MORNING NEWS BRIEFING – DECEMBER 15, 2021

Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday December 15, 2021

1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL

December 15 2021

Good morning on this Bill of Rights Day from Washington, where lawmakers and other policymakers on the left claim that conservatives want to “restrict access” to the ballot box. A new state-by-state scorecard shows where honest elections thrive, our Fred Lucas reports. The Salvation Army, trading jabs with an outside critic, insists that it isn’t depicting America as racist, Kevin Mooney writes. On the podcast, meet a Christian youth organization that celebrates our rights. Plus: Armstrong Williams urges President BIden to protect the nation’s children. And 230 years ago today, the first 10 amendments to the Constitution, known collectively as the Bill of Rights, become the law of the land.

NEWS
Find Out Which States Best, Worst for Honest Elections
By Fred Lucas
Georgia ranks at the top among states for the strongest laws to guarantee honest elections, while Hawaii ranks at the bottom, according to a new Election Integrity Scorecard from The Heritage Foundation.
NEWS
Salvation Army Should Apologize by Christmas for Racially Divisive Training, Watchdog Demands
By Kevin Mooney
“We want The Salvation Army to make a statement that recognizes and honors America’s commitment to colorblind principles,” says Kenny Xu, president of Color Us United.
ANALYSIS
On Bill of Rights Day, Christian Youth Group's Hope Isn't Lost on Next Generation
By Virginia Allen
Generation Joshua exists “to teach high school students about their country, where it comes from, why it’s free, and how to keep it that way,” says Joel Grewe, the organization’s director.
NEWS
Beijing Pays US Social Media Influencers to Hype Olympics, Downplay Boycotts
By Laurel Duggan
State-controlled Chinese media, including China Daily and Xinhua, already spend millions of dollars attempting to influence American audiences.
COMMENTARY
We Are Losing the War for Our Children
By Armstrong Williams
Rappers such as Lil Nas X and Future rap about pervasive immoral conduct and extravagant drug usage. Lil Nas X even raps about having sexual relations with Satan.
LOGO-CHARCOAL_75percent.jpg

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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES

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3.) DAYBREAK

Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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1.
Biden Blisters Americans Rejecting Vaccine Mandates

He responded to a reporter asking about the mandate setbacks in court by saying “This is a pandemic of the unvaccinated. Not the vaccinated, the unvaccinated. That’s the problem. Everybody talks about freedom about not to have a shot or have a test. Well guess what? How about patriotism? How about you make sure you’re vaccinated, so you do not spread the disease to anyone else. What about that? What’s the big deal?”

Daily Wire

2.
Elon Musk Tussles with Elizabeth Warren After He Is Named Time’s Person of the Year

Warren Tweeted “Let’s change the rigged tax code so The Person of the Year will actually pay taxes and stop freeloading off everyone else” (Twitter) to which Elon Musk responded “And if you opened your eyes for 2 seconds, you would realize I will pay more taxes than any American in history this year” (Twitter).  More on their little battle (Washington Examiner).

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3.
Percentage of Americans Citing “No Religion” Hits All Time High

Now at 29 percent. And fewer than half of all U.S. adults pray daily. From the story: The secularizing shifts evident in American society so far in the 21st century show no signs of slowing. The latest Pew Research Center survey of the religious composition of the United States finds the religiously unaffiliated share of the public is 6 percentage points higher than it was five years ago and 10 points higher than a decade ago (Pew). From another story: “If the unaffiliated were a religion, they’d be the largest religious group in the United States,” Elizabeth Drescher, an adjunct professor at Santa Clara University, and the author of “Choosing Our Religion: The Spiritual Lives of America’s Nones,” told AP. She also noted that “nones” were once concentrated in coastal urban areas, but have since spread across the country and occupy a variety of ages, ethnic groups, and social classes (Daily Wire).

4.
Philadelphia Schools Allow Children to Declare Any Gender Without Parental Consent

From the story: The student’s self-identified gender preference will then be used in school-specific applications like Google Classrooms and internal systems like school and district records, as well as report cards. Students will be allowed to change their own gender themselves, including declaring themselves non-binary, without a parent’s or guardian’s permission, and without providing legal documentation recognizing the change.

Daily Wire

5.
Public School Enrollment Shrinking Across the Country

From the story: The most irresistible force behind these falling enrollments is the lack of future kindergarteners — that is, the lack of babies. California’s Total Fertility Rate was 2.21 babies per woman in 2007, and it fell to 1.66 in 2019. The United States has fewer children today than it did a decade ago — not merely proportionately: The under-18 population actually decreased by 1.1 million, from 74.2 million to 73.1 million. Of course, many private schools are seeing record numbers of applications after the public schools in Democrat-run states and municipalities showed disregard (or even disdain) for children by locking them out of their buildings, quarantining them because one child coughed, and forcing even 4-year-olds to wear masks. Homeschooling is seeing record popularity.


Washington Examiner

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6.
Jen Psaki Blames Increase in Meat Prices on “Greed of Meat Conglomerates”

Townhall has the video (Twitter). From Ted Cruz: The Biden-Harris White House has a new talking point to try and dodge the blame for inflation.   The American people won’t buy the Biden admin’s spin (Twitter). Elizabeth Warren tweeted “Families are rightly upset that the price of meat has gone through the roof. Who’s to blame? Meatpacking monopolies that are using inflation as cover to raise prices and make record profits. I’m fighting for stronger antitrust enforcement to lower prices” (RedState).

7.
San Francisco Mayor Claims She’s Gonna Crack Down on Crime

As the city becomes the laughingstock of America. But Mayor London Breed is part of the Democrats who shield criminals from consequences.

Washington Times

8.
New Hampshire Teachers Union Sues to Block CRT Ban in Public Schools

Parents remain the enemy of the American Federation of Teachers.

Daily Wire

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9.
Latinx Failure Follows the Democrats’ Struggle with Hispanics

As the group fails to get in line with what the woke expect of minorities.

National Review

10.
Kroger to No Longer Provide Paid Sick Leave for Unvaccinated Workers

The story notes “The company will also add a $50 monthly surcharge to company health plans for unvaccinated managers and non-union employees. The Cincinnati-based grocery chain is one of the largest employers in the United States with almost half a million full-time and part-time employees. Kroger has made a decision to tighten pandemic-related policies for its workers at a time when businesses across the country face uncertainty over federal vaccination mandates.”

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4.) THE SUNBURN

Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 12.15.21

Up and at ’em: Here’s your scoops and other stories driving the day in Florida politics.

Good Wednesday morning.

A tandem of statewide hospital associations is asking the Florida Legislature to bump spending on graduate medical education programs by $95 million, a move it says will help stave off a projected shortfall of 18,000 physicians in the state by the year 2035.

The Safety Net Hospital Alliance of Florida and the Florida Hospital Association released a report Wednesday conducted by IHS Markit that showed Florida had 55,083 physicians practicing in the state in 2019 — enough to cover about 93% of demand.

By 2035, the study estimates there will be 56,859 full-time physicians in the state. As their ranks grow at an anemic 3%, Florida’s population growth shows no signs of a slowdown. If the trend continues unabated, nearly a quarter of physician demand will go unmet.

Safety Net Hospital Alliance of Florida CEO Justin Senior likens it to a “one-two punch of Florida’s growing population and a wave of older physicians retiring from practice.”

Justin Senior says Florida’s health care industry is taking a one-two staffing punch. Image via The Daytona Beach News-Journal.

However, he said the Florida Legislature could punch back by increasing state funding for residency programs at Florida hospitals.

Senior, along with Florida Hospital Association President and CEO Mary Mayhew, will ask Lawmakers to spend an additional $38 million in general revenue which, when matched with federal Medicaid funds, will increase GME funding in the state by $95 million.

Since Florida launched the state Medicaid GME Residency program, physician teaching slots have grown from 3,562 to 6,432. Senior said the additional investment could add another 3,000 to 6,000 slots.

“Research shows that physicians are most likely to practice medicine where they complete their residency, which is why it is so critical to invest in quality residency programs throughout our state,” Mayhew said.

Read the report here.

— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —

Tweettweet:

 

— @AshaRangappa_: BTW, it’s not just that FOX News hosts blamed Antifa while privately imploring (DonaldTrump to stop riot that same day. The network made a three-part “documentary” *a month ago* claiming that Jan. 6 was a false flag operation BY THE FBI … and not one of those anchors has disavowed it

@DWUhlfelderLaw: The Villages is trending because three Republican residents have been charged with voter fraud for voting multiple times in 2020 election, but Ron DeSantis isn’t going to do or say anything about it @RemoveRon

@SundaeDivine: Between the IRS, STD outbreaks, dueling golf carts, and voting fraud, I would definitely watch a series about The Villages.

@BiancaJoanie: Rent prices in Miami affecting lawyer retention: At the Miami-Dade delegation meeting this morning, Dade Public Defender Carlos Martinez says that his office has lost 62 attorneys in the past year (35% turnover). He says the office is having a hard time competing with pay in NYC.

Tweet, tweet:

 

Tweet, tweet:

 

@ChrisSprowls: Being Speaker of the Florida House can make you feel like every day is your birthday, but that’s not actually true. @lobbytools I wasn’t born in December, but thanks for the thought!

— @NateMonroeTU: So Shad Khan got really upset when someone asked if the Four Seasons play is real. Then he reveals the Four Seasons basically laughed off the idea of associating with a hotel in Jax, but also asserts he — who has no decision-making role with the company — can make it happen.

— DAYS UNTIL —

’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 2; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 7; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 14; Private sector employees must be fully vaccinated or tested weekly — 20; final season of ‘This Is Us’ begins — 20; CES 2022 begins — 21; Ken Welch’s inauguration as St. Petersburg Mayor — 22; NFL season ends — 25; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 27; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 27; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 27; Florida Chamber’s 2022 Legislative Fly-In and Reception — 27; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 28; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 30; NFL playoffs begin — 31; ‘Ozark’ final season begins — 37; ‘Billions’ begins — 39; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 51; Super Bowl LVI — 60; ‘The Walking Dead’ final season part two begins — 67; Daytona 500 — 67; Special Election for Jacksonville City Council At-Large Group 3 — 69; CPAC begins — 71; St. Pete Grand Prix — 72; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 78; The Oscars — 104; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 147; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 166; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 169; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 206; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 217; ‘The Lord of the Rings’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 261; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 296; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 331; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 334; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 366; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 429; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 590; ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 674; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 954.

— TOP STORY —

Far too little vote fraud to tip election to Donald Trump” via Christina Cassidy of The Associated Press — An Associated Press review of every potential case of voter fraud in the six battleground states disputed by Trump has found fewer than 475 — a number that would have made no difference in the 2020 presidential election. The review also showed no collusion intended to rig the voting. Virtually every case was based on an individual acting alone to cast additional ballots. The findings build on a mountain of other evidence that the election wasn’t rigged, including verification of the results by Republican Governors. Contacted for comment, Trump repeated a litany of unfounded claims of fraud he had made previously but offered no new evidence that specifically contradicted the AP’s reporting. “I just don’t think you should make a fool out of yourself by saying 400 votes,” he said. “Voter fraud is virtually nonexistent,” said George Christenson, election clerk for Milwaukee County in Wisconsin, where five people statewide have been charged with fraud out of nearly 3.3 million ballots cast for president. “I would have to venture a guess that’s about the same odds as getting hit by lightning.”

AP found absolutely no proof of widespread election fraud, despite what Donald Trump says. Image via AP.


— STATEWIDE —

Florida offers support to states impacted by tornado cluster” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Florida is offering support to roughly nine Midwestern and Southern states impacted last week by a swarm of deadly tornadoes. Thousands are displaced after a cluster of tornadoes blew through the region, killing dozens. Over the weekend, the Florida Department of Emergency Management (FDEM) reached out to regional emergency teams offering support and resources. Search and rescue teams, ambulance strike teams, and disaster recovery specialists are among the resources Florida may offer to impacted states, many of which are without water and electricity amid frigid temperatures. Florida is the fourth-most disaster-prone state.

Disaster-prone Florida reaches out to tornado-ravaged Kentucky. Image via AP.

Following federal scrutiny, Florida education officials returned $878,000 to certain local school boards” via Danielle J. Brown of Florida Phoenix — After several months of legal challenges, state sanctions, and a Special Session that outlawed strict mask mandates in public schools, the Florida Department of Education returned $877,851 in state funds to eight school districts that had been punished over a COVID-19-related mask controversy. “It has been put back, so we do have that money,” said Russell Bruhn, communication staffer with the Brevard County School District, said. The return of the money came when the state’s education department was under scrutiny by the U.S. Department of Education over potential violations of federal education laws.

Florida’s specialty license plates have stolen millions from manatees and panthers” via Alex Deluca of the Miami New Times — All told, more than 100 specialty license plates are available across the state of Florida today. It might seem like just another bureaucratic obligation, but the license plate a Florida car owner chooses determines how much money state officials may allocate to protect and conduct research for threatened manatees or the endangered Florida panther. That’s because Florida is one of several U.S. states that takes in a significant portion of its funding for its endangered-wildlife programs, such as the Florida Panther Program and Florida Manatee Program, through the sale of specialty license plates. During the 2020-21 fiscal years, the panther plates brought in just under $1.1 million, while the manatee plates brought in $1,023,835, the lowest year on record. This comes as the number of specialty license plates available to Florida motorists has skyrocketed, from about a dozen in 1987 to 120 and counting as we head into 2022.

— DATELINE TALLY —

Gov. Ron DeSantis has victory in the bag, so why is he using the state budget to hurt migrants?” via Fabiola Santiago of the Miami Herald — The Governor’s $99.7 billion budget — which he has dubbed the “Freedom First Budget” because its essence isn’t to address the needs of Floridians but to assist his re-election campaign — says a lot about who DeSantis is. Selfish. Entitled. Cruel. DeSantis doesn’t just want to govern. Armed with hefty coffers, including billions in federal funds from President Joe Biden’s commitment to helping states recover from COVID-19 losses and stimulate the economy, DeSantis aims to further agitate and divide an already politically on-edge Florida. Nothing says this louder than DeSantis’ $8 million plan to buy one-way bus tickets out of Florida for the undocumented. If this business of transporting undesirable people isn’t evoking a nauseating feeling, it’s because you’ve forgotten history.

Ron DeSantis is a shoo-in for re-election, so why hurt migrants?

‘A false narrative’: Debbie Mucarsel-Powell challenges validity of Florida constitutional carry bill” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Former U.S. Rep. Mucarsel-Powell has dismissed a “constitutional carry” bill now moving through the Florida Legislature as trafficking in a “false narrative” that will make the Sunshine State less safe. The bill (HB 103), sponsored by Howey-in-the-Hills Republican Anthony Sabatini, would lift the requirement that a person in Florida obtains a concealed weapon license to carry a gun on their person hidden from plain view. Instead, the bill would allow for the open or concealed carrying of a handgun without a permit, reflecting the view that the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution itself is a citizen’s license to carry a firearm.

Annette Taddeo, Anna Eskamani file bills to bring voter registration to high schools” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics — Sen. Taddeo and Rep. Eskamani filed a set of bills Monday aimed at increasing youth voting. The identical bills from the two Democrats (SB 1228 and HB 903) would require public high schools to give students a presentation on voter registration and allow an opportunity for those students to register or preregister online. In Florida, U.S. citizens can register to vote at 18 or preregister at 16 or 17. Voter outreach is required in schools under Florida law. But those efforts have a history of going undone or unreported and there’s no registration requirement. Eskamani said similar programs allowed her to register to vote. She also said new tools, such as online registration and expanded preregistration, can be used to “turn up civic engagement.”

DOE unveils proposed ‘victims of communism’ rules — The Florida Department of Education released a proposed rule requiring Florida high school students to learn about the “victims of communism.” As reported by Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida, the rule would require instruction on the dictatorial regimes of Mao ZedongJosef Stalin and Fidel Castro. Lessons must cover how those living under those regimes “suffered, including through suppression of speech, poverty, starvation, migration, and systemic lethal violence.” The rule matches language included in a 2022 bill sponsored by Sen. Manny Diaz that would set declare Nov. 7 as “Victims of Communism Day.” DOE officials will workshop the proposed rule Feb. 4. After that, it would be considered by the State Board of Education.

Florida’s Department of Education is preparing rules for schoolchildren to learn about the dangers of communism.

Lawmakers stopped cities from banning natural gas. Climate change plans suffered” via Alex Harris and Daniel Rivero of the Miami Herald — This summer, Miami joined cities across the state in pledging to lower its greenhouse gas emissions to stave off the worst impacts of climate change, which could swamp Florida’s coasts with a few feet of sea rise by midcentury. But Miami’s plan, like others across the state, was weakened by a set of new state laws that block municipalities from regulating fossil fuels in their communities, as well as direct lobbying from the fossil fuel industry. The laws are part of a wave of gas industry-supported bills sweeping the nation in response to efforts from cities to tamp down on their emissions. So far, 19 states have passed similar legislation, with another five states considering the bills this year.

— CORONA FLORIDA —

Florida COVID-19 update: 3,067 new cases added to state tally” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida reported 3,067 COVID-19 cases and no new deaths Monday. The Florida Department of Health will most likely add deaths to Monday’s total. The state has done this in the past when it has added cases and deaths to previous days during the pandemic. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,720,146 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 62,073 deaths. In the past seven days, the state has added 41 fatalities and 2,350 cases per day, on average. The seven-day case average is the highest since Oct. 21.

Delta caused Florida’s worst COVID-19 wave. What will omicron bring?” via Ana Claudia Chacin of the Miami Herald — At least three cases of the new, little-known-about omicron variant have been reported in Florida, including one in Miami-Dade reported Friday, just a few months since the state began recovering from the devastating delta wave experienced over the late summer and early fall. According to Jason Salemi, an epidemiologist and professor at the University of South Florida, delta’s impact was largely avoidable. “When you’re getting to 400 deaths a day when vaccines are available, you start to look at it, and say ‘My God, this wave did not need to be anywhere near this bad,’” he said. Last Tuesday, at a news conference in Oldsmar, DeSantis suggested he would tackle omicron the same way he did delta, without lockdowns or mask requirements.

With the availability of vaccines, Jason Salemi says delta didn’t have to be so bad. Image via USF.

Jason Pizzo files legislation to undo Special Session on COVID-19 protocols” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — To anyone wishing the gavel that opened the 2021 Special Session B never dropped Nov. 15, Sen. Pizzo has filed a bill for you. On Monday, Pizzo actually filed three of them (SB 1230, SB 1234 and SB 1232). The bills would essentially undo the Special Session highlighted as cementing Gov. DeSantis‘ “Keep Florida Free” agenda. Pass the 166 lines of legislation, and it would be like those three days, and the ensuing gubernatorial signing in Brandon never happened. None of the bills have House companions, and it’s unlikely they’d even get a glance in the Republican-controlled Legislature. Still, DeSantis spokesperson Christina Pushaw called the proposed legislation “appalling.”

Broward teacher could be fired for not wearing mask” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The recommended termination of John C. Alvarez, 57, a science teacher at Piper High in Sunrise, could reignite a bitter debate in Broward over the required use of face coverings to combat COVID-19. School district officials are accusing Alvarez of insubordination, neglect of duty and incompetence for his refusal to wear a mask. Alvarez plans to appeal the recommendation to a state administrative law judge. “The state of Florida, which provides my licensure, has said mask mandates are unconstitutional,” he said. The state hasn’t actually done that. DeSantis and the Legislature have banned districts from imposing mask mandates for students, but the law doesn’t address whether districts can require them for teachers or other employees.

Personnel note: Kenneth Scheppke named Deputy Secretary at DOH — The Florida Department of Health announced this week that Dr. Scheppke will now serve as the Deputy Secretary for Health. Scheppke has previously served as the State Emergency Medical Services Medical Director, the Florida Division of Emergency Management’s Chief Medical Officer, and Medical Director for seven fire-rescue agencies across Palm Beach and Martin counties. “The Florida Department of Health is pleased to have Dr. Scheppke assume this new role. Dr. Scheppke has been and will continue to be a great asset to the Department and the State of Florida,” Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo said. “We look forward to his leadership and the vast experience he brings to the table.”

The Florida Department of Health appoints Kenneth Scheppke as the agency’s No. 2 man.

— 2022 —

Democratic Governors worry about threat to democracy but don’t see it as a winning message for 2022” via Edward-Isaac Dovere of CNN — Democratic governors are facing a messaging conundrum: they say American democracy may hinge on their elections in 2022, but they’re not sure they can get most voters to care. Attempts to meddle with the certification of the Electoral College count and the partisan takeovers of the voting infrastructure don’t seem to be front of mind for an electorate drained by nearly two years of pandemic living and a creeping sense of economic panic, and that worries a range of Democratic governors gearing up for campaigns who gathered in New Orleans for grim meetings about their 2022 electoral prospects.

Report: Socialism attacks hurt Dems with Latino voters” via Sabrina Rodriguez of POLITICO — A new post-mortem on the 2020 election results reveals that GOP attacks claiming Democrats embrace socialism helped fuel Trump’s gains with Latino voters last year. More than 40% of Latino voters across the country expressed concern that Democrats are embracing socialism and leftist policies. Among those who voted for Trump, more than 70% were concerned. And Latino voters said they are more concerned with Democrats moving to the left than with Republicans embracing fascist and anti-democratic politics. The report’s findings suggested that the attacks painting Democrats as supporters of socialism resonated well beyond Florida, which has a more conservative-leaning Cuban American population.

Socialism was the third rail for Democrats, losing Latino voters in 2020.

The Democrats’ 2024 kryptonite” via Tina Nguyen of Puck News — Jeff Roe’s political consulting firm Axiom has run hundreds of races over the years, including Ted Cruz’s 2016 national campaign, but Roe has become synonymous with Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s campaign in large part because the victory articulated a new Trump-friendly, post-Trump Playbook for Never Trump Republicans. After alienating suburban moms and people of color during the Trump years, suburban voters and minorities suddenly turned up to vote Republican in Virginia. And Roe suddenly became the hottest name in political consulting, a phenomenon he attributes to the fact that there was so much press attention on this particular race given its proximity to the swamp.

Nikki Fried warns, again, DeSantis could be President” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Fried returned to this theme yet again in a Tuesday email fundraising for her campaign. In the so-called “Ron recap,” Fried blasted the Governor: “DeSantis has spent the year imitating Trump, acting as a wannabe authoritarian dictator, and running a shadow campaign for the presidency in 2024 — all the while enacting horrifying policies that hurt our state.” The email charges DeSantis with adopting a “pro-COVID agenda” while remonstrating him for having “abandoned Florida in the middle of a crisis to raise money for his 2024 presidential run.” Then, a chilling warning: “If this is what he’s done in 2021 alone, can you imagine what he could do with another term? Or, worse, with the presidency?”

—“DeSantis fundraises off ‘noncitizens’ voting in New York” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics

Eric Lynn lands CD 13 endorsements from Eric Swalwell, Jimmy Panetta” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Congressional candidate Lynn landed endorsements Tuesday from two California Congressmen. Democratic U.S. Reps. Swalwell and Panetta both offered their support to Lynn, who is running in CD 13. “With years of national security experience at the federal and international level, Eric has a firsthand understanding of how to navigate the challenges of lawmaking,” Panetta said. Lynn worked as a national security adviser under former President Barack Obama. Notably, his father served for a period as Obama’s Defense Secretary. Swalwell, who launched a 2020 run for President with a gun control town hall in Florida, said Lynn “is the most qualified candidate to both win this race and help get our country back on track.”

Trump gives thumbs-up to Byron Donalds’ return to Congress” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Trump has endorsed U.S. Rep. Donalds for re-election. The high-profile nod came about a week after Donalds, a Naples Republican, shared photos of himself and wife Erika in Southwest Florida with the former commander in chief. “Congressman Byron Donalds has been a terrific advocate for the people of Florida and our Country,” Trump said. The first-term Congressman welcomed the support. “Thank you, POTUS Trump, for your ENDORSEMENT and your unwavering support,” Donalds tweeted. Trump recently hosted a Naples Winter Christmas event in the heart of Florida’s 19th Congressional District. Donalds attended and had his picture taken with Trump.

Chip LaMarca adds $27K in November to boost re-election war chest” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Rep. LaMarca followed a massive October fundraising haul by adding another $27,000 in November. LaMarca raised more than $21,000 through his campaign account in November and another $6,000 through his political committee, Citizens Helping Improve Policy. That means LaMarca has amassed more than $110,000 in the past two months alone. He added more than $83,000 in October. The incumbent listed just over $8,000 in expenses during November. As of Nov. 30, LaMarca holds nearly $168,000 between his two funding sources as he seeks a third term in the House.

Fiona McFarland pulls in $21K as maps promise challenging election cycle” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Rep. McFarland added more than $20,000 to her war chest in November, her official campaign’s biggest month this year. The step up in fundraising came as draft redistricting maps made clear her district could be as much a battleground as ever. The Sarasota Republican reported $21,125 in new donations over the course of November. Since the start of the election cycle, she has raised $76,969. She closed the month with $56,576 on hand. The proposed maps suggest McFarland could end up in a Primary with a GOP colleague. An affiliated political committee, Friends of Sarasota, raised another $17,000 in November and has pulled in $72,000 this year. That means there’s another $39,624 in cash available to support McFarland’s re-election effort.

Fiona McFarland faces a tough road after redistricting. Image via Colin Hackley.

—“Dana Trabulsy raises $10K in November as she seeks second House term” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics

David Borrero brings in more than $14K in November push for second House term” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Rep. Borrero raised more than $14,000 in November, his third-highest monthly fundraising haul of the 2022 election cycle. Borrero is seeking a second term in the House after winning the open House District 105 seat in 2020. Borrero raised more than $8,800 through his campaign account last month and another $5,550 via his political committee, Floridians for Prosperity. In November, Braman Motors was Borrero’s most significant donor, sending $2,500 to his political committee. Borrero listed just over $4,100 in campaign expenses in November. Nearly $3,100 went to DRC Consulting for various campaign costs. Borrero’s committee sent $1,000 to Rep. Chis Latvala’s campaign for Pinellas County Commission.

The coffee shop at this nonprofit Florida hospital pours cash into political coffers” via Kerby Wilson of the Miami Herald — A festive scene greets patients and visitors entering Tampa General Hospital’s main campus. A Christmas tree, a shiny reindeer, a menorah, gift-wrapped presents. Once visitors check-in at the front desk, they can attend to their hospital business or pop over to sip Peppermint Mochas and Irish Cream Cold Brews at the Starbucks. Unbeknown to most of its customers, this Starbucks serves up more than holiday cheer. For the past three years, it’s been making venti-sized campaign contributions to a select group of Florida political candidates. It does this even though Tampa General operates as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. Federal law prohibits it from giving money to political candidates.

— CORONA NATION —

Omicron spreading rapidly in U.S., could bring punishing wave of infections, C.D.C. warns” via Lena H. Sun, Joel Achenbach, Laurie McGinley and Tyler Pager of The Washington Post — Top federal health officials warned in a briefing Tuesday morning that the omicron variant is rapidly spreading in the United States and could peak in a massive wave of infections as soon as January. The prevalence of omicron jumped sevenfold in a single week, CDC modeling shows, and at such a pace, the highly mutated variant of the coronavirus could ratchet up pressure on a health system already strained in many places as the delta variant continues its own late-autumn surge. The warning of an imminent surge came even as federal officials and pharmaceutical companies signaled that they don’t currently favor creating a new omicron-specific vaccine. Based on the data so far, they believe that existing vaccines plus a booster shot are an effective weapon against omicron.

🦠 — 15 grim reminders that COVID-19 is not done with us: One out of every 100 Americans age 65 or older has died from COVID-19, according to The New York Times. Building on that, The Washington Post outlined a list of data points that show, even if most everyday Americans are done with the virus, it’s definitely not done with them. Overall, one in 420 Americans died from the virus, while one in 290 Mississippi residents have succumbed to the illness. Still think it hasn’t touched someone you know? One in less than seven Americans have had confirmed cases of COVID-19, and 72% say they know someone who has died or been hospitalized with the virus. One in 130 have been hospitalized. Scarier still, a third of Americans say they have a family member or close friend who has died from the virus. Read more about these stark realities here.

COVID-19 isn’t quite through with us yet. Image via AP.

One year of vaccines: Many lives saved, many needlessly lost” via The Associated Press — One year ago, the biggest vaccination drive in American history began with a flush of excitement in an otherwise gloomy December. Trucks loaded with freezer-packed vials of a COVID-19 vaccine that had proved wildly successful in clinical trials fanned out across the land, bringing shots that many hoped would spell the end of the crisis. That hasn’t happened. A year later, too many Americans remain unvaccinated, and many die. The nation’s COVID-19 death toll stands at around 800,000 as the anniversary of the U.S. vaccine rollout arrives. A year ago, it stood at 300,000. An untold number of lives, perhaps tens of thousands, have been saved by vaccination. But what might have been a time to celebrate a scientific achievement is fraught with discord and mourning.

Pfizer jabs protect 70% against hospitalization from omicron” via The Associated Press — A two-dose Pfizer/BioNTech vaccination provides just 33% protection against infection by the omicron variant of the coronavirus, but 70% protection against hospitalization, according to a large-scale analysis. The first large-scale analysis of vaccine effectiveness in the region where the new variant was discovered appears to support early indications that omicron is more easily transmissible, and that the Pfizer shot isn’t as effective in protecting against infection as it was against the delta variant. The result shows that vaccinated individuals who received two doses of the Pfizer vaccine have 33% protection against infection from omicron, relative to those who were unvaccinated. This represents a significant drop from the 80% protection against infection afforded during the earlier period, probably based on lower antibody susceptibility.

Some hospitals cancel worker vaccine requirements with Joe Biden rule tied up in courts” via Eli Rosenberg and Aaron Gregg of The Washington Post — Several hospitals are walking away from vaccine requirements for their staffs in the wake of court rulings that have blocked the White House’s vaccine rule for many health care centers. These hospital groups include Christian medical center AdventHealth, the Cleveland Clinic, Tenet Healthcare and Nashville-based HCA Healthcare, which comprise more than 300 hospitals and 500,000 employees. The hospitals all said they had instituted vaccine requirements to comply with the Biden administration’s directive that hospitals and medical centers that receive Medicaid or Medicare funding institute vaccine mandates. But now that the rule is being held up in court, they said they were dropping the requirements.

Some hospitals drop vaccine mandates while they are mired in court. Image via Federal Vaccine Response.

Vaccine mandates should be illegal, Americans say” via Margaret Talev of Axios — Half of Americans say it should be illegal for companies to deny service or employment to the unvaccinated, according to the latest Axios/Ipsos Coronavirus Index. This carries real political risk for Democrats as Biden’s mandates on federal workers and large employers meet legal challenges, and Republicans try to use mandates as a wedge issue. The survey shows there’s deep, bipartisan resistance — even from those who support vaccine and mask mandates — to imposing severe consequences on those who won’t go along. “This is sort of getting at the limits of what government can do,” said Cliff Young, president of Ipsos U.S. Public Affairs. “Biden doesn’t have strong support for these sorts of initiatives. It’s very conditional.”

— CORONA ECONOMICS —

U.S. holiday travel makes comeback with over 100 million drivers” via Chunzi Xu of Bloomberg — More than 100 million Americans are forecast to hit the road this holiday season, nearing pre-pandemic levels even as gasoline prices at the pump remain close to seven-year highs. The estimate for people planning to drive 50 miles or more between Dec. 23 and Jan. 2 represents a 28% increase from last year when lockdowns curbed traveling. But the number is still 7.3% lower than two years ago.

Holiday travel is back with a vengeance. Image via AP.

— MORE CORONA —

Omicron variant more resistant to vaccine but causes less severe COVID-19, major South African study concludes” via Lesley Wroughton of The Washington Post — Omicron appears to cause less severe illness than earlier variants of the coronavirus but is more resistant to the two-dose Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine widely used in South Africa. The study by Discovery Health, South Africa’s largest health insurer, of 211,000 positive coronavirus cases, of which 78,000 were attributed to omicron, showed the risk of hospital admissions among adults who contracted COVID-19 was 29% lower than in the initial pandemic wave that emerged in March 2020. However, the study, released Tuesday, found that the vaccine from U.S. pharmaceutical giant Pfizer and German partner BioNTech provided just 33% protection against infection, much less than the level for other variants detected in the country.

Gen Z is done with the pandemic” via Christian Paz of The Atlantic — It’s still too early to determine just how disruptive the omicron phase of the pandemic will be for most Americans. The Delta variant turned out to be much more transmissible than the original strain and stunted summer celebrations with breakthrough cases and surges in unvaccinated communities, but many of the young people I spoke with for this story told me they aren’t as worried now. Part of that response comes from pandemic fatigue, but much of this feeling is a result of the new risk calculus they have developed for how they want to live their lives. As a member of this generation, I can confirm as much from what I’ve observed among friends.

Gen Z is so over the pandemic.

Where I live, no one cares about COVID-19” via Matthew Walther of The Atlantic — I don’t know how to put this in a way that will not make me sound flippant: No one cares. Literally speaking, I know that isn’t true. But outside the world inhabited by the professional and managerial classes in a handful of major metropolitan areas, Americans are leading their lives as if COVID-19 is over. In my part of rural southwest Michigan, and in similar communities throughout the country, this is true not despite but without any noticeable regard for cases, hospitalization statistics or death reports. I don’t mean to deny COVID-19’s continuing presence. What I wish to convey is that the virus simply does not factor into my calculations or those of my neighbors.

New York feels COVID-19’s grip tighten anew as hospital cases surge 70%” via Shelly Banjo and Hannah Levitt of Bloomberg — New York’s COVID-19 hospitalizations have jumped by 70% since the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday, prompting officials and businesses alike to reassess their policies in an attempt to blunt a winter virus surge and the onset of the new omicron variant. Gov. Kathy Hochul said that the rise in hospitalizations across the state, along with a 58% jump in cases per 100,000 people during the same period, was the impetus for a new statewide indoor mask mandate for businesses without a vaccine requirement. While cases and hospitalizations had been going up mostly in upstate New York earlier in the month, the increasing trend levels are now present across the state.

Air Force discharges 27 service members in first apparent dismissals over vaccine refusal” via Alex Horton and Timothy Bella of The Washington Post — The Air Force removed 27 people for not obeying orders to get vaccinated against the coronavirus, a spokeswoman said Monday, apparently marking the U.S. military’s first dismissals of those who refuse the shots. More than 94% of the Air Force is fully vaccinated. But tens of thousands of active-duty members across all services have declined the vaccines, a show of defiance in a culture built around following orders. Many of them have sought rarely given exemptions. Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek acknowledged that those dismissed Monday were the first active-duty Air Force members discharged over the Pentagon’s vaccination requirements for military members.— PRESIDENTIAL —

Revealed: Biden administration was not legally bound to auction gulf drilling rights” via Oliver Milman of The Guardian — The Biden administration admitted that a court decision did not compel it to lease vast tracts of the Gulf of Mexico for oil and gas drilling, shortly before claiming it was legally obliged to do so when announcing the sell-off. Last month, the U.S. government held the largest-ever auction of oil and gas drilling leases in the Gulf of Mexico’s history, offering up more than 80m acres of the Gulf’s seabed for fossil fuel extraction. The enormous sale, which took place just four days after crucial U.N. climate talks in Scotland, represented a spectacular about-turn from Biden’s previous promise to halt offshore drilling and was denounced by outraged environmental groups as a “huge carbon bomb.”

Last month, the U.S. government held the largest-ever auction of oil and gas drilling leases in the Gulf of Mexico’s history. What could go wrong?

— D.C. MATTERS —

Senate Dems’ choice: Election reform first, or Biden’s megabill?” via Marianne Levine and Burgess Everett of POLITICO — During Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s leadership meeting Monday evening, Democratic Senators hotly debated how to handle their two biggest unfinished tasks. Some Democrats say they should kick both issues until next year; others argue the party’s leverage over Joe Manchin won’t improve over time and want action now. And Tuesday interviews revealed a party wrestling with how to clinch its top priorities. Sen. Raphael Warnock said he spent the weekend talking to Manchin and other Democrats about prioritizing legislation on ballot access, which he called a “moral question” that his party needs to confront.

Rick Scott denounces White House ‘lies’ amid fight over ‘charity hospital’ funding” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — “The American public is fed up with Joe Biden and his constant lies,” Scott told the Fox Business Channel denouncing White House press secretary Jen Psaki who claimed the Congressional Budget Office scoring of the Build Back Better bill was “fake” because it assumed social programs in the plan would be permanent. CBO scoring says the “true” cost of the bill is $4.9 trillion, not the $3 trillion claimed by the Biden administration. “I think it’s fake what she says. Because what comes out of her mouth is constantly a lie. Remember how the infrastructure bill was paid for? It wasn’t. Remember how this was paid for? It’s not. Remember how they’re not going to raise taxes on middle income? They are.”

Rick Scott blasts the Joe Biden administration’s ‘lies.’ Image via Spectrum News.

Spotted — Scott on Business Insider’s list of 25 richest members of Congress. He’s No. 1.

Mike Waltz, two Democrats plead for administration to help Ukraine now” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — After returning from a whirlwind research mission in Ukraine, Republican U.S. Rep. Waltz and two Democratic colleagues Tuesday implored the Biden administration to immediately get heavy weapons to Ukraine and economic sanctions prepared against Russia to deter a potential Russian invasion. “I would love to see — and would encourage and demand — the White House to take stronger moves now,” Waltz said in a virtual news conference Tuesday. “This is about speed,” agreed U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton. The trio, all military veterans, went to Ukraine over the weekend and returned late Monday. In Ukraine, they met with diplomatic officials, intelligence officials, and Ukrainian special forces, receiving briefings on the reported 125,000 Russian troops amassing along Ukraine’s eastern border.

House, Senate near agreement on Uyghur Bill aimed at China” via Daniel Flatley of Bloomberg — Lawmakers in the House and Senate are close to agreement on legislation aimed at punishing China for the alleged oppression of the Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang, according to two people familiar with the discussions. A deal would set up a potential vote on the legislation before the end of the year if Senate committees sign off and the measure can be squeezed into the schedule. Versions of the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act have passed in the House and Senate, and lawmakers in both chambers have been working to iron out differences.

— CRISIS —

D.C. suing the Oath Keepers, Proud Boys for damage caused Jan. 6” via Kyle Cheney of POLITICO — The Attorney General of the District of Columbia is suing the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, and 31 members of the far-right groups for participating in the mob that breached the Capitol on Jan. 6. It’s the first government-backed legal action against the groups whose members allegedly stormed the Capitol. Members of Congress and the Capitol Police have already filed similar suits in their personal capacities. The D.C. suit alleges a conspiracy among the groups to attack the Capitol, causing severe harm to the District of Columbia, including damage to buildings and trauma to Metropolitan Police officers.

D.C. wants the Proud Boys to pick up the tab for Jan. 6. Image via Reuters.

Two Jan. 6 organizers are coming forward and naming names: ‘We’re turning it all over’” via Hunter Walker of Rolling Stone — Two key organizers of the main Jan. 6 rally in Washington, D.C. are coming in from the cold. Dustin Stockton and Jennifer Lynn Lawrence are set to testify next week before the House select committee investigating the attack on the U.S. Capitol. The pair will deliver testimony and turn over documents, including text messages, which indicate the extensive involvement members of Congress and the Trump administration had in planning the House challenge to certifying Biden’s election and rally near the White House where Trump spoke — efforts that ultimately contributed to a massive and violent attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Enigmatic observation: Mitch McConnell says he looks forward to getting to the bottom of what happened on Jan. 6.” via Anthony Adragna of POLITICO — McConnell told reporters he’s watching the proceedings of the House Jan. 6 committee and looks forward to seeing what it finds. McConnell has been an ally of Rep. Liz Cheney, who’s faced de facto excommunication from the House Republican conference for vocally condemning Trump after Jan. 6. Cheney is now sitting on the Jan. 6 select panel formed after McConnell’s Senate GOP made a bill creating an independent riot commission its first filibuster of 2021. McConnell said he was not in contact with then-White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows or other senior officials to urge Trump to do more to stop the siege at the Capitol.

Proud Boys regroup, focusing on school boards and town councils” via Sheera Frenkel of The New York Times — Members of the Proud Boys, the far-right nationalist group, have increasingly appeared in recent months at town council gatherings, school board presentations, and health department question-and-answer sessions across the country. Their presence at the events is part of a strategy shift by the militia organization toward a larger goal: to bring their brand of menacing politics to the local level. For years, the group was known for its national profile. But since federal authorities have cracked down on the group for the Jan. 6 attack, including arresting more than a dozen of its members, the organization has been more muted. Some members and researchers said that away from the national spotlight, the Proud Boys quietly shifted attention to local chapters.

— EPILOGUE TRUMP —

What crime might Trump have committed on Jan. 6? Liz Cheney points to one.” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — Rep. Cheney’s disclosures of intriguing Jan. 6 text messages between Meadows and both Donald Trump Jr. and Fox News personalities are the big news in the committee’s investigation right now. But don’t lose sight of what Cheney said immediately after reading those texts aloud. Cheney’s comment matches the language of the statute. It states, “Whoever corruptly … obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding, or attempts to do so, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both.” That law defines an “official proceeding” as including “a proceeding before the Congress.”

Liz Cheney cites the laws Donald Trump may have broken, chapter-and-verse. Image via AP.

Trump’s longtime accountant testifies to New York grand jury in criminal probe” via David A. Fahrenthold, Josh Dawsey, Shayna Jacobs and Jonathan O’Connell of The Washington Post — A longtime accountant for Trump testified recently before a New York grand jury investigating Trump’s financial practices, according to two people familiar with that investigation. Accountant Donald Bender of the firm Mazars appeared before a grand jury that was impaneled this fall by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. to weigh potential criminal charges, the people said. In addition, in recent weeks, prosecutors have interviewed Rosemary Vrablic, a former managing director at Deutsche Bank who arranged hundreds of millions of dollars in loans to Trump. Vrablic’s interview was not before the grand jury. Instead, one person said, prosecutors pressed Vrablic about Trump’s role in dealings with the bank.

The pro-Trump conspiracy internet is moving from Facebook to your doorstep” via Sarah Mimms of BuzzFeed — Across the country, the pro-Trump conspiracy theory internet is manifesting itself into knocks at the door. Individual election deniers and grassroots groups are canvassing for election fraud in states lost or even won by Trump in 2020, including New Hampshire, Arizona, Colorado, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Florida, North Carolina, Utah, and Nebraska. Despite 60-plus court losses and countless official audits and recounts confirming the 2020 election results, many of Trump’s supporters are still so convinced of his lies that they’ve turned to this kind of vigilantism. It’s all part of a broader effort by Trump supporters to deny the 2020 election results at all costs and cast doubt on elections going forward.


— LOCAL NOTES —

Buddy Dyer: Downtown Orlando is ‘well positioned’ to grow post-pandemic” via Ryan Gillespie of the Orlando Sentinel — Facing questions from a gathering of a few hundred local and business leaders, Orlando Mayor Dyer handicapped the city’s odds of hosting World Cup matches as favorable, championed its efforts on addressing homelessness and housing affordability and pitched Orlando as a city prepared to take on a post-COVID-19 world. “The pandemic has ushered in a realignment in how people live and work,” Dyer said from a stage on the sideline of Exploria Stadium. “Downtown Orlando is well-positioned to take advantage of these new dynamics.” Dyer spoke for an hour and touched on development and business growth as well as challenges surrounding transportation, housing and homelessness.

Buddy Dyer says Orlando is poised to come roaring back.

Seminole attorney: Joel Greenberg agrees to pay nearly $1.9 million to Seminole in restitution” via Martin E. Comas of the Orlando Sentinel — Seminole County’s attorney Tuesday said he has reached an agreement with Greenberg toward the payment of nearly $1.9 million in restitution for public money that was misspent during his time in office. “I have reached a tentative agreement, a verbal agreement — and I emphasize verbal — with Joel Greenberg’s attorney for restitution in the amount of $1,870351,” county Attorney Bryant Applegate told Commissioners this morning. Applegate added that he expects the county to obtain the money during Greenberg’s sentencing scheduled for March or “prior thereto.”

Disney guests evacuated at Magic Kingdom after small fire breaks out near Cinderella Castle” via Katie Rice and Lisa Maria Garza of the Orlando Sentinel — A small fire at Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom Tuesday night prompted guests to evacuate an area of the park next to Cinderella Castle. An unsigned statement from the company said a small fire broke out in the Magic Kingdom and was quickly extinguished. Jon Shirey, President of the Reedy Creek Firefighters Association, said the call initially came into the fire department around 6:45 p.m. as an electrical fire on a junction box outside the castle. Once firefighters arrived, they saw a tree on fire next to the structure, he said. Cinderella Castle was evacuated and roped off to Disney guests. The cause of the blaze is still pending investigation by the Fire Marshal.

Manatee County candidate shares text exchange from consultant who jilted him” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A candidate for Manatee County Commission emailed supporters promising he will defy experts’ expectations. In his blast, he included a text message exchange, without permission, with a prominent campaign consultant who refused to work with his campaign. Jason Bearden, a Republican challenging County Commissioner Carol Whitmore’s re-election, sent out a fundraising pitch with the curious subject line “They Want Me to Quit and Give Up!” The expert he referenced, without naming him, was Anthony Pedicini, the Tampa-based founder of Strategic Image Management, a conservative political consulting firm. Pedicini confirms Bearden reached out to him about potentially working with his campaign, but the consultant declined to meet.

Jason Bearden won’t back down. Image via Facebook.

Teddy bears, bedroom sets and brand-new cars — what’s fueling inflation for South Florida companies?” via Tom Hudson of WLRN — There is no must-have, rush-out-to-the-store, fight-the-crowds toy this year. Nothing like what the toy industry has experienced during past holidays. Sure, there still are mass-marketed toys. Jay Foreman, the CEO at Basic Fun, a toy company based in Boca Raton, counts on a combination of nostalgia from parents or grandparents — and technology. He also knows its technology contributes to the lack of a blockbuster toy. “Everything is so fragmented from the media that the kids consume, commercials they watch, the influences they have, that it’s so micro-targeted. There’s nothing really that hot this year,” he said. But there is something that almost everything has this holiday season — inflation. And no one asks for inflation for Christmas.

FPL reveals world’s largest solar-powered battery at Manatee Solar Energy Center” via Florida Politics — It’s “the world’s largest battery when measured by generating output and the world’s largest solar-powered battery when measured by both total output and capacity per hour,” according to the company. The battery measures 409 megawatts and 900-megawatt-hours. That gives it the power of 100 million iPhone batteries and allows it to power nearly 330,000 homes for more than two hours. The biggest benefit is that it can help homes operate on solar energy even when it’s dark outside. The battery will store solar energy captured by the Manatee Solar Energy Center and keep it available for use. “It’s been a momentous year for clean energy in Florida … “ FPL President and CEO Eric Silagy said.

— TOP OPINION —

Biden seems set on making ‘transitory’ inflation last” via Gerard Baker of The Wall Street Journal — It’s welcome that Jerome Powell at least has decided to retire the term, not primarily because it was misleading, but because it was meaningless. Despite the best efforts of the current incumbents at the Fed and the White House to emulate the staggering combination of policy errors that contributed to the Great Inflation, no one serious at the moment thinks we are in for a full-on repeat. Fiscal incontinence and monetary abandon have seen the federal debt balloon this year to nearly 123% of gross domestic product and the central bank’s balance sheet explode to nearly $9 trillion. Growth will slow next year, and perhaps inflation will too, but the mismatch between monetary policy and the condition of the economy is still virtually unprecedented.

— OPINIONS —

It’s time to entertain the possibility that the Build Back Better bill won’t pass” via Henry Olsen of The Washington Post — Most pundits seem to be operating under the assumption that Biden’s Build Back Better program will eventually become law. After all, it would be very unusual for a Congress controlled by the president’s party to reject his first major domestic proposal. But given developments in the past week, it might be time to start seriously considering the chance that BBB is DOA. Manchin has long been the primary obstacle to BBB’s passage. He represents an energy-producing state, so he has a different view on the bill’s climate provisions than most Democrats. West Virginia is now staunchly Republican at all levels and voted for Trump by 39 points in 2020. To have any hope of re-election, Manchin has to show his constituents that he is fighting hard for them.

FPL’s dark-money games are backfiring” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida Power and Light has had a run of bad press lately that would make Kanye West and Urban Meyer blush. First came news of FPL payments to people connected with the state’s ghost-candidate scandal. Now come revelations that the utility’s political consultants were behind a $240,000 job offer to a city council member in Jacksonville who was standing in the way of FPL’s plans to buy the city-owned electric company. FPL says it has done nothing wrong and merely involved itself in the political process the way any great American or company might. The company also says it’s unfair to link them with any controversial actions taken by dark-money groups controlled by operatives they hired.

What Steve Schale is reading — “Nobody believes Urban Meyer. That’s why he’s failing.” via Sally Jenkins of The Washington Post — Meyer’s problem with the Jacksonville Jaguars seems to be mostly one of tone; he can’t seem to find a sincere one. Meyer has had to “address” his team, what, three times now over various mismanagement issues? But you can never pin any blame on him for a lousy performance or inner dissension. He’s cleaner than his white lies. Nobody believes a word Meyer says. He’s 2-11, he bailed on his team after a loss to go grinding in a bar, and he doesn’t even seem to know which of his players rotate in and out of the game or why.

— JINGLE, JINGLE —

White House decides against lavish Christmas parties with omicron spreading” via Emily Goodin of the Daily Mail — Biden and First Lady Jill Biden will host ‘Holiday Open Houses’ instead of cocktail parties for the holiday season, so visitors can see the decorations in the White House in a COVID-19-friendly way. “Anyone who knows the Bidens knows how much they enjoy hosting and celebrating the holidays. In the coming days, we will host a limited number of Holiday Open Houses, inviting guests to see the Christmas decorations in person at the White House,” Jill Biden’s spokesman Michael LaRosa said. “It is disappointing that we cannot host as many people as the Bidens would like to, but as we have done since Day One of the Biden administration, we will continue to implement strong COVID-19 protocols, developed in consultation with our public health advisers.”

Sorry. No lavish holiday parties at the White House this year. Image via CNN.

Fried delivers Christmas trees to DeSantis, fellow Cabinet offices” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Fried continued the annual tradition of delivering locally-grown Christmas trees to the members of the Florida Cabinet. On Friday, Fried’s team delivered trees to the offices of the Governor and the other two Cabinet positions, the Attorney General and Chief Financial Officer. “We’re proud to contribute to the joy of the season, providing our fellow Cabinet offices with locally-grown, Fresh From Florida Christmas trees,” Fried said. The Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services delivered 8-foot Carolina Sapphire trees from Bavarian Christmas Tree Farm in Tallahassee.

— ALOE —

Tweettweet:

 

— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —

Celebrating today are Ken Lawson, Sara Pennington Nuvy, and former Florida Democratic Party chair Terrie Rizzo.

___

Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter SchorschPhil AmmannRenzo Downey and Drew Wilson.


5.) MORNING BREW

December 15, 2021
Morning Brew
Athletic Greens

Good morning. How mainstream is your taste in Christmas music? Compare your faves to the most-streamed Christmas songs on Spotify this holiday season:

  1. “All I Want for Christmas Is You” by Mariah Carey (surprise!)
  2. “Last Christmas” by Wham!
  3. “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas” by the Singin’ Santa himself Michael Bublé
  4. “Jingle Bell Rock” by Bobby Helms
  5. “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” by Brenda Lee (great sax solo)

Jamie Wilde, Max Knoblauch, Neal Freyman

MARKETS

Nasdaq

15,237.64

S&P

4,634.09

Dow

35,544.18

10-Year

1.439%

Bitcoin

$47,343.03

Uber

$37.27

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 4:00pm ET. Here’s what these numbers mean.
  • Markets: Stocks stumbled yesterday as investors anxiously await an update from the Fed this afternoon. Uber shares bucked the trend after CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said the company had its “best week ever” for overall gross bookings, which encompasses its ride-sharing and delivery units.
  • Economy: The Fed will make a big announcement today about its inflation-fighting strategy. Fresh data released yesterday—showing that producer prices rose at their fastest pace on record—will put even more pressure on the central bank to wind down its stimulus measures quickly and chart out a plan to hike interest rates.

CYBERSECURITY

Companies Feel Extra Insecure Ahead of the Holidays

A computer getting hackedFrancis Scialabba

A piece of faulty software called Log4J has exposed major companies to over 1.2 million cyberattacks since last Friday, according to researchers. It’s already one of the most wide-reaching security breaches ever, and it could take years to fully fix. Awake yet?

The little-known but widely used Log4J software helps major companies, including Amazon, Apple, Tesla, IBM, and Twitter, log and track user activity across a range of applications. Now, cyberattackers are using it as a crowbar to break into computers. Once in, hackers can:

  • Extract sensitive data.
  • Mine crypto.
  • Join the computer to a “botnet”—a system of interconnected computers used to mass-send spam and perform other nefarious actions.

So far, the only company known to have been breached via Log4J is Microsoft, which had its servers for the video game Minecraft hijacked. Other companies are currently in investigation mode, so the full fallout is unknown.

Who’s getting fired over this goof?

No one. Log4J was maintained by a team of volunteers who in their free time code for the nonprofit Apache Software Foundation. It’s one of dozens of open-source, volunteer-run organizations that create the free software that underpins most major companies’ operations.

So maybe blame it on the volunteers’ day jobs that, despite the flaw reportedly existing since 2013, the team wasn’t aware of it until an Alibaba employee sent a warning on Nov. 24. Within weeks, the code was out of the bag: Details of the flaw surfaced in conversations on Chinese social network WeChat and shortly after became global news.

What now? The volunteer team has already created a patch to fix the issue, but corporate software engineers have to adapt and deploy the update. Plus, hackers who walked into servers through the Log4J door likely broke some windows while in there, allowing them to circumvent the first patch.

Big picture: The US government had already warned companies last month to stay extra vigilant against online attacks ahead of the holidays, a popular period for hackers to strike.—JW

            

COVID

Covid Speed Round

A sign saying "mask up for Xmas" in BritainChristopher Furlong/Getty Images

Omicron in the US: Omicron accounts for 3% of sequenced Covid-19 cases in the US, and it’s expected to keep spreading beyond the 33 states it’s already been found in, the CDC said. But Delta remains the dominant variant, making up 96% of sequenced cases in the country.

School’s out: Cornell is closing its campus in Ithaca, NY, and moving all of its final exams online after observing the “rapid spread” of Covid-19 among its student body.

iMask: Apple is mandating that shoppers wear masks at its stores nationwide.

The UK relaxes its travel ban: It’s taken 11 countries in southern Africa off its “travel red list,” saying there’s no point in banning travel when Omicron is already spreading widely across the world.

Sports disrupted: Professional leagues including the NBA, NHL, and English Premier League have postponed games in recent days due to Covid outbreaks. 37 NFL players tested positive for Covid on Monday (the highest single-day total since the pandemic began) and the league is now requiring coaches and some other staff to get a booster shot by Dec. 27.—NF

            

LABOR

America’s Saddest Home Videos

South Dakota teachers scramble for one dollar bills at a hockey game.Twitter/@annietodd96

So let’s get this straight: a video featuring local teachers scrambling on their hands and knees for $5,000 in one-dollar bills to use on classroom supplies was posted online and people didn’t love it?

The “dash for cash” stunt—which has received nearly 20 million views on Twitter—took place at a South Dakota junior ice hockey game last Saturday. Ten teachers (out of 31 who applied) competed in the dystopian event, stuffing their shirts with dollar bills. Teacher takeaways ranged from $376 to $616.

Critics called the event “humiliating”—a gamification of economic inequality à la Squid Game. The dash for cash was criticized for making light of a bleak American reality, similar to the game show Paid Off, in which contestants with enormous amounts of student debt compete to have it wiped out. The reality in this case: South Dakota ranks 50th in the nation for teacher pay.

The mea culpa: In a joint statement, the home team and the local mortgage lender that funded the event apologized and acknowledged that it seemed degrading to the teaching profession. They’ve since pledged an additional $500 each to all teachers involved, including the applicants who didn’t compete.—MK

            

TOGETHER WITH ATHLETIC GREENS

Putting the Green in Your Routine

Athletic Greens

You know the saying, New Year, New You? Welp, it seems that kind of resolution often evaporates after January. Good news is, we bring you the only health-minded resolution you’ll need, and one that’s easy to stick to: AG1 by Athletic Greens.

Want to make time for healthy habits in the new year and beyond? AG1 is an all-in-one nutritional powder that makes getting all your nutrients more convenient than ever before. We’re talkin’ just one daily scoop to support your immunity, gut health, energy, and healthy aging.

AG1 contains over 75 essential vitamins, minerals, and whole-food sourced ingredients to give you a multivitamin, probiotic, prebiotic, adaptogens, and more. Oh, and it tastes delish.

How’s that for a resolution routine that actually sticks?

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GRAB BAG

Key Performance Indicators

Michael Scott talking about God Giphy

Stat: 63% of US adults identify as Christians, down considerably from 78% in 2007, according to a new Pew survey on religion in America. 29% of US adults say they have no religion at all, up from 16% in 2007. “The secularizing trends that have been evident for a long time show no signs of slowing, certainly no signs of reversing,” Greg Smith, the author of the study, said.

Quote: “More befitting the Mediterranean than the Arctic.”

The UN confirmed a temperature reading of 100.4 Fahrenheit taken last summer in the Russian town of Verkhoyansk—a new record high for the Arctic. The Arctic region is warming more than 2x faster than the global average, the UN said.

Read: Inside Tinder’s wild $441 million breakup. (Morning Brew)

            

ECONOMY

What Your Inflation Take Says About You

Expectations around inflation tend to fluctuate depending on factors like age, income, and Hogwarts house (OK, not that one)—and the differences can be pretty significant.

The November results of the New York Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations—which measures what different groups think the median inflation rate will be in three years—revealed that Americans…

  • Under 40: expect inflation to hit 3.5%
  • Over 60: expect inflation to hit 4.7%
  • Making less than $50k: expect inflation to hit 4.4%
  • Making more than $100k: expect inflation to hit 3.4%

Why the big difference? Because we all live in different circumstances. More so than the youths, older Americans tend to rely on fixed incomes and personal savings, which suffer disproportionately from inflation. Similarly, an increase in the price of everyday goods hurts lower-income people more than those with higher salaries.

Zoom out: Inflation expectations are watched closely by economists because, for instance, if workers anticipate prices will rise in the future, then they may rally for higher wages, which in turn could generate more inflation. The Fed will try to manage those expectations with its big policy update later today.—MK

            

WHAT ELSE IS BREWING

  • Congress voted to raise the debt ceiling, just one day before the US potentially would have defaulted on its IOUs. The measure raises the debt ceiling by $2.5 trillion.
  • Domino effect: Employees at two Starbucks locations in the Boston area filed for union elections after workers at three Buffalo-area Starbucks locations voted to unionize last week.
  • Dogecoin prices spiked up to 40% at one point yesterday after Elon Musk said Tesla will accept the token as payment for some merch.
  • Goldman Sachs could increase its bonus pool for investment banking by 50% this year, and JPMorgan could juice theirs by 40%, per Bloomberg.

BREW’S BETS

So much crypto. With eToro, you can browse over twenty cryptocurrencies and even experiment with a virtual portfolio before opening your e-wallet. Even better, eToro will give you $10 when you invest in $100 of crypto. .*

What’s on your 2022 career checklist? If you’ve got a new salary, new title, and new opportunities on your list, you need to sign up for the CMA® (Certified Management Accountant) certification. Make a BOLD career move in 2022 and .*

The internet is breaking our brains. Crooked Media’s weekly series Offline with Jon Favreau examines society’s online habits and explores ways we can regain control over our hyperconnected world. Listen now.

The 2021 retrospectives are coming fast and furious: Here is the year in groceries, China’s top buzzwords and internet slang, the best films of 2021, and a recap of noteworthy events.

Nic Cage playing Nic Cage: Sign us up.

*This is sponsored advertising content

GAMES

The Puzzle Section

Word Search: Connect ugly Christmas sweater designs to famous movies and TV shows in today’s puzzle. Play it here.

2020 or 2021?

The final two years have been…how should we say this…a bit of a blur. We’ll give you a notable event and you have to figure out whether it happened in 2020 or 2021.

  1. The first Covid vaccine dose was administered
  2. The storming of the Capitol building
  3. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle said they would “step back” from the British royal family
  4. The Brood X cicada emergence
  5. Strange monoliths were discovered in Utah, California, and Romania
  6. Bill and Melinda Gates announced their divorce
  7. Italy beat England at the Euro soccer tournament

ANSWER

1) 2020 2) 2021 3) 2020 4) 2021 5) 2020 6) 2021 7) 2021
✤ A Note From eToro

eToro USA LLC; Investments are subject to market risk, including the possible loss of principal. This promotion is available in the USA only.

          
Written by Neal FreymanJamie Wilde, and Max Knoblauch

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6.) THE FACTUAL

15 DEC 2021

The Factual

Facts, not fear.

TRENDING TOPICS
Killer’s brain analysis • DOJ prosecutes professor • Belarusian activist jailed • Antarctic glacier collapse risk • FDA nominee evaluated
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#1 in U.S. News • 18 articles

Why did former NFL player Phillip Adams commit a mass-killing?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    Former NFL player Phillip Adams, who shot to death six people and killed himself, suffered from CTE.
    USA Today (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 75% • 5 min read

    CTE, the neurodegenerative disease linked to concussions and repetitive head trauma from contact sports, has been associated with behavioral and mood changes. In 2017, the Boston University CTE Center reported that 110 of the 111 [NFL] players they’d examined suffered from CTE.

    Of the possible link between violence and CTE, [Ann McKee, a neuropathologist who led the examination of Adams’ brain] said, “We have even seen homicidal behavior in other individuals diagnosed with CTE. It’s difficult to say that it alone resulted in these behaviors because usually it’s a complicated issue with many other factors.”

    Adams was “desperately” seeking help from the NFL, according to a statement from his family. “He wasn’t a monster. He was struggling with his mental health,” [said Adams’ sister]. McKee said “the holy grail of our research” would be to find a way to detect CTE in living people because it would provide the ability to monitor how the disease responds to specific therapies. CTE can be diagnosed only after death.
  1. Different political viewpoint
    Autopsy finds former NFL player accused of shooting six suffered from CTE.
    Washington Examiner (Moderate Right) • Factual Grade 69% • 2 min read
  1. Selected long-read
    Exactly how dangerous is football? (2020)
    New Yorker (Left) • Factual Grade 78% • 22 min read

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TODAY’S POLL

Would you allow your teenager to play tackle football?

All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PDT

YESTERDAY’S POLLShould Covid-19 vaccine mandates have religious exemptions?

521 votes, 76 comments

Context: Supreme Court declines to block New York’s removal of religious exemptions from a Covid-19 vaccine mandate.

HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS

 Yes – There are many people of faith who struggle with the fact that the vaccines were tested or produced using material that comes from previously aborted fetuses. While there are ways to produce and test vaccines without the use of these cell lines, the companies producing the vaccines don’t appear to want to use them. People try to live their faith the best they can, and there are many things out of their control […] This is something they can personally control that goes against their faith, and the constitution protects that.

 No – There are multiple vaccines that these medical workers have been required to receive in the past that have also used cells derived from…

 Unsure – I can say that, as a Christian, it would be nice for there to be an exemption from obeying an order to put a specific substance i…

#2 in U.S. News • 6 articles

Why is a former Havard professor facing trial for alleged ties to China?

Dr. Charles Lieber, the former chairman of the department of chemistry and chemical biology at Harvard University, received $15 million in…
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Why was the husband of a Belarusian opposition leader sentenced to prison?

The court found Syarhei Tsikhanouski, a 43-year-old video blogger, guilty of organizing mass unrest and of inciting social hatred, and handed him one of the longest jail…
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#1 in Science News • 23 articles

What would be the impact of the Thwaites glacier collapsing?

Thwaites glacier in western Antarctica is the widest glacier on Earth, spanning about 80 miles and extending to a depth of about 2,600 to 3,900…
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#1 in Health News • 8 articles

How are Senators receiving President Biden’s pick for FDA commissioner?

Ranking members of the [Senate] panel expressed solid confidence in Dr. Robert Califf, signaling that his confirmation to the commissioner’s post for a second time might r…
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UPDATES & BREAKING NEWS

HIGHLY CREDIBLE, UNDER-REPORTED STORIES

EDITOR’S PICKS

Highly-rated article from left-leaning source

Time Magazine • Grade 75%

Person of the Year 2021: Elon Musk.

Highly-rated article from right-leaning source

Commentary Magazine • Grade 82%

Limited government is back in fashion. Can Republicans make the most of it?

9,257 Articles Analyzed Visit The Factual

7.) LIBERTY NATION

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FROM OUR NEWSROOM

Wednesday’s Breaking News

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Living In a Dream – DNC Celebrates a Fading Biden
By Mark Angelides

Did someone spike the punch at this year’s Democrat holiday extravaganza?

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“A sharp tongue is the only edge tool that grows keener with constant use.”

– Washington Irving

Democrat Mayors Say Don’t Believe Your Lyin’ Stats on Crime
By Sarah Cowgill

Belabored politicos push back against the facts.

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Today’s Political Meme

Sometimes, you just need to laugh!

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Happy Bill of Rights Day! Tell a Kid About Our Rights Today
By Scott D. Cosenza, Esq.

Can civics make a comeback?

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Democrats Pass $2.5T Debt Ceiling Increase Thanks to Republicans
By James Fite

National debt continues to spiral out of control – and Congress doesn’t care to fix it.

Click Here

What’s New In Liberty Nation MemberZone

From the Liberty Nation Studios

The Great Anti-Work Movement – Swamponomics – TV – Is the recent anti-work movement a temporary blip in the American economy, or is it foreshadowing a long-term economic crisis? by Andrew Moran – Watch Now

Spin Over Substance at Biden-Putin Summit – LN Radio Videocast – Did this conference yield any results, or did the discussion lack substance? by Liberty Nation Staff – Watch Now

Liberty Nation On The Go: Listen to Today’s Top News 12.15.21
By Liberty Nation Staff

Conservative News – Hot Off The Press – Audio Playlist – AD FREE

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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.

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8.) FOX NEWS

 


9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

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10.) THE FEDERALIST PAPERS

Web version
Liz Cheney Accidentally Undercuts Entire Purpose of Jan. 6 Committee by Releasing Mark Meadows’ Texts
Posted by Isa Cox, The Western Journal
This does not look good for the Jan. 6 committee. Read more…
WH Press Secretary Jen Psaki Absurdly Blames Dramatic Increases in Meat Prices on ‘the Greed of Meat Conglomerates’
Posted by Steve Straub
WH Press Secretary Jen Psaki went into full ‘Baghdad Bob’ propaganda mode today by absurdly claiming that the recent dramatic surge in meat prices is caused by the greed of… Read more…
Cartoon Explains True Meaning of Phrase ‘Happy Holidays,’ This Will Drive Leftists Crazy
Posted by Steve Straub
A new cartoon hilariously explains the true meaning of the phrase “happy holidays’ in a way that will make secularists on the left crazy with rage. Take a look at… Read more…
Watch: Biden Can’t Stop Saying 13-Letter Word That Is Nowhere in the English Language
Posted by Isa Cox, The Western Journal
Imagine if Trump did this. Read more…
DeSantis Reveals Biden’s Disturbing ‘Human Smuggling Operation’
Posted by Jack Davis, The Western Journal
‘The Biden administration puts people on planes and flies them into Florida in the wee hours of the morning.’ Read more…
Andrew Cuomo Ordered to Pay the Piper to the Tune of Millions
Posted by Abby Liebing, The Western Journal
‘It is ordered that by no later than 30 days from the date of this resolution, Gov. Cuomo pay over to the attorney general of the State of New York an amount equal to the compensation paid to him for his outside activities related to the book.’ Read more…
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11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE

AEI’s daily publication of independent research, insightful analysis, and scholarly debate.
AEI scholars’ work is made possible by generous individuals, foundations, and corporations that share our core values. Support our scholars by making a tax-deductible donation to AEI.

Congress and COVID-19: We needed leadership; they gave us cash
Philip Wallach | American Enterprise Institute
When legislators were confronted with the threat of COVID-19, they managed to put aside partisan differences and pass several major laws negotiated by congressional leaders. Congress did not, however, resolve any of the most contentious political issues created by the pandemic.
Full Story
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Get used to Putin’s power plays — at least until 2024
Leon Aron | The Hill
Vladimir Putin’s main audience is internal. His brinkmanship is directly linked to what is described in Russia as “Problem 24” — namely, the fulfillment of Putin’s paramount goal to become president for life in 2024, when, at 72, he will start yet another six-year term.
Full Story
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We need to do hard but necessary things to tackle inflation
R. Glenn Hubbard | The New York Times
Policymakers must acknowledge that taming inflation is likely to require reining in demand. Monetary policy should become less conducive to growth, which would be better than the more aggressive approach that could prove necessary if higher inflation persists deep into next year.
Full Story
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Biden’s Build Back Better bill could decimate the childcare landscape
Frederick M. Hess | Education Week
Many families rely on faith-based childcare centers — but those providers are in peril under the Build Back Better bill’s current language.
Full Story
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Economics, Housing, and Poverty
Building an entrepreneurial ecosystem is about a lot more than education and science funding
James Pethokoukis | AEIdeas
Are unemployment benefits the best stimulus for jobs? Not in 2021
Matt Weidinger | AEIdeas
Life in 2050, as seen by ‘deep tech’ venture capitalists
James Pethokoukis | Faster, Please!
Will inflation tank the housing market — and the economy?
Paul H. Kupiec | AEIdeas
Will the Fed be caught flat-footed?
Desmond Lachman | Barron’s
The horrifying misuse of foster care
Naomi Schaefer Riley and Greg McKay | Commentary
Housing finance: Insights on the new normal (week 50, 2021)
Edward J. Pinto and Tobias Peter | American Enterprise Institute
Comment letter to the Employee Benefits Security Administration: Proposed rule on prudence and loyalty in selecting plan investments and exercising shareholder rights
Benjamin Zycher | US Department of Labor
Foreign Policy and Defense
The empty rhetoric at the Summit for Democracy
Danielle Pletka | The Dispatch
Olympics officials are playing China’s game. Should they face sanctions?
Michael Mazza | The Hill
New defense budget commission could be the last hope for fixing DOD spending
William C. Greenwalt | Breaking Defense
The left should end its Iran hypocrisy
Michael Rubin | Washington Examiner
Supporting the Afghan resistance is an American interest
Michael Rubin | The National Interest
Politics, Society, and Culture
‘The Dawn of Everything’ review: Wrong from the start
Tunku Varadarajan | The Wall Street Journal
Disaster of the Senate
Matthew Continetti | Commentary
The media made themselves ‘enemies of the people’ by interfering in the 2020 election
Peter J. Wallison | Washington Examiner
Congress can prevent another January 6 by updating a key elections law
Kevin R. Kosar | The Hill
The good news for the GOP is only temporary
Jeremi Suri and Samuel J. Abrams | Politico
What are the real third places?
Samuel J. Abrams | National Review
Health Care and Technology
Employer-sponsored insurance, part II: If you can’t be with the coverage you love, love the one you’re with
Thomas P. Miller | AEIdeas
How is cybersecurity law being constructed? Highlights from my conversation with Jim Dempsey
Shane Tews | AEIdeas
Education
How Uncle Sam writes the rules for schools
Frederick M. Hess | Education Week
Podcasts
Santa on trial
John Yoo, Richard A. Epstein, and Troy Senik | “Law Talk”
The 3 whiskey happy hour: Staring down stare decisis, with guest bartender John Yoo
John Yoo, “Lucretia,” and Steve Hayward | “Power Line”

12.) THE FLIP SIDE

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Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Kentucky Tornadoes

“President Joe Biden said on Monday he will visit hard-hit Kentucky on Wednesday to survey damage from deadly tornadoes that devastated a broad swath of the state… At least 64 people, including six children, lost their lives in Kentucky, with power still out for thousands and strangers welcoming survivors who lost everything into their homes.” Reuters

“An employee of the Kentucky candle factory where eight workers were killed by a tornado said Tuesday that a supervisor threatened her with written disciplinary action if she went home early because storms were approaching.” AP News

From the Right

The right argues that faced with a tornado people should shelter in place, not leave, and pushes back against claims blaming the disaster on climate change.
“It would have been a violation of safety protocols for managers to have allowed people to leave. Most people who die during a tornado are killed by flying debris. Keeping people from driving home in a tornado is simply common sense — unless you want to frame the story as evil capitalists deliberately trying to murder helpless workers… When the siren sounds or you see a funnel, [you] seek shelter immediately. The workers asking to leave were wrong, and to paint the response of company managers in any other light than an attempt to save lives is nothing more than cynical politics. The managers had no idea whether a tornado would touch down or when and took the only sensible precaution; stay indoors, hunker down, and pray.”
Rick Moran, PJ Media“The historical record shows that over past decades, heavy [EF3+ strength] tornadic activity has steadily decreased even as carbon emissions increased. The last peak came in the late 1960s and early 1970s when we were being warned about the dangers of global cooling and the possibility of another ice age being upon us… Also, it’s worth noting that tornadic outbreaks in December are not rare…“We live on a continent that generates a lot of tornadic storms. They’ve been recorded for as long as we’ve had a country, and some parts of the country are worse than others. We had a serious spike of E3+ tornadoes in 2011 and people tried to blame it on climate change then, also. That was followed by five years where the number was roughly one-third as many and you didn’t hear a peep out of anyone.”
Jazz Shaw, Hot Air“Global deaths resulting from climate-related disasters — floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, droughts, wildfires, and extreme temperatures — averaged nearly half a million every year in the 1920s. By the 2000s, we averaged fewer than 14,000 deaths worldwide every year from these same disasters. As nations continue to develop and become wealthier, those numbers will keep falling, as they have nearly every decade for the past century…

“The drop has been more precipitous in the United States than elsewhere. In 1942, the year Biden was born, 384 Americans died in tornadoes, even though far fewer Americans lived in their paths. Last year, 76 Americans died in tornadoes. The year Biden first ran for office, 555 people died in floods. Last year, 57 Americans did…

“Critics will point out that the declining death numbers are due to innovation, early warning systems, better infrastructure, and more mobility. The answer to this contention is, ‘You’re right.’ That’s the point. Adaptation to climate change has been driving innovation since the first person put on a thatched roof. Human history has been a long fight to get out of the bad weather, and adaptation is a lot more affordable than overturning modernity.”
David Harsanyi, National Review

From the Left

The left condemns the companies for putting their workers at risk and argues that climate change makes extreme weather events more likely.
“‘People had questioned if they could leave or go home,’ one [Mayfield Consumer Products factory] employee told NBC News in an interview. But, she said, they were warned: If they left, they were ‘more than likely to be fired.’ When a powerful tornado did bear down on the factory, it was so strong that there was nowhere safe to hide… When the storm cleared, eight people on site were dead and eight others were missing. Three hours north, in Edwardsville, Ill., a similarly powerful tornado hit an Amazon warehouse, killing six people…

“These disasters cannot be separated from the overall political economy of the United States, which is arguably more anti-labor now than it’s been at any point since Franklin Roosevelt signed the Wagner Act in 1935. A society organized for capital — a society in which most workers are denied a meaningful voice in their place of employment — is a society where some workers will be exposed, against their will, to life-threatening conditions… As the sociologist Oliver Cromwell Cox once wrote, ‘The people are not free when a relatively few masters of industry could deny them control of their resources’ — and to that, one might add control of their selves.”
Jamelle Bouie, New York Times

“Many [Amazon] workers, all of whom requested anonymity to protect their jobs, said they had never had a tornado or even a fire drill over the course of their careers at Amazon, dating back up to six years. Several expressed that they would be unsure of what to do in an emergency. In one case, an Amazon contractor, fearing Hurricane Ida, asked to go home early but was told that leaving would adversely affect their performance quota…

“[Former employee LeeAnn] Webster said that Amazon’s safety problems extend far beyond extreme weather preparedness. In Minnesota, recent reporting by the National Employment Law Project found that Amazon warehouse workers are injured at more than double the rate of non-Amazon warehouses in the state.”
Ken Klippenstein, The Intercept

“In February, a freakish cold spell in Texas killed more than 200 people and left millions without power. In March, a crippling sandstorm — caused by worsening desertification — turned the Beijing sky an eerie orange. In June, an unprecedented heat wave sent temperatures in the Pacific Northwest soaring into the triple digits…

“No smoking gun proves climate change played a role in the tornadoes that destroyed a 275-mile swath of the nation’s heartland… [But] We should remember that climate is nothing but weather over long periods of time. And we should take this year’s brutal events as an urgent warning. By continuing to spew heat-trapping carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, we’re daring nature to do its worst. I fear the consequences are just beginning.”
Eugene Robinson, Washington Post

On the bright side…

The real life ‘Aristocats’ of St. Petersburg’s Hermitage Museum.
CNN

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13.) AXIOS

Axios AM

🐪 Hello, Wednesday. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,198 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.

🩺 At 12:30 p.m. ET today, please join Axios’ Sam Baker and health care editor Tina Reed for a virtual event on building climate resilience in health care. Register here.

1 big thing: Booster gap traps millions
Data: CDC. Chart: Will Chase/Axios
Data: CDC. Chart: Will Chase/Axios

Health officials are stressing the importance of coronavirus vaccine booster shots as the Omicron variant spreads around the world. But millions of vaccinated Americans aren’t yet eligible for another dose, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes.

  • Some experts warn that giving a booster shot too soon could diminish its effects.

Why it matters: Two doses of Pfizer or Moderna vaccines (or one J&J) aren’t very protective against Omicron infection, according to preliminary data — although they likely prevent severe illness.

Where it stands: Anyone 16 and older who got their second Pfizer or Moderna shot at least six months ago is eligible for a booster shot in the U.S., as are people who received a J&J shot at least two months ago.

  • But 58 million Americans received their second shots within the last six months, per CDC data.
  • Children ages 5-11 just became eligible for vaccines last month, meaning none of them are yet eligible for a third shot.

⚡ Adults in the U.K. are now eligible for booster shots three months after their second dose, rather than six.

2. Companies give up on return-to-office
Featured image

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

In the 22 months since U.S. companies sent workers home, they’ve collected droves of poll data, paid billions to workplace consultants, and drafted plan after plan.

  • But they still know little more about post-pandemic work than in March 2020, Erica Pandey writes for Axios What’s Next.

“[E]mployees are wanting transparency. They want a plan,” says Brad Bell, director of the Center for Advanced Human Resource Studies at Cornell. “But every time we think we’re coming out of this, and companies go to flip the switch on return-to-work, something comes up.”

  • In June, Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman said he’d be “very disappointed” if his workforce wasn’t back in the office by Labor Day 2021.
  • But this week, he told CNBC: “I was wrong on this. … Everybody’s still finding their way.”

Firms that have pushed back return-to-work dates in the past week include Ford, Lyft and DocuSign, The New York Times’ Emma Goldberg writes in “The End of a Return-to-Office Date” (subscription).

  • DocuSign’s planned return on Jan. 10 — now postponed — was its fourth attempt at setting a date to bring employees back.

Share this story.

3. Fox hosts target 1/6 committee
Texts Mark Meadows turned over: Graphic: January 6th Committee

Two Fox News prime-time hosts tore into the House’s 1/6 investigative committee last night as they spoke about their own texts during the siege.

  • Their texts had been turned over to the committee by former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows.
  • The hosts spoke 24 hours after committee Vice Chair Liz Cheney read the texts aloud during a hearing on holding Meadows in contempt.

Last night, Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham both played tape of themselves on 1/6 as they condemned violence.

  • Ingraham said: “The more they talk about January 6th, the stronger Trump and the GOP are becoming in the polls.”
  • Hannity spoke next to a graphic saying: “SHAM COMMITTEE.”

The House voted 222-208 just after 11 p.m. to hold Meadows, a former House member, in contempt of Congress for refusing to comply with a subpoena from the 1/6 committee.

  • Only two Republicans — Cheney and Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois — joined Democrats in voting for the resolution.

Committee Chair Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) said during the floor debate: “[I]f you’re making excuses to avoid cooperating with our investigation, you’re making excuses to hide the truth from the American people about what happened on January 6th.”

Graphic: AP

⚡ Reality check: An AP review of every potential case of voter fraud in the six battleground states disputed by former President Trump has found fewer than 475 — a number that would have made no difference in the 2020 presidential election.

  • President Biden won Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin and their 79 Electoral College votes by a combined 311,257 votes out of 25.5 million ballots cast for president.
  • The disputed ballots represent 0.15% of his victory margin in those states.

Go deeper: State-by-state breakdown.

4. Pics of the day
Photo: Rod Lamkey/CNP/Sipa USA via Reuters

Congressional leaders — both chambers, both parties — hold a moment of silence on the Capitol steps last evening, as America’s COVID death toll passed 800,000Video.

Photo: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), who holds the fate of President Biden’s Build Back Better agenda in his hands, is followed to his car by reporters after voting yesterday.

5. First woman NYPD commissioner
Featured image

Cover: New York Post

New York Mayor-elect Eric Adams chose Keechant Sewell — chief of detectives in Nassau County, on Long Island — as his NYPD commissioner.

  • Why it matters: Sewell, 49, will be the first woman and third Black commissioner in the New York City Police Department’s history.

Adams, a former NYPD captain, will be inaugurated Jan. 1 at the 92-year-old Kings Theatre in Flatbush, Brooklyn.

  • “Keechant Sewell is a proven crime fighter with the experience and emotional intelligence to deliver both the safety New Yorkers need and the justice they deserve,” Adams told the New York Post.
6. Tesla tests Dogecoin
Illustration: Dado Ruvic/Reuters

Elon Musk says Tesla will experiment with accepting the cryptocurrency Dogecoin for merchandise — but he didn’t mention cars.

  • Why it matters: Musk has 66.5 million Twitter followers, and his continuing embrace of crypto helps fuel alternative finance.

Musk tweeted“Tesla will make some merch buyable with Doge & see how it goes.”

Dogecoin (pronounced DOHJ-coin) raced up after the tweet, Reuters reports.

  • Musk’s tweets on Dogecoin, which started as a joke, have helped the meme coin soar 5,859% over the past year, according to Coinbase data.

Backstory: Tesla said in February that it had invested $1.5 billion in Bitcoin, and reported $1.26 billion in “digital assets” at the end of Q3.

  • Tesla said in the February disclosure that it planned to begin accepting Bitcoin for products soon. But Musk tweeted in May that Tesla had “suspended vehicle purchases using Bitcoin,” citing “increasing use of fossil fuels for Bitcoin mining and transactions.”
7. Cyberthreat: A world without trust
Cover: Foreign Affairs

Jacquelyn Schneider, a Hoover Institution fellow, writes in a special “Digital Disorder” issue of Foreign Affairs (Jan./Feb.) that the foremost danger posed by cyberattacks is the way they “undermine the trust that undergirds modern economies, societies, governments, and militaries”:

The key to success in cyberspace over the long term is not finding a way to defeat all cyberattacks but learning how to survive despite the disruption and destruction they cause.

Keep reading … Explore the issue.

8. 📷 1 for the road: Instagram @ 2 billion
Data: Axios research. Chart: Will Chase/Axios
Data: Axios research. Chart: Will Chase/Axios

Instagram hit 2 billion monthly active users worldwide this fall, Axios Media Trends author Sara Fischer writes from a CNBC report.

  • Why it matters: Instagram joins an exclusive club of just four social apps that have hit that milestone. Meta owns three of the four.

What to watch: In hitting 2 billion users, Instagram has proven it can still grow despite increased competition, notably TikTok.

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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON

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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES


16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Criticism of Vice President Kamala Harris on influential Spanish-language talk radio programs in South Florida …
America’s Newspaper
December 15, 2021

   

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In this Thursday, June 21, 2018, file photo, Ever Castillo (left) and his family, immigrants from Honduras, are escorted back across the border by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents in Hildalgo, Texas. The U.S. Justice Department is in talks to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars to each child and parent who was separated under a Trump-era practice of splitting families at the border. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip) ** FILE **

GOP lawmakers seek to block Biden’s repayments for illegals

A group of GOP lawmakers on Tuesday moved to block taxpayer money going to illegal immigrants, which the Biden administration … Read More

By Mica Soellner

Top Headlines

 

Congress sends Biden $2.5T debt limit hike, avoiding default

By Brian Slodysko – Read More

Biden calls for passage of stricter gun laws on anniversary of Sandy Hook massacre

By Jeff Mordock – Read More

Another place VP Harris isn’t popular: Spanish-language talk radio in Florida

By Dave Boyer – Read More

Crime-weary business owners turn to private security after Portland defunds police

By Emily Zantow – Read More

Bailed-out airline chiefs face lawmakers amid rising cancellations, soaring complaints

By Dave Boyer – Read More

LinkedIn offers stripped-down service in China in face of official repression

By Ryan Lovelace – Read More

Opinion

 

Elites use COVID-19 to build wealth, flaunt virtue as middle America suffers

By Kelly Sadler – Read More

Stop the witch hunt, stop the assault on executive privilege

By Peter Navarro – Read More

Demographic winter: The plague of the century

By Don Feder – Read More

Politics

 

House votes to hold Mark Meadows in contempt of Congress

– Read More

Immigrant from the Bahamas charged with casting illegal ballots in North Carolina

By Stephen Dinan – Read More

FDA pick Robert Califf pledges to make COVID-19 task ‘No. 1’

By Tom Howell Jr. – Read More

Security

 

As Army hits mandate deadline, services ponder next moves

By Mike Glenn – Read More

Illegal immigrant Russians nabbed making run at U.S. border

By Stephen Dinan – Read More

Biden’s senior adviser on migration stepping down, report says

By Jeff Mordock – Read More

Sports

 

House committee demands NFL come clean after latest Snyder expose

By Matthew Paras – Read More

Beal’s slow start threatens to turn into an inexplicable lost year

By Matthew Paras – Read More

Capitals’ attendance remains strong amid leaguewide decline

By Jacob Calvin Meyer – Read More

 

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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

 

Subscribe to the Magazine View this as website
BY HUGO GURDON AND DAVID FREDDOSO
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HIGHLIGHTS

Biden in Trump’s shadow as Jan. 6 committee homes in on allies

Biden in Trump's shadow as Jan. 6 committee homes in on allies

More than a year into his administration, President Joe Biden is still living in his predecessor’s shadow as the Jan. 6 House Select Committee investigates former President Donald Trump and his closest aides over the violent storming of the U.S. Capitol.

Republicans jockeying for primary position answer Trump’s call to oppose McConnell

Republicans jockeying for primary position answer Trump's call to oppose McConnell

Opposition to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is quickly becoming an issue in Republican primaries as insurgent conservatives jockey for advantage.

Doctors caution CDC against changing ‘fully vaccinated’ standard for now

Doctors caution CDC against changing 'fully vaccinated' standard for now

Doctors have warned that a move by the federal government to include COVID-19 vaccine boosters in the standard definition of “fully vaccinated” would have enormous unintended consequences for guidance, restrictions, and mandates, as well as for private businesses.

Laura Ingraham fires back at media ‘hacks’ and Liz Cheney over Jan. 6 messaging

Laura Ingraham fires back at media 'hacks' and Liz Cheney over Jan. 6 messaging

Fox News host Laura Ingraham went on the offensive against members of the media, who she says mischaracterized her messaging during the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, as well as Rep. Liz Cheney.

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Hospitals reconsider vaccine mandate amid staffing shortages

Hospitals reconsider vaccine mandate amid staffing shortages

Major hospital systems across the country are quietly scrapping their vaccine mandates amid worker shortages and growing confusion as to whether such requirements on the national level are even legal.

Industry hopes to delay return of net neutrality by blocking Biden FCC nominee

The telecom and broadband industries hope to block a left-wing Federal Communications Commission nominee in order to delay Democratic-backed regulations.

Number of US adults who identify as Christian drops 12% in 10 years

Number of US adults who identify as Christian drops 12% in 10 years

The religious identity of the United States is changing, with the number of U.S. adults who identify as Christian dropping 12 points in 10 years, according to a new study.

OJ Simpson’s Nevada parole ends early

OJ Simpson's Nevada parole ends early

O.J. Simpson will get to celebrate Christmas as a free man for the first time in over a decade.

Man who threatened to shoot Pelosi in the head sentenced to 28 months in prison

Man who threatened to shoot Pelosi in the head sentenced to 28 months in prison

A man who sent text messages suggesting he had plans to kill House Speaker Nancy Pelosi after the Capitol riot on Jan. 6 was sentenced to 28 months in prison.

WATCH: New York state attorney general wants to follow California lead with new gun law

WATCH: New York state attorney general wants to follow California lead with new gun law

New York state Attorney General Letitia James says she wants liability for gun manufacturers and gun distributors and would be in favor of new state legislation that allows individuals to sue those who put guns on New York’s streets.

Catholics flood Pelosi’s office with roses in hope she has ‘conversion of heart’ on abortion

Catholics flood Pelosi's office with roses in hope she has 'conversion of heart' on abortion

A Catholic bishop in California is asking fellow Catholics across the country to send House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat, roses until she changes her stance on abortion.

THE ROUNDUP

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The LPGA Drive On Championship would be Feb. 3-5 at Crown Colony Golf Club. Although the contract is still not signed, the GM termed it “imminent.”
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Chicago Tribune
VIEW IN BROWSER DECEMBER 15, 2021 CHICAGOTRIBUNE.COM

DAYWATCH

Good morning, Chicago.
The U.S. has reached another disheartening pandemic milestone — 800,000 COVID-19 deaths — and we’re learning more about the new omicron variant.
The proportion of U.S. coronavirus cases caused by omicron has increased sharply, according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the new variant could lead to a significant surge in infections as soon as January.
Data from South Africa, where the new variant is already driving a COVID surge, indicates omicron appears to be more easily transmitted but cause less severe disease than previous versions of the coronavirus.
Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day.

1

Little Village residents slam city for failing to reduce influx of industry: ‘As if we don’t deserve clean air’

Little Village is home to more than two dozen industrial facilities — asphalt plants, rock and metal-crushing facilities, oil and gas facilities, and of course, warehousing — that use medium or heavy-duty diesel trucks.

Residents on Chicago’s Southwest Side say respiratory issues are common and are calling on the city to install air monitoring systems and enact a moratorium on warehouse development.

2

CPS says new ‘boys+’ and ‘girls+’ bathroom signs are gender inclusive; petition seeks to rescind policy

Chicago Public Schools has directed school leaders to post signs the district says make it “clear that our restrooms are open for use to anyone who feels comfortable in that space.”

CPS officials and health professionals answered questions about the new signs — which have drawn criticism from some parents — in an hourlong online session Tuesday. “Boys+” facilities have stalls and urinals, while “girls+” restrooms just have stalls. All who “feel comfortable” can use those bathrooms, but one CPS principal noted Tuesday that it’s “not a free-for-all.”

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3

Chicago affordable housing project headed to council vote despite alderman’s objection

Aldermen ignored a colleague’s opposition to a Far Northwest Side apartment complex with affordably priced units Tuesday, giving the project a key approval and dealing a blow to Chicago’s tradition of council members calling the shots in their own wards.

The City Council Zoning Committee approved the Glenstar O’Hare development by a 12-5 vote, despite local Ald. Anthony Napolitano arguing it isn’t a good fit for the area just east of O’Hare International Airport. The proposal will head to the full council Wednesday.

4

Disorder. Dysfunction. Disappointment. As the Chicago Bears’ systemic failures continue, one proposed remedy has become common: ‘You clean house.’

At 4-9 and with only one victory in the last 66 days, the Bears again are in free fall with their parachute not activating, Tribune reporter Dan Wiederer writes. Around the NFL, most observers are merely waiting for the “Splat!”

Make no mistake: Significant change is likely coming. That wave already has begun building at Halas Hall. The question is when it will crash and just how much of the shore it will wipe clean.

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5

‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ review: Tom Holland is a very good Spidey as Marvel tangles with the multiverse

Tribune critic Michael Phillips writes that casting Tom Holland as Peter Parker was “one of the sharper decisions to emerge” from the Marvel Cinematic Universe:

“Holland provides the glue and the webbing for the latest Spidey outing.”


21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES

Christmas tree ship is ultimate mission for many in Coast Guard

#607・ 
Chicago Sun-Times Morning Edition
Good morning, Chicago —
Here’s the latest news from around the area on this unseasonably warm morning.
In Chicago, the U.S. Coast Guard is famous for its annual delivery of Christmas trees from Northern Michigan. This year, the Sun-Times joined the crew of the Mackinaw for part of their trip, sailing overnight to Navy Pier, where more than 1,000 trees were unloaded for families in need. Read more on a coveted Coast Guard assignment with roots back to the 19th century.
Administrators at Taft High School on the Northwest Side recently shot down an attempt by a right-wing group to form a chapter at the school, describing it as “an organization promoting racial intolerance.” In a letter to parents, Principal Mark Grishaber said he was “disturbed” by Turning Point USA’s efforts to open a chapter at Taft, which he said “will never tolerate the formation of any group that does not support” the school’s mission statement to “educate global citizens to create a better world.”
And putting the cherry on top of a championship year for Candace Parker, the Chicago Sky star announced yesterday that she’s expecting a baby with her wife, Anna Petrakova. “We’ve always dreamed of growing our family,” Parker wrote on Instagram. “It’s surreal that we now have a baby on the way! Lailaa is pumped to be a big sister.”
Get even more news below, and thanks for reading.
Satchel Price, assistant audience engagement editor
Christmas tree ship is ultimate mission for many in Coast Guard

Right-wing group’s attempt to open at Chicago high school rejected

Candace Parker announces she is expecting a baby with wife Anna Petrakova

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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT

The Hill's Morning Report
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White House chief of staff Mark Meadows speaks with reporters in October, 2020

© Associated Press/Patrick Semansky

 

 

Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Wednesday! 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 each morning this week: Monday, 797,348; Tuesday, 798,710; Wednesday, 800,473. In the United States, 2021 is ending with loss (The Associated Press).
The House on Tuesday voted to hold former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows in contempt, headlining a busy day on Capitol Hill that included action to raise the debt ceiling and questions about whether Democrats are making any progress to win Sen. Joe Manchin’s (D-W.Va.) vote for the Build Back Better agenda.

 

Lawmakers voted to hold Meadows, a former conservative member from North Carolina, in criminal contempt for noncompliance with a subpoena and failure to provide some information to the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. Members voted largely along party lines, 222-208, with Reps. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) and Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.), who are members of the panel, breaking party ranks (The Hill).

 

The vote took place after the committee released a second batch of text messages from allies begging Meadows on Jan. 6 to try to persuade former President Trump to quell the rioters.

 

“The President needs to stop this asap,” one unidentified GOP lawmaker wrote to Meadows.

 

On Tuesday, Cheney read aloud a number of explosive text messages Meadows received amid the Capitol attack from Donald Trump Jr. and a number of Fox News hosts making similar pleas of Trump via Meadows. The former chief of staff asserted this week that messages he had turned over to the panel were “selectively leaked” to the public.

 

“We’ve tried very hard, in [a] very transparent and accommodating way, to share non-privileged information,” Meadows told Newsmax’s “Rob Schmitt Tonight.” “And what we found out tonight is that not only did that just get disregarded, but then they tried to weaponize text messages, selectively leaked them, to put out a narrative, quite frankly, that the president didn’t act. … And I can tell you this: The president did act” (Daily Beast).

 

As The Hill’s Niall Stanage writes in his latest Memo, the disclosed messages help make the case for defenders of the committee who believe the more information that comes to light about the worst attack on the Capitol in more than two centuries, the better.

 

The Hill: Meadows falsely claims that Trump “acted quickly” to stop the Jan. 6 riot.

 

The New York Times: Cheney embraces role in Jan. 6 inquiry, holding up an unsparing mirror to the GOP.

 

The Hill: Congress passes bill allowing for easier National Guard defense of Capitol after Jan. 6.

 

On Tuesday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who has laid the blame for the Capitol attack squarely at the feet of Trump, told reporters that he is keeping an eye on the committee’s work and is intrigued with what it will unearth.

 

”It will be interesting to reveal all the participants who were involved,” McConnell said in the Capitol (Politico).

 

HuffPost: A QAnon believer who threatened to shoot Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) was sentenced to 28 months in prison.

 

The Washington Post: The D.C. attorney general sues the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers over the Jan. 6 attack.

 

The Wall Street Journal: Trump loses bid to shield tax returns from Congress.

 

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., walks to the chamber

© Associated Press/J. Scott Applewhite

 

 

Meanwhile, Congress moved early today to raise the debt limit by a deadline described by the Treasury Department and provided lawmakers a breather in the debt battle until after next year’s midterm elections. Senate Democrats, acting without GOP support, voted 50-49 to increase the limit by $2.5 trillion to a cap of $31.4 trillion (The Hill and Reuters). The House followed early today by a vote of 221-209 (The Hill). President Biden will sign the measure.

 

“As I have said repeatedly, this is about paying debt accumulated by both parties, so I’m pleased we came together to facilitate a process that has made addressing the debt ceiling possible,” Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) said before the upper chamber voted.

 

The Associated Press: Senate votes to raise debt limit by $2.5 trillion, avoiding U.S. default.

 

However, Senate Democrats are staring down trouble on the legislative front because White House and Democratic leaders can’t nail down Manchin’s support for the party’s nearly $2 trillion social spending and climate package.

 

Manchin on Tuesday indicated that talks on Monday and Tuesday with Biden have not allayed his reservations, putting into further peril Schumer’s goal of passing the Build Back Better Act by Christmas.

 

“I wouldn’t say that,” Manchin told CNN when asked if Biden is moving him closer to voting for the bill. The West Virginia centrist has differences with the administration over the child tax credit, the scope and projected 10-year costs of the legislation.

 

According to The Hill’s Alexander Bolton, the situation has created a divide among Democrats over how hard to push Manchin. Progressives, including Sens. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), both members of leadership, favor an aggressive approach. However, moderate members counsel patience and maintain that a vote before Christmas is unnecessary and that time is needed to get the bill done.

 

“I don’t know that that’s absolutely essential,” said Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.), adding that it’s “fine” if the bill is postponed until 2022. “I think what’s more important is what’s in it rather than the time frame.” 

 

However, unless the measure is signed into law before the new year, the government’s monthly child tax credit payments, supported by most Democratic lawmakers, will expire (CNBC).

 

Schumer on Tuesday did not promise a vote on the mammoth blueprint next week.

 

Jordain Carney, The Hill: Democrats push Manchin on the “nuclear option” for voting rights.

 

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., leaves his office

© Associated Press/J. Scott Applewhite

 

A MESSAGE FROM CHARTER

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LEADING THE DAY
CORONAVIRUS: Federal officials believe a significant wave of omicron infections looms because so many people in the United States are unvaccinated against COVID-19, or are vaccinated but have yet to obtain booster doses. “Everything points to a large wave. A large wave is coming,” a senior administration official told Axios“It will be fast. It won’t be as severe, but regrettably, there will be plenty of hospitalizations,” the official added.

 

> Deliberate speed: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that the omicron variant needed just weeks to become 3 percent of all confirmed U.S. COVID-19 cases (The Hill). … In the United Kingdom, omicron is spreading so fast it has the potential to overwhelm Britain’s hospitals (The Associated Press). … As COVID-19 cases surge, Apple announced it is requiring customers and staff to wear masks at all Apple stores (The Hill). … Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y., moved on Tuesday to shut down its campus amid a “rapid spread” of COVID-19 cases among students. Classes moved online and in-person events and athletics are canceled (The Hill). … JP Morgan Chase & Co. told unvaccinated workers to stay home: “It seems unfair to require our vaccinated employees to wear masks all day at their desks” (The Wall Street Journal).

 

> Pfizer wants emergency use approval from the Food and Drug Administration for its coronavirus antiviral treatment pill Paxlovid, which the company said on Tuesday has been shown in a clinical trial to protect against severe illness, and is likely to work to mitigate the severity of infection with the omicron variant (The New York Times). The pills are taken with an older antiviral, ritonavir, every 12 hours for five days beginning shortly after onset of symptoms. Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said Tuesday that Paxlovid is not a substitute for COVID-19 vaccines, and he encouraged people to get jabbed.

 

This image shows SARS-CoV-2 virus particles

© National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases – Rocky Mountain Laboratories via Associated Press

 

IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
ADMINISTRATION: Biden today will survey parts of Kentucky that will take years to recover and rebuild after being flattened by weekend tornadoes that killed at least 88 people in five states, while many more remain missing. He will repeat his pledges that all available help will be provided by the federal government to Kentucky and other states that declared disaster emergencies because of the powerful December storms.

 

“Tens of thousands are still dealing with water, gas or power outages. Families are in shock and grief over the loss of loved ones,” McConnell said on Tuesday. “Rebuilding the areas of Kentucky leveled by this storm will take months, if not years, to complete” (Lexington Herald-Leader).

 

The Associated Press: On a single Kentucky street in a Bowling Green subdivision, a tornado killed seven children. Fourteen people died within a few blocks.

 

The entire Kentucky congressional delegation was invited to fly on Air Force One with Biden today to meet with first responders, victims’ families and to view the extent of the destruction, according to the White House.

 

On Monday, Gov. Andy Beshear (D) said he expected the price tag of a full recovery to be “in the hundreds of millions of dollars at least.” But the exact amount won’t be known for a while, as government officials and emergency workers continue to focus on searches for the missing and navigating needed shelter, food and medical attention for thousands of people who have been displaced in Kentucky and other affected states. The death toll in Kentucky remained at 74 late on Tuesday.

 

> On Tuesday, Biden hosted 10 current and incoming mayors at the White House for meetings, greetings and outreach from Cabinet departments and Vice President Harris. Attendees included Mayor Jim Ross of Arlington, Texas; Mayor-elect Andre Dickens of Atlanta; Mayor Michelle Wu of Boston; Mayor Tim Kelly of Chattanooga, Tenn.; Mayor-elect Justin Bibb of Cleveland, Ohio; Mayor-elect Aftab Pureval of Cincinnati, Ohio; Mayor-elect Daniel Rickenmann of Columbia, S.C.; Mayor-elect Eric Adams of New York City; Mayor-elect Bruce Harrell of Seattle; and Mayor-elect Ken Welch of St. Petersburg, Fla.

 

The State Department would get a new office and envoy position to combat Islamophobia globally, if the House gets its way. Up in arms about anti-Muslim rhetoric and behavior by a small number of GOP colleagues, lawmakers on Tuesday passed a bill to expand the executive branch focus on mistreatment of Muslims worldwide (The Hill).

 

******

 

POLITICS: Democrats are fretting that the continued spread of COVID-19 could do harm to Biden’s political standing and that of the party ahead of the midterm elections and as the U.S. passes the two-year mark since the virus entered the public sphere.

 

As The Hill’s Amie Parnes reports, Democrats have a new term to describe both their political fears and Biden’s falling approval ratings: COVID-19 incumbency disadvantage. In addition, their angst goes beyond the midterms to prospects for the Democratic Party to hold the White House in 2024.

 

According to recent polls, Americans are still confused about the messaging on vaccinations, their overall efficacy and when life will return to normal.

 

“It could continue. That’s the fear,” said Democratic strategist Joel Payne“For any politician in office, there’s going to be a COVID incumbency disadvantage. COVID belongs to all of those people. COVID is going to be the thing that’s always poisoning the well.”

 

Payne added that there’s likely going to be a “real come to Jesus moment” for Democrats about vaccine politics. A recent ABC News/Ipsos survey showed that while 53 percent of Americans approve of Biden’s handling of the COVID-19 response, 45 percent disapprove, the biggest drop for Biden since a March survey when 72 percent of Americans said they were pleased with Biden’s pandemic response.

 

Democrats at the state level are also confronting whether to institute vaccine mandates. Although the Biden administration continues to beat the drum that is its directive for federal workers and large employers, there are indications of hesitancy by some Democratic governors to follow suit.

 

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) reportedly told business leaders in Montcalm County that she understood concerns about the mandates, adding that if a federal vaccine requirement were to take effect, “we’re going to lose state employees.”

 

Politico: “They’re sick of masks”: Democratic governors fight COVID-19 fatigue.

 

Reid Wilson, The Hill: States plan challenges to federal vaccine mandates.

 

The Associated Press: New York ethics board tells former Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) to return money from his $5.1 million book deal.

OPINION
After Ron Johnson’s Listerine push, no product is certain it won’t be billed as COVID-19 treatment, by Alexandra Petri, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3GKff9e

 

Postcards from a world on fire: The planet is failing, as seen and described in a global pictorial project in The New York Times opinion section. https://nyti.ms/3GIW53w

A MESSAGE FROM CHARTER

 

We believe internet access for all means opportunity for everyone. That’s why we’re investing billions to extend our network to reach those who need it most.

WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 11 a.m. Pelosi will hold her weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m.

 

The Senate convenes at 10 a.m. to resume consideration of the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal 2022.

 

The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 8 a.m. Biden will fly to Fort Campbell, Ky., to survey tornado damage. He will then travel to Mayfield, Ky., to get a disaster briefing from local leaders at 11:25 a.m., then tour a neighborhood. The president will travel to Princeton, Ky., to tour a neighborhood in hard-hit Dawson Springs, Ky., at 2:30 p.m., followed by remarks at 3 p.m. before returning tonight to the White House.

 

First lady Jill Biden will travel to New York City for a Forbes 50 over 50 and “Know Your Value” event at 1 p.m. This afternoon, Dr. Biden, second gentleman Doug Emhoff and U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy will arrive in Wisconsin, where they will visit the children’s hospital in Milwaukee at 4 p.m. local time to meet workers who cared for COVID-19 patients as well as the victims of the November Waukesha Christmas Parade tragedy. They will also meet children who will have just received COVID-19 shots. At 6 p.m. CT, the trio will meet first responders and families who lost loved ones when a fleeing driver barreled through the Waukesha parade route, killing six and injuring at least 18 children. The first lady, Emhoff and Murthy will return to Washington tonight.

 

The Federal Reserve will release a statement at 2 p.m., and Chairman Jerome Powell will hold a press conference at 2:30 p.m. following the central bank’s final meeting of 2021. Bloomberg News noted what to expect.

 

The White House COVID-19 response team will brief reporters at 11 a.m.

 

📺 Hill.TV’s “Rising” program features news and interviews at http://thehill.com/hilltv or on YouTube at 10:30 a.m. ET at Rising on YouTube.

ELSEWHERE
➜ INTERNATIONAL: What could possibly be next for disaster-ravaged Haiti? On Tuesday, at least 75 people died and dozens were injured in Cap-Haïtien when a gasoline tanker truck exploded in a fireball and overturned on a street (The Associated Press).

 

➜ OUTER SPACE & DEEP OCEAN: NASA revealed on Tuesday that in April, its Parker Solar Probe (rendition below) “touched” the sun, plunging through the unexplored atmosphere known as the corona about 8 million miles from the sun’s center. The data gathered through several passes by the probe took months to make its way back to Earth. Because the sun lacks a solid surface, exploring the magnetically intense corona region can help scientists better understand solar activity that can interfere with the watery blue marble that circles it every year (The Associated Press). … And speaking of Earth, scientists are increasingly worried that the Southern Ocean is ominously signaling that global warming is affecting the Antarctic current in complex ways, and shifts could complicate the ability to fight climate change in the future. The circular flow of water around Antarctica is, in effect, a climate engine spinning on a continental scale (The New York Times).

 

This image shows an artist's rendering of the Parker Solar Probe approaching the Sun

© Steve Gribben/Johns Hopkins APL/NASA via Associated Press

 

 

➜ STATE WATCH: In California, a state-sponsored market in wood products made from small trees could help store carbon, fund forest treatments and create material for affordable housing, according to a study from the University of California at Berkeley. The study aims to bridge a gap in California’s forest policy (The Hill).

 

 COURTS: O.J. Simpson is a free man -– officially. The former football legend’s parole in Nevada ended effective on Dec. 1, making him fully free following his 2008 conviction for armed robbery in Las Vegas. Simpson was granted parole in July 2017 as part of the minimum sentencing, and was subsequently released from prison three months later (ESPN). … Arizona officials on Tuesday asked the Supreme Court to permit its law criminalizing abortions based on genetic conditions to take effect, the latest high-profile case to put the issue of reproductive rights before the nation’s highest court. A federal district judge temporarily blocked enforcement of Arizona’s law in September and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit upheld that decision last month (USA Today).

THE CLOSER
And finally … 🦓 After four months on the run in Maryland suburbs, two zebras, the known survivors from an original trio that escaped in August from an exotic animal farm in the state, have been caught and were later seen outdoors at an Upper Marlboro, Md., farm (The Washington Post). The Department of Agriculture and Prince George’s County Animal Services said they learned on Monday that the much-publicized zebras had been recovered without official federal or county assistance and had been returned to their herd last week.

 

The pair were part of a trio that escaped from a large farm where at least 30 zebras live, authorities said. One of the escaped zebras was found dead in September in an illegal snare trap on a neighboring property.

 

The two zebras on the loose in PG County have been found

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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT

 


24.) ROLL CALL

Image

Morning Headlines

ImageShort-term advancements in data science combined with long-term shifts in how Americans vote are making swing districts increasingly rare. Months away from the first primary elections, it appears more House races will unfold in districts where one party holds a significant advantage. Read more…

ImageDemocrats cleared legislation Wednesday to raise the statutory debt limit by $2.5 trillion, an amount intended to give the Treasury Department enough borrowing room to make it past the midterm elections and into 2023. The House voted 221-209 to send the measure to President Joe Biden. Read more…

Where have you gone, Richard Nixon?

 

ImageOPINION — On Jan. 6, 1961, Vice President Richard Nixon presided over the formal counting of electoral votes that guaranteed his defeat in the 1960 presidential election. “Those who lose accept the verdict and support those who win,” Nixon said on the Senate floor. Whatever happened to the honorable America he personified? Read more…

Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.

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Senate membership shows how the parties have changed

 

ImageANALYSIS — Changes in Senate membership between the 107th and 117th Congresses offer a clear picture of what’s happened to the two parties, Stuart Rothenberg writes: Democratic senators aren’t noticeably more liberal or progressive than they were in 2001-2003, but the other side of the aisle has changed much more profoundly. Read more…

Optimism waning in Senate about budget reconciliation vote this month

 

ImageSenate Democrats on Tuesday softened their optimism that their party’s sweeping safety net and climate spending and tax package will pass before Christmas, citing uncertainty about whether Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-W.Va., is ready to support it and procedural steps that are far from complete. Read more…

House votes to hold Meadows in contempt of Congress

 

ImageThe House on Tuesday voted 222-208 to hold former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows in criminal contempt of Congress for refusing to cooperate with the Jan. 6 select committee’s investigation. The panel took issue with Meadows releasing a book about his White House experience and then refusing to testify with the committee. Read more…

Burnout among pharmacists slows COVID-19 boosters

 

ImageFacing a shortage of pharmacists, drugstores nationwide are urging people to make appointments for COVID-19 shots rather than walking up — even as the Biden administration promotes vaccination as the key to ending the pandemic and relies on pharmacies as the main supplier. Read more…

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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK

POLITICO Playbook: A junkie’s guide to the 2022 midterms

Presented by

DRIVING THE DAY

BREAKING OVERNIGHT — The House voted 222-208 to hold MARK MEADOWS in contempt of Congress and make a criminal referral to the Department of Justice. Just two Republicans — ADAM KINZINGER (Ill.) and LIZ CHENEY (Wyo.) — voted for the resolution, seven fewer than the nine Republicans who supported the recent contempt of Congress vote regarding STEVE BANNON. More from Nicholas Wu for Congress Minutes

— Elsewhere, Fox News hosts SEAN HANNITY and LAURA INGRAHAM on Tuesday night began to address their text messages to Meadows on Jan. 6 — and their subsequent coverage of the riot. (Their critics won’t be mollified.)

SETTLING (MOST) FAMILY BUSINESS — It took them a while, but Democrats have finally dealt with most of the tricky debt and spending issues that prevented them fully focusing on the Biden legislative agenda.

The Senate passed a debt limit increase of $2.5 trillion Tuesday afternoon, and the House followed suit just after midnight. Congress should be freed from addressing the issue again until 2023.

A final vote on the long-stalled NDAA is likely in the Senate today. Congress has funded the government through mid-February. It shouldn’t exactly get a big pat on the back for doing the basics, but the three issues were all cleared with some degree of bipartisanship and less brinkmanship and drama than expected.

The next big hurdle for Democrats? JOE MANCHIN.

Marianne LeVine and Burgess Everett expertly break down Manchin’s (D-W.Va.) role as the key to moving both President JOE BIDEN’s Build Back Better and voting rights legislation:

“During Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER’s leadership meeting on Monday evening, Democratic senators hotly debated how to handle their two biggest unfinished tasks. Some Democrats say they should kick both issues until next year; others argue the party’s leverage over Manchin won’t improve over time and want action now. And Tuesday interviews revealed a party wrestling with how to clinch its top priorities. …

“Manchin is not yet committed to the $1.7 trillion climate and social safety net legislation, nor does he support changing the Senate rules to push through an elections bill on a simple majority. He spoke with Biden Monday about the domestic spending bill and met with a trio of Democrats Tuesday to discuss voting rights and the rules changes needed to pass it, signs that the West Virginia Democrat is still open to casting his critical vote for both measures.

“Manchin is expected to speak to Biden again soon and also discussed voting rights legislation in Tuesday’s full caucus meeting, according to attendees.”

Some key quotes:

— Sen. RAPHAEL WARNOCK (D-Ga.): “Voting rights should be the very next thing we do.”

— Sen. ELIZABETH WARREN (D-Mass.): “There’s no policy reason they have to be linked, but they do come down to the same person.”

— Schumer: “There’s a strong belief in the Senate that we can restore the Senate and at the same time deal with voting rights, and that’s what we’re aiming to do.”

— Sen. BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.): “We want both of them, but voting rights has more of a time issue because there are states already developing their district mapping. If we don’t move quickly it could be too late.”

— Sen. CHRIS MURPHY (D-Conn.): “There’s productive conversations happening about voting rights. Nothing’s landed yet. Just like there’s productive conversations happening on Build Back Better.”

There’s no white smoke from the upper chamber yet about where Manchin will land on either issue. We’ve long been bullish that some version of the reconciliation bill will pass, even if it’s trimmed further. The odds for voting rights legislation are longer. But given Manchin’s continued reluctance to come around on either front after months and months of talks, the possibility that Democrats will fail to pass both bills is becoming more real.

Good Wednesday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael BadeEugene DanielsRyan LizzaTara Palmeri.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — DOUG SOSNIK was an adviser to BILL CLINTON for six years, and for some dozen years he has written regular memos about national trends that have attained something of a cult following among political junkies. We know many of our readers are fans of his wonky missives, so we’re pleased to present Sosnik’s latest memo, “A Look Ahead to the 2022 Midterm Elections and Beyond,” exclusively to the Playbook audience.

A key focus for Sosnik in determining the outcome of the midterms is where things stand in late summer of next year, when views about the economy and the direction of the country “harden” and it’s too late for the Biden administration to change them.

That gives the president just six to eight months to turn things around. Pay attention to employment numbers (June 3, July 8, Aug. 5), inflation data (June 10, July 13, Aug. 10) and the University of Michigan consumer confidence data released July 15 and Aug. 12.

Sosnik has a nice rundown and summary of what he calls the “Five Myths About American Politics in the Age Of Trump” that are well worth your time and attention:

1) DONALD TRUMP’s victory in 2016 was an aberration.
2) Demography is destiny, and that is good for the Democrats.
3) A higher turnout is always good for Democrats.
4) The Trump presidency has realigned the suburbs toward the Democratic Party.
5) Trump has pushed independents into the arms of the Democratic Party.

On the 2022 Senate races, he focuses on the fact that Democrats could be lucky that the GOP is barreling toward nominating a series of out-of-the-mainstream candidates in primaries in several key states. There’s a nice clip-and-save primary calendar to keep handy:

— Ohio (open, Portman): May 3 primary
— North Carolina (open, Burr): May 17 primary
— Pennsylvania (open, Toomey): May 17 primary
— Alabama (open, Shelby): May 24 primary
 Georgia (Warnock): May 24 primary/June 21 runoff
 Nevada (Cortez Masto): June 14 primary
 Arizona (Kelly): Aug. 2 primary
 Missouri (open, Blunt): Aug. 2 primary
 Wisconsin (Johnson): Aug. 9 primary
 New Hampshire (Hassan): Sept. 13 primary

A few more tidbits:

— On 2022 House races: “If the Republicans pick up a net of 35 seats next year — a distinct possibility — they would achieve their highest total of members in the House since 1929. However, the Republican win total could be somewhat tempered by the nationalization of our politics, in addition to their unexpected success in the 2020 House elections when they picked up a net of 14 seats.”

— On 2022 governor’s races: “If the Republicans pick up any of the presidential battleground states in the industrial Midwest (Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin), they will take total control of government in these states and, with this power, they could determine the voting procedures and counts in the next presidential election.” Read the whole thing

BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY (Eastern times):

— 8 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.

— 9 a.m.: Biden will leave the White House for Fort Campbell, Ky., arriving at 11:10 a.m. He’ll survey the tornado damage with an aerial tour at 11:35 a.m.

— 12:05 p.m.: Biden will arrive in Mayfield, Ky., where he’ll get a briefing from local leaders at 12:25 p.m. and tour a neighborhood at 1:45 p.m.

— 2:35 p.m.: Biden will leave Mayfield and head to Princeton, Ky., before touring a neighborhood in Dawson Springs, Ky. He’ll deliver remarks there about his administration’s response to the storms at 4 p.m.

— 5:10 p.m.: Biden will leave Princeton and eventually arrive back at the White House at 7:30 p.m.

Principal deputy press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE will gaggle on Air Force One on the way to Kentucky. The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 11 a.m.

THE SENATE is in. THE HOUSE is out.

PLAYBOOK READS

ALL POLITICS

SURVEY SAYS — Three years out from the next presidential election, voters of each party are largely sticking by their 2020 men, at least for now, our latest POLITICO/Morning Consult poll shows.

On the Republican side, seven in 10 voters think Trump should probably or definitely run again. That’s compared to a less-than-commanding 63% of Democrats who think the 79-year-old Biden should seek reelection. Bad news for both men: A majority of independent voters are hoping neither runs, with 59% saying no to Trump and 67% saying Biden shouldn’t seek a second term.

If Biden steps aside, his second-in-command would have a plurality of Democratic support, according to the poll. Thirty-one percent of Democratic voters said they would back VP KAMALA HARRIS, while 11% would support Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG. Warren and Rep. ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ (N.Y.) both pick up 8% of support. Toplines … Crosstabs

THE COVID OFF-RAMP — Democratic governors were already barreling straight into a perilous midterm election. But a building winter Covid surge is putting many of them in a greater bind. Now, Democrats are “searching for an off-ramp to the pandemic that allows them to sell a brighter future to voters next November,” Zach Montellaro reports in New Orleans.

ONE BIG 2020 ELECTION REVIEW — The AP looked into the six battleground states where Trump attempted to dispute the 2020 election results and “found fewer than 475 [cases of potential voter fraud] — a number that would have made no difference in the 2020 presidential election,” Christina Cassidy writes. “Biden won Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin and their 79 Electoral College votes by a combined 311,257 votes out of 25.5 million ballots cast for president. The disputed ballots represent just 0.15 percent of his victory margin in those states. The cases could not throw the outcome into question even if all the potentially fraudulent votes were for Biden, which they were not, and even if those ballots were actually counted, which in most cases they were not.”

THE PANDEMIC

TAKING STOCK — POLITICO’s Recovery Lab is launching a new state-by-state pandemic scorecard, evaluating how well different parts of the country have handled the past 21 months. Among the findings: No state did well in every policy area. States that imposed more restrictions such as stay-at-home orders and mask requirements did experience lower rates of death and hospitalizations. But they also tended to have worse economic and educational outcomes. Check out the valuable and complex analysis here.

A GRIM MILESTONE — The U.S. coronavirus death toll surpassed 800,000 on Tuesday — “a sad coda to a year that held so much promise with the arrival of vaccines but is ending in heartbreak for the many grieving families trying to navigate the holiday season,” AP’s Heather Hollingsworth reports.

AND ANOTHER SURGE INCOMING? — “The omicron variant is already spreading rapidly in the United States and could drive a massive wave of infections as soon as January,” write WaPo’s Meryl Kornfield, Paulina Villegas, Andrew Jeong, Annabelle Timsit, Ellen Francis and Lena Sun.

CONGRESS

LIBERTARIANISM MEETS DISASTER RELIEF — After Sen. RAND PAUL (R-Ky.) swiftly sought federal aid after the tornado that hit Kentucky this weekend, WaPo’s Mike DeBonis writes that the move “conjured memories of Paul’s own lengthy history of opposing congressional legislation written to address past disasters, including bills passed following hurricanes Sandy, Harvey and Maria directing billions of dollars of assistance to stricken Americans.”

JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH

CENTER-STAGE CHENEY — NYT’s Catie Edmondson and Luke Broadwater profile Cheney’s performance on the Jan. 6 committee: “In closed-door interviews held in a nondescript federal office building near the Capitol, Ms. Cheney has emerged as a leader and central figure on the panel, known for drilling down into the details of the assignment she views as the most important of her political career. She is well-versed in the criminal code and often uses language borrowed from it to make clear she believes the former president and others face criminal exposure.”

CAN YOU HEAR ME NOW? — JOHN EASTMAN sued to block Verizon from handing over his phone data and messages to the Jan. 6 committee, per BloombergThe lawsuit

TRUMP CARDS

ANOTHER LAWSUIT SCRAPPED — A federal judge rejected Trump’s lawsuit that aimed to prevent congressional Democrats from obtaining information about the former president’s tax returns, Josh Gerstein and Kyle Cheney report. The ruling “is a boost for the House Ways and Means Committee, chaired by Rep. RICHARD NEAL (D-Mass.), which has been seeking Trump’s tax returns since the middle of 2019.”

TRUMP PROBE HEATING UP — Sources tell WaPo’s David Fahrenthold, Josh Dawsey, Shayna Jacobs and Jonathan O’Connell that Trump’s accountant DONALD BENDER recently spoke to a New York grand jury that’s investigating Trump’s finances. A former Deutsche Bank employee who handled loans to Trump, ROSEMARY VRABLIC, was also interviewed by prosecutors, they write.

These latest moves “suggest prosecutors are seeking information about Trump’s finances from a small circle of outside partners who handled details of Trump’s taxes and real estate deals. Bender and Vrablic were never Trump’s employees, but they knew more about his company’s inner workings than many employees did.”

— NYT’s William Rashbaum, Ben Protess and Jonah Bromwich write that the documents compiled by Trump’s accountants “could help answer a question at the heart of the long-running criminal investigation into the former president: Did he inflate the value of his assets to defraud his lenders?”

PLAYBOOKERS

Elon Musk ripped into Elizabeth Warren after she tweeted that the U.S. should “change the rigged tax code so The Person of the Year will actually pay taxes and stop freeloading.” “You remind me of when I was a kid and my friend’s angry Mom would just randomly yell at everyone for no reason,” Musk replied. Then: “Please don’t call the manager on me, Senator Karen.” Followed by: “If you opened your eyes for 2 seconds, you would realize I will pay more taxes than any American in history this year.” And: “Don’t spend it all at once … oh wait you did already.”

Cory Booker walked through the Senate subway “blasting Mariah Carey’s ‘All I Want For Christmas Is You’ from Spotify on his phone.” (h/t Andrew Desiderio)

Bob Menendez was rushing to make a vote on the Senate floor when he slipped, fracturing and dislocating his shoulder.

Andrew Cuomo was given 30 days to pay back his $5.1 million book deal after New York’s state ethics board found he’d used state resources to write the book.

Luann de Lesseps of “Real Housewives of New York” fame dined and dashed at Le Diplomate, but ended up paying her bill after N.Y. Mag’s Shawn McCreesh called her publicist.

The NYT published an “editor’s note” for the ages atop a story originally published last month about a Palestinian professor of poetry.

OMICRON DASHES WHITE HOUSE HOLIDAY PARTIES — The White House is canceling its glitzy holiday party season in response to the Omicron spread, The Daily Mail’s Emily Goodin scoops. “President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden will host ‘Holiday Open Houses’ instead of cocktail parties for the holiday season, so visitors can see the decorations in the White House in a COVID-friendly way,” she writes.

Michael LaRosa, Jill Biden’s spokesman, told Goodin it’s “disappointing that we cannot host as many people as the Bidens would like to,” but the administration will continue to abide by Covid protocols.

SPOTTED at the White House: lawyer and former “The View” co-host Star Jones (h/t theGrio’s April Ryan). Ryan reports that Jones met with the VP for “30 mins catching up & talked policy that impacts women, girls and young people of color.”

OUT AND ABOUT — Almost every White House correspondent and member of the Biden press team got together (under D.C. Covid guidelines!) at the JW Marriott for the annual White House Correspondents’ Association holiday reception Tuesday night. As per tradition, there was a Christmas poem themed for D.C., a speech from WHCA president Steve Portnoy and a little roast from White House press secretary Jen Psaki.

— The Motion Picture Association and Bloomberg hosted a screening of “House of Gucci” at the MPA’s headquarters Tuesday night. After the screening, Bloomberg’s Peggy Collins sat down with Bloomberg’s Sara Forden to discuss her book on which the screenplay is based. SPOTTED: Charles Rivkin, Emily Lenzner, Sena Fitzmaurice, Cameron Normand, Andrew Reinsdorf, Kira Alvarez, Emorie Broemel, Wes Kosova, Anna Edgerton, Jackie Simmons, Mike Shepard, Heather Podesta, Stephen Kessler, Tammy Haddad, Giuditta Giorgio, Giuseppe Sarcina, Lamberto Moruzzi, Pascal Confavreux, Georgette Brammer-Hardy, Matea Gold, Jenn Molay, Michael Anthony, Berin Szóka, Christina Sevilla and Izzy Klein.

— The Renew Democracy Initiative held a “Frontlines of Freedom” dinner Tuesday night at the Watergate, which featured an off-the-record conversation about Russian aggression, Ukraine and America’s role in protecting democracy. SPOTTED: Garry Kasparov, Rep. Andy Kim (D-N.J.), Heidi Heitkamp, Michael Steele, Rina Shah, Bill Kristol, Lucy Caldwell, Alex Vindman, Max Boot, Mona Charen, Linda Chavez, retired Gen. Stanley McChrystal, retired Gen. Michael Hayden, retired Lt. Gen. James Clapper, Bill Taylor, Matt Calkins, David Frum, Dmitri Mehlhorn, Annie Scranton and Alex Yergin.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The University of Chicago Institute of Politics is announcing its winter fellows: GOP strategist Mark Campbell, former San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz Soto, former Chicago inspector general Joe Ferguson, former MoveOn executive director Anna Galland, TOLONews’ Lotfullah Najafizada and journalist/author Sarah Smarsh.

— John Campbell is joining Red Edge to launch its fundraising practice. He’s an alum of FreedomWorks and Prosper Group.

MEDIA MOVE — Jen Friedman is now VP of comms at NBCUniversal. She most recently was managing director for public affairs at Blackstone. More from The Hollywood Reporter

TRANSITIONS — Corinne Day is now deputy comms director for Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.). She previously was media relations manager at the R Street Institute, and is an RNC alum. … Tom Gannon is now chief government relations officer at H&R Block, heading the D.C. office. He most recently was VP of public policy at Mastercard. … Wells Griffith is now a senior director for FTI Consulting’s strategic comms segment. He most recently was managing director and senior adviser to the CEO for energy at the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, and is a Trump NSC, NEC and DOE alum. …

… Adam Golodner is now a senior adviser at WestExec Advisors. He previously was at Arnold & Porter, and is a Cisco and DOJ alum. … Alifair Masters is now deputy chief of staff for Rep. Jimmy Gomez (D-Calif.). She previously was VP at HM Consulting. … Zach Farmer is joining the Council for Opportunity in Education as director of congressional affairs. He most recently was in Rep. Warren Davidson’s (R-Ohio) office, covering education, veterans and other issues.

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Alex Schriver, EVP at Targeted Victory, and Tracey Schriver, SVP at the Bank Policy Institute, welcomed Virginia Lee Schriver on Monday. Pic … Another pic

— Elizabeth Boylan, director of government and industry affairs at FMC Corporation, and Patrick Boylan, founder of Raconteur Creative, recently welcomed baby James. Pic

— Natalie Buchanan Joyce, deputy chief of staff for member services to House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, and Sean Joyce, CEO of Atlas Crossing, welcomed Jameson Buchanan Joyce on Dec. 7. He came in at 7 lbs, 10 oz, is named after both of his grandfathers, and joins big sister Genevieve.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) … retired Gen. John Allen of Brookings … Ruy Teixeira (7-0) … Donna Brazile … POLITICO’s Isabel Dobrin, Mollie Parlini and Valerie Yurk … Winter Casey … Andrew Cote of Brinc Drones … Bill Knapp … Jim Dornan of Michael Steele’s Maryland gubernatorial exploratory committee … Erin Dwyer … Lauren French of Rep. Adam Schiff’s (D-Calif.) office and House Intel … Heather Booth … Tara Corrigan of the Messina Group … Tim Dickson … Jeff Le of Rhino and the Truman National Security Project … Anna Jager … Lenny Young of Rep. Julia Brownley’s (D-Calif.) office … Patrick Oakford … Fox News’ Griff Jenkins … Meridith Webster … Cheddar’s Kristen Scholer … Danyell Tremmel … Andy Polesovsky … Caroline Ponseti of the Herald Group … McCauley Mateja … Sarah Sullivan … Jan Eberly … Brian Haley … Maggie Gau … Carson Pfingston

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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE

 


27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS

 


28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS

 


29.) PJ MEDIA

The Morning Briefing: Please Democrats, Keep Up Your Lunatic Jan. 6 Obsession

Jim Bourg/Pool via AP

Top O’ the Briefing

Happy Wednesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. If you never doused yourself with Drakkar to kill the hangover smell before heading out for breakfast burritos were you even a man in the 1980s?

That weird thing is happening with Twitter again where the full tweet won’t show up. I discovered that it’s a glitch on their end. It resolved itself after a day last time. As you know, I’ve got three sections here that feature tweets. Rather than leave them out, I decided to post the text-only versions so you can still click on the links and see what they were about.

Nancy Pelosi’s pathetic revenge porn January 6 show trial has been chugging along with its alt-reality addiction to all things Donald Trump. Bless their hearts, they think it’s going well.

Anyone with an IQ over 14 knows that there was no insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021. Fortunately for Pelosi, the sub-14 IQ demographic is heavily populated with Democrats in Congress, as well as CNN and MSNBC viewers.

So they’re still talking about an insurrection that never happened.

The best part is that they think it’s going well for them.

The drama during this week has centered on some texts that were read by soon-to-be unemployed Republican turncoat Liz Cheney, which Robert wrote about:

So it was understandable that the far-Left propaganda organ the Daily Beast was thrilled Monday when Rep. Liz Cheney (R-NeverTrump) revealed numerous texts sent to Trump Chief of Staff Mark Meadows on Jan. 6, begging Trump to tell the people who had entered the Capitol to desist. They got him now, right? After years of the Russian collusion hoax and Stalinist show trial impeachment proceedings, they finally got him! Well, no. In fact, the texts Cheney revealed prove definitively that there was no Jan. 6 insurrection at all.

These emails may not paint the most flattering picture of Trump but, as Robert wrote, they really make the whole “coordinated insurrection” narrative of the Democrats fall apart.

To the surprise of no one on this side of the political aisle, you wouldn’t know that if you followed the MSM coverage of Textgate. The Democrat Media Complex hacks all think there is some “there” there with these texts, which is decidedly not the case. CNN’s big “Gotcha!” is the fact that Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham aren’t talking about their texts on Fox News. Poppin’ Fresh Stelter has been repeatedly pointing out that Pelosi’s folly isn’t being covered by FNC.

Because nobody outside of the Democrat fever-dream cares. That’s a constantly growing group, by the way.

Regular readers here know that I hope the Democrats continue to hang themselves with the faux insurrection kangaroo trial. It’s part of their pathological obsession with Trump, which will be their undoing.

These are truly amazing times. We’ve seen many prominent Democrats in recent weeks say that they might want to stop focusing on Trump if they want to have a shot at not getting annihilated in the midterms next year. They know that’s the wise thing to do but they just can’t help themselves.

They also don’t grasp that only CNN’s 17 viewers and MSNBC’s slightly bigger handful think that Liz Cheney has any impact anywhere.

So yes, please, keep paddling upstream on a river of irrelevance, Democrats. We’ll be over here talking about issues that matter to real Americans.

This is gonna be fun.

Everything Isn’t Awful

 

PJ Media

VodkaPundit: Insanity Wrap: COVID Sense Breaks Out in Colorado, World Fails to End

BREAKING: Cuomo Ordered To Return $5.1 Million Mad Stacks From Book Deal

Rand Paul Blasts CNN’s Coverage of Tornado Tragedy and Himself

Adam Schiff Uses Text Messages That Disprove Insurrection to Try to Shore Up Sagging Insurrection Narrative

Christmas Killjoys Target Group Laying Wreaths at Veterans’ Graves

BUT PANIC ANYWAY. COVID-19 Reality Check: Omicron Spreads Rapidly But Does Not Cause Death

What Kind of People Would Fake a Hate Crime? Leftists!

Bring On That Double-Digit Inflation! Producer Prices Rise 9.6%

EU Goes ‘White Supremacist,’ Proposes Border Controls to Defend Against Weaponized Migrant Inundation

Workers at Kentucky Plant Told They’d Be Fired if They Left Work Even After Tornado Warnings

Liz Cheney, Daily Beast Tout ‘Bombshell’ Texts That Actually Prove There Was No Insurrection

Democrats Say the Darnedest Things When It Comes to Crime

In 90% of the Country, No One Gives a Flying Fig About COVID

The New York Mask Mandate Is a Spectacular Failure

The Hysterical Reaction of Biden Aides to a Map Showing Taiwan as a Separate Country From China

They do like to cheat. Clyburn: Democrats Will ‘Get Around’ Filibuster To Pass Voting Bills

Prager: Differences Between a Secular and a Religious — Jewish or Christian — Upbringing

Townhall Mothership

House Democrats Block Bill That Would Force DHS to Finish Construction of Border Wall

Leftists are all weak. The Atlantic’s COVID Article That Drove Libs Insane and Caused Mass Cancelations

‘Climatologist’ Drops an Insane Take on Severe Weather

Biden Might Not Want to Take Amtrak Anymore

The 5th Circuit Delivers a Shockingly Ruthless Rebuke of Joe Biden’s Lawlessness

ESPN Shamelessly Tries to Resell the Bubba Wallace Noose Story as a Thing

As the January 6 Commission Stumbles, Who Has It Worse — The Democrats, or the Media?

Nevada “Ghost Gun” Ban Halted By State Judge

Cam&Co. Gun Industry Reacts To Newsom’s Latest Attack

Pro-Gun Groups Should Be Recruiting Candidates, Too

Let’s go Brandon! Another new inflation record: Producer price index hits 9.6% in November

Mark Rober’s war on porch pirates continues with glitter bomb 4.0

Weeks after the Waukesha massacre, a Wisconsin woman killed a man by driving over him with an SUV

TDS is incurable. Jen Psaki says there’s no question President Biden will commemorate the anniversary of January 6

Um…School official confirms racially segregated playground night, says the effort is to unite, not divide

‘Horrific’ and ‘absolutely disgusting’ video shows a drone that can tase illegal immigrants

VIP

Me: Happy One-Year Anniversary to the ‘Game-Changer’ Vaccine!

Failing New York Times Issues Five-Paragraph Mother of All Corrections

My Second Time Testing the N.Y. Mask Mandate Was More Interesting

More Dishonesty on Critical Race Theory, This Time From a ‘Conservative’

Biden Official Says a COVID ‘Explosion’ Is Coming

Is the White House Still Lying About Americans Left Behind in Afghanistan?

Around the Interwebz

‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ Review: The Most Exciting, Surprising And Emotional Spidey Of Them All

Coinbase mistakenly told some customers they were billionaires 

Buttigieg won’t save the Democrats

Some People Know Game of Thrones Better Than Real-Life History, New Survey Shows

Bee Me

 

The Kruiser Kabana

Kabana Gallery

 

Kabana Tunes

30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER

Cut to the News
Cut through the clutter to today’s top news
December 15, 2021
Good morning Rick
Welcome to today’s top news.
Leading the News . . . 
Where are noncitizens allowed to vote in the US? . . . New York City councilmembers voted this past Thursday to allow legal noncitizens to vote in local elections, but it is not the first municipality in the U.S. to enact similar measures. While New York City is the largest city to do so — with nearly 800,000 additional city residents now eligible to vote — 14 smaller U.S. jurisdictions have similar laws allowing noncitizens to vote in local elections. Most of those jurisdictions are located in Maryland, a blue state led by a Republican governor. The state’s constitution authorizes municipalities to allow people outside those qualifications to vote without state approval. Maryland’s municipalities that allow certain noncitizens to vote include Barnesville, Cheverly, Chevy Chase Section 3, Garrett Park, Glen Echo, Hyattsville, Martin’s Additions, Mount Rainier, Riverdale Park, Somerset and Takoma Park. The 11 locales are in close proximity to Washington, D.C. Fox News
Wake up, Americans. The country is being hi-jacked by the leftist radicals. They will not stop until they turn it into a dangerous crime-ridden socialist hell hole.
Big government socialism isn’t working . . . Opinion. By Newt Gingrich. The Biden administration is committed to a radical experiment. The No. 1 issue for 2022 and 2024 is very simple. Big Government socialism isn’t working. Go to your local gas station and ask folks filling up their gas tanks if they think things are working. Go to the grocery store and watch people coping with the rising cost of food and ask if they think things are working. Go to small businesses whose shipments are still hung up on container ships anchored off Long Beach and ask them if they think things are working. Ask people if things are working when the man who burned down the Christmas tree outside Fox News in New York City, causing $600,000 in damage, is released from jail without bail. He was back on the street before the paperwork for his arrest was finished. Washington Times
Biden to DNC holiday party: ‘We’re going to win in 2022’ . . .
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi also spoke at the event and explained how Biden is the ‘perfect’ president. President Joe Biden spoke at the Democratic National Committee holiday party on Tuesday night and expressed optimism that his party will prevail in next year’s midterm elections. “We have to keep making the case,” Biden told a crowd of about 400 in Washington, D.C. “Let me say this again: From the president, we’re going to win in 2022.” Fox News
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Politics                       
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Pelosi says Biden is ‘just perfect’ . . . Oh no. Nancy is again thinking that we’re idiots. Speaking at a dinner Tuesday evening for the Democratic National Committee, Pelosi said President Biden was “experienced” and “capable.” Well, he’s certainly experienced, but it’s not clear that that’s made him capable. President Biden at the same event predicted victory for Democrats in the House in 2022, which showed that delusion was on the menu. White House Dossier
Another place VP Harris isn’t popular: Spanish-language talk radio in Florida . . . Criticism of Vice President Kamala Harris on influential Spanish-language talk radio programs in South Florida is prompting speculation in some quarters that she‘s the target of an organized campaign to drive down her popularity. Fernand Amandi, principal at the public opinion research firm Bendixen & Amandi in Miami, said there “appears to be a proactive, clearly organized effort to demonize and malign” the vice president’s image and reputation. “It comes in the form of audience listeners calling into live talk shows with talking-point attacks,” Mr. Amandi tweeted. He didn’t respond to a request for further comment. Stories about Ms. Harris on the Facebook page of Actualidad Radio, a prominent South Florida talk station, also contained criticism of the vice president from the station’s followers. Washington Times
Democrats divided over how hard to push Manchin . . . Democrats are divided over how hard to push Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) to vote on President Biden’s climate and social spending bill before Christmas, with some lawmakers favoring an aggressive approach while others worry about killing the legislation by moving too hastily. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) has said for weeks that he wants to vote on Biden’s signature Build Back Better Act before Christmas but on Tuesday he declined to guarantee a vote next week. “The bottom line is right now there are good discussions going on. As I said, we’re moving forward with progress. The president’s been speaking with Sen. Manchin and I look forward to hearing about further progress,” Schumer said Tuesday when asked if he would guarantee a vote before Christmas. The Hill
House votes to raise federal debt limit by $2.5 trillion, Biden set to sign . . . The House of Representatives voted to raise the nation’s debt limit by $2.5 trillion, giving the Treasury Department the ability to issue additional new debt until after the 2022 midterm elections. The final vote in the lower chamber was 221-209 . The measure passed the Senate earlier Tuesday and now heads to President Joe Biden’s desk. Washington Examiner
Defiant Meadows cracks text message joke, welcomed by conservatives ahead of contempt vote . . .  A defiant Mark Meadows joked about his text messages and glad-handed Republicans as the House of Representatives debated whether to hold him in criminal contempt of Congress for his refusal to cooperate with the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. “The enemy means … for evil. He will make it good. He will turn it good,” Meadows said in a keynote speech at a dinner in Atlanta, paraphrasing a verse in Genesis. “I say that because tonight allows for it. The Democrats are wanting to send a clear message that not only should I be referred for criminal contempt but that anybody that is a conservative and supported Donald Trump should be ashamed. They’re not going to intimidate me.” Washington Examiner
Hang tough, Mark Meadows. The American KGB apparatchiks are vicious, vindictive, and malicious. They won’t stop at anything to destroy those whom they view as a threat to their shenanigans, as many of us who served in USG and especially in the intel and national security area would attest.
National Security     
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Hackers launch more than 1.2m attacks through Log4J flaw . . . Hackers including Chinese state-backed groups have launched more than 1.2m attacks on companies globally since last Friday, according to researchers, through a previously unnoticed vulnerability in a widely used piece of open-source software called Log4J. Cyber security group Check Point said the attacks relating to the vulnerability had accelerated since Friday, and that at some points its researchers were seeing more than 100 attacks a minute. Perpetrators include “Chinese government attackers”, according to Charles Carmakal, chief technology officer of cyber company Mandiant. The flaw in Log4J allows attackers to easily gain remote control over computers running apps in Java, a popular programming language. Jen Easterly, director of the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, or CISA, told industry executives that the vulnerability was “one of the most serious I’ve seen in my entire career, if not the most serious”, according to US media reports. Hundreds of millions of devices are likely to be affected, she said. Financial Times
U.S. lawmakers call for sanctions against Israel’s NSO, spyware firms . . . A group of U.S. lawmakers is asking the Treasury Department and State Department to sanction Israeli spyware firm NSO Group and three other foreign surveillance companies they say helped authoritarian governments commit human rights abuses. Reuters
International                
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Don’t fall into Putin’s trap, Estonian PM warns the West . . . Russian military pressure cannot be allowed to influence who can join the European Union and NATO, warned Kaja Kallas, the prime minister of Estonia, ahead of two key meetings on the bloc’s relationship with its neighbors. By amassing troops at the Ukrainian border, and then suggesting that NATO rescind a 2008 commitment to Ukraine and Georgia that they would one day become members of the alliance, Russian President Vladimir Putin “is trying to present himself as a solution to this problem that he has created himself. And I think we shouldn’t fall into that trap,” Kallas said in a phone interview on Tuesday in which she also discussed concerns about U.S. President Joe Biden’s outreach to Putin. “I don’t think that Russia has any right to say anything about who has the right and who doesn’t have the right to join [the] European Union or NATO,” said Kallas, whose country of 1.3 million people borders Russia. PoliticoEU
After Gas Crisis In Europe That Increased Russia’s Federal Budget Revenue, Moscow Has No Intention Of Going ‘Green’ . . . There is no chance of reaching the Paris Climate Goals by 2030 and very little hope of turning the world carbon neutral by 2060. Yet, China is rapidly becoming one of the most important beneficiaries of the new “green” agenda, as it produces up to half the world’s electric vehicles and close to 80 percent of its solar panels. Russia instead stays almost entirely outside the new “green” mainstream. Several speeches, articles, and interviews by leading Russian public figures, including President Vladimir Putin present a strange combination of hatred, fear, and unattainable and fanciful hopes about a “green” agenda for the country. However, the majority of Russians cannot really imagine that windmills and solar panels may sideline oil, gas deposits, and pipelines. MEMRI
US to blacklist eight more Chinese companies including dronemaker DJI . . . The Biden administration will place eight Chinese companies including DJI, the world’s largest commercial drone manufacturer, on an investment blacklist for their alleged involvement in the surveillance of the Uyghur Muslim minority. The US Treasury will put DJI and the other groups on its “Chinese military-industrial complex companies” blacklist on Thursday, according to two people briefed on the move. US investors are barred from taking financial stakes in the 60 Chinese groups already on the blacklist. Financial Times
Republicans demand Biden put Nigeria back on religious freedom watch list . . . The Trump administration had just put Muslim-majority Nigeria on the religious freedom watch list due to the persecution of Christians. The Biden administration, for some reason, took it off. Thousands of Christians have been murdered in the country in recent years. Republican lawmakers are demanding answers after the State Department removed Nigeria from a watch list for countries that raised “particular concern” about religious freedom. In a Monday letter to Secretary Antony Blinken, seven GOP senators requested the department place Nigeria back on the list, which includes countries like North Korea and Saudi Arabia. White House Dossier
Lithuania pulls diplomats from China as row deepens over Taiwan ties . . . Lithuania has pulled its remaining diplomats out of China over concerns for their safety, in a sharp escalation of bilateral tensions as Beijing retaliates against the Baltic nation’s efforts to strengthen ties with Taiwan. Audra Ciapiene, Lithuania’s interim chargé d’affaires in China, the country’s most senior diplomat in Beijing after the ambassador’s recall in September, returned to Vilnius on Wednesday for consultations. The embassy will temporarily operate remotely, the foreign ministry in Vilnius told the Financial Times. Financial Times
Coronavirus
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States plan challenges to federal vaccine mandates . . . State legislatures will consider a host of new challenges to the Biden administration’s mandates that workers in some settings be required to receive vaccines against the coronavirus, setting up a new front in the tug-of-war that is already being fought in federal courts across the nation.
Several states have already approved new measures meant to circumvent federal vaccine orders. The Hill 
Pentagon stops implementing vaccine mandate for defense contractors . . .  The race to vaccinate defense workers is now at a standstill, after a US district court judge blocked the implementation of the vaccine mandate for federal contractors last week. The Defense Department issued a Dec. 9 memo instructing its contracting officers to stop enforcing President Joe Biden’s Sept. 9 executive order, which required workers for federal contractors to be vaccinated for COVID-19 by Jan. 18. Breaking Defense
Omicron spreading rapidly in U.S. and could bring punishing wave as soon as January, CDC warns . . . Top federal health officials warned in a briefing Tuesday morning that the omicron variant is rapidly spreading in the United States and could peak in a massive wave of infections as soon as January, according to new modeling analyzed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The prevalence of omicron jumped sevenfold in a single week, according to the CDC, and at such a pace, the highly mutated variant of the coronavirus could ratchet up pressure on a health system already strained in many places as the delta variant continues its own surge. The warning of an imminent surge came even as federal officials and some pharmaceutical executives signaled that they don’t currently favor creating an omicron-specific vaccine. Washington Post
‘They’re sick of masks’: Democratic governors fight Covid fatigue . . . Asked in an interview about his November close call, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy attributed it to “a lot of folks who are frustrated, is my guess.” In his most candid assessment of his 3-point victory to date, Murphy said some New Jerseyans “feel like government is not connecting with them. They’re sick of masks, being told what to do in terms of vaccines, probably not thrilled with what they sense is going on in Washington, they may have lost a job or a business that went bust — or a loved one, worse yet.” Politico
Money                           
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Wholesale price inflation nearly in double digits . . . Another sign that the supposedly “transitory” inflation is going to be both bad and sticking around. Wholesale prices increased at their quickest pace on record in November in the latest sign that the inflation pressures bedeviling the economy are still present, the Labor Department reported Tuesday.
The producer price index for final demand products increased 9.6% over the previous 12 months after rising another 0.8% in November. Economists had been looking for an annual gain of 9.2%, according to FactSet. Excluding food, energy and trade services prices rose 0.7% for the month, putting core PPI at 6.9%, also the largest gain on record. Estimates were for respective gains of 0.4% and 7.2%, meaning the monthly gain was faster than estimates but the year-over-year measure was a bit slower . . . Those numbers come with headline consumer prices running at their fastest pace in nearly 40 years and core inflation the hottest in about 30 years. White House Dossier
Holiday Spending Expected to Be Strong, Fueled by Solid Demand, Rising Inflation . . . The holiday shopping season is likely off to a strong start, with consumers showing robust demand for gifts, dinners out and other products even amid the highest inflation in decades. Sales at U.S. retail stores, online sellers and restaurants are estimated to have risen by a seasonally adjusted 0.8% in November from the previous month, according to economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal. The Commerce Department will release its report on Wednesday morning. Consumer spending has been a primary driver of strong economic growth this year. Retail sales rose nearly 15% in October, from a year earlier, showing low unemployment, rising wages and savings from stimulus payments are giving Americans the capacity to spend more, even when accounting for historically strong inflation. Wall Street Journal
Trump’s media company to partner with Rumble . . . Former President Donald Trump’s social media company announced a technology and cloud services partnership with video hosting platform Rumble. “As part of our mission, TMTG [Trump Media & Technology Group] continues to align with service providers who do not discriminate against political ideology,” Trump said in a statement Tuesday.  “Therefore, I have selected the Rumble Cloud to serve as a critical backbone for TMTG infrastructure. TMTG has already launched Truth Social on the Rumble Cloud for invited guests only, and the initial Beta launch has been excellent. America is ready for TRUTH Social, and the end to cancel culture.” Fox Business
The White House is trying to spin inflation by blaming it on corporate greed. Meantime, back on planet earth, there are supply chain issues, the lack of action by the Fed, and vast new spending measures proposed and signed by President Biden that are actually causing inflation.
You should also know 
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As trial of Harvard prof opens, Biden faces pressure to end Trump program to catch Chinese spies . . . As a high-profile Harvard professor stands trial for hiding his ties to the Chinese government, the Biden administration is coming under intense pressure from a loose coalition of lawmakers, nonprofits, and academics to abandon the so-called China Initiative, a Justice Department effort to preserve America’s technological edge by thwarting Chinese spies. Launched by the Trump administration in 2018 and continued so far by its successor, the China Initiative is designed specifically to identify and prosecute those engaged in hacking, stealing trade secrets, and conducting economic espionage for the Chinese government on U.S. soil. The program has led to several arrests and convictions, including, for example:
Last month, a federal jury convicted Yanjun Xu, deputy division director of China’s Sixth Bureau of the Jiangsu Province Ministry of State Security, for attempting to steal trade secrets and commit economic espionage. Just the News
OJ Simpson Is ‘Completely Free’ After Being Granted Early Release From Parole . . .  O.J. Simpson is a free man after he was granted early release by the Nevada Board of Parole earlier this month. Simpson, 74, is a former football star and actor who was acquitted in the 1994 murder of his wife and her friend.
He was later convicted by a jury in Las Vegas in 2008 after he was accused of leading five men, two armed among them, in a confrontation over sports memorabilia at an off-strip Las Vegas casino hotel. Simpson said he just wanted to retrieve personal mementoes and items stolen from him following his acquittal.
He served nine years in prison before he was released on parole on Oct. 1, 2017. Epoch Times
New York Times podcast: Steele dossier ‘profoundly flawed,’ should never have had impact it did . . . The New York Times podcast “The Daily” broke down the history of the “profoundly flawed” Steele dossier on Monday, with host Michael Barbaro. It’s the latest media reckoning with the dossier, the series of memos by ex-British intelligence officer Christopher Steele alleging an extensive conspiracy between Donald Trump and the Russians to defeat Hillary Clinton, as well as salacious allegations of blackmail tapes, and Trump-Russia contacts going back more than a decade. “It seems we can clearly see now that the Steele dossier should never have had the life and the impact that it did,” Barbaro said. “It should never have been used in the wiretap warrant for Carter Page, should never have been read into the congressional record, or featured on prime time segments on cable news.” Fox News
Still waiting for the US government apparatchiks to be held accountable for weaponizing the most powerful intelligence and security tools, reserved for foreign adversaries, in order to run a Soviet-style disinformation and covert influence campaign on the American people and unseat the president whom they elected.
Fun Stuff        
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‘Men Aren’t Women,’ Says Dangerous Far-Right Extremist . . . EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND —According to sources, a dangerous right-wing extremist named J.K. Rowling has taken to the internet to spread hateful rhetoric. Authorities have called for decisive action to silence the bigoted fascist before she further spreads her message.  “Men aren’t women,” said the disgusting transphobe in a recent Twitter post. She then doubled down on her controversial message by also saying “Women aren’t men.”
“This is a hate crime,” said EU Diversity Minister Günter Schreiber. “Everyone knows that women aren’t a real thing, but rather a fantastical state of being that ebbs and flows through the human imagination like a wisp of magical fairy dust. That’s just science.” The EU has called for a hearing to discuss what they can do to silence the deadly thought criminal before she gains an audience and teaches them basic biology. As the war on Christmas rages on, it is your DUTY to follow these eight simple steps to land a blow for the spirit of Christmas. Babylon Bee
For those of you who are in the Washington DC area, please join us to celebrate Christmas and the 2021 holiday season this weekend.
The Kintz-Mejia Academy of Ballet (KMAB) is performing The Nutcracker at the Meridian High School in Falls Church, VA on Saturday, December 18 at 7:30 PM and on Sunday, December 19 @ 2:00 PM. These are professional quality productions that rival performances that you’d see at The Kennedy Center or other major stages. My daughter has been training with KMAB to become a professional ballerina since she was barely 3 years old (she is now 16!).
Pre-order your tix here or grab’em at the door (subject to availability). They are selling out fast! Additional info is in the video below, which I recorded with the KMAB Directors, Linda Kintz and Mark Mejia. Hope to see some of you there! Spread the word. Thank you for doing it!
Rebekah
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Rebekah Koffler
Editor, White House Dossier and Cut to the News
Author of Putin’s Playbook: Russia’s Secret Plan to Defeat America, to be released July 27, 2021
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31.) THE DISPATCH

The Morning Dispatch: Newsom Vows to Model Gun Legislation on Texas Abortion law

Plus: The House passes the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act.

Happy Wednesday! O.J. Simpson was discharged early from parole in Nevada on Tuesday, making him, in the words of his lawyer, a “completely free man.”

That’s just what American society has been missing these past few years: A completely free O.J. Simpson.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • large, real-world study out of South Africa found that—during the country’s current Omicron wave—two doses of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine were just 33 percent effective against infection, but 70 percent effective against severe disease requiring hospitalization. Those infected with the Omicron variant, however, were found to be 29 percent less likely to require hospitalization than those infected with the D614G variant in 2020. “Furthermore, hospitalized adults currently have a lower propensity to be admitted to high-care and intensive-care units, relative to prior waves,” one of the study’s authors said.
  • Pfizer announced Tuesday that a final analysis of clinical trial data confirmed that Paxlovid—the company’s oral COVID-19 antiviral—reduced the risk of hospitalization or death in high-risk patients by 89 percent when taken within three days of symptom onset, and is likely effective against the Omicron variant. President Joe Biden cheered the news, but noted “several steps remain before the Pfizer pill can become available, including authorization by the Food and Drug Administration.”
  • The Senate voted 50-49 on Tuesday—with Democrats accounting for all the votes in favor and Republicans all the votes against—to increase the debt ceiling by $2.5 trillion, almost assuredly punting the issue past the midterms and into 2023. The House approved the measure 221-209 early Wednesday morning, sending it to President Biden’s desk for his signature.
  • The House voted unanimously on Tuesday to pass the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act after Democratic Rep. Jim McGovern and Republican Sen. Marco Rubio came to an agreement on the final text of the bill, which would prohibit all imports from China’s Xinjiang region in the absence of “clear and convincing evidence” the goods in question did not rely on forced labor in any way. The White House confirmed yesterday for the first time that President Biden will sign the legislation into law once it passes the Senate.
  • The House voted 222-208 last night to hold Mark Meadows—Donald Trump’s former chief of staff—in criminal contempt of Congress for defying a subpoena from the January 6 Select Committee. Meadows had turned over thousands of pages of records to the committee but ceased cooperation last week, claiming lawmakers were pursuing information protected by Trump’s claims of executive privilege.
  • The Bureau of Labor Statistics announced Tuesday the Producer Price Index—which measures what suppliers are charging their customers—increased 9.6 percent year-over-year in November, the largest such figure on record since the data was first collected in 2010.
  • A Belarusian court on Tuesday sentenced the husband of opposition leader Sviatlana Tskikhanouskaya to 18 years in prison for “organizing mass unrest” and “inciting social hatred.” Tskikhanouskaya accused Belarusian dictator Alexander Lukashenko of being behind the “revenge” verdict, saying he “hopes to continue repressions in silence,” but that “the whole world watches.”
  • Sens. Joe Manchin and Bernie Sanders said Tuesday they will oppose the confirmation of Dr. Robert Califf—President Biden’s nominee to lead the FDA—meaning the Obama administration FDA commissioner’s approval will require Republican support, which it appears he has currently.
  • President Biden announced Tuesday he intends to nominate acting Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Sandra Thompson to lead the agency—which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac—on a permanent basis.
  • gasoline tanker truck exploded in the Haitian city of Cap-Haïtien on Tuesday, killing at least 62 people and wounding dozens more.

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Did the Supreme Court Just Unlock a Constitutional Cheat Code?

(Photo by DANIEL SLIM/AFP via Getty Images)

The Annie Get Your Gun-ification of American politics continues apace. In a press release issued Saturday, California’s Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom announced he had ordered his staff to begin working with the state legislature to craft a bill—modeled after Texas’ recently enacted abortion legislation—that would allow private citizens to seek injunctive relief and statutory damages against “anyone who manufactures, distributes, or sells an assault weapon or ghost gun kit or parts in the State of California.”

“If states can now shield their laws from review by the federal courts that compare assault weapons to Swiss Army knives,” he declared, “then California will use that authority to protect people’s lives, where Texas used it to put women in harm’s way.”

One day earlier, the Supreme Court had issued its rulings in Whole Woman’s Health v. Jackson and United States v. Texas, allowing Texas’ S.B. 8—which permits private individuals to sue anyone who helps perform an abortion after about six weeks of gestation—to remain in place. But the cases were only tangentially about abortion; really at issue was the law’s unique enforcement mechanism.

“The ultimate merits question—whether S. B. 8 is consistent with the Federal Constitution—is not before the Court,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote in the majority opinion. “Nor is the wisdom of S. B. 8 as a matter of public policy.”

Normally, when a state passes a law likely to be ruled unconstitutional—like a six-week abortion ban—affected parties can sue those set to enforce the law, and a court will block those officials from enforcing it before it goes into effect. But in the case of S.B. 8, it was not clear whom affected parties could sue to seek an injunction, as we detailed in a TMD last month.

Senate Bill 8’s (SB8) enforcement is not in the hands of state officials like prosecutors or county clerks, but private citizens who can collect $10,000 and attorney’s fees for successfully suing anyone who performs—or “knowingly engages in conduct that aids or abets the performance” of—an abortion after a fetal heartbeat is detected. Noting that there were “serious questions” about law’s constitutionality, a majority of the court nonetheless voted to deny an application for injunctive relief. Texas legislators had, through what Cato Institute Vice President Ilya Shapiro labeled “a clever gimmick,” essentially hacked the system of [judicial pre-enforcement] review.

Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act on Its Way to Becoming Law

After months of bipartisan negotiations, the House voted unanimously on Tuesday to pass the latest version of the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act hammered out by Democratic Rep. Jim McGovern and Republican Sen. Marco Rubio. “We as a country have become so reliant on China that we’ve turned a blind eye to the slave labor that makes our shoes, our solar panels, and much more,” Rubio said. “But that changed today.”

Haley spent much of the past week reporting on the bill, and yesterday’s Uphill dives into its provisions in more detail than we’ve seen anywhere else.

The legislation, when implemented 180 days after enacted, will block goods made with forced labor in China’s Xinjiang region from being imported into the United States.

[The bill] assumes all products made in part or in whole in Xinjiang are tainted with forced labor. It gives businesses the option to receive exemptions from the import ban if they can prove to U.S. Customs and Border Protection with “clear and convincing evidence” that their supply chains are free of coerced labor.

The bill passed the House unanimously—and could very well do the same in the Senate—but it had to overcome a series of obstacles to get to this point.

Worth Your Time

  • Another day, another Ronald Bailey piece for Reason. In this one, he calls on the FDA to expedite its authorization of Paxlovid, Pfizer’s highly effective COVID-19 oral antiviral. “The pill proved so effective in clinical trials that the company stopped enrolling participants in its study in early November 2021 because it would have been unethical to give new participants a placebo,” he writes. “The company has been all along sharing with the FDA its data as part of an ongoing rolling submission for emergency use authorization (EUA) of the treatment. Four weeks ago, the Biden administration announced that it had already purchased 10 million treatment courses of the Pfizer antiviral COVID-19 pill. It is beyond stupid that the agency has apparently not yet scheduled a meeting of its advisory committee to review Pfizer’s EUA application. It’s not like some 1,200 Americans aren’t still dying daily from COVID-19 infections and that another highly contagious variant looks likely to cause millions of breakthrough infections as the winter comes on.”
  • Henry Olsen—conservative columnist for theWashington Postargues in his latest that it’s time to “entertain the possibility” that Democrats’ Build Back Better legislation won’t become law. Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia has continued to express concerns about the package, noting it may not actually be fully paid for, and that it could create additional inflationary pressures. “Progressives have clearly stated all year that they expect a transformational package,” he writes. “They have been willing to compromise thus far primarily on the overall cost, which is why the bill that passed the House has so many programmatic expirations. They have not been willing to admit that there isn’t a Senate majority for a transformational bill. Instead, they have been ramping up the pressure on Manchin to go along with the party majority. That’s not something Manchin is willing to do, per all his public statements.”
  • Katherine Wu has a colorful explainer in The Atlantic looking at how a vaccinated person’s killer T cells step up to the plate when antibody protection wanes. “They home in on different aspects of the virus than antibodies do, and they are much harder to stump with mutations,” she writes. “Their entire raison d’être is rooting out infected cells—not free-floating viruses—and they manage that feat through an affinity for gore. As a signal of distress, infected cells can chop up some of the viruses they’re being forced to produce and display the mangled pieces on their outside. ‘They say, ‘Look, I’m infected with something,’’ Avery August, an immunologist at Cornell University, told me. The dismembered bits are gross but effective: Nothing makes killer Ts go wild more than a hunk of mutilated virus splattered onto the surface of an infected cell.”

Something Cool

Steph Curry of the Golden State Warriors passed Ray Allen last night to become the NBA’s all-time leading three-point shooter—and he’s only 33 years old.

Here are all 2,974 of them.

Twitter avatar for @kirkgoldsberryKirk Goldsberry @kirkgoldsberry

2,974

Presented Without Comment

Also Presented Without Comment

Also Also Presented Without Comment

Twitter avatar for @AZachParkinsonZach Parkinson @AZachParkinson

Man, that chart looks real different when you zoom out a bit

Image

The White House @WhiteHouse

New: The average price of gas is down nearly 10 cents per gallon since last month’s peak and prices continue to fall. Read more about our progress at the pump and @POTUS’s ongoing work to bring down prices here: https://t.co/CviLXTqhl0

Toeing the Company Line

  • In yesterday’s Sweep, Sarah muses about Pete Buttigieg’s recent trip to New Hampshire, Rep. Devin Nunes’ political calculations, and partisan gerrymandering in Maryland, Illinois, North Carolina, Texas, and other states. Plus, Audrey provides an early look at how the Pennsylvania Senate race is shaping up.
  • Princeton University’s Keith Whittington dropped by The Remnant yesterday for a conversation with Jonah about President Biden’s Supreme Court Commission.
  • Citing the text messages released Monday by the January 6 Select Committee, David’s Tuesday French Press (🔒) argues that “when Fox News covered the unfolding attack on the Capitol, its personalities were covering an event they helped create.”

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@lawsonreports), Audrey Fahlberg (@AudreyFahlberg), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).

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By Members  ·  Launched 2 years ago

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.


32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION

Saint Louis U. Threatens to Expel Student for Hanging Posters Advertising Talk by Matt Walsh

Texas School Board Attempted to Censure Two Conservative Members

“We’ve fully entered the Second Great Age of Political Correctness”

 

  • William Jacobson: CORNELL CAMPUS SHUTTING DOWN — By now you probably have read that Cornell is in the process of shutting down the Ithaca campus due to an outbreak of Covid positive tests among students, including Omicron, and significantly, mostly in fully vaccinated students. The campus is not shut down yet, but all finals now will be online, gatherings are prohibited, visitors barred, and so on.  Significantly, the university is recommending that students not leave town unless they have a negative test – in other words, don’t make Cornell a superspreader. I left campus earlier this month after my last class, so I’m not in Ithaca, but if it’s anything like what happened in March 2020, there’s probably some level of panic on campus. This is a pretty important development not just because of the people it impacts, but because the campus is almost 100% vaccinated and had a pretty stringent masking requirement. Think about that.”
  • Kemberlee Kaye: “Meditating on Psalms 63. All day and all night.”
  • Leslie Eastman: “It is heartening to see some of the COVID-19 tenets promoted by “experts” questioned and an official call to end “Covid Theater” from a leading liberal publication.  Now, if my advice from 2 years ago would only have been followed, I suspect the nation would have been much better off.  The New York Times Now Agrees with Virus Response Plan I Proposed…Nearly Two Years Ago
  • Vijeta Uniyal: “”On Monday, Denmark’s high-power court convicted Inger Stoejberg, who served as the country’s immigration minister between 2015-19, for ordering the separation of refugees couples if the woman was under 18. Stoejberg’s 2016 order, as she argues, was aimed at stamping out the practice of child brides who were being imported into the country in the wake of the migrant wave.”
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE

 


34.) DESERET NEWS


35.) BRIGHT

 

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Early Reports Suggest Omicron More Contagious, Milder
MSN covers the first large, real-world study of the omicron variant:

“The first real-world study looking at 78,000 omicron cases in South Africa found the risk of hospitalisation is 29 per cent lower compared with the Wuhan strain, and 23 per cent lower than delta, with vaccines holding up well.

Far fewer people have also needed intensive care from omicron, with just five per cent of cases admitted to ICU compared to 22 per cent of delta patients, the study shows…

The data from South Africa, which was compiled by Discovery Health, its largest private health insurer, and the South Africa Medical Research Council (SAMRC), found that although there were high numbers of breakthrough infections in people who had been vaccinated, cases appeared to be less severe, and this was backed up by anecdotal evidence from doctors on the ground…

They found that effectiveness against infection dropped from 80 per cent to 33 per cent but offered 70 per cent protection against hospital admissions, and this was maintained across age groups and chronic conditions. At the time of the study there had been no deaths.

Professor Glenda Geray, of SAMRC, said: ‘It’s very heartening to see these results and release that vaccine effectiveness is still greater than 50 per cent. So it’s encouraging and again – the booster strategy may also mitigate the reduction in vaccine effectiveness.

‘I think it’s too early for us to make that call but we can say that prior infection and vaccination are affecting the reduction of admission and serious illness. And we’re seeing a shorter duration in hospitalisation.’”

Creative Thinking on Restraining Woke Capital
From BRIGHT editor Rachel Bovard, an intriguing idea.

“Republicans have historically been dubious about private rights of action (as well as class-action lawsuits) over concerns that frivolous lawsuits would pile up for the purpose of enriching trial lawyers while harassing businesses, forcing them to waste both time and resources. If businesses are perpetuating misdeeds in the market, either through antitrust violations, fraud, or other malfeasance, Republicans have argued that the regulating agencies — the Department of Justice or the Federal Trade Commission, for example — should be the enforcers and protectors of consumers.

But what happens when those agencies are no longer trustworthy? That is, increasingly, the attitude that is pushing conservatives to empower individuals to enforce their rights against major interests, instead of waiting for the government to do it for them…

Of course Big Business would rather deal with the federal government than have to litigate individual cases on the merits. Lumbering federal bureaucracies are resource-strapped and time-limited. Business interests would much rather negotiate a settlement agreement than take a case to litigation, and Big Business, particularly those represented by groups like the Chamber with armies of lobbyists in Washington, are much better positioned to negotiate away any violations. 

Private rights, by contrast, are a far more democratic alternative to waiting for increasingly partisan government agencies to decide if claims are worth pursuing. This is particularly true for conservatives, who are unlikely to have their causes pursued by partisan actors within executive branch agencies.

Does anyone think the Biden administration would consider, for even a second, pursuing claims of market manipulation or anti-competitive behavior against Amazon, Google, and Apple on behalf of the conservative social media company Parler? Hardly…

Expanding private rights of action, as a matter of policy, is what you do when you can’t trust the government to fight for you. As government agencies shed their valence of neutrality and Big Business becomes overtly hostile to conservative causes, congressional Republicans are increasingly looking to give citizens the tools to fight back. Private rights of action are exactly that – accountability, democratized. Expect to see more of them.”

Fashion Moment of the Week
I’m still finding my footing in my “new” Manhattan residence, but I ventured out to Brooklyn with some friends to take in the sights of this awesome Dior exhibit in the Brooklyn Museum. Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams had room after room of the fashion house’s beautifully displayed creations, from  its beginnings in the 1940s all the way through red carpet looks from the last couple years. It was also cool to see New York, Paris, and other cities as they appeared 50 or 70 years ago, in old films, and to see how editorial photography showcased fashion in earlier eras. You can read about the exhibit over at Harper’s Bazaar, and if you’re in the area or visiting, it’s well worth your time.

Podcast Update
This week’s High Noon podcast features one of my favorite young (ugh, Gen Z), right-leaning reporters, Aaron Sibarium of the Free Beacon. One of the things I think is so important about Aaron’s work is that he has done systematic deep dives on just how woke ideology has intrenched itself in various institutions – universities, private school accreditation firms, the ABA, medical associations, etc – and how it manages to insert itself as unchallengeable “best practices” rather than as what it is, overt radical politics. IOW, Aaron is really studying the institutionalization of wokeness, and the mechanisms of its enforcement in those institutions. We go through some of his most explosive reporting, and then discuss what it may suggest about how to deinstitutionalize the ideology that seems like its everywhere.

As always, High Noon with Inez Stepman is available everywhere you get your podcasts, and new episodes are released at noon on Wednesday.

Wednesday Links
Watch The Federalist’s first documentary, “Meet the Parents,” which tells the story of Loudoun County parents and how they took the fight to their public schools, in their own words. (The Federalist)

Disgraced scumbag Andrew Cuomo schemed to go after Janice Dean for calling attention to the COVID policies that contributed to the deaths of her in-laws. (The Federalist)

David Harsanyi: Tornadoes are tragic, but not a sign of climate apocalypse. (National Review)

I, along with my colleague Carrie Sheffield, will be interviewing Jason Riley about his new biography of the great Thomas Sowell as part of IWF’s book club series. Register for the virtual event at 1 pm. (IWF)

Heritage Foundation ranks states on election integrity. (RealClear Politics)

Byron York: the real cost of BBB. (Washington Examiner)

Adams appoints first female police commissioner of the NYPD, but will she turn around the city’s crime situation? (NY Post)

TIME Person of the Year Elon Musk out-Tweets Senator Warren with funny rejoinder. (NY Post)

Billie Eilish says porn “destroyed” her brain and calls it a “disgrace” to women. (The Federalist)

Notes on just how terrible the new Sex and the City series has been. (Radio Hour)

If you’re in the area: VA Museum of Fine Arts has a great exhibit featuring the photography of Ansel Adams and Man Ray. (The Federalist)

BRIGHT is brought to you by The Federalist.
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Today’s BRIGHT Editor

Inez Feltscher Stepman is a senior policy analyst at the Independent Women’s Forum and a senior contributor to The Federalist. She is a San Francisco Bay Area native with a BA in Philosophy from UCSD and a JD from the University of Virginia. She lives in Washington, D.C. with her husband, Jarrett Stepman, her puggle Thor, and her cat Thaddeus Kosciuszko. You can follow her on Twitter at @inezfeltscher and on Instagram (for #ootd, obvi) under the same handle. Opinions expressed on this website are her own and not those of her employers. Or her husband.
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER

 

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Recent Articles

Joe Biden vs. the Tornados

Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
Why would Biden make claims of a linkage between the tornado outbreak and climate change when science and data say there is no causation?  Read More…


NATO? If Russia Conquered Europe, It Would an Improvement

Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
The Bear isn’t big on political correctness… Read More…


Vaccine Passports are Not Only Useless but a Threat to Public Health

Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
Not only do vaccine passports not achieve their ostensible purpose, but by creating the illusion of safety where there is none, they expose those who believe in it to the very dangers they hope to escape. Read More…


Out of Africa Come Republicans

Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
Unpleasant circumstances resulted in our family hosting a number of resident home help caregivers from Africa or of African descent. Getting to know them challenged the assumptions the dominant media would have you believe. Read More…


Time to Cancel Students for Justice in Palestine

Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
A new stunt at Arizona State University, where Kyle Rittenhouse plans to enroll, shines the spotlight on this noxious organization. Read More…


In Praise of Thomas Jefferson

Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
While it is true that Jefferson owned slaves, that is not his legacy regarding slavery.  Read More…


Recent Blog Posts

The Big Lie that Republicans threaten democracy
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
The left has started to fire opening salvos of propaganda to mislead the American people into believing that the Republicans — not the Democrats — present the clear and present threat to democracy.  Read more…


Stalin and Biden agree: who gets to count the votes matters more than who gets to vote
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
Be prepared, more of this Democratic mockery of elections to come.  Read more…


Biden’s Building Backwards Better with record high wholesale prices
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
Even worse than Jimmy Carter.  Read more…


Can anything good come from a Kennedy?
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
When it comes to exposing Anthony Fauci, Bill Gates, and the whole COVID takeover, the answer is yes.  Read more…


The show trial taking place in D.C.
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
Tucker makes a scathing attack on the January 6 committee’s Soviet-style show trial and he reserves special, and deserved, contempt for Liz Cheney.  Read more…


The left’s resistance to Ivermectin is shameful
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
Whether it’s hospitals, the media, the FDA, or the Post Office, all seem desperate to stop Americans from having the Right to Try a potentially life-saving drug.  Read more…


Will Joe Manchin wake up with a horse’s head in his bed?
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
What kind of extreme leverage are the Schumers and Pelosis of our world ready and willing to deploy for the sake of getting a bad law passed?  Read more…


J.K. Rowling continues to speak out for women
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
Rowling refuses to be silenced about the damage transgender men do to women, and Hollywood punishes her for doing so.  Read more…


Conservatives: You also have FIRST Amendment right not to testify!
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
As officals use the January 6 protests to question hundreds of political opponents and seize or subpoena thousands of documents, it is important to remember why and how the federal courts limited these methods some sixty years ago.  Read more…


Today is the Bill of Rights’ 230th birthday
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
This sacrosanct document needs defending, and you’re the one to do it.  Read more…


The greed for power of the Democrats is endless
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
Almost all the Democrat policy proposals involve transferring more power and money from the rest of the country to the extremely powerful federal government.  Read more…


Why leftists want to turn your kids into weaklings
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
The left’s efforts to weaken our young people have been going on for decades. Why?  Read more…


Rudolph goes woke and the North Pole is melting with anger
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
Rudolf went woke and Christmas will never be the same.  Read more…


The QE virus
Dec 15, 2021 01:00 am
While the media and other Democrats are trying to keep COVID in the spotlight, what world governments are doing to the economy is more dangerous.  Read more…


El Salvador’s President Bukele produces the receipts on Biden corruption
Dec 14, 2021 01:00 am
A gate has been opened.  Read more…


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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL

 


38.) THE BLAZE

 


39.) THE FEDERALIST

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40.) REUTERS

The Reuters Daily Briefing

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

by Linda Noakes

Sponsored by   Hitachi

Hello

Here’s what you need to know.

Investors batten down for the Fed, a judge rejects Trump’s bid to keep his tax returns from Congress, and German police foil an ‘anti-vaxxer murder plot’

Today’s biggest stories

People wear protective face masks to enter a store as new New York State indoor masking mandates went into effect in New York City, December 14, 2021. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

BUSINESS

The Federal Reserve is expected to announce that it is speeding up the end of its pandemic-era bond purchases and signal a turn to interest rate increases next year as a guard against surging inflation. As the U.S. economy closes in on the Fed’s framework goals, we look at how policymakers will react.

British consumer price inflation surged to its highest in more than 10 years in November, jumping to 5.1% from October’s 4.2%, in news likely to unsettle the Bank of England as it considers whether to raise interest rates tomorrow. We look back at how BoE Governor Andrew Bailey upset traders and set UK bond markets adrift last month.

China’s factory output grew faster than expected in November, supported by stronger energy production and a moderation in sky-high materials costs, but new curbs to fight rising COVID-19 cases hit retailers in the world’s second-largest economy.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said his government would make Europe’s largest economy fit for the future by fostering investment in climate protection and digitalization, vowing no one would be left behind in this major transformation.

Sales at Zara-owner Inditex and rival H&M are back at pre-pandemic levels or better, as the world’s top two fashion retailers ride a recovery in demand despite supply chain challenges.

U.S. House Select Committee on January 6 Chairman Representative Bennie Thompson speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill, December 13, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

U.S.

Former President Donald Trump’s chief of staff, Mark Meadows, could face criminal prosecution for refusing to cooperate fully with a probe into the deadly attack on the Capitol, after the House of Representatives voted to hold him in contempt of Congress. We look at what’s at stake for Trump allies.

A U.S. judge dismissed a bid by Trump to keep his tax returns from a House of Representatives committee, ruling that Congress’ legislative interest outweighed any deference Trump should receive as a former president.

Congress approved raising the federal government’s debt limit by $2.5 trillion, to about $31.4 trillion, sending the bill to President Joe Biden to sign and avert an unprecedented default.

White former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin is expected to plead guilty today in a federal court in Minnesota to charges that he violated George Floyd’s civil rights during the Black man’s murder, reversing his not-guilty plea in September.

O.J. Simpson, the former football star and television personality who was tried and acquitted in the 1994 murder of his wife and her friend, won an early release from parole on a Nevada robbery conviction.

WORLD

A fire broke out in Hong Kong’s World Trade Centre, trapping about 150 people on its roof, and 13 people were injured before firefighters put out the blaze. The 39-floor building is home to restaurants, offices and shops in the bustling Causeway Bay commercial and shopping district.

South Africa’s High Court ordered former President Jacob Zuma to return to jail after setting aside the decision to release him on medical parole. The 79-year is serving a 15-month sentence for contempt of court, after he ignored instructions to participate in a corruption inquiry.

A minister defended the government’s handling of Britain’s COVID-19 pandemic but admitted it may have made some mistakes, a day after almost 100 Conservatives dealt a blow to Prime Minister Boris Johnson by voting against new curbs.

German police searched several locations in the eastern state of Saxony as part of an investigation into what they said was a plot to murder the state’s prime minister, Michael Kretschmer, by anti-vaccination activists.

Lithuania’s diplomatic delegation to China left the country, diplomatic sources said, amid worsening relations over Taiwan which opened a de facto embassy in Vilnius last month.

Quote of the day

“We’ve got one of the highest vaccination rates, which means we can fight this thing. We don’t have to surrender to it”

Prime Minister Scott Morrison

 

Australia re-opens borders to non-citizens despite Omicron worries

Video of the day

Kentucky woman houses five families after tornado

Days after a tornado ripped through her town, Reina Guerra Perez is hosting 26 people in her home.

And finally…

Rave reviews may help ‘Spider-Man’ deliver holiday gift to theaters

The newest ‘Spider-Man’ movie adventure has won glowing reviews from film critics, and box office analysts predict the superhero spectacle will set pandemic-era sales records at cinemas this weekend.

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41.) NOQ REPORT

 


42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE

 


43.) REDSTATE

RedState Morning Briefing
The 5th Circuit Delivers a Shockingly Ruthless Rebuke of Joe Biden’s Lawlessness

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WATCH: Fauci Said in March 2020 That Vaccines Could Actually Make People Worse

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WH Nailed on Afghanistan Lies as They Flout Law Requiring They Turn Over Info

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Ron DeSantis Zeroes in on the One Thing That Would Make Joe Biden Secure the Border

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As the January 6 Commission Stumbles, Who Has It Worse — The Democrats, or the Media?

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Biden ‘Democracy Summit’ Went All Kinds of Wrong After Disastrous Taiwan Insult

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Vile Details Emerge About Child Sex Abuse Allegations Surrounding CNN Cuomo Producer

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University Paper Fires Writer, Orders Bias Training After Nonwhite Student Is Misnamed

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The Most Unintentionally Hilarious Fact Check on Joe Biden’s Truck Driving Claim Has Arrived

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44.) WORLD NET DAILY

Web version
Breaking News Alert
This is a breaking news alert which we send infrequently to update you on emerging breaking stories.
CDC: Shocking percentage of omicron cases are in vaccinated people!
Posted by Art Moore
While the government and media continue to scare citizens with the omicron variant, here comes stunning news from the CDC about omicron in people who already have gotten COVID shots. Read more…
Related
Hospital suddenly in serious trouble for denying patient prescribed ivermectin
Posted by Bob Unruh
The dark forces that want to prevent anyone from using ivermectin to fight COVID apparently have no fear of the law, and now, a judge is not too thrilled. Read more…
Related
Forget Joe Biden: Look who’s ‘positioning’ to be Dems’ presidential nominee in 2024
Posted by Bob Unruh
‘One of the most artificial and calculating human beings on the planet.’ Read more…
Related
Supermarket giant strips unvaccinated workers of their benefits
America’s largest food chain employs roughly 465,000 people Read more…
The Nativity sacrifice – what Jesus gave up being born
“What Yeshua-Jesus did when He chose to be born as an innocent babe is every bit as awe-inspiring as contemplating His decision to be nailed to a cross.” Read more…
Nikki Haley’s Christmas present to America
“The more government goes where it doesn’t belong, the more confidence and trust that citizens feel in their government deteriorate.” Read more…
Ilhan Omar bill creating federal ‘Islamophobia monitor’ advances
Critics of jihad violence, Shariah oppression warn they will be targets Read more…
The death of California
Irony of the week: California wants to be a “sanctuary” for those seeking abortion. Used to be the womb was a sanctuary. Read more…
Where in the world is hoax-enabler Tina Tchen?
Let’s play connect-the-dots, shall we? Read more…
Biden snaps at reporter, fires off nonsensical insult
Biden mocked the Fox News reporter as he walked offstage. Read more…
Chris Cuomo’s nightmare intensifies after 1 damning photo surfaces
It seems like Chris Cuomo had a lot of vile people in his immediate orbit. Read more…
CNN may be horrified at Chris Cuomo’s latest move
Cuomo could be in for a big win if his contract was violated in any way. Read more…
U.S. military makes sick move against unvaccinated
There will almost certainly be more of this coming. Read more…
TV actor hits network with vax-mandate lawsuit
‘There is no need for everybody to get the COVID-19 shot, even if the president demands it,’ the suit reads. Read more…
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45.) MSNBC


46.) BIZPAC REVIEW

 


47.) ABC

December 15, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
OSHA investigating after 6 killed by tornado at Amazon facility: The Occupational Health and Safety Administration has launched an investigation into the collapse of an Amazon delivery station in Edwardsville, Illinois, that left six people dead after a tornado pummeled the facility during the height of the busy holiday shopping season. The building impacted by the storm opened in July 2020, according to Amazon, and was approximately 1.1 million square feet with approximately 190 employees across multiple shifts. During a news conference, Edwardsville Fire Chief James Whiteford noted how the walls — which were made out of 11-inch-thick concrete — on both sides of the building collapsed inward and the roof collapsed. He also said there was a shift change happening when the tornado struck, causing further confusion for rescue efforts regarding how many workers were in the building at the time. To see if workplace safety rules were followed, OSHA spokesman Scott Allen told ABC News in a statement that OSHA will have six months to complete its investigation, issue citations and propose monetary penalties if violations are found. Today, President Joe Biden will be on the ground in Kentucky to meet with those who have been impacted by the devastating tornadoes. He will be joined by Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell.
TSA has confiscated record number of guns at airports in 2021: As many travel for the holidays, a new report from the Transportation Security Administration reveals that the agency has confiscated the most guns ever this year — some 5,700 — most of which were loaded. “The reason, I think, is just that there’s more firearms carriers in the country,” TSA Administrator David Pekoske said at a press conference on Monday. Currently, passengers are not permitted to carry firearms or ammunition in carry-on luggage through security checkpoints, but TSA regulations do allow passengers to transport unloaded firearms in checked baggage. If weapons are confiscated, the TSA turns the weapons over to local law enforcement and passengers found to be defying the rules can be fined or face civil penalties.
COVID deaths for pregnant people spiked during delta: As the COVID-19 death toll surpassed 800,000 in the U.S. on Tuesday, data released this week by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that the COVID-19 delta variant took a toll on unvaccinated pregnant people, with deaths dramatically increasing in the summer months. In August and September, the number of pregnant people who died of COVID-19 spiked sharply, with more than two dozen deaths recorded in each of those months. The number of pregnant people who contracted COVID-19 also increased sharply over the summer months, according to CDC data. Now, as the World Health Organization says the omicron variant is spreading at a rate we have not seen,” with what is believed to be a high degree of transmissibility, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said she is very concerned” about those who remain unvaccinated, especially those who are pregnant and unvaccinated. About 60.9% of the U.S. population is fully vaccinated against COVID-19, according to data from the CDC.
Make-A-Wish creates magical Christmas light display for 6-year-old with leukemia: One boy’s wish of having a merry and bright Christmas is coming true this holiday season. Thanks to the Make-A-Wish Foundation, 6-year-old Wyatt’s Durham, North Carolina, home was decorated with festive lights like in his favorite Christmas movies. Wyatt, who was diagnosed with leukemia when he was just 3 years old, loves watching Christmas films repeatedly during his treatment sessions. He said the films inspired him so much that he wanted to design a winter wonderland of his own. With the help of Make-A-Wish, Wyatt was able to create the winter wonderland of his dreams with Blaine Fuller, a past winner of “The Great Christmas Light Fight,” who provided decorations and other specialists to create the light show to 26 of Wyatt’s favorite holiday songs. The display was revealed on Dec. 4 and brought tears to many including Wyatt’s mother, Ashley. “I got filled with emotion, the memories, what we’re doing this for and the joy that it’s brought him,” she said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” our “12 Days of Christmas Cookies” countdown continues with Anthony Underwood baking up some Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer cookies. Plus, Keanu Reeves sits down to talk about “The Matrix Resurrections,” which hits theaters next week. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Kids who lost parents to COVID-19 describe ’emptiness’ they feel this holiday season
For every four deaths due to COVID-19, one child loses a parent or caregiver, according to the CDC.
Put some good in your morning
PHOTO: Anysharp Tory Johnson’s 40 Boxes has 10 gifts with great savings
PHOTO: Zendaya attends the premiere of the film, Zendaya strikes again with another spider-inspired red carpet look
VIDEO: Mickey Guton on how music gave her a voice to be ‘her most authentic self' Mickey Guyton on how music gave her a voice to be ‘her most authentic self’
VIDEO: ‘Santalorian’ walks child battling brain cancer to school bus ‘Santalorian’ walks child battling brain cancer to school bus
Read more →
Try Reese Witherspoon’s ‘Cowboy Cookies’ recipe
The actress shared this flavor-packed cookie recipe in her book, “Whiskey in a Teacup.”

48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN


49.) NBC FIRST READ

 


50.) CBS

 


51.) REASON

 


52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE

 


53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER

 


54.) TOWNHALL

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The True Cost of Biden’s Agenda
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE

 


56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY

 


57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY

 


58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG

 


59.) SARA A. CARTER

 


60.) TWITCHY

 


61.) HOT AIR

 


62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST

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Good morning. It’s Wednesday, Dec. 15, and we’re covering another tool in the fight against COVID-19, a devastating explosion in Haiti, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
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NEED TO KNOW

Pfizer COVID-19 Pill

Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer announced yesterday its COVID-19 antiviral pill retained an 89% efficacy in reducing hospitalizations and deaths in a large-scale trial. Meant to be taken shortly after an infection begins, the treatment is viewed as a potentially significant tool in battling the virus in at-risk populations and lower-income countries where vaccines are not readily available.

 

The news comes one day after rival Merck revealed the effectiveness of its antiviral treatment had dropped from 50% to 30% between preliminary and later-stage trials. US health regulators had previously narrowly approved emergency authorization use of the Merck pill in high-risk patients.

 

Separately, more data released yesterday bolstered evidence that the omicron variant spreads quicker and evades vaccine defenses more readily than other strains but causes less severe symptoms. The variant currently makes up 3% of US cases.

 

Roughly 60,000 people are currently hospitalized with COVID-19, up by almost 50% over the past month (see data).

Explosion in Haiti

At least 75 people were killed and dozens injured after a fuel truck exploded in the Haitian port city of Cap-Haïtien early Tuesday morning. Early reports suggest it was the result of an accident, when the truck flipped trying to avoid a motorcycle.

 

The tragedy is the latest to befall Haiti, which saw its president assassinated in July and suffered an earthquake that killed more than 2,200 people in August. The spiraling political crisis and resulting power vacuum have led many parts of major cities to be under gang control—including one that carried out a high-profile kidnapping of US missionaries in October (five of 17 have been released).

 

Officials say the high death toll is partially due to onlookers scrambling to scoop up spilled gas; the fuel was ignited after making contact with smoldering trash. See video from the scene and aftermath here.

Thousand Talents Trial

Charles Lieber, the former chair of Harvard University’s chemistry department, went on trial yesterday with federal prosecutors alleging he knowingly concealed funding from the Chinese government. The case is one of the highest-profile legal sagas in academic science in recent memory.

 

The charges stem from a wide-ranging FBI probe into China’s Thousand Talents program. Its public purpose is to recruit top researchers, but US officials argue it is used to appropriate foreign research by secretly paying scientists to transmit or recreate the results in Chinese shadow labs. The harshest critics say the program effectively steals state-funded technology and intellectual property for its own economic and military gain.

 

Lieber has maintained his innocence since being arrested almost two years ago, with his supporters arguing the case misconstrues the open and international nature of basic science.

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SAVE YOUR TEETH FROM STRESS

We lead high-stress lives. It comes as no surprise that stress and anxiety are linked with teeth grinding and jaw clenching—especially at night. In fact, over 40% of executives and managers grind their teeth at night, risking damage and exposure to serious dental issues.

 

But it isn’t all doom and gloom: Getting a custom professional night guard from your dentist used to mean spending $500+, but Remi has reinvented the night guard to be far more comfortable, convenient, and affordable. Think of Remi as the “dental Warby Parker”—they’re making it easy to get a custom-fit professional night guard without leaving home, for only $99. Remi sends you an at-home impression kit and has a team of in-house dental professionals that make you the perfect, thin, and comfortable night guard—for less than 80% the cost of the dentist.

 

With 25,000+ happy customers, thousands of 5-star reviews, and a 30-day satisfaction guarantee, a better night’s sleep is risk-free. Save your smile and save time. Use code 1440 for 20% off.

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IN THE KNOW

Sports, Entertainment, & Culture

In partnership with Verb
> Ex-NFL player Phillip Adams, who murdered six people and killed himself in April, had stage 2 chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) at time of shooting (More) | OJ Simpson’s parole ends in Nevada; sentence stemmed from a 2008 armed robbery conviction (More)

 

> “Return of the Jedi” and “Lord of the Rings” among 25 movies added to Library of Congress National Film Registry (More) | See complete list of 825 films on registry (More)

 

> Steph Curry makes five 3-pointers in Warriors victory to break Ray Allen’s NBA record for most threes of all time; Curry’s record now stands at 2,977 career 3-pointers (More)

From our partners: Give the gift of energy. Verb’s Cinnamon Roll and Cookie Butter holiday flavors are irresistibly delicious—but better yet, they’re full of green tea-powered caffeine for a jitter-free boost with just 90 calories. They might be the tastiest energy bars you’ve ever tried; send some to a friend or treat yourself to Verb’s best deals of the year—take up to 30% off!

Science & Technology

> More than 40% of patients who test positive for COVID-19 are asymptomatic, according to an analysis of 95 different studies; the figure does not include asymptomatic cases that go untested (More)

 

> NASA to launch four Earth-focused science missions in 2022, collecting atmospheric data on extreme weather dynamics, atmospheric dust, and more (More)

 

> Research suggests cracks in Antarctica’s Thwaites Glacier may cause the ice shelf to break apart within five years; the melting shelf already contributes to roughly 4% of annual sea rise (More)

Business & Markets

> US stock markets fall again (S&P 500 -0.8%, Dow -0.3%, Nasdaq -1.1%) ahead of today’s Federal Reserve meeting (More)

 

> Toyota to invest $35B by 2030 to build lineup of 30 electric vehicles (More)

 

> Six women employed at Tesla’s Fremont, California, factory file lawsuits alleging they were part of a culture of workplace sexual harassment (More)

Politics & World Affairs

> Washington, DC, attorney general files suit against alt-right group Proud Boys and militia group Oath Keepers for their role in the Jan. 6 storming of the US Capitol (More) | House votes to hold former Trump Chief of Staff Mark Meadows in contempt; Justice Department must decide whether to pursue charges (More)

 

> Senate raises debt limit along party-line vote; ceiling raised by $2.5T, likely to not be approached again before the 2022 midterm elections (More)

 

> Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) ordered by state ethics panel to return $5M in earnings from a book written while in office during the pandemic; decision likely to be challenged in court (More)

25,000 HAPPY SMILES

In partnership with Remi

 

It’s a well-kept secret that many busy leaders grind their teeth at night. Luckily, Remi has reinvented the traditional bulky night guard to be far more comfortable, convenient, and affordable using proprietary plastics and the latest technology.

 

Remi’s “Warby Parker approach” has made it easy to get a custom-fit professional night guard without leaving home, and for only $99—which is 80% less than the average dentist. See why over 25,000 happy customers have chosen Remi. Take advantage of a 30-day satisfaction guarantee and 20% off with code 1440 to enjoy a better night’s sleep, risk-free.

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[endif]

ETCETERA

Three in 10 Americans are religiously unaffiliated.

 

Paris to hold the 2024 Olympic opening ceremonies on the River Seine.

 

A look back at expert predictions for 2021.

 

These carnivorous dinosaurs ran as fast as Usain Bolt.

 

The app that tracks your cat’s happiness.

 

Photos of Ethiopia’s “church forests.”

 

Foul-mouthed crow entertains schoolchildren.

 

The newest televised sport—Excel calculations.

 

Clickbait: How all politicians should settle grievances.

 

Historybook: US Bill of Rights ratified, becomes law (1791); Eiffel Tower builder Gustave Eiffel born (1832); Hunkpapa Lakota leader Sitting Bull killed (1890); RIP Walt Disney (1966); RIP actress Joan Fontaine (2013).

“A person should set his goals as early as he can and devote all his energy and talent to getting there.”

– Walt Disney
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH

 


64.) NATIONAL REVIEW

 


65.) POLITICAL WIRE

 


66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS

 


67.) ZEROHEDGE

 


68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT

 


69.) FRONTPAGE MAG

 


70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE

 


71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF

 


72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION

 


73.) POPULIST PRESS

This could be the nail in Biden’s coffin after the AP caught him red handed and is demanding answers

 

IN DEPTH:

  1. Biden ‘Effectively’ Running a ‘Mass Human Smuggling Operation’  1 hour ago
  2. Congress will hike debt limit by $2.5 trillion…  1 hour ago
  3. Pfizer Protects 33% Against Omicron, 70% Against Hospitalizations  1 hour ago
  4. Air Force Discharges 27 Members Over Vax  1 hour ago
  5. Democrats Move to Raise Debt Ceiling Hours Before Deadline  2 hours ago
  6. House Jan. 6 Inquisition Votes to Hold Mark Meadows in Criminal Contempt  2 hours ago
  7. Philadelphia Implements COVID-19 Vaccine Passports for Indoor Dining  2 hours ago
  8. WH Repeats Biden Running in ’24, Hillary Raises Profile  3 hours ago
  9. DeSantis Sending Biden Illegals To Martha Vineyards…  3 hours ago
  10. Biden senior adviser for migration leaving WH  3 hours ago
  11. WH cries ‘fake news’ on CBO score for spending bill  3 hours ago
  12. Biden Denies Student Loan Payment Extension  3 hours ago
  13. F-35 Can Now Carry Stormbreaker ‘Smartbomb’  4 hours ago
  14. USS Connecticut Pulls Into San Diego  4 hours ago
  15. Military’s Force Structure Likely Inadequate  4 hours ago
  16. Alaska-based F-35As arrive in Japan  4 hours ago
  17. Russia war fears explode  4 hours ago
  18. Russia may deploy mid-range nukes in Europe  4 hours ago
  19. Putin: Russia Leads World in Hypersonic Missile Tech  4 hours ago
  20. Pseudo-science hype: Tornadoes & climate change  4 hours ago
  21. Biden Administration Must Lift Tariffs  4 hours ago
  22. Trump: Netanyahu ‘Never Wanted Peace’  4 hours ago
  23. Kanye Concert Proceeds Going to Woke Groups  4 hours ago
  24. Congress Beef With Warner-Discovery Merger  4 hours ago
  25. Even SF residents sick of liberal reforms  4 hours ago
  26. BLM activists demand abolition of gang database  4 hours ago
  27. Chauvin expected to plead guilty in Floyd case  4 hours ago
  28. NFL star: Ex-girlfriend ‘staged’ brutal attack video  4 hours ago
  29. Tibetans Chain Themselves to Olympic Rings  4 hours ago
  30. CBO: ‘Biden BBB Bill adds $3 trillion to deficit’  4 hours ago
  31. Howard Stern Mocks Wallace’s Fox News Departure  5 hours ago
  32. Sen. Hawley: BLM’s corporate sponsors ‘anti-American’  5 hours ago
  33. “Meme Stocks” Crash to Lowest Level in Months  5 hours ago
  34. Biden bill could double child care costs  5 hours ago
  35. ETFs Post a Record $1 Trillion of Inflows  5 hours ago
  36. NYT columnist: ‘Inflation affects low-income families?’  5 hours ago
  37. Apple To Become The First $3 Trillion Company  5 hours ago
  38. Biden ‘Deeply Troubled’ by Kellogg’s Plans to Replace Striking Workers  19 hours ago

We are officially a banana republic by allowing this to continue.


 

IN DEPTH:

  1. New York Orders Andrew Cuomo to Return $5.1m from Book Deal
  2. Biden ‘Effectively’ Running a ‘Mass Human Smuggling Operation’  1 hour ago
  3. Congress will hike debt limit by $2.5 trillion…  1 hour ago
  4. Pfizer Protects 33% Against Omicron, 70% Against Hospitalizations  1 hour ago
  5. Air Force Discharges 27 Members Over Vax  1 hour ago
  6. Democrats Move to Raise Debt Ceiling Hours Before Deadline  2 hours ago
  7. House Jan. 6 Inquisition Votes to Hold Mark Meadows in Criminal Contempt  2 hours ago
  8. Philadelphia Implements COVID-19 Vaccine Passports for Indoor Dining  2 hours ago
  9. WH Repeats Biden Running in ’24, Hillary Raises Profile  3 hours ago
  10. DeSantis Sending Biden Illegals To Martha Vineyards…  3 hours ago
  11. Biden senior adviser for migration leaving WH  3 hours ago
  12. WH cries ‘fake news’ on CBO score for spending bill  3 hours ago
  13. Biden Denies Student Loan Payment Extension  3 hours ago
  14. F-35 Can Now Carry Stormbreaker ‘Smartbomb’  4 hours ago
  15. USS Connecticut Pulls Into San Diego  4 hours ago
  16. Military’s Force Structure Likely Inadequate  4 hours ago
  17. Alaska-based F-35As arrive in Japan  4 hours ago
  18. Russia war fears explode  4 hours ago
  19. Russia may deploy mid-range nukes in Europe  4 hours ago
  20. Putin: Russia Leads World in Hypersonic Missile Tech  4 hours ago
  21. Pseudo-science hype: Tornadoes & climate change  4 hours ago
  22. Biden Administration Must Lift Tariffs  4 hours ago
  23. Trump: Netanyahu ‘Never Wanted Peace’  4 hours ago
  24. Kanye Concert Proceeds Going to Woke Groups  4 hours ago
  25. Congress Beef With Warner-Discovery Merger  4 hours ago
  26. Even SF residents sick of liberal reforms  4 hours ago
  27. BLM activists demand abolition of gang database  4 hours ago
  28. Chauvin expected to plead guilty in Floyd case  4 hours ago
  29. NFL star: Ex-girlfriend ‘staged’ brutal attack video  4 hours ago
  30. Tibetans Chain Themselves to Olympic Rings  4 hours ago
  31. CBO: ‘Biden BBB Bill adds $3 trillion to deficit’  4 hours ago
  32. Howard Stern Mocks Wallace’s Fox News Departure  5 hours ago
  33. Sen. Hawley: BLM’s corporate sponsors ‘anti-American’  5 hours ago
  34. “Meme Stocks” Crash to Lowest Level in Months  5 hours ago
  35. Biden bill could double child care costs  5 hours ago
  36. ETFs Post a Record $1 Trillion of Inflows  5 hours ago
  37. NYT columnist: ‘Inflation affects low-income families?’  5 hours ago
  38. Apple To Become The First $3 Trillion Company  5 hours ago
  39. Biden ‘Deeply Troubled’ by Kellogg’s Plans to Replace Striking Workers  19 hours ago

 

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74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL

 


75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS

 


76.) THE DAILY DOT


77.) HEADLINE USA

 


78.) NATURAL NEWS

NaturalNews.com
How to maintain your sanity in a world dominated by delusion
Mike Adams We live in a world where the masses are delusional. They have been manipulated via engineered media hysteria into believing in an invisible “pandemic” that’s going to kill them if they don’t comply.

The compliance demands, of course, have become increasingly insane. First it was masks, then two jabs. Now it’s two masks and seven jabs. And you have to surrender your children. Soon it will be three masks, 12 jabs, three children and a partridge in a pear tree.

Navigating all this is challenging, but never try to conform to a delusional society. If you are truly sane, you will always be considered an “outcast” by a society that has gone utterly insane.

Today’s article and podcast explain all this in much more detail. Plus, we have some really hilarious new “wokie” superhero stuff to share with you that will leave you rolling with laughter.

Get the full article and podcast here.

New Videos from Brighteon.com
Situation Update, Dec 14, 2021 – In a world of mass delusion, the truly sane seem like outcastsWatch this video
Clay Clark and Mike Adams expose the globalist plan for runaway inflation and a dollar collapseWatch this video
Meet a woman being targeted and sued for merely expressing pro-America patriotism on a highway in TexasWatch this video
Featured Articles
Be vigilant: The next phase of the plandemic is digital “vaccine” passports and World War IIIBy Ethan Huff | Read the full story
90 percent of all “covid” deaths since August occurred in fully vaccinatedBy Ethan Huff | Read the full story
Sponsor: Health Ranger’s Organic Turmeric Gold Liquid Extract is packed with curcumin, essential vitamins, minerals, and more.
Covid “vaccines” are triggering psychiatric disorders in hundreds of thousands of people, data revealBy Ethan Huff | Read the full story
Covid jabs can cause the central nervous system to go absolutely haywire, possibly for lifeBy S.D. Wells | Read the full story
Sponsor: Support healthy vision with FDA-registered Groovy Bee Pinhole Glasses.
Everywhere you look, covid “vaccines” are failingBy Ethan Huff | Read the full story
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More of Today’s ArticlesA 5-day course of ivermectin hastens patient recovery from respiratory infection — real-world study
A 5-day course of ivermectin was put to the test in Dhaka, Bangladesh. A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial was set up to study the safety and effectiveness of ivermectin on mild …After you are vaccine damaged, if you complain about symptoms you will be required to take psychiatric medications until your “disorder” is cured (i.e. you stop complaining)
They call it Post Pandemic Stress Disorder, or PPSD, but it’s really long-term side effects from the Covid vaccines, and those who dare complain will face the dire consequences of …Exposed: CDC, NIH officials partnered with EcoHealth to perform illegal gain-of-function research on bat coronaviruses in Wuhan
As we all now know, Tony Fauci of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and Francis Collins, formerly of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), were both complicit …Vaccinated people show symptoms similar to those diagnosed with covid-19… a “pandemic of the vaccinated?”
A new study found that the side effects of Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines are difficult to distinguish from early symptoms of the virus itself. Researchers at King’s College …Dr. Vladimir Zelenko calls covid-19 vaccines the worst crime in human history – Brighteon.TV
Dr. Vladimir Zelenko, a well-known New York-based physician, called Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines the worst crime in human history. “It’s called premeditated first degree …New York State Supreme Court blocks outgoing Mayor Bill de Blasio’s vaccine passport mandate
The New York State Supreme Court on Tuesday, December 7, blocked outgoing Mayor Bill de Blasio’s vaccine passport mandate for city employees, including the New York Police Department (NYPD) …Democrats’ new ploy: Run pretend Republicans in political races, lie to the voters, get elected, then unleash left-wing tyranny
As Joe Biden’s and Kamala Harris’ poll numbers sink to pathetically low levels and Democrats face a red-wave wash-out during next year’s midterm elections, the party has got to get …

Democratic governor of Colorado finally decides it’s time to go with the real science and end foolish, ineffective covid lockdowns and mask mandates
It took Colorado Democratic Gov. Jared Polis a while — a long while — but he has finally come to his senses about the COVID-19 pandemic. As Dr. Anthony Fauci and crew have made clear, …

Austrian bureaucrat wants to financially punish unvaccinated citizens for non-compliance
Gerrit Loibl, the vice president of the Lower Austrian Medical Association, has a new plan for punishing the unvaccinated: a monthly tax. According to reports, Loibl wants the Austrian government …

British media says “hardcore vaccine refuseniks” are “terrorists” that need to be “deradicalized”
ITV in the United Kingdom has released the hounds against “anti-vaxxers,” calling for them to be “deradicalized” like “terrorists” and “punished” with …

Study confirms Pfizer covid-19 vaccine is useless against omicron variant
A study from Israel found that even three doses of Pfizer’s Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine do not provide enough protection against the post-vaccine omicron variant. In fact, the …

Insanity: Phoenix Zoo vaccinates 75 animals for covid-19 – all of them endangered species
Seventy-five animals at the Phoenix Zoo in Arizona have been given the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines – all of them are on the endangered species list. Veterinarians working for the zoo …

Jeffrey Prather: Jan. 6 patriots are still in jail while BLM, Antifa are allowed to keep rioting – Brighteon.TV
Retired Special Operations Command soldier Jeffrey Prather slammed the hypocrisy of government leaders during the Dec. 10 episode of “The Prather Point” on Brigheon.TV. Prather pointed …

Vaccine fantasies: Fauci claims Santa Claus already received Covid vaccine booster shot
Infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci made a ridiculous claim that Santa Claus has already received his Wuhan coronavirus (covid-19) booster shot. This appears to be another attempt by …

Dr. Stella Immanuel: Learn to trust God in these evil times – Brighteon.TV
Cameroonian-American physician Dr. Stella Immanuel talked about learning to trust God in evil times with her guest Vanessa Clark during the Dec. 7 edition of “Health with Dr. Stella …

Dr. Steven Hatfill tells Ann Vandersteel: There’s no valid medical reason for mass vaccination of kids and young adults – Brighteon.TV
American physician and virologist Dr. Steven Hatfill said there’s no valid medical reason for the government’s mass vaccination program for kids and young adults. Hatfill, who served as …

Smoking gun: Pfizer logs 1,223 deaths, 42,086 adverse reactions after just three months of vaccine rollout
In a stunning “confession,” Pfizer admitted that it has logged a staggering 42,086 adverse reactions – representing a total of 158,893 adverse events – in the first three months of its …

California school districts “phase out” D and F grades in bizarre effort to claim public school pandemic-era students aren’t failing
California school districts are lowering their standard to help high school students get accepted into colleges and universities. The Los Angeles Unified, Oakland Unified, Sacramento City Unified …

Amtrak to cut services due to labor shortages made worse by federal vaccine mandate
The staff shortages exacerbated by President Joe Biden’s Wuhan coronavirus (covid-19) vaccine mandate on federal contractors have led to the cutting of some services by Amtrak. In a written …

Amazon outage causes chaos, renders many helpless (and even locked out of their own homes) without working smart gadgets
Thousands of people were left without working fridges, Roombas, doorbells and lighting at about 10 a.m. Eastern time Tuesday, Dec. 7, following the outage at Amazon.com Inc.’s …

12 large US cities have broken yearly homicide records so far – and they all have Democrat mayors
A dozen major American cities have already broken their yearly homicide records – and all of them have Democratic mayors. As of December 6, the city of Philadelphia had 521 homicides on record …

      
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79.) POLITICHICKS

 


80.) BLACKPRESSUSA

 


81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL

 


82.) CNN


83.) THE DAILY CALLER

 


84.) POWERLINE

 


85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION

 


86.) THE PATRIOT POST

 


87.) DECISION DESK HQ

 


88.) DIGG

 


89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK

 


90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE

 


91.) USA TODAY

usatoday.com
Daily Briefing
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 15
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and lawmakers participate in a moment of silence for the 800,000 American lives lost to COVID-19 on Dec. 14, 2021 in Washington, DC.
800,000 COVID deaths and counting
Number of COVID dead approaching 1 million, Biden will survey tornado damage in Kentucky and more news to start your Wednesday.
click here
Good morning, Daily Briefing readers. The number of people who have died from COVID-19 in the United States is approaching 1 million. President Biden will head to Kentucky to survey the devastation caused by a series of deadly tornados. If you’re eligible, you may get your final child tax credit cash. And, planning to send Christmas gifts with with FedEx and USPS? Make sure you do it today.
It’s Jane, with Wednesday’s news.
💰 Congress voted to raise the nation’s debt limit by $2.5 trillion, officially staving off default and the economic peril that would come if the U.S. were unable to pay its bills.
🔴 The nation has surpassed 800,000 coronavirus deaths as 1,200 Americans die from COVID-19 every day. “There is no question that we will reach 1 million deaths sooner rather than later,” physician Robert Glatter told USA TODAY.
The U.S. reached 800,000 COVID-19 deaths Tuesday, and health experts believe there is "no question" the nation will reach 1 million fatalities from the coronavirus.
The U.S. reached 800,000 COVID-19 deaths Tuesday, and health experts believe there is “no question” the nation will reach 1 million fatalities from the coronavirus.
USA TODAY
⚖️ Prince Andrew is asking a judge to dismiss a sexual-abuse lawsuit brought against him by Virginia Roberts Giuffre, saying the accuser was the age of consent at the time.
🦠 The omicron variant is moving faster than surveillance systems can track. It has so unnerved some medical experts that they’re starting to put the brakes on preparations for their holiday gatherings.
🔵 The House voted to hold former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows in contempt for defying a subpoena from the committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection.
The House has voted to hold Mark Meadows in contempt for defying a subpoena in its Jan. 6 probe, urging the DOJ to prosecute Trump's former chief of staff.
The House has voted to hold Mark Meadows in contempt for defying a subpoena in its Jan. 6 probe, urging the DOJ to prosecute Trump’s former chief of staff.
USA TODAY
🏈 “Total plant”: The true identity of the Aaron Rodgers doppelganger on “Sunday Night Football” is unconfirmed, but the Packers quarterback joked: “That was a total plant by NBC, I’m sure.”
🐍 ‘Twas not yet the night before Christmas, but there was a creature stirring in a house in South Africa: one of the most poisonous snakes in the country.
🎤 Girl Named Tom has entered “The Voice” history books. The Ohio trio, composed of siblings Bekah, 21, Joshua, 24, and Caleb, 26, was crowned the Season 21 champ, becoming the first-ever group to win the singing competition.
Kelly Clarkson celebrates with sibling trio Girl Named Tom, the first group to ever win.
Kelly Clarkson celebrates with sibling trio Girl Named Tom, the first group to ever win.
NBC, Trae Patton/NBC
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, reporter David Oliver explains how some TikTok users say their feed clued them in on the fact they were gay before they realized it themselves. You can listen to the podcast every day on  Apple PodcastsSpotify, or on your smart speaker.
Here’s what’s happening today:

Biden to visit Kentucky in aftermath of deadly tornadoes

President Joe Biden will visit Kentucky on Wednesday to survey the damage from a series of deadly tornadoes that ravaged the state late Friday and early Saturday. More than 30 tornadoes ripped across Kentucky and four other states over the weekend, leaving dozens dead, devastating homes and demolishing entire towns. Kentucky was the hardest hit by what Gov. Andy Beshear said was the deadliest tornado in the state’s history, with 74 people dead and at least 100 people unaccounted for. On Saturday, Biden offered condolences to the victims of the deadly storm and indicated that he would travel to the heavily damaged areas once he was certain his visit would not impede recovery efforts.

Derek Chauvin expected to plead guilty in George Floyd civil rights case

Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin appears set to change his plea to guilty on federal charges that he violated George Floyd’s civil rights . A docket entry showed that a hearing has been scheduled for Wednesday for Chauvin to change his not-guilty plea in the case. Chauvin has already been convicted of state murder and manslaughter charges for pinning his knee against Floyd’s neck during a May 2020 arrest even as the Black man said he couldn’t breathe. He was sentenced to 22 1/2 years. Chauvin and three other officers were indicted earlier this year on federal charges alleging they willfully violated Floyd’s rights while acting under government authority.

Just for subscribers:

⚖️ 1,500 Black college students challenged police in 1961. The Supreme Court took their side.
🌪 Aerial views show deadly tornado devastation in Mayfield, Kentucky, and four states.
🏀 “I just got used to being sick”: How long-haul COVID has cost WNBA star Asia Durr two seasons.
🎠 Splurge or save? These moms are willing to pay a premium for magical experiences at Walt Disney World. And they show how to save, too.
🎸 Opinion: “The Beatles launched me into adolescence, but in ‘Get Back’ they weren’t who I expected.” The new TV film makes Jill Lawrence wonder how they lasted as long as they did.
These articles are for USA TODAY subscribers. You can sign up here for $1/week. Here is all of our subscriber content.

Storm to pound central U.S. with strong winds

A storm that lashed California with rain, wind and snow Tuesday is predicted to produce a swath of strong winds from the deserts to the central and southern Plains Wednesday. Not only will winds be strong enough to kick up dust and raise the risk of wildfire ignition, the gusts will also bring the potential for power outages, AccuWeather warned. A National Weather Service forecast office in Nebraska warned of 70 mph gusts, adding that “travel will be difficult, especially for high-profile vehicles. Trucks may be blown over. Holiday decorations will be damaged or blown away.” A few severe thunderstorms are also possible in portions of Minnesota, Iowa and Missouri.

Latest (and possibly last) child tax credit money set to arrive

One final blast of cash is set to arrive Wednesday for roughly 36 million families nationwide who are eligible for the advance payment for the child tax credit . The payments, part of the American Rescue Plan signed into law March 11, amount to up to $300 for each child ages 5 and younger and up to $250 for those who range in age from 6 to 17. The monthly payments began July 15 and Wednesday’s payout will be the last unless Congress passes President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better social spending and climate package, currently stalled in the Senate.

ICYMI: Some of our top stories yesterday

🔴 Phillip Adams, the former NFL player who killed six people and himself, suffered from the debilitating brain disease chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a doctor announced.
👨‍💻 A ransomware attack on Kronos could disrupt how companies pay and manage their employees for weeks.
🍪 What’s your state’s favorite Christmas cookie? Google has shared the unique holiday searches.

Shipping Christmas gifts through FedEx or USPS? Make sure you get them sent

This week is expected to be the busiest week of the holiday mailing and shipping season, with nearly 2.3 billion pieces of mail and packages expected to be processed and delivered. Wednesday is the last day for ground delivery with FedEx and USPS. UPS recommends using its website to get an estimate. “Now is the time to mail your holiday greetings and packages to make sure they reach their intended destination in time for holiday gatherings and celebrations,” Postmaster General Louis DeJoy said. Retailers’ shipping deadlines for online orders vary, and many stores will offer curbside and in-store pickup through Christmas Eve.

📸 Rain, snow and travel havoc: Powerful storm lashes California 📸

A local resident surveys the damage to a washed-out road in Silverado Canyon, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 14, 2021.
A local resident surveys the damage to a washed-out road in Silverado Canyon, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 14, 2021.
Eugene Garcia, AP
A powerful storm walloped California on Tuesday, as several inches of rain fell in the Los Angeles area and feet of snow were reported the Sierra Nevada.
The storm wreaked travel havoc across the state. It also raised the threat of mudslides in areas scarred by wildfires, prompting evacuation orders in southern California.
See our gallery of the inclement weather as it marched through the state.
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG

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IMPORTANT REPORT: Tornado Prediction Revealed
Disaster early warning! >>
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[JUST IN] – Democrat Senator Exposes CHEAP TRICKS – “Whether We Like It Or Not…”
This is NOT what we need right now >>
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This can affect your state too! >>
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See the name here >>
U.S. On The BRINK – First Time This Has Happened Since 1982
It’s official >>
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96.) NOT THE BEE

 


97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT

 


98.) NEWSMAX

 


99.) MARK LEVIN

December 14, 2021

December 14, 2021

On Tuesday’s Mark Levin show, Rep Liz Cheney suggests that then-President Trump committed a federal crime on January 6th, 2021. Of course, Congress has no authority to prosecute any crime, and acting in this manner violates one’s Fifth Amendment rights. in doing so, Liz Cheney has demonstrated that many in Trump’s inner circle urged him via texts to Mark Meadows to speak out against the violence at the Capitol. Incidentally, Trump had offered 10,000 National Guard troops, but Speaker Pelosi rejected the President’s offer. This Pelosi-appointed committee is covering up for her. The real question is: what did Pelosi know and when did she know it? Then, Sen. Richard Blumenthal, who lied about combat service in Vietnam, attended the 102nd-anniversary celebration of the Communist Party USA. Blumenthal had his American Marxism on full display. Later, Barak Ravid fires back on Twitter but remains a small fish in a large pond. Israeli prosecutors have made flimsy allegations against Benjamin Netanyahu hoping that the charges will stick.  Afterward, smash-and-grab robberies abound in California and while retailers are installing barbed wire, leftwing politicians refuse to empower police or prosecutors to stop the problem. The White House dodges questions on crime and remains silent on this issue. Finally, Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich joins the show with an update on his lawsuits against the Biden Administration’s unconstitutional policies on vaccine mandates and the southern border.

THIS IS FROM:

Hot Air
Cheney hints: We’re building a case that Trump committed a federal crime on January 6

American Thinker
Sen. Richard Blumenthal ‘excited and proud’ to help Communist Party USA celebrate its 102nd anniversary

Newsweek
The Ugly Truth Comes Out About Netanyahu’s Trial | Opinion

NRO
Key Inflation Metric Grows at Fastest Pace Ever Recorded

Amazon
Amazon Best Sellers of 2021 (So Far)

CNN
Famous LA shopping center adds barbed-wire-like fence to deter smash and grabs

Daily Wire
Jim Clyburn Says Democrats Will ‘Get Around’ Filibuster To Pass Progressive Voting Expansion

Just The News
North Carolina governor vetoes bill blocking private funding of elections

Breitbart
White House Repeats Joe Biden Running in 2024 as Hillary Clinton Raises Profile

Washington Examiner
Congress will hike debt limit by $2.5 trillion to extend borrowing past midterm elections

Rumble
Psaki Doesn’t Know Anyone Concerned About National Debt Crisis

Washington Examiner
White House cries ‘fake news’ on CBO score showing higher cost for spending bill

The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.

Image used with permission of Getty Images / Anna Moneymaker


100.) WOLF DAILY

 


101.) THE GELLER REPORT

Breaking news stories the media complex won’t cover. Share widely.

For more information on any post below, click through to read the full article on our website.


Schumer, Who Accused President Trump of Russian Collusion, is Getting Paid by Putin

Photo Credit: Courtesy artist Bosch FawstinSchumer, Who Accused Trump of Russian Collusion, is Getting Paid by Putin

By Daniel Greenfield, The Jewish Press, December 13, 2021:

“A single, ominous question now hangs over the White …


CNN producer Bought ENTIRE SKI HOUSE in Vermont To Sexually Abuse Children There: Court Docs

CNN producer John Griffin (right) is accused of recruiting girls by using a “BDSM dating, Fetish and Kink” website. John Griffin/TwitterA senior CNN producer bought an entire ski house in Vermont for the purposing sexually abusing children …


TRUMP PEACE: Moroccan King Orders Restoration of Hundreds of Jewish Sites

What President Trump has accomplished for Israel-Arab relations is a miracle. Shame on the MSM for not extensively reporting on these incredible developments. Kudos to Morocco’s King Mohammed VI for this initiative.This weekend marked one year …


Still No Deaths From Omicron: Americans Are Getting On With Their Lives Despite Unhinged Media Frenzy

The pandemic was a hoax. The American people have had it. By Jordan Boyd The Federalist, December 14, 2021:Americans are returning to normal despite the media’s attempts to drum up alarm over the supposedly ‘highly transmissible’ Omicron …


Israel’s Mossad tricked Iran scientists into blowing up their own nuclear facility

The feel good story of the year!The Telegraph is reporting agents from Israel’s spy agency Mossad recruited Iranian scientists to sabotage the nuclear facility where they were employed by smuggling in explosives disguised as boxes of food, …


Fraudulent President Biden’s job approval sinking on inflation, crime and COVID: POLL

They don’t care. Tyrants don’t care about ‘the people.’ Their callous indifference to the pain and suffering they are causing is a hallmark of dictatorships.Another disastrous poll for the failed Biden Administration. President Biden’s polls …

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102.) CNS

 


103.) RELIABLE NEWS

 


104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL

Independent Sentinel

The Biden Regime hates you.

NY bills will allow unelected Gov. Hochul to arrest people without trial over ‘health threats’.

Highest Producer Price Inflation Since Records Began”.

Liz Cheney is deranged.

13 murdered service members and 170 murdered Afghans was “inevitable,” says Biden

image Exploding Glitter Bombs to Nab Porch PiratesThis is a unique way to capture or scare off porch pirates for people who live, say in San Francisco, where police don’t pursue thieves. It’s a glitter bomb disguised…
image The Biden Regime Still Hates YouThe Biden administration announced last week that they were issuing a diplomatic boycott of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics. The decision not to send an official delegation, White House press secretary…
image Tyranny! NY Bills Include Detaining People Without Trial Over Public HealthThe Marxists are rampaging through our blue states and what they do needs to be watched closely because this is the Democrat plan for the nation. New York, like California,…
image Psaki Thought a Bald-Faced Lie Would Be a Great Response to Soaring Meat PricesThese inflationary policies, if left open, will literally destroy the economy. ~ Larry Kudlow The White House spokesperson Jen Psaki decided a bald-faced lie would be a great response to…
image The Left “Weaponizes Tornado…Deceit and Deception..Piling on the Misery… Sociopathic”Insanity. Its a below average tornado, wind damage and hail season. No credibility No knowledge of past weather, We are in the hands of leftists who weaponize weather for their…
image Double Vaxxed people Under 40 Appear to Be Driving OmicronOmicron appears to be driven by young vaccinated people. Data from Denmark shows that just over 70 percent of omicron cases have been among those younger than 40. This is…
image “Highest Producer Price Inflation Since Records Began”Mr. Patrick said “the US Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Tuesday that the producer price inflation jumped 9.6% year over year in November. It’s the highest since records began, basically.” Democrats…
image Traitor McConnell Participates in Another Major Giveaway to DemsThanks to Mitch McConnell and his band of RINOs, the debt limit will be extended into 2023. That gives Democrats plenty of time to push through their socialist/communist bills. It…
image Deranged Cheney Twists Emails Into “Insurrection”-Meadows Held in ContemptDeranged, traitorous Liz Cheney is trying to use texts that amount to a no-never mind as proof that J6 was an “insurrection.” The J6 inquisition merely wants to destroy Donald…
image Biden Explains 13 Murdered Service Members in Kabul Was InevitableDuring an interview with CBS Sunday Morning with his wife, Biden explained away the deaths of 13 U.S. service members and 170 Afghans thanks to his horrendous withdrawal plan. “Everybody…
image WaPo’s Investigating Manchin, Possibly a Threat to Get BBB PassedSenator Joe Manchin usually makes a big splash to pretend he is supporting his red state and then reluctantly gives in. That might be the process he’s following now when…
image Dinesh D’Souza: Racism of Karl Marx and Critical Race TheoryDinesh D’Souza shows that the racism of Critical Race Theory traces its origin to the racism of Karl Marx, who was not only a racist but also a colonialist and…
image Nanny State Cali Targets Food Waste as Cities BurnCalifornia is living with a crime wave, a cargo ship crisis (largely of their own making), and has the highest unemployment in the country, shared only by Democrat Nevada. None of…
image Used Car Inflation! Prices Up 50% in 2021Used car prices have increased more than 50% in 2021. Historically, used cars decrease in value. You know the old saying about buying a new car? “The moment you drive…
image VA Hospital Finally Relents on Ivermectin After Defying Court OrdersChris Davies and his father Donald have been fighting for their mother and wife Kathy Davies’ right to try the drug Ivermectin as a COVID-19 treatment at Fauquier Health hospital…
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS

 


107.) BECKER NEWS

 


108.) SONS OF LIBERTY

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109.) STARS & STRIPES

 

 


110.) RIGHT & FREE

 


111.) UNITED VOICE

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