Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday December 3, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
December 3 2021
Happy Friday from Washington, where the Biden administration and much of the media keep misrepresenting the science on COVID-19. Indefatigable former New York Times reporter Alex Berenson joins the podcast to give Doug Blair the straight facts about liberals’ failed approach to the pandemic. Are Salvation Army do-gooders secretly taught to divide America by race? Kevin Mooney reports. Plus: Mary Margaret Olohan shares what female legislators envision for a post-Roe society; Tim Murtaugh exposes crimes of journalism; and “Problematic Women” examines the implications of ending abortion on demand. On this date in 1989, President George H.W. Bush and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev predict that the Cold War is coming to an end.
Do lockdowns work? Do masks? What government actions help prevent the spread of COVID-19, and which don’t? Alex Berenson, author of “Pandemia,” analyzes the data.
Heritage Foundation policy analyst Melanie Israel discusses the implications of the Dobbs case and her takeaways from the arguments before the Supreme Court.
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“A Good Cop”, an NTD original drama series inspired by true events, follows the lives of three cops at different stages of their career during the current “defund the police” climate. The series premieres at 7:30pm, Dec. 5th on NTD Television. Stay Tuned!
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
Democrats Stall Bill to Condemn Forced Labor Camps in China
From the story: … the Democrat-led Congress can’t seem to get the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, which passed the Senate unanimously in July, to President Biden’s desk. Pointing to procedural issues and promises of future action, Democratic leadership in both the House and Senate can’t seem to agree on a strategy to pass the bill through both chambers, despite publicly claiming they support it. Later: Biden administration officials have been quietly telling lawmakers to slow down. Administration sources confirmed that in an October call between Deputy Secretary of State Wendy R. Sherman and Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), the other co-sponsor, Sherman made it clear that the administration prefers a more targeted and deliberative approach to determining which goods are the products of forced labor. She also told Merkley that getting allied buy-in was critical and more effective than unilateral action…In other words, while the administration supports the legislation in public, they are asking Democrats to essentially water it down in private (Washington Post). From Marco Rubio: the opposition to my bill isn’t about a House blue slip. This is sick stuff (Twitter). From Seth Mandel: An extraordinarily Wendy Sherman thing to do. No skill quite suits your advancement in Foggy Bottom like the ability to step over bodies. The folks who thought a half-million Syrian bodies was a fair price to pay for a ludicrously weak Iran deal also want to know why we’re in such a rush to punish genocide when it’ll upset Nike (Twitter).
2.
Man Shattering Female Swimming Records at University of Pennsylvania
A 22-year-old male swimmer, competing as a female, has broken several records that recently belonged to actual women (NY Post). From another story: Just two years ago, Lia Thomas was competing in men’s swimming at Penn as Will Thomas. In the 2018-19 season, Thomas was a second-team All-Ivy swimmer in three different events. After last competing against men in November 2019, Thomas returned after the Ivy League canceled the 2020-21 season because of COVID to compete against women and has obviously seen great success. Women who otherwise would have been on Penn’s team are out of luck. So are the women who would have won these events had they not been competing against a man. And more will be out of luck later on. Thomas’s times would have won silver and bronze in two events at the 2021 NCAA Women’s Championships (Washington Examiner).
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3.
New York City Sets Vaccine Mandate for Religious and Private School Workers
The story begins: New York City will require employees at yeshivas, Catholic schools and other private schools to be vaccinated against the coronavirus, in what is believed to be the largest effort in the nation to force religious schools to adhere to a vaccine mandate.
Democratic Pollster Warns Democrats: We Are in Trouble
Brian Stryker told the New York Times “we have a problem. We’ve got a national branding problem that is probably deeper than a lot of people suspect. Our party thinks maybe some things we’re saying aren’t cutting through, but I think it’s much deeper than that” (New York Times). From Frank Luntz: Looks like calling everyone who disagrees with you “racist” is not an effective strategy for winning over voters (Twitter). A poll out of Harvard finds Biden’s approval among 18-29-year-olds has dropped 13 points and is now under 50 percent (Daily Caller).
5.
Team Biden Mocked for Graph Showing Gas Down Two Cents Over Two Weeks
Even the Washington Post notes, in reality “Since Biden took office, the price of gas has risen more than a dollar on this same measure.”
11th School Board Association Votes to Leave the NSBA
The Alabama School Board Association is the latest to bail over their letter to the Biden Administration seeking them to get the FBI to harass parents (AL). From Christopher Rufo: The parent movement has broken the National School Boards Association. They tried labeling parents “domestic terrorists”—and parents fought back (Twitter).
Atlantic Story Admits Opening Schools Didn’t Doom America
From the story: …many schools that reopened were able to implement measures that other institutions struggled with. Even so, people continued to worry about the danger that schools posed to society. Then classes began, and … widespread doom never really came—or, if it did, it didn’t come from schools. The Delta surge began long before classes resumed, and looking at the state-by-state data, you’d be hard-pressed to find bumps that can be pinned on the beginning of the semester. Last year, no surge happened in September either. Most states didn’t see any significant rise in COVID cases last fall until well into October. Schools aren’t the problem. They never have been.
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Good morning. Here are two wild stats to break the ice in meetings today:
Denver entered December without any snow for the first time on record. In fact, there’s been no measurable snowfall in Denver for 224 consecutive days and counting.
The Memphis Grizzlies thrashed the Oklahoma City Thunder 152–79 last night. The 73-point margin is the biggest in NBA history.
Markets: On today’s episode of Stocks Gone Wild, the major indexes all bounced back from a bruising Wednesday, led by travel and hospitality stocks. Omicron has the markets looking like a sine wave this week.
Other updates: Congress passed a short-term spending bill to avoid a government shutdown this weekend.Plus, it’s jobs report day. Economists expect a meaty gain of 550,000 jobs in November, which would be the biggest number since July.
Ray Dalio is the billionaire founder of Bridgewater Associates, the world’s largest hedge fund, so when he opens his mouth, people listen. And in the case of Dalio’s recent remarks about China, some people listened…then went, “Well that was weird.”
On Wednesday, Dalio was asked during a CNBC appearance how he could square his firm’s investments in China with the government’s alleged human rights abuses and the sudden disappearances of people from public life. Dalio offered an extremely evasive response, saying he “can’t be an expert in those types of things.” He added, “As a top-down country what they are doing is they behave like a strict parent.”
Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, who said he was a friend of the “brilliant” Dalio, scolded his pal on Twitter yesterday. Dalio’s “feigned ignorance of China’s horrific abuses and rationalization of complicit investments there is a sad moral lapse,” Romney said.
Some background on Bridgewater’s recent Chinese investments:
Dalio is a longtime China bull, and Bridgewater just raised $1.25 billion for its third fund in the country, according to the WSJ.
It’s a tiny amount relative to Bridgewater’s $150 billion in assets, but the fund is one of the biggest from any foreign private-fund manager in China, the Journal wrote.
Of course, Bridgewater is one of many US firms being challenged recently about their business ventures in China, especially with the Beijing Winter Olympics just two months out. Airbnb, a top Olympics sponsor, lists a dozen homes for rent on land owned by a US government-sanctioned organization in the Xinjiang region, Axios found.
The Women’s Tennis Association has been an outlier in its confrontational response to Chinese government’s actions, announcing this week it’ll suspend tournaments in China following the treatment of star Peng Shuai.
Zoom out: When asked whether the Olympics should be moved out of China, major Olympics sponsors like Coca-Cola, Visa, and Allianz channeled their inner Dalio, saying they’ll continue to support the Games no matter where they’re hosted.
+ While we’re here: The Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi said it would delist from the New York Stock Exchange and go public in Hong Kong following a cybersecurity probe by the Chinese government.—NF
To make sure Omicron doesn’t interfere with everyone’s buckwild holiday schedule of cookie exchanges and sitting silently in your grandma’s living room, President Biden revealed a new winter Covid plan yesterday. The goal is to tame the new variant while keeping the country open for business.
Travel: All travelers entering the US will need to show a negative Covid test within 24 hours of their flight, regardless of their vaccination status. American citizens can still fly domestically and internationally without any proof of vaccination.
The Biden administration also extended the federal mask mandate for airplanes, trains, and buses through March.
At-home tests: To grease the Covid testing wheels, Biden said private insurers must reimburse the costs of at-home tests, which only sounds great if you’ve never tried to navigate a Blue Cross portal. The government will also double the originally pledged number of 25 million free tests to 50 million for community and rural health clinics.
What else? The 9-pronged plan also involves ramping up booster shot access and vaccinating more young people. The president said that as of yesterday more than 4 million 5-to-11 year olds and 15 million adolescents have been vaccinated.—MM
The Federal Trade Commission checked their list and decided Nvidia shouldn’t get a present this year. The agency sued to block Nvidia’s $40 billion acquisition of British chip designer Arm from SoftBank on Thursday.
This deal, which would be the largest in semiconductor history, has been heavily scrutinized globally on antitrust grounds since it was first announced in September 2020. The FTC suit is the biggest roadblock so far, and puts the deal in serious jeopardy.
Arm serves as both a supplier and a licenser to semiconductor companies like Nvidia and, according to the FTC, receives access to competitive information by working with them. The FTC voted 4–0 in favor of blocking the merger, with a trial set for August 2022.
Zoom out: This is Biden-appointed FTC Chair Lina Khan’s first attempt to block a major merger, and it likely won’t be her last. Khan, an antitrust scholar, is a longtime critic of large tech mergers, and both Amazon and Facebook were rattled by her appointment. In recent months, the agency, along with regulators in the UK and Australia, have become increasingly hostile toward tech deals like Nvidia’s.—MK
Long lines. Inconvenient prescription pickup times. Outdated tech. Sheesh—seems like retail pharmacy could use a revamp.
NowRx agrees. That’s why they’re paving the way for a more convenient, affordable, and hassle-free future with their proprietary pharmacy software and robotics that provide free, same-day medication delivery.
The company’s “QuickFill” software and robotics integration automates prescription dispensing in under 30 seconds—all while dramatically reducing errors commonly seen in pharmacy.
In 2020, the company saw revenue grow nearly 90% YoY and this year they’re on pace to surpass more than $22M in revenue. With their newest Telehealth product growing 73% MoM and over $9M raised in the last two months, this is an investment opportunity you don’t wanna miss.
Stat: Ford’s F-Series pickup is the bestselling vehicle in the US for the 40th consecutive year, the company said, chip shortage be darned. But supply chain snags could knock the Chevy Silverado from the No. 2 spot and give it to the Ram pickup truck.
Quote: “The trigger wasn’t pulled, I didn’t pull the trigger.”
Last night on ABC, Alec Baldwin gave his first interview since the fatal shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins. Baldwin said he doesn’t know how live ammunition ended up on the Rust film set, nor how the gun fired as he held it.
The feeling of getting a 5/5 on the Brew’s Weekly News Quiz has been compared to going to the bathroom after holding it in for an uncomfortably long time.
45% of US households say they’re being hurt by price increases, per a new Gallup poll.
OPEC+ decided to continue its plans to gradually boost output each month, despite Omicron denting oil prices.
Grab went public on the Nasdaq at a valuation of nearly $40 billion; it’s the largest SPAC deal in history.
Germany announced severe restrictions on unvaccinated people, banning them from nonessential stores, recreational venues, and more.
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What to read: This Is How They Tell Me the World Ends, an investigation into the cyber weapons arms race, was just selected as the Financial Times and McKinsey Business Book of the Year.
The 221-212 House vote came after lawmakers struggled to come to an agreement. The short-term measure would give Congress time to work on a longer-term funding plan. The temporary spending bill will need to pass [the Senate] by Friday night to avoid a shutdown. A shutdown would furlough hundreds of thousands of nonessential federal employees.
…
The bill could face complications in the Senate, where a group of [over a dozen] Republicans are threatening to delay passage of the bill in the upper chamber because they want language in the bill that would prevent the use of federal money to carry out a Biden administration mandate on workplace vaccinations.
…
The continuing resolution has the support of Democratic and Republican leaders. But Senate procedure allows individual lawmakers to delay a floor vote for at least a couple of days, imperiling the chances of meeting the midnight Friday deadline. [Congress] still must address raising the debt ceiling to avoid sending the U.S. into default for the first time.
How is the ‘Remain-in-Mexico’ asylum policy being reinstated?
The policy was first implemented in 2019 by former President Trump amid an increase in Central American families crossing the southwest border. About 70,000 migrants have been returned to Mexico under…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Context: Greece requires citizens over 60 to get vaccinated for Covid-19.
HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS
“No – Unless their cognitive faculties have degenerated to the point that they lose their ability to make decisions for themselves. Being old and unvaccinated may be risky, but as long as everyone around you has had the ability to get vaccinated, you aren’t a danger to anyone but yourself. You might be shooting yourself in the foot, but even senior citizens deserve the right to shoot themselves in the feet.”
“Yes – But only for over 65. This group is the most affected by the virus and the only group that is ful…”
How would NATO respond to a potential Russian invasion of Ukraine?
Secretary of State Antony Blinken urged Moscow on Thursday to abandon plans for a potential invasion of Ukraine. [Blinken’s meeting with Russia’s foreign minister…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Why is the U.S. suing to block Nvidia’s merger with Arm?
The FTC said the proposed deal would give one of the largest chip companies control over computing technology and designs that competitors rely on to dev…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
How will Major League Baseball’s lockout impact the 2022 season?
During a lockout, which is a labor-relations tool used by management to keep employees from working until a deal is agreed upon, team officials and players cannot communica…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Burning Through the Oil – A Disaster in Waiting – LN Radio Videocast – Is the recent release of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve adding up to be a recipe for disaster? by Liberty Nation Staff – Watch Now
Talking Liberty – America Becomes a Gangster’s Paradise – LN Radio Videocast – MemberZone Exclusive – When did criminals get more rights? by Liberty Nation Staff – Watch Now
Liberty Nation On The Go: Listen to Today’s Top News 12.03.21
LibertyNation.com brings a new generation of writers to the vanguard of political discourse. Our content is entirely original, providing readers and viewers with bold, provocative analysis and commentary on current events.
Karlyn Bowman and Samantha Goldstein | American Enterprise Institute
Polls on abortion reveal substantial continuity over a 50-year period, but opinion is complex. On the two major questions that have been asked for decades, opinion bulks in the middle.
China’s behavior in 2020 put critical goods at risk for millions of Americans, yet the Trump and Biden administrations have done almost nothing since. The first step in supply chains is to determine where we’re most vulnerable. But that will mean nothing unless we’re prepared to act, not just talk.
The drive by Tehran’s and Moscow’s dictatorial regimes to cement an anti-US alliance will backfire. Decades of official Islamic Republic hostility to the United States have not eroded and, indeed, likely may have encouraged a general friendliness by the Iranian public toward America.
Joe Biden’s chief medical adviser has undermined his credibility with misleading statements to the public that are as demagogic as those of any politician.
“Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai went missing for 18 days after accusing former Chinese Communist party leader Zhang Gaoili of sexual assault back on Nov. 2… The former French Open and Wimbledon doubles champion claimed retired Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli forced her into sex three years ago in a since-deleted online post to the Chinese social-media site Weibo. Peng has not been seen in public since, aside from a heavily-scrutinized video Chinese state media released of her at a Beijing restaurant on Saturday and an alleged video call with the president of the International Olympic Committee [IOC] on Sunday…
“The WTA [Women’s Tennis Association] has actively pressured China into confirming Peng’s safety and investigating her allegations, and on Dec. 1 took its strongest step yet by suspending all tournaments in the country. The White House, United Nations and European Union also came to Peng’s defense, calling for investigations into her allegations and disappearance.” CBS Sports
On November 21, “the IOC said Peng spoke to its president, Thomas Bach, and other officials in a 30-minute video call from Beijing. According to the organization’s statement, she reassured them that she was well and thanked them for their concern — while asking for privacy… Some critics say the IOC’s handling of the call with Peng makes it an active partner in delivering Beijing’s message — while not providing Peng with an open forum to discuss her allegations.” AP News
Both sides praise the WTA’s decision and criticize the IOC:
“This is the flip side to globalization that China is not so keen on. It’s true that the sheer size of the Chinese market gives the Communist Party a huge bargaining chip. But the global market can also bring world-wide attention to China’s unsavory practices, from the suppression of its Uyghur minority to its effort to smother Ms. Peng’s accusation of sexual assault…
“Beijing wins when it forces others to play by its rules. But when an institution such as the WTA refuses to go along, the Chinese simply don’t know how to respond. The result is ham-fisted and unpersuasive, as it’s been with Ms. Peng. And China is publicly embarrassed.” William McGurn, Wall Street Journal
“Does it matter that a single organization, the women’s tennis tour, takes a stance against the monolithic Chinese government? It matters. It matters in the way that any small act of righteous dissent matters because each has a way of gathering momentum. It matters because, as Vaclav Havel wrote as a dissident under the boot of European communism in the 1960s, ‘Even a purely moral act that has no hope of any immediate and visible political effect can gradually and indirectly, over time, gain in political significance.’…
“Here is what [Arthur] Ashe would say to the question of whether a small stand matters. He would say that tennis, cricket, rugby, soccer and Olympic boycotts of South Africa played monumental roles in helping to finally topple apartheid. He would say that the IOC has utterly lost its compass. He would point out, as he once wrote in a Washington Post editorial, that sports are terribly important to regimes for their ‘self-image of independence, resilience and toughness.’… The WTA just made it a lot harder for other organizations to unembarrassedly coddle or cooperate in China’s governmental brutalism, slavery, detentions and repressions.” Sally Jenkins, Washington Post
“The fact that other western organizations are too venal and cowardly to pull the plug on China makes today’s show of principle by the WTA that much more admirable… The WTA bailing out of China won’t get Disney or the NBA to pull out but it will give Americans critics a useful line of attack against them. ‘If the WTA cares enough about human rights to boycott China, why don’t you?’ Long-term, that logic may wear down some American corporations…
“Outfits like the NBA will probably try to distinguish their situation from the WTA’s by arguing that the WTA naturally has an obligation to protect one of its own. If Yao Ming were still active in American basketball and the CCP disappeared him, we might be told, then the NBA would certainly take action. (Spoiler: It wouldn’t.) The IOC doesn’t get to use that logic, though, since Peng Shuai is a three-time Olympian. She’s ‘one of their own.’ What are they going to do for her besides rubber-stamping a ChiCom propaganda video purporting to show that she’s fine and that she’s forgotten all about that silly business where she was allegedly raped by the former vice premier?” Allahpundit, Hot Air
“In Bach’s 30-minute conversation with Peng Shuai, the IOC president showed a scandalous lack of curiosity. For instance, why couldn’t others—like the Women’s Tennis Association—make direct contact with Peng? Can she travel freely? Why was she scrubbed from the Internet in China and then selectively reintroduced after a worldwide furor? Can independent media outlets speak with her? Instead, Bach confirmed that he is willing to do what it takes to keep the Olympic money spigot wide open, even if it means sacrificing stated Olympics principles—like ‘the preservation of human dignity’—on the altar of Olympic-sized profits…
“After his instantly infamous call with Peng Shuai, the chair of the IOC’s Athletes’ Commission relayed that the tennis player ‘appeared to be relaxed. I offered her our support and to stay in touch at any time of her convenience, which she obviously appreciated.’ The callousness of these antiseptic statements are chilling. The IOC is in effect whitewashing a possible kidnapping that was done in the service of covering up a sexual assault.” Dave Zirin and Jules Boykoff, The Nation
“Beijing chose the IOC over WTA because the regime was confident that the IOC would do its dirty bidding. Whether it was Berlin in 1936, Moscow in 1980, or Beijing in 2008, the IOC has repeatedly served as a useful idiot for the world’s worst authoritarian regimes. It often placed sport at the service of these brutal regimes, letting them abuse its platform to promote their propaganda and hide their atrocities behind staged fanfares and forced smiles.” Helen Raleigh, The Federalist
“For decades, the IOC has all but ignored the exploitation and abuse of athletes, especially in authoritarian countries. The examples are all too numerous, from the 1936 Berlin Olympics, in which competitors were used to promote Nazi racial ideology, to East Germany’s obvious (and sometimes involuntary) doping of its athletes, to the recent sexual abuse of American gymnasts. Too often, the IOC has either overlooked such violations or offered muted criticism while hoping the problems would be dealt with locally…
“The IOC still has an opportunity to live up to the Olympic charter and its commitment to preventing athletes from being abused or exploited. Doing so might offend the hosts of Beijing 2022. Yet the alternative — accepting an Olympics that exists to please sponsors and wealthy, authoritarian patrons — would be far worse. Peng’s plight is a tragedy. But it’s also an opportunity for the IOC to prove that athlete voices matter. All it needs to do is ask China to listen.” Adam Minter, Bloomberg
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Happy Friday. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,196 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
1 big thing: Burnout, money, concern drive Harris turnover
Vice President Harris and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg in Charlotte yesterday. Photo: Logan Cyrus/AFP via Getty Images
Burnout, better opportunities and concern about being branded a “Harris person” are driving departures from Vice President Harris’ office, Axios’ Alexi McCammond and Sarah Mucha report.
Why it matters: Harris is not only a heartbeat from the presidency but, by virtue of her office, the presumed 2024 frontrunner if President Biden doesn’t seek re-election. There’s been an inordinate amount of disarray — and, now, turnover — throughout her tenure.
Her allies say she has a terrific chance to reset, and they downplay the early stumbles. But top Biden officials privately roll their eyes at her team and want to see smoother, more effective leadership.
What’s happening: Chief spokesperson Symone Sanders this week told colleagues she’s leaving at the end of the month. Communications director Ashley Etienne said last month she’s leaving.
Sanders is expected to get married next year. Her first book, “No, You Shut Up,” was published in May 2020 — in the middle of the presidential campaign and pandemic. So she hasn’t been able to sell her book in a concerted way.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki called the departures “an opportunity … to bring in new faces, new voices, and new perspectives.”
A Democratic operative close to the vice president’s office said the departures add pressure to Harris’ chief of staff, Tina Flournoy.
“If we mess this up, it’s going to set women back when it comes to running for higher office for years to come,” the operative told Axios, requesting anonymity to speak freely.
Between the lines: Harris’ management has been scrutinized ever since she became the first Democrat to end their 2020 presidential campaign.
Axios is told some Harris staffers want to work on Biden’s re-election campaign. Others don’t want to be aligned with Harris in the event another promising Democrat runs for president in 2024.
Context: Concerns about Harris’ operation and treatment by the media triggered a meeting last summer between the vice president and some of the Democratic Party’s most influential women.
White House officials, including chief of staff Ron Klain and presidential adviser Cedric Richmond, have defended her.
Here’s how insanely rich Elon Musk is: He has unloaded $10 billion of his stock in the past month — and could do that 15+ more times given his silos of shares.
What’s happening: When Musk polled Twitter in early November about whether to sell 10% of his Tesla stock (“Sell!” Twitter replied), his stake was worth over $200 billion, or 17% of the company, The Wall Street Journal reported.
Now his “share-selling spree” is stretching into a second month, per The Journal.
The sales arepart of a plan to exercise some of his vested stock options that will expire next year, and to sell some holdings to cover tax obligations, Axios’ Kia Kokalitcheva notes.
👢 P.S. With an SEC filing Wednesday, Tesla officially moved its HQ from Palo Alto to its Gigafactory Texas outside Austin.
3. 🧐 Why loyalty clubs are suddenly everywhere
The promotion above, which lets Call of Duty players “unlock in-game rewards and level up their game when they enter product codes from specially-marked products,” is part of a new tsunami of online come-ons.
What’s happening: “New privacy protections … by tech giants and governments are threatening the flow of user data that companies rely on to target consumers with online ads,” The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
“[F]rom brewers to fast-food chains, … marketers are rushing to collect their own information on consumers, seeking to build millions of detailed customer profiles.”
The tactics: “loyalty programs, sweepstakes, newsletters, quizzes, polls and QR codes.”
Case in point: “In North America, most of PepsiCo’s online ad targeting now uses its own customer data,” instead of buying it from social-media giants, The Journal writes.
“Partly to expand its cache of data, PepsiCo has launched an online store for its Mountain Dew Game Fuel brand aimed at gamers.”
The joint promotion above for PepsiCo’s Mountain Dew and Doritos brands invites gamers to enter their first and last name, email address, mailing address and birthdate.
4. College students’ tips for Jerome Powell
Photo illustration: Megan Robinson/Axios. Photo: Federal Reserve, public domain via Wikimedia Commons
Speed up the taper. Supercharge communication. Release the digital coin white paper.
That’s all advice the Federal Reserve is getting from college kids, Axios Closer author Courtenay Brown writes.
Why it matters: This is fresh perspective from your next colleague or boss — and the next policymakers.
Students in the annualCollege Fed Challenge act as Fed officials, and compete to pitch staffers the best direction for the economy.
That team, which has more victories than any other group in the competition’s 18-year history, recommended the Fed issue a new document that’s more explicit about the path of the economy.
“It’d be around two pages, just letting market participants into the mind of the Fed,” says Fiona Waterman, a Pace senior and team co-captain.
Smart Brevity™ for the Fed!
Fun fact: Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg competed in the high school version of the challenge.
5. 📊 New data suggest autism affects 1 in 44 U.S. kids
In an analysis of 2018 data from 11 states, CDC researchers found that among 8-year-olds, 1 in 44 had been diagnosed with autism, AP reports.
What’s happening: U.S. autism numbers have been on the rise for several years. Experts believe that reflects more awareness and wider availability of services, rather than an increase in the number of affected children.
A separate CDC report released yesterday said that children were 50% more likely to be diagnosed with autism by age 4 in 2018 than in 2014.
The CDC reports are based on data from counties and other communities in 11 states. Rates varied widely — from 1 in 26 in California, where services are plentiful, to 1 in 60 in Missouri.
Maria J. Hackett of Brooklyn and daughter NiNi. Cover photo: Anastassia Whitty for The Washington Post Magazine. Used by kind permission
The Washington Post Magazine dubs this “The Year of Endurance: Hope and uncertainty amid a pandemic that wouldn’t end.”
Cover packageof photo essays … “Moving on: First, people paused. Then they took stock. Then they persevered,” by Anastassia Whitty.
7. 🎥 Alec Baldwin: I’m not responsible
Alec Baldwin told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos during an hourlong prime-time special, “Alec Baldwin Unscripted,” about the movie-set shooting that killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins:
Someone put a live bullet in a gun, a bullet that wasn’t even supposed to be on the property … Someone is responsible for what happened, and I can’t say who that is, but I know it’s not me. …
I don’t know what happened on that set. I don’t know how that bullet arrived in that gun. … I let go of the hammer of the gun, and the gun goes off. … I didn’t pull the trigger.
After a wild day on Capitol Hill in which a group of House and Senate Republicans threatened to derail the spending bill over vaccine concerns, congressional leaders navigated a bill through Congress that would fund agencies into February.
Former President Donald Trump is expected to cast a long shadow over the midterm elections, but his increasing involvement in the Senate and gubernatorial races in Georgia, a state he narrowly lost in 2020, is raising questions about how helpful he will be to Republicans.
A parental rights group filed a federal civil rights complaint Thursday against New York City Public Schools for separating students by race for discussions on social justice topics, saying the practice amounted to racial discrimination.
Using an electronic vaping device causes the same changes in gene regulation as cigarettes do, according to a study, potentially raising an individual’s risk of developing severe illnesses, including cancer.
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee was hammered over a tweet containing a misleading graph thanking President Joe Biden for a drop of 2 cents in U.S. gas prices.
President Joe Biden appeared to forget his Arab–Israeli history, confusing the 1967 Six-Day War with the Yom Kippur War of 1973 during a White House menorah lighting celebration for Hanukkah.
With a new COVID-19 plan focused on increased testing and booster shots, tighter rules for international travel, and an extended mask mandate for public transportation, the Biden administration acknowledged that a full return to normal won’t happen until well into 2022.
Paid leave has become a significant sticking point in the effort to pass President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better legislation, a $1.75 trillion social welfare and green energy bill.
A stash of money and checks was discovered behind a bathroom wall by a plumber working at the megachurch of televangelist Joel Osteen in Houston, Texas.
A parent was told by Loudoun County Public Schools in Virginia that it would cost tens of thousands of dollars to gain access to all the public records relating to sexual assault and rape incidents across several months this year.
The Senate on Thursday passed a measure to fund the government through Feb. 18 after first defeating an amendment that would have eliminated the Biden administration’s vaccine mandates.
The truck driver who dethroned incumbent New Jersey Senate President Steve Sweeney says Democrats in control of the Legislature are seeking 2021 election revenge with a proof-of-vaccination mandate for lawmakers.
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Bernice Loggins wasn’t just the Queen of Gizzards at Crouch’s Gas N Snack in Fort Myers, she was a mom, auntie and grandma whose cooking fed generations.
When Kim Foxx first met Juan Johnson at the gym nearly a decade ago, he was a 210-pound weightlifting fanatic. Soon, he became her personal trainer, as the two bonded over their similar backgrounds growing up in the city. But now Johnson weighs just 140 points, struggling with heroin use that’s put him in an “unending cycle” of addiction and arrests. Read more on Johnson’s struggles as part of our special investigation with BGA.
Illinois health officials reported a staggering 11,524 newly diagnosed COVID-19 cases yesterday, the state’s highest coronavirus case load in more than a year. While the state also reported its one-day record for tests processed, a 4.7% positivity rate puts community transmission at its highest point in three months.
In Chicago, thousands of drug possession arrests are routinely tossed out every year, a Chicago Sun-Times-Better Government Association investigation finds. The cost to taxpayers? Millions. To those arrested? The loss of jobs, housing, freedom.
Thursday’s caseload is nearly twice as high as any other day over the past 10 months. Officials say it’s critical that more residents to get vaccinated.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Friday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 776,639; Tuesday,778,601; Wednesday, 780,233; Thursday, 782,100; Friday, 785,912.
Congress got its job done early. Both chambers on Thursday acted to fund the government temporarily through mid-February, which averted a looming government shutdown at midnight tonight.
The House on Thursday evening passed a continuing resolution, 221-212, to fund government operations at the previous year’s fiscal levels through Feb. 18, giving lawmakers more time to hammer out their differences. Retiring Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) was the lone GOP member to vote with Democrats (The Hill).
Hours later, the Senate surprised some by following suit after days of threats by some conservative senators to use a shutdown threat as leverage to defund President Biden’s COVID-19 vaccinate-or-test mandate for large employers. The chamber ended the skirmish with a 69-28 vote to approve the continuing resolution, now headed to the president’s desk (The Hill).
Thursday’s reprieve means Congress will return to the funding battlefield in 11 weeks.
The Washington Post: Senate passes bill to fund the government, averting shutdown.
Politico: Congress thwarts shutdown after vaccine mandate clash.
The vote took place after Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah), Roger Marshall (R-Kan.) and Ted Cruz (R-Texas) got their wish in the form of a chance to vote by simple majority on the question of jettisoning the administration’s mandate. Democrats batted it down, 48-50. Leadership held the mandate vote in part because two Senate Republicans, Sens. John Thune (S.D.) and Bill Hagerty (Tenn.), were absent on Thursday, meaning the majority party could withstand losing a vote and still pass their objective, which was funding the government into February.
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) provided some drama earlier in the day when he opened the door to voting to defund the mandate, telling reporters that he was “less enthused” about a private sector compared to one for the government (The Hill). He ultimately voted with Democrats to swat away the amendment vote.
“I am glad that in the end cooler heads prevailed,” Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) said on the Senate floor prior to the vote. “The government will stay open. And I thank the members of this chamber for walking us back from the brink of an avoidable, needless and costly shutdown.”
For days, leaders in both parties maintained there would not be a shutdown. Biden told reporters on Thursday that a gap in funding would be averted so long as no member “decides to be totally erratic.” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) maintained that lawmakers would not shutter the government to protest the administration’s vaccine mandate, arguing that it was a futile and pointless endeavor.
“I don’t think shutting down the government over this issue is going to get an outcome. It would only create chaos and uncertainty, so I don’t think that’s the best vehicle to get this job done,” McConnell told Fox News on Thursday morning (The Hill).
At a Senate GOP meeting earlier Thursday, leaders tried to dissuade the conservative troika from pursuing their plan. One GOP senator told The Hill colleagues hoped to persuade Lee (pictured below) to instead use next week’s planned action to challenge Biden’s vaccine mandate using the Congressional Review Act to revoke the rule, which remains under court challenge and has not been implemented. Earlier this year, Marshall secured a vote on a similar amendment to prohibit funding for mandate enforcement, but it would have required at least 60 votes and failed along party lines (The Hill).
“I think funding our government and whether you’re going to get your Social Security check is not something we need to put on someone’s table right now,” Senate Appropriations Committee member Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) told Bloomberg TV and Radio, adding that the quest by Lee and others was a “fool’s errand.”
Throughout the lead-up to the votes, Democratic leaders hammered Republicans for contemplating a possible federal shutdown during a pandemic, ahead of the holidays and amid scientific mysteries about the omicron version of COVID-19.
“How do they explain to the public that they’re shutting down government because they don’t want people to get vaccinated?” Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said during her weekly press conference Thursday. “This is so silly that we have people who are anti-science, anti-vaccination saying they’re going to shut down government over that. And you’re asking me what’s our message? Our message is that we have to respect governance, and we have to respect science, and that’s what we are doing, and we will pass this legislation” (The Hill).
CNN: Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) won’t commit to voting for Biden’s sweeping social safety net expansion.
Annette, founder of House of Takura, designs “bags that empower” and she’s one of the many Black-owned businesses we’re proud to support through our #BuyBlack Friday Gift Guide this holiday season.
CORONAVIRUS: Biden on Thursday said the administration’s winter strategy to respond to COVID-19 and the omicron variant, confirmed in at least five states, is focused on getting more people vaccinated, administering booster doses, extending to March a mask requirement on all public forms of transit, securing insurance-paid COVID-19 rapid testing beginning in January, and new U.S. travel restrictions beginning next week to require a negative test by all travelers originating abroad within 24 hours before they begin their trips (The Hill). The administration has held off on implementing vaccine or testing requirements for domestic flights, although future changes are possible.
Omicron infections are appearing from coast to coast and on the island of Oahu and may have been present in the United States for some time, according to hypotheses from some infectious disease experts.
Cases were confirmed Thursday in residents of Minnesota, New York, Hawaii and Colorado and a case was previously identified in California. A Minnesota man attended an anime convention at the New York City Javits Center Nov. 19-21 and then developed mild symptoms of COVID-19 that were confirmed by a test on Nov. 24 after returning to Minnesota. The man, who was vaccinated, experienced mild symptoms that subsided (The Hill). The Colorado omicron case involves a resident east of Denver who recently traveled to multiple countries in southern Africa as a tourist. She was fully vaccinated but not boosted and experienced mild symptoms. Her close contacts have tested negative so far (The Associated Press). Five people in the New York City area, including a 67-year-old, vaccinated woman from Long Island who recently traveled to Africa, were reported to have tested positive for the new variant (The New York Times).
Genetic sequencing is required to confirm particular variants of the virus in those who have been infected, and the process in the U.S. has not been widespread and takes time, usually about 10 days.
World Health Organization officials said that international COVID-19 responses familiar during the long pandemic appear to be effective following the emergence of omicron. “The positive news in all of this is that none of the information we have currently about omicron suggests we need to change the directions of our response,”Takeshi Kasai, WHO regional director based in Manila, said Friday (The Associated Press).
Economic forecasting firms, unsure of omicron’s potency and the path ahead, said on Thursday that it’s possible that the variant’s global spread could knock the fragile U.S. economic recovery off track (The New York Times). The new variant “could cause significant problems” for international economies by exacerbating supply chain interruptions and dampening demand, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told a Reuters conference on Thursday.
Citing overloaded hospitals, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Thursday that people who aren’t vaccinated will be excluded from nonessential stores, cultural and recreational venues. She also said that parliament will consider a general vaccine mandate as part of efforts to curb coronavirus infections that again topped 70,000 newly confirmed cases in a 24-hour period (The Associated Press).
In Greece, Israel, the Netherlands and European countries, tighter and in some cases punitive COVID-19 restrictions are being applied as the pandemic continues, the delta and omicron variants spread and unvaccinated populations remain vulnerable (The Associated Press).
More than 50 people in Norway, many of them vaccinated, tested positive for the omicron variant following a company Christmas party held at an Oslo restaurant. The Norwegian government said Thursday that new national and regional restrictions take effect today, including working from home when possible in Oslo, a 100-person attendance limit at private indoor events in public places or rented venues, and registration of patrons at restaurants and bars. Nationally, anyone entering Norway must be tested within 24 hours, either at the border, at a public test station or by self-test. If a rapid test comes back positive, a traveler must take a more conclusive PCR test within 24 hours, the government said (The Associated Press).
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
POLITICS: Once again, the political universe is revolving around Georgia, a state poised to become ground zero for both parties in the 2022 midterms.
Democrats are doing all they can in the Peach State to put their best foot forward, headlined by Wednesday’s news that Stacey Abrams is reprising her bid for the governorship. As The Hill’s Max Greenwood and Hanna Trudo write, Democratic operatives are hoping that Abrams’ entrance will help put Sen. Raphael Warnock’s (D-Ga.) chances over the top. Warnock’s seat is crucial to Democrats retaining the upper chamber.
However, the political winds could stand in the way. COVID-19 continues to be an issue for the nation, with rising inflation and Biden’s standing with Americans proving problematic for the party already, as evidenced by the Virginia and New Jersey contests last month.
As The Hill reported, the political coalition that powered Democratic victories in the state last year appears fragile, and a loss for either Abrams or Warnock would be a major blow to the majority party.
The Washington Post: GOP tactics herald a grim new era of governing for Biden and Democrats.
The Associated Press: Biden, allies push back against GOP’s objections about the administration’s COVID-19 responses with political barbs of their own.
Axios: McConnell: No legislative agenda for 2022 midterms.
The Associated Press: Lawyers allied with former President Trump ordered to pay $175,000 in sanctions.
Niall Stanage: The Memo: Elites’ misdeeds fuel public distrust.
Politico: Senate Republicans wonder whether Mehmet Oz is their Pennsylvania remedy.
*****
ADMINISTRATION: Under court order, the Biden administration next week will resume the Trump-era “Remain in Mexico” policy for asylum-seekers migrating toward the U.S. southern border, a policy that requires them to wait for U.S. court hearings on the Mexico side of the border (The Associated Press).
> Vice President Harris was in Charlotte on Thursday with Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg to tout the new infrastructure law, and on Wednesday, she focused on her duties running the National Space Council. Behind the scenes, her staff was acknowledging the sort of prominent turnover that hints at a makeover-in-the-making, although Harris, when questioned by journalists, offered no hints about how her White House staff will change after less than a year in office.
As The Hill’s Brett Samuels and Amie Parnes report, the exodus of staff members, including senior adviser and spokesperson Symone Sanders (seen below), cap a rocky year for Harris and a potential reset amid Democratic worries that the vice president, her top team and the West Wing staff serving Biden have not sufficiently enhanced Harris’s public image as a confident leader and national problem-solver.
The Hill and The Washington Post: Two more experienced Harris aides in addition to Sanders and communications director Ashley Etienne will leave the vice president’s staff.
Axios: Burnout, money, fear drive Harris staff turnover.
The House meets at 9 a.m. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) will hold his weekly press conference at 11:30 a.m.
TheSenate convenes on Monday at 3 p.m. and will resume consideration of the nomination of Jessica Rosenworcel to be a member of the Federal Communications Commission.
The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:30 a.m. Biden will speak about the government’s November jobs report at 10:15 a.m. from the State Dining Room. He will have lunch with Harris at 12:15 p.m. The president, who celebrated the lighting of the National Christmas Tree on Thursday along with entertainer Billy Porter (pictured below), will depart the White House at 5:30 p.m. to spend the weekend at Camp David.
First lady Jill Biden will travel today to Philadelphia and Tahlequah, Okla. At 10:45 a.m., she will visit a pediatric COVID-19 vaccination clinic at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia to urge that children receive coronavirus inoculations. She will fly from Philadelphia to Tulsa, Okla., arriving in the afternoon. The first lady will visit the Cherokee Immersion School in the Cherokee Nation at 3:45 p.m. local time to highlight native language preservation.
Economic indicator: The Bureau of Labor Statistics at 8:30 a.m. will release its employment report for November, which is expected to show additional U.S. jobs growth.
The White House daily press briefing is scheduled at 1:30 p.m.
➔ INTERNATIONAL: Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov (both pictured below) on Thursday in Sweden and repeated U.S. warnings that Russia risks “consequences” if Moscow uses aggression with Ukraine instead of the preferred option of diplomacy. Blinken said Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin are expected to speak directly “in the near future” (CNN). … The U.S. imposed new sanctions on Belarus (Reuters). The United Kingdom announced new Belarus sanctions (Reuters). … Austrian Chancellor Alexander Schallenberg announced Thursday he is stepping down from the post only two months after replacing Sebastian Kurz. The outgoing chancellor said he would depart office when a new leader of the conservative Austrian People’s Party is decided on, with Kurz (the party leader) announcing only hours earlier that he was exiting politics. Kurz resigned as chancellor in October over allegations of bribery (The Associated Press).
➔ HEALTH: Perhaps because of greater public and medical awareness, more U.S. children are being diagnosed with forms of autism and at younger ages, according to government information released on Thursday. According to data drawn from nearly a dozen states, researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that among 8-year-olds, 1 in 44 had been diagnosed in 2018 with the developmental condition, compared with 1 in 54 in 2016. According to The Associated Press, experts believe more awareness and wider availability of services to treat the condition are behind the shift in data.
➔ STATE WATCH: A federal judge on Wednesday blocked the enforcement of a Texas law to halt social media companies from banning users based on political views. Judge Robert Pitman sided with two industry associations, saying that social media companies “have a First Amendment right to moderate content disseminated on their platforms.” The order underscored that social media platforms are “privately owned platforms” and not “common carriers” (The Hill).
THE CLOSER
And finally … 👏👏👏 Congratulations to the Morning Report Quiz all-stars this week! Asked to ponder some recently inflated numbers, they guessed (or Googled) a few dollar signs in the news.
Taking well deserved bows in the winners’ circle: Pam Manges, Candi Cee, Patrick Kavanagh, Mary Anne McEnery, Richard E. Baznik, Gary Sensenig and Sharon Banitt.
They knew that the cost per pound for wholesale frozen turkeys weighing 16 pounds or less jumped this year by 23 percent compared with 2020, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Turkey Market News Report.
Newly named Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal will receive a bonus of $12 million if he makes rapid decisions and implements them.
University of Connecticut basketball star Paige Bueckers landed a $1 million, multi-year name, image and likeness deal with Gatorade and sneaker marketplace StockX.
A $30 sketch purchased at an estate auction four years ago by an astute Massachusetts man may be worth $50 million now that experts think it’s the work of German Renaissance master Albrecht Dürer. The drawing, believed to be from 1503, now hangs in a London gallery.
The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
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The Senate cleared a temporary spending bill Thursday night that would keep the lights on at federal agencies through Feb. 18, buying 11 more weeks to try to resolve partisan disputes over funding levels and policy riders that have stalled progress on fiscal 2022 appropriations. Read more…
House leaders warned Thursday they likely can’t address the debt limit by linking it to the annual defense authorization bill, a move Senate leaders have discussed in negotiations to ensure the Treasury can continue paying its financial obligations beyond Dec. 15. Read more…
Save for a select few, members of the House GOP Conference, and its leaders, have been silent on anti-Muslim remarks made by Rep. Lauren Boebert. One critic, Nancy Mace, drew a barrage of vitriol from Georgia’s Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has a history of inflammatory remarks herself. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
President Joe Biden said his top experts anticipate COVID-19 cases to increase in the weeks and months ahead as the omicron variant is likely to spread throughout the United States this winter, so he called on Americans to defend the nation with a unified front. Read more…
The weather outside might not be so frightful, but Congress’ inability to do anything on time sure does suck. Which begs the question: Is working on Capitol Hill worth it? CQ Roll Call’s own Niels Lesniewski and Bridget Bowman join the Political Theater podcast to discuss. Listen here…
The Senate is weighing whether to give current and former members of Congress the power to demand their personal information be wiped off the internet, in response to recent threats and physical attacks against government officials. Read more…
With the Supreme Court seemingly poised to dismantle Roe v. Wade, pro-life activists may be readying a new slogan, according to CQ Roll Call cartoonist R.J. Matson. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Crisis averted after conservatives cave
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
NO SHUTDOWN — Congress avoided a government shutdown after Senate conservatives dropped their demands to nix President JOE BIDEN’s vaccine mandates in the funding bill — and Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER gave them a way out.
All 100 senators agreed late Thursday night to quickly proceed to a bill funding the government through Feb. 18. The breakthrough came after Schumer gave Republicans a vote (with a simple majority threshold) to defund federal vaccination mandates. He did so only because there were two Republicans absent, meaning that even if Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) sided with Republicans, the amendment would be defeated. (And fail it did, 48-50.)
Conservatives will argue they got something out of this drama: a vote on their issue. In reality, it was a face-saving measure. The far-right started out demanding that Congress effectively scuttle the mandates, then reduced their ask to a mere vote they knew would fail, ensuring smooth passage of a continuing resolution a full 30 hours before the shutdown deadline.
Another reality: Their shutdown threat was never going to give them what they wanted. Schumer was all too willing to embrace the showdown over vaccines amid the threat of the Omicron Covid-19 variant. Plus, fellow Republicans blasted their demand as irresponsible and pointless.
One thing the right did get out of it was attention. Their protest was front and center for days and will be again next week when Sen. MIKE BRAUN (R-Ind.) forces another vote on the issue. They also demonstrated to other members how to leverage year-end deadlines for votes on their pet issues — a precedent Schumer warned against before he acceded to their ask.
THE STEP BACK: Despite Thursday night’s movement on the funding bill, it’s been a week from hell for Schumer, who has multiple crises on his hands. The National Defense Authorization Act is still stalled amid GOP opposition, though it appears Democrats are discussing a possible workaround that could break the impasse in the coming days.
There’s been some talk by Democrats about adding a debt ceiling increase onto the NDAA, which Republicans broadly support. But House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY panned that idea, and Senate Republicans seem unlikely to go along with it.
December was always going to be Schumer’s Pamchenko, the near-impossible twist-throw in couples skating as depicted in the 1992 film “The Cutting Edge”(which one of us owns and shamelessly watches at least once a year). With the GOP disrupting his strategy at every turn, he’s going to need flawless execution to pull off the legislative equivalent.
So last week, nearly 10 months after the first snub, Trump finally granted her a visit to Mar-a-Lago to kiss the ring. “He doesn’t see the point in making enemies,” a source close to Trump said, adding that the former president is still skeptical of Haley because of her back-and-forth statements about him. “He likes teasing people,” another aide said.
Meanwhile, Trump has been complimentary of MEHMET OZ, telling confidantes that he believes the TV doc has a chance in the Pennsylvania Senate GOP primary — mainly because he’s a lot like him. Trump “likes the fact that [Oz is] in the mainstream of America and that he had a ton of face time with voters, similar to ‘The Apprentice,’ that he’s omnipresent in people’s houses through their television,” the source close to Trump said. Trump endorsed SEAN PARNELL in the primary before he dropped out after losing a messy custody battle with his wife.
Oz may have some serious competition for Trump’s nod in the Pennsylvania contest. A source close to DAVE MCCORMICK, the hedge-fund billionaire and husband of former Trump White House senior official DINA POWELL MCCORMICK, said “the Oz candidacy has not impacted him at all, other than to realize that he’s getting more encouragement to jump in sooner rather than later.” WSJ reported that McCormick met with Trump at Mar-a-Lago last week, also seeking his blessing if he decides to jump in the race.
BILL DE BLASIO has been running a very under-the-radar effortto build a campaign ahead of officially entering the race against New York Gov. KATHY HOCHUL. Rather than launching a traditional campaign, the outgoing NYC mayor started an advocacy effort focused on promoting his education reform agenda.
De Blasio has brought on some heavy hitters to the effort who will likely join his campaign, including his former senior adviser PETER RAGONE and ANNA GREENBERG, the pollster for his mayoral campaign.He’s also brought on Sen. BERNIE SANDERS’ (I-Vt.) digital lead, TIM TAGARIS, and the Bearstar Strategies team that ran California Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM’s anti-recall campaign, including ACE SMITH, SEAN CLEGG and JUAN RODRIGUEZ.
BEHIND THE BRICK-AND-WROUGHT-IRON CURTAIN — Steps away from the Capitol grounds, the idyllic Capitol Hill neighborhood serves as more than a haven for D.C. residents: It’s a home for serious lobbyists who have abandoned K Street. Hailey Fuchs and Tara peek beyond the townhouse doors with lobbyists SCOTT ECKART of Emergent Strategies and BRIAN BELL of the Allied Pilots Association.Listen and subscribe to Playbook Deep Dive
BIDEN’S FRIDAY:
— 9:30 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 10:15 a.m.: Biden will deliver remarks on the November jobs report.
— 12:15 p.m.: Biden and VP KAMALA HARRIS will have lunch.
— 5:30 p.m.: Biden will depart the White House en route to Camp David.
The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 11 a.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 1:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE is out. McCarthywill hold his weekly press conference at 11:30 a.m.
THE SENATE is out.
PLAYBOOK READS
CONGRESS
DON YOUNG TO TRUMP: ‘JUST SHUT UP’ — WaPo’s Paul Kane has a fabulous profile of one Republican who isn’t afraid of Trump: Rep. DON YOUNG (R-Alaska). In an interview about a possible Trump-backed primary challenge following his vote on the bipartisan infrastructure bill, Young basically told Trump to bring it. He even whipped out his long, infamous knife — the one he once held to JOHN BOEHNER’s throat — and talked openly about how he uses his weapon. As for Trump, he had some advice for him: “I think his policy is just so good,” Young said. “Just shut up — that’s all he has to do. He’s not going to. I know that.” The full write-up here
DON’T PROVIDE A TARGET — Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL “has told colleagues and donors Senate Republicans won’t release a legislative agenda before next year’s midterms,” Axios’ Jonathan Swan and Alayna Treene report. “Every midterm cycle, there are Republican donors and operatives who argue the party should release a positive, pro-active governing outline around which candidates can rally. McConnell adamantly rejects this idea, preferring to skewer Democrats for their perceived failures.”
THE WHITE HOUSE
SAME PLAYBOOK — As the Biden administration grapples with the Omicron variant, Adam Cancryn and Jonathan Lemire write that its plan of attack so far is expanding current regulations — and not embracing further-reaching initiatives: “Even as the president promised that his new approach ‘pulls no punches in the fight against Covid-19,’ his administration is stopping short of the more aggressive measures that health experts believe would more quickly rein in the pandemic — like vaccine mandates for domestic travel, more rigorous public health restrictions and enforced quarantines — wary of further inflaming GOP opposition and demoralizing an exhausted public.”
FRIENDS AFTER ALL — Harrisand Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG jointly visited North Carolina on Thursday “as Washington chatter has heated up over the possibility that Buttigieg could be positioned as the future standard-bearer of the Democratic Party instead of the vice president, should Biden not run for reelection in 2024,” CNN’s Jasmine Wright reports. “The notion has ignited reports of a shadow rivalry between the pair that hung over their joint trip to North Carolina to tout the newly passed infrastructure law and its effect on the nation’s transit.”
ALL POLITICS
THE SENATE GOP’S UNLIKELY EMBRACE, PART I — From Wrightsville, Ga., Michael Kruse has a big new feature on HERSCHEL WALKERand his lifelong reluctance to speak out on racial issues. Going back to when he was just 18, his silence on politics and race has left a bad taste in the mouths of some Black Georgians. Only in the past few years has he started to speak out, often to downplay racial divides. “Walker throughout and again and again made the same essential decision he had made back in the tempestuous spring of his senior year of high school. When it came to controversial social and political topics? He steered clear,” Michael writes. “Then came Trump.”
THE SENATE GOP’S UNLIKELY EMBRACE, PART II — With the Pennsylvania GOP Senate primary wide open, the party isn’t writing off Dr. Ozas their potential swing-state savior, Marianne LeVine and Burgess Everett report. Though most senators don’t know him well — and Oz has plenty of controversial baggage — they like his name recognition, deep pockets and early moves to line up veteran party operatives for his campaign.
QUIETLY BUCKING TRUMP — Five Republican senators — MIKE CRAPO (Idaho), SHELLY MOORE CAPITO (W.Va.), JONI ERNST (Iowa), JIM INHOFE (Okla.) and DEB FISCHER (Neb.) — have donated to KATIE BRITT’s campaign for Alabama’s Senate seat from their leadership PACs, though Trump has endorsed Britt’s opponent, Natalie Allison reports. “None of them have done so yet for GOP Rep. MO BROOKS, who Trump endorsed in April to replace the retiring Sen. RICHARD SHELBY (R-Ala.).”
CUOMO LATEST — The DOJ launched a probe into the sexual harrassment claims against former New York Gov. ANDREW CUOMO,CNBC’s Dan Mangan reports. “Cuomo, who has denied wrongdoing, already was known to be facing criminal investigations by various New York state district attorneys for his conduct toward women. … The federal investigation of Cuomo by the DOJ was disclosed in a legal services contract that the office of current Gov. Kathy Hochul signed with the law firm Wilkie, Farr & Gallagher.”
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
ABOUT THAT BOOK — Some members of the House select committee on Jan. 6 said former Trump chief of staff MARK MEADOWS “may have damaged his case for maintaining the secrecy of his contacts with former Trump on Jan. 6 by divulging selected details in his book, due to publish Tuesday,” Kyle Cheney and Nicholas Wu report.
— The committee also announced Thursday that it’s interviewed about 250 people. AP’s Mary Clare Jalonick writes that that’s “a staggering pace over just five months as lawmakers work to compile the most comprehensive account yet of the violent attack and plan to hold public hearings next year.”
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week”: Eugene Daniels, Sahil Kapur and Jonathan Martin.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Gen. David Thompson. Guest panel: Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) and Michèle Flournoy. Sunday panel: Karl Rove and Jennifer Griffin. Power Player: John Heubusch.
MSNBC
“The Sunday Show”: Cecile Richards … Nancy Northup … Ruth Marcus … Daniel Goldman … San Francisco Mayor London Breed.
ABC
“This Week”: Stephen Hodge. Panel: Rick Klein, Mary Bruce, Rachel Scott and Vivian Salama.
CBS
“Face the Nation”: Maria Van Kerkhove … Francis deSouza … Scott Gottlieb.
Gray TV
“Full Court Press”: Gordon Brown … Michael Osterholm.
CNN
“Inside Politics”: Panel: Molly Ball, Phil Mattingly, Laura Barrón-López, Lauren Fox and Joan Biskupic.
NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Eugene Daniels, Errin Haines, Stephen Hayes and Ashley Parker.
Pope Francisreceived a Hanukkah gift from NYT Rome bureau chief Jason Horowitz: gelt and a dreidel. Horowitz “suggested he play a round with the cardinals.”
Kamala Harris pretended to drive an electric bus while laughingly reciting “the wheels on the bus go ‘round and ‘round.” Pete Buttigieg looked on.
The DCCC was roundly mocked for tweeting out a graph thanking Joe Biden for gas prices dropping by two cents a gallon. (It would also seem to suggest that the president is responsible for gas prices, which may not be what the White House wants to hear.)
SPOTTED: Sens. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.)and John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.) at the Bob Dylan concert at the Anthem on Thursday night (h/t Alex Seitz-Wald). They returned to the Senate to vote quickly on passage of the C.R., and “dipped, ostensibly back to the Bob Dylan concert,” reports Caitlin Emma.
OUT AND ABOUT — It was “Emily in Washington” on Wednesday nightwhen French Ambassador Philippe Etienne hosted the cast of the Netflix hit “Emily in Paris” at his residence, including the star Lily Collins, a British actress who plays a bumbling American woman in Paris, and co-stars Ashley Park, William Abadie and Philippine Leroy Beaulieu. While many Americans and French blushed at the over-the-top cliches in the show, Etienne called the series “a love letter to Paris.” Show creator Darren Star (of “Sex and the City” fame) said learning he was being invited back to film season 2 during the pandemic was like Sally Field’s iconic Oscar speech moment, “You like me! You really like me!” Also SPOTTED at the intimate event: Steve Clemons, Liz Allen, John Hudson, Ryan Heath and Zachary Bishop, Heather Podesta, Jonathan Kott, Jonathan Stahler, Kathleen Koch and Chelsea Moser.
— Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sens. Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.), Tina Smith (D-Minn.), Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) toasted Laphonza Butler, the new president of EMILY’s List, at a party on the patio at the DSCC on Thursday night. Also SPOTTED: Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), Rep. Melanie Stansbury (D-N.M.), Christie Roberts, Jessica Knight-Henry, Mindy Myers, Martha McKenna, Jessica Mackler, Emily Cain, Muthoni Wambu, Sheila O’Connell, Rohini Kosoglu, Lauren Dillon, Karen Finney, Jess Floyd, Karen DeFilippi, Simone Ward, Jen Pihlaja and Celinda Lake.
TRANSITIONS — Brianna Herlihy is now deputy comms director for Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.). She previously was director of press advance and spokesperson for DOJ’s antitrust division in the Trump administration. … Kelly O’Donnell is joining the National Confectioners Association as PAC director. She previously was PAC director for the National Association of REALTORS, TriNet and the Farm Credit Council. … Josie Bradley is joining TargetSmart as senior research analyst. She previously worked in field operations and directed political strategy in the Midwest for the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee. …
… Tamlyn Sheng will be digital content manager at ATHOS. She currently is digital director for Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.), and is a Jody Hice alum. … Hana Vizcarra is now senior attorney for national climate issues in Earthjustice’s D.C. office. She most recently was a staff attorney at Harvard Law School’s Environmental and Energy Law Program. … Torey Mack is joining the Children’s Hospital Association as chief quality and solutions officer. She previously was deputy associate administrator for the Bureau of Health Workforce in the Health Resources and Services Administration.
ENGAGED — Shelley Greenspan, a foreign affairs officer at the State Department, and Reuben Smith-Vaughan, head of public policy for Latin America at Amazon, got engaged Friday in North Carolina. The two met while working at Amazon’s public policy office and reconnected on Bumble at the beginning of the pandemic. Reuben biked a gin and tonic to Shelley’s apartment before their first virtual Zoom date. Reuben proposed to Shelley with both their families present on the tennis court, fittingly the site of their first in-person date. Pic… Another pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Chanan Weissman, White House liaison to the American Jewish community, and Elana Weissman, lower school principal at the Beth Tfiloh Dahan Community Day School in Baltimore, welcomed Rosie Nessa on Monday.
— Jennifer Non, senior manager of media relations and public affairs at the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, and Abraham Biriggwa, project manager at Tyler Technologies, welcomed Micah Jeffrey on Thursday. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Reps. Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-Texas) and Kathy Manning (D-N.C.) … Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson … Robby Mook … National Council on Disability Chair Andrés Gallegos … Tom Oppel … NBC’s Ali Zelenko … Margaret Mulkerrin … WaPo’s Scott Higham … Jesse Lee … Cody Sanders of Plus Communications … Robert Pondiscio … POLITICO’s Bruce Ritchie … Bill Sternberg … CBS’ Miles Doran … Missy Jenkins … Kevin Baron of Defense One … Lance Trover … Bill Tighe of the National Association of Chain Drug Stores … Danielle Bolger … Mike Inacay of Sen. Brian Schatz’s (D-Hawaii) office … The Fulcrum’s David Meyers … Daniel Chao … Mandi Critchfield of the Senate Banking Committee … Meg Hilling … Laura Howard of Sentinel Strategic Advisors … Jamie Carroll … former Reps. Jim Renacci (R-Ohio) and Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (D-S.D.)
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The Senate late Thursday cleared a stopgap bill to fund the government through mid-February, after an 11th-hour agreement led a pocket of conservative Republicans who were prepared to force a shutdown to allow for the measure’s expedited passage. The bill, which funds the government through Feb. 18, sailed through the …
At last month’s National Conservatism Conference in Orlando, Florida, I used my speech to criticize “Fusionism,” the postwar conservative movement’s default political alliance built upon an attendant “Fusionist” political philosophy, and instead argue on behalf of an alternative path forward. Fusionism, as formulated and popularized by the midcentury theorist Frank …
Parents Defending Education (PDE) filed a civil rights complaint Thursday with the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) against New York City Public Schools for its plans to hold racially segregated “affinity groups,” according to the complaint. PDE filed the complaint with the Office for Civil Rights “for discrimination on the …
Twitter users mocked Democratic New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for claiming that Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh was credibly accused of sexual assault on Wednesday. “Reminder that Brett Kavanaugh *still* remains credibly accused of sexual assault on multiple accounts w/ corroborated details & this year the FBI admitted it never …
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing, deliver a speech, have lunch and then travel to Camp David for the weekend. President Joe Biden’s Itinerary for 12/3/21 ALL TIMES EST 9:30 AM Receive daily briefing10:15 AM Deliver a speech on jobs12:15 PM Lunch with the Vice President5:30 PM Travel to …
The House on Thursday passed a stopgap funding bill that would keep the federal government open through Feb. 18, the first step to avoiding a shutdown set to occur Friday at midnight. But the bill, which passed 221-212, faces a rocky path through the Senate, where a handful of conservative …
Americans are currently getting hit where it hurts most, and the Biden administration has done nothing to control the damage. Despite the narrative pressed across the board in today’s media, our current economic woes cannot merely be chalked up to increased demand and trouble in the supply chains. Fundamentally, we’re …
Congress has mapped out an agreement on a proposal to fund the federal government through mid-February, but a group of conservative Senators is saber-rattling over COVID vaccine mandates causing the establishment Republicans to face the fact they still haven’t been able to take control of the narrative. The House of …
The Democratic Party’s lead fundraising arm for electing members to the House cheered a two-cent reduction in the average price of gasoline on Thursday. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) tweeted a graph of gas prices between Nov. 15-29, showing that the average cost at the pump has fallen from …
The Women’s Tennis Association was not playing around. They had told the Chinese Communist Party that they would pull all events from the nation unless they addressed the Peng Shuai situation appropriately. Peng has been under pressure to counter her accusations of sexual assault. China wants to cover what is …
The trial of Ghislaine Maxwell, the socialite who stands accused of procuring young girls for the sex predator Jeffrey Epstein, began last week. Though the mainstream media has not focused as heavily on this case as other high-profile trials in recent months, the proceedings have certainly not been forgotten by …
Riccardo Simonetti, LGBT ambassador to the European Union Parliament, dressed as a transgender Virgin Mary for the cover of a Berlin-based queer magazine. The photos show a bearded Simonetti in a tunic and veil, holding a baby who is presumably representing Jesus. In another photo he is holding the baby …
Canadian energy firm Pembina Pipeline Corp. pulled the plug on a years-long project that would have led to greater natural gas exports from to Canada to the U.S. The multi-billion-dollar Jordan Cove project included plans to construct a marine export terminal, which would have been the first of its kind …
Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom went after local officials on Wednesday for being reluctant to prosecute shoplifters under current California laws, CBS 13 reported. The state has faced a wave of large-scale thefts, where shoplifters rob stores in large groups or smash and grab items from displays. Retailers have argued …
Twitter and Facebook each removed thousands of accounts linked to Chinese state-backed propaganda campaigns, according to the platforms’ reports Wednesday and Thursday. Twitter announced in a blog post early Thursday that it removed thousands of accounts spreading state propaganda, the majority of which were linked to a Chinese campaign aimed at …
Conservatives used to refer to Republicans as the stupid party and Democrats as the evil party. I’d like to suggest that “Dumb and Dumber” are also appropriate – and the dumber party is still evil. How stupid is the dumb party? The Republicans still count Mitt Romney and Liz Cheney …
The First Family and the Second Family Attend the National Christmas Tree Lighting. The event is scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. EST. Content created by Conservative Daily News is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details.
A Texas social media law designed to curb political censorship violated tech platforms’ First Amendment rights, a federal court found on Wednesday. Judge Robert Pitman of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas issued a preliminary injunction blocking HB 20, signed into law by Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott …
Happy Friday! Tired of trying to teach your son or daughter how to ride a bike? Have a spare $1,900? Try Tesla’s new ridiculous-looking Cyberquad ATV for kids!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
Both chambers of Congress passed a continuing resolution Thursday night that, once signed into law by President Joe Biden, will avert a shutdown and fund the government at current levels through February 18, 2022. The House voted 221-212 to pass the stopgap measure yesterday evening, and—after rejecting an amendment 48-50 that would’ve defunded the Biden administration’s COVID-19 vaccine and testing mandates—the Senate advanced the CR 69-28. Lawmakers now have about 11 weeks to work out a longer-term budget for fiscal year 2022.
President Biden outlined his administration’s plan to combat a potential winter COVID-19 surge driven by the Omicron variant, announcing Thursday he is extending the federal mask mandate on planes and public transportation through March 18, 2022, and requiring anyone flying into the United States—regardless of nationality or vaccination status—to test negative within one day of departure. He also said the Department of Health and Human Services will issue guidance in the coming weeks requiring private health insurers to reimburse the cost of over-the-counter COVID-19 tests. Several more cases of the Omicron variant have been confirmed in the United States: Five in New York, and one each in Colorado, Minnesota, Hawaii, and California.
The Biden administration on Thursday reached an agreement with the government of Mexico to restart the Trump administration’s Migrant Protection Protocols—or Remain in Mexico policy—that require asylum seekers along the southern border to wait outside the United States for their claims to be processed. The Department of Homeland Security reiterated yesterday that Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas believes the program “has endemic flaws” and “impose[s] unjustifiable human costs,” but U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk ordered the Biden administration to reimplement MPP in August after Mayorkas terminated it in July.
Russian-led oil producers and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC+) agreed Thursday to move ahead with their previously agreed upon plan to increase collective oil production in January by 400,000 barrels per day. Some analysts had expected the body to decelerate or pause production growth due to the emergence of the Omicron variant and the United States’ decision to release oil from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
Twitter announced Thursday it had removed more than 2,000 accounts linked to the Chinese Communist Party that sought to downplay and deflect discussion of the human rights abuses being perpetrated against the Uyghur population in Xinjiang. Earlier this week, Facebook detailed an influence operation on its platform in which Chinese state employees created a fake Swiss biologist—“Wilson Edwards”—who sought to discredit efforts to investigate the origins of COVID-19.
Two Georgia election workers—a mother and daughter—sued Gateway Pundit and its publishers Thursday, alleging the right-wing provocateurs defamed them by falsely claiming they participated in election fraud. Gateway Pundit’s lies, the complaint reads, “instigated a deluge of intimidation, harassment, and threats that has forced them to change their phone numbers, delete their online accounts, and fear for their physical safety.”
U.S. District Judge Linda Parker on Thursday ordered nine attorneys—including Sidney Powell and Lin Wood—to pay $175,250 to the state of Michigan and city of Detroit in response to their participation in the frivolous “Kraken” lawsuits seeking to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
With Germany facing its worst COVID-19 surge yet, outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel and Chancellor-designate Olaf Scholz announced new restrictions Thursday barring unvaccinated people from non-essential businesses and shutting down bars and clubs in areas with an incidence rate above a certain threshold. Merkel also endorsed a nationwide vaccine mandate, which, if passed through parliament, could be enacted by February.
Initial jobless claims remained near pandemic lows but increased by 28,000 week-over-week to 222,000 last week, according to the Labor Department. The measure’s four-week moving average is now at its lowest point since March 14, 2020.
Will the Biden Administration Deter Another Russian Invasion of Ukraine?
In late February 2014, then-President Barack Obama appeared before reporters with a message for Moscow. “The United States will stand with the international community in affirming that there will be costs for any military intervention in Ukraine,” he said, cautioning Russian President Vladimir Putin against occupying the Crimean peninsula.
In the year that followed, Russia continued its offensive into Ukraine, capturing and annexing Crimea, moving troops into its neighbor’s eastern territory, and financially and militarily supporting Ukrainian separatists. Obama’s warnings went unheeded, and Putin went largely unpunished.
Seven years later, the Russian president is once again mobilizing tens of thousands of troops and armaments near Ukraine’s border in a surge that Western intelligence suggests portends an imminent attack. As we wrote last month:
In recent days, Moscow has undertaken a “large and unusual” concentration of forces along various points of its border with Ukraine, per Ukrainian defense officials. More than 100,000 soldiers—including ground troops and air and sea personnel—pose the threat of further escalation in an ongoing conflict. But unlike April’s buildup, Putin has thus far refrained from calling attention to the troop movements, which is probably not a good sign.
“It’s been a lot more discreet. In the spring, there was a sense that Russia wanted us to see. There was stuff that was being done very publicly, there were announcements, it was done in broad daylight,” Peter Dickinson, editor of the Atlantic Council’s UkraineAlert, told The Dispatch. “This time that’s not happening. What we’re seeing actually looks more like a genuine build-up.”
In an effort to avoid a 2014 redux, U.S. officials are scrambling to sufficiently raise the cost for Russia of re-invasion. Secretary of State Antony Blinken gathered with North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) allies in Latvia this week before traveling to Stockholm to attend the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe Ministerial Council, where he met one-on-one with both Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.
“As we’ve made very clear in recent weeks, we have deep concerns about Russia’s plans for renewed aggression against Ukraine,” Blinken told Lavrov in front of reporters before their meeting. “That’s not just our concern. It’s a concern that is shared by many in Europe, and I think Sergey has heard that expressed over the last 24 hours here in Stockholm. We have a strong, ironclad commitment to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine.”
“We, as President Putin stated, do not want any conflicts,” Lavrov said. “But if our NATO partners have stated that no one has a right to dictate to a country that would like to join NATO whether it can do or not, we can say that every country is able to define its own interests to guarantee their security.”
A NATO joint communiqué earlier this year reiterated that Ukraine is on a path to membership in the alliance, a development to which Russia is adamantly opposed. “It is for the 30 NATO allies to decide when Ukraine is ready for membership. No one else has any right to try to meddle or to interfere in that process,” NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said in April. “Russia is now trying to reestablish some kind of sphere of influence where they try to decide what neighbors can do.”
But Putin is undeterred, warning earlier this week that a deployment of NATO troops and weapons to Ukraine would cross a “red line” and warrant an aggressive response. “I hope that it will not get to that and common sense and responsibility for their own countries and the global community will eventually prevail,” the Russian president said.
Blinken described his 40-minute conversation with Lavrov as “serious” and “sober,” with the two men sharing “candid exchanges” on “different perspectives.”
According to a State Department readout of the meeting, Blinken and Lavrov discussed ongoing fighting between separatists and Ukrainian forces in Donbas, efforts to curb Iran’s nuclear program, the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict, and Russian aggression near Ukraine’s border. “Should Moscow choose the path of military escalation, the secretary made clear that the United States and our allies are prepared to impose significant costs,” spokesman Ned Price said without elaborating on what those costs might be.
Blinken’s threats are “deliberately ambiguous,” said Klon Kitchen, a national defense and cybersecurity expert at the American Enterprise Institute.
In an interview on The Lead With Jake Tapper yesterday, veteran sports broadcaster Bob Costas offered a measured, but forceful, condemnation of the coddling of China by some international institutions and prominent athletes. Tapper asked about the Peng Shuai situation and why the Women’s Tennis Association and International Olympic Committee have taken such different approaches to it. “The IOC is in bed with China,” Costas said. “It’s very troubling, their affinity for authoritarian regimes. … Meanwhile, you’ve got not just the IOC, you’ve got the NBA, and you’ve got Nike, and various individual sports stars in the United States who have significant investments in China, where the sports market is huge. And some of those people are very outspoken—as they have a right to be, and maybe in general you and I would agree with their viewpoints—very outspoken and sometimes offer sweeping condemnations of their own admittedly imperfect country, the United States. But when it comes to China—perhaps the world’s leading human rights abuser given its size and its wherewithal—they’re mum. Very, very few have anything to say.”
National Review published a back and forth between Elbridge Colby and Patrick Porter on Thursday, with Colby arguing in favor of the United States defending Taiwan from China with military force and Porter making the opposite case. Both are worth your time. “The fundamental reason [to defend Taiwan],” Colby writes, “is, counterintuitively, China’s awesome power, and the very real danger that this power, if allowed to expand too far, will pose to Americans’ prosperity and freedom. The United States should defend Taiwan because it is important to deny China hegemony over Asia, by far the world’s largest market area. If China could dominate Asia, as it has made increasingly clear it seeks to do, Beijing would determine the terms, tempo, and distribution of global economic power.” Porter is more pessimistic about what a potential military conflict would look like. “The problem is that China will likely not back off,” he writes. “The prospects for a militarized dispute that de-escalates on Washington’s terms, or a hot war that is swift and victorious, are bleak. Why? The heart of the matter is political. China covets Taiwan, seeing it as existentially important. In terms of value, it exceeds the Falklands for Britain or Algeria for France. It is more like the importance of Texas to America. … The issue is vital to the Chinese Communist Party’s domestic standing and survival. Once a war is under way, China must not lose. No matter how much U.S. policy-makers choose to care about Taiwan, they cannot overcome this imbalance of resolve in China’s favor.”
Have you ever listened to a great song on repeat for so long that you grew to hate it? In a piece for The Ringer, Michael Baumann argues that’s exactly what’s happened on a global scale to Coldplay—and particularly it hit, “Fix You.” “‘Fix You’ was the band’s definitive power ballad, and it turned into a huge hit, moving 1.8 million copies in the U.K. and 500,000 more in the U.S., where it peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Adult Alternative chart,” he writes. “But because this was Coldplay, a band that was everywhere and made music for everyone, it was only fitting that ‘Fix You’ ended as a victim of its own success. But whose fault is that? Not Coldplay’s. The greatest sin [lead singer Chris] Martin and his colleagues committed was to write a song that connected with so many people, that scratched so many emotional itches, that too many looked to for catharsis. It touched and moved its audience—what is that if not a resounding artistic success?” (One of your Morning Dispatchers performing not one, but two separate xylophone Coldplay medleys in a high school talent show had no bearing on the inclusion of Baumann’s essay.)
Yesterday’s episode of Advisory Opinions focused on—you guessed it—oral arguments in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. What were the key exchanges on Wednesday? Are Roe and Casey actually going to fall? What’s the court’s decision-making process from here? David and Sarah break it all down.
On Thursday’s solo Remnant, a sleep-deprived Jonah shares his thoughts on the possibility of the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade. When does life truly begin? Why are taboos so important? And could the case lead to a sea change in American politics?
An essential daily news roundup, TMD includes a brief look at important stories of the day and original reporting and analysis from The Dispatch team, along with recommendations for deeper reading and some much-needed humor in these often fraught times.
William Jacobson:“GREETINGS – from partially sunny San Diego. Several of us from Legal Insurrection are attending the ALEC conference, and tonight (Thursday) is our reader reception. So if you hear in the news about a small earthquake near San Diego, it just means our party got a little out of control. (with Leslie)”
Mary Chastain: “Sen. Sheehan is a horrible and terrible person. I cannot stand these people who worship infanticide. Literally have blood on their hands.”
Fuzzy Slippers: “So Sen. Shaheen says she wants a revolution? “. . . . You say you’ll change the constitution / Well, you know / We’d all love to change your head / You tell me it’s institution / Well, you know / You better free your mind instead / But if you go carrying pictures of Chairman Mao / You ain’t going to make it with anyone anyhow.” The radical left has long been pining for their “revolution,” and if they are unlucky enough to achieve that goal, it will certainly not be over abortion rights / Roe. No one is going to take up arms to stop . . . checks notes . . . abortion laws relegated back to the states (where they belong, anyway). Interesting, though, that a sitting Sen. advocating “revolution” is totes fine . . .when it’s over infanticide.”
Leslie Eastman: “If Fauci’s “victory” over AIDS is the reason he can proclaim himself the embodiment of “science”, then the time has come for a hard assessment of the realities of that victory and his role in the response.”
Stacey Matthews: “The DCCC is actually bragging – via a custom-made info-graphic – that gas prices went down 2 cents in one week under Joe Biden. Insane.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “While the negotiators sent by the Biden White House are trying to restore the 2015 nuclear agreement with Iran at the talks in Vienna, Austria, the Iranian regime has stepped up the production of enriched uranium at an underground facility — bringing it steps away from building an atomic bomb. The move brings Iran closer to acquiring a nuclear bomb. The IAEA “said Iran plans to enrich uranium there up to 20% purity — a short, technical step from weapons-grade levels of 90%.” The Associated Press reported.”
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Good morning. On our mind today: Arizona politicians, women’s equity and Utah’s NFL-bound players. Read this morning’s six most important stories below.
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Why do Arizona Democrats seem more like Republicans?
Perspective: There’s more to the pandemic than the virus
Mormon Battalion monuments vandalized — again
NFL-bound Utes returned in 2021 to complete unfinished business. Will they close the deal?
A national report ranked Utah last for women’s equity — again. What can be done to change it?
Congress averts shutdown despite GOP protest over vaccine rule. Utah Sen. Mike Lee draws criticism for joining threat
Democrats Block Bill That Would Prevent Uyghur Slave Labor
An amendment within the annual defense-authorization bill that would serve to protect the human rights of Uyghurs and other groups persecuted by Beijing was blocked by Senate Democrats last night.
The Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, which would ban imports from the region of China where the CCP is committing mass genocide if companies cannot provide evidence they used no forced labor, already passed as a bill in the senate with bipartisan support last summer until Nancy Pelosi refused to put it up for a vote in the house. It took its insertion into the National Defense Authorization Act to bring the provision forth. Democrats now claim this is a procedural problem concerning the source of spending and revenue measures. After the democrats moved to stop the bill, Marco Rubio, who originally inserted the bill into the defense act, halted any consideration of the act’s amendments.
According to National Review, the bill is “a piece of legislation that Uyghur advocates say is critically important to combat the Chinese Communist Party’s mass atrocities. And the senators are doing this amid stepped-up lobbying from companies that stand to lose something from combating modern slavery in China and entreaties from the Biden administration to delay or water down the legislation.”
If this was truly only a procedural problem, Democrats would have passed the bill in its original form.
Government Faces Potential Shutdown Over Biden’s Vaccine Mandate
In standing up to the president’s vaccine mandates placed in a must-pass government funding bill, Senate Republicans risk a government shutdown against today’s funding deadline. The objection remains particularly strong among Senate Republicans where only one senator can stall voting proceedings.
In blocking the proceedings, the Senate would strip funding from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. This would prevent the mandate of private employers with at least 100 workers to require their employees get vaccinated or regularly tested.
“This week, a federal judge blocked the administration from enforcing a coronavirus vaccine mandate on thousands of health care workers in 10 states. Earlier, a federal appeals court temporarily halted the OSHA requirement that employers with 100 or more workers ensure they are fully vaccinated.
The administration has previously implemented policies requiring millions of federal employees and federal contractors, including military troops, to be fully vaccinated. Those efforts are also being contested in federal courts.
Polling from The Associated Press shows Americans are divided over Biden’s effort to vaccinate workers, with Democrats overwhelmingly for it while most Republicans are against it.”
Germany Announces a Lockdown of the Unvaccinated
Germany announced a nationwide lockdown for the unvaccinated who, for now, won’t have access to any businesses deemed unessential.
The announcement comes from outgoing Challencor of Germany Angela Merkel and her predecessor, Olaf Scholz, who also said they look forward to rolling out their proposal for mandatory vaccinations. If the proposal is approved in parliament, CNN reported it could take effect as early as February.
Furthermore, Merkel clarified in a press briefing yesterday that vaccinated people lose their vaccination status nine months after getting their last shot.
Link Round-Up
In a positive update from my most recent newsletter, Peng Shuai is back. This reveals a lot about the power people should be wielding more often in rallying around their causes that convict them
BRIGHT’s former editor Emily Jashinsky used a tv review to analyze why Gen Z is so averse to sex positivity in The Federalist.
You won’t see coverage of it most places, but here is the latest with the Ghislaine Maxwell trial.
The American Conservative published a piece on how Hillsdale in D.C. Director of Academic Programs and Assistant Professor of Government Matthew Mehan is helping fight progressive education through children’s literature.
Helen Roy thoughtfully explored the constitutional role of parental rights as well as their modern distortion in this article with The Claremont Institute.
Friday Fun
With the weekend upon us, here’s my weekly recommendation on how to best spend your down time.
My tip for this weekend is to play tennis. Whether the weather is conducive to an outdoor game will be an important factor in your ability to play this time of year, but in many places (including my home in the nation’s capital), this is one of the last weekends to comfortably play without having to really embrace the frigid air. Among many reasons that tennis is my favorite sport, the game is known for being a life-long one for good reason. Although the days of playing a game of figure skating, volleyball, and water polo may be numbered for most people, tennis is a sport enjoyed by those of all ages and fitness levels. This makes it an easy social activity as you can play with almost anyone willing to lace up their shoes. Also, heading into the holiday season, tennis is great cardio and provides many other health benefits including improved critical thinking, mental alertness, agility, and flexibility.
BRIGHT is brought to you by The Federalist.
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Today’s BRIGHT Editor
Allison Schuster is a research assistant for Hillsdale College in DC as well as a regular contributor and former intern for The Federalist. Follow her on Twitter @AllisonShoeStor.
Note: By using some of the links above, Bright may be compensated through the Amazon Affiliate program and Magic Links. However, none of this content is sponsored and all opinions are our own.
Dec 03, 2021 01:00 am
According to a cost-benefit analysis conducted by Toby Rogers, PhD in the 5 to 11 age range, 117 healthy kids will have to die of vaccine-related side effects in order to save one child from perishing of Covid 19. Read More…
Dec 03, 2021 01:00 am
The country is faced with the dilemma of choosing between a president who is not up to the job and a vice-president that may be worse still. Read More…
We’re being governed by imbeciles
Dec 03, 2021 01:00 am
Not a pretty sight, and not going to change soon. But pointing this out can be helpful, even cathartic. The pendulum will swing back, eventually. This too shall pass. Read more…
Roe and the right to life
Dec 03, 2021 01:00 am
There is no more important, no more fundamental right than the right to life. Without life, none of the other rights have meaning. Read more…
Not a good time to stop the game
Dec 03, 2021 01:00 am
The average baseball fan must be wondering whether these people on both sides understand that the country is just recovering from a pandemic. Read more…
What if it isn’t the parent’s fault?
Dec 03, 2021 01:00 am
There is way too much student anger; anger that has been seeded and nourished by school boards, administrators, and teachers. Read more…
The sinister nature of electric cars
Dec 02, 2021 01:00 am
Once again, Democrats are trying to force people to drive electric cars, but people need to consider the loss of power that accompanies driving one. Read more…
A study finds mRNA COVID vaccines provide the biggest booster impact, Ukraine warns of a large-scale Russian offensive, and ride-hailing giant Didi is cowed by Chinese regulators
Today’s biggest stories
A mural promoting the COVID-19 vaccine in Jakarta, Indonesia, December 2, 2021. REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan
COVID-19
The World Health Organization urged countries to boost healthcare capacity and vaccinate their people to fight a surge in COVID-19 cases driven by the Omicron variant, and said travel curbs could buy time but alone were not the answer.
New rules requiring international air travelers arriving in the United States to obtain a negative COVID-19 test within one day of travel will take effect Monday at 12:01 a.m. ET.
COVID-19 vaccines made by Pfizer and Moderna that use mRNA technology provide the biggest boost to antibody levels when given 10-12 weeks after the second dose, a British study published has found.
FILE PHOTO: Former President Donald Trump attends a rally in Perry, Georgia, September 25, 2021. REUTERS/Dustin Chambers
U.S.
The Gateway Pundit, which started as a tiny opinion blog, saw readership surge to 50 million views a month as it amplified Donald Trump’s false stolen-election claims. Reuters documents the impact: 25 election workers targeted by more than 100 violent threats or hostile messages citing the pundit.
A U.S. judge ordered Sidney Powell and other lawyers who sued in Michigan to overturn Democratic President Joe Biden’s election victory to pay a $175,000 penalty, reiterating an earlier finding that the lawsuit was frivolous.
The Democratic-controlled U.S. Senate passed a bill to fund the government through mid-February, averting the risk of a shutdown after overcoming a bid by some Republicans to delay the vote in a protest against vaccine mandates.
Russia has massed more than 94,000 troops near Ukraine’s borders and may be gearing up for a large-scale military offensive at the end of January, Ukraine’s Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov told parliament, citing intelligence reports.
Afghanistan’s Taliban government released a decree on women’s rights which said women should not be considered “property” and must consent to marriage but failed to mention female access to education or work outside the home.
A European human rights watchdog told Turkey it was preparing “infringement proceedings” over its failure to release imprisoned philanthropist Osman Kavala, a move that could lead to Ankara’s suspension from the body.
The government of incoming Honduran president Xiomara Castro does not plan to establish diplomatic ties with China as it prioritizes U.S. relations, a high-ranking ally of Castro said, signaling a reversal of her pre-election stance.
Pope Francis called for healing during an outdoor Mass in Cyprus within sight of a huge Turkish Cypriot flag on a mountainside on the other side of a line that has divided the island for nearly half a century.
BUSINESS
Just five months after its debut, ride-hailing giant Didi Global said it plans to withdraw from the New York stock exchange and pursue a Hong Kong listing – a stunning volte-face as it bends to Chinese regulators angered by its U.S. IPO.
Shares in Grab, Southeast Asia’s biggest ride-hailing and delivery firm, slid more than 20% in their Nasdaq debut following the company’s record $40 billion merger with a blank-check company.
The European Central Bank may set policy for a relatively short period at this month’s meeting given heightened uncertainty but should not delay a decision as markets need direction, ECB President Christine Lagarde said in an interview at the Reuters Next conference.
Interest rate differentials will dominate sentiment in forex markets over the next three months, a Reuters poll of FX analysts found, placing the U.S. dollar in a unique position to extend its outperformance against its peers.
Leaders of the world’s largest economies hailed a recent agreement to overhaul global corporate tax rules as key ensuring multinationals paid their fair share of tax. But some companies could still use Ireland to reduce their tax bills even after the agreement takes effect, according to tax specialists and a Reuters review of corporate filings.
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Quote of the day
“Do I feel comfortable here? I wouldn’t say that I do. But it’s not my choice to be here. The sport has taken the choice to be here”
The station’s orbit, in an unscheduled maneuver carried out by mission control, dropped by 310 meters for nearly three minutes to avoid a close encounter.
How Omicron Is Being Used to Blame Africa and the ‘Unvaccinated’ for the Many Failures of the Jabs
Topline: Lockstep political decision to roll out leaky “vaccines” occurred around the world immediately following the Omicron announcement. Circumstances with a new, heavily mutated variant, vastly different population immunity and knowledge about “genetic vaccine” effectiveness, nothing like those 12 months ago when first generation COVID injections were rolled out globally. Omicron may be more infective, is likely no more dangerous — but may be …
At 36-years-old, Fox News pundit Lisa Boothe is statistically not at risk from Covid-19. She has been outspoken against the various vaccine mandates. Today, she took to social media to explain why she’s not getting the jabs. If you are under 70 you have a 99.95% survival rate against COVID. That threat diminishes the younger you get. But let’s just …
MTG’s Epic Speech: ‘Do Not Pass the CR. Shut It Down.’
Congress has demonstrated a complete lack of discipline when it comes to spending the money they take from us. This isn’t new, but in the age of Covid it’s as if any semblance of fiscal responsibility has been tossed out of Capitol Hill’s windows. Today, Congress passed a continuing resolution that will fund the government through February. The Senate has …
They say in every joke there’s a hint of truth. Joe Biden tried to be funny when he asked and answered a question today while speaking at the National Institute of Health (NIH). “Who’s President? Fauci! But all kidding aside…” He’s not really kidding. He doesn’t make a move that has anything to with Covid-19 (which is essentially everything) unless …
VAXX Conspiracy? Austria Plummets Into Political Turmoil as Chancellor Alexander Schallenberg Steps Down
It’s hard enough getting many Americans to pay attention to what’s happening in American politics, let alone events that are happening half a world away in a foreign nation. But the odd series of events in Austria may be a harbinger for what’s to come across Europe and eventually to the United States. If you’re not paying attention yet, today’s …
How Can the Big Pharma Agenda Survive Three Ultra-VAXXED Countries Spiking on the Same Day?
The writing is on the wall. It isn’t written in a language that requires Daniel the Prophet to decipher. It’s written in plain English in flashing neon lights telling any thinking human that the Covid “vaccine” agenda is flawed beyond any semblance of reasonable doubt. But a strong delusion has engulfed the populace to the point that those who have …
In an interview with WND, the vaccine researcher who invented the messenger RNA technology behind the Pfizer and Moderna shots reveals some stunning information about medical research, vaccine policies and political realignment that should terrify everyone. …Read more…
Biden’s policies have allowed inflation to surge in the United States, with price increases for gasoline, food, household goods and nearly everything else.
Now a new poll confirms just how much hardship Bidenflation is causing – and who is being hit the hardest. … Read more…
President Joe Biden participates in a Q&A townhall with Chief Medical Adviser to the President Dr. Anthony Fauci on Monday, May 17, 2021, in the Blue…Read more…
Retailers in San Francisco, Los Angeles and other cities have been plagued by a rash of “smash-and-grab” crimes, losing hundreds of thousands of dollars in merchandise to gangs of thieves.
Now the White House is giving a really stupid excuse for why these crimes are happening. … Read more…
Biden’s policies have allowed inflation to surge in the United States, with price increases for gasoline, food, household goods and nearly everything else.
Now a new poll confirms just how much hardship Bidenflation is causing – and who is being hit the hardest. … Read more…
President Joe Biden participates in a Q&A townhall with Chief Medical Adviser to the President Dr. Anthony Fauci on Monday, May 17, 2021, in the Blue…Read more…
Retailers in San Francisco, Los Angeles and other cities have been plagued by a rash of “smash-and-grab” crimes, losing hundreds of thousands of dollars in merchandise to gangs of thieves.
Now the White House is giving a really stupid excuse for why these crimes are happening. … Read more…
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Following Wednesday’s Supreme Court arguments that overwhelmingly favored the Mississippi law that bans abortion after 15 weeks, it’s no surprise that the U.S. finds itself poised to overthrow Roe v. Wade, Anthea Butler writes. “This seemingly penultimate moment for abortion rights in America has been 40 years in the making. And religious scholars have seen it coming.”
The religious right has long courted politicians, including the likes of Donald Trump. “That long game, which included voting for candidates who support pro-life positions, fundraising, National Sanctity of Human Life Day and clinic picketing and lobbying, has been written off by far too many liberals as fringe behavior.”
How do we make sense of this unprecedented moment in world history? Why is this all happening? Chris Hayes asks the big questions that keep him up at night every week on his podcast, aptly titled, “Why Is This Happening?”
In the newest episode, Chris talks to Lawrence Bartley about how being incarcerated led him to create “News Inside,” a Pulitzer Prize-winning Marshall Project criminal justice magazine that’s distributed in prisons around the country. Bartley describes how he used his time in prison to reckon with his past, while also finding his place in a rapidly changing society. Listen now.
MORE FROM MSNBC
On Sunday, listen to the first episode of MSNBC’s newest original podcast series, “American Radical.” Ayman Mohyeldin explores the story of Rosanne Boyland, a woman from his own hometown who became a foot soldier in one of the most dangerous movements in America and died at the Capitol on Jan. 6.
Scan the QR code on your screen to listen to the trailer and follow “American Radical” now.
MSNBC Films presents “Paper & Glue,” from Oscar-winning producers Brian Grazer and Ron Howard. The award-winning documentary follows visionary French artist JR as his work transcends rules and borders, from a prison in California to a favela in Brazil.
Watch the world television premiere of “Paper & Glue,” next Friday at 10 p.m. ET.
President Biden to make at-home rapid tests free in new COVID plan: As COVID-19 cases rise in the colder months and amid concerns of a new COVID-19 variant, President Joe Biden announced a new plan on Thursday for a winter coronavirus strategy that includes extending the mask requirement on public transit, requiring more stringent testing protocols for international travelers and making at-home rapid tests free. To allow for free rapid tests, senior administration officials say that more than 150 million Americans with private insurance will be able to submit for reimbursement to their insurance companies through the same rule that allows tests on site to be covered by insurance. Uninsured Americans and those on Medicare or Medicaid will be able to access these at-home tests for free from federal sites around the country. The omicron variant, which was first detected last week is concerning due to its never-before-seen mutations, has prompted U.S. scientists, including those in the New York State Department of Health’s Wadsworth Center Labs in Albany, New York, to be on high alert for any confirmed cases of the new variant circulating around the country. On Wednesday, scientists in California confirmed the first known case of omicron in the U.S., but doctors at the Wadsworth Center believe that it is already circulating in many other communities. To curb the spread of the virus, health officials are urging people to get vaccinated, get boosted and to continue to follow COVID-19 guidelines. “We have to double down on what we know is going to be our best tool in the toolbox, and that is vaccination,” ABC News’ chief medical correspondent, Dr. Jennifer Ashton, told “World News Tonight” anchor David Muir Thursday.
Alec Baldwin says ‘someone is responsible’ for ‘Rust’ set tragedy, but it’s not him: In his first interview since the deadly shooting on the set of the film “Rust” in October, actor Alec Baldwin recalled the events that happened that day leading up to the death of the film’s cinematographer, Halyna Hutchins. “Someone put a live bullet in a gun, a bullet that wasn’t even supposed to be on the property,” Baldwin said. “Someone is responsible for what happened, and I can’t say who that is, but I know it’s not me.” Baldwin was holding an antique Colt .45 revolver during a rehearsal of the film, when the prop gun discharged a live bullet, killing Hutchins and wounding director Joel Souza. Baldwin said he remembers the film’s assistant director, Dave Halls, handing him the revolver and telling him that it was a “cold gun,” or empty with “dummy” rounds. During his interview, Baldwin maintained that he had no idea that the gun was loaded and said he “didn’t pull the trigger.” Those comments have been the subject of intense public scrutiny and an investigation by the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office since the incident happened. Baldwin said the incident has left him scarred. He said it also makes him question whether he wants to continue making films, and that even if he does, he “can’t imagine” ever doing a movie with guns in it again. Watch “Good Morning America” at 7 a.m. for more on this story.
Judge issues ruling in UK tabloid’s appeal of Duchess Meghan lawsuit over letter to her estranged dad: A British court on Thursday ruled in favor of Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, dismissing a tabloid publisher’s appeal to an earlier ruling that it breached her privacy by publishing parts of a letter she wrote to her now-estranged father, Thomas Markle, in 2018, after her wedding to Prince Harry. The Court of Appeal in London upheld a February judgment from the High Court that ruled publication of the letter by Associated Newspapers, the publisher of the Mail on Sunday and the MailOnline website, was “manifestly excessive and hence unlawful,” Senior judge Geoffrey Vos told the court in a brief hearing Thursday. Vos said, “The Duchess had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the contents of the letter,” and it was “personal” and “private.” Meghan said in a statement Thursday that the ruling was a victory for her and “anyone who has ever felt scared to stand up for what’s right.” She added, “What matters most is that we are now collectively brave enough to reshape a tabloid industry that conditions people to be cruel, and profits from the lies and pain that they create.” Meanwhile, Associated Newspapers said in a statement it is “considering an appeal to the Supreme Court.”
Strangers donate breast milk after mom of newborn dies of COVID-19: One Missouri family is honoring a mother who died from COVID-19 complications by making sure her baby has breast through his first birthday. Last month, Megan Richards, a mother of six, died from COVID-19 complications. She had planned to provide breast milk for her youngest child, 5-month-old Myles, through his first birthday. “It was so important to her, so it was important to me,” Megan’s husband, Michael Richards, told “GMA.” To fulfill her wish, Michael and their family are collecting donations of breast milk. “The first donation that we received came from a woman named Megan,” said Megan Richards’ sister, Brittany Eppenauer, who is leading the drive for donations. So far, the Missouri family has received about 400 ounces of donated breast milk, as well as a donated freezer to store it. They estimate they will need around 10,000 ounces to reach Myles’ first birthday next July, according to Eppenauer. “It’s overwhelming to know that other moms care that much, to make sure that we can fulfill my sister’s wishes,” she said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” with omicron now in the U.S., we’re chatting with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky about what you need to know about the new variant and how to slow the spread. Plus, Kaylee Hartung sat down with Mariah Carey to talk about her Christmas special. And ahead of his journey to space aboard a Blue Origin rocket, we’re sending Michael Strahan off with special messages and advice as he goes to infinity and beyond. All this and more only on “GMA.”
We have a deep dive into criticisms of the International Olympic Committee over its handling of the Peng Shuai situation, a look at what it’s like for trans men in prison, and an unplanned IKEA sleepover.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Friday morning.
When Olympics organizers held a video call with Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai this week, many activists and experts said it was merely a continuation of a decadeslong trend in which the International Olympic Committee has enabled and even emboldened authoritarian regimes.
Peng, a three-time Olympian and former doubles world No.1, wasn’t seen for three weeks after making sexual assault allegations against Zhang Gaoli, a former vice premier who was one of China’s most powerful officials.
The committee held a video call with Peng last month, reporting she was “safe and well” and saying that she asked for privacy. On Thursday, the IOC said it spoke with Peng again and was offering “wide-ranging support” — but it did not release video of the calls or mention the allegations.
“It was typical IOC: take the Chinese Communist Party at its word despite all evidence to the contrary,” said Kelley Currie, former U.S. ambassador-at-large for global women’s issues.
Currie is among critics who see the episode as the latest in a long list of examples where the IOC has allowed human rights abusers to wield the world’s largest sporting event as a soft-power tool.
The IOC said in a statement it had “taken a very human and person-centered approach” to the situation.
On Thursday, health officials from Minnesota, New York, and Colorado announced cases of the new, highly mutated variant, one day after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported the first individual detected with omicron in California.
Congress passed a short-term government funding bill Thursday that will prevent a shutdown before the Friday night deadline, sending the legislation to President Joe Biden for his signature.
The racist and classist way poor people are talked about in the U.S. is part of the reason why failed policies stay in place, says Michael Tubbs, author of “The Deeper the Roots” and former mayor of Stockton, California.
That’s what happened to six shoppers and two dozen staff in Aalborg, Denmark who had an unplanned sleepover in their local store after being left stranded by a snowstorm.
The group played cards, watched television and slept in the store’s display beds.
Hundreds of people were stuck at the local airport as 12 inches of snow fell outside.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: With Roe v. Wade in the balance, the 2016 election looms ever larger
All elections have consequences. It’s just that some elections – like 2016 – are more consequential than others.
That’s the stark reality of this week’s big news that the new 6-3 conservative U.S. Supreme Court is almost certain to uphold Mississippi’s restrictive abortion law – as well as possibly overturn Roe v. Wade.
Yes, Donald Trump was a one-term president, joining the likes of Jimmy Carter and George H.W. Bush. But he also appointed three Supreme Court picks, replacing conservative Antonin Scalia, swing vote Anthony Kennedy and liberal Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
Trump installed scores more conservative judges on federal and appeals courts, many of whom are thwarting President Biden’s immigration and Covid-response plans.
He pulled out of the Iran nuclear deal, and it looks like the current chances of reviving it are slim.
He also left the Paris climate accord, delivering a blow to the Obama Era’s response to climate change (though Biden rejoined it after assuming office).
Leigh Vogel/Getty
In 2016, Hillary Clinton won the popular vote by 2 percentage points, 48 percent to 46 percent, but lost the Electoral College by a combined 77,000 votes in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
In 2020, Democrats regrouped – they boosted their turnout (though so did the GOP); they did a better job of managing Bernie Sanders and the progressive wing of the party; they discredited the Jill Steins and the Green Party – and Joe Biden won the popular vote by 4.5 percentage points and won Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin by a combined 257,000 votes.
But ask yourself: Which was the election cycle – 2016 or 2020 – that mattered more when it came to the Supreme Court and locking in the Obama agenda?
The answer is pretty obvious. Especially after this week.
$7.4 billion: The amount from the bipartisan infrastructure law that will be distributed next year aloneto overhaul water infrastructure and replace lead pipes.
48,856,194: 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 147,863 more since yesterday morning.)
788,778: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,566 since yesterday morning.)
59.6 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
71.3 percent: The share of all Americans 18-years and older who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
Dr. Oz is up on the air in PA-SEN
Well, that was fast.
Republican Dr. Oz is already on Pennsylvania’s airwaves with new 30- and 60-second TV ads that are almost identical to his announcement video from earlier this week. Per AdImpact, it’s a $1.3 million buy.
“Covid has shown us that our system is broken. We lost too many lives, too many jobs, and too many opportunities because Washington got it wrong. They took away our freedom without making us safer, and tried to kill our spirit and our dignity,” he says in the 60-second spot.
(Just asking, but does Dr. Oz include Trump and his administration when saying Washington got Covid wrong?)
And he concludes in the ad, “Pennsylvania needs a conservative who will put America first, one who can reignite our divine spark, bravely fight for freedom, and tell it like it is.”
Stacey Abrams discusses bid for GA-GOV
Meanwhile, Stacey Abrams spoke with MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow Thursday night after her announcement that she’s running for Georgia governor.
On her bid and message: “I believe in our state. I believe that we have the capacity to be an extraordinary place for families to grow, for people to succeed and thrive, and I think we have a failed leader who is currently occupying the office. My mission is service. And to serve people, you have to care about them. You have to care about all of them.”
And on her non-concession after losing in 2018: “And on the night on the 16th of November when I acknowledged that I would not become governor, that [Republican Brian Kemp] had won the election, I did not challenge the outcome of the election unlike some recent folks did. What I said was that the system was not fair. And leaders challenge systems. Leaders say we can do better. And that’s what I declared.”
She added, “I could not in good conscience say that in order to protect my political future, I’m going to be silent about the political present, which is that we have a system under a leader that sought to keep people from casting their ballot, that threw those ballots out, that said that voter suppression was a viable tactic for winning elections.”
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world
A handful of new cases of the omicron variant are popping up around the country.
The White House’s new testing requirement for international arrivals has some concerned about whether they can find a test with a quick enough turn-around time.
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Good morning. It’s Friday, Dec. 3, and we’re covering a short-term deal to keep the government open, charges in an Ohio police shooting, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
Congressional leaders announced yesterday a short-term deal that would provide funding for federal operations through Feb. 18. The agreement would avoid a potential government shutdown ahead of a deadline at midnight tonight.
The House passed the bill by a vote of 221-212, followed by Senate approval by a vote of 69-28. The Senate vote came despite opposition from a number of GOP senators who object to use of federal funding to carry out vaccine mandates for workers at federal agencies. The legislation includes an additional $7B to help resettle Afghan refugees.
In related news, Treasury officials have warned the debt ceiling—the limit on how much the US can borrow to cover its obligations—must be raised by Dec. 15.
See our guide on how the federal budget works here.
White House Plots for Omicron
President Joe Biden announced his winter COVID-19 strategy yesterday in a speech at the National Institutes of Health, part of an effort to keep schools and businesses open in the face of a potential winter wave of COVID-19 cases.
The strategy includes reimbursement for at-home tests, an extension of the federal mask mandate for airlines and public transit through March 18, and an effort to encourage vaccines and boosters by launching hundreds of family vaccination centers. Also included are strict requirements for international air travelers, including demonstration of a negative test by inbound travelers within 24 hours of their flight, reduced from the current three-day policy.
Meanwhile, the US identified its second and third cases involving the omicron variant, one in Minnesota and one in Colorado. The findings suggest the strain is likely already circulating within the country. Almost 75% of Americans over 5 years old have received at least one dose of the vaccine. The US averages around 85,000 new cases per day, with just over 850 daily deaths (see stats).
Charges in Columbus
A former Ohio sheriff’s deputy was charged with murder yesterday in the fatal shooting of Columbus resident Casey Goodson Jr. last December. The shooting led to a string of racial justice protests in the city.
Jason Meade, a now-retired 17-year veteran of the county sheriff’s office, shot Goodson five times in the back while searching for a fugitive as part of a US Marshals task force. The 23-year-old Goodson, who was at his grandmother’s house at the time, was not related to the search. Meade initially said Goodson drove by him waving a gun but later withdrew the statement; Goodson’s family says he was holding a Subway sandwich, though a gun was recovered from the scene (Goodson had a license to carry).
Details of the encounter are muddled, with no body-camera or dashcam footage available. Goodson’s family separately filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Meade yesterday.
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Juggling multiple things—like IT, onboarding, and company security—is no easy task. It can mean packed-solid days, countless distractions, and sometimes, quite literally, a pain in the neck. So we’re teaming up with Electric to help you make IT easier: lowering costs 50%, providing lightning-fast chat support, and making onboarding a breeze … and they’ll throw in a free Theragun Mini to get rid of that pain in your neck altogether.
>Meghan Markle wins court appeal against Mail on Sunday for breach of privacy after the UK tabloid published a private letter the Duchess of Sussex sent to her father (More)
>Eddie Mekka, Tony-nominated actor best known for “Laverne & Shirley,” dies at 69 (More) | Suspect arrested in shooting death of Jacqueline Avant, philanthropist and wife of Clarence Avant (More)
>Olympic officials say they spoke with Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai via video call for second time (More) | Memphis Grizzlies top Oklahoma City Thunder 152-79; 73-point margin of victory breaks all-time NBA record (More)
Science & Technology
>Scientists identify reaction likely behind blood clotting issues caused by the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine; protein attracted by the vaccine can trigger an immune response in rare cases, with antibodies clumping together (More)
>Google’s DeepMind used for the first time to help mathematicians identify patterns in unsolved problems; breakthrough led to new discoveries in knot and symmetry theories (More)
>Engineers demonstrate solar-powered soft aquatic robots capable of autonomously cleaning ocean and lake surfaces; device uses water as fuel, similar to a steam engine (More)
>US stock markets rebound (S&P 500 +1.4%, Dow +1.8%, Nasdaq +0.8%) after Wednesday’s losses on omicron variant fears (More)
>The Federal Trade Commission sues chipmaker Nvidia to block $40B planned acquisition of semiconductor design giant Arm (More)
>Shares of Grab, Southeast Asia’s largest ride-hailing app, fall over 20% in trading debut to $34B valuation after completing the highest valued special purpose acquisition company merger in history (More)
>Biden administration strikes deal with Mexico; will restart Trump-era policy that requires most migrants seeking asylum to stay south of the US border while their cases are adjudicated (More)
>Michigan prosecutor pushes for charges against parents of 15-year-old who killed at least four and injured seven others in a Tuesday school shooting north of Detroit (More)
>Germany to institute COVID-19 restrictions barring unvaccinated residents from nonessential stores, restaurants, and other venues (More)
IN-DEPTH
Hiding in Plain Sight
Boston Globe | Emily Sweeney. How one of the country’s most wanted fugitives managed to live a normal life in a Boston suburb. (Read)
Take Two Shrooms and Call Me in the Morning
Walrus | Brad Badelt. On the medical promise of psilocybin, the active ingredient in magic mushrooms—if use of the substance can overcome legal barriers. (Read)
Digital Unrealities
Wired | Adam Rogers. Can brain-computer interfaces be used to upload fabricated memories into our brains? (Read, paywall)
Is streamlining your company’s IT efforts proving too stressful? Sign up for a demo call with Electric to learn more about their lightning-fast, stress-relieving support … and receive a free Theragun Mini while you’re at it. You must be an IT decision-maker at a US company with 15-500 employees to qualify.
Historybook: RIP novelist Robert Louis Stevenson (1894); HBD rock star Ozzy Osbourne (1948); HBD actress Julianne Moore (1960); First human heart transplant carried out (1967); Mikhail Gorbachev and George H.W. Bush declare end to Cold War (1989).
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We’re at that weird period between Thanksgiving and Christmas; a time when people take time off work and get ready for the new year to begin. It’s head empty season. No intellectual thoughts, just vibes. In other words, it’s the perfect time for a new dumb meme to take off. Yes, I’m talking about “pondering my orb.” The meme began when a Twitter user posted an illustration of a wizard pensively looking into an orb, with the caption, “pondering my orb.” The Illustration comes from the cover of a 1993 supplement for Middle-earth Role-Playing (MERP), titled Valar and Maiar, as Known Your Meme reports.
If you’re a Lord of the Rings fan, you’ll recognize the wizard as Saruman and the orb as a palantír, which can show events. But if you’re not, well, then it’s just an orb. And that is the brilliance of the meme: You don’t need to know any pop culture references to understand most versions of it. All you need to know is that if you have an orb, you can spend time pondering it. The meme has inspired photoshopped edits and fan art.
“Pondering my orb” is reminiscent of a meme from 2017, in which Twitter users went into a frenzy over a photo of Trump touching a glowing orb. So the lesson here is that people love orbs.
NowRx is a technology-enabled pharmacy using proprietary software and robotics to provide customers same-day pharmacy delivery and unheard-of customer service.
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Former Frenemies podcast co-host Trisha Paytas addressed those “gatekeeping religions and beliefs” in response to criticism of a recent series of Hanukkah videos.
Paytas, who is engaged to Israeli artist Moses Hacmon, has been documenting Hanukkah on TikTok, starting with a video captioned “Me trying to seduce my Israeli husband.” The TikTok has more than 7 million views. “This doesn’t feel right idk,” said one commenter.
On Wednesday, Paytas appeared to respond to the criticism: “It really sucks those gatekeeping religions and beliefs. RELIGION. CAN. NOT. BE. APPROPRIATED. culture can. Relics can. Apparel can. But if someone is seeking multiple religions to find their truth and purpose ….idk. Maybe just let them? God is for EVERYONE.”
Some of the best holiday gifts are on sale right now! Check out Dot Recs to find amazing deals on the products and services everybody wants this Christmas.
Everyone’s favorite NSFW party game has expanded to over 50 decks, but not all expansion packs are created equal. We ranked the top 15 Cards Against Humanity expansion packs totally worth the buy.**The Daily Dot may receive a commission in connection with purchases of products or services featured here.
CELEBRITIES
People are making memes about rumors that Rihanna is pregnant
People are speculating that Rihanna is pregnant—again. This time, the rumor started after the singer was declared a National Hero of Barbados on Tuesday. Twitter users reacted to the news with disbelief and, of course, memes.
After being deceived before, many users refused to believe the rumor and instead poked fun at how often it’s spread. “Rihanna just became the first person to be pregnant for 6 consecutive years,” one user wrote. Another tweeted, “Does Rihanna know she’s pregnant?” with a picture of a worn-out Bugs Bunny drunk on carrot juice.
President Joe Biden expressed optimism for the future of the country during the National Christmas Tree lighting ceremony yesterday in Washington, telling the American people that “we have so much ahead of us.” Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day.
By Andrew Torgan
A sign promotes Covid-19 testing this week at a Los Angeles airport.
Coronavirus
New, stricter Covid-19 testing requirements for all travelers coming to the US are set to take effect Monday. The new rules will require travelers coming to the US to test negative one day before departure instead of up to three days before entering the country. The shift in policy — which Biden announced yesterday alongside a slate of new steps to combat Covid-19 this winter — underscores the potential threat posed by the newly discovered Omicron variant. Separately, several GOP-led states are expanding unemployment benefits to unvaccinated residents who lose their jobs due to vaccine mandates. And in Europe, Germany announced a nationwide lockdown for the unvaccinated yesterday as its leaders backed plans for mandatory vaccinations in the coming months.
Federal funding
Congress averted a government shutdown last night when both chambers voted to pass a stopgap bill to extend funding through mid-February. It came after party leaders brokered a deal to overcome GOP opposition to vaccine mandates. Passage of the measure ahead of today’s midnight deadline ended a standoff that had threatened to trigger a shutdown when a small number of Republican senators who object to Biden’s vaccine requirements had held out the possibility of holding up a quick vote on the funding bill. To resolve the impasse, the two parties agreed to hold votes on the stopgap bill, as well as a GOP amendment to prohibit the use of federal funding for Covid-19 vaccine mandates, which ultimately failed.
Build Back Better
Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin is casting skepticism in conversations with senators that the Build Back Better bill can pass the Senate this year, potentially delivering a blow to the Senate Majority leader’s push to get the bill approved by Christmas. Manchin still has a number of concerns, namely that budget gimmicks hide the true cost of the bill, and he’s pushing to ensure it costs no more than $1.75 trillion. But he also is seeking to pare down the bill, which passed the House last month, in a number of other areas, including paid family leave, a methane fee on emissions from energy producers and a Medicare expansion to cover hearing costs.
Immigration
The Trump-era border program known as “Remain in Mexico” is set to relaunch on Monday due to a court order. That means the US will again send migrants to Mexico to await their immigration court hearings. Mexico agreed to the terms of the revamped program yesterday and said it would begin accepting migrants. The program, which forces non-Mexican migrants to stay in Mexico until their immigration court dates in the US, was suspended at the beginning of Biden’s term and formally terminated months later. But in August, a federal judge in Texas said the administration had violated federal law in how it had gone about unwinding the program and required it to be restored.
Belarus
The US joined with international allies to impose new sanctions on Belarus yesterday in response to the migrant crisis on the border with Poland and the political repression and ongoing human rights violations committed by the regime of Belarus’s longtime strongman leader Alexander Lukashenko. The US, UK, European Union and Canada took coordinated action against Belarusian entities and individuals in their latest effort to pressure Lukashenko, who has been accused — in the words of the US secretary of state — of using “innocent migrants as a political weapon, as an effort at destabilization.” The sanctions also come at a time of heightened tension between Moscow — Lukashenko’s strongest backer — and much of the West as Russia’s President amasses troops on the border with Ukraine.
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It’s December and it hasn’t snowed in Denver yet
Denver has never entered December without measurable snow since it started keeping records back when Chester A. Arthur was President.
But there are blizzard warnings for Hawaii???
There could be up to a foot of snow and 100-mph wind gusts!
That’s roughly how much the Environmental Protection Agency unveiled yesterday in new federal water infrastructure funding. The EPA is urging states to use the money — provided in the recent bipartisan infrastructure law — to address environmental impacts faced by historically underserved communities.
This is a crisis now and it’s only going to get worse.
Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, imploring Congress to address the global computer chip shortage by passing the CHIPS for America Act, a $52 billion bill that would encourage domestic semiconductor production and research.
Pandas on ice!
Check out these pandas cooling off this week at Smithsonian’s National Zoo. Why? Because … pandas! (Click here to view.)
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New queuing system has alleviated port congestion without addressing distribution bottlenecks causing shortages; reduced number of vessels anchored offshore reflect dispersal of ships, not unloading.
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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
96.) NOT THE BEE
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
99.) MARK LEVIN
December 2, 2021
Posted on December 2, 2021
On Thursday’s Mark Levin Show, the media is yet again exaggerating the fact that the government might shut down because Congress has failed to deliver a balanced budget as they are required to under the Constitution. Interestingly, the government is shut down every weekend and on holidays, and during actual shutdowns, only 17% of the government is down. Then, Anthony Fauci, President Biden, and the government say that you must be vaccinated and wear a mask and then they say that the masks and vaccines aren’t guaranteed so the public will need more. There are studies that show that natural immunity outweighs vaccine immunity but the media refuses to share these facts from the New England Journal of Medicine or the success of Gov. Ron DeSantis’s policies in Florida which leads the way in COVID safety as of now. Later, Constitutional Scholar John Eastman joins the show to explain that Nancy Pelosi’s January 6th Committee violates the House’s own rules and the basic principles of due process. Eastman has said that certain states acted illegally in the 2020 presidential elections, but the House committee won’t let him call any witnesses to litigate his case. Eastman also drops a bombshell regarding judges in some of the 2020 election integrity cases. Afterward, Black Lives Matter has announced a hateful boycott against “White” businesses. Americans must become patriotic activists and do business wisely. BLM fails to realize that this will hurt Black athletes, entertainers, and employees employed at these very same White enterprises such as the NFL, ESPN, and many others. Finally, James Golden calls in to discuss his new book “Rush on the Radio: A Tribute from His Sidekick for 30 Years.”
While mandating ineffective vaccine, the Biden administration and its media ministry of propaganda has directed no efforts into treatment of the Chinese virus.On the contrary, they have worked to keep effective treatments away from the American …
C’mon, man!https://twitter.com/Worldtoday365in/status/1466077888390877184?s=20Biden haters greet president in Minnesota with ‘FJB’ and ‘You Suck’ signs
The Democrats have destroyed the greatest city in the world. Once Wall Street bolts — NYC will look no different than Democrat destroyed Detroit.Goldman Sachs CEO Says Declining New York City May Lose Status As Global Financial Hub
Authorities on New York’s Long Island are hunting the person responsible for a blast on a small island that left a s crater in the sand and shook houses miles away, sparking potential terror concerns.Speaking at a press conference in Yaphank …
The Biden Administration consistently goes from bad to worse. It’s incredible. We will have to wait and see if this decision has any impact on Colombia’s next presidential election in May of 2022. Read Senator Cruz’s statements here.Related …
California could have recalled Newsom but didn’t. I have no pity for them. The voters spoke and then voters are being punished.California’s Santa Cruz County mandates mask-wearing in private homes
Pelosi Proves We Need Term Limits with This AnswerSpeaker Pelosi was asked about a bill backed by Sens. Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, and Chris Murphy, Democrat of Connecticut, that punishes China for its many horrific human rights…
Twitter Puts a Warning on AHA Study About mRNATwitter is trying hard to self-destruct, unless, that is, their staff is loaded with doctors and scientists who know more than the American Heart Association. Twitter slapped an “unsafe link” warning on…
Boy Seriously Injured by Waukesha Terrorist Comes HomeThe media has memory-holed the terror attack by a black supremacist killer who ran over or into 67 people, killing six people, including dancing grannies and an 8-year old child…
Biden’s Poll Numbers Are at a Well-Earned Abysmal LowThe Trafalgar poll published Wednesday is very bad news for the incompetent president Joe Biden. Only 36.3 percent of Americans approve of Biden’s performance in the White House, and 59.1 percent disapprove.…
Does Your Dog Eat Grass? – 3 Signs He Or She May Be Sick
Is your dog giving you a “warning” sign?According to Dr. Marty Goldstein, one of the top veterinarians in the world, many dogs are at risk of serious health issues … but their owners may be missing the warning signs.“It’s an epidemic. Over half of all dogs over 10 years old will get cancer,” says Dr. Goldstein. “That number has doubled since I graduated veterinary school 40 years ago. But if you know the warning signs, you can hopefully catch it.”According to Goldstein – who has appeared on shows such as Oprah, Martha Stewart, and has over 40 years of experience with dogs of every shape and size – certain dog foods contain a dangerous chemical that wreaks havoc on our dogs’ bodies. This, in turn, leads to digestive discomfort, joint problems, smelly breath and digestive issues, weight gain, itching, allergies, and even early death.Fortunately, by simply learning the 3 warning signs of danger, Dr. Goldstein has seen thousands of dogs defeat these troubling conditions. Dr. Goldstein actually discovered this trick – which anybody can do, right in their home – while working with his own Golden Retriever, Daniel.”It’s easy, and you don’t need to change your dog’s food. It only takes about two minutes a day,” Dr. Goldstein said on a call with reporters and industry experts.
Now, for the first time ever, Dr. Goldstein has created a short video where he explains everything about the true cause of canine health issues, including how people can naturally fix them, on their own, right from home.
The video is presented below by Dr. Goldstein, free and uninterrupted.
So far, the reviews have been stunning, with viewers saying their dogs’ health improved in a matter of weeks or even days.
One viewer commented: “This is amazing! If you want your dog to live a long time and be happy, these tips are a godsend. So easy and so important.”
Of course, Dr. Goldstein’s announcement was met with some hesitation. We spoke to some canine health experts who attended the call, who advised that people keep their expectations realistic.
“This idea is great, and he’s a really well respected veterinarian and researcher,” said one pet expert in attendance. “But try it first. This is helping a lot of dogs, but it’s rare that you find one thing that works for everyone.”
UnitedVoice was created to promote independent thinking and to share common sense ideas, useful information and alternative perspectives on important issues.All UnitedVoice editorials have these things in common–they promote American family values, freedom, independence, common-sense thinking and self-reliance… taking responsibility as individuals for our own lives in order to help keep our families safe and our country strong.UnitedVoice helps equip its readers to make better decisions in uncertain times.We will continue to share the week’s most popular stories to ensure that reading anything we share is time well spent.Jack Manza
Editor
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I’ve reported how Facebook censors me. Now I’ve learned that they also censor environmentalist Michael Shellenberger, statistician Bjorn Lomborg and former…