatory motives.” The ruling struck down a key portion of the 2019 law that prohibits local and state officials from adopting “sanctuary” policies for undocumented migrants, a main focus for Gov. Ron DeSantis, who vowed to ban “sanctuary cities” in Florida when running for Governor in 2018 even though there were none in the state. The judge also blocked the state from enforcing a provision in the law requiring law enforcement officers and agencies to “use best efforts to support the enforcement of federal immigration law” when acting within their official duties.
___
The Florida Health Care Association has hired Susan E. Anderson as its director of government affairs, the association announced Tuesday.
Anderson comes to the FHCA from LeadingAge Florida, another nursing home association, and will work with FHCA senior director of government affairs Toby Philpot. In addition to her legislative lobbying duties, Anderson will assist FHCA member facilities with state and federal regulatory compliance.
“Susan brings a wealth of legislative, regulatory and policy experience, and we’re confident that her knowledge and expertise will contribute greatly to our members’ goals to continuously enhance the quality care they deliver,” Emmett Reed, FHCA chief executive officer, said in a prepared release announcing the hiring.
Before joining the FHCA, Anderson was the director of assisted living public policy for LeadingAge Florida and vice president of public policy for the Florida Senior Living Association. She also worked in the Florida Department of Elder Affairs general counsel’s office.
___
Here are some other things on my mind.
— Essential pandemic reading from the best reporters covering it: The Atlantic compiled six key takeaways from the ongoing and unwavering COVID-19 pandemic, which the publication describes as “rules” to define the “second pandemic winter.” They cover such topics as the new role vaccines play in managing the crisis, how vaccination demographics affect overall outcomes, the ongoing changes to those most at risk, why breakthrough cases aren’t as bad as you think, the problem with dismissing COVID-19 rarities, and final caution, that there is no single “worst” version of the virus.
— Hyper-minority districts may be a thing of the past, even for those they benefit: This must-read think-piece in The Atlantic takes a look at oddly construed congressional districts that lump Black voters into single districts, guaranteeing in most cases a safe Democratic seat, to preserve surrounding districts for White Republicans. For years, Dems in those seats have defended their safe districts — such as Corrine Brown did as recently as 2010 in her meandering district between Orlando and Jacksonville — but that thinking is shifting, and it could shake up the nation’s congressional makeup.
— Mind-blowing Twitter thread shows how a Donald Trump lawyer really wanted the election overturned: Former George W. Bush staffer Christian Vanderbrouk tweeted a six-point plan Trump lawyer John Eastman hatched to overturn the 2020 election, including a scheme that would have given Trump both an electoral victory and one through individual states’ votes. As The New York Times’ Maggie Haberman points out, it contradicts Trump’s long-standing narrative that his pressure on Vice President Mike Pence was to hand the issue “back to the states” and not directly overturn the election. The perhaps not-so-shocking plan includes throwing out electoral votes from seven states with objections, reducing the needed number to win from 270 to 228, which under that scenario, Trump would have. It further goes on to suggest conceding to Democrats’ “howls,” by allowing votes to be taken by states in the House to elect the President, where Trump would have claimed a majority at 26, again handing him the election. Mind blown yet?
— Like it or not, tax credit scholarships are helping Florida kids: More than 150,000 students are now attending K-12 private schools using Florida Tax Credit and Family Empowerment scholarships, nearly twice the number of students enrolled in the program as just six years ago. As lawmakers continue to emphasize school choice, particularly as a way to escape (or find) COVID-19 restrictions, expect that number to continue to grow. While the issue will always face scrutiny from pro-public education stalwarts in the Democratic Party, the kids who receive these scholarships are using them to obtain a high-quality education that may have been evading them in the public school system.
— Much anticipated Sopranos prequel gets a review no one wants to hear: Looking for a Corleonesque rise to power from Tony Soprano in The Many Saints of Newark? You might not get it. That’s the take away from a scathing review from AV Club about the much-hyped film, in which critic A.A. Dowd laments the main Sopranos character small role in the new movie, including “a solid hour” of a young Tony Soprano being “basically a Jake Lloyd-sized” boy “watching from the sidelines of a criminal empire in late 1960s Jersey.” The review bashes the film’s choice of emphasized characters, though not necessarily its casting choices (looking at you, Ray Liotta). But in true Sopranos fashion, die-hard fans will probably still give it a watch even with a lousy review, whether they like the outcome or not. You can catch it in theaters or on HBO Max on Oct. 1.
— iPhones to detect depression, cognitive decline: What if your smartphone could predict when a user is depressed, or experiencing some cognitive decline? That’s what Apple is attempting in its latest attempt to expand its burgeoning health portfolio, The Wall Street Journal reports. The plan would use data on mobility, physical activity, sleep patterns and typing behavior, among others, to create a predictive algorithm to flag potential problems. Sounds cool, but there’s work to be done. The plan is in its infancy, and the data needed to predict such ailments could raise privacy concerns and rely on users to trust Apple with sensitive data. Still, though, the research progress shows an intriguing possibility.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
Tweet, tweet:
—@MichaelGWaltz: If the U.N. secretary is gravely concerned about a cold war with the (Chinese) he must send that message to Chairman Xi, who is actively trying to replace the American Dream with the China Dream and is silencing anyone who opposes the #CCP authoritarian rule.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@GovRonDeSantis: At the request of @NorthPortPolice, @MyFWC law enforcement has been assisting in the search for Brian Laundrie. I have directed all state agencies under my purview to continue to assist federal & local law enforcement as they continue to search — we need justice for Gabby Petito.
—@ChristinaPushaw: Just incredible to see journalism school graduates confidently assert that a Harvard Medical School graduate is “unqualified” to be Surgeon General. 👀
—@MDixon55: The non-lobbying political consultants are in the building, which can only mean one thing: presiding officer designation day!
—@SenPizzo: It’s the worst-kept secret that I’ve been blessed with the hardest working, most loyal and dedicated person since Day 1. Bittersweet, but the best and brightest must have the space to shine bigger and brighter — @FLSenateDems are stronger with @ChiefMaggie as Staff Director.
—@PaulFox13: Right now, we are closer to the Winter Solstice (Dec. 21, 2021) than the Summer Solstice (June 20, 2021).
— DAYS UNTIL —
The Problem with Jon Stewart premieres on Apple TV+ — 8; Disability Employment Awareness Month begins — 9; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres — 9; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 9; MLB regular season ends — 11; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres — 16; ‘Succession’ returns — 25; ‘Dune’ premieres — 30; World Series Game 1 — 34; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 35; Florida TaxWatch’s annual meeting begins — 35; Georgia at UF — 38; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 41; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 41; The Blue Angels 75th anniversary show — 44; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 44; ‘Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 46; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 47; Miami at FSU — 52; ExcelinEd National Summit on Education begins — 57; FSU vs. UF — 66; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 70; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 76; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 79; ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 86; ‘The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 91; ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 94; NFL season ends — 109; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 111; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 111; Joel Coen’s ‘The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 114; NFL playoffs begin — 115; Super Bowl LVI — 144; Daytona 500 — 151; St. Pete Grand Prix — 158; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 184; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 228; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 247; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 253; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 289; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 301; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 380; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 415.
“Ron DeSantis’ new Surgeon General questions masks, vaccines, other COVID-19 measures” via Gray Rohrer and Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — New state Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo said he was a signer of the Great Barrington Declaration, a statement from a group of scientists in October 2020 that called for herd immunity through natural infection. It was immediately blasted by the scientific community, including an open letter to the medical journal The Lancet signed by more than 80 researchers that called the theory “a dangerous fallacy unsupported by scientific evidence. … It is not feasible to restrict uncontrolled outbreaks to particular sections of society.”
>>>Ladapo is also the author of multiple op-eds questioning vaccines and downplaying the effectiveness of masks. In a June Wall Street Journal piece headlined, “Are COVID Vaccines Riskier Than Advertised?” Ladapo argued that COVID-19 vaccines could be attributable to a spike in deaths in some countries such as Norway and decried “anti-Trump politics in the spring of 2020 [that] mushroomed into social-media censorship.” In an April Wall Street Journal op-ed entitled, “An American Epidemic of ‘COVID Mania,’” Ladapo argued the U.S. response to COVID-19 was an “overreaction,” and the disease “never posed a serious threat to social and economic institutions.” As recently as last week, Ladapo continued to push for the use of hydroxychloroquine as a COVID-19 treatment, writing in the Journal, that “health officials seem determined to close the book” on it.
—“DeSantis nominates doctor who opposes COVID-19 restrictions as next state Surgeon General” via Arek Sarkissian of POLITICO
—” ‘Fear is done’: Florida’s new Surgeon General outspoken critic of COVID-19 lockdowns, mandates” via Jeffrey Schweers of USA Today Network
Here’s a selection of readings from Dr. Ladapo:
—”Are COVID-19 vaccines riskier than advertised?” for The Wall Street Journal
—”Vaccine mandates can’t stop COVID-19’s spread” for The Wall Street Journal
—”Masks are a distraction from the pandemic reality” for The Wall Street Journal
—”Let’s all be honest about hydroxychloroquine: Evidence is more positive than many in the medical community admit” for the New York Daily News
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Paul Renner denounces division, highlights GOP in designation speech” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Renner touted freedom while rejecting division that stifles opposing thought in his designation speech. In a speech that at times condemned division and at others stoked it, the new Speaker-Designate decried division and radicalism while touting the Republican vision. While dismissing political labels, Renner highlighted “two directions, two distinct visions,” one moving toward and one away from freedom. Renner denounced social media bans, group guilt, and marginalizing opposing viewpoints as a negative vision. The radical views remind him of the false promises made in Cuba, he added. “Bullying people to conform to a narrow set of ideals is not progressive, and it certainly isn’t American,” Renner said.
Tweet, tweet:
“Jimmy Patronis backs DEP Secretary interview amid DeSantis-Nikki Fried feud” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Patronis says his office will recommend that the Cabinet consider Department of Environmental Protection Secretary Shawn Hamilton’s appointment at its next meeting. Disagreements over Hamilton’s recent appointment flared during Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting. Fried contends DeSantis illegally appointed Hamilton to the position without a public interview or the Cabinet’s unanimous approval. As she did in June, Fried interrupted the Cabinet meeting to raise concerns that the Secretary’s appointment was invalid. “My other concern is that any action he takes at this point is not a lawful appointment. It’s not even a lawful interim appointment,” Fried said.
Fried casts lone vote against Miami-Dade road project — The Governor and Cabinet voted 3-1 to approve an extension to the Dolphin Expressway in Miami-Dade after an administrative law judge rejected the plan because it would damage farmlands and the Everglades. Fried casting the lone nay vote and questioned why her “Cabinet colleagues think they know better than an Administrative Law Judge who recommended against this wasteful project. By overriding a judge with the expertise to recommend against it, Cabinet members have once again sided with developers in favor of harming Everglades restoration, risking wildlife, agricultural lands, and Miami-Dade’s water supply, while not really reducing urban sprawl. Let’s be clear about what was done today, because these lands can’t be unpaved once they’re gone forever.”
“Fried, Democrats rebuke abortion restriction efforts ahead of Session” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Democratic lawmakers demonstrated alongside activists Tuesday, vowing to fight Texas-style abortion restrictions ahead of the 2022 Legislative Session. Fried left a Cabinet meeting to attend the event, a move that garnered applause among demonstrators. She warned similar legislation is on the horizon. “We will not let the White men of this building tell us what to do with our bodies,” said Fried, a Democratic gubernatorial contender. Democratic Sen. Annette Taddeo coined the law “The Rapist Bill of Rights.” She blasted Republicans and encouraged attendees to organize in defense of state abortion rights. Abortion rights, she warned, are under threat. Despite vocal support from Senate President Wilton Simpson, DeSantis last month appeared less enthused to push similar legislation in Florida.
For your radar — “Americans *hate* the Texas abortion law” via Chris Cillizza of CNN — At the core of the Texas abortion law is the empowerment of private citizens to bring lawsuits against people who assist someone in getting an abortion after the state’s six-week window. It also provides monetary rewards of up to $10,000 for those who bring the suits. People really don’t like either of those provisions, according to new national polling from Monmouth University. Fully 70% of Americans disagree with the idea of allowing private citizens to bring lawsuits against abortion providers. That number includes 9 in 10 Democrats, yes, but also more than 4 in 10 Republicans. Opposition to paying off these complainants is even higher in the poll, with 81% disapproving of the idea — including 2 in 3 (67%) self-identified Republicans.
“In reversal, Florida to apply for $820 million in food aid” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — In a reversal, Florida announced this week it would tap into $820 million in federal food aid money for children in low-income households. After weeks of saying the money wasn’t needed, Florida’s Department of Children and Families said it is applying for the no-strings-attached funding after all. That means parents of up to 2.1 million children could receive $375 to pay for food for each child over the summer. The shift came after months of urging from advocacy groups and food banks, who noted that children are hungrier in the summer. A U.S. Census Bureau survey of Florida households from June and July found that 14% of adults reported that their kids were not eating enough because the household could not afford food.
“Senators consider staffing needs stemming from child welfare reform” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Senators on the Children, Families and Elder Affairs committee reviewed recent reforms to the foster care system that already have had implications on staffing within the child welfare system. The committee reviewed two top bills emerging from that Session affecting the Department of Children and Families. Sen. Darryl Rouson said meeting requirements under new laws DeSantis signed this year requires “herculean efforts” from the department. Sen. Gayle Harrell said she was concerned about the demand placed on the workforce by significantly expanding the welfare system. The employee applicant pool has decreased, Deputy DCF Secretary Taylor Hatch noted.
“‘We’ll get it done’: Keith Perry breathes life into juvenile expunction bill” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Sen. Perry announced plans Tuesday to refile a bill that would broaden a juvenile’s ability to expunge their arrest record in Florida. This time, however, he expects the Governor’s signature. “We’ll get it done,” Perry told Florida Politics. “Absolutely.” Despite the proposal (SB 274) soaring through the Legislature without a single downvote, DeSantis vetoed it in June, citing public safety concerns. The bill was among the most expansive criminal justice reform efforts in decades.
“With minimum wage hikes on the horizon, bill would expand state children’s insurance eligibility” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Minimum wage workers are getting a pay raise Sept. 30 and Rep. Robin Bartleman of Weston wants to ensure that pay bump won’t cost workers their children’s health insurance. Bartleman has filed a bill (HB 135) to increase the maximum income a family can earn to be eligible for state-subsidized health insurance for their children, called Florida KidCare. Currently, those making less than 200% of the federal poverty level are eligible to get the insurance. That means a single mother with two children can’t earn more than $43,919 in annual income for her children to be eligible for state-subsidized insurance. Bartleman proposes the threshold to 250% of the federal poverty level, or $54,900 annually for that single mother.
“Lauren Book, Anna Eskamani bring back measure to make diapers tax-free” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Sen. Book and Rep. Eskamani are back with bills to eliminate sales tax for child and adult diaper purchases. Book has backed versions of the legislation for years, though the measure has yet to pass. “It’s time to stop taxing Florida families for essential health care items,” Book said in a statement announcing she’s renewing her push again ahead of the 2022 Legislative Session. Last year’s legislation earned unanimous approval in the Senate Commerce and Tourism Committee and the Senate Finance and Tax Committee. It died in the Appropriations Committee, its last committee stop. No House member joined Book on a companion bill during the 2021 Session.
Is she fast or just furious? — “Book measure would crack down on drag racing, target promotion on social media” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Book is hoping to strengthen the state’s laws against drag racing in a bill which would, in part, target those who promote and coordinate illegal races via social media. Book is bringing back legislation she filed before the last Session. Her previous attempt stalled, dying in the Transportation Committee. This year’s version (SB 258) would amend state statutes regulating racing on highways to clearly add “roadways,” “parking lots,” and “organized rides” to the list of regulated areas. The bill also explicitly bars racing with mopeds, all-terrain vehicles, and other vehicles not licensed to operate on roads. In addition, the measure aims to crack down on race spectators and organizers who utilize social media.
Assignment editors — Sen. Shevrin Jones; House Democratic Co-Leaders Bobby DuBose and Evan Jenne; and Reps. Dotie Joseph, Michele Rayner and Marie P. Woodson will hold a joint news conference regarding the humanitarian crisis at the U.S. Southern border, 11 a.m., 4th Floor Rotunda. This event will also be livestreamed on The Florida Channel.
“Citizens Insurance may push you toward more expensive insurers” via Ron Hurtibise of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Customers of state-owned Citizens Property Insurance Corp. will be forced to spend more to insure their homes if a new state law limits or eliminates their ability to just say no to private companies taking over their policies. Citizens is looking for ways to reduce its policy count, which has increased from 420,000 in 2019 and is expected to reach 765,000 by the end of the year and more than 1 million by 2022. Three proposed changes to state law that Citizens plans to seek next year would throttle policyholders’ ability to reject bids by private-market insurers seeking to cherry-pick their policies out of Citizens.
Florida Education Foundation welcomes two board members — The Florida Education Foundation, a direct-support organization for the Florida Department of Education, announced on Tuesday that Rebecca Matthews and Sarah Painter have joined its board of directors. Matthews is vice president of Automated Health Systems and will serve as the foundation’s treasurer. Painter is Florida’s 2022 Teacher of the Year and will serve as an ex officio member of the board on its civics committee.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Gregory Black, Brian Jogerst, Waypoint Strategies: R Street Institute
Travis Blanton, Johnson & Blanton: The Innovation Group
Amanda Fraser, Colodny Fass: United Property & Casualty Insurance Company
Jeff Johnston, Amanda Stewart, Anita Berry, Johnston & Stewart Government Strategies: SentinelOne
Fred Karlinsky, Timothy Stanfield, Greenberg Traurig: Florida Casualty Insurance Company
Daniel Olson, Meenan: Delta Dental Insurance Company, Florida Insurance Guaranty Association, Florida Life & Health Insurance Guaranty Association, Florida Service Agreement Association, FlowMSP, Nationwide Insurance
Ron Pierce, Natalie King, Edward Briggs, RSA Consulting Group: Muzology
David Ramba, Thomas Hobbs, Ramba Consulting Group: Village of Wellington
Katie Webb, Colodny Fass: United Property & Casualty Insurance Company
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Tuesday Florida COVID-19 update: 13,201 more cases added to state tally” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida on Tuesday reported to the CDC 13,201 more COVID-19 cases and five deaths. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,517,177 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 51,889 deaths since the pandemic began. On average, the state has added 376 deaths and 9,112 cases per day in the past seven days, according to Herald calculations of CDC data. The 376 deaths per day, reported Tuesday, tie with Florida’s highest seven-day death average recorded Monday.
“DeSantis says monoclonal antibody brought Florida COVID-19 ER visits down 70%” via Brendan Cole of Newsweek — DeSantis has said that monoclonal antibody treatment is having a significant effect on COVID-19 cases in his state, as he continues to lock horns with the Joe Biden administration over the distribution of the therapy. Along with other GOP Governors, DeSantis has championed the treatment that lessens the severity of COVID-19 symptoms, which he sees as a key pandemic-fighting policy, along with promoting vaccines. However, DeSantis faces criticism for his opposition to mask mandates and has joined other GOP Governors in threatening legal action to prevent the order announced by Biden to mandate vaccinations for workers at some companies.
“Duval Schools data shows COVID-19 cases are slowing. Doctors say it’s because the mask mandate is working.” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — The number of new COVID-19 cases reported within Duval County Public Schools has tapered off significantly within the last week. Doctors say it’s an indicator that the school district’s stricter mask mandate is working. The 2021-22 school year started with a mask requirement that students’ families could easily opt out online. About 10% of the student population or 12,500 students opted out within weeks of the school year. Cases of the coronavirus on campus quickly multiplied, though the district isn’t tracking masked versus unmasked cases.
“Polk County residents voice outrage at Commissioners for not supporting ivermectin letter” via Dustin Wyatt of The Lakeland Ledger — The majority of Polk County Commissioners said Friday that they wouldn’t support a letter to DeSantis written by Commissioner Neil Combee that promotes people’s right to try alternative drugs, such as ivermectin, to treat COVID-19. The rejection of this letter outraged many residents, and dozens, several representing local Republican groups, came to the meeting Tuesday morning to express their dismay and disappointment with the all-Republican elected body. There was shouting, a plea to three Commissioners to step down, threats of a recall campaign, and several residents were ejected for not following rules of decorum. Many of the comments from the public echoed remarks and conspiracy theories that have been perpetuated by Combee in recent months.
“‘We’re coming back:’ Parents plan to keep pushing for masks after school board strikes down meeting” via Jack Newby of the Pensacola News Journal — The Escambia County School District board voted against calling a special meeting about face masks in the classroom, but that hasn’t stopped a growing number of concerned residents from pushing for the board to reconsider. “We’re at least trying to get them to go back to the protocols they used last school year,” said Pensacola resident Dianne Krumel, who delivered a pair of impassioned pro-mask speeches during the public forum of two school board workshop meetings last week. Krumel and others plan to speak during the public forum again to encourage Superintendent Tim Smith to put something actionable on the agenda for October’s meeting.
“Palm Beach Gardens will use more than $2M of its COVID-19 relief money to build a golf course. Why?” via Katherine Kokal of The Palm Beach Post — As communities nationwide spend millions in federal relief funds helping businesses and residents hurt by the coronavirus pandemic, Palm Beach Gardens is set to spend the lion’s share of its first $2.9 million payment on building a new golf course. The city confirmed plans to use $2.1 million from the American Rescue Plan to pay for the development of a par-3 golf course it is building immediately west of the one at its Sandhill Crane Golf Club. Palm Beach Gardens is using a $14 million bond to pay for the rest of the course’s construction along Northlake Boulevard west of Florida’s Turnpike.
— 2022 —
“Influential donor promises $100K donation if DeSantis entertains 2020 election audit” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Notable pandemic denier Alfie Oakes, who says he would rather give children heroin than a COVID-19 vaccine, promised to donate $100,000 to DeSantis’ reelection if the Governor meets about auditing the 2020 election. The politically influential Naples businessman is part of a public pressure campaign to persuade DeSantis to sit down and talk fraud. Oakes tells right-wing outlets that the idea is to prove through an election audit that in the 2020 election, nearly a million votes were stolen in Florida, a state that former Trump won by more than 370,000 votes. Show that’s possible — even in a state where Republicans control state government — and it will prove that in some states won by Biden, the fix was in.
“A congressional election is almost here. Who knew?” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Within a week, 100,000-plus South Florida voters will get ballots in the mail so they can start voting in a critical Nov. 2 election. That’s not a mistake, even though it’s an odd-numbered year, when there aren’t usually elections. Voters are picking the region’s next member of Congress, anointing someone who could serve for decades into the future. Even though signs are up, some candidates are sending flyers in the mail, and TV commercials are airing, the contest hasn’t attracted much interest. With a low turnout and an unusually large number of candidates, the winner could be decided by an extremely small number of voters.
“Annette Taddeo endorses Janelle Perez as ‘the right person’ for SD 37” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Taddeo has endorsed Perez, a Cuban American businesswoman, in the Senate District 37 race, adding her name to a list that is likely to grow through next year. Taddeo, rumored to be weighing a 2022 run for Governor, pointed to the person now occupying the office, DeSantis, as one reason she is backing Perez. “Gov. DeSantis has been acting more like an autocrat and less like a democratically elected Gov.,” Taddeo said in a statement announcing the endorsement. Taddeo’s endorsement is the second to come from an elected state Democrat within a week of Perez’s announcement that she was swapping races in her inaugural run for political office.
“Jacksonville City Council presidents back Lake Ray’s bid to reclaim HD 12 seat” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Former Rep. Ray, an Arlington mainstay who represented House District 12 from 2008 to 2016, is seeking a return to Tallahassee in 2022. Among past Council presidents endorsing him is the current HD 12 incumbent, Rep. Clay Yarborough, who is running for Senate. Current Jacksonville City Council President Sam Newby also endorsed Ray, as did former presidents Elaine Brown, Lad Daniels, Bill Gulliford, Jerry Holland, Kevin Hyde, Stephen Joost, Ginger Soud and Scott Wilson. “To say that I am humbled that this group of outstanding Jacksonville leaders would choose to endorse my candidacy would be an understatement … I look forward to working with them and our current leadership in helping to move our city and state forward,” he said.
Happening tonight:
and
“Political newcomer and incumbent to face off in Lakeland mayoral election” via Sara-Megan Walsh of The Lakeland Ledger — When Election Day rolls around on Nov. 2, Lakeland residents will have their choice between two candidates for Mayor. Incumbent Bill Mutz is seeking a second, four-year term. Now retired, Mutz was a former used auto dealership owner who occasionally provides consulting or business mentorship. Though a political newcomer, Saga Stevin is no foreigner to politics as she has made a habit of studying the issues and believes it’s time to step up to the plate. “The groundswell of support is amazing,” she said. “So many people feel they are not being heard.” Mutz said there are many critical infrastructures needs the city must address in partnership with others.
— CORONA NATION —
“‘Soul-crushing.’ 1,900 Americans are dying every day from COVID-19” via The Associated Press — COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. have climbed to an average of more than 1,900 a day for the first time since early March, with experts saying the virus is preying largely on a distinct group: 71 million unvaccinated Americans. The increasingly lethal turn has filled hospitals, complicated the start of the school year, delayed the return to offices and demoralized health care workers. Nearly 64% of the U.S. population has received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. And yet, average deaths per day have climbed 40% over the past two weeks, from 1,387 to 1,947.
“Joe Biden bets on rapid COVID-19 tests but they can be hard to find” via Matthew Perrone of The Associated Press — Biden is betting on millions more rapid, at-home tests to help curb the latest deadly wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. But the tests have already disappeared from pharmacy shelves in many parts of the U.S., and manufacturers warn it will take them weeks to ramp up production, after scaling it back amid plummeting demand over the summer. The latest shortage is another painful reminder that the U.S. has yet to successfully manage its COVID-19 testing arsenal, let alone deploy it in the type of systematic way needed to quickly crush outbreaks in schools, workplaces and communities. Experts say encouraging signs last spring led to false confidence about the shrinking role for tests.
Tweet, tweet:
“J&J says COVID-19 booster shot is 94% effective in the U.S. when given two months after first dose” via Berkeley Lovelace Jr of CNBC — Johnson & Johnson said its COVID-19 booster shot is 94% effective when administered two months after the first dose in the United States. It also said the booster increases antibody levels by four to six times compared with one shot alone. A J&J booster dose given six months out from the first shot appears to be potentially even more protective against COVID-19, the company said, generating antibodies twelvefold higher four weeks after the boost, regardless of age.
“Study: Pandemic cut U.S. life expectancy by more than 9 million years” via Marisa Fernandez of Axios — The pandemic slashed U.S. life expectancy by more than 9 million years, with Black and Hispanic Americans losing more than twice as many years per capita compared to white Americans, according to research published Monday in Annals of Internal Medicine. The data show that despite reports of older and more vulnerable populations assuming many of the deaths, young people with above-average life expectancies, including Black and Hispanic communities, were not spared. “The COVID-19 pandemic has robbed Americans of 9 million birthdays that would otherwise have been celebrated,” Hanke Heun-Johnson, one of the authors of the study tells Axios.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“IRS COVID-19 benefit: How to get up to $600 tax deduction” via Fareeha Rehman of KRON — If you make a cash donation to charity before the end of 2021, you can take advantage of expanded tax benefits approved under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act. This includes deductions up to $300 for individuals and $600 for married couples who gave cash donations to qualifying charities during 2021, the IRS said. Normally, people who elect the standard deduction — 9 in 10 taxpayers, the IRS estimates — aren’t able to claim donations for an additional deduction. But under the CARES Act, contributions to charity through the end of the year will qualify taxpayers for more money back.
“Polk County seeks applications for remaining $10.5 million in COVID-19 relief funds” via Dustin Wyatt of The Ledger — The county received $140 million in American Rescue Plan funding from the federal government. After the Commission agreed to put more than half the money, $82 million, toward infrastructure projects, the county has $10.5 million available for nonprofits, health organizations, or businesses. “Organizations are requested to submit informational proposals for projects that would help the community recover from and respond to COVID-19,” a release says. “Proposals will be reviewed to ensure they qualify for the ARP funds and meet the requirements of the Department of Treasury.” Applicants must be located in and doing business in Polk County, and also must have been established as a business before Jan. 1, 2021.
“CVS to hire 25,000 new workers to meet flu, COVID-19 demand” via Vance Cariaga of Yahoo Finance — Most of the positions will be for full-time, part-time and temporary licensed pharmacists, trained pharmacy technicians and nurses at CVS Pharmacy locations, the company said in a news release. CVS will also add retail store associate positions. To attract applicants, CVS will hold a one-day virtual national career event on Sept. 24. Qualified candidates can apply by texting “CVS” to 25000. Another option is to visit the CVS Health Career website to learn about jobs in specific localities. You will enter a streamlined digital screening process on the website that facilitates an online application, virtual job tryout, and immediate hiring. No on-site applications will be taken, or any interviews be conducted.
— MORE CORONA —
“Rodrigo Duterte accuses rich countries of hoarding COVID-19 vaccines while the poor ‘wait for trickles.‘” via Rick Gladstone of The New York Times — With his country badly lagging in COVID-19 vaccinations, President Duterte of the Philippines railed against the world’s affluent countries at the United Nations on Tuesday, accusing them of hoarding vaccines while the poor “wait for trickles.” Reinforcing his reputation as a blunt speaker, Duterte described the rich-poor divide over vaccination rates as scandalous. His remarks, delivered via prerecorded video to the 193-member General Assembly, were among the most forceful criticisms of the inequities that have been laid bare by the pandemic. Just 10 rich countries account for most of the 5.86 billion vaccine doses administered so far.
“Tennessee recommends vaccinated residents lose access to monoclonal antibody treatment” via Brett Kelman of USA Today — The Tennessee state government now recommends nearly all vaccinated residents be denied access to monoclonal antibody treatment in a new effort to preserve a limited supply of antibody drugs for those who remain most vulnerable to the virus, largely by their own choice. The federal government began capping shipments of these drugs last week because the majority of the national supply is being used by a small number of poorly vaccinated southern states, including Tennessee. State officials say restricting eligibility to the treatment will reserve the now-limited supply of drugs for those unvaccinated residents most likely to suffer severe complications from a coronavirus infection.
“Restaurant owners fear losing $25,000 outdoor dining sheds” via Kate Krader of Bloomberg — More than 11,800 restaurants have taken advantage of the city’s Open Restaurants Program, offering dining on streets, sidewalks throughout the five boroughs. Earlier this year, Mayor Bill de Blasio proposed an amendment that would make the program permanent, by removing restrictions on the placement of outdoor cafes. The current Open Restaurant program expires at the end of 2022, when New York is slated to begin accepting applications for permanent structures. “The focus now must be on developing a permanent outdoor dining program,” says Andrew Rigie, executive director of the New York City Hospitality Alliance.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Dems fear Biden’s domestic agenda could implode” via Burgess Everett and Heather Caygle of POLITICO — Internal Democratic discord has wounded President Biden’s massive social spending plan, raising the prospect that the package could stall out, shrink dramatically — or even fail altogether. Myriad problems have arisen. Moderate Senate Democrats Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona continue to be a major headache for party leadership’s $3.5 trillion target. The Senate parliamentarian just nixed the party’s yearslong push to enact broad immigration reform. House members may tank the prescription drugs overhaul the party has run on for years. And a fight continues to brew over Vermont independent Sen. Bernie Sanders’ push to expand Medicare.
“In his U.N. debut, Biden calls for global unity against common threats.” via Michael D. Shear, David E. Sanger and Rick Gladstone of The New York Times — Biden delivered his debut address to the annual gathering of world leaders at the United Nations on Tuesday amid strong new doubts about his ability to vault the U.S. back into a position of global leadership after his predecessor’s promotion of “America First” isolationism. He called for a new era of global unity against the coronavirus, emerging technological threats and the expanding influence of autocratic nations such as China and Russia. “Our security, our prosperity and our very freedoms are interconnected, in my view as never before,” Biden said. Calling for the world to make the use of force “our tool of last resort, not our first,” he defended his decision to end the U.S. war in Afghanistan.
“Boris Johnson says dealing with Biden is ‘a breath of fresh air‘” via Scott Stump of TODAY — Asked about his close relationship with Trump, Johnson said the U.K. Prime Minister and U.S. President are “fated to get along,” which applies to Trump and now Biden. “But what I will say about Joe Biden and dealing with the new American President, yes, it is a breath of fresh air in the sense of some things on which we can really work together, and you knew I was gonna bring it up — climate change — he’s great on that,” Johnson said. “And he wants to cut CO². He wants to get to net-zero by 2050, and he shares with me, a basic view that you can do this without penalizing the economy.”
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Trump Org prosecutors find new evidence — in a basement” via Jose Pagliery of The Daily Beast — Prosecutors have discovered a tranche of evidence in the basement of a co-conspirator in the Trump Organization tax fraud case, a defense lawyer for indicted chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg revealed in court on Monday, with the attorney also signaling that more shoes are yet to drop in New York’s ongoing investigation. “We have strong reason to believe there could be other indictments coming,” Weisselberg’s lawyer, Bryan Skarlatos, said in Manhattan criminal court on Monday. Skarlatos also referenced a private conversation that Weisselberg — along with his defense lawyers and prosecutors — had with the judge before proceedings were open to the public, revealing that prosecutors had discovered tax documents related to Trump’s company in the basement of an unnamed co-conspirator.
“Trump campaign knew lawyers’ voting machine claims were baseless, memo shows” via Alan Feuer of The New York Times — Two weeks after the 2020 election, a team of lawyers closely allied with Trump held a widely watched news conference at the Republican Party’s headquarters in Washington. They laid out a bizarre conspiracy theory at the event, claiming that a voting machine company had worked with an election software firm, the financier George Soros and Venezuela to steal the presidential contest from Trump. But there was a problem for the Trump team. By the time the news conference occurred on Nov. 19, Trump’s campaign had already prepared an internal memo on many of the outlandish claims about the company, Dominion Voting Systems, and the separate software company, Smartmatic.
“Two GOP operatives indicted for allegedly routing money from Russian national to support Trump campaign” via Felicia Sonmez and Isaac Stanley-Becker of The Washington Post — A political strategist who was pardoned by the former President after being convicted in a 2012 campaign finance scheme is facing new charges related to an alleged 2016 plot to illegally funnel donations made by a Russian national to support then-candidate Trump’s White House bid. Jesse Benton, 43, who was previously a top aide to former Republican Rep. Ron Paul of Texas and GOP Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky and later ran a pro-Trump super PAC, was charged this month, according to a federal indictment in Washington unsealed Monday. Also charged is Roy Douglas “Doug” Wead, 75, a conservative author and former special assistant to President George H.W. Bush.
— CRISIS —
“Jan. 6 committee chairman says panel could start issuing subpoenas ‘within a week‘” via Annie Grayer and Ryan Nobles of CNN — The Democratic chairman of the House Select Committee investigating the deadly Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol said Monday that the panel could start issuing subpoenas to companies and individuals who have not cooperated with records requests “within a week.” “We will probably as a committee issue subpoenas either to witnesses or organizations within a week,” said Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi. The select committee spent most of August requesting records from a variety of government agencies and social media companies to begin charting its course for piecing together the events leading up to the Jan. 6 riot and zeroing in on who within Trump’s White House and orbit knew what.
“Huge hack reveals embarrassing details of who’s behind Proud Boys and other far-right websites” via Drew Harwell, Craig Timberg and Hannah Allam of The Washington Post — Epik has long been the favorite internet company of the far-right, providing domain services to QAnon theorists, Proud Boys and other instigators of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. But that veil of anonymity abruptly vanished last week when a huge breach by the hacker group Anonymous dumped into public view more than 150 gigabytes of previously private data, including usernames, passwords and other identifying information of Epik’s customers. Extremism researchers and political opponents have treated the leak as a Rosetta Stone to the far-right, helping them decode who has been doing what with whom over several years.
— D.C. MATTERS —
AARP Florida urges Stephanie Murphy to act on prescription prices — AARP Florida on Tuesday called on U.S. Rep. Murphy to take action to lower prescription drug costs impacting Floridians. “Floridians are suffering because the high cost of medication is forcing them to choose between taking their pills and paying for food or rent. Congresswoman Stephanie Murphy has a once-in-a-generation chance to help change this,” AARP Florida State Director Jeff Johnson said. Johnson cited data showing drug costs in Florida rose 26.3% from 2015 to 2019, while the annual income for residents only increased 13.0%. He added, “It is wrong that even during a pandemic and financial crisis, drug companies increased the cost of over 1,000 drugs last year, including those for chronic conditions that people over age 50 depend on.”
Billboards pop Murphy for ‘MISSING’ on child tax credit — The Economic Security Project Action political committee is putting up billboards and launching a digital ad campaign in Florida’s 7th Congressional District dinging U.S. Rep. Murphy for being “MISSING” in her support for the child tax credit. The ads are going up in response to Murphy’s recent statement that she would not vote for the $3.5 trillion “Build Back Better Act,” citing concerns with some provisions in the bill. The ads include an image of a missing poster on the side of a milk carton. They urge a vote for the Build Back Better Act. The billboard is located in Winter Park on the west side of U.S. 17/92, a little over half a mile north of Fairbanks Ave., facing south.
Shevrin Jones asks Biden administration to issue humanitarian parole to incoming Haitians — Sen. On Tuesday, Jones sent the Biden administration a letter asking it to direct U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents and officers to issue humanitarian parole to all Haitians seeking protection at a U.S. border and refer them into INA Sec. 240 removal proceedings. “These images are not from 1892, this is from 2021, and every one of us should be outraged. Our Haitian brothers and sisters have gone through the assassination of a President, a catastrophic earthquake, constant political unrest, gang violence, and the list goes on. This isn’t a border issue, this is America’s litmus test of humanity and empathy, and the Biden administration must act,” he said.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“DeSantis directs state police to assist in search for Brian Laundrie” via Michael Lee of the Fox News — DeSantis announced that Florida State Police are assisting in the search for Laundrie. “At the request of @NorthPortPolice, @MyFWC law enforcement has been assisting in the search for Brian Laundrie,” DeSantis said on Twitter. “I have directed all state agencies under my purview to continue to assist federal & local law enforcement as they continue to search — we need justice for Gabby Petito.” Authorities found the body of a person that fit the description of Petito near Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming Sunday. Police have had trouble locating Laundrie in the vast reserve, though authorities have now focused their search on a specific area of it.
“How one of the largest nursing home chains in Florida could avoid nearly all of $256 million fraud judgment” via Christopher Rowland of The Washington Post — The Justice Department and a medical whistleblower have tentatively agreed to settle a $256 million civil fraud judgment against a large nursing home chain for $4.5 million. Entities operating under Consulate Health Care, a chain based in Florida tied to private equity company Formation Capital, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in March. The sixth-largest nursing home chain in the country with 140 facilities from the mid-Atlantic to the Gulf Coast, it said it did not have the resources to pay the large False Claims Act judgment against it. The penalty was the culmination of a whistleblower case brought in 2011 against an earlier owner of Consulate’s nursing homes a nurse who worked at two of the chain’s nursing homes.
“Broward schools tech chief resigns, then decides to stay” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A Broward schools technology chief submitted his resignation last week but decided Tuesday he’ll remain a district employee for a while. Phil Dunn told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel on Tuesday morning he was stepping down due to health-related issues; he has longtime cardiac issues he needs to address. His Sept. 14 resignation letter said his last day would be this Friday. But by Tuesday afternoon, he said he had worked out an agreement to take medical leave instead of quitting. Dunn, who makes $178,000 a year, said he still expects the district to appoint a temporary replacement while he’s away for an unspecified time.
“Former judge cleared in campaign finance investigation” via Rafael Olmeda of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Former Broward Circuit Judge Tom Lynch and two campaign associates have been cleared of wrongdoing after an investigation into campaign finance issues from his 2020 run for Public Defender. The investigation became public in April when DeSantis assigned the case to the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office. Broward State Attorney Harold Pryor had asked the Governor to reassign the case to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest because Lynch’s son, Michael Lynch, is a judge overseeing Broward criminal cases. Miami prosecutors found no evidence that Lynch, campaign manager Michael Ahearn or campaign treasurer Megan Donahue committed a crime.
“Blueprint: Funding Doak stadium repairs could leave OEV budget dry, but also boost the economy” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — If sales tax funding to do repairs to Doak Campbell Stadium are approved, it could leave the economic development arm of the Blueprint Intergovernmental Agency without the ability to go after other projects. The 12-member board of City and County Commissioners will decide the fate of $20 million requested by Florida State University this spring to do infrastructure repairs and maintenance at its football stadium. The board meets Monday. Doing so could mean that the Office of Economic Vitality would use up 20 years’ worth of tax dollars. In all, the project is estimated to cost $33 million with FSU committed to paying the difference should the IA approve the funding.
— TOP OPINION —
“If you thought kids in cages looked bad, President Biden, then take a look at this” via the Miami Herald editorial board — What’s your thinking, Mr. President, about the images of the border agent grabbing and menacing a Haitian migrant with what looks for all the world like a whip? We’re not sure if the border agent was channeling his inner “massa” from all those slave-era movies Hollywood churns out. But we’re pretty sure that he was just doing his job, following orders. Orders to round up these migrants so that they can be deported., Your orders, ultimately, President Biden.
— OPINIONS —
“Let science lead the way on COVID-19 booster shots” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — The Biden administration got ahead of the science last month in proposing to make all Americans vaccinated against COVID-19 eligible for a booster shot. The 16 to 2 vote against a Pfizer booster for most adults receiving the vaccine represented a political setback for the Biden administration, which last month proposed that most Americans receive a booster eight months after receiving their second shot. That rollout was to begin this fall. Biden’s motivations may have been admirable, but the President should have supported a vaccination strategy only after public health experts reached a consensus on the best way forward.
“So, who should get booster shots for COVID-19? Americans are confused by Biden’s grand plan” via the Miami Herald editorial board — By Biden’s predictions, fully vaccinated American adults would be able to receive a third shot of the coronavirus vaccine starting Monday. It looks like the President jumped the gun. The President’s plan is bogged down in criticism after an FDA advisory group recommended against booster shots for anyone over 16 on Friday. The panel of outside experts recommended a third shot only for people over 65, at higher risk of severe disease or high risk of exposure to the coronavirus. It’s a far cry from the President’s message on Aug. 18 that “every fully vaccinated” adult would be eligible for a shot eight months after they finished their two-dose regimen of a Pfizer vaccine.
“Dump COVID-19 vaccine religious exemptions. There is no Church of Moderna Disbelievers” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — What is a COVID-19 vaccine mandate worth if it includes exemptions for “sincerely held religious beliefs?” Very little, if anything at all. If the definition of religious beliefs were contained to major, established religions, there would basically be no exemptions because no major religion bans vaccination against COVID-19 or other diseases. Given how large a loophole religious exemptions create, no one should be remotely surprised that, where mandates have been introduced, thousands of employees are lining up to claim religious exemptions from vaccine requirements.
“Florida’s elected hypocrites undermine the Constitution they profess to love” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — State Rep. Randy Fine marked Constitution Day last week by taking to Facebook and affirming his devotion to the 233-year-old document. That’s what he says. But here’s what the Brevard County Republican did: Fine has introduced a bill in the state House that contains some of the most sweeping government-imposed speech restrictions we’ve ever seen in a piece of legislation. Fine’s proposal would ban schools and government agencies from teaching or advocating, among other things, “divisive concepts,” which is defined in such broad terms that it includes saying anything that might make a person “feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress on account of his or her race or sex.”
“Angela Garcia Falconetti: The Florida College System — fueling Florida’s future” via Florida Politics — The Florida College System (FCS) remains the top system in the United States, and the No. 1 provider of workforce education and training industries including health care, law enforcement and manufacturing. Beyond the economic benefits, the FCS provides many Floridians an improved quality of life and employment opportunities through transformative education. The training our institutions provide remains essential to supporting businesses in our communities and the overall prosperity of our economy. The FCS aligns with the Governor and the state’s workforce development priorities to accelerate the provision of quality workforce education programs and services and support other key priorities like dual enrollment and transfer student articulation. However, this requires investment in the Florida College System Program Fund.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Gov. DeSantis has named Dr. Ladapo as Florida’s new Surgeon General.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Agriculture Commissioner Fried again spars with DeSantis — claiming he broke the law by independently appointing new Department of Environmental Protection Secretary Shawn Hamilton.
— Reporter Renzo Downey covered the spat for Florida Politics. He says the lone Democrat on the Cabinet has found an ally. Downey was also part of team coverage on DeSantis’ new agency heads.
— And the Biden administration is expressing horror over videos showing U.S. Border Patrol agents confronting Haitian migrants with whips, on horseback.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Holiday bummer: Now prices are soaring for Christmas trees and decorations” via Parija Kavilanz of CNN Business — It’s a good thing that consumers are in a mood to spend heading into the holiday season. Depending on where they buy it from, they may have to dish out more for a new artificial Christmas tree this year. Some large sellers of artificial trees say they are increasing their prices by double-digit percentages and are blaming unduly high shipping costs tied to the ongoing global supply chain mess. “We’ll have to raise prices. For trees, it’ll be on average about 20% higher,” said Mac Harman, CEO of Balsam Hill. Based in Redwood City, California, the company does more than $200 million in direct-to-consumer annual sales of artificial Christmas trees and other decorations in the United States.
“Jon Stewart drops first-look trailer for new Apple show” via Lacey Rose of The Hollywood Reporter — His new entry, The Problem With Jon Stewart, is set to roll out globally on Apple TV+ beginning Sept. 30. The series, a single-topic public affairs show that’s drawing early comparisons to John Oliver’s Last Week Tonight, will tackle issues, or “problems,” including the struggle for comprehensive veteran care and better ways to support the American working class. And unlike his previous Comedy Central entry, which earned Stewart 22 Emmys and cultlike status among Hollywood liberals, he is hopeful the biweekly offering allows for the kind of deeper dive that he’s after at this stage of his career. The just-released 30-second teaser for his new series attempts to give viewers a sense of what’s in store, including a glimpse at a lively producers’ meeting.
Feels relevant in Florida — “The first look at Joel Coen’s take on Shakespeare is here in ‘The Tragedy of Macbeth’” trailer via Gabrielle Sanchez of AV Club — Oscar winner Coen is no stranger to epic tales of heroes in pursuit of power — their stories laced with tragedy, violence, and madness. In the Coen brother’s first solo film following Ethan Coen’s departure from filmmaking, Joel takes on a classic tale: Shakespeare’s “The Tragedy of Macbeth.” The first trailer sets the misty black-and-white stage, as the three witches foretell a prophecy to the power-hungry Macbeths. One of the absolutely necessary components to pull off a noteworthy Shakespeare adaptation is a legendary cast: Academy Award winners Denzel Washington and Frances McDormand play Lord and Lady Macbeth, with Bertie Carvel, Alex Hassell, Corey Hawkins, Harry Melling, and Brendan Gleeson filling out the cast of characters.
To watch the trailer, click on the image below:
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Best wishes to Sen. Jennifer Bradley, Mario Bailey (he’s turning the big 4-0), Chris Clark, Brian Melton, and PR ace William Stander (shhh).
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
5.) MORNING BREW
|
BECOME SMARTER IN JUST 5 MINUTES
Get the daily email that makes reading the news actually enjoyable. Stay informed and entertained, for free.
6.) THE FACTUAL
|
7.) LIBERTY NATION
|
|
|
8.) FOX NEWS
|
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
|
9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
10.) THE FEDERALIST PAPERS
|
11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
|
12.) THE FLIP SIDE
- Subscribe
- Past Issues
- RSS
- Translate
|
13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
🍂 Good Wednesday morning, and welcome to fall. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,189 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Justin Green.
🥊 Breaking: Former President George W. Bush’s first campaign event of the ’22 midterms will be a fundraiser for Rep. Liz Cheney, The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
🔋Please join Axios’ Ben Geman and me today at 12:30 p.m. ET as we talk Climate Week with White House national climate adviser Gina McCarthy and Environmental Defense Fund president Fred Krupp. Sign up here.
The pandemic has weakened public schools, with Zoom classes, teacher fatigue and student disengagement taking tolls.
- Charter schools have picked off hundreds of thousands of public school students during the pandemic, Erica Pandey reports for Axios What’s Next.
- Private schools and homeschooling are also booming.
U.S. charter school enrollment increased 7% between the 2019-20 school year and the 2020-21 year — a jump of 240,000 pupils, the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools reports.
- During the same period, non-charter public school enrollment dropped 3% — a whopping 1.5 million students.
What to watch: Public schools that waffle over mask policies or delay the return to in-person learning could frustrate even more parents
Many Haitian migrants camped in the Texas border town of Del Rio are being released in the U.S., two federal officials tell AP.
- Haitians have been freed on a “very, very large scale” in recent days, according to one U.S. official, who put the figure in the thousands.
What’s happening: Many are released with notices to appear (NTA) at an immigration office within 60 days. That takes less processing by Border Patrol agents than ordering an appearance in immigration court.
- The Homeland Security Department is busing Haitians to El Paso, Laredo and Rio Grande Valley, and this week added flights to Tucson.
The new wall: Texas Department of Safety vehicles line up along the bank of the Rio Grande to try to block new migrants.
With more than two dozen world leaders appearing in person at the UN in New York for the first time during the pandemic, President Biden said that “as we close this period of relentless war, we’re opening a new era of relentless diplomacy”:
We will lead on all the greatest challenges of our time — from COVID to climate, peace and security, human dignity and human rights. But we will not go it alone.
After returning from New York, Biden — who used to commute home to Delaware every night when he was in the U.S. Senate — greeted Prime Minister Boris Johnson in the Oval Office by saying: “I understand, Boris … you came down on Amtrak, is that right?”
- Johnson: “I did. And … you’re a living deity — “
- Biden: “I am.”
- Johnson: ” — on Amtrak, I can tell you.”
- Biden: “I’ve traveled millions of miles. … If I were a conductor, I’d be number one in seniority.”
Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios
The decades-long office boom that remade the District has all but stopped, partly because of workplace trends, Paige Hopkins and Cuneyt Dil write in Axios D.C., which debuted this week. (Sign up here.)
- Why it matters: Dizzying construction reshaped the city, reinvigorated downtown and created bustling new communities.
Stunning stat: Only one new office building is scheduled for completion after 2022, commercial real estate firm CBRE says.
- “The pipeline is dwindling to zero,” Randy Harrell, CBRE’s Vice Chairman, tells Axios. “In a normal environment we’d see … between one and two million square feet [of new office space] delivering every year in Washington.”
What’s happening: Money to invest in new office construction just isn’t there, Harrell says. He blames reports of high vacancy rates and the pandemic-induced exodus from major metros. Both catalysts make investment firms uneasy about new projects.
The home-building pipeline remains strong. And growth continues just outside D.C.:
- Amazon is pouring billions into its HQ2 just across the Potomac River in Arlington, Va. The company says its 350-foot-tall tower, “The Helix,” will bring 1,900 jobs.
George Stephanopoulos interviews Robert Costa and Bob Woodward on Monday. Screengrab: ABC
“Peril“ — the instant bestseller by Bob Woodward and his Washington Post colleague Robert Costa — grabbed headlines for its Donald Trump reporting. But half the book covers President Biden, with Woodwardian channeling of top advisers’ interior monologues:
In a 50-50 Senate, each Democrat was a tall pole in the tent. Everyone was needed. [Chief of staff Ron] Klain recalled that they all thought that life in the Obama White House had been hard with 58 Democratic senators. He fantasized that if Biden had 58 Democrats, as chief of staff Klain would only have to work three days a week. (p. 347-8)
When Biden announced his Afghanistan withdrawal decision in April, he “did not expect to see on television and in the newspapers so much critical commentary,” Woodward and Costa write:
Several days after the announcement, [Secretary of State Tony] Blinken and [national security adviser Jake] Sullivan were with the president in the Oval Office. …
“Mr. President,” Blinken said, trying to provide some comfort, “this was an incredibly hard decision.” …
Biden was standing by the Resolute Desk. Blinken could see the president was still carrying the burden of the decision. Presidents lived in the world of the suboptimal. Standing there alone, the president lightly tapped the desk.
“Yeah,” Biden said, “the buck really does stop here.” (p. 391)
Flashback: Then-Vice President Biden “told others privately in 2009, ‘The military doesn’t f— around me,’ more than implying they had with Obama.” (p. 336)
- N.Y. Times review (subscription).
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Facebook is ditching apologies and taking a more combative stance against critics as it faces a barrage of negative coverage and leaked internal reports, Axios managing editor Scott Rosenberg reports.
The New York Times reported (subscription) a Facebook “effort to show users pro-Facebook stories” in an “informational unit” marked as coming from Facebook:
- “[T]he move was sensitive because Facebook had not previously positioned the News Feed as a place where it burnished its own reputation.”
Facebook spokesman Andy Stone tweeted: “Kinda like the New York Times uses the New York Times to promote the New York Times?!”
SEC Chair Gary Gensler said he doesn’t see long-term viability for thousands of cryptocurrencies, likening them to the wildcat banking era before federal regulation, The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
- “I don’t think there’s long-term viability for five or six thousand private forms of money,” Gensler told the WashPost’s David Ignatius at a virtual event. “So in the meantime I think it’s worthwhile to have an investor-protection regime.”
Translation: Regulation.
Mosa Meat’s cultured steak tartare. Photo: Redwan Farooq/Mosa Meat
Actor and environmentalist Leo DiCaprio is investing in a pair of cultivated meat startups and joining their advisory boards, Axios Future correspondent Bryan Walsh scoops.
- Why it matters: Cultivated meat — which uses animal cells to grow only the parts that consumers will eat, rather than an entire cow — is criticized by some greens for the energy it requires.
DiCaprio will invest undisclosed sums in Dutch startup Mosa Meat, which made the world’s first cell-based hamburger, and Israel’s Aleph Farms, which produced the first cell-based steak (“Steak done right”).
📬 Invite your friends to sign up for Axios AM and Axios PM.
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
|
|
|
|
|
|
15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
|
|
|
17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
|
Copyright © 2021 MEDIADC, All rights reserved.Washington Examiner | A MediaDC Publication 1152 15th Street NW Suite 200 | Washington, DC 20005 |
You received this email because you are subscribed to Examiner Today from The Washington Examiner. Update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive.We respect your right to privacy – View our Policy Unsubscribe |
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
|
21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Boy, 15, shot to death blocks from Simeon High School
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
|
23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
|
Morning Headlines
House members address constituent requests using funds from their Members’ Representational Allowances, tight budgets that they rely on to pay staff and run all operations in both district and Capitol offices. However, Congress has largely let its funding for members’ offices stagnate. Read more…
As the House approaches a Sept. 27 deadline to vote on a bipartisan infrastructure bill, moderate and progressive Democrats are each holding a hostage. Read more…
GOP has to make 2022 about policy, not personality
OPINION — Republicans have a great opportunity to retake the House and Senate next year, but they need a strategy focused on broadening their coalition by appealing to independents and key voter groups with a center-right agenda that connects with ordinary Americans. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
House poised to vote on hundreds of amendments to defense bill
As the House debates its defense authorization bill, it plans to consider 476 amendments on everything from the proper level of U.S. defense spending to how best to handle fallout from the war in Afghanistan. Read more…
Breakthrough COVID-19 cases expected to become more common in coming months
Mild cases of COVID-19 among vaccinated individuals are becoming increasingly common as the highly contagious delta variant barrels through communities, but physicians and public health experts say that shouldn’t be a cause for significant concern. Read more…
What I learned from getting a breakthrough COVID-19 infection
Even for the fully vaccinated, the coronavirus is no walk in the park, as CQ Roll Call health care reporter Ariel Cohen can attest. Read more…
House passes stopgap funding, debt ceiling suspension bill
On a 220-211 party-line vote, the House passed a catchall budget package Tuesday that’s intended to avoid a partial government shutdown and debt limit crisis, but it seems likely to come back for a do-over once the Senate works its will. Read more…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
1201 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Suite 600
Washington, DC 20004
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
Pelosi’s toughest whip campaign commences
DRIVING THE DAY
GOOD NEWS FOR MCCONNELL: The latest weekly POLITICO/Morning Consult poll is out this morning and finds that more voters would blame Democrats than Republicans if the U.S. were to default on its debt. The finding comes as Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL is rallying his members to oppose raising the borrowing cap. Asked which party they would blame more, 33% said Democrats, 42% said both parties, and only 16% said Republicans. Nine percent didn’t know. One note of caution: The crisis point is still weeks away, and the blame game has hardly begun. Toplines … Crosstabs
CAN THE HOUSE GET TO 218 ON BIF? That’s the big question on Capitol Hill after Speaker NANCY PELOSI made clear Tuesday her team would not delay a Monday vote on the bipartisan infrastructure bill, aka BIF. Here’s what we’re watching as Pelosi’s whipping operation gets underway for what promises to be a close vote.
FOR THE DEMOCRATS:
— How many progressives play hardball? Progressives have long claimed they have the numbers to tank legislation they think is too accommodating to centrists. With leadership decoupling the left’s prized $3.5 trillion reconciliation package from BIF, now is their moment to flex — or look like pushovers.
But how many will defy Pelosi? A dozen? More than 20? Progressive Caucus Chair PRAMILA JAYAPAL (D-Wash.) said half of her 95-member group will oppose BIF without the reconciliation package. But until those members go on record, we won’t know what the actual number is. Whatever it ends up being, Democratic leaders will need GOP members to make up that difference. (More on why that’s problematic in a second …)
— Can JOE BIDEN get the job done? The president ran on his four decades of experience in the Senate and ability to work with Congress to get stuff done. But there are real questions about his sway in the House, where he is not as well-known. Just a few weeks ago, he tried but failed to whip House moderates to support their party’s budget. Pelosi ended up striking the deal.
This time, he needs to win over progressives, who were never huge fans of Biden to begin with. Add to that his administration’s handling of migrants at the border — which has infuriated many liberals — and he’s starting from a very difficult spot.
We should get an initial read on this today: Biden is meeting with a group of House Democrats from across the caucus, to try to find a path forward before Monday. Heather Caygle and Sarah Ferris have a preview.
FOR THE REPUBLICANS:
— Does KEVIN MCCARTHY whip his members against it? The House minority leader has made clear he opposes BIF, but he’s also under increased pressure to take the next step and urge his members to oppose it. On Tuesday, one of his allies, Republican Study Committee Chair JIM BANKS (R-Ind.), became the latest member to call on McCarthy to muscle votes in opposition. McCarthy is also getting an earful from the House Freedom Caucus, whose support he needs to become speaker someday.
And don’t forget about DONALD TRUMP, who ironically called for a big infrastructure bill as president but is now demanding they oppose the one Democrats are pitching. Will Trump lean on McCarthy to do more?
— Problem Solvers have got problems. Earlier this year, a host of GOP lawmakers in the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus endorsed BIF. But now even moderate Republicans who helped craft it are concerned about voting with a president whose poll numbers have taken a significant dip the past few weeks. As our colleague Olivia Beavers reported Tuesday, Republicans say as few as a half-dozen, and as many as two dozen or three dozen, could support this depending on whom you speak with.
Complicating matters, the group’s GOP leader, Rep. BRIAN FITZPATRICK (R-Pa.) — who would traditionally take the lead keeping PSC Republicans together on this — is new to this. He was thrust into the job this spring after his predecessor, longtime PSC co-leader TOM REED (R-N.Y.), stepped down amid scandal. We’re told Fitzpatrick doesn’t have the relationships with his members that Reed did and will have his work cut out keeping them together.
— The business community jumps in. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other business groups are blitzing the offices of House Republicans this week, working behind the scenes to get them to “yes” on BIF. (POLITICO Influence’s Caitlin Oprysko dug into this Tuesday.)
Good Wednesday morning, and thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY:
— 9:15 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 11 a.m.: Biden will convene a virtual Covid summit on the margins of the U.N. General Assembly.
Biden will also meet with members of Congress in the Oval Office in the afternoon to discuss the BIF and his agenda.
VP KAMALA HARRIS’ WEDNESDAY:
— 1:30 p.m.: The VP will lead a session at the virtual Covid summit.
— 5:15 p.m.: Harris will meet with Zambian President HAKAINDE HICHILEMA in the Vice President’s Ceremonial Office.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 1 p.m.
The HOUSE will meet at 10 a.m. DHS Secretary ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS and FBI Director CHRISTOPHER WRAY will testify before the Homeland Security Committee at 9 a.m.
The SENATE is in.
PLAYBOOK READS
CONGRESS
CHAMBER WARNS DEM ALLIES ON RECONCILIATION — Last year, the U.S. Chamber took heat from GOP allies for endorsing several moderate Democrats up for reelection — a break from the group’s categorical alliance with Republicans. This week, the business lobby is putting some of those same Democrats on notice: If they vote for reconciliation, they will lose their endorsement. “No member of Congress can achieve the support of the business community if they vote to pass this bill as currently constructed,” reads a “key-vote” notice sent to Hill offices. Verbal warnings are also being delivered, we’re told.
Why it matters: A lot of these Democrats tout the Chamber’s backing to bolster their bipartisan cred in swing districts.
Related: This morning the Chamber will announce six-figure ads in the districts of five of those Democrats urging them to vote “no”: CINDY AXNE (Iowa), ANGIE CRAIG (Minn.), ANTONIO DELGADO (N.Y.), JOSH HARDER (Calif.) and ELAINE LURIA (Va.). View the ads here
‘F—ING HATES HER’ — KYRSTEN SINEMA’s latest enemy is Los Altos, Calif.-based megadonor KARLA JURVETSON, who has the ear of Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER. Puck’s Theodore Schleifer writes: “What makes it feel more personal is that Jurvetson helped raise money for Sinema’s tough campaign in 2018. But the two have since fallen out. On a brusque private call in May that included Jurvetson and the Arizona senator, the two clashed over how Democrats could move on the filibuster, I hear, with the call ending rather abruptly.”
SHUTDOWN SHOWDOWN — The House advanced a stopgap funding bill in a 220-211 vote Tuesday evening. But the “party-line outcome foreshadowed its doomed prospects in the Senate, where Republicans have pledged to oppose it, threatening to leave Congress with little time to resolve a set of disputes that could destabilize global markets,” WaPo’s Tony Romm writes.
The bill passed after Democrats pulled $1 billion in funding for Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system. House progressives threatened to vote against the funding bill earlier Tuesday if it included such funds, Sarah Ferris, Heather Caygle and Anthony Adragna reported for Congress Minutes.
— Conservatives pounced. “Supporters of Israel should take note. If Iron Dome can lose Democratic Party support, then there is nothing pro-Israel that won’t be in jeopardy in Congress,” WSJ’s editorial board wrote.
ALL POLITICS
— In Wyoming, GEORGE W. BUSH is backing Rep. LIZ CHENEY (R-Wyo.) with his first fundraiser of the 2022 cycle, WSJ’s Mike Bender and Kristina Peterson report. The event Oct. 18 in Dallas will draw a stark battle line between Trump and Bush in the hotly contested proxy primary for the GOP’s future. Among the co-hosts for the Cheney fundraiser: KARL ROVE and former Sen. KAY BAILEY HUTCHISON, who served in the Trump administration.
THE WHITE HOUSE
— The Haitian migrant crisis at the border has backed the Biden administration into an impossible spot, taking fire from all sides politically and facing few good options to solve the problem, Natasha Korecki and Laura Barrón-López report.
— WaPo’s Widlore Merancourt, Anthony Faiola and Nick Miroff report that the administration plans to double the amount of Haitians being deported from the border “starting Wednesday, raising alarm that thousands of cash-strapped migrants will add a new dimension to the humanitarian crisis in a country torn apart by violence, natural disaster and political strife.”
— First lady JILL BIDEN will travel to Michigan on Friday to visit a community college with Education Secretary MIGUEL CARDONA and Rep. ANDY LEVIN (D-Mich.), the White House announced.
TRUMP CARDS
— A bombshell from NYT’s Alan Feuer: “Days before lawyers allied with Donald Trump gave a news conference promoting election conspiracy theories, his campaign had determined that many of those claims were false, court filings reveal.”
— The former president is suing the NYT, three of its reporters and his niece MARY TRUMP, per The Daily Beast’s Maxwell Tani and Harry Siegel. “The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in Dutchess County, New York, by attorney ALINA HABBA, alleges that the newspaper convinced Mary Trump to ‘smuggle records out of her attorney’s office and turn them over to The Times’ despite her having signed a confidentiality agreement in 2001 after settling a contentious legal battle over the will of FREDERICK TRUMP, Donald’s father and Mary’s grandfather. … ‘I think he is a f—ing loser, and he is going to throw anything against the wall he can,’ said Mary Trump of her uncle’s new suit.” The Times called it “an attempt to silence independent news organizations and we plan to vigorously defend against it.”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
BLINKEN ON DEFENSE — Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN held a tense meeting with U.S. diplomats who have suffered from the Havana syndrome earlier this month, NBC’s Josh Lederman and Brenda Breslauer scoop. The diplomats conveyed their “growing dismay over continuing stigma and disbelief within the U.S. government about their injuries” to Blinken, who in turn “spent more than an hour offering reassurances and fielding questions.”
— The House passed legislation Tuesday that would provide financial support to those who have been affected by the syndrome, sending it to Biden’s desk for his signature, Lederman also reports. The move comes a day after it was revealed a member of CIA Director BILL BURNS’ team was showing symptoms consistent with Havana syndrome after traveling to India.
VALLEY TALK
— NYT’s Ryan Mac and Sheera Frenkel have a deep dive on Facebook’s “Project Amplify,” a company plan to promote pro-Facebook news on the website’s newsfeed: “The idea was that pushing pro-Facebook news items — some of them written by the company — would improve its image in the eyes of its users … But the move was sensitive because Facebook had not previously positioned the News Feed as a place where it burnished its own reputation. Several executives at the meeting were shocked by the proposal.”
— WSJ’s Kate O’Keeffe, Aaron Tilley and Dawn Lim report that “a Justice Department-led panel is investigating Zoom Video Communications Inc.’s deal to buy an American customer-service software company, citing potential national-security risks posed by the U.S. videoconferencing giant’s China ties.”
PLAYBOOKERS
Cliff Sims, the former deputy DNI and Trump White House alum, is out with a new single: “U, Ur Mom & Me.” Sims was previously the frontman for two bands, “Moses” and “Colour Academy,” which landed him on MTV.
“Well, he’s dead, so…” -Bill Gates when pressed by Judy Woodruff on the lessons he learned from spending time with Jeffrey Epstein.
Jerome Adams, the former surgeon general, had trouble refinancing his mortgage because HHS “was unwilling” to verify his past employment. “Apparently they won’t accept Wikipedia as a reference,” Adams followed up.
Kara Swisher is selling her D.C. townhome.
Meghan McCain has harsh words about the performance of Biden, a “man I once considered a friend and confidante.”
Arne Duncan’s name is in the mix for the role of National Basketball Players Association executive director, per Marc Stein.
Space Force unveiled new uniforms and the internet exploded.
SPOTTED: Jon Voight, Chris Ruddy and Steve Lauren at lunch at media hotspot Michael’s in midtown Manhattan. … Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, Melinda Gates and Evan Ryan dining together at Zaytinya on Tuesday night. Pic
SPOTTED at a happy hour hosted by New Dems for its comms director Natasha Dabrowski, who’s moving to the Biden administration, at Dacha Navy Yard on Tuesday evening: Reps. Suzan DelBene (D-Wash.), Derek Kilmer (D-Wash.), Ron Kind (D-Wis.) and Ann McLane Kuster (D-N.H.), Helen Milby, Cindy Brown, JD Grom and Aaron Schmidt. Pic
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — John Steitz is now a managing director at FTI Government Affairs. He most recently was deputy chief of staff and legislative director for Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.), and is a David Vitter alum.
— Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) will be honored with an Order of Australia today by Australian PM Scott Morrison and Ambassador Arthur Sinodinos at an investiture ceremony at the Capitol.
MEDIA MOVE — Alyson Shontell will be the next editor-in-chief of Fortune, the first woman to lead the magazine. She currently is editor-in-chief of Business Insider. Announcement
TRANSITIONS — Brian Krebs is now head of elections and advocacy at Flytedesk. He previously was VP at Rising Tide Interactive and is a DCCC alum. … Kate Bernard is now VP of advocacy comms at Arnold Ventures. She previously was comms director for the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition. … Makeba Clay is now VP of inclusion, diversity, and equity at the Pew Charitable Trusts. She previously was the inaugural chief diversity officer at the Phillips Collection. …
… Lee Brenner is now head of public policy for digital assets at Goldman Sachs. He most recently helped lead global public policy and external affairs for Facebook Financial. … Thad Inge is now a VP at Van Scoyoc Associates. He previously led government relations at Paychex.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Jeffrey Goldberg … CNN’s Gloria Borger and Jamie Crawford … Kelly Coldiron … POLITICO’s Stephanie Murray, Jeremy Siegel and Kelsey Powers … HHS’ Kirsten Allen … Rich Meade of Prime Policy Group … Katie McBreen of the Consumer Brands Association … Edelman’s Kelsey Cohen … former Sen. Tim Wirth (D-Colo.) … former Reps. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.), Dan Lungren (R-Calif.) and Bill Enyart (D-Ill.) … Tommy Burr … Sandra Smith of Fox News … Joe Van Wye … Josh Nerpel of Graphicacy and The American Independent (4-0) … Will Hadden of Shirley & McVicker Public Affairs (28) … Monument Advocacy’s Matt McAlvanah (42) and Winda Wanikpun (24) … Amy Chozick … Carl Cameron (6-0) … Terry Delahunty … Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. (7-0) … Kate Karnes … Locust Street Group’s Hayley Zachary … Stacy Kerr … Reta Jo Lewis … Bill Middendorf … Benjamin Leonard … TJ Ducklo … Garrett Stephens of the Pivot Group … Facebook’s Dara Levy … Jennifer Bishop … Jenner & Block’s David Pressman … Brett Broesder … Heather Dawn Thompson … Jack Pagano … Lyndsay Keith … Washington Examiner’s Katherine Doyle
Did someone forward this email to you? Sign up here.
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
Follow us on Twitter
26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
|
29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Biden’s Fake Presidency Could Wreck the Dems For a Long Time
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Wednesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Let us all drunkenly pitch a tent of joy.
While I do worry about the damage to the U.S. Constitution our senile, alleged president and his puppet masters can do before November of 2022, I also relish the fact that his scorched-earth commie plan might relegate the Democrats to the backbench for quite some time.
Joe Biden is obviously too mentally broken to realize he’s brutalizing our freedoms. His compatriots in the Democratic Party are, however, keenly aware of what their Idiot King is doing to them.
Rick:
In 2009, Barack Obama came into office with a filibuster-proof Senate supermajority—255 Democrats in the House to just 179 Republicans. Obama ended up frittering away his time those first two years trying to pass Obamacare — an ill-advised move that ended up quickly costing him his majority.
For Joe Biden and the Democrats in 2021, there is no margin for error. A 50-50 Senate and a margin of just three House seats has required a nearly unprecedented level of partisan cohesion. To get anything passed in a Congress with a united Republican Party in opposition means that virtual unanimity of opinion is necessary to achieve the party’s lofty — and ruinously expensive — goals.
Perhaps a more energetic president would have made a difference. Perhaps a smarter president would have been able to pass something from the party’s wishlist.
Alas for the Democrats, Joe Biden isn’t energetic or smart. As a result, his presidency is failing.
It’s beginning to dawn on Democrats in Congress that Joe Biden is not the sort of leader who can wrangle a $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill through both chambers
The race is on to see what Biden obliterates first: his country or his party.
One is going to have to take a hit though.
This is a perfect time for Democrats in the heartland to take back control of their party from the fringe coastal commies who have it now. The Republic can’t survive if one of the two major political parties has gone off of an ideological cliff.
Cooler beads might prevail but I’m probably not going to hold my breath.
Everything Isn’t Awful
don’t mind me, just gonna squeeze in here pic.twitter.com/if7IRYhlHc
— Humor And Animals (@humorandanimals) September 21, 2021
PJ Media
Some Very Bad News Out of Iowa for Biden, Democrats
Grateful Refugee Plots to Bomb Pittsburgh Church
How Far Will COVID-19 Medical Authoritarianism Go Before We Say ‘Enough’?
The World Has Had 250 Years to Mimic Our Constitution
Portland Activists Survey Themselves and Conclude Un-Woke Cops Are to Blame for Their Riots
As Biden’s Presidency Crumbles, Democrats in Congress Lose Hope
Former Biden Border Chief Makes Bombshell Accusations Against Administration
Energy Crisis Hits Europe With Natural Gas Prices Rising a Whopping 250 Percent
Is ‘The Activist’ the Worst Idea for a Reality TV Show in History?
Trump More Popular Than Joe Biden Now?
Townhall Mothership
White House Staff’s Latest Move Proves They Really Don’t Want Biden Answering Questions
Mayorkas Presents Alarming Figures on the Afghan Evacuees Brought to US
Why a CNN Host Got Roasted by Liberals for Her Take on the California Recall
All of This Is Just a Series of Media Distractions
Kira: There Are No Bathrooms at the Border…and Other Shocking Revelations
Springfield, MA Buyback Yielded Whopping 38 Guns
Cam&Co. Beto Not The Biggest Threat To TX Gun Owners
NY Times’ columnist Michelle Goldberg downplays cancel culture (but her readers disagree)
Your new phone may be able to tell if you are depressed
Drew Holden shames the media for its smear campaign over the New York Post’s Hunter Biden story
VIP
Manchin and Sinema Aren’t the Only Democrats Concerned With the Direction of the Party
SHAME: Biden Claims United States Has ‘Turned the Page’ on Afghanistan
What’s Your Actual Risk of Dying From COVID?
Around the Interwebz
‘White Collar’ Stars & Creator Remember Willie Garson: “You Were the Best Of Us”
Need to trap a Roomba? You don’t need anything more sophisticated than a rug
The Stories Behind 20 Inventions That Changed the World
Bee Me
Kamala Harris Hoping Her Unlikability Will Distract From Her Terrible Job Fixing The Border https://t.co/xKMCnmi6Ij
— The Babylon Bee (@TheBabylonBee) September 21, 2021
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
At Covasna, 1979 #stefanescu #romanianart pic.twitter.com/H1tRnyjWMO
— THE MONTMARTE (@themontmarte) September 22, 2021
Kabana Comedy
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
|
Editor
Cut to the News
8409 Lee Hwy #3984
Merrifield VA 22116-9998
USA
Unsubscribe | Change Subscriber Options
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: A Trump-GOP Temperature Check
Plus: President Biden’s Tuesday address to the United Nations.
The Dispatch Staff | 4 |
Happy Wednesday! If you’re still a little groggy this morning, check out this video of White House staffers repeatedly shouting “Thank you!” over reporters trying to ask President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Boris Johnson questions at the White House yesterday. We promise it’ll wake you right up.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Johnson & Johnson released the results of a Phase 3 study on Tuesday showing that a single dose of its COVID-19 vaccine remained 79 percent effective against infection and 81 percent effective against hospitalization—even as the Delta variant became the dominant strain in the United States. The data also showed that a booster dose—given 56 days after the initial one—increased effectiveness against symptomatic illness to 94 percent in the United States and effectiveness against severe COVID-19 to 100 percent. J&J said it plans to submit the data to public health regulators for consideration.
- The House voted along party lines last night to advance legislation that would fund the federal government through December 2021 and suspend the debt ceiling through December 2022. The package is likely doomed in the Senate, where it needs 60 votes to get to President Biden’s desk and Republicans have made clear they will not support it. Sens. Mitch McConnell and Richard Shelby introduced a competing short-term government funding bill Tuesday night that did not include a suspension of the debt limit.
- The European Court of Human Rights ruled on Tuesday that Russia was responsible for the fatal 2006 poisoning of former KGB officer Aleksandr Litvinenko, who fled Russia after being fired from the country’s security service and was granted asylum in the United Kingdom.
- Sudanese officials said they foiled an attempted coup on Tuesday undertaken by adherents to Omar Hassan al-Bashir, the longtime dictator who was ousted in 2019. “This is an extension of the attempts by remnants since the fall of the former regime to abort the civilian democratic transition,” Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok said.
- The Treasury Department on Tuesday announced sanctions against cryptocurrency exchange SUEX “for its part in facilitating financial transactions for ransomware actors.” It is the first instance of the United States levying sanctions against a virtual currency platform.
A Trump-GOP Temperature Check
Have you ever seen that old German optical illusion featuring a strategically drawn animal? Of any two people who take a look at the sketch, and one might come away sure it’s a duck and the other certain it’s a rabbit—and they’d both be right.
A similar dynamic is currently playing out in Washington with respect to former President Donald Trump and his future in the Republican Party. Everyone is looking at the same political landscape, but depending on which details are emphasized, Trump is either a has-been rapidly losing his grip on power or a lock to be the 2024 GOP nominee.
On the one hand, Trump lost in 2020, and—after trying and failing to carry out a political coup—his net approval rating tanked to the lowest level of his presidency. A record 10 members of his own party voted to impeach him in the House, and an unprecedented seven Republican senators opted to convict him in the Senate. Even those who didn’t—like Minority Leader Mitch McConnell—were scrambling to put as much distance between themselves and the standard bearer of their party as possible.
In the months since, Trump’s ability to dominate the news cycle has all but vanished alongside his social media accounts, and he’s relying on increasingly desperate ploys—like providing commentary alongside a $49.99 pay-per-view boxing match on September 11—to garner attention. Republicans are increasingly willing to buck him—19 GOP senators voted in favor of a $550 billion infrastructure package Trump decried as “weak, foolish, and dumb”—and even his strongest allies aren’t echoing his renewed calls to replace McConnell as minority leader in the Senate. Trump’s hand-picked candidate lost to another Republican in the TX-6 special election a few months ago, and current elected officials have emerged as more effective leaders in opposing the Biden administration. His presence certainly isn’t deterring would-be 2024 candidates—including Mike Pence, Nikki Haley, Tom Cotton, Mike Pompeo, and Ron DeSantis—from beginning to lay the necessary groundwork for a campaign.
But there’s also plenty of evidence the former president remains as formidable as ever. Sixty-eight percent of GOP and lean-GOP voters told Republican pollster Echelon Insights in August they would “definitely” or “probably” vote for Donald Trump in the 2024 primary, compared to just 25 percent looking for a different candidate—and that split has grown in the months since January 6. After a brief hiatus, more Republican voters once again consider themselves primarily a supporter of Donald Trump than the Republican Party.
Biden Addresses United Nations General Assembly
The 76th United Nations General Assembly came at an awkward time for President Biden. Between last month’s fall of Kabul—and the ensuing international uproar it provoked—and a recent falling out with our French allies over the U.S.’s nuclear-powered submarine deal with Australia (AUKUS), there was no shortage of global tensions for him to address.
But in step with the administration’s recent foreign policy posturing, the president delivered another speech seemingly detached from the gravity of its context. Drawing on standard platitudes of multilateralism and diplomacy, Biden focused on areas of greater international consensus—climate change, technological development, humanitarian aid, and the COVID-19 pandemic—while giving little to no air time to the crisis in Afghanistan, AUKUS, or America’s strategic competition with Beijing. When he did address them, he was on the defensive.
“Instead of continuing to fight the wars of the past,” Biden said, alluding to the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan, “we are fixing our eyes on devoting our resources to the challenges that hold the keys to our collective future: ending this pandemic; addressing the climate crisis; managing the shifts in global power dynamics; shaping the rules of the world on vital issues like trade, cyber, and emerging technologies; and facing the threat of terrorism as it stands today.”
“The world today is not the world of 2001 … and the United States is not the same country we were when we were attacked on 9/11, 20 years ago. Today, we’re better equipped to detect and prevent terrorist threats, and we are more resilient in our ability to repel them and to respond,” Biden added, just days after the Pentagon acknowledged an August drone strike killed 10 civilians—and no terrorists—in Kabul. “We know how to build effective partnerships to dismantle terrorist networks by targeting their financing and support systems, countering their propaganda, preventing their travel, as well as disrupting imminent attacks.”
Worth Your Time
- In The Atlantic yesterday, science reporter Katherine Wu argues we should think about post-vaccination COVID-19 as an entirely different—and less worrisome—disease than the one that shut down the world last year. “The measles virus is ultra-infectious, much more so than SARS-CoV-2, and kills many of the uninoculated children it afflicts,” she writes. “But for those who have gotten all their shots, it’s a less formidable foe, which we’ve learned to live with long-term. That’s the direction that many experts hope we’re headed in with SARS-CoV-2 as it becomes endemic. … On average, breakthrough infections seem to be briefer, milder, and less contagious. Among the fully immunized, catching the coronavirus doesn’t mean the same thing it did last year.”
- We’ve written a lot about GOP state legislatures’ efforts to undo pandemic-era voting expansions and add new restrictions to boot, but some Republicans are now wondering if the clampdown on absentee ballots—undertaken primarily to appease their own voters’ Trump-inspired concerns about election fraud—will backfire on their own party. “In Texas, one Republican state legislator wrote a newspaper column where he openly wondered why the legislators were ‘trying to make it harder for Republican voters to vote?’ Dante Chinni reports for the Wall Street Journal. “In Iowa, a Republican election commissioner from rural Adams County asked the same thing at a hearing on new voter rules in that state. And in Florida, one former Republican campaign operative worried that the new laws could rile voters of color and turn them out in greater numbers.”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
Boris Johnson has finally admitted that he has six children, a question he has previously dodged in numerous interviews and press conferences.
Toeing the Company Line
- For more on Trump’s reemergence, check out this week’s Sweep. “GOP leaders in Washington thought they had reached an understanding with Trump in the wake of 2020,” Sarah writes. “Sure, Rep. Liz Cheney, the former No. 3 in the House GOP, who lost her leadership position within the party for continuing to insist that Trump had lost the 2020 election, had to go. But for those willing to keep their mouths shut, they believed, Trumpism was still subordinate to Republicanism. Perhaps not.”
- It’s an incredibly busy time in Congress, and yesterday’s Uphill has all you need to know. “For the first time since July, both chambers of Congress are back in session, and there is plenty on the to-do list,” Harvest and Ryan write, “including a bill to keep the government funded and suspend the debt ceiling, while Democrats seek to advance President Joe Biden’s sweeping $3.5 trillion infrastructure and social investments package and finalize a $550 billion bipartisan infrastructure bill that focuses on traditional items like roads, bridges, and airports.”
- Chris Stirewalt returned to The Remnant on Tuesday for punditry so intense it could rival the summer heat of New Orleans. He and Jonah discuss the intersection of Christianity and politics, the Republican Party’s embrace of working-class men, and the return of radical chic.
- David’s in a bit of a predicament. “There are reasons why Joe Biden’s approval rating is dropping to Trump-like levels,” he writes in his latest French Press (🔒), citing the U.S.’ Afghanistan withdrawal, more-than-transitory inflation, chaotic border situation, and continued coronavirus struggles. But the Republican Party—which should serve as an electoral check on Biden in 2022—is not ready to govern. “Are House Republicans led by serious adults or by Trumpist vassals, beholden both to an utterly unfit former president and to his increasingly radicalized base?” he asks. “And won’t their victory do nothing but embolden Trump and energize that base?”
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@lawsonreports), Audrey Fahlberg (@AudreyFahlberg), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
|
33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
|
36.) AMERICAN THINKER
|
|
37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
|
41.) NOQ REPORT
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Now They’re Mad: White House Reporters File Formal Complaint Against Biden
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the RedState.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions |
44.) WORLD NET DAILY
|
45.) MSNBC
September 22, 2021 THE LATEST Texas’ abortion ban architect is now taking aim at ‘homosexual behavior’ by Jessica Levinson The architect of Texas’ restrictive new abortion law, former Texas Solicitor General Jonathan Mitchell, has apparently moved on to new territory. He plans to attack two Supreme Court rulings, from 2003 and 2015 respectively, that protect crucial and hard-won LGBTQ rights, Jessica Levinson writes about a brief filed last week.
Given that Texas’ abortion law was passed largely because the Supreme Court judges remained silent, what it boils down to, writes Levinson, is that “the goal for some conservatives is a rollback of landmark Supreme Court cases that provide vital guardrails to the freedoms and protections enjoyed by so many members of our society.”
Read Jessica Levinson’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Wednesday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Presidents have too much power. This new set of laws could fix that. Read More Biden’s performance was akin to an aging rock star playing a medley from their greatest hits album. Read More Gabby Petito’s case highlights a twisted (and common) media phenomenon. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC Sen. Elizabeth Warren joins Hallie Jackson for a live interview. Watch Hallie Jackson Reports, today at 3 p.m. ET.
Introducing The ReidOut Blog, the digital extension of “The ReidOut,” political juggernaut Joy Reid’s nightly show on MSNBC.
Follow for the latest commentary on daily news, including the ways politics and culture clash and coincide. You’ll also find exclusive web content that expands on conversations broached on “The ReidOut.” Race and racism, voting rights, reproductive rights, the Covid-19 fallout and recovery — expect it all.
Follow MSNBC
Check out the MSNBC channel on Apple News
Download the NBC News Mobile App and watch MSNBC
Privacy | Unsubscribe |
46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
|
|
47.) ABC
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
President Joe Biden is looking to lead the charge on vaccinating the rest of the world with an announcement that the U.S. will donate 500 million more Covid vaccine doses to lower income countries.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Tuesday morning. The Democratic-controlled House passed a stopgap bill Tuesday to keep the government funded at existing levels through Dec. 3 and extend the debt limit until after the 2022 elections.
So, that’s good news, right? Not so fast. The bill still needs to pass in the Senate where there is broad GOP opposition — particularly on the issue of extending the debt ceiling.
If the bill isn’t signed into law by Sept. 30, the federal government will shut down.
But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. There are also looming deadlines for President Joe Biden’s massive infrastructure bill and multitrillion-dollar spending package.
NBC News’ national political reporter Sahil Kapur breaks it all down and explains where Congress stands on key deadlines here. Tuesday’s Top Stories
The additional doses will bring the total number of shots the U.S. plans to donate to lower-income countries to 1.1 billion. Male deportees assaulted the pilots of a flight carrying families when it landed in Port-au-Prince and attacked three ICE officers on the plane. Meanwhile, Biden told reporters Tuesday, “We’ll get it under control,” when he was asked about the images of Border Patrol agents chasing migrants. The move raises ethical questions, public health experts say, about who should get this treatment and who shouldn’t. OPINION Trump was a stress test for democracy. Our new bill has the answer, Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., writes in an opinion piece. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
New Jersey’s Atlantic white cedar forests are turning from green to a pale white, a sign of creeping sea levels and more frequent superstorms. Shopping
Amanda Gorman’s new children’s book ‘Change Sings: A Children’s Anthem’ is already a bestseller on Amazon. One Incredible Effort
The iconic General Sherman tree in Sequoia National Park is in danger as flames from a massive wildfire creep closer.
Firefighters are doing everything they can — including covering the base of its massive trunk with fire-resistant wrapping — in an effort to protect it.
Now race is on to preserve the great General Sherman and the surrounding towering treasures. Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
|
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Ben Kamisar and Benjy Sarlin
FIRST READ: Biden seeks to bring his party together amid infighting over agenda
The true fate of President Biden’s legislative agenda was always going to decided when 1) Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V. huddles with progressives and tells them what he’s SPECIFICALLY for on reconciliation; and 2) when Biden rolls up his sleeves and tells his party HOW it should proceed.
Today, it appears we might get an answer to that second question — or at least the beginning of the answer.
President Biden is expected to meet today with House and Senate Democrats to discuss a way forward on the infrastructure/reconciliation legislative packages, especially with the infrastructure bill set for a House vote on Monday, per NBC News.
“As of Tuesday evening, the White House had not settled on the final timing and invite list for the gatherings but a source familiar with the planning told NBC News that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer are expected to attend a 2 p.m. ET meeting at the White House,” NBC’s Teaganne Finn, Sahil Kapur, Geoff Bennett and Haley Talbot write.
The standoff here: “Progressive lawmakers have said they won’t back the Senate-passed infrastructure bill, a top priority for the Democratic leadership, unless the larger $3.5 trillion reconciliation package passes first. Moderates, meanwhile, said they won’t support the reconciliation measure unless the bipartisan infrastructure bill passes on Monday as scheduled.”
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The real endgame to this stalemate has always been Manchin finally showing his cards about what he can support on reconciliation, given that Democrats need his vote (as well as Sen Kyrsten Sinema’s) in the current 50-50 Senate.
But the other key component was Biden leading his party and trying to find a way out.
|
Can Biden really afford to see his infrastructure deal go down to defeat next week?
Progressive House Dems are threatening to vote against the bipartisan infrastructure deal that the Senate passed last month – as a way to keep both it and the reconciliation package (which is still TBD) tied together legislatively.
But can Biden afford to see the infrastructure bill go down to defeat in the House? Even if the measure gets another vote whenever the reconciliation stalemate gets resolved?
Here’s what Biden said last month when the infrastructure package cleared the Senate by a 69-30 vote, with 19 Republicans joining all 50 Dem senators:
“Folks, above all, this historic investment in infrastructure is what I believe you, the American people, want — what you’ve been asking for for a long, long time. This bill shows that we can work together.
“I know a lot of people — some sitting in the audience here — didn’t think this could happen. This bill was declared dead more often than — anyway. That bipartisanship was a thing of the past. From the time I announced my candidacy (inaudible) bringing the country together and doing things in a bipartisan way, it was characterized as a relic of an — an earlier age.
“As you may well remember, I never believed that. I still don’t.
“So, I want to thank those senators who worked so hard to bring this agreement together. I know it wasn’t easy.
“For the Republicans who supported this bill, you showed a lot of courage. And I want to personally thank you for that, and I’ve called most of you on the phone to do just that.
“You have — and no doubt, you will –- disagree with me on many issues. But where we can agree, we should. And here, on this bill, we proved that we can still come together to do big things, important things for the American people.”
Bottom line: Will someone who ran for president touting his deal-making ability (including with the opposition), who delivered an inaugural address on achieving unity, and who routinely emphasizes the power of his word in negotiations really allow his party to defeat this bill?
Even if it’s a temporary defeat?
TWEET OF THE DAY: Trump vs. Trump
|
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
$30 million: How much the DSCC is investing in a new field program targeting nine states with the hopes of holding onto their slim majority.
500 million: How many more Pfizer Covid vaccine doses America is buying to donate to the world.
42,455,954: The number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 125,672 more since yesterday morning.)
682,653: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 2,360 more since yesterday morning.)
386,780,816: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 542,935 more since yesterday morning.)
54.8 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
66 percent: The share of all U.S. adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC
|
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
U.S. diplomats suffering from the so-called “Havana Syndrome” had a tense meeting with Secretary of State Blinken this month.
The New York Times reports that the Trump campaign wrote a memo in mid-November that acknowledged many of the conspiracy theories spouted by Trump’s allies claiming massive election fraud were false.
Many Americans are having to postpone important medical procedures because hospitals are inundated with Covid patients.
Democrats are criticizing the Biden administration over the treatment of Haitian migrants.
The Washington Post reports that few GOP Senate candidates are backing Trump’s call to depose Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
The former French Ambassador to the U.S. hammered the Biden administration over its handling of L’affaire Sous-marine.
And this Wednesday night at 7:00 pm ET, Speaker Pelosi, Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, and other Dem lawmakers will join progressive health-care activist Ady Barkan for the online premiere of his documentary “Not Going Quietly.”
|
|
|
Download the NBC News Mobile App
|
50.) CBS
51.) REASON
|
|
|
|
|
52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Busy day for Joe Biden. Our president whose mental acumen is beyond reproach is at the United Nations today. He gave a big speech. His handlers are taking him from avoiding questions after a meeting w … MORE |
54.) TOWNHALL
|
||
FACEBOOK TWITTER |
ADVERTISEMENT |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions You can unsubscribe by clicking here. Or Send postal mail to: * Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers. |
55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
|
|||||||||||||||
|
56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
|
57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
|
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Wednesday, Sept. 22, and we’re covering lava flows on the Canary Islands, a looming legislative battle, and more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWEruption on La PalmaMore than 6,000 people from four villages have been required to evacuate their homes as a new fissure emerged in the erupting Cumbre Vieja volcano on one of Spain’s Canary Islands. The volcano on the island of La Palma started erupting Sunday, causing lava to flow toward inhabited coastal areas and bury hundreds of homes. The new opening appeared late Monday 3,000 ft. north of the ridge after a 3.8-magnitude earthquake hit the island. The quake was among thousands that have been reported over the last week. As of yesterday, the lava covered nearly 260 acres of the island, and no injuries or deaths have been reported. Officials estimated the current damage at $470M; see photos of the damage here. Experts also warned the flow could trigger what is known as laze—toxic clouds of acidic gas and condensate produced when lava reacts with cold seawater. Trudeau Misses Majority Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau secured a third term in office, while his Liberal Party fell short of securing the 170 seats needed for a majority in parliament. As of this writing, 14 seats had yet to be decided (current breakdown). The Liberal Party was projected to win 158 seats, followed by the Conservative Party (119), the pro-Quebec Bloc Québécois (34), New Democrats (25), and the Green Party (2). Despite being outgained in seats, the Conservative Party won the popular vote, taking 33.9% of the vote compared to the Liberal Party’s 32.2%. Trudeau hoped his handling of the pandemic would convince voters to deliver his party a majority, but appears likely to gain just three seats. Though there was little overall movement in seats, the election ended as the most expensive in Canada’s history. Shutdowns and ShowdownsLawmakers on Capitol Hill are gearing up for a pair of legislative showdowns over the next week and a half, set in motion by two decisions over the past two days. The first focuses on government funding and the debt ceiling. If Congress does not provide funding for fiscal year 2022 by midnight Sept. 30, the federal government will face a shutdown. Similarly, the Treasury Department has said Congress must raise the debt ceiling by mid-October to avoid default. House Democrats passed yesterday a bill pairing short-term funding through Dec. 3 with a debt ceiling increase—a move requiring the support of at least 10 Republican senators. Separately, House Democrats said they planned to bring a $1.2T bipartisan infrastructure deal up for a vote, separate from a $3.5T social spending budget bill. The move pits moderates against progressives, with the latter previously saying they would only support the infrastructure deal if a vote on the budget bill came at the same time. It’s unclear how many House Republicans will support the $1.2T bill. An infrastructure vote in the House is expected Monday. A CHANGE IN TACTICSYou’re a good marketer: You’ve tested every digital channel you can think of, and you’re always looking to expand where possible. But in a time when it’s harder than ever to get consumers to respond to digital marketing, this may be your cue to take things offline. Give direct mail a try: It’s an oldie, but a goodie. And with Lob, you can get the same level of transparent, reliable infrastructure for your direct mailings as email, miraculously bringing direct mail in line with your digital channels. It can help you open a whole new world of possibilities, bringing the convenience of the inbox to the mailbox but with responsiveness that digital channels lack. Embrace a truly omnichannel marketing strategy today. And instead of going at it alone, revising your workflows, eliminating data silos, and revamping your approach to marketing, let Lob lend a hand. Read their Direct Mail Tactics Playbook for free today. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & CultureBrought to you by Public Rec > Alyson Shontell becomes Fortune’s first female editor-in-chief in the business magazine’s 92-year history (More) > The Fugees, hip-hop trio consisting of Lauryn Hill, Wyclef Jean, and Pras Michel, announce international reunion tour for 25th anniversary of “The Score” (More) > Willie Garson, actor best known for “Sex and the City,” dies at 57 (More) | Hollywood reacts to Garson’s death (More) From our partners: All day, every day. It’s both the name of these pants and when you’ll be wearing them. Public Rec’s All Day Every Day Pants are great at the office, on the golf course, or on the couch—because they make loungewear with waist and inseam sizing for your best fit. And now, they’re available in both men’s and women’s styles for pant-wearers of all shapes and sizes. Public Rec rarely offers discounts, but for the next seven days they’re offering 10% off with code 1440—check it out. Science & Technology> Johnson & Johnson says booster shots of its one-dose COVID-19 vaccine prevented 94% of moderate and severe illnesses in US trial; less than 15 million of more than 181 million inoculated Americans received the Johnson & Johnson shot (More) > AstraZeneca drug shown to reduce the risk of death or tumor progression in metastatic breast cancer by 72% compared to standard treatment in clinical trials (More) | Want to learn the basics of how cancer works? Check out 1440’s cancer resource page (More) > Researchers suggest models of human whistled languages may provide the basis for algorithms capable of decoding communications between bottlenose dolphins (More) Business & Markets> US stock markets end mixed (S&P 500 -0.1%, Dow -0.2%, Nasdaq +0.2%) after seeing early gains following Monday’s steep losses, as investors await outcome of today’s Federal Reserve meeting (More) > Shares of record label Universal Music Group soar 36% in its first day trading to a valuation of 46 billion euros; marks Europe’s largest initial public offering this year (More) > Google to acquire 12-story office building on west side of Manhattan for $2.1B in the largest commercial real estate deal since the beginning of the pandemic (More) Politics & World Affairs> President Joe Biden makes first address since taking office to the United Nations General Assembly; calls on nations to partner on COVID-19, climate change, and other issues (More) > Sudanese government says it foiled a coup attempt led by supporters of ousted former President Omar al-Bashir; Bashir’s government was toppled in 2019 (More) > FBI confirms the remains found in Teton County, Wyoming, are of missing 22-year-old travel blogger Gabby Petito; coroner rules death a homicide but doesn’t specify cause (More) | Authorities search for fiancé Brian Laundrie in Florida’s expansive Carlton Reserve (More) MAILBOX IS THE NEW INBOXIn partnership with Lob Digital burnout is real. With most people living and working entirely online, it’s no wonder digital marketing response rates are dropping. But do you know where there isn’t burnout? Your mailbox. Bring the convenience of email to the mailbox, but with a level of responsiveness digital channels lack. Start connecting more effectively with customers by revamping your direct mail tactics, and read Lob’s free Direct Mail Tactics Playbook today. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAThe best drone photography of 2021. Child handprints in Tibet may be the oldest discovered cave art. Visualizing the world’s most-used apps. AI now helps Roombas avoid dog poop. Apple wants the iPhone to detect depression. Charting the recovery of the restaurant industry. Procter & Gamble is losing the toilet paper wars. The mail jumpers of Lake Geneva. Clickbait: Australia mulls infecting invasive carp with herpes. Historybook: President Lincoln issues preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, freeing enslaved persons in Confederate states (1862); Peace Corps formally authorized by Congress (1961); Iraq invades Iran, beginning the Iran-Iraq War (1980); “Friends” debuts on NBC (1994); RIP baseball great Yogi Berra (2015). “When you come to a fork in the road, take it.” – Yogi Berra Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
|
|
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
TOP STORIES:
-
Donald Trump Makes Earth Shattering Election Moves
-
🚨Durham About To Drop Massive Bomb — Hillary Clinton In Full Panic
- 100s of Navy SEALs Sidelined for ABSURD Reason — Biden’s Disaster
-
JUST IN: Autopsy Confirms Gabby Petito’s Shocking Manner Of Death
- Chattanooga nurse speaks out… I quit, screw your experimental Vaccine!
-
Clinton Judge Steps In… It’s Been BLOCKED
- SERVICEMEMBER SOUNDS THE ALARM ON AFGHAN REFUGEES NOW IN THE US
- Democrat Mayors Grandson Shot and Killed
- BRIAN LAUNDRIE POSSIBLY CAUGHT ON REMOTE TRAIL CAM
- Haitian Illegals Revolt- Seize Control of Federal Bus
|
IN DEPTH…
- Border patrol union leader slams White House and media for claims of ‘whipping’ migrants 2 hours ago
- Facebook Oversight Board Launches Review of XCheck System for High-Profile Users 3 hours ago
- Media play ‘telephone’ with Haitian immigration crisis 4 hours ago
- ‘So Clearly A Crisis’: Brianna Keilar Confronts Mayorkas Over Refusal To Say The Southern Border Is in Crisis 2 mins ago
- PJW Live: Orange Vest Movement Takes Over Streets of Melbourne 27 mins ago
- WATCH: Biden administration officials slams their own treatment of migrants at the border 52 mins ago
- Abbott to Biden: Texas needs a federal emergency declaration and we need it now 57 mins ago
- Biden administration releases ‘numerous’ migrants far from southern border in ‘catch and release’ system 1 hour ago
- Haitian migrants revolt in custody and seize control of privately contracted bus 1 hour ago
- Schiff and Pelosi push bill to limit presidential power with laundry list of Trump complaints 1 hour ago
- Politico Reporter Confirms Emails From Hunter Biden Laptop 2 hours ago
- Federal Health Authorities Blast Ivermectin for Covid Treatment 2 hours ago
- J&J Says COVID Booster Shot Increases Protection After Two Months
- 32 attorneys general throw support behind bipartisan House antitrust bills 3 hours ago
- Start of a Yellow Vest Revolt in Australia? 4 hours ago
- Biden appeals to UN to team up on pandemic and climate responses after diplomatic flaps 4 hours ago
- Trump has Republicans in a now-familiar place: On edge, awaiting his next move 5 hours ago
- Lockheed Martin Forecasts 40% Reduction In F‑35 Sustainment Costs Over Five Years 6 hours ago
- Trident II Successfully Launched From U.S.S. Wyoming 6 hours ago
- Companies Beware: Adopting a “Woke Culture” Hurts Diversity and Inclusion. | Human Events 6 hours ago
- The Space Force Finally Has Its Own Rank Insignia 6 hours ago
- Russia behind Litvinenko murder, rules European rights court 6 hours ago
- The lawyer representing Brian Laundrie’s family says he’s no longer holding a press conference after talking to the FBI
- Trump, with spate of 2022 endorsements, goes where no former president’s gone before 6 hours ago
- US Army Justifying Vax Mandates with a Slide That Lists 7 Tenets of Satanism 6 hours ago
- VP Harris Under Fire For Lack Of Attention To Border Crisis 6 hours ago
- Ex-Military Officer: Nearly 1,000 Americans Still Trapped in Afghanistan 6 hours ago
- Biden Is Desperate to Regain Bases, Intel, Allies He Threw Away in Afghanistan 7 hours ago
- As Canadians Turn Out To Vote, Trudeau’s Hope For A Decisive Win Hangs By A Thread 7 hours ago
- North Korea Warns U.S.-U.K.-Australia Pact Could Trigger ‘Dangerous Nuclear Arms Race’ 7 hours ago
- U.S. to relax restrictions for vaccinated international travelers in November 7 hours ago
- London’s Khan: ‘We May Need Vaccine Passports’ 7 hours ago
- Islamic State Claims Responsibility for Syria Pipeline Bombing 7 hours ago
- Chinese Version of TikTok Limits Kids’ Usage to 40 Minutes a Day 7 hours ago
- Ghost of 1993 Haunts House Democrats 7 hours ago
- The truth behind the Texas bridge migrants 7 hours ago
- The Need – and Opportunity – For a Rural Renaissance Has Never Been Greater 7 hours ago
- BLM protests restaurant after women who allegedly attacked hostess after refusing to provide vaccine passport claim they were racially profiled 7 hours ago
- Mayorkas Won’t Admit Border Crisis Exists While Standing in Overrun Del Rio 7 hours ago
- Trump Admin Sanctions on Iran Decimated Regime’s Global Trade, Report Says 7 hours ago
- Would Jesus Wear A Mask? 7 hours ago
- Masking 2‑year-olds is proof positive we’ve gone way too far 7 hours ago
- NYT Labels Jill Biden a ‘Doctor’ but Not Rand Paul, Who Actually Is a Doctor 7 hours ago
- 2021 Emmys accomplishes award show rarity as ratings go up to 7.4 million viewers 7 hours ago
- California drivers react to the most expensive gas in America 7 hours ago
- Mike Rowe Gives A Glimpse Into His Personal Life As He Teases New Show ‘How America Works’ 7 hours ago
- Arnold Schwarzenegger Thinks “Voters Made The Right Decision” In Not Recalling California Governor Gavin Newsom 7 hours ago
- ‘By Whatever Means Possible’: Chinese Communist Takeover of Taiwan Imminent, Asserts Regime Flack. 7 hours ago
- New England, California to See Soaring Energy Costs This Winter 7 hours ago
- Evergrande Declines Further After S&P Says Default Is Likely 7 hours ago
- WTH Is This? Tucker Carlson Reveals ‘Satanism’ Powerpoint Slide Presented To Army To Promote Vaccination 7 hours ago
- MBA applications at some of the country’s best schools fell this year 7 hours ago
- Victoria’s Secret Model Doutzen Kroes Slams Vaccine Mandates: ‘I will Not Accept Exclusion of People Based On Their Medical Status’ 7 hours ago
|
TOP STORIES:
-
Clinton Judge Steps In… It’s Been BLOCKED
-
Biden Humiliates Himself In Front Of Leaders At UN General Assembly
- SERVICEMEMBER SOUNDS THE ALARM ON AFGHAN REFUGEES NOW IN THE US
-
Audit Investigator Drops Hammer — Legal Action Being Taken
- Democrat’s Grandson Shot and Killed
- BRIAN LAUNDRIE POSSIBLY CAUGHT ON REMOTE TRAIL CAM
-
Haitian Illegals Revolt- Hijack & Seize Control of Federal Bus
- House Progressives May Deal Blow To Biden…
- John Kerry Caught With Deep Ties To China…Over $1Million Invested
- ‘Everybody Needs to Be Fired’: Trump Spox Goes OFF
- Note Found On Brian Laundrie’s Car After He Disappeared
- Democrat Lawmaker Has Resigned
|
IN DEPTH…
- ‘So Clearly A Crisis’: Brianna Keilar Confronts Mayorkas Over Refusal To Say The Southern Border Is in Crisis 2 mins ago
- PJW Live: Orange Vest Movement Takes Over Streets of Melbourne 27 mins ago
- WATCH: Biden administration officials slams their own treatment of migrants at the border 52 mins ago
- Abbott to Biden: Texas needs a federal emergency declaration and we need it now 57 mins ago
- Biden administration releases ‘numerous’ migrants far from southern border in ‘catch and release’ system 1 hour ago
- Haitian migrants revolt in custody and seize control of privately contracted bus 1 hour ago
- Schiff and Pelosi push bill to limit presidential power with laundry list of Trump complaints 1 hour ago
- Politico Reporter Confirms Emails From Hunter Biden Laptop 2 hours ago
- Federal Health Authorities Blast Ivermectin for Covid Treatment 2 hours ago
- J&J Says COVID Booster Shot Increases Protection After Two Months
- 32 attorneys general throw support behind bipartisan House antitrust bills 3 hours ago
- Start of a Yellow Vest Revolt in Australia? 4 hours ago
- Biden appeals to UN to team up on pandemic and climate responses after diplomatic flaps 4 hours ago
- Trump has Republicans in a now-familiar place: On edge, awaiting his next move 5 hours ago
- Lockheed Martin Forecasts 40% Reduction In F‑35 Sustainment Costs Over Five Years 6 hours ago
- Trident II Successfully Launched From U.S.S. Wyoming 6 hours ago
- Companies Beware: Adopting a “Woke Culture” Hurts Diversity and Inclusion. | Human Events 6 hours ago
- The Space Force Finally Has Its Own Rank Insignia 6 hours ago
- Russia behind Litvinenko murder, rules European rights court 6 hours ago
- The lawyer representing Brian Laundrie’s family says he’s no longer holding a press conference after talking to the FBI
- Trump, with spate of 2022 endorsements, goes where no former president’s gone before 6 hours ago
- US Army Justifying Vax Mandates with a Slide That Lists 7 Tenets of Satanism 6 hours ago
- VP Harris Under Fire For Lack Of Attention To Border Crisis 6 hours ago
- Ex-Military Officer: Nearly 1,000 Americans Still Trapped in Afghanistan 6 hours ago
- Biden Is Desperate to Regain Bases, Intel, Allies He Threw Away in Afghanistan 7 hours ago
- As Canadians Turn Out To Vote, Trudeau’s Hope For A Decisive Win Hangs By A Thread 7 hours ago
- North Korea Warns U.S.-U.K.-Australia Pact Could Trigger ‘Dangerous Nuclear Arms Race’ 7 hours ago
- U.S. to relax restrictions for vaccinated international travelers in November 7 hours ago
- London’s Khan: ‘We May Need Vaccine Passports’ 7 hours ago
- Islamic State Claims Responsibility for Syria Pipeline Bombing 7 hours ago
- Chinese Version of TikTok Limits Kids’ Usage to 40 Minutes a Day 7 hours ago
- Ghost of 1993 Haunts House Democrats 7 hours ago
- The truth behind the Texas bridge migrants 7 hours ago
- The Need – and Opportunity – For a Rural Renaissance Has Never Been Greater 7 hours ago
- BLM protests restaurant after women who allegedly attacked hostess after refusing to provide vaccine passport claim they were racially profiled 7 hours ago
- Mayorkas Won’t Admit Border Crisis Exists While Standing in Overrun Del Rio 7 hours ago
- Trump Admin Sanctions on Iran Decimated Regime’s Global Trade, Report Says 7 hours ago
- Would Jesus Wear A Mask? 7 hours ago
- Masking 2‑year-olds is proof positive we’ve gone way too far 7 hours ago
- NYT Labels Jill Biden a ‘Doctor’ but Not Rand Paul, Who Actually Is a Doctor 7 hours ago
- 2021 Emmys accomplishes award show rarity as ratings go up to 7.4 million viewers 7 hours ago
- California drivers react to the most expensive gas in America 7 hours ago
- Mike Rowe Gives A Glimpse Into His Personal Life As He Teases New Show ‘How America Works’ 7 hours ago
- Arnold Schwarzenegger Thinks “Voters Made The Right Decision” In Not Recalling California Governor Gavin Newsom 7 hours ago
- ‘By Whatever Means Possible’: Chinese Communist Takeover of Taiwan Imminent, Asserts Regime Flack. 7 hours ago
- New England, California to See Soaring Energy Costs This Winter 7 hours ago
- Evergrande Declines Further After S&P Says Default Is Likely 7 hours ago
- WTH Is This? Tucker Carlson Reveals ‘Satanism’ Powerpoint Slide Presented To Army To Promote Vaccination 7 hours ago
- MBA applications at some of the country’s best schools fell this year 7 hours ago
- Victoria’s Secret Model Doutzen Kroes Slams Vaccine Mandates: ‘I will Not Accept Exclusion of People Based On Their Medical Status’ 7 hours ago
|
|
You signed up for the Populist Press newsletter at www.Populist.Press We are the #1 Drudge Alternative. Visit our homepage for incredible news!
|
Click here to unsubscribe
Populist Press
7940 Front Beach Rd.
Panama City Beach, FL. 32407
74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
September 22, 2021 Hello! Every Wednesday, our internet culture staff discusses the world of streaming entertainment. In today’s Insider:
NOW STREAMING ‘Host’ scared the Zoom out of me It’s film festival season, and after reading about Rob Savage’s upcoming film Dashcam—which has been both buzzed-about and called out for its lead casting choice—I was led to his first film, Host. It debuted as a Shudder original last summer, after he tweeted a Zoom prank video in April 2020.
Much like Searching and Unfriended, Host uses online framing to tell its story, though this film takes place entirely within the intimate confines of a Zoom meeting. A horror movie about Zoom? I know, it could be bad! But a year and a half into the pandemic, Zoom meetings do feel like a special kind of purgatory. How many times can you say “Can you hear me?” before you summon something? This is the era of cursed content, and that now includes all the things we’ve seen on Zoom. In Host, six friends get together during lockdown for a virtual seance. At just 57 minutes, the film is very effective in quickly creating a sense of dread and isolation. It inventively uses Zoom filters and backgrounds to add to the unsettling vibe, and though the evil entity storyline isn’t exactly original, what Savage does with empty rooms, screen space, and jump scares (and the actors’ realistic performances) makes it stand out from all the other COVID-related “content” made last year.
Host is streaming on Shudder. Senior Writer
SPONSORED Savings, assemble: The Disney, Hulu, and ESPN+ bundle is a superhuman deal
Keeping track of all the services you subscribe to is a pain. Keep things simple and entertain the whole family with the Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ bundle. $13.99 per month gets you world-class sports, decades of family entertainment, and the best new TV and movies.
AWARDS SEASON ‘The Queen’s Gambit’ draws ire for Emmys speeches Award speeches can be something of a mixed bag: They can endear you to the audience in the room or at home, but they can just as easily turn you into a Twitter main character. In the case of The Queen’s Gambit, the award speeches for the two categories it won at the Primetime Emmys turned Netflix’s prestigious miniseries into one of the ceremony’s villains.
The Queen’s Gambit came into Sunday night’s ceremony with nine awards already under its belt from the Creative Arts Emmys. While the miniseries lost some of the early acting categories to Mare of Easttown’s Julianne Nicholson and Evan Peters, Scott Frank won Queen’s Gambit’s first Emmy of the night for outstanding directing for a limited or anthology series or movie. (He was up against Thomas Kail for Hamilton, Sam Miller and Michaela Coel for I May Destroy You, Craig Zobel for Mare of Easttown, Barry Jenkins for The Underground Railroad, and Matt Shakman for WandaVision).
When Frank won his award, he took a pair of glasses out of his suit pocket, unfolded the two pieces of paper in his hands, and thanked everyone involved with his win—including tributes to stars Anya Taylor-Joy and Moses Ingram. In theory, the speech was fine. Reading off a list of names can be dry or boring, no matter where you’re watching the ceremony, and it obviously was important to him to do so. But Frank’s speech went on for so long that the orchestra attempted to play him off three separate times.
People’s ire for Frank was significant enough that when the all-male team for The Queen’s Gambit won best limited or anthology series, people were preemptively mad that he was going to speak again. Fortunately, for those people, Frank didn’t speak again. The honors for the speech went to The Queen’s Gambit executive producer William Horberg, who thanked everyone who made the show a word-of-mouth hit—according to Netflix, it’s the streamer’s most-watched limited series ever—and Netflix for taking “a chance on risky material.”
He also thanked Taylor-Joy, who starred as the young chess prodigy at the show’s center and who he credited with making chess sexy again.
—Michelle Jaworski, staff writer
REVIEWS ‘Star Wars: Visions’ takes full advantage of animation’s limitless medium If you go into Star Wars: Visions expecting things to make logistical sense or fit neatly within a rigid, predetermined timeline, you’ll be disappointed. (The Galactic Empire is mentioned in several episodes, but only one of them, “Tatooine Rhapsody,” actually involves established characters.)
Visions is a show that isn’t going to bother with the logic behind a lightsaber contraption that can split the plasma blade and turn it into a rotating umbrella that can be used as a deadly weapon. It won’t stop to question how twins created in a lab as tools of the dark side of the Force can survive a battle on top of a star destroyer without any oxygen as they fight each other in a battle with lightsabers that take the shape of whips and strobe lights. It’s not going to spend time delving into the debate about whether a droid can hold his own against an Inquisitor or just how a lightsaber can change color and length based on who’s holding it.
Those are just a few of the things that occur in Visions, and for the record, all of those things absolutely work in context. (I’ve seen all nine episodes of the English dub.) It’s those things that, for the first time in quite some time, help make the many lightsaber battles all the more exciting.
All nine episodes of Star Wars: Visions will be available to stream on Disney+ Sept. 22. —M.J.
Now Playing: 🎶 “Queens” by Aeon Station 🎶
Questions? Feedback? Contact us at info@dailydot.com.
Copyright © 2021 The Daily Dot, All rights reserved.
Don’t want to hear from us anymore? We understand, but it won’t be the same without you! Click here to unsubscribe To view this newsletter in your browser, click here. |
77.) HEADLINE USA
|
|
|
78.) NATURAL NEWS
|
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
|
82.) CNN
Wednesday 09.22.21 If you’ve patiently waited to break out the decorations and the pumpkin spice, now’s your time. It’s the first day of fall in the Northern Hemisphere! Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Passengers scan an app used to monitor Covid-19 status before boarding a catamaran yacht in Malaysia. Coronavirus
Medical experts are warning of another deadly pandemic winter as Covid-19 numbers tick up and flu season threatens. The US is back at a point where more than 2,000 people are dying of Covid-19 every day on average, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. Additionally, about 12,000 to 50,000 Americans lose their lives to flu every year. The best way to avoid another devastating season, doctors say, is to get vaccinated for both. Meanwhile, parts of Southeast Asia, including Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam, are coming out of long lockdowns and abandoning their “zero Covid” strategies. Leaders want to revive their countries’ economies, especially their tourism sectors, but experts are worried that low vaccination rates in the region could spell disaster.
United Nations
The climate crisis was front and center at the UN General Assembly yesterday. Chinese President Xi Jinping recorded a rare address to the UN body promising to halt coal projects, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his country will present the Paris climate agreement to its parliament next month, and US President Joe Biden and UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson stressed further climate action during an Oval Office meeting. An array of international points of conflict were also addressed by the dozens of world leaders present, including nuclear arms in Iran, free and fair elections in Venezuela, and competition between the US and China. The Taliban have also requested representation at this week’s meeting, a move that is expected to kick off a diplomatic battle with the preexisting Afghan envoy. Congress
Progressive Democrats have announced they will not vote for the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill without passing the $3.5 trillion package that is aimed at enacting President Joe Biden’s economic agenda. That vote is scheduled for next week, and as it stands, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi can afford to lose only a handful of votes to get anything passed. President Biden will increase his engagement with Congressional Democrats today, including a meeting with Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, to try and get all the Democratic factions in line. Yesterday, the House also passed a bill to avoid a government shutdown and suspend the US debt limit. The bill is unlikely to pass the Senate, so the country is still approaching a possible shutdown and financial precipice in the coming weeks. Trump revelations
Several recent revelations have shed light on then-President Trump and his supporters’ plans to subvert the Constitution and keep him in power after the 2020 election. These revelations are likely to be of high interest to the House select committee investigating the January 6 insurrection. For instance, a newly revealed memo shows a conservative lawyer working with Trump’s legal team tried to convince then-Vice President Mike Pence that he could overturn the election results on January 6 when Congress counted the Electoral College votes. The six-step scheme, which included throwing out electors from seven states, was outlined in a two-page memo obtained by Washington Post journalists Bob Woodward and Robert Costa for their book, “Peril.” The memo was then obtained by CNN. Immigration
There are about 8,600 Haitian migrants remaining under the Del Rio International bridge in Texas, waiting to be processed by immigration officials and possibly removed from the country. That’s down from a high of about 14,000 earlier in the week, but there are still tens of thousands of other Haitian refugees further south, still waiting for a chance to enter the US. There are up to 30,000 Haitians in Colombia who may be seeking to travel north, and Panama expects 80,000 migrants to cross its borders by the end of this year. South and Central American leaders have expressed concern at the unprecedented flow of migrants. More than 97% of Haitians migrating to the US do not come directly from Haiti, but rather were residents of other countries first. Many Haitians trying to enter the US are believed to have been living elsewhere since the devastating Haiti earthquake in 2010. Sponsor Content by SimpliSafe Meet SimpliSafe It’s finally easy to make sure your house is safe. Whatever you’re worried about, SimpliSafe’s got your back. Click here and get 30% off your system when you sign up for interactive monitoring.
People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. ‘Dancing with the Stars’ Season 30 premieres
‘The View’ turns 25
This child-sized Aston Martin toy car costs $123,000
Think remote meetings are hard? Hybrid meetings are much more complicated
Chipotle is adding a new meat to its menu in memoriam
Willie Garson, who famously played Stanford Blatch on “Sex and the City,” has died. He was 57. In a statement, HBO/HBO Max honored Garson, calling his portrayal “one of the most beloved characters from the HBO pantheon.” $216,000 That’s how much the Hungarian Football Federation must pay in fines after being punished by football’s world governing body for “numerous” fans’ racist behavior during a recent World Cup qualifier against England. I started telling myself that it was okay. I was coming to terms with dying.
Samantha Mayor, who was injured during the 2018 deadly school shooting at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. Mayor and other shooting survivors gave their firsthand accounts in a brief filed Tuesday in a case that could impact concealed carry and Second Amendment laws across the country. Brought to you by CNN Underscored We spent 5 days testing the iPhone 13 to see if it’s worth the upgrade If you’re in the market for an iPhone and have an 11 or older, now is a really ideal time to switch devices. Here’s everything you need to know about Apple’s latest iPhone lineup before preordering. Restoring an icon 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
No longer want to receive this newsletter? Unsubscribe. Interested in more? See all of our newsletters.
Like what you see? Don’t like what you see? Let us know. We’re all about self improvement. Did a friend forward you this newsletter? Sign up here.
Create CNN Account | Listen to CNN Audio | Download the CNN App
® © 2021 Cable News Network, Inc. A WarnerMedia Company. All Rights Reserved. One CNN Center Atlanta, GA 30303 |
83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- That Fella From Down Under
- Did Biden’s political needs lead to tragically mistaken drone strike?
- A question
- Angelo Codevilla, RIP
- You talkin’ to me?
That Fella From Down Under
Posted: 21 Sep 2021 04:22 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)“That fella from down under” is what Joe Biden called Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison. But on Saturday night (Sunday in Australia), I was the fella from down under as a guest on Sky News Australia’s excellent “Outsiders” program. We covered three or four topics from American news of the day. I think it was a fun and informative segment; I hope you enjoy it:
Sunday’s entire Outsiders program can be viewed on YouTube. I think it is an excellent show, as is Andrew Bolt’s Bolt Report on the same network. The genesis of the show is that several years ago, the Australia Broadcasting Corporation, pretty much the equivalent of the BBC, started a program called “Insiders.” It featured three liberal talking heads. So Sky News responded with “Outsiders,” starring three conservatives.
|
Did Biden’s political needs lead to tragically mistaken drone strike?
Posted: 21 Sep 2021 12:09 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Unintentional killings of innocent civilians are an unfortunate but inevitable occurrence in sustained wars. The wars associated with our attempt to curb terrorism seem particularly prone to producing such killings by American forces. I don’t think there’s any doubt that the wars fought under Presidents Bush (43) and Obama resulted in U.S. forces unintentionally killing innocent civilians. This might well have been the case under President Trump too, despite the scaled-back and changed nature of his war efforts. However, the unintentional killing of innocents in that recent Afghanistan drone strike, as we were completing our evacuation of Americans and Afghans, is different in at least two respects. The first is that accidental killings under Biden’s immediate predecessors were carried out as we were trying to win. By contrast, Biden’s killings occurred after we had given up. Our troops had already pulled out of Afghanistan and the evacuation of civilians, such as it was, had just about been completed. The victims of our attack, including seven children, probably are the last people to die at our hands in Afghanistan for our mistakes there (however one defines them). This distinction isn’t damning in itself, though. The target of our attack was thought to be on his way to inflict serious terrorist damage. That he actually wasn’t means we made a mistake, but as I said, mistakes are inevitable in the war against terrorists at any stage. But there’s a second distinction. This particular attack might well have resulted from Joe Biden attempting to save a little face over our disastrous exit from Afghanistan and, in particular, the killing of American forces at the Kabul airport. Charles Cooke makes that case:
Cooke isn’t saying that Biden deliberately decided to kill innocent people in order to change the narrative. I think he’s suggesting — as I am — that Biden’s political needs caused his team to be less discriminate than normal in picking and vetting a target. These political needs included changing the narrative, as Cooke says. They also included being able to claim some measure of revenge for the terrorist killings of Americans at the Kabul airport. In addition, this seems to have been an attempt to demonstrate to Americans that, even with our troops gone, we still have the “over-the-horizon” capability to kill terrorists (as we thought the target was) in Afghanistan. Biden had promised that, post-withdrawal, we would have “counterterrorism over-the-horizon capability that will allow us to keep our eyes firmly fixed on any direct threats.” After the drone attack that killed the innocents, Biden touted the strike as a successful example of his over-the-horizon strategy. Scott has observed that the claim that this was an over-the-horizon attack is highly dubious, but the point here is that Biden believed he could sell this attack as evidence of that capability. The key question, then, is whether Biden’s political need to kill suspected terrorists, and the military’s related desire to save some face and to impress the commander-in-chief, resulted in less care than normal in selecting this target and in going through with the attack. There’s good reason to suspect that it did, but suspicion is not proof. Secretary of Defense Austin has ordered a high-level review of the attack. I have zero confidence in Austin or in any review he orders. A finding of no departure from regular procedures wouldn’t carry any weight with me. A finding of departures would leave open the question of why, but should reinforce the already strong suspicion that politics entered into the process. If Republicans regain control of a chamber of Congress, they could conduct their own investigation. The Democrats would do so, I’m pretty sure, if the shoe were on the other foot. But that doesn’t mean a congressional investigation is warranted. Maybe it’s best just to pay reparations and move on, with our suspicions intact.
|
A question
Posted: 21 Sep 2021 09:29 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)In this post, Scott wrote about Saturday’s “Justice for J6” rally in Washington, D.C. He collected tweets reporting on the substantial, and seemingly predominant, police presence, including that of undercover feds. I was struck by a statement by CBS’s Margaret Brennan, the moderator of Face the Nation. According to this tweet by Nicholas Fondacaro, Brennan said “the strong show of security” by police and the feds “kept the crowds away.” I doubt that’s what happened. As Fondacaro says, Brennan was probably trying to cover up the fact that the media and the feds vastly overstated claims that this rally threatened the peace. But here’s my question: What do you call a state in which a strong show of security keeps people away from a lawful protest against perceived injustice (the phenomenon Brennan appears to applaud)? The answer is, a police state.
|
Angelo Codevilla, RIP
Posted: 21 Sep 2021 09:01 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)Terrible news out this morning of the death of Angelo Codevilla, at age 78, reportedly the victim of a drunk driver. It is hard to overstate the importance and brilliance of Angelo. If you only knew him by his many books and columns (including this 2015 piece he wrote for Power Line on Trump’s significance and prospects), it would be sufficient to establish his greatness. But he was also at the storm center of key aspects of American intelligence and foreign policy going back more than 40 years. As a Senate Intelligence Committee staff aide to Wyoming Senator Malcolm Wallop in the late 1970s, Angelo was instrumental in exposing the perils of our arms control strategy vis-a-vis the Soviet Union. But it was also in this same time period that Codevilla and Wallop revived the idea of strategic missile defense, thus setting up President Reagan’s Strategic Defense Initiative in the 1980s. Codevilla was a keen critic of how the Pentagon bureaucracy did its best to delay and undermine even the research program for SDI let alone eventual deployment, such that we still don’t have the robust missile defense capability that technological progress has made eminently possible. Among his many fine books are a translation of Machiavelli’s Prince, and several books on war, strategy, and intelligence that hold up very well even at a remove of 30 years in some cases. Especially recommended is his book The Character of Nations, which holds up very well because it draws upon vast historical learning that never goes out of style. His co-authored book with Paul Seabury, War: Ends and Means, is also a fantastic primer on how to take warfare seriously. And his book on intelligence, Informing Statecraft, is also a classic that can be read to great use today, because it was less about transient facts such as the Soviet Union and more about the defective culture of our “intelligence” community. In recent years Angelo took on the mantle of gentleman farmer, growing premium wine grapes up in the Sierra foothills southeast of Sacramento, but where he also continued to issue forth a series of short books (especially The Ruling Class—a favorite of Rush Limbaugh) and notable articles. (See especially his longer essays for the Claremont Review of Books.) Don’t miss what appears to have been his final article for American Greatness a few days ago: “Epitaph for the ‘War on Terror.’” You can see in this article what had long been Codevilla’s central theme: America is unserious about foreign affairs.
Or take in this long interview with Angelo that appeared in The Tablet a while back. Sample:
If you have some time to spare, take in this 2014 lecture by Angelo at the Heritage Foundation, where he speaks with his usual bluntness about our national security establishment:
|
You talkin’ to me?
Posted: 21 Sep 2021 05:54 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)Does it matter that Joe Biden is operating at some fraction of his original mental capacity? That he has half a mind to be president? We might be more confident in assigning blame for the fiascos and catastrophes over which he presides, but even if he were firing on all cylinders we’d still be in trouble. His minders in the White House daycare operation know what he would have wanted. You may have heard that during a virtual event last week with Prime Minister Scott Morrison of Australia and U.K. counterpart Boris Johnson, Biden addressed the British prime minister by name before he referred to Morrison as “that fellow down under.” The Washington Free Beacon takes Biden’s latest blank out as the occasion for a video look back at a few similar lapses. The video below reminds us of a few of Biden’s greatest misses.
|
You are subscribed to email updates from Power LinePower Line. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
|
Unsubscribe | ThePoliticalInsider.com | About | Contact | Privacy Policy | Terms of UseForward to a Friend The Political Insider, LLC | 1818 Library Street | Reston | VA | 20190
|
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Twitter • Facebook • Tumblr • YouTube Advertise on Digg digg.com • Unsubscribe© 2020 Digg Holdings 18 Shipyard Drive, Hingham, MA 02043 |
89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
|
92.) THE DAILY BEAST
Manage newsletters View in browser
Advertisement
When all hell breaks loose, we keep a grip on reality.
Support our newsroom by becoming a member.
Advertisement
By Noor Ibrahim, Barbie Latza Nadeau
Fever Dreams A podcast covering twisted tales of the new American right.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
© Copyright 2021 The Daily Beast Company LLC If you are on a mobile device or cannot view the images in this message, click here to view this email in your browser. To ensure delivery of these emails, please add emails@thedailybeast.com to your address book. If you no longer wish to receive these emails, or think you have received this message in error, you can safely unsubscribe. |
93.) JUST THE NEWS
|
94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
|
96.) NOT THE BEE
|
|
Not the Bee Daily Newsletter |
Sep 22, 2021 |
|
Buffalo’s Highmark Stadium requires fans to show proof of vaccination, so Bills WR Cole Beasley and one of his teammates are offering to buy unvaxxed fans tickets to away gamesOkay this is how you do it right here:
Construction workers are staging massive anti-vax-mandate protests in Australia and the footage is certifiably nutsConstruction workers in Victoria, Australia staged massive demonstrations against the state’s vaccine mandates on Tuesday, with what appeared to be thousands of workers taking to the streets and highways of Melbourne in aggressive defiance of the government’s orders.
Watch: A monkey kidnapped a puppy in Malaysia and it took people three days to figure out how to rescue the poor dogThis might be the most dramatic rescue video of all time.
Awesome: Coaches at a Tennessee school were told not to lead students in prayer so the students went ahead and led it themselvesSchools in recent years have periodically been the centers of controversy over the practice of prayer in public, specifically whether or not, and to what extent, school authorities may take part in such displays of faith.
Watch this insane footage of lava flow from the recent volcano eruption on the Canary IslandsResidents on the island of La Palma in the Spanish Canary Islands are being evacuated after a massive volcano eruption sent lava flowing across the surface of the island toward the sea.
Police in New Zealand busted some crooks carrying $70k in cash and an absolute mother lode of KFC chickenNew Zealand has been well-known over the past year and a half for its uncompromising hardcore COVID-19 lockdown, with much of the country’s law enforcement having been deputized to enforce long-term stay-at-home orders and other severe mitigation measures.
Chicago’s Lori Lightfoot wants to give poor families $500-a-month universal basic income and I’m sure that will solve the problem of gang violence and drugs on the streets!The violent city of Chiraq is plagued by more carnage than the dark city of Gotham itself.
New Samuel Adams beer is so strong that it’s illegal in 15 states 🧐Samuel Adams is coming out with their new limited edition beer that will make your eyes water! That is if you ever get your hands on it… the beer is SO strong that it is ILLEGAL in 15 different states.
Trump is still dominating the potential primary field and it isn’t even closeIt’s up to you to say whether this is a good or bad thing, but right now there is no other potential 2024 Republican candidate who comes within a hundred miles of The Donald.
MSNBC’s Joy Reid wants to remind Americans that their concern about Gabby Petito’s tragic disappearance is because they’re racists suffering from “Missing White Woman Syndrome”The lesson here is that everything is racist and you are a racist and if you disagree, you are a super-racist:
Nearly half of Americans believe Biden lacks the “mental soundness” to be presidentThe numbers keep rolling in for U.S. President Joe Biden and they keep being not good at all:
Watch Justin Trudeau repeatedly mess up the letters while trying to say “LGBTQ” 🤣Uh-oh! This could be trouble for Trudeau!
This company is reselling Chick-Fil-A sandwiches on Sundays for $6.66 so people can spite the fast-food chain and I’m more than a little confusedLet me remind you, once again with a heavy sigh, that all the leftist ire against Chick-Fil-A comes because the company’s founder said a decade ago that he personally believes in the biblical definition of marriage… the view that has been held for thousands and thousands of years by not only Jews and Christians, but the vast majority of the human race.
A mountain goat killed a grizzly bear in Canada and a swarm of bees killed dozens of penguins in South Africa so something is definitely going onHave you given any donations recently to your local Canadian conservation fund or apiary foundation? Yeah you might want to consider dropping a few bucks on those just to cultivate some goodwill. Up first, out of the Canadian hinterlands:
Border Patrol chief canned by Biden lobs a truth grenade at the president, says Biden is “laser-focused on expediting the flow of migrants into the U.S.”The former chief of U.S. Border Patrol absolutely eviscerated Joe Biden in a new letter that accuses the president of purposely creating a border crisis in order to flood the U.S. with illegal immigrants.
“The Handmaid’s Tale” just lost a whopping 21 Emmy nominations, setting a new recordThis is clear evidence that Hollywood is filled with fascist theocrats who want to control women’s bodies:
New homeowner finds creepy doll behind boarded up wall holding note saying she killed the original ownersOkay this is a tad bit creepy…
New image of Justin Trudeau wearing blackface emerges as he wins re-election in CanadaSo Justin Trudeau, poster boy for the Marxist New World Order, just won re-election as Prime Minister of Canada.
Woke Ben & Jerry’s came out with new social justice flavor because of course they did… 🙄Ben & Jerry’s just came out with a new ice cream flavor called “Change Is Brewing” with the word “Liberation” printed on the pint to promote Rep. Cori Bush’s public safety bill, The People’s Response Act.
Let this woke disciple try to explain to you how Jesus was “non-binary” 🤡What you see here is the opposite of proper theological exegesis:
Hero cop catches 1-month-old baby who was thrown off a second-floor balcony by a lowlife thug
Stop masking childrenLike the vast majority of Americans, I didn’t tune in for one second of the Emmy Awards. It’s tough for me to imagine having so little to occupy my time that I willfully subject myself to watching hours of such a self-congratulating Hollywood spectacle. But I have seen the images from the evening’s festivities, and they leave me with questions.
So funny: Look how many browser tabs this dude’s mom had open on her phoneTry not to laugh while watching this [language warning]:
A wanted top mobster turned himself in after his son posted a photo of him in Florida on social media 😂Mob life ain’t what it used to be; there was a time when a wiseguy could evade the authorities fairly easily, but now with social media it’s hard for a fella to slip under the radar, ya know?
|
Our mailing address is: PO Box 87044 |
You received this email because you are a subscriber to Not the Bee or you opted-in to our newsletter through a prompt on our website. If you no longer wish to receive these emails, click here to unsubscribe. |
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
House GOP to Investigate FAA Drone Ban Over Texas Bridge
Special: How the Wealthy Monetize Tax Loopholes Rand Paul to Newsmax: Dem Open Borders ‘Insanity’ Texas’ New Curb: Law Cracks Down on Distributing Abortion Pill After 7 Weeks Special: Outrage Over Survival Food Anger at Haiti Airport Putting More Pressure on Biden Trump Sues Niece, NY Times Over Tax Records Story Special: Biden Fires Warning Shot for Retirees… Officials: Many Haitian Migrants Are Being Released in US More Than 40% of Adults Have ‘Silent’ Heart Disease: Study
|
|
|||
|
This email is never sent unsolicited. You have received this Newsmax email because you subscribed to it or someone forwarded it to you. To opt out, see the links below.
Remove your email address from our list or modify your profile. We respect your right to privacy. View our policy. This email was sent by: |
99.) MARK LEVIN
September 21, 2021
On Tuesday’s Mark Levin Show, WREC Radio Host Ben Ferguson fills in for Mark. President Biden has lots of problems from the border chaos, the botched Afghanistan withdrawal, and the budget reconciliation crisis and CNN is covering all of them to distract from Special Counsel Durham’s indictment of Clinton Lawyer Michael Sussman. Then, Members of the FBI did the dirty work of the Clinton Campaign and the Democrat National Committee and did it through a web of lawyers. The media spread the lies that promoted the phony Russian Collusion story peddled by Sussman on behalf of the Clinton campaign and the DNC. Later, John Durham’s investigation may lead to Hillary Clinton appearing in front of a grand jury. This investigation may lead as high as officials in the White House and the FBI as well. Afterward, the border chaos continues as all manner of unidentified people including trafficked children and gang members steadily grows. Yet rather than be upset by the Biden-made humanitarian crisis, the White House is investigating the horse-mounted border patrol agents that corralled and grabbed the shirt of a Haitian migrant that crossed the border illegally.
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
|
102.) CNS
103.) RELIABLE NEWS
Please Read or Unsubscribe | |||
Our goal is to provide you with nothing but the facts | |||
FEATURED | |||
JUST IN: Massive EXPLOSION – Thousands Evacuated So Far | |||
Read it Here >> |
|||
RECENT | |||
LOOK: Florida Business FORCED to Shut Down | |||
U.S. Gymnasts Step Forward – Expose Top Level Government Officials | |||
[INCREDIBLE] Elon Musk MAKES HISTORY – A Major Victory For America | |||
|
|||
Welcome to Reliable News! Our goal is to provide you with nothing but the facts. |
|||
|
|||
Use of this content is subject to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use of this Publisher. Content marked Sponsored may be paid third party advertisements and are not endorsed or warranted by our staff or company. The content in our emails is for informational or entertainment use, and is not a substitute for professional advice. Always check with a qualified professional for treatment advice and/or diagnosis. Be sure to do your own careful research before taking action based on anything you find in this content. | |||
ReliableNews.org 7040 Avenida Encinas – Ste 104-701 Carlsbad, CA 92011Intended for: rpbnewmedia@protonmail.com Unsubscribe© Copyright ReliableNews.org All Rights Reserved. |
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
I don’t think I like what the panelist said on the FDA panel.
Panelist on FDA panel said vaccines are killing more than they saveThe FDA released a panel discussion on their YouTube panel. One panelist was particularly noteworthy. Steve Kirsch, who is the Executive Director of the COVID-19 Early Treatment Fund, said that… | |
What woolly Biden promised to give away at the UN todayBill O’Reilly talked about the demented speech President Befogged gave to the UN today. O’Reilly complimented him for giving vaccines to developing nations although Biden made it seem as if… | |
GOP candidate for NV Lt. Gov. dragged out of Stalinist meeting and injuredRepublican Lt. Governor candidate Mack Miller was involved in a scuffle with security, who dragged him out of a Clark County Commission meeting. He ended up on the floor injured… | |
Entire Laredo sector’s unmanned but Mayorkas claims the border’s closedThe entire Laredo border sector is unmanned. Checkpoints in and out of Laredo have been shut down. The Biden administration took agents from Laredo and sent them to Del Rio.… | |
Geraldo condemns Border Patrol & spreads lies about them on airAt a briefing with TX Governor Greg Abbott, the Border Patrol union informed him that illegal aliens on a transport bus being driven from Del Rio to the RGV overtook… | |
This is why Roe vs. Wade needs to be put in checkWe posted earlier about the Mississippi abortion case that will be heard by the Supreme Court. The case, Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, will be heard on Dec. 1.… | |
Project Veritas whistleblower video banned on FB and InstagramHHS hospital insider Jodi O’Malley is the whistleblower who videotaped medical professionals talking about hiding adverse effects from vaccines. The Arizona State Senator wants the facility investigated. Facebook and Instagram… | |
Progressives take Iron Dome out of spending bill–prefer supporting TalibanThe progressives — communist Democrats — had $1 billion taken out of a spending bill that was aimed at boosting Israel’s Iron Dome air defense system. They did not complain at… | |
Open borders Schumer says deportations are “hateful and xenophobic”Communist Democrat Chuck Schumer is insisting everyone should come into our country without vetting. If you are not for open borders, you are “xenophobic and hateful”. “Expulsions,” aka deportations, such… | |
Ben & Jerry–commie ice cream makers–create a defund the police flavorThe extreme communists from Vermont Ben & Jerry , who make the ice cream of the same name, will support Rep. Cori Bush’s and BLM’s communist defund the police movement.… | |
Border Czarina Kamala Harris condemns Border Patrol trying to protect usEarlier today, at a briefing with TX Governor Greg Abbott, the Border Patrol union informed him that illegal aliens [they’re not migrants] on a transport bus being driven from Del Rio… | |
Biden never tires of insulting the US, especially at the UNJoe Biden hoped to set a new tone from that of his predecessor Donald Trump who spoke of sovereignty for each country, focusing on each country’s own citizens, and American… | |
Stunning SCOTUS decision has Dems reelingThe Supreme Court will take up a Mississippi case that directly aims at overturning Roe vs. Wade, the abortion dictum. “The Supreme Court on Monday set December 1 arguments on… | |
They come with measles, varicella, mumps, TB, malaria, leishmaniasis, hep A, COVAuthoritarian Joe Biden is responsible for sick people coming into the United States. Besides criminals and terrorists, he won’t ban or properly vet people with contagions. Diseases we once eradicated… | |
Whistleblower’s hospital responds to non-reporting of adverse vaccine effectsYesterday, James O’Keefe released his part I video interview of a federal employee who blew the whistle on her hospital. The whistleblower, who came armed with video clips, said the… | |
This is why Joe Biden abandoned our people and Bagram in AfghanistanJoe Biden’s embarrassing speech at the UN General Assembly today explains exactly why he rushed out of Afghanistan, leaving airbases, including Bagram, and thousands of innocents to the tender mercies… | |
FBI illegally seizes contents of security boxes & won’t give it back until owners prove it’s theirsThis next story is almost unbelievable but we now have an FBI that does whatever it wants. The FBI suspected a safe deposit box company named U.S. Private Vaults was… | |
DHS will ‘swiftly’ investigate agents doing their damn jobsSpeaker Pelosi and countless Democrats pushed a media hoax claiming border patrol agents “whipped” Haitians in Del Rio, Texas. Pelosi is the master of changing the subject. (videos below) Nearly… | |
Censored Aussies angrily protest every day, facing off with riot copsAll social media is attempting to keep the Victoria protests out of the news as thousands protest. Thousands of Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU) members in Victoria,… | |
Maricopa leaked tape: voting machine audit-recount was ‘pretty bullshit’Maricopa County Supervisor Steve Chucri was the only supervisor willing to meet with a grassroots organization called We The People AZ Alliance. They have been pushing for a full forensic… | |
Good Morning! Crazy Dem News to Start Your DayWe thought we’d start the morning off with some interesting messages from the Internet world and beyond. President Befuddled said yesterday “The National Weather Service has confirmed that extreme heat… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) BECKER NEWS
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
|
|
||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||
|
||||||||||||||
|
|||||
109.) STARS & STRIPES
|
110.) RIGHT & FREE
111.) UNITED VOICE
|
112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
MIDDLETOWN, Pennsylvania — When judging the nation’s character, the media tend to gravitate toward its loudest voices, its most extreme measures, its deepest…
‘This whole situation is blowing up and even liberals are turning on this administration,’ an agent told Fox News.
This is to be expected, but the left won’t accept that.
Insurgent Conservatives
PO Box 8161 Greenwood, IN 46142
If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe here.
114.) WAKING TIMES
|
115.) UNCOVER DC