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MORNING NEWS BRIEFING – FEBRUARY 7, 2022

Posted By: Rick Bulow February 7, 2022

Good morning! Here is your news briefing for day , 2022

1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL

February 7 2022

Good morning from Washington, where the Biden administration sees no reason you shouldn’t pay higher premiums so it can force insurers to cover gender “transitions.” Jay Richards and Jared Eckert explain. Americans need to know more about business deals in China that enriched the Bidens, Sen. Ron Johnson tells Fred Lucas. On the podcast, our Rob Bluey interviews Julie Kelly about her book exposing the left’s exploitation of last year’s riot at the Capitol. Plus: the Winter Olympics throws a spotlight on China; the left’s coziness with Russia; and a new threat to Americans’ privacy. Sixty years ago today, President John F. Kennedy orders broader restrictions on U.S. trade with Cuba, effectively creating a full embargo.

COMMENTARY
Biden Proposal Would Force Insurers to Pay for Gender ‘Transition’
Biden Proposal Would Force Insurers to Pay for Gender 'Transition'
By Jay Richards
This would be a disaster for insurers, for medical providers, and, most of all, for those struggling with gender dysphoria.
More
NEWS
Sen. Ron Johnson Asks ‘Full Accounting’ of Biden Family’s Chinese Business Deals
Sen. Ron Johnson Asks 'Full Accounting' of Biden Family's Chinese Business Deals
By Fred Lucas
A new book, “Red Handed: How American Elites Get Rich Helping China Win” by Peter Schweizer, asserts that five deals with China helped the Biden family make a total of $31 million.
More
ANALYSIS
What the Media Isn’t Telling You About Jan. 6
What the Media Isn't Telling You About Jan. 6
By Rob Bluey
Author Julie Kelly says a top FBI official “twice refused to answer” whether there were “any FBI informants or agents who either incited or engaged in violent behavior that day.”
More
NEWS
‘Bigger Than Sports’: As Olympics Begin, NBA Star, Lawmaker Speak Out Against China
'Bigger Than Sports': As Olympics Begin, NBA Star, Lawmaker Speak Out Against China
By Maggie Hroncich
“The athletes need to stand up for something bigger than basketball and say, ‘I’m not going to participate … in a country where there’s a genocide happening,'” says the Boston Celtics’ Enes Kanter Freedom.
More
COMMENTARY
Russian Appeasement a Left-Wing Monopoly
Russian Appeasement a Left-Wing Monopoly
By Victor Davis Hanson
The left falsely accused the Trump campaign, transition, and administration of “collusion.” That charge instead best summarizes Democrats’ years of accommodation with Putin’s Russia.
More
COMMENTARY
Biden’s Anti-Crypto Scaremongering Threatens to Impose Surveil-and-Control on All Americans
Biden's Anti-Crypto Scaremongering Threatens to Impose Surveil-and-Control on All Americans
By Peter St. Onge
Even if you don’t own or care about crypto and inflation, the much wider issue is what policymakers are using the scapegoat to push: a full-blown surveillance state.
More
NEWS
ICYMI: ‘You Are on the Losing Side of History’: Meet Mom Fighting Schools’ Mask Mandates
ICYMI: 'You Are on the Losing Side of History': Meet Mom Fighting Schools' Mask Mandates
By Lauren Evans
“My son came home the first day of school with an extreme headache,” says Merianne Jensen. “For two weeks, he came home with a headache. We took him to the doctor. It was all because of the mask.”
More
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MORNING BRIEF TOP NEWS

CDC Signals Changes to COVID-19 Vaccine Schedule, in Part to Address Heart Inflammation

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EXCLUSIVE: Trump Reveals the First Thing He Would Do If He Is President Again

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Memphis Black Lives Matter Founder Sentenced to 6 Years for Illegally Voting

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Navy SEAL Candidate Dies, 2nd Hospitalized After ‘Hell Week’

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Freedom Convoy Organizer Says Removal of GoFundMe Donations Result of Government Interference

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Border Patrol Union: Lucky If We Seize 5 Percent of Fentanyl Pills Coming Across Border

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Fired Syneos Health Workers: Company Ignored Tennessee Vaccination Law

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Joe Rogan Responds After Edited Video Compilation Shows Him Saying N-Word

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POSITIVE NEWS

Henry III Gold Coin Found by Amateur Metal Detectorist Sells at Auction for $875,000

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EPOCH OPINION

GoFundMe and How the Left Came to Despise the Working Class

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Rex Murphy: Media’s Alarmist Reporting of Trucker Protest and Trudeau’s Intolerant Rhetoric Are Shameful

By Rex Murphy

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3.) DAYBREAK

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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2022
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1.
Beijing Winter Olympics Open to Abysmal Ratings

From the story: … the 16 million viewers is a record-low for an Opening Ceremony, with the previous low being 20.1 million viewers for the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary. According to polls, one of the main components to the lack of interest is the Olympic Games’ location itself.

Daily Wire

2.
National Security Adviser: “Very Distinct” Possibility Russia Will Attack Ukraine “Any Time Now”

On ABC’s This Week, Jake Sullivan said “We believe that there is a very distinct possibility that Vladimir Putin will order an attack on Ukraine. It could take a number of different forms. It could happen as soon as tomorrow or it could take some weeks yet.”  More from the story: What do they plan to do about it? Sullivan said “we are ready to respond in a united, swift and severe way with our allies and partners should he choose to move forward with a military escalation”(ABC News). They are marching against Russian in the streets of Kharkiv (Twitter)

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3.
Biden Rewards Iran with Relief on Nuke Sanctions

From the story: As U.S. negotiators head back to Vienna for what could be a make-or-break session, Secretary of State Antony Blinken signed several sanctions waivers related to Iran’s civilian nuclear activities. The move reverses the Trump administration’s decision to rescind them. The waivers are ultimately intended to entice Iran back to the 2015 deal that it has been violating since former President Donald Trump withdrew from the agreement in 2018 and reimposed U.S. sanctions. In the short term, the waivers will exempt foreign countries and companies that work in Iran’s civilian nuclear sector from American penalties (Associated Press).  From the Wall Street Journal editorial board: It’s egregious that all this is happening as Iran continues to spread terror in the region (see the Houthis) and stonewall international nuclear inspectors. Washington has held off on censuring Tehran at the International Atomic Energy Agency, fearful that a rebuke at the organization’s Board of Governors will cause the Iranians to walk. But if Iran won’t allow outsiders to fully verify its nuclear activity, what good is a deal that claims to limit nuclear activity? (WSJ). From Nikki Haley: “Biden is giving Iran a win for absolutely nothing in return…to get into Iran’s good graces. The Ayatollahs know Biden will do anything to keep them at the table and they are taking full advantage of us in the process” (Twitter).

4.
Stacey Abrams Photographed Maskless In the Middle of Masked School Children

The picture perfectly captures the soul of Democrats (Washington Times). Meanwhile, a new poll has her down 7 to Kemp in the race for Governor of Georgia (Fox News). Instead of dealing with the issue honestly, Abrams went with the race card (RedState). The new mayor of New York City, a lover of mask mandates for children, was also caught indoors, in public, posing for pictures, maskless (Fox News).

5.
After Leftists Dig Up Old Rogan Clip Where He Uses N-Word, Spotify Stands Firm

From Spotify CEO Daniel Ek: “While I strongly condemn what Joe has said and I agree with his decision to remove past episodes from our platform, I realize some will want more. And I want to make one point very clear – I do not believe that silencing Joe is the answer. We should have clear lines around content and take action when they are crossed, but canceling voices is a slippery slope. Looking at the issue more broadly, it’s critical thinking and open debate that powers real and necessary progress.” Elk also agreed to an “incremental investment of $100 million for the licensing, development, and marketing of music (artists and songwriters) and audio content from historically marginalized groups” to boost “all types of creators” (Daily Wire). From Christina Sommers: Dear @Spotify, The most marginalized group right now? Reasonable, fair-minded & forgiving human beings. Please don’t forget them (Twitter). From Rich Lowry: Everywhere is a college campus now. No one has the fortitude to say, “No, grow up, get over it.” It’s all supine apologies and doublespeak in the same dreary pattern, over and over (Twitter). Rogan explained it was 12 years ago, not something he does any longer, and taken completely out of context (Page Six). The ironically unforgiving CNN wants him ousted (Daily Wire). From Megyn Kelly: The Rogan controversy isn’t about whether he said racist things (or pushed covid misinfo). It’s about the Woke Left’s piety. One must adhere to ALL of their world view or be destroyed. The comments are just the excuse – anyone who doesn’t share their zealotry will be targeted (Twitter). From Erielle Davidson: People’s brains are falling out of their heads, and it is fascinating, yet terrifying to watch. Just complete hysteria (Twitter).

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6.
Senator Cruz Calls for Investigation of GoFundMe Over Treatment of Canadian Truckers

From Townhall’s Rebecca Downs: Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) is calling on the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to investigate GoFundMe after they ended a fundraiser for Canadian truckers that had ultimately reached approximately $10 million. Initially, as I reported, the crowdfunding platform announced that donors had to request a refund by February 19, or else the funds would be redistributed. After pushback and threats of investigation, the platform ultimately decided to automatically issue refunds (Townhall). Meanwhile, the mayor of Ottawa has declared a state of emergency over the truckers (NY Times).

7.
Teachers Bailing on Profession

And companies are quickly hiring them. Teachers left their profession at a higher rate than any other industry in 2021. The story notes “Many of those are teachers exhausted from toggling between online and classroom instruction, shifting Covid-19 protocols and dealing with challenging students, parents and administrators.”

WSJ

8.
More than 3 in 4 Voters Believe Members of Congress Have Unfair Stock Trading Advantage

As proven by Nancy Pelosi.

Business Insider

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9.
16 Penn Swimmers Want Male Swimmer Barred from Competing Against Women

They are still afraid to be named as Democrats, media and all on the left are willing to crucify women who dare to stand up to this insanity.

NY Post

10.
Ohio State University Sponsors “Sex Week” Encourages Thanking Abortion Providers

From the story: Student Advocates for Sexual Health Awareness is hosting the “Sex Week,” but told Fox News Digital that several Ohio State University departments such as the Ohio State University Department of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies and the College of Social Work are providing financial support for the week-long event. One event hosted during “Sex Week” is “Valentine’s for Abortion Providers” where students can “help thank abortion providers” for the work that they do.

Fox News

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4.) THE SUNBURN

Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 2.7.22

Here’s your AM rundown of people, politics and policy in the Sunshine State.

Good Monday morning.

Susie Wiles is now co-chair of the global public strategy firm Mercury.

The veteran GOP strategist is best known for masterminding former President Donald Trump’s two electoral wins in the Sunshine State. She also managed now-U.S. Sen. Rick Scott’s first gubernatorial campaign when he a virtual unknown in state politics.

She was also key in helping Ron DeSantis overcome deficits in polling and momentum in his successful 2018 campaign for Governor.

In addition to her campaign work, Wiles has lobbied on behalf of companies ranging from local businesses to multinational corporations at the state and federal levels.

Big get: Susie Wiles takes her considerable talents to Mercury.

“I am excited to join the bipartisan team of experts and established public strategists at Mercury,” Wiles said. “I look forward to working hard to provide successful outcomes on behalf of our world-class roster of clients in both Florida and D.C.”

In her new role, Wiles will serve as co-chair of the firm’s Florida and Washington offices. Wiles will also launch Public Strategy Advisors, a new company focused on electing Republicans nationwide.

“Susie is a veteran campaign strategist with an expert ability to put her finger on the pulse of any issue and effectively use her insight and perception to yield winning results,” said Ashley Walker, a partner at Mercury. “We are thrilled for Susie to join the Mercury family, as she will undoubtedly be an invaluable leader to those working alongside her at the firm and will elevate the work we deliver to our clients.”

Mercury CEO Kieran Mahoney added, “Susie, and her ability to successfully navigate any political landscape, is an extraordinary addition to our team.”

— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —

—@AnnieGrayerCNN: Former Chief of Staff to Mike Pence, Marc Short, who was at the Capitol on Jan. 6: “from my front-row seat, I did not see a lot of legitimate political discourse.”

—@GovRonDeSantis: Floridians should not have their data used by Big Tech without providing affirmative consent, and I urge the Legislature to protect the data privacy of all Floridians.

—@JeanetteNunez: The same @gofundme that supported Antifa, BLM, and CHAZ/CHOP just shut down fundraisers for the Canadian truckers protesting against vaccine mandate. Florida stands with the Freedom Convoy.

—@MattRinaldiTX: What @gofundme is doing now, your bank will be doing in 5 years.

—@SatinRussell: My nephew insists on wearing his mask, no matter where he is — even when we assure him that the family is safe. He’s four and can hardly remember a time when he didn’t mask around people he doesn’t live with.

—@AnnaforFlorida: Not only is book banning just a dangerous practice, but there is so much irony among those who make fun of “cancel culture” as they try to cancel things

Tweet, tweet:

 

—@BSFarrington: I was this close to giving up Twitter, and a Republican legislator called me and said, “You may not know it, but your message of kindness makes a difference.” I decided then I wouldn’t be silenced by hate. I’ll keep speaking about love and kindness, even if it subjects me to hate.

—@MDixon55: People who will wait in those quarter-mile long @Starbucks lines that spill out into the street are wild, man.

— DAYS UNTIL —

Super Bowl LVI — 6; Will Smith‘s ‘Fresh Prince of Bel-Air’ reboot premieres — 6; Discover Boating Miami International Boat Show begins — 9; season four of “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ begins — 9; Spring Training report dates begin — 10; Synapse Florida tech summit begins — 10; ‘The Walking Dead’ final season part two begins — 13; Daytona 500 — 13; Special Election for Jacksonville City Council At-Large Group 3 — 16; Suits For Session — 16; CPAC begins — 17; St. Pete Grand Prix — 18; Joe Biden to give the State of the Union address — 22; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 25; Miami Film Festival begins — 25; the 2022 Players begins — 29; Sarasota County votes to renew the special 1-mill property tax for the school district — 29; the third season of ‘Atlanta’ begins — 44; season two of ‘Bridgerton’ begins — 46; The Oscars — 48; Macbeth with Daniel Craig and Ruth Negga begin performances on Broadway — 50; Grammys rescheduled in Las Vegas — 55; Magic Johnson’s Apple TV+ docuseries ‘They Call Me Magic’ begins — 74; ‘The Godfather’ TV series ‘The Offer’ premieres — 80; federal student loan payments will resume — 83; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 88; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 109; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 115; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 152; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 165; Michael Mann and Meg Gardiner novel ‘Heat 2’ publishes — 183; ‘The Lord of the Rings’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 207; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 242; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 277; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 280; ‘Avatar 2′ premieres — 312; ‘Captain Marvel 2′ premieres — 375; ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ premieres — 410; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 536; ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 620; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 900.

—TOP STORY —

Great schism — The Republican National Committee’s decision to censure U.S. Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger and denounce the House investigation into Jan. 6 has spawned an internecine war within the GOP, with trad conservatives blasting the decision and Trumpists sticking to the line that the Capitol attack was merely a protest, not a riot or an insurrection.

United front? — Much of the controversy stems from the statement going out on RNC letterhead. Law-and-order Republicans say it reads a tacit endorsement of the Jan. 6 rioters, which are described as “ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse.”

Half and half — Still, some top GOP officials are playing both sides of the issue. Count Sen. Joe Gruters among them. The Republican Party of Florida Chair co-sponsored the resolution and gave it a yay vote in absentia but insists he believes all who broke the law should be held accountable.

Rioters or patriots? Joe Gruters walks a thin line in the debate among Republicans over Jan. 6.

Care to explain? — “I was in Session in Tallahassee so did not vote in person but gave my proxy to Florida (National Committeewoman) Kathleen King. Prior to the meeting, I discussed with both the Florida NCW and (National Committeeman Peter Feaman), and we all signed on as co-sponsors to the resolution.”

Muddy waters — Florida Politics asked him point-blank whether he thought the events of Jan. 6 were “legitimate political discourse.” His answer: “I understand why people were so upset, but there is no justification for breaking the law, especially those who damage property or attack law enforcement officers. Justice should prevail, and people that committed these acts should be held accountable. Many more people came to D.C. to peacefully protest what they thought was an injustice. Those ordinary citizens should not be harassed or targeted in any way. “

Broken record — When asked to clarify why he co-sponsored the resolution, he stuck to the script: “There is no justification for breaking the law, especially those who damage property or attack law enforcement officers. Justice should prevail, and people that committed these acts should be held accountable. Many people came to D.C. to peacefully protest what they thought was an injustice. Those ordinary citizens should not be harassed or targeted in any way.”

— DATELINE TALLY —

“House budgets $105.3 billion in spending plan” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — The Florida House unveiled its proposed spending plan for the coming fiscal year on Friday, clocking in at $105.3 billion. While the number is about $4 billion larger than what the state is spending in the current fiscal year, the amount falls shy of the $108.6 billion budget plan the Senate published earlier Friday. Together, both are north of DeSantis‘ $99.7 billion proposal, but DeSantis’ total dollar amount is near the House’s top figure when considering the federal spending that helped balloon the Legislature’s budget beyond past marks. In a statement, House Speaker Chris Sprowls said the House’s budget proposal builds on last year’s plan by investing state dollars in a “strategic, intentional way.”

“Senate unveils $108.6 billion budget with pay hikes for state workers” via Gray Rohrer of Florida Politics — Low-paid state workers would see raises and K-12 schools would get a funding boost, as would nearly every portion of the state budget under a spending plan released Friday by the Senate. The $108.6 billion proposal would be a more than $7 billion increase on the current year’s budget, thanks largely to an infusion of federal stimulus dollars given to states to cope with the COVID-19 pandemic. Senate President Wilton Simpson has pushed to increase the pay for low-paid state workers by raising the minimum wage to $15. A constitutional amendment passed by voters in 2020 will push the minimum wage for all workers to $15 by 2026, but Simpson says the early increase is needed to recruit and retain workers in needed areas.

Ka-Ching: Both Chris Sprowls and Wilton Simpson release blockbuster budget proposals.

“Senate, House snub Ron DeSantis’ push to increase cancer research to $100 million” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — There are plenty of differences between the proposed $47 billion-plus health care spending proposals the Senate and House rolled out this week. But the chambers are in lockstep in deciding not to include an additional $37 million to increase cancer research and treatment, as advocated by DeSantis and First Lady Casey DeSantis. The Governor and the First Lady have already noticed the snub, both of whom took to social media after the House released its proposed spending plan late Thursday afternoon. “Cancer is the second-leading cause of death in Florida. I have recommended to the Legislature $100 million for cancer research so we can fight this terrible disease,” DeSantis said in a Twitter post.

“Senate pitches cash for new state planes” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The Senate unveiled plans this week to add two new planes to the state’s aviation fleet. The buy would cost taxpayers $26.5 million and fill a void left by former Republican Gov. Scott. Scott in 2011 sold off two state planes as part of a campaign promise to limit abuses by government officials. A multimillionaire, he instead traveled aboard his private jet. While the sale made good on the campaign promise, it left future Governors and cabinet members without wings. Sen. Ben Albritton said the buy is a move to replenish the fleet. He serves as chair of the Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture, Environment and General Government.

“Is DeSantis getting what he wants in Florida’s early budget proposals?” via Kirby Wilson and Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — DeSantis and top Republican leaders in the House and Senate have put their cards on the table. This week, legislators unveiled the first round of proposed House and Senate budgets. The Governor included nearly $310 million to hospitals that serve the most Medicaid patients. Neither the House nor the Senate included that money in their initial health care budgets this week. One of DeSantis’ recent talking points has been his proposal to cut the gas tax for several months this year. This idea isn’t included in the Senate’s budget.

Meanwhile … “Seminole Tribe says its gaming rights, Florida’s revenue payments are at risk again” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The Seminole Tribe of Florida has charged in a court filing that if a judge breathes new life into a North Florida casino initiative, and it gets on the ballot and wins approval, that could infringe on the Tribe’s exclusive rights. If that happens, the Tribe cautioned, then the Seminoles’ hundreds of millions of dollars of revenue sharing payments to Florida, only recently resumed after a three-year dispute, could be disrupted again. Based on those arguments, Leon County Circuit Judge John Cooper accepted the Tribe and its political committee, Standing Up For Florida, as interveners in a lawsuit filed earlier this week by Florida Voters In Charge, which is trying to resurrect its North Florida casino campaign.—TALLY 2 —

“‘A recipe for disaster’? Florida GOP wants to add new requirements to vote by mail” via Skyler Swisher of the Orlando Sentinel — A GOP-led voting overhaul would add new requirements for casting a mail ballot that one Central Florida election supervisor is warning could be a “recipe for disaster.” Starting in 2024, voters would have to provide the last four digits of their driver’s license or state ID number on their ballot. If they don’t have a state ID, the last four digits of their Social Security number could be submitted. Ballots won’t be counted if those identifying digits aren’t provided or don’t match the numbers on file with the elections office. Election supervisors must contact people whose ballots aren’t correctly completed and allow them to fix problems. The deadline to complete that process, known in political jargon as “curing” a ballot, is two days after Election Day.

A rough patch: Florida is considering adding more speed bumps in the vote-by-mail process.

“Nursing homes struggle with staffing; Legislature considers loosening standard of care” via Hannah Critchfield and Kirby Wilson of Florida Politics — A bill to loosen staffing standards at Florida nursing homes was initially drafted with the help of one of the state’s most powerful long-term care lobbying interests. Under the measure, Senate Bill 804, nursing homes that fail to meet state-mandated staff requirements would no longer be barred from admitting new residents. It would also broaden which kinds of employees can be counted in these mandatory staffing minimums intended to keep residents safe.

—“Bill changing Florida nursing home standards was written by the industry, emails show” via Hannah Critchfield and Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times

Senate property insurance package takes aim at Carlos Beruff — A Senate property insurance bill (SB 1728) would change the qualifications to serve on the board of state-backed Citizens Property Insurance Corp., potentially making current Chair Beruff ineligible for reappointment. Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida reported that the language would require board members to have at least 10 years of experience in the insurance industry. The current requirements require members to have insurance experience, but there is no explicit definition for how much or what kind of experience. The change comes after Beruff proposed selling policies directly to consumers to avoid paying commissions to insurance agents.

House virtual school plan riles choice advocates — The House K-12 budget proposal would block school districts from contracting with Florida Virtual School for online education and prevent virtual charter schools from enrolling out-of-county students. As reported by Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida, opponents of the plan say it is counteractive to school choice. About half of Florida’s 103,000 online K-12 students are currently enrolled in FLVS, and about a fifth are enrolled in FLVS franchises, where district teachers assist students in working through FLVS curricula. About 40 districts operate FLVS franchises and school choice advocates say it is a good option for parents who want their children to have access to clubs and counseling that are not available with a purely online school.

“Senate passes bills on addiction, child hearing loss” via Brendan Farrington of The Associated Press — While Democratic and Republican lawmakers have had a contentious debate on issues like abortion and immigration this year, the two sides came together Thursday to pass 20 bills quickly, almost all unanimously. The legislation included approving new state legislative districts, authorizing schools to stock and use medicines to counteract an opioid overdose and requiring insurance companies to provide hearing aid coverage for children. Democrats and Republicans praised a bill that would expand the use of overdose-reversing drugs, including allowing schools to stock naloxone, which could be administered by staff trained to recognize an opioid overdose.

“Jason Shoaf backs bill to end concealed weapons licensure” via David Adlerstein of The Apalachicola Times — A bill in the Florida House that would do away with Florida’s concealed weapons permitting process has the strong support of State Rep. Shoaf, and while a companion bill in the Florida Senate has yet to be filed, State Sen. Loranne Ausley does not share his enthusiasm. House Bill 103, a measure filed as it has in years past by Rep. Anthony Sabatini, would remove laws that require a concealed-weapons permit in Florida. Since the end product has yet to be marked up in committee, it is as yet unclear the extent to which the bill would allow the public display of firearms, with no restrictions, and Shoaf has some reservations about unfettered open carry.

“Sizzling housing market in Florida hurts many, but help slow to come from Legislature” via John Kennedy of the Tallahassee Democrat — Florida’s white-hot housing market is setting new pricing records almost daily, but thousands of homeowners and renters are being scorched, unable to find anything they can afford. Now, talk of the unfolding crisis is coursing through the Florida Legislature, with calls for lawmakers to do something. “The bottom line is the American dream is slipping away for more and more people every day,” Sen. Gary Farmer said. A lack of apartment supply, less land available for new construction, and pandemic-driven changes like the arrival of remote workers from even costlier states have powered up the price of available homes and rentals.

Nightmare: Gary Farmer says the American dream is slipping away. Will help come from the Legislature?

“Florida Chamber political tool identifies swing seats on latest legislative maps” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The Florida Chamber of Commerce unveiled its exclusive 2022 Florida Partisan Performance Index map during a special webcast to its members Friday. Applying the tools to Florida’s just-approved redrawn legislative maps, Chamber analysts said there are few swing seats but plenty of drama in store this year. The Chamber tool studies precinct-level data on voter performance based on the past five years. That includes how voters in the district cast ballots in the last two presidential elections and the 2018 gubernatorial race. In this case, the new district came out as R+1, closer, actually, and it’s trended more purple over time. Overall, the new maps result in fewer swing districts where both Democrats and Republicans can play. Based on Chamber election analysis, the new House map has 15 true swing districts; the Senate map (S 8058) has just three.

—MORE TALLY —

“Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo is unfit to serve” via Lauren Book for the Orlando Sentinel — I can think of no more important time than during a multi-year pandemic for our state to be guided by a physician who not only understands pandemic science but is willing and able to explain his plan for keeping all of us as safe as possible. Sadly, Dr. Ladapo is not that person. When Dr. Ladapo was asked clear questions about his department’s role in addressing the pandemic, he offered non-answers, obfuscations and demonstrations of verbal jiu-jitsu. For starters, he has supported and had publicly promoted “widely debunked theories” of how to deal with this virus. This is unacceptable and disrespectful to the institution of the Florida Senate and to the people of this great state.

Unqualified: Joseph Ladapo just doesn’t have the chops, says Lauren Book.

“Rocky Hanna blasts GOP lawmaker as ‘bully’ for retaliatory state budget item after masks fight” via Ana Goñi-Lessan of the Tallahassee Democrat — Leon County Schools Superintendent Hanna is once again at odds with the state’s Republican leaders who, with a new proposed line item in the next state budget, are targeting school districts who defied the Governor’s ban of mask mandates last year. House Republicans introduced legislation this week that would slash salaries from school districts, of which Leon was one, that implemented mandatory mask rules after DeSantis prohibited them in schools. In a K-12 Appropriations Subcommittee meeting, state Rep. Randy Fine proposed a line item in the budget that would take away $200 million from a dozen school districts that defied the Governor’s emergency rule that banned mask mandates and give that money to other districts.

“Before even passing, the ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill is already hurting Florida’s children” via Fabiola Santiago of the Miami Herald — Oh, Florida legislators, the harm you do from your ivory tower up there in Tallahassee. Elaine Acosta González, a concerned parent who reached out to me after reading my column about the wrong-headed “Don’t Say Gay” bill moving through the Legislature, says her 15-year-old daughter has been talking about the topic at home. The bill would silence gay children, their teachers and education advocates by banning the discussion of sexuality and gender identification in Florida’s public schools. Indeed, youth should have a prominent voice in the discussion of the bill and so should the science- and data-oriented experts who know the place of sexuality in education. Like parents, these experts also are concerned about the damage lawmakers who introduced the bill already are doing to set back the lives of gay and trans children in Florida.

“Why put more limits on public petition campaigns?” via Bill Cotterell of the Tallahassee Democrat — There’s a proposal ready for a vote in the Florida House (HJR 1127) that would limit the subject matter of petition campaigns to procedural matters, the structure of state government and the Constitution itself. A companion measure in the Senate hasn’t moved, at the midway point of the Legislative Session, but maybe Republicans who run both chambers are just waiting for the House version to cross the rotunda.

“Keith Truenow defends bill disbanding Lake County Water Authority” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Rep. Truenow responded to a recent article criticizing his bill (HB 1105) to disband the Lake County Water Authority, pitching it as an attempt to eliminate “duplicitous government.” The Feb. 4 article by Kevin Spear, casts the Lake County Water Authority as a “venerable and independent guardian of Central Florida waters” and asserts that Truenow’s bill is motivated by “contentious dealings” he has had with the water authority. Truenow and the Lake County Water Authority often sparred over “pollution flowing from ditches at Truenow’s large, turf-grass growing operation north of Lake Apopka.”

“Food fight: Time to scrape Florida’s strawberry shortcake bill down the garbage disposal” via Brian Burgess of The Capitolist — Sen. Danny Burgess wants to have his cake and eat it too. Burgess represents Plant City, the heart of Florida’s strawberry industry. So, he can’t be blamed for sponsoring a bill that would promote fresh, Florida-grown strawberries, but he must bear responsibility for trying to make strawberry shortcake, which is barely a dessert at all, the official state dessert when better options could have been chosen. The Legislature’s desire to acknowledge Florida’s robust strawberry industry is admirable. But choosing strawberry shortcake as the method for doing so is not. Lawmakers could have just as easily nominated Florida-based Publix brand strawberry shortcake ice cream as the official dessert.


— SKED —

Happening today — BioFlorida Day at the Capitol, to demonstrate the strength of the state’s life sciences and advocate for funding and policies necessary to facilitate continued growth; the two-day event starts at 7 a.m., Room 110 of the Senate Office Building. BioFlorida Day reception begins at 5 p.m. Register here.

Happening today — House Minority Leader Evan Jenne will host a media availability, 10 a.m. Zoom link here.

— The House Health Care Appropriations Subcommittee meets to consider HB 7047, from Rep. Sam Garrison, to enact changes in the state’s Medicaid managed-care program, including consolidating 11 regions into eight, 11 a.m., Morris Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Public Integrity and Elections Committee meets to consider constitutional amendment (HJR 663), from Rep. Jayer Williamson, to allow the recall of County Commissioners and county officers, 11 a.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.

— The House Agriculture and Natural Resources Appropriations Subcommittee meets to consider HB 1233, from Rep. Fine, to allow specific online training for private security officers, 1:30 p.m., Morris Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Early Learning and Elementary Education Subcommittee meets for an update on the New Worlds Reading Initiative, which lawmakers passed last year, 1:30 p.m., Reed Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Local Administration and Veterans Affairs Subcommittee meets to consider HJR 1 and HB 1563, from Rep. Josie Tomkow, to increase homestead property-tax exemptions to classroom teachers, law enforcement officers, correctional officers, firefighters, child-welfare services professionals and people in the U.S. armed forces or the Florida National Guard, 1:30 p.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.

— The Senate Commerce and Tourism Committee meets to consider SB 1316, from Chair Ed Hooper, to revamp a law dealing with the resale of tickets, 2:30 p.m., Room 110 of the Senate Office Building.

— The Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee meets to consider SB 224, from Sen. Gruters, to allow local governments to restrict smoking on beaches and in public parks, 2:30 p.m., Room 37 of the Senate Office Building.

— The Senate Judiciary Committee meets to consider SB 796, from Sen. Jennifer Bradley, to increase criminal penalties for evidence tampering in capital cases or cases involving deaths, 2:30 p.m., Room 412 of the Knott Building.

— The House Infrastructure and Tourism Appropriations Subcommittee meets to consider HB 907, from Rep. Bobby Payne, to begin the process of establishing a port along the St. Johns River in Putnam County, 4 p.m., Reed Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Insurance and Banking Subcommittee meets to consider HB 425, from Rep. Jason Fischer, to extend post-traumatic stress disorder benefits in the workers’ compensation insurance system to correctional officers, 4 p.m., Morris Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Secondary Education and Career Development Subcommittee meets to consider HB 1115, from Rep. Demi Busatta Cabrera, to require high school students to earn a half-credit in financial literacy and money management to graduate, 4 p.m., Room 212 of the Knott Building.

— The House Civil Justice and Property Rights Subcommittee meets to consider HB 1525, from Rep. Grall, to repeal the state’s no-fault auto insurance system and the requirement that motorists carry personal-injury protection, or PIP, coverage, 4 p.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.

— The Senate Special Order Calendar Group will set a special-order calendar, 15 minutes after the Senate committee meetings, Room 401 of the Senate Office Building.

Assignment editors — U.S. Reps. Darren Soto and Frederica Wilson will participate in a Committee on House Administration discussion about election misinformation campaigns in Spanish-speaking communities. Also on hand will be former Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, 9 a.m., Miami Dade College, Wolfson Campus, 300 N.E. Second Ave., Miami.

Assignment editors — NBA legend Magic Johnson and Agency for Health Care Administration Secretary Simone Marstiller will join a discussion about HIV and AIDS prevention and care, hosted by Clear Health Alliance, 11:30 a.m., Jacksonville River City Downtown Hotel, 245 Water St., Jacksonville.

— STATEWIDE —

“Voting fraud conspiracy group has pipeline to Governor as election changes considered” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Started by the Lakewood Ranch leader of a pro-Trump women’s organization, Defend Florida has mobilized an army of volunteers to collect “affidavits” that raise questions about whether voters cast legal 2020 ballots. The group has collected more than 5,000 affidavits in 34 counties, implying each is a possible instance of voter fraud. The claims appear to be getting serious consideration from GOP officials. Defend Florida co-founder Caroline Wetherington said the group met with DeSantis’ top staff on six occasions while also securing meetings with Secretary of State Laurel Lee and top GOP legislators. However, local elections and law enforcement officials have dismissed Defend Florida’s claims. Despite being rebuffed by local authorities, Defend Florida still is highly active.

Questionable: Defend Florida seems to have a direct pipeline to Ron DeSantis. Image via Zac Anderson/Herald-Tribune.

“‘Truck Yeah’ slogan keeps rolling for DeSantis” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — DeSantis continues to calibrate messaging around commercial drivers, closing out the week with a campaign email predicated around a slogan his policy team broke out two weeks ago. The same “Truck Yeah” slogan seen on signs at a January news conference in Bowling Green resurfaced in an email Friday from his re-election campaign to political supporters. In the email, DeSantis’ concerns were somewhat more global than the commercial driver’s license training money doled out to state colleges in January. “People across the world are finally standing up and fighting back,” DeSantis asserted.

“‘Possibly illegal behavior’: Ashley Moody blasts GoFundMe after Freedom Convoy flip-flop” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Moody stood with supporters of the Canadian anti-vax “Freedom Convoy” against the GoFundMe service, suggesting that what the fundraising platform contemplated this weekend could have been illegal. Moody told a Fox News audience that she and DeSantis will not tolerate threats, such as that made by GoFundMe, not to distribute funds to causes it doesn’t support, such as the “Freedom Convoy,” a group of Canadian truckers protesting the country’s COVID-19 vaccination requirements. The service threatened to redistribute the donations made to the truckers, freezing them on Friday, before deciding Saturday to reverse course and refund all contributions. Moody was incensed Sunday regardless.

“Joel Greenberg wants federal judge to delay his sentencing again” via Jeff Weiner of the Orlando Sentinel — Greenberg plans to ask again to delay his sentencing for sex trafficking and other crimes, despite a federal judge having previously said his current sentencing date was final. Greenberg’s sentencing is currently slated for March 29. In May, he pleaded guilty to six federal crimes and was originally scheduled to face sentencing in August, before twice being granted delays. The latest delay request, which Greenberg’s defense attorney, Fritz Scheller, said is not opposed by the government, will include “confidential information” about Greenberg’s work with federal authorities “as well as the nature and extent of Mr. Greenberg’s cooperation,” the defense attorney’s Friday court filing states.

“Daniella Levine Cava asks for probe after voters say party registrations were changed to GOP” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald editorial board — Levine Cava is asking prosecutors to investigate claims of “voter fraud” after elderly residents in Little Havana said their party affiliations were changed without their knowledge. A county spokeswoman wrote in an email late Friday that Levine Cava “sent an official request to the State Attorney to investigate recent reports of voter registration fraud to ensure the integrity of the elections process.” Levine Cava, who made the request in an email to State Attorney Katherine Fernandez-Rundle, joined other Florida Democrats in calling for an investigation following complaints from residents of Haley Sofge Towers, a county-managed public housing complex in Little Havana. State Sen. Annette Taddeo and Nikki Fried also called for an investigation.

Swap meet: Daniella Levine Cava is calling to investigate shady party switches. Image via Facebook.

“Jacksonville attorney tied to FPL consultants billed JEA for privatization work” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — A Jacksonville attorney at Foley & Lardner who advised consultants to Florida Power & Light, while those consultants were devising strategies to conceal the utility’s campaign contributions, was also among the firm’s lawyers who billed JEA ratepayers during the contentious privatization campaign that same year. The Times-Union previously reported that Erika Alba, Foley’s director of public affairs, had been advising employees at Matrix LLC, an Alabama consulting firm that was working with FPL in 2019, at the same time that Alba’s Jacksonville colleagues at Foley were billing hundreds of hours helping JEA executives sell the city agency to a private operator. A review of Foley’s billing records shows that Alba herself billed JEA ratepayers for work related to the privatization process on two occasions.

“Florida assessing damage to crops caused by January freeze” via The Associated Press — The Florida Department of Economic Opportunity is assessing the impact recent freezing temperatures had on the state’s agricultural industry. According to a news release, the agency activated a survey on Friday to gather data and evaluate resources that affected businesses may need to recover from the freeze that occurred during the last weekend in January. “The agriculture business in Florida is an integral part of the state’s economy, and we are going to do everything we can to help the farmers who were impacted by freezing temperatures this past weekend,” DeSantis said in a news release.

— CORONA FLORIDA —

“DeSantis touts Florida COVID-19 response, criticizes justices without ‘backbone’” via Mark Harper of The Daytona Beach News-Journal — DeSantis spoke to a friendly crowd, touting his “default” pandemic position, freedom, during an appearance at a convention of the conservative legal advocacy group the Federalist Society. In what was dubbed a “fireside chat” without a fire, DeSantis sat with former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, also a Floridian, and presented his record as Florida Governor, all the while punching upward at Biden. DeSantis followed Pence. Both men are considered top-tier possible Republican nominees for President in 2024, especially if Trump decides against running again. The Governor also faces his own re-election campaign later this year.

Tout sheet: Ron DeSantis speaks with Kayleigh McEnany about his record on COVID-19 and spineless judges. Image via AP.

“Ladapo fires back at former UCLA supervisor who refused recommendation” via Arek Sarkissian of POLITICO — Ladapo said that criticism from his former UCLA supervisor was a sign that differing scientific opinions have turned into personal attacks. Ladapo said in a phone interview that good science requires respect for all perspectives. “It’s OK to disagree, and I’ve had no problem with disagreement, but what has been really disappointing is how disagreement has become a ticket or a passport to activate personal attacks,” Ladapo said. The unidentified supervisor provided his assessment as part of a routine background check performed by the Senate during a confirmation process.

“Florida reports 1,324 deaths, 132,622 cases this week” via Caroline Catherman of the Orlando Sentinel — The Florida Department of Health reported 132,622 new coronavirus cases this week among Florida residents to bring the cumulative total to 5,610,370. With 1,324 more fatalities on record, 66,279 Florida residents have died. This week’s 1,324 deaths reflect an increase from the 1,192 reported last week, but deaths can take several days or weeks to be reported. The majority of the newly reported deaths are people who died before this week. The death count had not reached anywhere near September levels when nearly 2,500 new deaths were reported multiple weeks in a row.

“Four ‘stealth omicron’ cases found in Florida” via Chris Persaud of The Palm Beach Post — At least four cases of the so-called “stealth omicron” variant have been discovered in Florida as the state’s death toll increased by 1,000 for the second time in as many weeks. Two people’s test results in Miami-Dade County confirmed the presence of a new mutation of omicron. The lab did not immediately provide more information about the infected people. Helix Laboratories confirmed two cases earlier this week discovered in Florida. Two people, a 69-year-old woman and a 32-year-old man, caught the mutation in January, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported Tuesday.

—“The weekly number of COVID-19 cases in Alachua County is declining, as is the positivity rate” via Gershon Harrell of The Gainesville Sun

“Florida’s fourth COVID-19 surge came fast and strong. Here’s what the omicron wave tells us about what’s ahead.” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the Orlando Sentinel — By now, scientists expected the omicron surge in Florida to be nearly over. The new forecast projects about four more weeks before the omicron wave diminishes to give Floridians a respite. Most experts see hope in the much larger immune population in the state. Between those who caught the virus during the omicron surge and the increasing number of vaccinated and boosted people, much of Florida should have some protection against future variants. “We won’t know the exact toll of omicron for several weeks,” notes Scott Herr, a computer scientist who tracks COVID-19 in Florida. “My guesstimate would be somewhere between 7,000 and 10,000 deaths, possibly more. The biggest unknown is how long the ‘tail’ will be from the peak until the wave ends.”

“USF, Tampa General studies ivermectin, other drugs to treat COVID-19” via Rose Wong of the Tampa Bay Times — Tampa Bay is part of a nationwide study to examine the efficacy of three drugs to treat COVID-19, including ivermectin, the antiparasitic medication that some believe can cure the virus. Instead, it sent people to the emergency room. The University of South Florida and Tampa General Hospital are participating in the National Institutes of Health’s Accelerating COVID-19 Therapeutic Intervention and Vaccines public-private partnership, which brings together organizations and companies to study new COVID-19 treatments and variants. The double-blind study expects to enroll 15,000 participants nationwide.

— 2022 —

“Brady Duke says CD 7 voters are ‘hungry’ for his candidacy” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Duke, a former Navy SEAL, close-combat consultant and Christian ministry adviser, believes the voters in Florida’s 7th Congressional District are itching for a Republican like him to represent them. “I see a lot of people that are hungry for fair and honest representation. I have talked to a number of people who are happy to have seen the announcement that (Democratic U.S. Rep.) Stephanie Murphy is not running for re-election,” Duke said. The political newcomer has his platform shaped by his convictions as a battlefield veteran, a conservative Christian seeking to end abortion, a passionate believer in the need for border security, and a staunch defender of capitalism seeking to oppose and rollback tax hikes.

Hunger: CD 7 voters are starving for strong Republican leadership, says Brady Duke.

“Matt Gaetz is in a safe GOP seat, but can he keep it?” via Jim Little of the USA Today Network-Florida — Gaetz’s potential legal troubles are shifting what’s possible in Northwest Florida. Gaetz could be facing his biggest re-election battle since he first won the seat. In the last month, pressure from the investigation has intensified as news outlets reported more witnesses agreeing to testify in the case., including an ex-girlfriend of Gaetz. Jacob Shively, a professor at the University of West Florida’s Askew Department of Government, said that Gaetz’s outspoken support of Trump in previous election cycles gave Democratic challengers a boost.

“Challenger nearly matches Scott Franklin’s contributions” via Gary White of The Ledger — U.S. Rep. Franklin, a Lakeland Republican, reported campaign contributions of $58,876 in the fourth quarter of 2021, about $7,000 more than a Democratic challenger. Franklin’s top Democratic challenger, Eddie Geller of Brandon, reported $51,800 from October through December. Geller, a former comedian and political activist who entered the race in August, has collected $183,400 in total contributions and carries $96,300 in campaign cash. The Legislature is creating new congressional boundaries, and proposed maps show Polk County being removed from District 15. Geller is likely to remain in the District 15 race.

“GOP Senate leaders quickly line up behind Erin Grall’s SD 29 campaign” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Rep. Grall’s early clear path into the proposed Senate District 29 election just got help from Republican Senate leaders to ensure that path stays unimpeded. Senate President Simpson, President-designate Kathleen Passidomo and Sen. Ben Albritton have endorsed Grall in that race. The move comes one day after Grall, a three-term lawmaker from Vero Beach, announced she was filing to run in the new SD 29 this year. Grall is the first to file to run in the proposed SD 29, carved in current redistricting efforts out of several other Senate districts, including Albritton’s. Grall, a managing partner of the Grall Law Group, chairs the House Judiciary Committee and has been a particularly powerful force on religious conservatism issues.

Toe the line: Erin Grall is lining up the high-profile endorsements for her Senate run.

“Kevin Steele enters race for newly redrawn HD 53” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Steele entered the race for the new House District 53 on Thursday. The new HD 53 will cover portions of Hernando and Pasco counties and is separate from the current HD 53, which covers part of Brevard County and is represented by Rep. Randy Fine. Fine now resides in the new House District 33. In a news release, the Republican candidate said he was on board with “the Governor’s vision for Florida.” “I’ve always believed in the power of commitment and a strong work ethic in accomplishing your goals and objectives. Whether it’s family, business, or campaigns, there’s no replacement for good, honest, hard work and I intend to apply that same attitude to win this race,” he said.

— CORONA NATION —

“Joe Biden marks 900,000 COVID-19 deaths and urges: ‘Get vaccinated, get your kids vaccinated’” via Annabelle Timsit of The Washington Post — Biden on Friday urged all Americans to get vaccinated, as he marked another “tragic milestone” in the coronavirus pandemic. “900,000 American lives have been lost to COVID-19,” he said in a late-night statement issued Friday. The death toll would have been higher without coronavirus vaccines, Biden said, estimating they had “saved more than 1 million American lives,” as he urged unvaccinated Americans to “get vaccinated, get your kids vaccinated, and get your booster shot if you are eligible.” Less than two months ago, the White House marked 800,000 COVID-19 deaths in the United States.

Just get the shot: Joe Biden marks another tragic milestone for the U.S. Image via AP.

— CORONA ECONOMICS —

“Biden administration tells Congress that key coronavirus funds are dwindling” via Tony Romm and Jeff Stein — Nearly all of the money in a key federal program to boost coronavirus testing, therapeutics, and vaccines appears to have been committed or already shelled out, raising the potential that the Biden administration may have to ask Congress to approve additional aid. The dwindling funds reflect an uptick in spending as the White House in recent months has labored aggressively to battle back the rise of the omicron variant. While top officials say they are confident in their ability to weather the latest surge, they have started exploring whether more money might be needed to protect the public against future variants.

Breaking the bank: Federal funding for COVID-19 testing and the like is almost gone.

“Despite omicron surge, businesses desperate to find and keep workers” via Abha Bhattarai of The Washington Post — Omicron was supposed to wreak havoc on the labor market. But it didn’t. The jump in January hiring has underscored the economy’s growing capacity to weather renewed waves of surging coronavirus cases, suggesting a tight job market is forcing companies to retain workers now that hiring new ones has become costlier and more difficult. Unlike previous waves of the virus, when businesses were quick to pause operations and lay off workers, many are now going to greater lengths to hang on to their employees. Overall, U.S. employers added 467,000 jobs in January, with much of those gains concentrated in hotels, restaurants, retailers and other services.

— MORE CORONA —

“The world is likely sicker than it has been in 100 years” via David Luhnow, Joanna Sugden and Rajesh Roy of The Wall Street Journal — The world is living through a unique moment: In the past five or six weeks, the omicron coronavirus variant has likely gotten more people sick than any similar period since the 1918-1919 flu pandemic, according to a global health expert. While omicron infections have peaked in many places, February is likely to see similar caseloads as the variant continues to spread before it flames out, causing worker shortages from hospitals to factories and spurring debate about COVID-19 restrictions, mainly since omicron appears to be causing less serious illness.

Unwell: America hasn’t been this sick since the Spanish Influenza outbreak of 1918.

“Omicron infections may not protect well against future spread” via Caitlin Owens of Axios — The extent to which omicron’s rapid spread leaves the world better off in its fight against COVID-19 depends on a few big questions, including how long infection-induced immunity actually lasts. Vaccinations and infections at high enough levels can form an immunity wall against the future spread of the virus. But if omicron infections ultimately don’t contribute much to this wall, that leaves much of the world still vulnerable. When the coronavirus first emerged, no one had any immune protection. In the two years since, that’s changed drastically, as hundreds of millions of people worldwide have become infected and billions have been vaccinated.

“Blood supplies run low as omicron limits donations” via Renée Onque of The Wall Street Journal — Blood is in short supply in the U.S., with donation drives stalled amid COVID-19 and demand rising as people resume medical care they put off earlier in the pandemic. The number of people donating blood each month was 10% lower at the end of last year than before the pandemic began in February 2020. Blood drives at schools and colleges have decreased by 62% during the same time. Public-health experts say that shortages could leave hospitals unprepared for emergencies such as car accidents or natural disasters that can require a lot of blood for transfusions and urgent surgeries.

“After weathering the omicron crush, CVS and Walgreens removed their limits on buying at-home tests.” via Esha Ray of The New York Times — For the past few months, those Americans who had been lucky enough to find at-home coronavirus tests in stores had been kept from buying more than a few at a time so that stores could keep up with the surging demand. But that is changing at nearly all CVS and Walgreens locations nationwide as of this week. A CVS spokesman, Matthew Blanchette, confirmed on Saturday that the pharmacy chain had increased its inventory of over-the-counter rapid test kits and removed all limits “on those products at CVS Pharmacy locations nationwide and on CVS.com.” A Walgreens representative also said on Saturday that because of “improved in-stock conditions,” the company had removed its purchase limit of at-home tests at almost all its locations.

— PRESIDENTIAL —

“Biden inches back toward Michelle Obama’s school nutrition standards” via Helena Bottemiller Evich of POLITICO — The Biden administration today is issuing a new rule asking schools to soon start meeting nutrition standards that were strengthened at the urging of Obama, but were suspended during the pandemic as schools struggled to procure more nutritious options. The stricter nutrition standards, which cut sodium, require more whole grains and mandate more fruits and vegetables, were also partially relaxed during the Trump administration. One of former Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue’s first moves was to “Make School Meals Great Again” by loosening rules for whole grains, sodium and flavored milk.

Lunchables: Joe Biden is slowly bringing back Michelle Obama’s nutrition standards. Image via AP.

“Democrats’ big dilemma: Avoid Biden or embrace him?” via Sean Sullivan and Marianna Sotomayor of The Washington Post — As Democrats gear up for a difficult midterm campaign, one of the biggest variables is Biden’s popularity, which has fallen sharply amid his struggles to contain the pandemic, rising prices and foreign policy crises. Clear majorities now disapprove of the job Biden is doing, triggering uncomfortable conversations in the party about how much to incorporate him into their campaigns and prompting a range of early responses from Democrats in hard races. Midterm elections are influenced strongly by how voters feel about the sitting President, and many Democrats are trying to inoculate themselves by forging their own brands and even criticizing some of Biden’s actions.

— D.C. MATTERS —

“Marco Rubio condemns ‘evil, genocidal’ Chinese government as Olympics kicks off Opening Ceremony” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — On the day of the 2022 Winter Olympics opening ceremony in Beijing, Sen. Rubio again called out the systemic oppression of ethnic and religious minorities by the Chinese government, specifically of the Uyghur people. The Winter Olympic Games, Rubio said, will be remembered for the atrocities committed by the Chinese Communist Party rather than for the accomplishments of the participating athletes. Last month, Rubio and Sen. James Lankford introduced a resolution calling the International Olympic Committee to relocate the Winter Olympic Games from Beijing.

Evil Empire: As The Games begin, so does the bashing of China’s dismal record on human rights.

“Charlie Crist announces support for COMPETES Act to fight inflation, help Florida marine life” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — U.S. Rep. Crist has announced his support of the America COMPETES Act, legislation aimed at boosting industry domestically. The bill, Crist said, hopes to fight inflation by promoting domestic innovation and manufacturing. The bill also hopes to maintain American global competitiveness, create good-paying jobs, improve supply chains, beat China and combat the climate crisis. In announcing his support for the plan, Crist also outlined provisions within the legislation that address issues impacting Florida. The state would receive another $3 billion to boost domestic solar energy manufacturing to help combat the climate crisis without relying on foreign-made materials. The act also works to support the state’s marine life, including the record number of manatee deaths in Florida over the last year.

“Citing Brian Flores case, Debbie Wasserman Schultz says Congress must investigate ‘egregious lack of representation and opportunity for Black leaders in the NFL’” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Wasserman Schultz, citing the case of the fired Miami Dolphins coach, said Thursday that Congress must investigate. “Money and power is what rules the NFL, and unless somebody steps in and holds them accountable, nothing will change. They will continue business as usual,” the Broward/Miami-Dade County Democrat said during the hearing. Flores, in a lawsuit, alleged pervasive racist hiring practices for NFL coaches and general managers.

Assignment editors — U.S. Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar will hold a press call ahead of the introduction of her Dignity Act, a top-to-bottom immigration reform bill, 10 a.m., dial-in information provided upon RSVP to FL27.Press@mail.house.gov.

What Brian Ballard is reading — “U.S. fills board that’ll dish out $250M for Israel-Palestine peace-building projects” via Jacob Magid of The Times of Israel — The U.S. Agency for International Development announced the appointment of an advisory board for recommending how to distribute $250 million in U.S. funding for Israeli-Palestinian dialogue programs and Palestinian business development. The filling of the board allows the Biden administration to move forward in supporting people-to-people projects on the ground after the funds were allocated through the Nita M. Lowey Middle East Partnership for Peace Act (MEPPA) passed by Congress in 2020. The board currently includes 12 members appointed by leadership from both houses of Congress. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi appointed former Congressman Robert Wexler, a former candidate to serve as Biden’s ambassador to Israel and currently head of the S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace.

— CRISIS —

“Mike Pence says ‘Donald Trump is wrong’ to say then-Vice President had the right to overturn 2020 election” via Steve Contorno and Eric Bradner of CNN Politics — Pence called out his former boss by name on Friday, saying that “President Trump is wrong” in claiming that Pence had the right to overturn the 2020 election on Jan. 6, 2021. Speaking at the Federalist Society Florida Chapters conference near Orlando, Pence delivered his strongest response yet to Trump’s ongoing efforts to relitigate the 2020 Presidential Election, calling it “un-American” to suggest one person could have decided the outcome. Pence warned against conservatives who insist that the Vice President can alter an election and said it could be a problematic position for Republicans in the next presidential contest.

Called out: On the issue of overturning the election, Mike Pence throws Donald Trump under the bus.

“Newly obtained records show Trump and Jim Jordan spoke at length on morning of Jan. 6” via Ryan Nobles, Annie Grayer and Zachary Cohen of CNN — The House select committee investigating the Capitol insurrection is now in possession of White House records that provide new details about a phone call Trump made to Rep. Jordan on Jan. 6, 2021, as the investigation drills down on the former President’s communications that day and questions have long swirled around calls between him and lawmakers. Two sources reviewed call records that Trump spoke on the phone at the White House residence with Jordan for 10 minutes on the morning of Jan. 6.

“In censure of Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, RNC calls events of Jan. 6 ‘legitimate political discourse’” via Gabby Orr of CNN — In a resolution formally censuring GOP Reps. Cheney and Kinzinger, the Republican National Committee on Friday described the events surrounding the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection, which have been at the center of a House probe, as “legitimate political discourse.” A copy of the resolution obtained by CNN claimed that the two lawmakers were “participating in a Democrat-led persecution of ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse” from their perches on the House select committee.

“A Jan. 6 suspect died. Now the FBI has to prep for conspiracies.” via Ryan J. Reilly of NBC News — A man featured on the FBI’s website, wanted for assaulting police at the Capitol during the Jan. 6 attack, died months ago. In the year since the Jan. 6 investigation began, the FBI has posted images of more than 500 individuals on its U.S. Capitol Violence webpage. More than 350 of those included on the page still haven’t been arrested, including dozens who have been successfully identified by online sleuths. Removing his image from the website now could spark additional conspiracy theories that could only be resolved through public identification, which would set off a fresh round of pain for a family still recovering from its loss. His removal from the list without being charged has prompted rampant conspiracy theories that he was acting as a plant to stoke the crowd.

— EPILOGUE TRUMP —

“This was the week when Trump revealed all” via Dan Balz of The Washington Post — Trump has told some big lies over the years. One of the biggest, it now is clear, came on Jan. 7, 2021, the day after his supporters assaulted the U.S. Capitol. On Jan. 6, as law enforcement officers fought valiantly against an armed mob of rioters attacking the Capitol, Trump remained in the White House, silent in the face of repeated efforts by advisers, family members and allies who pleaded with him to try to call a halt to the violence. The next day, in a videotaped address, he said, finally, that he was “outraged” by the “heinous attack” on the Capitol. He didn’t mean it, as he made clear last weekend.

Whopper: Donald Trump has told many lies, but one stands out.

“The extreme ideas floating around Trump on how to overturn the election” via Amber Phillips of The Washington Post — As Trump tried to hang on to power after his election loss, he surrounded himself with advisers, lawyers, and seemingly random people who were willing to give him ideas. We keep learning just how drastic some of those ideas were. The President appeared to take some more seriously than others, but it seems clear that Trump and/or his top aides at least entertained the thought of seizing voting machines. A memo was circulated among Trump allies suggesting that the NSA could be used to try to prove a baseless claim about fraud. And that’s just what’s been revealed in reporting and from the congressional Jan. 6 investigation.

“Trump and allies try to redefine racism by casting White men as victims” via Cleve R. Wootson Jr. of The Washington Post — Holding court at a political rally in Texas last week, Trump implied that he, a wealthy White man who was elected to an office almost exclusively held by White men, was also a victim of racism. Trump’s claim referenced what he said were three “radical vicious, racist prosecutors,” one in Georgia, one in New York, one in Washington, all of them Black, who are investigating his role in the Jan. 6 insurrection and examining his business organization’s finances. But his comments made him the latest in a line of conservatives claiming, loudly and frequently, that White men are also victims of racism.

“How Trump’s political style smothered the last substance left in the GOP” via Carlos Lozada of The Washington Post — Jeremy Peters’s “Insurgency” is not the first attempt to take a long view of how the party of Lincoln became the party of Trump. “Insurgency” is persuasive in suggesting that the long-term transformation of the Republican Party is one in which a style of politics has overpowered and then suffocated any remnant of its substance. The Trump era in American politics can feel uniquely disruptive, but Peters highlights earlier episodes that, put together, leave Trump looking like an inevitable outcome rather than an unlikely outlier.

“Javanka in exile” via Bob Norman of the Washingtonian — Ivanka Trump’s world has certainly gotten smaller. She’s out of politics at the moment, out of her former executive job at the Trump Organization, out of the womenswear brand that bore her name, out of high society in New York, and cast out of Washington, too. Ivanka never did find her footing in the White House or D.C. society; Jan. 6 was the final rupture. Now the Kushners have sought refuge in Surfside, a town that previously managed to stay off most people’s radar. Which was just fine with plenty of residents. Javanka aren’t only the town’s most well-known inhabitants — they’re also among its most invisible. Still, Surfside hasn’t completely sheltered them from the bitter political storm they helped create.

Invisible: The Kushners are laying low. Very low.

“Michael Flynn is still at war” via Robert Draper of The New York Times — Two days after Thanksgiving, Flynn spoke with the Worldview Weekend Broadcast Network. Claiming that the 2020 election involved “probably the greatest fraud that our country has ever experienced in our history,” … China was “not going to allow 2020 to happen, and so now what we have is this theft with mail-in ballots.” He insisted that a legitimate counting of the ballots would have resulted in a Trump landslide. Flynn was beginning to envision a military role. “It’s not unprecedented,” Flynn insisted to Newsmax host Greg Kelly on Dec. 17. “I mean, these people out there talking about martial law, like it’s something that we’ve never done,” he said, adding, “I’m not calling for that.” Flynn was, in fact, calling for sending the military to the contested states.

—LOCAL NOTES —

“Two men in Miami stole 192 ventilators, worth $3 million, the authorities say.” via Eduardo Medina of The New York Times — Two men in Miami have each been sentenced to 41 months in prison for stealing medical ventilators bound for a COVID-19 care facility in El Salvador as part of a U.S. aid program. The crime occurred in August 2020, according to a news release issued after the sentencing of the second of the two men. The men, Yoelvis Denis Hernandez and Luis Urra Montero, stole a tractor-trailer from a parking lot in South Florida that was loaded with 192 ventilators, worth about $3 million, that were bound for Miami International Airport for shipping to El Salvador by the U.S. Agency for International Development.

How low can you go? Yoelvis Denis Hernandez and Luis Urra Montero are accused of stealing $3M in ventilators meant for COVID-19 patients.

“Nicaraguan doctor’s quest for political asylum remains in limbo years after escape to Central Florida” via Lisa Maria Garza of the Orlando Sentinel — More than three years after he fled Nicaragua seeking political asylum, Dr. Luis Rodolfo Ibarra is still waiting for a hearing in Orlando immigration court. Ibarra, 35, said he wants a judge to know that he put his oath as a doctor above government orders in 2018 when he treated wounded civilian protesters who sought to dismantle President Daniel Ortega’s regime. A hearing for Ibarra’s asylum case was set for July in Orlando, then abruptly canceled because of COVID-19 concerns, his lawyer Rusten Hurd said. Online court records show there are no future hearings scheduled for Ibarra’s case, which has been consolidated with his wife and daughter’s requests for asylum.

“Rising antisemitism in South Florida and beyond fuels concern and determination in Jewish community” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Drivers on Interstate 4 in Orlando last Sunday were confronted with a Nazi flag displayed on an overpass, along with a banner proclaiming “Vax the Jews” and listing the same website as the previous weekend’s flyers. The incidents are part of what Jewish community leaders and others said is a disturbing trend: an increase in the number of antisemitic incidents, some violent, others aimed at instilling fear. “Both locally and nationally, we have seen steady increases in antisemitism and all forms of bigotry over the past few years,” said Lonny Wilk, interim regional director of the Anti-Defamation League in Florida.

“State of the city: West Palm mayor talks about boom times, crime, expensive housing and water problem” via Wayne Washington of The Palm Beach Post — Basking in West Palm Beach’s economic boom times, Mayor Keith James declared that “the state of our city today is strong, our economy is sound, and our state of mind is sturdy.” The mayor touted the new office buildings sprouting up in the city, talked up partnerships with the University of Florida and Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University, noted what he described as a drop in crime, and announced that he’s increasing his goal for the construction of affordable housing units. While James said he’s proud of the city’s accomplishments over the past year, he is pushing his administration to do more. Housing, he said, is still too expensive for many. The city has been “chipping away” at homelessness but wants to do more on that front.

“Will Sheriff Gregory Tony face any penalty after investigation into his lies? What we know and don’t know” via Lisa Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — DeSantis says he’ll decide whether to take any action against Tony after a state investigation concluded Broward County’s top cop lied on numerous forms about his murder arrest and other key parts of his past. Many outcomes could take place in the coming days: The Governor soon could act to suspend Tony from office. He could wait for a state ethics panel to recommend whether any discipline or penalty is warranted — and delegate that task to the ethics panel. Or he could decide to do nothing at all. Tony’s case can be a complicated matter to decide, said attorney Burnadette Norris-Weeks. The decision to remove an elected official from office can be subjective, Norris-Weeks said. “Legal standards, quite frankly, can be a little blurry sometimes.”

In deep: Gregory Tony faces several possibilities; many are not good. Image via AP.

“‘A bad look’: Walton residents call for crackdown on teenage spring breakers” via Jim Thompson of the Northwest Florida Daily News — With about a month to go before the first Spring Break crowds arrive along the beaches of Walton County, residents and other stakeholders are pressing county law enforcement, beach safety and code enforcement personnel to take a tough stand against teenage visitors. Clearly frustrated by what high school spring breakers bring to the county, residents called for the county to institute a spring break curfew and be more visible and proactive in addressing lawbreaking, particularly underage drinking. Last year, Walton County Commissioner Tony Anderson, whose district includes most of the county’s 26 miles of public and private beaches, asked for consideration of a Spring Break curfew

— TOP OPINION —

“Stan Lockhart: Before any ban, Florida should first look at Utah’s successful ranked choice voting” via Florida Politics — Ranked choice voting (RCV) has a long history in Utah for state and county Republican Party elections going back to 2002. Starting in 2019, Utah cities have had the option to use RCV for their nonpartisan elections. RCV is a faster, cheaper, and better way to run our local elections in Utah. Traditionally, Utah’s local elections include a Preliminary Election in August to narrow down the field, and then a General Election in November between the top candidates. With RCV, cities can replace two elections with one — shortening the campaign season and reducing the cost to taxpayers. Instead of going to the polls twice (which data shows greatly reduces turnout), voters only have to go once!

— OPINIONS —

“RNC should take a lesson from Pence” via National Review editorial board — There is no conceivable political benefit to the Republican Party or its members, other than Trump, in looking to defend or minimize Jan. 6 rather than simply move on. The American people are never itching to hear a defense of rioters. But the voters have also shown little interest in the Democrats’ obsession over the event. Republicans who did nothing to encourage the mob, and there are many such Republicans, need not wear a hair shirt over Jan. 6, but when they choose to talk about it, they should tell the unsparing truth. We commend the example of Pence.

“Pence gives bombshell speech that Trump was ‘wrong.’ But now comes the hard part” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Pence finally, finally, finally said what needed to be said. “President Trump is wrong. I had no right to overturn the election.” Well, hallelujah. It’s a year late, and it’s not under oath. But he said it, and to a Florida gathering of the Federalist Society, a conservative legal group. If Pence truly wants to remedy any of the damage to this country, he should now encourage other Republicans to drop the masks of falsity so many have willingly worn for a year, too fearful of Trump to stop mouthing his Big Lie. For Pence, it might turn out that his speech was the easy part. But today, in this one moment, hearing a top Republican say the plain and simple truth gives us a flicker of relief, a momentary cessation of pain, like a national headache that suddenly stops hurting.

“Will Florida’s ‘election police’ be afraid of ‘ghosts?’ Lawmakers, dump this idea” via the Miami Herald editorial board — The Frank Artiles “ghost” candidate scandal has called into question the results of one Miami Senate race and maybe two others, one in Miami and another in Seminole County, all won by Republicans. It’s turning into one of the worst abuses of our election system in recent times. That has us thinking: Maybe we were too hasty when we said DeSantis’ proposed election security office was a waste of time and tax money. Surely this kind of potential misconduct would be its reason for existing. Nope. Sen. Travis Hutson, sponsor of the Senate bill that would create an election security office, said this week that the special investigative unit that DeSantis has called for would only deal with “election fraud — not candidacy fraud,” according to the Orlando Sentinel.

“If Democrats don’t ask questions, nobody will” via Steve Bousquet of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The Senate Ethics and Elections Committee discussed a controversial and hasty 45-page rewrite of a bill that includes a scaled-back version of DeSantis’ new elections police force (Senate Bill 524). That’s Tallahassee-speak for stopping debate and calling for a vote so the minority Democrats can’t run out the clock by asking questions. None of the five Republicans asked probing questions. Senators need to keep asking questions about those elections cops, and the potential for partisan witch hunts, and every other proposed change to voting laws. But they learned Friday they will have one less chance to do so. Fewer hearings mean fewer questions, and SB 524 was rerouted by the Senate President’s office to one fewer committee.

“Legislation poses a real risk to our state’s children” via Dr. Deborah Day for the Tallahassee Democrat — There is an existential threat to children in legislation currently being considered by the Florida House. If passed, House Bill 1395 would codify a presumption of 50/50 timesharing between divorced parents. While this may sound fair and reasonable on its face, it is not; it poses a real risk to our state’s children and, I believe, it must be stopped. As a regularly appointed social investigator in family law cases, I work almost exclusively with families going through a divorce and are in conflict over the timesharing of their children. So, it is with this extensive firsthand experience that I speak out against this presumption of the 50/50 timesharing provision in HB 1395.

“Bob Lotane: Randy Fine’s ‘Dirty Dozen,’ GOP discomfort and hypocrisy” via Florida Politics — Fine hammered the 12 school districts that defied DeSantis’ ban on mask mandates — pushing budget language to strip $200M from the “Dirty Dozen” and redistribute it to districts that complied. Leon Schools Superintendent Hanna called Fine “a childish, immature bully.” Political observers might be tempted to add another adjective: Hypocrite. Fine introduced legislation to require the teaching and other remembrances of the 1920 Ocoee Election Day Riots and the Holocaust. It passed in March 2020, and DeSantis happily signed it. Fast-forward one year, and there was Fine accusing Brevard Schools of using critical race theory (CRT). What changed? How did these two go from passing and signing legislation assailing racism and antisemitism to become cheerleaders for a movement aimed at sanitizing America’s shameful racial history?

“One bill’s answer to corruption: More secrecy” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — There is one bill that’s more dangerous than any pro-secrecy legislation we’ve seen in a long time. If it passes, HB 1547/SB 1848 could tunnel new and secretive channels in Florida’s already corrupt campaign finance system by hiding the names of big-money donors. Well, if these bills pass, lawmakers will have done something: They will have made the situation much, much worse, by wrapping a cloak of secrecy around the names and other identifying information of those big-money donors.

“Holier-than-thou book banners in Florida ought to start with the Bible” via Frank Cerabino of The Palm Beach Post — We may have to ban the Bible from Florida’s public schools. Book banning is starting to take off in Florida, and as long as it is, we shouldn’t leave the Bible out of the discussion. A national group called The County Citizens Defending Freedom has formed in Polk County to remove books from public school libraries deemed harmful to children under the age of 18. OK, so if we need to scrub the public library shelves from books that promote the “socialist mentality” and/or contain “narrative accounts of sexual excitement or sexual conduct,” it’s time to round up all the Bibles and lock them away from the children. For starters, Jesus was basically Bernie Sanders in open-toed sandals. If you’re into more graphic sexual passages, the Old Testament has a lot to offer.

—TODAY’S SUNRISE —

How did Florida’s Governor become involved in a trucker vaccine protest in Canada? By targeting GoFundMe’s decision to suspend a fundraiser for the “Freedom Convoy” and return the money to contributors.

Also, on today’s Sunrise:

— Attorney General Moody says GoFundMe’s treatment of the “Freedom Convoy” may be illegal and is probably discriminatory.

— House and Senate budgets are in and head to full appropriations committees.

— Bills moving through the House and Senate could make a difference in decreasing veteran suicides. Rep. Ben Diamond explains.

To listen, click on the image below:

— OLYMPICS —

“Why Americans are turned off by the Olympics” via David Nather and Margaret Talev of Axios — Americans’ concerns about the Chinese government’s human rights abuses, surveillance and international competitiveness, and fears of another COVID-19 outbreak are driving down enthusiasm about this year’s Winter Olympics. Seven in 10 survey respondents disapprove of allowing China to host these Olympics, but half plan to tune in anyhow. Just 7% say they’re more enthusiastic about this year’s games than the 2018 games in South Korea, while 47% say they’re less enthusiastic. Fewer than half of Americans say the Olympics should go ahead while the omicron variant is spreading, while the rest say The Games should be postponed (34%) or canceled (16%).

Meh: Americans are just not in the Olympic spirit this time. Image via AP.

“Hilary Knight: Four-time Olympian, full-time disrupter” via Roman Stubbs of The Washington Post — Knight was an elite athlete in her prime in 2012 when her mother told her she needed to get a job. Ostensibly, Knight was a professional hockey player, but that didn’t pay a livable wage, so she also taught skating lessons. While training with Team USA as it readies to defend its gold medal win over Canada four years ago in Pyeongchang, Knight has continued her work with the Professional Women’s Hockey Players Association, which was formed to promote a viable professional league in North America. The organization has offered around 200 of the world’s top players an alternative to the Premier Hockey Federation, the continent’s only professional women’s league, which Knight and her teammates have said is not sustainable.

“U.S. forward Abby Roque is a first-time Olympian and a pioneer for Indigenous people” via Barry Svrluga of The Washington Post — The players skated around Tuesday afternoon at Wukesong Sports Center without their helmets and, briefly, mercifully without their masks, stopping and smiling for the camera that would capture the official team portrait of the 2022 U.S. Olympic women’s hockey team, not to mention their own camera phones that were tucked under pads on their hips or their shoulders. After the large group photo came the subsets: first-time Olympians in one shot, the goalies in another; University of Minnesota players followed by those from the University of Wisconsin, rivals in everyday life, teammates here.

“Mikaela Shiffrin’s Olympic prep has included covid, isolation, tears — and relief” via Barry Svrluga of The Washington Post — The Olympics were only five weeks away, and the most prominent Team USA athlete was sequestered in a hotel room in Austria, reduced to doing pullups on her bed frame and lunges with a single 15-kilogram plate. This is not how a two-time gold medalist is supposed to prepare for winning more gold medals. But COVID-19 doesn’t care if the Olympics are afoot, so here was Shiffrin, coughing and with a sore throat, in isolation when she should have been ski racing. With the Opening Ceremonies of the Beijing Winter Games on Friday, Shiffrin is over COVID-19, out of isolation and back on the mountain. She has even won again on the World Cup circuit in circumstances that brought about an unprecedented outpouring of emotion, which we’ll get to.

— ALOE —

“A man in a ‘Star Wars’ costume gives free masks to travelers. Meet ‘The Maskalorian.’” via Hannah Sampson of The Washington Post — Even in these strange times, the sight is unusual enough to turn heads: a helmeted figure in a jumpsuit and cape with a tiny green creature strapped to his chest. Both appear to come from a galaxy far, far away. Both wear disposable masks over their mouths. Masks, it turns out, are the entire point of their mission. Inspired by the hit Star Wars show “The Mandalorian” on Disney+, the character is the brainchild of Matt Adams, a 43-year-old filmmaker and improv performer. And that little green guy wearing a GoPro on his chest might look a lot like Grogu, aka the Child, aka Baby Yoda. But his name is Masku. Together, they have given away roughly 1,000 masks.

To watch The Maskolarian in action, click on the image below:

 

“SeaWorld ramps up care for threatened Florida manatees” via Curt Anderson of The Associated Press — The SeaWorld theme park in Orlando is opening new pools to care for Florida manatees that are dying from starvation due to poor water quality in their normal habitat. The lovable, round-tailed marine mammals had their worst die-off last year, more than 1,100 of them, and there are federal and state efforts ongoing to save the threatened creatures. One of these efforts is to have a place like SeaWorld, with the marine assets it has, provide rehabilitation to those that can be rescued. SeaWorld announced Friday that it had added five 40-foot (12-meter) pools to accommodate up to 20 manatees within two weeks. The theme park is one of five facilities in the U.S. taking care of sick and injured manatees. It had 28 manatees in its care as of Friday.

“It’s official: UFC 273 is coming April 9 to Jacksonville’s VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena” via Clayton Freeman of The Florida Times-Union — It’s official: For the third time, UFC is packing a punch on the First Coast. Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry confirmed the global mixed martial arts series is officially returning to VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena on April 9 for UFC 273. UFC formally announced the fights during Saturday night’s Fight Night broadcast between Jack Hermansson and Sean Strickland. The featured bout on the card pits Australia’s Alexander Volkanovski against Chan Sung Jung, known in UFC as the Korean Zombie, for Volkanovski’s featherweight title belt. Also scheduled to fight for the bantamweight title are Aljamain Sterling and Petr Yan, designated as the co-main event.

What Michelle Schorsch is reading — “The long, slow death of the hotel minibar” via Hannah Sampson of The Washington Post — The Atlantic piece reported that a German company invented the minibar in the early 1960s. The first one to become famous was at the Madison Hotel in D.C. Hilton claims to have “popularized” the in-room concept in 1974 in Hong Kong. The heyday that followed for minibars is largely over. Large hotel chains have been scaling down their use for several years. The Wall Street Journal reported in 2011 that Hyatt Hotels & Resorts was removing stocked minibars from some convention hotels, and Hilton and Omni were making similar moves. Popular new brands emphasize a communal atmosphere, with wine hour in the lobby or a market near the front desk.

— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —

Celebrating today are two North Florida politicos: state Rep. Brad Drake and Dr. Rachel Pienta. Happy birthday to our friend Josh Burgin. Belated happy birthday wishes to INFLUENCE 100’er Fred Karlinsky, former Rep. Clay Ingram, top fundraiser Christina Diamond, and Rep. Clay Yarborough.

___

Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Daniel Dean, Renzo Downey, Jacob Ogles, and Drew Wilson.


5.) MORNING BREW

February 07, 2022
Morning Brew
TOGETHER WITH

Good morning. Apparently the hot new thing among transportation agencies is to have people vote on punny names for their snow plow fleets.

Scotland’s been doing it since 2006 with tremendous results (Buzz Iceclear, Lord Coldemort, Creedence Clear-Road Revival), and last week Minnesota’s DOT announced the winners of its own Name-A-Snowplow contest:

  • Betty Whiteout was the runaway winner, followed by Ctrl Salt Delete and The Big Leplowski.

Our entry for next year: Snow More Mr. Ice Guy

—Neal Freyman

MARKETS: YEAR-TO-DATE

Nasdaq

14,098.01

-9.89%

S&P

4,500.53

-5.57%

Dow

35,089.74

-3.44%

10-Year

1.913%

+39.9 bps

Bitcoin

$42,412.43

-8.41%

Oil

$92.09

+22.45%

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 7:00pm ET. Here’s what these numbers mean.
  • Markets: With all the focus on wild stock swings last week, we neglected to mention the big news that US oil prices topped $90 for the first time since 2014, despite attempts by the Biden administration to keep them down. Gas prices, in turn, are back up to their highest levels in more than seven years.
  • Covid: The US death toll from Covid-19 has now surpassed 900,000. Another crazy thing to think about: Omicron has gotten more people around the world sick at the same time than at any point since the 1918–1919 flu pandemic, the WSJ points out.

GEOPOLITICS

Europe prepares for a gaslighting

Empty fuel pumps at an Esso petrol stationDan Kitwood/Getty Images

To kick off the week, let’s head to the Russia–Ukraine border, where Russia has amassed at least 70% of the military capacity it needs to invade its neighbor, the US government said this weekend.

That means, in the words of National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan yesterday, a move into Ukraine “could happen as soon as tomorrow or it could take some weeks yet.”

  • The US has estimated that a war could leave 50,000 civilians killed or wounded, 25,000 Ukrainian soldiers dead, and millions of refugees looking for shelter across Europe.

It could also could sap Europe of energy

Among the scenarios keeping world leaders up at night is the possibility that Russia could cut off energy supplies to Europe.

How that would play out: If Russia invades, the US has vowed to unleash “the mother of all sanctions” against the country. Russia, in retaliation, could counter with its own mother lode—withholding gas shipments to Europe.

Which…would not be good, given Europe has a coffee-level dependence on Russian energy.

  • Russia supplies about 33% of Europe’s natural gas, and more than 25% of its crude oil imports.
  • Germany, in one extreme example, relies on Russia for more than half of its natural gas.

Putting Europe in an even more vulnerable position is the fact that consumers are already being squeezed by record energy prices. 22 million households in Britain will see their gas and electricity bill spike 54% come April, an energy regulator warned.

What can be done? Not a whole lot. One hope is that Russia won’t cut off all gas shipments, because that move could be just as damaging to its own economy as it would be to the rest of Europe. Still, Europe is exploring importing more gas from other countries in case Russia shuts off the spigot.

Looking ahead…leaders will be holding two separate high-stakes meetings today centered on the Ukraine conflict. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz is in Washington, DC, to meet with President Biden, and French President Emmanuel Macron will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow. Macron said he thinks it’s possible to avoid a war.

            

MEDIA

Rogan episodes go poof

Joe RoganAlex Trautwig/Getty Images

Spotify has scrubbed as many as 70 episodes of The Joe Rogan Experience podcast after a video compilation showed Rogan using the N-word in past episodes spanning 12 years.

In a note to employees obtained by Axios, Spotify CEO Daniel Ek said that Rogan “chose to remove a number of episodes from Spotify” due to his racially insensitive language. Rogan issued his own apology on Instagram over the weekend:

  • The podcaster said those clips looked “horrible, even to me” and said this was “the most regretful and shameful thing that I’ve ever had to talk about publicly.”
  • “It’s not my word to use,” Rogan added.

Big picture: As more artists pull their music from Spotify over its relationship with Rogan, Ek continues to stand by him. “While I strongly condemn what Joe has said…I do not believe that silencing Joe is the answer,” he said. “Looking at the issue more broadly, it’s critical thinking and open debate that powers real and necessary progress.”

Ek also said he’d commit $100 million (perhaps uncoincidentally the value of Rogan’s deal with Spotify) for the licensing, development, and marketing of music and audio content from marginalized groups.

            

FITNESS

Who should buy Peloton?

A Peloton framed as a skeleton Dianna “Mick” McDougall

Like most fitness equipment, Peloton has ended up as garage sale browsing fodder.

Multiple reports out Friday revealed that several companies—namely Amazon and Nike—were considering a purchase of the at-home fitness maker.

In general, Peloton makes an attractive takeover target because it’s on decent financial footing, boasts a highly loyal user base, and has become much cheaper due to its recent stock plunge (down nearly 85% from its 2020 peak). So why would it make sense for Amazon or Nike?

  • Amazon: Peloton would give Amazon a bigger foothold in the wellness area, which it’s already exploring with its Halo fitness band. Amazon could also lend its supply chain expertise to shore up Peloton’s logistics woes, and perhaps bundle a Peloton subscription into its Prime membership.
  • Nike: Buying Peloton would represent a bold pivot by the company from fitness tech software to hardware. But the brand fit is there, Axios notes.

Other potential buyers have also been floated, including the usual suspects Apple, Google, Netflix, Microsoft, or a private equity firm.

Still, any deal is contingent on the support of Peloton CEO John Foley, who has a tight grip on the board’s voting power. He’d have to be in a truly despairing mood to sell the company he co-founded in 2012.

            

TOGETHER WITH AMERICAN EXPRESS

Built to take your biz further

Like the snowflakes falling outside your window (dang, it’s only February), no two businesses are alike. That’s why the is designed to help you pursue the business goals that are unique to you.

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CALENDAR

The week ahead

Inflation: The monthly inflation report we’ve all come to dread will drop on Thursday, and it’s once again expected to be quite dreadful. Consumer prices are projected to have jumped 0.5% from the previous month and 7.3% over the past year—which would be the biggest increase since 1982.

Earnings: Last week’s earnings reports resulted in violent swings in stock prices, from Snap’s 59% gain to Meta’s 26% wipeout. The companies reporting this week—Pfizer, Disney, Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Twitter, and Zillow among them—know that in this market, any small stain on their financials could lead to a stock plunge.

Olympics: The 2022 Beijing Games enter their first full week. Here’s the current medal count, and here’s the TV schedule for today, which includes Nathan Chen in the men’s figure skating short program and a US–Canada women’s hockey battle.

Everything else:

  • The Academy Award nominees will be announced Tuesday.
  • New York Fashion Week begins on Friday.
  • The Super Bowl between the Bengals and Rams is on Sunday. Expect a lot of crypto ads.
            

GRAB BAG

Key performance indicators

Chanel's Classic Flap bag Christian Vierig/Getty Images

Stat: Chanel has raised the price of its Classic Flap bag by $3,000 since 2019, from $5,200 to $8,200. The entire luxury sector has been jacking up prices during the pandemic but, despite a few grumblings, it appears wealthy buyers aren’t fazed. “We’ve seen absolutely no consumer resistance to any of the price increases that we have taken, and there will be more,” John Idol, the CEO of Versace owner Capri, said recently.

Quote: “You come with a smile on your face, and you leave with a bigger smile on your face.”

Andy Johnson is the founder of Love Cloud, a company that will take you and your partner on a private, 45-minute Mile High Club Flight for $995. Yes, it’s exactly what it sounds like, complete with a twin mattress, pillows, and a pilot who wears noise-canceling headphones.

Read: The real names of Bored Ape Yacht Club’s pseudonymous founders. (BuzzFeed News)

            

SPORTS

Olympics pic of the day

Thibault Magnin of Spain performs a trick during the Freestyle Skiing Big Air training session.David Ramos/Getty Images

Spain’s Thibault Magnin dances with the smokestacks during a training session of the Men’s Freeski Big Air event.

WHAT ELSE IS BREWING

  • Delta Air Lines’s CEO Ed Bastian asked the DOJ to put unruly travelers on the “no-fly” list.
  • Ottawa’s mayor has declared a state of emergency over ongoing protests against vaccine mandates.
  • The International Olympic Committee said it would improve conditions for quarantined athletes in Beijing after receiving complaints.
  • About 100,000 dead fish were released into the Atlantic Ocean by a trawler, and European officials are looking into…why.
  • Lata Mangeshkar, the iconic Indian singer who lent her voice to hundreds of Bollywood films, died at 92. The Indian government announced two days of national mourning.

BREW’S BETS

 

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Stressed? Click to relax.

Dive back into the week.

  • Shallow dive: Bill Murray doing Bill Murray things
  • Medium dive: These birds do not exist
  • Deep dive: The man who almost faked his way to a Nobel Prize
  • Cannonball: Free courses on Black history from MasterClass

*This is sponsored advertising content

GAMES

The puzzle section

Turntable: It’s the hottest word game since Wordle—the Brew’s Turntable. Play it here.

Royal trivia

Queen Elizabeth II celebrated 70 years on the throne with her Platinum Jubilee yesterday. She’s the UK’s longest-ruling monarch in history—but who’s No. 2?

FROM THE CREW

V-Day gifts you won’t see anywhere else

Valentine's Day Promo

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ANSWER

Queen Victoria, Queen Elizabeth’s great-great grandmother. Her reign lasted for more than 63 years.
          
Written by Neal Freyman

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6.) THE FACTUAL

7 FEB 2022

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The Factual

Facts, not fear.

TRENDING TOPICS
Unruly passenger no-fly list • Military training safety • Ukraine diplomatic efforts • Facebook value crash • Better pandemic data
FEATURED UNDER-REPORTED STORIES
Right to repair conflict • Meat alternatives vs. taxes • North Korea and Covid-19

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TRENDING TOPICS, MOST CREDIBLE STORIES
#1 in U.S. News • 20 articles

Why is Delta Airlines proposing a federal no-fly list of unruly passengers?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    Delta CEO wants federal support for national no-fly list of unruly passengers.
    USA Today (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 71% • 3 min read

    Delta CEO Ed Bastian, in a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland, asked for “the much-needed step” of a comprehensive list of “any person convicted of an on-board disruption.” In November, Garland directed U.S. attorneys across the country to swiftly prioritize the prosecution of federal crimes that happen on commercial flights.
    …
    Unruly passenger cases spiked after the U.S. introduced a mask mandate on airplanes and in airports on Feb. 1, 2021. Some flights have been recently diverted due to unruly passengers. The rate of unruly passenger incidents has dropped about 50% since record-highs in early 2021.
    …
    In September 2021, flight attendants urged Congress to do more to reduce the number of air rage incidents. Ahead of that hearing, Delta’s senior vice president of inflight service sent a memo to flight attendants saying the airline has asked other airlines to share their no-fly lists to further protect employees. “A list of banned customers doesn’t work as well if that customer can fly with another airline,” the memo said.
  1. Different political viewpoint
    Delta seeks to put unruly passengers on no-fly list. [Free read link]
    Wall Street Journal (Moderate Right) • Factual Grade 62% • 4 min read
  1. Selected long-read
    Should U.S. airlines create their own ‘no-fly’ list? (2021)
    San Diego Union-Tribune (Moderate Right) • Factual Grade 69% • 5 min read

View all articles

TODAY’S POLL

Should there be a federal no-fly list of passengers convicted of unruly behavior?

Yes No Unsure

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

YESTERDAY’S POLLWas GoFundMe right to end the Freedom Convoy fundraiser?

445 votes, 43 comments

Context: GoFundMe refunds $9M of donations supporting Canadian truckers protesting vaccine mandates.

HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS

“ No – It’s a double standard. GFM actively encouraged people to donate to the CHOP/CHAZ zones in Seattle and Portland. Both of which were complete lawless zones and multiple people died in them during the occupation of these zones. The only people claiming damage are news outlets and the Canadian government. There is video proof that the truckers are helping people too but no news media will show it. ”

“ Yes – Highways are critical in ways that we may not imagine, and many that we can. Blocking highways is a threat to public safety. The roads are paid for by taxpayers and they should expect that the roads are available. When a group interferes with public services and puts the public at risk, people or businesses can choose whether they want to aid that effort.”

“ Unsure – Upon official request of law enforcement, or supported by the preponderance of evidence that an event does not meet its community guidelines, GoFundMe is right to take down a fundraiser. Furthermore, if the value of a fundraiser exceeds a certain amount, and there is not a valid governing body, or certified individual in place to manage the disbursement of funds any crowdfunding website would be right to withhold services. That said, GoFundMe and other crowdfunding sites have set a precedent for selective de-platforming that reveals partisan bias and tacit political endorsement.”

Your comments and earned Respects.
Share poll results and comments 
#2 in U.S. News • 19 articles

How did a Navy SEAL candidate die after a training session?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    U.S. Navy identifies SEAL candidate who died after ‘Hell Week’ training session.
    The Independent (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 67% • 3 min read

    Both the candidates were hospitalized soon after the symptoms emerged. One of them didn’t make it, while the other was listed in stable condition. [The Navy] stressed that the symptoms began “several hours” after the training session.
    …
    Both the candidates went through an extensive training session called Basic Underwater Demolition Seal which includes basic underwater demolition, survival and other combat tactics, the statement said. According to Navy seals website, the training also known as “Hell Week” consists of 5 and a half days of “cold, wet, brutally difficult operational training on fewer than four hours of sleep.”
    …
    On average, only 25% of Seal candidates make it through Hell Week. It isn’t yet clear how much Hell Week contributed to the deteriorated health of the trainees. However, this isn’t the first time a candidate has lost his life during rigorous training. In 2016, a candidate named Derek Lovelace died after he drowned during a pool exercise.
  1. Different political viewpoint
    Navy identifies SEAL candidate who died after ‘Hell Week’ training.
    Fox News (Right) • Factual Grade 53% • 3 min read
  1. Selected long-read
    What will decrease military training deaths? More training, Government Accountability Office says. (2021)
    Defense One (Center) • Factual Grade 71% • 7 min read

View all articles

#1 in World News • 53 articles

What diplomatic efforts are being pursued to avoid a war in Ukraine?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    As U.S. predicts Russia could seize Kyiv in days, diplomatic efforts set to intensify this week. [Free read link]
    Washington Post (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 73% • 4 min read

    New U.S. intelligence assessments said Putin has 70% of the combat power he needs for an assault that — in the most extreme scenario — could take out [Ukraine’s capital]. The Biden administration also warned that Moscow was considering filming a fake attack against Russian territory by Ukrainian forces as a pretext to invade.
    …
    Senior Russian officials dismissed new U.S. intelligence reports as alarmist. Some Ukrainian officials, including President Zelensky, have taken issue with Washington’s description of an “imminent” attack, fearing it will cause panic and hurt Ukraine’s economy. Zelensky’s office maintained that a diplomatic solution was more likely than war.
    …
    President Biden is set to meet Monday with new German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who has been accused of not doing enough to respond to Russian aggression. French President Emmanuel Macron will meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Monday, and then travel to Kyiv to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
  1. Top from different political viewpoint
    Biden’s pointless troop deployment.
    American Conservative (Moderate Right) • Factual Grade 73% • 5 min read
  1. Selected long-read
    The sliding-doors approach to the Russia-Ukraine crisis.
    The Atlantic (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 79% • 5 min read
  1. Recent poll
    Should the US send troops to Ukraine if it’s invaded by Russia?
    539 votes • 54 comments

View all articles

#1 in Business News • 26 articles

What drove Facebook’s record drop in market capitalization?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    For the first time in its history, Facebook is in decline. Has the tech giant begun to crumble?
    The Guardian (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 80% • 5 min read

    Facebook’s latest moment at the top of the news agenda had nothing to do with scandals and everything to do with its financial results, which were so unexpectedly bad that the shares dropped 25% at one point, taking $240bn off its market value, which in turn led to a 2% drop in the Nasdaq index.
    …
    Three factors stood out from reports of Mark Zuckerberg’s conference call with stock market analysts: the impact of TikTok; Apple’s move to require iPhone users to consent to being tracked by advertisers; and the revelation that the hitherto unstoppable growth in the number of Facebook users has stalled.
    …
    [Apple’s “app-tracking transparency” feature] required iPhone users to give explicit consent for user-level and device ID-based monitoring by apps. Users declined in droves. [Facebook has now lost] $10bn in advertising revenue. That’s 8.5% of the company’s 2021 revenues, but, more significantly, a quarter of its overall profit for the year.
  1. Selected long-read
    Why Meta suffered biggest wipeout in history.
    Times of India (Moderate Right) • Factual Grade 65% • 5 min read

View all articles

#1 in Science News • 10 articles

How will the expanded monitoring of wastewater help with pandemic tracking?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    CDC launches Covid-19 wastewater surveillance dashboard.
    ABC News (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 75% • 4 min read

    The federal agency’s National Wastewater Surveillance System connects more than 400 sites across 28 states and the District of Columbia. More than 34,000 samples have been collected representing 53 million Americans. Over the last 15 days, the dashboard shows that 98% of treatment facilities have detected the virus in all of their samples.
    …
    Between 40% and 80% of COVID-19 patients shed genetic material from the virus, or viral RNA, in their feces. Because people shed the virus when they are in the early stages of infection, increases in levels of viral RNA in wastewater are often seen before the number of cases rise.
    …
    “These can inform important public health decisions such as where to allocate mobile testing and vaccination sites,” Dr. Ann Kirby, program lead for the CDC’s National Wastewater Surveillance System said. Several countries overseas have used the tool to monitor polio outbreaks. In many European cities, public health officials have used wastewater surveillance to track opioid use.
  1. Selected long-read
    In sewage, clues to Omicron’s surge. [Free read link]
    New York Times (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 89% • 7 min read

View all articles

 

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UPDATES & BREAKING NEWS

  • Freedom Convoy: Ottawa declares emergency over trucker Covid rules protests.
    BBC (Moderate Left) • Grade 74% • 4 min read
  • 5-year-old boy who fell in well in Morocco found dead after dayslong rescue effort.
    ABC News (Moderate Left) • Grade 59% • 3 min read
  • Spotify pulls 70 episodes of Joe Rogan’s podcast.
    Mother Jones (Left) • Grade 68% • 3 min read
  • Cyclone pounds Madagascar with torrential winds and rain.
    Associated Press (Center) • Grade 66% • 2 min read

View more credible stories

HIGHLY CREDIBLE, UNDER-REPORTED STORIES

Please click Display images in your email app to view this email properly A fight over the right to repair cars turns ugly.

Wired (Moderate Left) • Grade 78% • 6 min read

Please click Display images in your email app to view this email properly More non-meat choices are better than meat taxes or bans.

Reason (Moderate Right) • Grade 70% • 4 min read

Please click Display images in your email app to view this email properly North Korea’s ticking Covid-19 time bomb.

The Diplomat (Center) • Grade 79% • 4 min read

View all under-reported stories
EDITOR’S PICKS

Highly-rated article from left-leaning source

Governing • Grade 80%

Offshore wind farms could help capture carbon from air and use energy that would otherwise go to waste.

Highly-rated article from right-leaning source

Fox News • Grade 75%

Minneapolis protest of Amir Locke shooting death draws more than 1,000 marchers.

8,820 Articles Analyzed Visit The Factual
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7.) LIBERTY NATION

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Dems’ Double Standards on Mask Mandates
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Blue state bosses jettison leading by example.

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“Lack of direction, not lack of time, is the problem. We all have twenty-four hour days.”

― Zig Ziglar

Is It Gerrymandering or Redistricting?
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Why do Democrats redistrict but only Republicans gerrymander?

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Today’s Political Meme

Sometimes, you just need to laugh!

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America’s New National Debt Milestone: $30 Trillion and Counting
By Andrew Moran

Kicking the can has become a habit for politicians on both sides of the aisle.

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  • Swamponomics: Hello Four Dollar Gas and More Food Inflation
  • New York Charter Schools Thrive, Public School Enrollment Falls
  • Flyover Folks See Red – Everywhere
GoFundMe Protects Canada’s COVID Regime
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The culture war comes to the crowdfunding industry.

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From the Liberty Nation Studios

The Lost Members of Never-Trumper Land – C5 TV – Sometimes it is simply divine when Karma rears her head and lays waste to bloviating haters. by Liberty Nation Staff – Watch Now

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8.) FOX NEWS

 


9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

 


10.) THE FEDERALIST PAPERS

Web version
US-Born Figure Skater Renounced Citizenship and Joined China … Now Look What’s Happening
Posted by Jack Davis, The Western Journal
Instead of a welcoming congratulations, she is receiving the ire of the Chinese people. Read more…
Memphis BLM Founder Sentenced to Six Years in Prison
Posted by Jack Davis, The Western Journal
Moses was previously charged with a slew of felonies, including stalking and perjury. Read more…
GoFundMe Just Got Some Horrific News as Truckers Emerge Victorious
Posted by Jack Davis, The Western Journal
Donors have already given over $2,500,000. Read more…
Dem Senators Unveil Horrifying Plan to Change Electoral Count Act
Posted by Samantha Chang, The Western Journal
Get ready, Democrats want to destroy elections as we know them. Read more…
Mayor Used Disgusting Slur While Bragging About Being Better Than Whites
Posted by Elizabeth Stauffer, The Western Journal
This hateful and divisive rhetoric does nothing to bring the city together. Read more…
Here’s How to Tell if the Chinese Are Watching You
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This strange error message could be nothing.

Or it could mean you’re on the Chinese regime’s blacklist. Read more…

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California’s free-market housing fix
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The recent passage of the California Housing Opportunity and More Efficiency Act suggests California’s housing crisis has gotten so bad that the state is willing to try a free-market approach.
Full Story
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The ‘Ukraine’ crisis is only sort of about Ukraine
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The Ukraine crisis is Vladimir Putin’s attempt to drive the US and its west European allies to abdicate our alliance obligations and show our unseriousness about defending our own vital national security interests.
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North Korea is becoming an asset for China
Oriana Skylar Mastro and Sungmin Cho | Foreign Affairs
To prevent conflict in the Korean Peninsula and keep pace in its competition with Beijing, the United States will need to come up with new ways to unite its allies and prove its resolve in the region.
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Is there a path forward for Congress on elections reform? A Q&A with Matthew Weil
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Matthew Weil discusses Congress’ role in elections reform, arguing that the federal government should support state election administration efforts with funding and incentives to meet basic standards.
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Von der Leyen’s Pfizer texts — why transparency isn’t all good
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From defund to refund: Attitudes about the police
Karlyn Bowman and Samantha Goldstein | AEIdeas
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Maritime territorial disputes in Asia and the relaxation of Cold War tensions: The case of Dokdo and the 1965 Japan-Korea normalization agreement
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12.) THE FLIP SIDE

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Monday, February 7, 2022

IS Leader Killed

“The leader of the jihadist group Islamic State died in a U.S. special forces raid in northern Syria on Thursday when he detonated a bomb that killed him and family members… Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby earlier described Thursday’s raid as a successful counter-terrorism mission, saying there were no U.S. casualties. Syrian rescue workers said at least 13 people including six children and four women were killed by clashes and explosions that erupted after the raid began.” Reuters

Many on both sides praise the raid but caution that the Islamic State remains a threat, and urge the administration to develop a comprehensive strategy to combat terrorism:

“Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi, the subject of a $10 million U.S. bounty, had been active in the Islamic State for years and advocated the enslavement of women from the ethnic Yazidi minority when the terrorist group controlled a swath of Iraqi and Syrian territory. As the hand-picked successor of the group’s previous boss, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, Mr. Qurayshi was operating undercover in Syria’s rebel-controlled Idlib province, attempting to reconstruct the group with an eye toward once again seizing territory. The world is a better place without him, and the Islamic State, at least temporarily, is a weakened organization…

“To those measures of success we would add a third: Apparently, U.S. personnel completed the raid with few civilian casualties. Indeed, it seems that Mr. Qurayshi died at his own hand, detonating a bomb rather than fighting Americans — or surrendering to them — and killing much of his family. Mr. Baghdadi similarly killed himself and others as U.S. troops closed in on him during a raid in 2019. Eyewitness reports confirmed official U.S. reports that civilians were warned to exit the targeted building and that some were escorted to safety by U.S. troops. This would represent a courageous effort to protect innocent life — even at the risk to American lives — and, as such, a welcome change from the disastrous U.S. drone strike on a supposed terrorist in Kabul last August, which killed 10 civilians.”
Editorial Board, Washington Post

“The world is now a slightly better place, and the lessons of the successful operation are worth recounting… One lesson is the importance of maintaining the forward deployment of U.S. counterterror forces. Donald Trump came close to withdrawing from Syria—and it’s fortunate he changed his mind. As of last month some 900 U.S. troops were stationed in Syria with another 2,500 in Iraq…

“Another lesson is the benefit of local allies on the ground. U.S. officials praised the Syrian Democratic Forces as ‘critical, vital enablers for operations like this.’ That probably included intelligence from months of searching for and then monitoring Hajji Abdullah at his safe house. We wish we now had such allies against ISIS and al Qaeda in Afghanistan… The temptation is to say the war against radical Islam is unwinnable so why keep fighting it? But by keeping jihadists on defense abroad, we reduce their ability to plot attacks against the U.S. homeland. We know what can happen when the plotters feel unthreatened.”
Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal

“The Islamic State today—having been driven out of Mosul, Raqqa, and just about everywhere else—is a shell of what it was seven or eight years ago. But it’s far from stamped out. On January 21, ISIS fighters laid siege to a prison in Syria holding thousands of their fellow combatants, resulting in hundreds of ISIS and Kurdish deaths and requiring some of the 900 or so U.S. troops stationed in Syria to intervene. In early December, the militant group reportedly killed seven Kurdish security force members and three civilians in a small Iraqi town in early December…

“Al-Qurayshi’s death will likely put a damper on the group’s recent momentum—particularly its recruiting efforts—but a new leader could have things back up and running in short order, just as al-Qurayshi was able to do following al-Baghdadi’s early demise. ‘It is a game of whack-a-mole, and we don’t whack the moles fast enough for it to make a difference,’ [senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies Bill] Roggio said. ‘We kill a leader here, we kill a leader there; six months in between, eight months. We don’t kill ISIS leaders fast enough and in big enough numbers to create a leadership void in the group that causes it to collapse.’”
Dispatch Staff, The Dispatch

“Perhaps the biggest surprise was that al-Qurayshi was hiding in Idlib province, the same place Baghdadi was found two years ago. Idlib, and northwestern Syria more broadly, is a stronghold of groups that oppose ISIS, including Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and the al-Qaeda-affiliated Hurras al-Din. That al-Qurayshi sought refuge in such a highly contested corner of Syria may suggest that ISIS’ geographic reach is greater than many analysts previously believed, stretching beyond its current stronghold in Badia in the central Syrian desert and the small villages and towns dotting northeastern Syria, where ISIS launched a series of prison breaks last week…

“Taking out a terrorist group’s top leaders one after another can definitely be effective in preventing it from mounting a comeback. However, decapitation strikes are no substitute for a more comprehensive strategy, which also requires disrupting a group’s logistical networks, revenue-generating activities and recruitment pipelines. Given the pared-down U.S. presence, American allies have mostly been the ones doing these tasks — notably, the Syrian Democratic Forces and Iraqi security forces. There is little doubt that al-Qurayshi’s death will hamper ISIS in the short term. However, it won’t dismantle the organization in any meaningful way.”
Colin P. Clarke, Politico

Other opinions below.

From the Right

“The fact that the latest episode of U.S. combat in Syria is likely to be a net-plus should not obscure the fact that both our basis for being there and our strategy — what exactly are we seeking to accomplish? — are murky at best (I am a longtime Syria naysayer). The seminal congressional authorities are use-of-force provisions that stretch back over 20 years, and countless things have changed in the interim. ISIS, for example, did not yet exist when the post-9/11 AUMF was enacted in 2001…

“Congress should long ago have made this a priority, but it has instead been AWOL — delegating seemingly boundless power to the commander in chief to carry out wartime missions in the places and against the targets of presidential choosing, under the vague auspices of counterterrorism. Lawmakers go on television to complain when things go wrong, wave pom-poms when things go right, but otherwise act as if the use of American force is none of their concern. That is not supposed to be the way this works… it should not be necessary to do mental acrobatics every time our government uses military force.”
Andrew C. McCarthy, National Review

From the Left

“Between 2018-20, U.S. military forces were somehow fighting terrorism in 89 countries. In 79 of those countries, they were training indigenous forces in how to fight terrorists. In 41, they conducted military exercises either alone or with local armies. In seven, they launched air or drone strikes. In 12 of the countries, U.S. troops engaged in combat operations. Since the report was published, troops have withdrawn from Afghanistan, leaving 11 countries where they’re engaged in combat operations or are authorized and set up to do so…

“In 2008, Seth Jones and Martin Libicki wrote a report for the RAND Corporation called How Terrorist Groups End. After studying 648 terrorist organizations between 1968-2006, they concluded that military troops destroyed the groups in just 7 percent of the cases… The RAND report found that military force is most effective when used against ‘large, well armed, and well organized’ insurgencies. In opposing such large groups, military force ‘has usually been a necessary component.’ However, against most terrorist groups, ‘military force is usually too blunt an instrument.’”
Fred Kaplan, Slate

On the bright side…

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13.) AXIOS

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Mike Allen
Mike Allen

Good Monday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,199 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.

🚨 Breaking: Former President Trump “improperly removed multiple boxes from the White House,” including what Trump once called “love letters” from North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, The Washington Post scoops.

  • The boxes were retrieved from Mar-a-Lago by the National Archives last month, The Post reports. Trump advisers said the boxes contained mementos, gifts, letters from world leaders and other correspondence.

Also included: a letter former President Obama left Trump.

1 big thing: FDA takes up vaccines for kids
Featured image

Illustration: Gabriella Turrisi/Axios

Federal health regulators are taking up the latest controversial vaccine question — whether to authorize Pfizer’s vaccine for children younger than five, despite ongoing questions around dosing and effectiveness.

  • Why it matters: Once again, the pandemic is forcing health officials to choose between unconventional vaccine approval methods and the human costs of abiding by more traditional — yet time-consuming — regulatory processes, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes.

Flashback: This tension was at the heart of last fall’s booster debate as well, when some scientists felt that there wasn’t yet enough data to justify the widespread recommendation of a third shot of the vaccine.

  • Ultimately, the FDA and the CDC slowed down the booster authorization timeline that had been envisioned by the Biden administration, and the entire process was criticized as messy and confusing.

👀 What we’re watching: An FDA advisory board will consider Pfizer’s proposal next week (Feb. 15). The FDA will then have to decide whether to authorize it, and the CDC will weigh in as well.

  • Keep reading for details of Pfizer’s proposal.
2. 🎙️ New overnight: Spotify keeps Rogan
Featured image

Photo Illustration: Cindy Ord/Getty Images

Spotify CEO Daniel Ek told employees yesterday that while he strongly condemns past racial slurs by Joe Rogan, he won’t cut ties with the platform’s most popular podcaster, according to an internal memo obtained by Axios’ Sara Fischer.

  • “While I strongly condemn what Joe has said and I agree with his decision to remove past episodes from our platform, I realize some will want more,” Ek wrote. “And I want to make one point very clear — I do not believe that silencing Joe is the answer.”
  • Ek committed $100 million for licensing, development and marketing of music and audio content from historically marginalized groups.

Ek doubled down on Spotify’s content moderation position, saying the company “should have clear lines around content and take action when they are crossed, but canceling voices is a slippery slope.”

  • Ek confirmed that Spotify had conversations with Rogan and his team about some of the content in his show, “including his history of using some racially insensitive language.”
  • “Following these discussions and his own reflections, he chose to remove a number of episodes from Spotify,” Ek said.

Read the full memo.

3. “Age tech” courts seniors
Featured image

Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios

Tech companies are increasingly catering to the many older people who were coaxed online by COVID, Jennifer A. Kingson writes for Axios What’s Next.

  • Why it matters: For seniors, learning to shop online, enjoy social media and use VR headsets can beat back isolation and loneliness. For marketers, wealthy retirees are an attractive sales niche.

A new report from Euromonitor lists “empowered elders” as a top-10 global consumer trend for 2022:

  • Among people 60 and older, 60% visit social media sites at least once a week, and 21% play video games, Euromonitor found. 82% own a smartphone.
  • That creates openings for online health screenings, financial services and learning.

Flashback: Companies that sell old-fashioned medic alert buttons — “I’ve fallen and I can’t get up” — have used the pandemic to expand services.

  • Customers started activating the button more frequently after the pandemic started — not because of an emergency, but because they wanted someone to talk to or needed help reaching a doctor, handyman or plumber.
  • So LifeStation is offering concierge-style menus to seniors cut off from normal activities. These extras include arranging a ride to the doctor or contacting a client’s niece.

Share this story.

4. Peng Shuai emerges
Protesters holding "Where is Peng Shuai?" t shirts

Peng Shuai supporters at the Australian Open in Melbourne last month. Photo: Tertius Pickard/AP

In a controlled interview in Beijing, Chinese tennis player Peng Shuai announced her retirement and claimed the sexual assault allegations she made against a former top Chinese official were the result of “an enormous misunderstanding.”

  • Why it matters: The former world doubles No. 1 disappeared from public view for weeks after making the allegations in a social media post on her verified Weibo page, which was quickly deleted.

“I never said anyone sexually assaulted me,” Peng told the French newspaper L’Équipe.”My private life should not be brought up in sports and politics.”

  • The interview at a hotel in Beijing was overseen by a Chinese Olympic official, and did not appear to allow for sustained follow-up questions.
  • Peng said she “erased” the Weibo post because she “wanted to,” but was not asked why she made it in the first place.

Zoom out: The Women’s Tennis Association suspended all tournaments in China amid concerns about her safety.

  • A global #WhereIsPengShuai? movement broke out online.

Get the latest.

5. Charted: Funding rise for Black-led startups
Data: Crunchbase. Chart: Baidi Wang/Axios

Black startup founders in the U.S. raised $4.2 billion in venture capital last year — the same as in the previous three years put together, Axios’ Kia Kokalitcheva wrote in the weekend edition of Pro Rata.

  • Venture funding can still be elusive for Black founders, despite corporate America’s growing attention to diversity. “[C]onsistent support has come from only a handful of venture capital firms, and many of them are relatively small,” a Reuters analysis found.

Between the lines: With just 1.3% of venture capital invested in Black-led startups last year, many of today’s Black entrepreneurs face the same funding gap their predecessors did 50 years ago, Kia writes.

6. Net-zero pledges not always what they seem
Featured image

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

A close look at 25 of the world’s largest companies with net-zero emissions pledges shows that most of those goals aren’t what they seem, Axios’ Andrew Freedman writes.

  • Why it matters: Corporate emissions reduction commitments have proliferated in the past few years. Consumers and investors are increasingly using them to decide where to put their money.

A report released yesterday by the NewClimate Institute and Carbon Market Watch analyzed 25 large companies that together accounted for about 5% of global greenhouse gas emissions in 2020.

  • Researchers ranked just one company’s net-zero pledge as having “reasonable integrity.” That was Maersk, the marine shipping giant, which has pledged to reach net-zero emissions in 2040.
  • The report lauds some companies for their innovative approaches, including Google’s program to match data centers’ energy use with zero-carbon power on a 24/7 basis, and Apple’s effort to drive down supply-chain emissions.

Between the lines: Common flaws in company planning include insufficiently ambitious short-term emissions targets and gaps in how they account for emissions throughout their value chains.

7. Online pastors help workers skirt vax mandates
Image: Los Angeles Times

A cottage industry has sprung up to offer documents to satisfy religious exemptions for vaccine mandates, the L.A. Times reports (subscription).

  • One “ministry” sells an official-looking letter from an “ordained Pastor” for $195 as part of a vaccine exemption “concierge program.”
8. 🖋️ 1 smile to go: A relic from another age

Former President George H.W. Bush wrote to fellow ex-president Gerald Ford in 1996: “[T]oo often we fail to tell our friends that we really care about them and we are grateful to them.”

  • Ford’s presidential library just tweeted the letter:
Via Twitter

💡 Maybe pick one person today and say: You made a difference.

Mike Allen
Mike Allen

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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON

THE FREE BEACON’S DAILY NEWS BRIEF
Supreme Court Frontrunner Was a Zealous Advocate for Gitmo Terror Suspects
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Supreme Court Frontrunner Was a Zealous Advocate for Gitmo Terror Suspects
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Was Nixon the One in 1960?
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Portrait of the Artist as an Old Bore
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SCOOP: Brian Stelter Ate His Feelings at McDonald's After CNN Canned Jeff Zucker
SCOOP: Brian Stelter Ate His Feelings at McDonald’s After CNN Canned Jeff Zucker

Congress Probes NIH for Spending $2.5 Million Injecting Puppies With Cocaine
Congress Probes NIH for Spending $2.5 Million Injecting Puppies With Cocaine

US Jury Finds Michael Avenatti Guilty of Defrauding Stormy Daniels
US Jury Finds Michael Avenatti Guilty of Defrauding Stormy Daniels

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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES

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Today's Headlines
The morning’s most important stories, curated by Post editors.

At a rally in Conroe, Tex., former president Donald Trump described a trio of Black prosecutors investigating him and his business organization as “racist.” (AP)

Trump, allies try to redefine racism by casting White men as victims

The former president and his allies have argued that to make America more equitable, everyone must be treated equally and, therefore, White men must not in any way be disadvantaged.

By Cleve R. Wootson Jr. ●  Read more »

Covid isn’t gone. Frustrated Americans are moving on anyway.

By Lenny Bernstein, Marisa Iati, Paulina Firozi and Brittany Shammas ●  Read more »

U.S. coronavirus cases are dropping. Other countries are seeing record surges.

LIVE: CORONAVIRUS ●  By Washington Post Staff ●  Read more »

Frozen out of GoFundMe, Canadian protest convoy raises millions on Christian site

By Paulina Villegas and Reis Thebault ●  Read more »

In Ukraine’s capital, residents grapple with the threat of war

By Steve Hendrix ●  Read more »

German chancellor says response to Russia will be ‘united and decisive’ if Ukraine is invaded

By Souad Mekhennet ●  Read more »

‘Remain in Mexico’ is back under Biden, with little resemblance to the Trump version

By Nick Miroff and Arelis R. Hernández ●  Read more »

Wrongly accused of genital cutting, a Muslim mom won’t accept ‘case closed’

By Hannah Allam ●  Read more »

Vincent Zhou’s positive covid test casts pall over U.S. team’s silver medal

Beijing Olympics ●  By Les Carpenter ●  Read more »

Opinions

Kevin McCarthy’s secret to survival

Opinion ●  Opinion by James Downie ●  Read more »

How China followed Nazi Germany’s Hollywood playbook

Opinion ●  Opinion by Sonny Bunch ●  Read more »

Biden’s agenda has reset. His fortunes may change, too.

Opinion ●  Opinion by Jennifer Rubin ●  Read more »

Want to fight crime? Take on the gun lobby.

Opinion ●  Opinion by E.J. Dionne Jr. ●  Read more »

This Californian deserves a spot on Biden’s short list

Opinion ●  Opinion by Dan Morain ●  Read more »

The IRS should not make you scan your face

Opinion ●  Opinion by the Editorial Board ●  Read more »

More News

Chinese tennis star says she wasn’t sexually assaulted, announces retirement

By Christian Shepherd ●  Read more »

Venezuelan baby killed in mother’s arms as Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard fires at migrant boat

By Ana Vanessa Herrero and Samantha Schmidt ●  Read more »

Floundering in the polls, Brazil’s Bolsonaro woos a surprising new demographic: The poor

By Terrence McCoy ●  Read more »

I’m disgusted by Joe Rogan’s weak apology. My former colleague’s death at 47 makes it worse.

Perspective ●  By Margaret Sullivan ●  Read more »

School chief’s ouster in Colorado prompts an uproar

By Timothy Bella ●  Read more »

‘Tinder Swindler’ con artist, subject of new Netflix documentary, reportedly banned from dating app

By Jennifer Hassan ●  Read more »

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16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES

A special program giving Iraqi refugees direct access to the U.S. remains shut down a …
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February 7, 2022

   

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Local residents attend the all-Ukrainian training campaign &quot;Don&#39;t panic! Get ready!&quot; close to Kyiv, Ukraine, Sunday, Feb. 6, 2022. Russia has denied any plans of attacking Ukraine, but urged the U.S. and its allies to provide a binding pledge that they won&#39;t accept Ukraine into NATO, won&#39;t deploy offensive weapons, and will roll back NATO deployments to Eastern Europe. Washington and NATO have rejected the demands. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky)

White House national security adviser warns Russia war looms with ‘enormous human cost’

The Biden administration elevated its warnings Sunday that a Russian invasion of Ukraine may be imminent, saying Moscow could invade … Read More

By Seth McLaughlin and Guy Taylor

Top Headlines

 

Iraqi man’s guilty plea reveals massive scope of refugee fraud ring

By Stephen Dinan – Read More

Marjorie Taylor Greene says a GOP intraparty ‘civil war’ is necessary

By Kerry Picket – Read More

Rubio warns: If Mike Pence could decide last election, what’s to stop Kamala Harris deciding next?

By Seth McLaughlin – Read More

Liz Cheney boosted by Dem donors for huge campaign cash haul, builds nationwide anti-Trump coalition

By Seth McLaughlin – Read More

Midterms renew doubts about election polling accuracy

By Sean Salai – Read More

American consumers see drop in restaurant, retail quality from labor shortage, study finds

By Sean Salai – Read More

Opinion

 

Biden promised he’d be a unifier; he’s been anything but

By Ronna McDaniel – Read More

Biden’s Iran team falls apart

By Jed Babbin – Read More

Some senators think voters are idiots

By Michael McKenna – Read More

Politics

 

Stacey Abrams ripped for maskless photo with masked Georgia schoolchildren

By Valerie Richardson – Read More

Former Gov. Chris Christie: Ronna McDaniel, RNC ‘carrying water’ for Trump

By Seth McLaughlin – Read More

Murkowski: RNC ‘absolutely wrong’ to call Jan 6 ‘legitimate political discourse’

By Seth McLaughlin – Read More

Security

 

U.S. airborne infantry troops arrive in Poland amid tensions

By Monika Scislowska and Czarek Sokolowski – Read More

U.N. experts: North Korea seeks to produce material for nukes

By Edith M. Lederer – Read More

Kremlin is top destination for spooked European leaders

By Sylvie Corbet, Lori Hinnant and Vladimir Isachenkov – Read More

Sports

 

Commanders merchandise in demand despite bumps in rollout

By Matthew Paras – Read More

Rams-Bengals a ‘What if?’ bowl for Commanders

By Matthew Paras – Read More

Heated U.S.-Canada women’s Olympic hockey rivalry set to resume

By John Wawrow – Read More

 

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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

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BY HUGO GURDON AND DAVID FREDDOSO
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HIGHLIGHTS

  • Scathing new study on lockdowns boosts critics of pandemic restrictions
  • ‘Cruelty and hypocrisy’: Stacey Abrams slammed for not wearing mask in classroom
  • Black Lives Matter activist sentenced to prison for registering to vote despite conviction

Queen Elizabeth II celebrates 70 momentous years on the throne

Queen Elizabeth II celebrates 70 momentous years on the throne

Queen Elizabeth II’s reign achieved platinum status Sunday as she marks 70 years on the throne with a jubilee celebration.

Tickets to this year’s Super Bowl most expensive on record

Tickets to this year's Super Bowl most expensive on record

Those wanting to watch the Cincinnati Bengals take on the Los Angeles Rams next week will be shelling out record amounts of cash to see the game in person.

Reporter’s Notebook: Biden’s energy dilemma on critical minerals & the rising cost of natural gas

Energy and Environment Reporter Jeremy Beaman joins Jim Antle to discuss the latest in energy and environment news. They go in-depth on our reliance on critical minerals from foreign nations, as well as detailing the rising prices of natural gas across the globe, and what a Russian invasion of Ukraine would do to Europe’s energy supply.

Rick Becker announces GOP primary challenge to North Dakota Sen. John Hoeven

Rick Becker announces GOP primary challenge to North Dakota Sen. John Hoeven

EXCLUSIVE — North Dakota State Rep. Rick Becker is launching a primary challenge to incumbent Republican Sen. John Hoeven, who has represented the state in the Senate since 2011.

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Coast Guard working to rescue 20 people trapped on floating ice in Lake Erie

Coast Guard working to rescue 20 people trapped on floating ice in Lake Erie

The U.S. Coast Guard is attempting to rescue a group of 20 people trapped in the middle of Lake Erie in Ohio.

Tampa Bay home auctioned off as first real estate NFT

Tampa Bay home auctioned off as first real estate NFT

Nonfungible tokens are homing in on a new market.

Waffle House shooter sentenced to life in prison

Waffle House shooter sentenced to life in prison

A man who opened fire in a Tennessee Waffle House and killed four people in 2018 was sentenced to life in prison on Saturday.

Lebanon returns 337 artifacts of different eras to Iraq

Lebanon returns 337 artifacts of different eras to Iraq

BEIRUT (AP) — Lebanon’s Ministry of Culture handed over to Iraq on Sunday 337 ancient artifacts that had been on display in a Lebanese museum for years.

Manchin and Murkowski cross aisle to endorse each other

Manchin and Murkowski cross aisle to endorse each other

Sen. Joe Manchin and Sen. Lisa Murkowski endorsed each other in their reelection campaigns, reinforcing their positions as two of the senators likeliest to buck their parties’ preferences.

NBC won’t air ad criticizing companies funding Olympics, congressman says

NBC won't air ad criticizing companies funding Olympics, congressman says

Rep. Michael Waltz claims that NBC refused to air an ad criticizing companies in the United States for funding the 2022 Beijing Olympics.

Delta wants DOJ to place unruly passengers on national ‘no fly’ list

Delta wants DOJ to place unruly passengers on national 'no fly' list

Delta Air Lines sent a letter to the Justice Department and Attorney General Merrick Garland requesting that any person convicted of creating a disruption aboard a flight be placed on the national “no fly” list.

THE ROUNDUP

  • Leondra Kruger’s centrist influence
  • How a fight over transgenderism derailed environmentalists in Nevada
  • COVID isn’t gone, but Americans are moving on anyway
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE

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VIEW IN BROWSER FEBRUARY 7, 2022 CHICAGOTRIBUNE.COM

DAYWATCH

Good morning, Chicago.
A downstate judge’s ruling Friday set off a weekend of confusion for schools across Illinois.
Sangamon County Circuit Judge Raylene Grischow granted a request to temporarily halt Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s executive orders on masking and quarantining for schools. Pritzker issued a statement saying he asked the attorney general’s office for an immediate appeal of the decision.
When students return to class this morning, mask policies may depend on where you live. Some districts, like District 25 in northwest suburban Arlington Heights, announced they would move to a mask-optional policy in the wake of the ruling, while Chicago Public Schools issued a statement Saturday saying the ruling would not prevent the district from continuing to require masks.
The ruling will be welcomed as a relief to some parents and school officials who have been calling for an “off ramp” to COVID-19 mask mandates as the omicron surge wanes, but the pandemic still poses an extraordinary public health challenge: The U.S. has now surpassed 900,000 coronavirus deaths, and many, schoolchildren and adults alike, have not yet received a COVID vaccine.
— Paul Day, audience editor
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1

With Gov. J.B. Pritzker taking heat on crime, his state police announce arrests in expressway shootings

MONDAY, FEB 7

As Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker tries to fend off Republican rivals who accuse him of being soft on crime, his office is announcing the arrests of about a dozen people in the last several months for crimes on Chicago-area expressways.

The rise in violent crime afflicting parts of the state has not spared the city’s expressways, which are patrolled by Illinois State Police. There were roughly 260 shootings on Chicago-area expressways in 2021, about double the number on those roadways the previous year, according to the state police.

2

Mayor Lightfoot ripped staffer for memo on General Iron’s controversial scrap shredder plan because it could be made public

MONDAY, FEB 7

As a chronic polluter sought city permission to set up shop on Chicago’s Southeast Side, recently released emails show there was a stark divide in the administration of Mayor Lori Lightfoot — one the mayor wanted to keep secret from the public.

The fall 2020 emails, released to the Tribune under an open records request, offer a window into the extent to which Lightfoot hoped to stop the public from learning details of the behind-the-scenes debate over General Iron’s attempted move from a wealthy, largely white Lincoln Park neighborhood to a lower-income, predominantly Latino one on the Southeast Side.

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3

Monday trial opening set for Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson, the only Daley to face federal charges

MONDAY, FEB 7

The list of political heavyweights to face criminal prosecution at Chicago’s federal courthouse is dismally long and peppered with names such as Ryan, Blagojevich, Cellini, Vrdolyak, and Burke.

But there has never been a Daley — until now.

On Monday, Chicago Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson, grandson and nephew of the city’s two longest-serving mayors, is scheduled to go on trial at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse on charges alleging he lied on federal tax returns about a line of credit he received from a Bridgeport bank that later collapsed.

4

Chicago Blackhawks fired the longtime Rockford IceHogs trainer in November for alleged sexual harassment in 2014

MONDAY, FEB 7

The Chicago Blackhawks fired the head athletic trainer of the minor-league Rockford IceHogs in November for alleged sexual harassment, the team confirmed to the Tribune late Sunday.

D.J. Jones was in his 16th season with the Hawks’ American Hockey League affiliate.

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5

Column: The best birria in Chicago is still made with goat, in a mom-and-son shop on the Northwest Side

MONDAY, FEB 7

Tribune critic Nick Kindelsperger admits he never made it to Sabor a Jalisco at the corner of Belmont and Karlov avenues before it closed: “Had I done so, I would have been able to rave about the goat birria made by owner Margarita Nunez five years sooner.”

You can now find the same birria at Barca Birrieria y Restaurant, Kindelsperger writes, and it’s one of the finest versions of that dish you’ll find in the state.

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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES

Feb 7, 2022

Man shot at Wicker Park club where mass shooting unfolded months earlier

Chicago Sun-Times Morning Edition
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Good morning, Chicago —
Here’s the latest news from around the area.
Four months after a mass shooting unfolded near the doorstep of Wicker Park club The Point, a 29-year-old man was seriously wounded early yesterday when a hail of gunfire erupted again and tore into the bar and music venue. Tom Schuba and Sophie Sherry have more on the violent incident.
Despite a downstate judge’s recent ruling halting mask mandates in Illinois, Chicago Public Schools’ masking requirements will remain in place for now, officials said. While more than 91% of CPS staffers are vaccinated, the district says only 53% of students ages 12 and over have gotten the shot – and that number’s even lower for students ages 5-11.
And a Catholic high school on the Southwest Side fired a longtime history teacher last week after she said the full N-word in class during a discussion of sports teams with racist names. Mary DeVoto, a teacher for 41 years, used the word while discussing the former name of the Washington Commanders NFL franchise.
Get even more news below, and thanks for reading.
Satchel Price, assistant audience engagement editor
Man shot, seriously wounded at Wicker Park club where mass shooting unfolded months earlier
Man shot, seriously wounded at Wicker Park club where mass shooting unfolded months earlier
Just after closing at 5 a.m. Sunday, roughly 10 bullets were fired into The Point at 1565 N. Milwaukee. A man, who isn’t believed to be the intended target, was shot in the right eye.
chicago.suntimes.com  •  Share

Masks will stay on in CPS classrooms despite downstate judge’s ruling against mandates

Masks will stay on in CPS classrooms despite downstate judge’s ruling against mandates
The Illinois Attorney General’s office has already filed an emergency stay aiming to pause the temporary restraining order suspending mask mandates.
chicago.suntimes.com  •  Share

Catholic high school on Southwest Side fires teacher who used N-word while discussing sports teams with racist names

Catholic high school on Southwest Side fires teacher who used N-word while discussing sports teams with racist names
Mary DeVoto, a teacher of 41 years, was discussing why the former name of the Washington Football Team was offensive to indigenous people, telling students the term was just as bad as the N-word — saying the full word.
chicago.suntimes.com  •  Share
More news you may have missed
  • Obituaries: Syl Johnson, Grammy-nominated Chicago blues artist, dies at 85
  • Crime: Mother of teen slain in Cicero still seeking justice after 11 years. ‘Time doesn’t heal all wounds.’
  • Batavia car crash: Two dead, three injured after vehicles collide in suburb
  • Luis Arroyo corruption case: Corrupt pols say prison doesn’t work, so feds quote judge from 2014 who argued: ‘Impose more severe penalties’
  • Politics: RNC censure of Kinzinger, Cheney could backfire for Illinois Republicans
  • Elections: Republican Sullivan taps former Ives campaign aide Murphy as running mate in governor’s race
  • Business: 15-story office tower planned in River North aims for post-pandemic appeal
  • Theater: From revamped intro to takedowns of macho culture, Drury Lane keeps ‘Evita’ fresh
  • Party on: As ‘Wayne’s World’ turns 30, here’s the who, what, where and NO WAY of a very silly hit
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT

The Hill's Morning Report
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A U.S. Air Force plane landing at the Rzeszow-Jasionka airport in southeastern Poland

© Associated Press/Czarek Sokolowski

 

 

Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Monday! It’s also Super Bowl week! 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 surpassed another dismal milestone late Friday. This morning the number of lives lost is 902,624. President Biden again told Americans that vaccinations, including for eligible children, and booster doses “can save your life and the lives of those you love.” 

 

As of today, 74.9 percent of the U.S. population has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 63.5 percent is “fully vaccinated,” according to the Bloomberg News global vaccine tracker and the government’s definition. The percentage of Americans who have received third or booster doses is 26.8.

Russia could invade Ukraine “any day,” according to President Biden’s national security adviser, who spoke Sunday during television interviews to point to intelligence assessments of Russia’s preparations for an all-out conflict.

 

“Madness and scaremongering,” responded Russia’s deputy ambassador to the United Nations, Dmitry Polyanskiy, in a tweet dismissing information the Biden administration reportedly briefed to members of Congress warning that a full-fledged Russian invasion could lead to the quick capture of Kyiv in Ukraine and potentially result in as many as 50,000 casualties (The Washington Post).

 

U.S. National Security Council Director Jake Sullivan said, “If war breaks out, it will come at an enormous human cost to Ukraine, but we believe that based on our preparations and our response, it will come at a strategic cost to Russia as well” (The Associated Press).

 

Western governments assess that Russia has assembled at least 70 percent of the military firepower it likely intends to have in place by mid-month to give President Vladimir Putin the option of invading Ukraine (frontline in the Luhansk region pictured below).

 

A bullet riddled effigy of Russian President Vladimir Putin

© Associated Press/Vadim Ghirda

 

 

Alarmed and determined to keep diplomacy alive amid speculation that Putin is looking to gain something tangible from NATO while perhaps averting a punishing clash, European leaders plan this week to keep up a parade of meetings and conversations with the inscrutable Russian leader.

 

The Hill: U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield said the administration is “still working to discourage the Russians from making the wrong choice and choosing confrontation.”

 

A U.S. Air Force plane carrying U.S. troops and equipment from Fort Bragg, N.C., arrived in Poland on Sunday (pictured above), part of Biden’s deployment of 1,700 soldiers to Poland to support NATO, in addition to the 4,000 troops already there.

 

The president today meets at the White House with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who is drawing sharp criticism at home and abroad for his hesitant leadership during one of the most serious security crises in Europe since the end of the Cold War (The New York Times). Scholz, who has not spoken to his Russian counterpart since taking office two months ago, will next week meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv, followed by Putin in Moscow on Feb. 15 (Politico).

 

The New York Times: Biden will press Scholz on Russia sanctions and likely discuss the $11 billion Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline being built between Germany and Russia.

 

While Biden is with Scholz today, French President Emmanuel Macron will take his shuttle diplomacy to Moscow to meet with Putin before traveling to Kyiv in an effort to avert a potentially imminent war that threatens security in Europe. Ahead of French elections in two months, events have handed Macron an opportunity to step into a larger leadership role for all of Europe and to define his at times grandiose visions for a Europe allied with, but more independent of, the United States (The New York Times).

 

Bloomberg News: Beijing Olympics may impact Putin’s thinking (or timing).

 

The New York Times: The crisis that defined Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s first year.

 

CNN: Biden, during a Sunday phone conversation with Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, said he looks forward to visiting Israel later this year.

 

A Marine Honor Guard stands watch at the entrance to the West Wing of the White House

© Associated Press/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

 

 

Here’s what else we’re watching this week:

 

> Can the House fund the government in the next four days? If lawmakers do not, alarm bells will be loud. The federal government will shutter on Feb. 18 without new funding, and lawmakers are scheduled to be out of Washington beginning next week.

 

> Will more COVID-19 restrictions get lifted this week in some states? The answer in New York, for instance, may ride on whether infection rates continue to plummet (New York Post).

 

> Tuned out? U.S. viewership for the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympics in Beijing, televised by NBC, hit a record low (Yahoo Sports). NBC is also carrying the Super Bowl on Sunday, which for the first time overlaps with the Winter Olympics. Ratings and ad revenues are iffy for the network’s two major winter sporting extravaganzas this year (Forbes).

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LEADING THE DAY
POLITICS: Top Republicans on Sunday came to the defense of former Vice President Mike Pence amid his escalating feud with former President Trump over his refusal to participate in an attempt to overturn the 2020 election on Jan. 6, 2021.

 

Marc Short, Pence’s chief of staff at the end of the Trump administration, told NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday that the former VP gave a more direct rebuke of Trump’s election claims because the continued comments “merited response.” In that response, Pence said in a speech on Friday that Trump was “wrong” and that he had no authority to reject the 2020 electoral results.

 

“Of course there’s nothing in the 12th Amendment or the Electoral Count Act that would afford a vice president that authority. It’s why no vice president in 200 years has ever used that authority,” Short said (The Hill).

 

High-profile GOP figures also provided backup for the former vice president. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) told CBS’s “Face the Nation” that “vice presidents can’t simply decide not to certify an election” (The Hill) Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), a member of Senate GOP leadership, added that Pence had a “constitutional duty” to follow through with electoral certification (The Hill).

 

The Sunday Shows: Trump-Pence division in the spotlight.

 

The Hill: Jan. 6 panel hesitates in asking Pence to testify.

 

The Associated Press: What does Ivanka Trump know about Jan. 6? Congress is asking.

 

The Hill: Trump, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) tensions shadow this year’s Conservative Political Action Conference.

 

President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence listen during an announcement in the Oval Office

© Associated Press/Andrew Harnik

 

 

Trump was not the only GOP figure or entity under the microscope on Sunday. The Republican National Committee continued to receive criticism for adopting a resolution on Friday that censures GOP Reps. Liz Cheney (Wyo.) and Adam Kinzinger (Ill.) for their roles on the House select committee probing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. The RNC said the panel is involved in the “persecution of ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse.”

 

The RNC sought to recast rioters who breached the Capitol, sought to halt the certification of an election and injured police. At least 725 of the insurrectionists have been charged with serious crimes, including seditious conspiracy.

 

Former Trump adviser and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R), who has increasingly aired criticism of the ex-president and is eyeing a possible 2024 presidential run, called the resolution a mistake (The Hill). He added that RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel is “carrying water” for Trump in the process (The Hill).

 

The New York Times: In scrutinizing Trump and his allies, Jan. 6 panel adopts prosecution tactics.

 

Axios: GOP’s shadow Jan. 6 committee targets Capitol Police “negligence.”

 

The New York Times: Republicans, wooing Trump voters, make Anthony Fauci their boogeyman.

 

Reid Wilson, The Hill: On The Trail: The new American malaise.

 

*****

 

CONGRESS: House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) on Sunday said that lawmakers will likely have to pass a stopgap spending bill to fund the government by Feb. 18 in bid to give them more time to reach a larger, long-term funding agreement.

 

“Well, we’ll get something done. It will probably be a short-term CR and it will be this coming week to give us a little more time,” Hoyer told MSNBC’s “Sunday Show,” using the shorthand phrase for a continuing resolution. “Negotiations are very vigorous and I think we’re going to get agreement on the topline and how it will be spent, but it’s not there yet.” 

 

According to Punchbowl News, the short-term bill is likely to keep the current spending levels through mid-March. Lawmakers in both congressional chambers have four working days to nail down a deal, with the House and Senate both out of town next week for the President’s Day recess.

 

As The Hill’s Aris Folley writes, a number of sticking points stand between members and a final deal, including the topline total, the disparity between defense and nondefense spending, and the timing. Negotiators have been eyeing an omnibus spending package to fund the government through late September when fiscal 2022 ends.

 

Politico: Retiring Senate spending chiefs go for broke.

 

The Hill: Sen. Joe Manchin (D-Va.): Social spending bill elements must go through time-consuming committee process​​.

 

Just off the floor of the Senate, the hands on the famous Ohio Clock point to 12 midnight

© Associated Press/J. Scott Applewhite

 

 

> Election reform: Manchin was adamant on Sunday that a legislative overhaul to the Electoral Count Act of 1887 will pass through Congress as bipartisan support for the change grows.

 

“Absolutely, it will pass,” Manchin told CNN’s “State of the Union” during a joint interview alongside Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska).

 

The legislation would do away with a law that Trump and his supporters used in an attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election results. Among other things, the proposal would make clear that the vice president has zero power to reject a state’s slate of electors, make clear that state legislatures are unable to appoint electors post-Election Day and allow states to have more time to carry out recounts (The New York Times).

 

Jordain Carney, The Hill: Trump, hurdles loom for Senate election reform talks.

 

Bloomberg News: Manchin endorses Murkowski in Alaska Senate race.

 

> Dem doldrums: Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) may be focused on 2022, but the Democratic leader already has himself a 2024 problem as progressives and Democratic activists grow louder with calls to primary Sens. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) and Manchin next cycle.

 

As The Hill’s Alexander Bolton notes, Schumer has twice been asked about supporting primaries against the foremost centrist members in his caucus, having dodged the question both times. His decision not to weigh in reflects a balancing act: not wanting to upset the left-wing of the party while also not trying not to alienate the two centrists who remain crucial to passing Biden’s agenda for the rest of this year.

 

However, Manchin gave Schumer cover on Sunday, telling CNN that he’s talked to the Democratic leader in recent days “about that and everything,” referring to whether the New York Democrat would support him in 2024 against a primary opponent.

 

“No way, shape or form will Mitch McConnell or Chuck Schumer not support their caucus. It just doesn’t happen,” Manchin said.

 

The Washington Post. GOP rivals seize on Stacey Abrams’s maskless classroom photo.

 

The Hill: Fighting for relief for Black farmers.

IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CORONAVIRUS: Mid-February is almost here — a predicted spring before spring when omicron is anticipated by public health soothsayers to recede and life amid a pandemic is projected to bloom.

 

The Hill’s Peter Sullivan reports on the intense push public officials are feeling to lift mandates and restrictions as omicron infections continue to ebb in 49 of 50 states. COVID-fatigue risks lulling Americans into apathy — or worse — when a future coronavirus variant of concern might revive mask mandates, quarantine periods and orders to restrict the size of indoor gatherings.

 

“If we don’t take the off-ramps, nobody will listen when we need to have an on-ramp,” said Jeremy Faust, a professor at Harvard Medical School. Nonetheless, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, wary of jumping the gun, points to record deaths and high hospitalization rates as rationales for continued public caution.

 

A discarded face mask lies in the street in San Francisco

© Associated Press/Jeff Chiu

 

 

Declining community COVID-19 infection rates may encourage schools in some locations to lift mask requirements based on improved public health data, former Food and Drug Administration head Scott Gottlieb told CBS News on Sunday (The Hill).

 

Meanwhile, lower court judges are weighing Biden administration COVID-19 mandates including those applied to federal contractors and government workers. The Wall Street Journal has a roundup report.

 

Citing ample supplies, CVS and Walgreens pharmacies this week are no longer limiting the number of at-home COVID-19 test kits customers may purchase at one time (The New York Times).

 

Canada: Protests against vaccine mandates continued to cripple Ottawa on Sunday as police were outnumbered and gridlock clogged parts of the city for a 10th day (Reuters).

 

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Sunday signaled that reopening his country’s borders to tourists is “not far away” (Reuters).

 

In South Africa, an mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccine produced at the World Health Organization-backed vaccine hub could take up to three years to get approval if companies do not share their technology and data, a WHO official said on Friday (Reuters).

 

Russia is experiencing a surge in COVID-19 infections in which positive rates are 10 times higher than reported a month ago (The Associated Press).

OPINION
Mike Pence’s Constitution, by The Wall Street Journal editorial board. https://on.wsj.com/332ZnAp

 

The COVID-19 policy that really mattered wasn’t a policy, by Ezra Klein, columnist, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/34FkHMz

 

After crypto’s cold winter, expect springtime for web 3.0, by Niall Ferguson, columnist, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/34Ep1eZ

A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
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WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at noon. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Schumer, congressional leaders and lawmakers will hold a moment of silence on the East Front Steps of the Capitol at 7 p.m. for the more than 900,000 people who’ve died in the United States due to COVID-19.

 

The Senate convenes at 3 p.m.

 

The president and Vice President Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10:15 a.m. Biden will meet with the German chancellor at 1:30 p.m. in the Oval Office. They will hold a joint news conference in the East Room at 3:15 p.m.

 

Secretary of State Antony Blinken at 8:45 a.m. meets with Josep Borrell, vice president of the European Commission. Blinken and Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm will host Borrell and European Commissioner for Energy Kadri Simson at 9:30 a.m. during a U.S.-EU Energy Council ministerial. Blinken and Borrell will hold a joint news conference at noon at the State Department. The secretary at 3:30 p.m. will meet virtually with Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne and British Foreign Secretary Elizabeth Truss. Blinken will embark on a trip to confer with officials in Australia, Fiji, and in Hawaii for a trilateral conference with Japanese and South Korean counterparts before a Sunday return to Washington.

 

First lady Jill Biden at 9:15 a.m. will deliver remarks at the 2022 Community College National Legislative Summit in Washington, D.C.

 

The White House daily press briefing is scheduled at 1:45 p.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
➜ 🏅OLYMPICS: At the Beijing Winter Olympic games, Russian Olympic Committee athletes have an early lead in the medal count, winning six (two golds) thus far. Five nations (Netherlands, Canada, Japan, Italy and Austria) have collected four medals, with the U.S. trailing with three total (and no gold). Sweden, which knows its way around winter sports, leads with three gold medals (NBC Sports).

 

➜ INTERNATIONAL: Queen Elizabeth II, 95, on Sunday quietly marked 70 years on the British throne. … The monarch expressed a “sincere wish” that Prince Charles’s wife, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, should be known as “Queen Consort” when her 73-year-old son one day succeeds her, as expected. With those words, Elizabeth sought to answer once and for all public questions about the status of Camilla, 74, who was initially shunned by fans of the late Princess Diana, Charles’s first wife (The Associated Press).

 

The screen in Piccadilly Circus is lit to celebrate the 70th anniversary of Britain's Queen Elizabeth's accession to the throne

© Associated Press/Alberto Pezzali

 

 

➜ STATE WATCH & CLIMATE: In California, economic justice advocates are pitted against the state’s solar industry over a postponed state proposal that would lower the incentives that homeowners receive for generating their own solar power and charge them to connect to the electric grid (The Hill). … In Northeast states, a recent “bomb cyclone” caught everyone’s attention with record snow accumulation, power outages, travel and transit disruptions and at least four deaths in New York. Climate change experts believe warming oceans can lead to more intense such weather conditions (The Hill).

 

➜ POLICING: Controversy simmered over the weekend about no-knock warrants issued by judges and used by police to enter properties without first announcing police presence. The practice has ended in controversial shooting deaths of Black people inside their homes, often when they are or have been asleep, and some federal and state lawmakers have introduced legislation that would curtail no-knock warrants by adding restrictions and detailed requirements (Congressional Research Service report). Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey (D) announced Friday the city would suspend the use of no-knock warrants after an officer on Wednesday fatally shot Amir Locke, 22, who was not named in the warrant and was asleep on a sofa with a gun he was licensed to possess. A police raid under a similar no-knock warrant in Louisville two years ago resulted in the shooting death of Breonna Taylor. Some legal experts continue to argue that no-knock warrants issued by judges and used by police occur under little regulation, supervision or civil rights oversight.

THE CLOSER
And finally … “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” and its sponsor surprised Washington-D.C.-area Uber driver Davante Williams with a $10,000 check a few days ago as a reward for kindness after learning he got stuck for more than five hours in the Jan. 4 traffic jam that stretched for many miles on Interstate 95 in Virginia.

 

Williams went above and beyond for a teenage passenger, whom he had picked up at Washington, D.C.’s Union Station to transport to Williamsburg, Va. Williams got lucky and found a way to turn around amid the icy gridlock to head back to the nation’s capital, where he paid the cost of a hotel room for his passenger after making sure she phoned her parents to explain the predicament (WTOP).

 

“Oh, gosh, I’m just overwhelmed,” Williams said when handed a check on TV.

 

Cars and trucks are stranded on sections of Interstate 95

© Associated Press/Steve Helber

 

The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE! 
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT

 


24.) ROLL CALL

Image

Morning Headlines

Union push in Congress explodes into view, but obstacles remain for staffers

ImageHouse Democrats have vowed to introduce a resolution that would allow staffers working in the chamber to form a union. The announcement came amid a sudden outpouring of support, as frustration among staffers reached a fever pitch and members of Congress tuned in to long-standing complaints about inequity and pay. Read more…

North Carolina Supreme Court strikes down GOP congressional map

ImageNorth Carolina’s Supreme Court on Friday ordered the state to draw a new congressional map after finding it unfairly favored GOP candidates. The 4-3 ruling requires the Republican-controlled legislature to redraw the map with a seat breakdown closer to the state’s overall voting results. Read more…

House takes its sixth hit on cannabis banking provisions

 

ImageThe House passed provisions for the sixth time Friday that would allow cannabis companies to access the banking system, but the latest action, as an amendment to the China competition bill, may have little better chance than earlier ones to become law. Read more…

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

Learn more about RevenueStripe...

Wyden probes FDA nominee’s views on accelerated drug approvals

 

ImageSenate Finance Chair Ron Wyden is pressing the White House’s nominee to lead the Food and Drug Administration, Robert Califf, to pledge to crack down on drugmakers’ use of fast-track approval pathways as the nominee seeks the chairman’s support. Read more…

Watch: ‘Nauseously woke,’ lunch in the Capitol and unicorn poop – Congressional Hits & Misses

 

ImageIn the latest Congressional Hits and Misses, Sen. Richard J. Durbin rattled off the weirdest possible vape flavors, Rep. Jim McGovern threatened to lower the temperature in the House Rules Committee if members didn’t speed up comments and President Joe Biden outed Sen. Mitch McConnell, saying they’re actually friends. Read more…

Photos of the week ending Feb. 4, 2022

 

ImageGovernment funding negotiations ramped up last week ahead of the Feb. 18 deadline to keep the lights of the federal government on. Elsewhere in and around the Capitol, teddy bears abounded, senators got stuck on the subway and the swastikas scribbled on Union Station were removed. Read more…

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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK

POLITICO Playbook: Can Dems defy history?

By RYAN LIZZA, EUGENE DANIELS and RACHAEL BADE

02/07/2022 06:23 AM EST

Presented by

President Joe Biden is pictured.
President Joe Biden’s Democrats are beginning to whisper about something that sounds laughable to many observers: Maybe they can win the midterms. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

DRIVING THE DAY

SCOOP — Alex Thompson has a must-read piece uncovering an internal White House investigation documenting a toxic work environment described by 14 current and former staffers who worked under ERIC LANDER, President JOE BIDEN’s top science adviser, who they say bullied and demeaned subordinates. “The behavior,” Thompson writes, “is at odds with Biden’s Day-1 warning to his political appointees that anyone who disrespected their colleagues would be fired ‘On the spot. No ifs, ands or buts.’”

DEMS RETHINK 2022 — The most likely November election scenario is that Republicans win the House and Senate. On average since World War II, the president’s party loses 26 House seats and four Senate seats in a midterm election.

The traditional indicators still point toward a typical midterm for Biden: low presidential approval rating (42%), a Republican advantage over Democrats on the generic ballot (44%-42%), and more than twice as many Democrats retiring from the House as Republicans (29-13).

But Democrats are beginning to whisper about something that sounds laughable to many observers: Maybe they can win the midterms.

Some recent developments have started to pierce the conventional wisdom about a GOP wave:

— Redistricting: Catastrophic losses from partisan gerrymandering that many Democrats feared have not materialized. Despite decrying the process and pushing reform in Congress, Democrats did not unilaterally disarm. The hyper-aggressive map recently released by New York Democrats made it clear that the party may come out ahead in the process nationally. “There aren’t many breaks Dems *haven’t* caught in redistricting so far,” Dave Wasserman recently noted.

— The economy: Inflation is still a top priority for voters and the main obstacle to Biden receiving higher marks on his handling of the economy. But unemployment is very low, growth is strong, and the latest jobs report was phenomenal. If inflation data released this Thursday shows a dip, Biden might be able to argue that the peak has been reached and the decline many economists predict this year is beginning.

— The pandemic: The Omicron wave has crested and a return to relative normalcy could be in sight.

— The GOP: As we outlined in detail Saturday, the Republican Party’s focus on 2020, Jan. 6 and DONALD TRUMP is creating major headwinds.

DOUG SOSNIK of Brunswick Group argues that “there would need to be a series of developments in order for the Democrats to defy history”:

  1. The virus needs to be contained with the country returning to a new normal.
  2. Inflation needs to start going down by summer.
  3. The economy and the stock market need to maintain steady growth, particularly as interest rates begin to rise.
  4. The supply chain needs to return to normal.
  5. There is not a global crisis.
  6. Biden’s job approval rating needs to be in the high 40s by summer.
  7. Republicans need to nominate unelectable general-election candidates and run lousy campaigns. They are capable of this and have done this in recent past cycles, choosing far-right candidates such as TODD AKIN or CHRISTINE O’DONNELL who ended up losing in the general election.
  8. Trump and Republicans need to keep talking about the 2020 election.

A message from PhRMA:

Washington is talking about price setting of medicines, but it won’t stop insurers from shifting costs to you. And it will risk access to medicines and future cures. Instead, let’s cap your out-of-pocket costs, stop middlemen from pocketing your discounts and make insurance work for you. Let’s protect patients. It’s the right choice. .

KRISTIAN RAMOS of Autonomy Strategies said he’s “more optimistic than others.” He said the “economy is incredible” and Democrats will have a better story to tell about the Biden record this year if they pass some version of Build Back Better, get children under 5 vaccinated, confirm the first Black woman to the Supreme Court and highlight the implementation of the infrastructure law.

But he’s bewildered by what he sees as his party’s restraint when it comes to attacking the GOP. “When are we going to start hitting Republicans?” he asked. “When are we going to start pointing out these people are fascist light and don’t believe in democracy?”

CHUCK ROCHA, the president of Solidarity Strategies who is working on several House races, pointed to two key dynamics. “If you combine redistricting and [Republicans] nominating crazy people, that’s how we might win,” he said. “Though I wouldn’t want these odds at a poker table.”

The most significant argument among the Democrats we surveyed was over how to handle Trump.

There have only been two midterm elections since World War II when the president’s party gained House seats: in 1998, as Republicans pursued an unpopular impeachment against then-President BILL CLINTON, and in 2002, when the country rallied around GEORGE W. BUSH’s post-9/11 leadership.

In both cases, unusual nationalized elections around a single dominant issue helped a president overcome the typical midterm backlash. The big unsettled strategic debate for Democrats is whether Trump/MAGA should become that issue in 2022.

Some prominent strategists argue that the 2018 and 2020 elections, with Trump at the center, saw massive turnout increases for both parties but that favored Democrats overall. Under this theory, the only hope for Democrats is to reassemble the 2018 and 2020 anti-Trump majority, and that means turning the election into a referendum on Trump, or at least Trumpism. These strategists want to highlight the work of the Jan. 6 committee and the work of prosecutors investigating the former president, focus attention on Republican primary debates where candidates outbid each other in their allegiance to Trump positions that are unpopular in a general election, nationalize Trump’s campaign-trail outrages, and spend heavily to make MAGA candidates who endorse the “Big Lie” the face of the GOP.

Other Democrats are wary. “I’m not sure the evidence to date suggests elections around Trump do it for us,” said a prominent Democratic strategist, “but that could change as the GOP legitimizes Jan. 6.” Vulnerable House Democrats on the frontline have also repeatedly pushed back on such a strategy, arguing that in 2018 they flipped more than 40 House seats because they talked about issues, not Trump. Indeed, many of them balk at using this playbook, as we reported a while back.

Ramos offered a subtle distinction. “Forget about Trump. He’s not on the ballot,” he said. “Trump is already in there in voters’ heads. He plays such an outsized role in society. He’s there. Why am I going to focus on someone who is already a bogeyman? Run against [GREG] ABBOTT. Run against [MARCO] RUBIO. Run against [RON] DESANTIS. Run against MAGA, not against Trump.”

Good Monday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza.

JOIN US — White House climate adviser GINA MCCARTHY will join POLITICO Live at 1:30 p.m. Thursday for a virtual interview with White House correspondent Laura Barrón-López to discuss Biden’s challenging path ahead to fulfill his ambitious climate agenda. The interview is part of “The Long Game: Who Will Solve the Climate Crisis?” event, which will kick off at 12:45 p.m. with a panel moderated by Global Insider author Ryan Heath discussing fresh data and insights from the POLITICO/Morning Consult Global Sustainability Poll on what citizens really think about how governments and businesses are dealing with climate and sustainability. RSVP here to watch

A message from PhRMA:

 

Government price setting threatens patient access to medicines and innovation. Instead, let’s cap out-of-pocket costs and stop middlemen from pocketing discounts. .

BIDEN’S MONDAY:

— 10:15 a.m.: The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief.

— 1:30 p.m.: Biden will participate in a bilateral meeting with German Chancellor OLAF SCHOLZ.

— 3:15 p.m.: Biden and Scholz will hold a joint press conference.

Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 1:45 p.m.

THE SENATE will meet at 3 p.m., with votes on a couple of judicial nominations at 5:30 p.m.

THE HOUSE will meet at noon, with votes postponed until 6:30 p.m.

BIDEN’S WEEK AHEAD:

— Wednesday: The president will participate in a roundtable with utilities CEOs to discuss his agenda.

— Thursday: Biden will travel to promote his agenda.

— Friday: Biden will travel to Camp David, where he will stay over the weekend.

PHOTO OF THE DAY

US Army Soldiers exit a U.S. Air Force Boeing C-17A Globemaster III transport aircraft at Jasionka Rzeszow Airport on February 06, 2022 in Rzeszow, Poland.
U.S. soldiers exit a transport aircraft Sunday in Rzeszow, Poland, as President Joe Biden deploys troops to the eastern flank of NATO. | Omar Marques/Getty Images

PLAYBOOK READS

CONGRESS

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Keep Country First Policy Action, an outside group founded by allies of Rep. ADAM KINZINGER (R-Ill.), is launching an ad campaign backing the bipartisan Senate group’s work on Electoral Count Act reform. The six-figure ads go live today and will target lawmakers on Capitol Hill, urging them on in their work. “We all saw how bad actors used misinformation about the Electoral Count Act to inspire the attack on the Capitol on January 6th,” group board member and former Rep. BARBARA COMSTOCK (R-Va.) will say in a release that goes out today. “Congress must act to reform the 135 year old law to remove any supposed ambiguity that could be exploited in future elections.” Watch one of the ads here

ALL POLITICS

PARTY ALLEGIANCE — Our colleague Sabrina Rodríguez has an important story this morning on a topic that doesn’t get enough attention: Trump and the GOP’s surprisingly strong performance among Latino voters in the 2020 election, and the question of whether the Democratic Party’s hold on that demographic is slipping. Sabrina zeroes in on a slate of Republican women running for Congress in districts along Texas’ southern border and writes that it’s “some of the clearest evidence that Trump’s 2020 performance there may not have been an anomaly, but rather a sign of significant Republican inroads among Texas Hispanics — perhaps not enough to threaten the Democratic advantage among those voters, but enough to send ripples of fear through a party that is experiencing erosion among Hispanics across the country.”

CUOMO PLOTS COMEBACK — Sources tell WSJ’s Jimmy Vielkind that former New York Gov. ANDREW CUOMO and his team “are intensifying an effort to revive his public standing, including discussing how to make his first public appearance since resigning in August … Mr. Cuomo and his remaining aides have been calling former allies and political operatives to complain about New York Attorney General LETITIA JAMES, who oversaw an investigation that concluded Mr. Cuomo sexually harassed 11 women. Mr. Cuomo has been attempting to determine the right forum for a speech or appearance that would mark his return to public life.”

ABRAMS MASK FIRESTORM — Perhaps it seemed innocuous enough: Over the weekend Georgia gubernatorial candidate STACEY ABRAMS posted a picture on Twitter of her sitting in front of a group of elementary school students to mark Black History Month. The problem: Abrams was not wearing a mask, and the students were. The since-deleted pic triggered a fierce backlash and charges of hypocrisy against Abrams, who’s long implored Georgians to mask up.

Abrams’ “campaign said she wore a mask to the event and only removed it so she could be heard by students watching remotely and for a handful of photos on the condition that everyone around her was wearing face-coverings,” Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Greg Bluestein writes.

“At the heart of the back-and-forth is a broader debate over coronavirus policies during the 2022 midterms. [Gov. BRIAN] KEMP and fellow Republicans contend aggressive efforts to roll back economic restrictions and push schools to reopen helped Georgia’s economy quickly rebound. Abrams and Democrats have blamed the rapid spread of the virus on Kemp’s ‘inaction’ and refusal to take more steps to curb the virus.”

A message from PhRMA:

 

Let’s protect patients. It’s the right choice. .

THE WHITE HOUSE

ISRAEL TRIP IN THE WORKS — The president will visit Israel “‘later this year’ after Israeli Prime Minister NAFTALI BENNETT invited him to the country,” during a phone conversation between the two leaders Sunday. The White House added that the two also “discussed the shared security and other challenges in the Middle East region, including the threat posed by Iran and its proxies.” More from CNN’s Donald Judd

STATE OF THE UNIONS — This morning, the White House Task Force on Worker Organizing and Empowerment is releasing its first report of recommendations to “promote worker organizing and collective bargaining for federal employees, and for workers employed by public and private-sector employers.” The task force led by Harris and Labor Secretary MARTY WALSH was created by Biden last April to find ways the administration could strengthen the power of unions.

Senior officials have told Playbook the administration sees the growth of union interest around the country as part of a revitalization in an area that has seen declining membership and attention. Politically, it’s also a chance for Democrats to work to preserve a constituency that’s been historically friendly to the party.

The report includes just under 70 recommendations, including ensuring federal contract dollars aren’t spent on anti-union campaigns for the Labor Department, OMB, Defense and HHS. The White House says Biden has already accepted the recommendations and that in six months the group is expected to send another report to the Oval Office on how action items are being implemented.

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

EYES ON EMMANUEL — “The standoff with Russia over Ukraine enters a critical phase this week,” NYT’s Roger Cohen and Andrew Kramer note. “Diplomatic avenues are being feverishly explored and the outlines of potential solutions, still amorphous, may be taking form. Biden meets Monday with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, and President EMMANUEL MACRON of France, at the same time, will visit his Russian counterpart, VLADIMIR PUTIN, in Moscow before traveling to Kyiv.

“With the Biden administration staking out a hard line, Germany lying low and Mr. Putin seemingly determined to force a solution to Russia’s security grievances, it is Mr. Macron who has positioned himself at the center of the diplomacy in Europe. To Moscow, he is a ‘quality interlocutor,’ as Mr. Putin called Mr. Macron. … For Mr. Macron the chance to lead the effort to create a new European security architecture has placed him front and center on perhaps the biggest stage of his presidency, just two months before elections.”

JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH

DREAMING OF 2023 — Our Olivia Beavers and Kyle Cheney write that House Republicans are grappling with what to do with the Jan. 6 committee if they retake the chamber this fall. Many just want to let it die, but some prominent conservatives like Reps. MADISON CAWTHORN (N.C.) and MATT GAETZ (Fla.) want to reorient the panel toward their own ends. “Reshaping it into a political cudgel against Democrats, as compelling as it might sound to some conservatives, will take time and focus from a party that wants to pursue its own policy agenda should it vault back to power as expected.”

PLAYBOOKERS

Barack Obama did not appear to be in “beach mode” when it comes to the construction of his Hawaii beachside mansion.

Glenn Youngkin’s campaign account lashed out at a teenager on Twitter — and Ralph Northam — in an online spat Saturday.

Brian Stelter appeared to get emotional as he spoke hopefully about the future of CNN.

Antony Blinken’s first year in the job got the NYT treatment.

TRUMP AIDE MOVE — Susie Wiles is now co-chair of Mercury Public Affairs. She is chair of the Save America PAC and is a Trump campaign, Ron DeSantis and Rick Scott alum. She’ll continue to head Trump’s Save America PAC. More from Florida Politics … Her email announcement, via Alex Isenstadt

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The Democratic Attorneys General Association has restructured its leadership team to a presidential model, elevating Sean Rankin to the role of president and Michelle Ortiz to executive director. In addition, DAGA is bringing on a slate of new hires: Jonathan Sclarsic will be COO and general counsel, Britteny Jenkins will be policy director, and JP Boyle will be development director.

TRANSITIONS — Jessica Rihani is joining Mindset as COO. She previously was COO of Signal Group. … Kivvit is adding Jalisa Washington-Price and Arielle Goren as managing directors. Washington-Price previously was VP of political and advocacy at iHeartMedia, and is a Biden-Harris alum. Goren previously founded Juno Strategies and worked for Uber policy and comms. They’re also adding Christine Lee as a senior associate and Mashal Hashem as an associate. …

… Stasha Rhodes is joining Keefe Singiser Partners as a partner. She previously was director of democracy campaigns at the Hub Project. … Drew Preston and Taylor Meredith are joining Duke Energy. Preston will be director of federal government affairs and is a Associated Industries of Florida, Florida Chamber of Commerce and U.S. Chamber of Commerce alum. Meredith will be senior manager of federal government affairs and is a Senate EPW Committee and EPA alum. … Emily Teitelbaum is joining the Libra Group as chief comms officer. She previously was VP for public affairs comms at Wells Fargo, and is an Edelman and Jim Webb alum.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.) … Monica Medina … Gay Talese (9-0) … Dave Levinthal … former Sen. Herb Kohl (D-Wis.) … POLITICO’s Laura Barrón-López and Patricia Iscaro … Beth Frerking … Bloomberg’s Jeff Kearns and Colleen Murphy … former Reps. Allen West (R-Fla.), Stephen Fincher (R-Tenn.), Doc Hastings (R-Wash.) and Michael Grimm (R-N.Y.) … John Criscuolo of Squire Patton Boggs … Emily Hampsten … Patrick Ferrise … Judge James Gilbert of the U.S. Postal Service (61) … Carleton Bryant … Community Change’s Jasmine Nazarett … Jessica Kershaw … Miguel L’Heureux … Jeanne McCann … Tiffany Win … Christine Grimaldi … Jeff Marschner … Invariant’s Mary Beth Stanton

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Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.

A message from PhRMA:

Washington is talking about price setting of medicines, but it won’t stop insurers from shifting costs to you. And it will risk access to medicines and future cures. Instead, let’s cap your out-of-pocket costs, stop middlemen from pocketing your discounts and make insurance work for you. Let’s protect patients. It’s the right choice. .

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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE

Evolution’s Racism defended by Clarence Darrow: The Monkey Trial & William Jennings Bryan – American Minute with Bill Federer

February 06, 2022

The Scopes Monkey Trial in 1925 pitted EVOLUTION against CREATION.
Read as PDF …

Three Secular Reasons Why America should be Under God

Clarence Darrow was the attorney who defended EVOLUTION.

Darrow had previously defended Leopold and Loeb, the teenage homosexual thrill killers who murdered 14-year-old Robert “Bobby” Franks in 1924 just for the excitement.

Darrow obtained a pardon for antifa-type anarchists in 1886 who blew up a pipe bomb in Chicago’s Haymarket, Square, killing 7 policemen and injured 60 others.

A Haymarket Statue was dedicated to the fallen policemen.
The policemen’s Haymarket Statue was blown up by the socialist anarchist group Weather Underground on October 6, 1969, prior to the “Days of Rage” protests.

The statue was rebuilt, but the Weather Underground blew it up again on October 6, 1970.
The Weather Underground’s leaders had a lasting effect, as two of them, Bill Ayers and Bernadine Dohrn, hosted a meeting in 1995 to launch Barack Obama’s Illinois State Senate Campaign; and another, Eric Mann, trained Patrisse Cullors, a founder of Black Lives Matter.

Clarence Darrow defended the “mentally deranged drifter” Patrick Eugene Prendergast in 1894 who confessed to murdering Chicago mayor Carter H. Harrison, Sr.

Darrow defended socialist organizer Eugene V. Debs, who was prosecuted for instigating the Pullman Railroad Strike which caused 30 deaths, 57 wounded, and $80 million in property damages in 27 states.
Debs founded the Socialist Party of America, which branched off the Communist Party USA in 1919.

Clarence Darrow represented the Western Federation of Miners leaders charged with the 1905 murder of former Idaho Gov. Frank Steunenberg.

In 1911, the American Federation of Labor arranged for Darrow to defend the McNamara brothers.
The McNamara brothers were charged with dynamiting the Los Angeles Times building which killed 21 employees.
Implicated in bribing jurors, Darrow was banned from practicing law in California.

In 1925, Darrow unsuccessfully defended John Scopes, a Tennessee high school biology teacher who taught the theory of origins called “evolution.”

The attorney defending CREATION was the Democrat Party’s three time candidate for President, William Jennings Bryan.

Bryan objected to a tooth being presented as proof of humans evolving from apes.
Later the tooth was found to be that of an extinct peccary (pig).

William Jennings Bryan won the Scopes case on JULY 21, 1925.

Though Darrow lost the trial, a pro-evolution propaganda film was produced in 1960 titled Inherit the Wind.

Professor Alan M. Dershowitz wrote on “The Scopes Trial” in his book America on Trial: Inside the Legal Battles that Transformed Our Nation (eBook Edition: May 2004):

“The popular perception of what transpired in the courtroom comes not from the transcript of the court proceeding itself, but rather from the motion picture … Inherit the Wind.
The William Jennings Bryan character, Scopes’s prosecutor, was a burlesque of know-nothing religious literalism …

… The actual William Jennings Bryan was no simple-minded literalist, and he certainly was no bigot.
He was a great populist who cared deeply about equality and about the downtrodden.
Indeed, one of his reasons for becoming so deeply involved in the campaign against evolution was that Darwin’s theories were being used – misused, it turns out – by racists, militarists, and nationalists to further some pretty horrible programs …”

Dershowitz continued:
“The eugenics movement, which advocated sterilization of ‘unfit’ and ‘inferior’ stock, was at its zenith, and it took its impetus from Darwin’s theory of natural selection.
German militarism, which had just led to the disastrous world war, drew inspiration from Darwin’s ideas on survival of the fittest.
The anti-immigration movement, which had succeeded in closing American ports of entry to ‘inferior racial stock,’ was grounded in a mistaken belief that certain ethnic groups had evolved more fully than others …

… The Jim Crow laws, which maintained racial segregation, were rationalized on grounds of the racial inferiority of blacks.

… Indeed, the very book – Hunter’s Civic Biology – from which John T. Scopes taught Darwin’s theory of evolution to high school students in Dayton, Tennessee, contained dangerous misapplications of that theory …”

Dershowitz added:
“Indeed, its very title, Civic Biology, made it clear that biology had direct political implications for civic society.
In discussing the ‘five races’ of man, the text assured the all-white, legally segregated high school students taught by Scopes that ‘the highest type of all, the Caucasians, (are) represented by the civilized white inhabitants of Europe and America.’
The book, the avowed goal of which was the improvement of the future human race, then proposed certain eugenic remedies.”

Eugenic laws, based on evolution, were passed in many states.
Virginia’s eugenic law, in 1924, allowed for the state to sterilize its first victim, Carrie Buck, who was a patient in the State Colony for Epileptics and Feeble-minded.

A case was brought which went to the Supreme Court.
There, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., gave his infamous Buck v. Bell decision (1927), which continued to allow the sterilization of people without their knowledge or consent, stating: “Three generations of imbeciles are enough.”
Because of Holmes’ decision, Virginia continued to sterilize more than 8,000 people until the practice was stopped in 1974.

Holmes also applied evolution to his decision-making philosophy, calling it “legal realism,” letting judges alter laws to adapt to changing social and economic conditions.

Three Secular Reasons Why America should be Under God

Professor Alan Dershowitz continued his critique of the high school textbook used by John Scopes, Hunter’s Civic Biology:
After a discussion of the inheritability of crime and immorality, the author proposed an analogy: …
‘Just as certain animals or plants become parasitic on other plants or animals, these families have become parasitic on society.
They not only do harm to others by corrupting, stealing, or spreading disease, but they are actually protected and cared for by the state out of public money …
They take from society, but they give nothing in return. They are true parasites …'”

Dershowitz added:
“From the analogy flowed ‘the remedy’:
‘If such people were lower animals, we would probably kill them off to prevent them from spreading.
Humanity will not allow this, but we do have the remedy of separating the sexes in asylums or other places and in various ways preventing intermarriage and the possibilities of perpetuating such a low and degenerate race.
Remedies of this sort have been tried successfully in Europe and are now meeting with success in this country.’

… These ‘remedies’ included involuntary sterilizations, and eventually laid the foundation for involuntary ‘euthanasia’ of the kind practiced in Nazi Germany …”

Dershowitz continued:
“Nor were these misapplications of Darwinian theory limited to high school textbooks. Eugenic views held sway at institutions of higher learning such as Harvard University, under racist president Abbot Lawrence Lowell.
Even so distinguished a Supreme Curt justice as Oliver Wendell Holmes upheld a mandatory sterilization law on the basis of a pseudo-scientific assumption about heritability and genetics.
His widely quoted rationale – that ‘three generations of imbeciles are enough’ – was later cited by Nazi apologists for mass sterilization …

… It should not be surprising, therefore, that William Jennings Bryan … would be outraged – both morally and religiously …
The textbook Scopes wanted to teach was … a bad science text, filled with misapplied Darwinism and racist rubbish.”

After the trial, William Jennings Bryan wrote in his summary of the Scopes trial of how science tells us what we can do, religion tells us what we should do:
“Science is a magnificent force, but it is not a teacher of morals. It can perfect machinery, but it adds no moral restraints to protect society from the misuse of the machine.
It can also build gigantic intellectual ships, but it constructs no moral rudders for the control of storm-tossed human vessel.
It not only fails to supply the spiritual element needed but some of its unproven hypotheses rob the ship of its compass and thus endanger its cargo …”
Bryan continued:
“In war, science has proven itself an evil genius; it has made war more terrible than it ever was before.
Man used to be content to slaughter his fellowmen on a single plane, the earth’s surface.
Science has taught him to go down into the water and shoot up from below and to go up into the clouds and shoot down from above, thus making the battlefield three times as bloody as it was before;
but science does not teach brotherly love.

… Science has made war so hellish that civilization was about to commit suicide;
and now we are told that newly discovered instruments of destruction will make the cruelties of the late war seem trivial in comparison with the cruelties of wars that may come in the future …”
Bryan concluded:
“If civilization is to be saved from the wreckage threatened by intelligence not consecrated by love, it must be saved by the moral code of the meek and lowly Nazarene.
His teachings, and His teachings alone, can solve the problems that vex the heart and perplex the world.”

Bryan’s 1925 statement was echoed by Winston Churchill, who stated in 1941:
“But if we fail, then the whole world, including the United States … will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age made more sinister, and perhaps more protracted, by the lights of perverted science.”

Three Secular Reasons Why America should be Under God

William Jennings Bryan had been a Colonel in the Spanish-American War, a U.S. Representative from Nebraska and U.S. Secretary of State under Democrat President Woodrow Wilson.
Bryan edited the Omaha World Herald and founded The Commoner Newspaper.

Dying five days after the Scopes Trial, William Jennings Bryan was so popular that his statue was placed in the U.S. Capitol’s Statuary Hall by the State of Nebraska and the Post Office issued a $2.00 stamp in his honor.

Bryan gave over 600 public speeches during his Presidential campaigns, with his most famous being “The Prince of Peace,” printed in the New York Times, September 7, 1913, in which he stated:
“I am interested in the science of government but I am more interested in religion …
I enjoy making a political speech … but I would rather speak on religion than on politics.
I commenced speaking on the stump when I was only twenty, but I commenced speaking in the church six years earlier-and I shall be in the church even after I am out of politics …”

Bryan reasoned:
“Tolstoy … declares that the religious sentiment rests not upon a superstitious fear … but upon man’s consciousness of his finiteness amid an infinite universe …
Man feels the weight of his sins and looks for One who is sinless.
Religion has been defined by Tolstoy as the relation which man fixes between himself and his God …
Religion is the foundation of morality in the individual and in the group of individuals …”

Bryan added:
“A religion which teaches personal responsibility to God gives strength to morality.
There is a powerful restraining influence in the belief that an all-seeing eye scrutinizes every thought and word and act of the individual …
One needs the inner strength which comes with the conscious presence of a personal God …”

Bryan stated further:
“I passed through a period of skepticism when I was in college …
The college days cover the dangerous period in the young man’s life; he is just coming into possession of his powers, and feels stronger than he ever feels afterward-and he thinks he knows more than he ever does know.
It was at this period that I became confused by the different theories of creation.

… But I examined these theories and found that they all assumed something to begin with …
A Designer back of the design – a Creator back of the creation;
and no matter how long you draw out the process of creation, so long as God stands back of it you cannot shake my faith in Jehovah …
We must begin with something – we must start somewhere – and the Christian begins with God …”

Bryan continued:
“While you may trace your ancestry back to the monkey … you shall not connect me with your family tree …
The ape, according to this theory, is older than man and yet the ape is still an ape while man is the author of the marvelous civilization which we see about us …
This theory … does not explain the origin of life.
When the follower of Darwin has traced the germ of life back to the lowest form … to follow him one must exercise more faith than religion calls for …”

Bryan explained:
“Those who reject the idea of creation are divided into two schools, some believing that the first germ of life came from another planet and others holding that it was the result of spontaneous generation …
Go back as far as we may, we cannot escape from the creative act, and it is just as easy for me to believe that God created man as he is as to believe that, millions of years ago, He created a germ of life and endowed it with power to develop …”

He added:
“But there is another objection.
The Darwinian theory represents man as reaching his present perfection by the operation of the law of hate – the merciless law by which the strong crowd out and kill off the weak …
I prefer to believe that love rather than hatred is the law of development …”

William Jennings Bryan concluded:
“Science has disclosed some of the machinery of the universe, but science has not yet revealed to us the great secret — the secret of life.
It is to be found in every blade of grass, in every insect, in every bird and in every animal, as well as in man.
Six thousand years of recorded history and yet we know no more about the secret of life than they knew in the beginning …
If the Father deigns to touch with divine power the cold and pulseless heart of the buried acorn and to make it burst forth from its prison walls, will he leave neglected in the earth the soul of man, made in the image of his Creator? …
The Gospel of the Prince of Peace gives us the only hope that the world has.”

Democrat President Franklin D. Roosevelt stated in an address at the Memorial to William Jennings Bryan, May 3, 1934:
“No selfish motive touched his public life; he held important office only as a sacred trust of honor from his country …
To Secretary Bryan political courage was not a virtue to be sought or attained, for it was an inherent part of the man.
He chose his path not to win acclaim but rather because that path appeared clear to him from his inmost beliefs.
He did not have to dare to do what to him seemed right; he could not do otherwise …”

Franklin Roosevelt continued:
“It was my privilege to know William Jennings Bryan when I was a very young man.
Years later both of us came to the Nation’s capital to serve under the leadership of Woodrow Wilson …
It was Mr. Bryan who said: ‘I respect the aristocracy of learning, I deplore the plutocracy of wealth but I thank God for the democracy of the heart.’
Many years ago he also said: ‘You may dispute over whether I have fought a good fight; you may dispute over whether I have finished my course; but you cannot deny that I have kept the faith.’
We who are assembled here today to accept this memorial in the capital of the Republic can well agree that he fought a good fight; that he finished his course; and that he kept the faith.”
—
Read as PDF … Evolution’s Inherent Racism defended by Clarence Darrow: The Monkey Trial & William Jennings Bryan
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27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS

 


28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS

 


29.) PJ MEDIA

 


30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER

 


31.) THE DISPATCH

The Dispatch

THE MORNING DISPATCH

The Morning Dispatch: Republicans Choose Their Corners in the January 6 Brawl

Meanwhile Mike Pence says Donald Trump is wrong.

The Dispatch Staff 27 min ago

8

Happy Monday! On this day in 1964, the Beatles arrived in America for the first time. There was so, so, so much screaming.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • U.S. employment growth dramatically exceeded expectations in January, with the Bureau of Labor Statistics reporting Friday that American employers added 467,000 jobs last month. The unemployment rate ticked up to 4 percent from 3.9 percent in December, and average hourly earnings have increased 5.7 percent year-over-year.
  • Senior Biden administration officials reportedly told members of Congress last week the administration believes Russia has amassed along its border approximately 70 percent of the forces necessary to launch a full invasion of Ukraine. The officials do not believe Russian President Vladimir Putin has made a final decision on whether to invade, but said that if he does, it will likely be in the second half of February and could result in tens of thousands of deaths. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba, meanwhile, cautioned on Sunday against believing “apocalyptic predictions,” maintaining Ukraine is “ready for any development.”
  • The House voted 222-210 on Friday to pass the America COMPETES Act, legislation aimed at bolstering the United States’ economic competitiveness vis-a-vis China. Although Friday’s vote was almost entirely along party lines after Republicans objected to the inclusion of what they saw as partisan “poison pills,” a similar bill received nearly 20 Republican votes in the Senate last year. The two chambers will seek to hammer out their differences in the coming weeks.
  • The Wall Street Journal reported Friday that, per data released by the Biden administration in a court filing, U.S. Border Patrol agents made a record-high 1.9 million arrests along the southern border with Mexico in 2021. Approximately 20 percent of the apprehended migrants were released into the United States while their asylum claims are processed, down from 56 percent of apprehended migrants during a pre-pandemic surge.
  • President Joe Biden announced on Friday he will extend through 2026 most of the Section 201 tariffs former President Donald Trump placed on imported solar panels and solar cells in 2018, but allow for many more products to be exempted from the levies.
  • Gas prices in the United States hit a seven-year high on Friday, with Americans paying an average of nearly $3.45 per gallon for the first time since late `2014.
  • Hundreds of people protested in Minneapolis over the weekend after a Minneapolis police officer shot and killed 22-year-old Amir Locke in a no-knock raid last week. Released body cam footage shows officers unlocking an apartment door with a key and shooting Locke—who was not the target of the investigation, but was sleeping on a couch and holding a gun—within seconds. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey on Friday imposed a moratorium on no-knock warrants.

An Awkward Weekend for the GOP

(Photo by Drew Anger(Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)er/Getty Images)

In seeking to understand the past decade of Republican politics, it’s useful to think of a Venn diagram. The GOP as currently constructed is not really one party, but multiple coalitions—for for simplicity’s sake, let’s say two (but there are more)—bound together by a set of shared ideals and opposition to the left.

For much of former President Donald Trump’s time in office, Republican elected officials in both the traditional conservative camp and populist camp agreed to hang out primarily in the middle of the Venn diagram—confirming originalist judges, cutting taxes, etc. Sure, each side spent some time in their respective poles—the party was deeply divided on trade policy and immigration, for example—but, after making their peace with Trump’s presidency in 2016, Republicans generally sought over the next four years to focus on the areas where they could find agreement. As the old saying widely attributed to Ronald Reagan goes, “The person who agrees with you 80 percent of the time is a friend and an ally, not a 20 percent traitor.”

But the legitimacy of the democratic process is a heck of a 20 percent to disagree about, which partially explains why, in the wake of January 6 and all that led up to it, the GOP has taken Reagan’s adage and turned it on its head. The middle of the Venn diagram is empty, with each of the GOP’s factions retreating to their corners.

“The Republican National Committee hereby formally censures Representatives Liz Cheney of Wyoming and Adam Kinzinger of Illinois and shall immediately cease any and all support of them as members of the Republican Party.”

Such a move has been in the works for weeks—and originally included language calling for the expulsion of Cheney and Kinzinger from the House Republican Conference—but RNC members finalized the resolution and voted to pass it at their winter meeting in Salt Lake City last week. Cheney and Kinzinger’s transgressions? Supporting Democratic efforts to “destroy President Trump” more than they support “winning back a Republican majority in 2022,” and “participating in a Democrat-led persecution of ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse.”

After the language of the censure resolution was made public, GOP Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel quickly sought to clarify that the RNC viewed stolen election claims and efforts to overturn said election as “legitimate political discourse,” not the violence at the Capitol. But the message came through loud and clear: Any effort to draw attention to January 6 rather than sweep it under the rug is not welcome at the Republican National Committee.

We say Republican National Committee and not Republican Party because, although the two are often closely aligned, the RNC’s leadership was more or less installed by Trump, as were many of its voting members—state party chairs, committeemen, committeewomen, and the like. “[The RNC is] certainly representative of the GOP infrastructure, the activist base of the party,” said Doug Heye, a political operative who served as the RNC’s communications director during the Obama years. “That may not be reflective of the broader party, of voters who are voting either in primary elections or in general elections.”

That’s not to say Cheney and Kinzinger, who serve on the January 6 Select Committee, are overwhelmingly popular among GOP voters—they’re not. All signs point toward Cheney losing to a Trump-backed primary challenger later this year, and Kinzinger announced last October he isn’t running for reelection. “There is a reason why Adam is quitting,” Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said Friday. “There’s a reason why Liz Cheney is no longer in leadership and has [a] very low poll rating in Wyoming.”

But Republican opinion on January 6—and Trump more broadly—is less monolithic than the RNC’s antics would lead you to believe. A survey conducted a few weeks ago by Echelon Insights, a GOP polling firm, found that 40 percent of Republican voters believe it’s time to move on from the former president, and 30 percent of GOP voters (with 11 percent undecided) would support a conservative who “didn’t agree with Donald Trump’s actions following the 2020 election and on January 6” over Trump himself in a hypothetical 2024 primary. Thirty percent is still a minority, of course, but a lot can change in two years—and members of that 30 percent are disproportionately represented in the halls of Congress, particularly the Senate.

“The RNC is censuring Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger because they are trying to find out what happened on January 6th,” Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana tweeted. “HUH?”

“Shame falls on a party that would censure persons of conscience, who seek truth in the face of vitriol,” Sen. Mitt Romney added on Friday. “Honor attaches to Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger for seeking truth even when doing so comes at great personal cost.”

Cassidy, Romney, and Sen. Lisa Murkowski are not new to this position, of course—all three voted to convict Trump a year ago this month—but they were joined over the weekend by a chorus of less expected voices. Rep. Michael McCaul of Texas told ABC News on Sunday the truth about January 6 “needs to come out” even if House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is “weaponiz[ing]” it to Democrats’ political advantage. Gov. Chris Christie—one of Trump’s earliest supporters who cut bait last year—accused McDaniel of “carrying water” for the former president.

“All anybody is talking about this weekend is this resolution rather than talking about the failures of the Biden administration,” Christie said. “People are tired of hearing about the 2020 election from Donald Trump and from some who support him.”

But the biggest surprise of the weekend came during a Federalist Society conference in Florida. “I heard this week that President Trump said I had the right to overturn the election,” former Vice President Mike Pence said in a speech on Friday. “President Trump is wrong. I had no right to overturn the election. The presidency belongs to the American people, and the American people alone.”

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Worth Your Time

  • Last week, despite daily COVID-19 cases at record highs, Denmark decided to do away with all its pandemic restrictions. No more mask mandates, no more vaccine obligations, no more isolation requirements. To better understand the rationale for the move—which Sweden, Norway, and Spain have since echoed—Derek Thompson spoke with Danish researcher Michael Bang Petersen. “Our hospitals are not being overwhelmed,” Petersen told The Atlantic. “We have a lot of people in hospitals with positive tests, but most of them are testing positive with COVID rather than being there because of COVID. They’re also in the hospital for a much shorter duration than previous waves. The number of people being treated for pneumonia is a critical indicator, and that’s going down as well. … It’s important to be clear that waiting to remove restrictions is not a cost-free decision. A pandemic is not just a public-health disaster. It affects all parts of society. It has consequences for economic activity, for people’s well-being, and for their sense of freedom. Pandemic restrictions put on pause fundamental democratic rights. If there’s a critical threat, that pause might be legitimate. But there is an obligation to remove those restrictions quickly when the threat is no longer critical.”
  • In a piece for The New Yorker, Dexter Filkins looks at what comes next in the fight against ISIS following last week’s raid. “Since the American military largely departed from Syria, in 2019, ISIS has had ample space to regroup and recruit,” he writes. “Will Abdullah’s death slow ISIS down? Probably not much. If the past is any guide, a new commander will take his place, and it may not be long before ISIS is once again capable of an action as lethal as the prison raid. Neither the Biden Administration nor its European allies show any appetite for going back into Syria to stop another retrenchment. ‘Counterterrorism operations like this can disrupt an insurgency, but not defeat an insurgency,’ [Jennifer] Cafarella said.”
  • On China and the Olympics, there’s no one better to read than Jay Nordlinger. “Where do you turn when you have no more moral capital to draw on? How do you claim your right to rule? The Communist Party turned to two things,” he writes for National Review. “Money-making—be as materialistic as you want and make as much money as possible—and nationalism. Today, the CCP milks nationalism for all it’s worth. Hosting the Olympics is a key part of that milking.”

Presented Without Comment

Twitter avatar for @KelleyKgaKelley K 😀 * covid-georgia.com @KelleyKga

Yet another picture of an unmasked Democrat surrounded by masked children. This is at a Decatur, Georgia elementary school, where they have a district-wide mask mandate. #gapol #UnmaskOurKids https://t.co/36NRJkNmhV

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February 5th 2022

1,365 Retweets2,952 Likes

Also Presented Without Comment

Twitter avatar for @sarafischerSara Fischer @sarafischer

Beijing Olympics opening ceremony viewership down 43% from Pyeongchang 2018 opening ceremony Winter Olympics opening ceremony viewership down 43% from 2018The games are impacted by a lack of fans and loved ones in stadiums that normally contribute to the excitement.axios.com

February 6th 2022

30 Retweets83 Likes

Toeing the Company Line

  • On Friday’s Dispatch Podcast, Steve and David were joined by Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio for a conversation about the rising risk of war in Ukraine, the prospects of reforming the Electoral Count Act, and the Cincinnati Bengals’ odds in next week’s Super Bowl.
  • Haley was on vacation last week, but Ryan and Harvest filled in admirably, updating readers in Friday’s Uphill (🔒) on the latest Electoral Count Act developments. “A number of Republicans have already signaled willingness to cross the aisle on a compromise,” they note.
  • Friday’s G-File was about Democrats and Republicans being equal-opportunity culture war instigators. “It’s fine to complain about culture war contests if you have a reasonable complaint,” Jonah writes. “It’s also fine to wage culture war fights if you have a reasonable complaint. But pretending that this is a one-sided phenomenon is itself a form of distortion and misinformation. It takes at least two sides to fight a war.”
  • “I have never in my adult life seen anything like the censorship fever that is breaking out across America,” David writes in his Sunday French Press. “As American animosity rises, we simply cannot censor our way to social peace or unity.”
  • On the site today, Chris Stirewalt also weighs in on the RNC’s censure of Cheney and Kinzinger and says the effort runs contrary to the body’s most important job: getting more Republicans elected.
  • Also today, Giselle Donnelly looks at Russia’s and Ukraine’s respective military strengths. While Russia has reformed and modernized in recent years, it’s still nothing like the Soviet Red Army. And Ukraine, she writes, has done an admirable job of modernizing its military since 2014.

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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32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION

 


33.) THE DAILY WIRE

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02.07.2022

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Susan Sarandon Apologizes For Incendiary Post Mocking NYPD Funeral

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Spotify Stands By Joe Rogan After ‘N-Word’ Controversy: ‘Canceling Voices Is A Slippery Slope’

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Whoopi Goldberg Spending Her Suspension From ‘The View’ Educating Herself About The Holocaust: Report

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WATCH: Martha MacCallum Challenges National Security Directly On American Energy Independence — He Responds With Uncomfortable Pause

By Virginia Kruta

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CNN Hosts Push To Cancel Rogan: ‘Seems Untenable’ That He Could Keep Job, Celebs Lose Roles ‘For Less’

By Daily Wire News

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Cruz Takes Action In Pushing Federal Agency To Investigate GoFundMe For Canceling Freedom Convoy

By Ryan Saavedra

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Spotify Stands By Joe Rogan After ‘N-Word’ Controversy: ‘Canceling Voices Is A Slippery Slope’

By Ryan Saavedra

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Whoopi Goldberg Spending Her Suspension From ‘The View’ Educating Herself About The Holocaust: Report

By Daily Wire News

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CNN Hosts Push To Cancel Rogan: ‘Seems Untenable’ That He Could Keep Job, Celebs Lose Roles ‘For Less’

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‘She’s Not Sorry, And The Kids Can Shove It. Got It’: Megyn Kelly Blasts Abrams’ Campaign Statement After Viral Photo

By Hank Berrien

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Abrams Slammed For Being Maskless Next To Masked Children: ‘This Photo Is Catastrophic’ For Democrats

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Glenn Greenwald Blows Up Jim Acosta Over Tweet Attacking Meghan McCain

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34.) DESERET NEWS

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Utah Today Logo
By Ashley Lee Monday Feb. 7, 2022
Good morning. Salt Lake City will have a high of 46° and a low of 23°.

 

If you’re anything like me, you’re looking forward to Super Bowl Sunday not because of anything happening on the TV screen, but because of the food. I regret to inform you that a new estimate is putting the price of typical Super Bowl snacks about 8% to 14% higher this year — but there are some still-reasonably-priced options out there.

 

Also on our mind today: Why Utah has paused using rapid tests at state COVID testing sites, a mysterious Lagoon ride and the Salt Lake City athlete who won the USA’s second medal of the Beijing Olympics.

A key leader of Salt Lake’s 2002 Olympics says Utah hosting another is a matter of when, not if. Here’s why

“It is absolutely when not if,” said Fraser Bullock, “and it’s likely either 2030 or 2034.”

 

Here are a few reasons why:

  • After Los Angeles won the 2024 Olympics, the United States Olympic Committee named Salt Lake its favored American city to bid for future Games.
  • The 2002 Olympic venues are well-preserved — which means the budget proposed for hosting a future Olympics is significantly less than the 2002 budget.
  • The International Olympic Committee has established a “new norm” for determining host cities that has replaced schmoozing IOC delegates for their votes with a system that objectively identifies the top candidates and buffers the voters from the bidders.
Read more to learn why Bullock is watching this year’s Olympics on TV like the rest of us.
ut-buildbackbetter-020722

How the ‘Build Back Better’ Act could be built back different

The Democratic majority in the Senate is so thin that the future of the “Build Back Better” Act can be decided by one Democratic senator who won’t vote for it — such as Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., or Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz.

 

Those who are watching the back-and-forth between Manchin and his party believe pieces of the original bill on controlling inflation, redoing the tax code, bringing down the cost of prescription drugs and addressing climate change could pass as individual measures or as a new, trimmed-down bill.

 

Meanwhile, Sinema has said she opposes any tax hike, so she would likely not support Manchin’s priority of rolling back the tax breaks for corporations during the previous administration.

 

Read more.

 

More in Politics

  • Former Utah lawmaker Haven Barlow dies at 100 (Fox13)
Round out your day (v5)

COVID

  • Utah pauses use of rapid tests at state COVID testing sites, cites potential inaccuracies (KSL.com)
  • Perspective: Should doctors be able to choose who to care for based on vaccination status? (Deseret News)
  • Live-action role-playing games are making a comeback post-Covid (Utah Business)

Faith

  • Video: What does it mean to enlist in today’s battalion? (Church News)
  • What museums don’t reveal about religious art (The New York Times 🔒)

Northern Utah

  • RV residents have lived at this remote Salt Lake site for months. Then, the city told them they needed to leave within 24 hours (Salt Lake Tribune 🔒)
  • Ogden leaders continue to publicly ponder Marshall White Center’s future (The Standard-Examiner)
  • Mysterious Lagoon ride is looking more and more like a roller coaster (The Standard-Examiner)

The West

  • Are high-pressure ridges really to blame for the West’s drying climate? (KSL.com)

The Nation

  • Experts say Delta’s call for an unruly passenger no-fly list invites legal turbulence (NPR)
  • Navy SEAL candidate dies, second hospitalized following ‘Hell Week’ training (NBC)

The World

  • U.S. says Russia has amassed about 75% of the troops it would need to invade Ukraine (NPR)
ut-olympics-020722

Olympics roundup: Salt Lake City’s Jaelin Kauf wins USA’s 2nd medal

Salt Lake City resident Jaelin Kauf won the USA’s second medal of the Beijing Olympics on Sunday morning, taking silver in women’s moguls skiing.

 

To win silver, Kauf had to make it through one round of qualifying — she finished third in her qualifying round — and then finished fourth in the first finals round and second in the second finals round to make the medal round.

 

Read more about Kauf’s silver medal-winning run, as well as how other Olympic athletes with Utah ties did on Sunday.

 

See the sports TV schedule for the week.

 

New With:

  • BYU Cougars: It’s back to the drawing board for BYU as it tries to end a 4-game losing streak
  • Utah Jazz: Quin Snyder rejoins Jazz after COVID-19 absence
  • Utah Utes: ‘Something really good is happening’: Utes’ optimism unfazed after another narrow Pac-12 defeat
That’s all for today! I hope your week gets off to a great start.

 

Please continue to tell us what you think about Utah Today by emailing us at newsletters@deseretnews.com.

 

— Ashley

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35.) BRIGHT

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Monday, February 7, 2022

The War on Rogan
Over the weekend more shots were fired at comedian and podcast host Joe Rogan and over 100 episodes of his show were removed from Spotify. The corporate media is committed to flexing that they can destroy anyone. Dave Chappelle refusing to be cancelled spooked them. Rogan isn’t a conservative, which makes it a huge win for them if they take Rogan down. It sends a message to EVERYONE that they’re not safe even if they aren’t a conservative, a Trump supporter, or even political. It also puts those who defend Rogan on the side of defending what the media falsely labels him — conspiracy theorist, racist, etc. You know the playbook.

Comedian and JRE podcast guest Andrew Schulz tweeted, “Rogan hit job started with misinformation. That didn’t stick so now it’s racism. Next it will be misogyny. After that transphobia. They are trying to make him radioactive bc they fear his influence. This isn’t about hate. It’s about silencing a powerful man THEY can’t control.”

Schulz also noted, “Rogan has made a lot of people millionaires. Imagine being one of those people and staying silent right now? Cause this will blow over in a month but that silence will never be forgotten.”

On the bright side another JRE guest, author Michael Malice, sees this as evidence that the Cathedral/corporate media’s power is crumbling. He tweeted, “The fact that the Cathedral has to be so hamfisted in its attempts to crush Rogan is a major sign of progress. They couldn’t get him on Covid so within 24 hours he’s a racist. People used to be able to be vanished overnight.”

Spotify CEO Daniel Ek sent a letter to staff on Sunday, giving the company plenty of wiggle room:

“While I strongly condemn what Joe has said and I agree with his decision to remove past episodes from our platform, I realize some will want more. And I want to make one point very clear – I do not believe that silencing Joe is the answer. We should have clear lines around content and take action when they are crossed, but canceling voices is a slippery slope. Looking at the issue more broadly, it’s critical thinking and open debate that powers real and necessary progress.”

More Weekend Reads
Pop Culture Warriors: Like a big guy is nicknamed “Tiny,” Nick Searcy became an international film and television star by playing Democrats. A favorite Nick Searcy Democrat to hate is “Frank Bennett” from Fried Green Tomatoes. (Human Events)

Wokeness Is Destroying Sports (The Political Insider)

The Great Power Competition: Mirroring Communist China (American Greatness)

‘Genocide games’: NBC refuses to run ad critical of China by NBA’s Kanter, Florida congressman (New York Post)

9 Responses You Should Use When The Mask Police Come For You (The Federalist)

GoFundMe Better Go Find Their Lawyers
Over the weekend several state attorneys general announced that they would look into GoFundMe’s announcement that they would not give the millions of dollars raised on their platform to the Canadian Freedom Convoy and would instead disperse the money to woke charities. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis tweeted, “It is a fraud for @gofundme to commandeer $9M in donations sent to support truckers and give it to causes of their own choosing. I will work with @AGAshleyMoody to investigate these deceptive practices — these donors should be given a refund.”

In addition to Florida, Texas, West Virginia, Louisiana, Georgia, and Missouri also said they would be looking into the issue. GoFundMe reversed course and said they would automatically refund all donations. But why can’t it go to the truckers? Because the Canadian government said so. From The Post Millennial:

“As for GoFundMe’s decision Friday to deplatform the Freedom Convoy’s multi-million dollar fundraiser, the Big Tech company cited ‘police reports of violence and other unlawful activity’ despite little to no documented evidence involving the largely peaceful demonstration entering its second week of protests.

Street crime has reportedly fallen in downtown Ottawa since the start of the Freedom Convoy protests where the demonstrators have installed themselves.

GoFundMe has since been called out for providing a platform for Antifa extremists while censoring right-wing causes.”

A Christian crowdfunding site, GiveSendGo, has agreed to help the Freedom Convoy and is hosting their funding page here.

Proactive Ways to Combat Loneliness
From BRIGHT guest editor and managing editor at The Federalist Madeline Osburn:

“In recent years, it’s become increasingly clear that while humans have been more “connected” than ever before, thanks to technology and Mark Zuckerberg, they also feel more isolated. Covid and the shift to remote work compounded that feeling, then made it our everyday reality.
…
There are of course still ways to find community and connection today, but they rarely involve screens or devices. A group Federalist writers discussed the challenges of cultivating community in their own lives, and offered practical tips for fighting loneliness in the face of government social restrictions and the all-consuming ‘busyness’ of work and family. Here’s what they had to say.”

Keep reading here.

Texas or Bust: A Series on Preparing to Make a Red State Redder
I must confess that after I saw Texas got an inch or two of snow, I was having second thoughts. But all is back on track as I check the weather reports and it will be sunny and high 60s there this week! As I continue packing, I’ve been making a list of things I need to take with me in my three-day drive to beat the moving truck to Texas. I also need to be mindful that I drive a four-door car and not an Escalade 😂 On my list: Clothes and toiletries for a week, various chargers, road trip snacks (obviously), laptop and work-related items (your BRIGHT won’t be interrupted!), set of sheets, pillows and towels, valuables I feel better having with me rather than on the truck, small safe with important personal documents and other things, moving-related paperwork, vacuum, cleaning supplies, tool box, and my precious AquaPur water purifier. What am I forgetting?

What I’m Reading This Week
I mentioned this book two weeks ago when I chose a novel instead (The Fifth Avenue Story Society — HIGHLY recommend!). This week it’s back on the docket: Choose Your Story, Change Your Life by Kindra Hall. From the description:

“Most of the ‘self-stories’ you tell yourself—the kind of person you say you are and the things you are capable of—are invisible to you because they have become such a part of your everyday mental routine that you don’t even recognize they exist. 

Yet, these self-stories influence everything you do, everything you say, and everything you are.

Choose Your Story, Change Your Life will help you take complete control of your self-stories and create the life you’ve always dreamed you’d have. Kindra Hall offers up a new window into your psychology, one that travels the distance from the frontiers of neuroscience to the deep inner workings of your thoughts and feelings. This eye-opening, but applicable journey will transform you from a passive listener of these limiting, unconscious thoughts to the definitive author of who you are and everything you want to be.”

A Case of the Mondays
If States Were People (Trey Kennedy on YouTube)

Golden Retrievers take over Golden, Colorado for Goldens in Golden (The Denver Post)

Recipe to try: Joanna’s quick and fresh banana bread. It’s not a loaf! (Magnolia)

BRIGHT is brought to you by The Federalist.
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER

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Recent Articles

Why the Sudden Hostility Toward Off-Label Medicines?

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Why now, almost two years into the COVID pandemic, are we not throwing everything at this virus? Read More…


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Here’s a way to find out: how many black head coaches has the NFL had since 2000? Read More…


The Man Who Replaced Bakke

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We can have a society based either on achievement or ascription. Despite the pretense, we cannot have both.  Read More…


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When you see what’s happening in Hawaii, it’s patently clear that everything the left is forcing on America is a lie.  Read more…


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Joe Rogan learns the price of wimpiness.  Read more…


The Thin Man solves the COVID case
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Let’s imagine that Nick Charles, Dashiell Hammet’s urbane sleuth, was called in to solve the COVID mystery. The following scene unfolds in an elegant suite at the Plaza Hotel in New York  Read more…


Russia, Ukraine and the price of oil
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Modern Russian adventurism is tied to the price of oil.  Read more…


When it comes to masks, shall the little children lead us?
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In California, students looked at pictures of a maskless Gov. Gavin Newsom and knew exactly what to do.  Read more…


Robert Reich vs. inflation
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Guess which one wins?  Read more…


Small business owners keep America running
Feb 07, 2022 01:00 am
The biggest challenges that small business owners face were created by national and local governments.  Read more…


Western nations losing belief in themselves
Feb 07, 2022 01:00 am
In America, leftist thugs have perverted our history, denied our glory, severed our common bonds, and stolen our dignity. They laugh as Rome 2.0 is burning, as far too many of us just fiddle.  Read more…


Putting Fauci in the law’s crosshairs
Feb 07, 2022 01:00 am
Although it’s not clear that the government will give Fauci his comeuppance, it’s entirely possible that thousands (or more) of Americans can do so.  Read more…


Biden betraying the nation he ‘leads’
Feb 07, 2022 01:00 am
The Biden administration has failed America and Americans in epic—almost unbelievable — fashion. It seems the Biden administration is unilaterally conducting the Great Reset.  Read more…


We need criminal control, and fast
Feb 07, 2022 01:00 am
Crime will be the big issue of 2022, and 2024, and…  Read more…


Moral Courage: An anomaly among Democrat lawmakers
Feb 07, 2022 01:00 am
Democrats never let integrity stand in the way of party unity. They mindlessly stand united, together embracing any radical idea they believe benefits the party  Read more…


WSJ censures the Liz Cheney censure by the RNC
Feb 07, 2022 01:00 am
The Wall Street Journal continues to be Bush-wacky  Read more…


A chat with Tina Aviles about school choice
Feb 07, 2022 01:00 am
A video interview from SIlvio Canto.  Read more…


Germany to raze a 1,000-year-old forest in the name of ‘going green’
Feb 06, 2022 01:00 am
Green energy is going to cost Germany more than it thinks.  Read more…


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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL

 


38.) THE BLAZE

 


39.) THE FEDERALIST

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Your daily update of new content from The Federalist
Be lovers of freedom and anxious for the fray
2022-02-07
Exclusive: Whistleblower Videos Show Systemic Issues With Pennsylvania Elections
Exclusive: Whistleblower Videos Show Systemic Issues With Pennsylvania Elections

These videos indicate there were widespread violations of the election code in a large Pennsylvania county, followed by coverups.

Margot Cleveland
The Beatings Will Continue Until The Right Imposes Costs For Cancellation Attempts
The Beatings Will Continue Until The Right Imposes Costs For Cancellation Attempts

When you’re dealing with a terrorist or a bully, the only way to make him stop is to make his aggression not worth it any more.

Joy Pullmann
Report: Red State Public Schools Encourage Kids To Go Transgender Behind Their Parents’ Backs
Report: Red State Public Schools Encourage Kids To Go Transgender Behind Their Parents’ Backs

A new report finds systemic racism, sexual obscenity, and anti-Americanism in U.S. public education, even in a deeply red state.

Joy Pullmann
How Green Energy Fantasies Have Put The World At The Brink Of War
How Green Energy Fantasies Have Put The World At The Brink Of War

Europe’s aggressive leap towards ‘green’ energy is proving to be a grave mistake, making it reliant on aggressive foreign neighbors.

Tristan Justice
Brian Flores’ Lawsuit Against The NFL Will Only Damage Black Head Coaches
Brian Flores’ Lawsuit Against The NFL Will Only Damage Black Head Coaches

Flores’ unfounded accusations against the NFL of ‘systemic racism’ will set back the relationship between owners and black coaching talent.

Kenny Xu
Vermont Plans To Enshrine Legal Abortions Right Up To Birth
Vermont Plans To Enshrine Legal Abortions Right Up To Birth

A three-year battle in Vermont is coming to a head over Proposal 5, an amendment to the state constitution that would enshrine existing Vermont abortion “liberties” to terminate pregnancies up until birth.  Roe v. Wade established “viability” as the determinant of when state governments hold a “compelling” interest to protect children. The current challenge to […]

John Klar
The Backlash Against Leftist Extremism In Schools Is Even Hitting San Francisco
The Backlash Against Leftist Extremism In Schools Is Even Hitting San Francisco

In less than two weeks, San Francisco residents will cast a vote to recall three leftist school board members, Board President Gabriela López, Vice President Faauuga Moliga, and Commissioner Alison Collins. These three have been criticized for several issues, including extended school closures in response to Covid-19, racial bias against Asian Americans, and the board’s zealous pursuit of […]

Helen Raleigh
NCAA Touts Female Achievements While Erasing Them
NCAA Touts Female Achievements While Erasing Them

‘Look at all these historic female athletic achievements!,’ gushes the NCAA, as it actively replaces women’s records with those won by men.

Jennifer C. Braceras and Kelsey Bolar
It’s Past Time To End The Campus Covid Craze
It’s Past Time To End The Campus Covid Craze

It’s been two years, but at the rate they’re going, none of these stupid restrictions will be removed anytime soon — they’ll only get worse.

Jorge Velasco
How The Supreme Court Could Give Parents Relief From Overbearing School Boards
How The Supreme Court Could Give Parents Relief From Overbearing School Boards

The U.S. Supreme Court may open legal doors to state programs that provide many parents access to better schooling for their children.

Jim Kelly

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40.) REUTERS

Reuters
The Reuters Daily Briefing

Monday, February 7, 2022

by Linda Noakes

Hello

Here’s what you need to know.

Australia welcomes the world back after two years of closed borders, why Trump’s Truth Social app needs Apple and Google to survive, and how the wild NFT market is fired up by billions in irregular sales

Today’s biggest stories

U.S. soldiers disembark as they arrive at Rzeszow-Jasionka Airport, Poland, February 7, 2022

WORLD

French President Emmanuel Macron flies to Moscow today in a risky diplomatic move, seeking commitments from Russian President Vladimir Putin to dial down tensions with Ukraine, where Western leaders fear the Kremlin plans an invasion. U.S. President Joe Biden and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz will underscore their unity in opposing any Russian aggression against Ukraine when they meet at the White House today.

Australia said it will reopen its borders to vaccinated travelers this month, ending two years of misery for the tourism sector, reviving migration and injecting billions of dollars into the economy. Meanwhile, Indonesia has temporarily banned foreign tourists entering the country through Jakarta’s airport in a bid to slow a spike in coronavirus infections.

As the protest against the Canadian government’s health measures and vaccine mandates entered an eleventh day, police have threatened to clamp down after facing criticism for lack of action that has crippled the national capital.

As frontrunner in the Philippines’ presidential race, Ferdinand Marcos Jr. appears poised to complete a remarkable rebranding of the family name 36 years after a ‘people power’ uprising ended his father’s autocratic rule. Read our factbox on the late dictator’s son aiming to restore family pride.

Every day for the last three months, an average of six or seven families in Myanmar have posted notices in the country’s state-owned newspapers cutting ties with sons, daughters, nieces, nephews and grandchildren who have publicly opposed the ruling military junta. The notices started to appear in such numbers in November after the army announced it would take over properties of its opponents and arrest people giving shelter to protesters.

FILE PHOTO: Travis McMichael, left, speaks with his attorney during his sentencing, along with his father Greg McMichael and neighbor William ‘Roddie’ Bryan, in the Glynn County Courthouse, Brunswick, Georgia, January 7, 2022

U.S.

Jury selection is due to begin in the U.S. federal hate-crimes trial of the three white men who murdered Ahmaud Arbery, a Black jogger who was chased and shot while running through a mostly white Georgia neighborhood. The jury will be asked to decide whether racial animus drove the defendants to fatally pursue Arbery in February 2020.

With just weeks to go before an expected launch, Donald Trump’s new media venture is trying to strike a delicate balance with its app: giving Trump’s base the freedom to express themselves, without running afoul of Apple and Google’s app store policies.

The White House released a highly anticipated report from its labor task force that includes nearly 70 recommendations on how the government can help workers join labor unions and bargain collectively. These include the government offering greater access to the federal workforce for unions seeking to build membership.

A lawsuit filed last week accusing the National Football League of racist hiring practices brought to light allegations that owners secretly offered incentives to coaches to lose, which could lead to class action lawsuits for hundreds of millions of dollars and even criminal liability, experts said.

A flurry of proposed carbon pipelines in the U.S. Midwest has triggered a battle over whether companies behind the projects should be allowed to seize land from unwilling property owners to secure a route. Here’s a factbox on carbon capture as a key tool in the climate fight.

BUSINESS

Toshiba said it now aims to break up into two companies instead of three and also unveiled a big boost to planned shareholder returns in an effort to appease angry investors. The rejig goes long on pragmatism and short on vision, says Breakingviews columnist Jennifer Hughes.

Credit Suisse will face charges in a Swiss court today of allowing an alleged Bulgarian cocaine trafficking gang to launder millions of euros, some of it stuffed into suitcases.

Spotify Chief Executive Officer Daniel Ek said he “strongly” condemns racial slurs and other comments made by popular U.S. podcaster Joe Rogan but will not be removing him from the platform. New York State’s top pension official, who oversees funds that hold Spotify shares, has asked the platform for details about the effectiveness of its new content rules.

Asian investors can now buy and sell U.S. stocks during Korean business hours in real time through a partnership between Samsung Securities and U.S.-based off-exchange trading venue operator Blue Ocean Technologies. Liquidity in U.S. stocks has fallen to levels last seen during the COVID-19 selloff two years ago, adding to volatility in an already-nervous market.

On January 12, an image of a computer-generated pixelated person was sold for about $50.6 million worth of cryptocurrency on a new online marketplace that caters for non-fungible tokens. Five minutes later, the same ‘Meebit’ NFT was sold back from the buyer to the original seller for around $49.6 million. Confused? Welcome to a weird and wild world.

WINTER OLYMPICS

See our full coverage of the Beijing Games

First woman to land quadruple jumps at Games, Valieva fulfils her dream of glory

Quote of the day

“We said what we had to say, the communication is up to her, it is her life, it is her story”

Thomas Bach

International Olympic Committee president

Chinese tennis player Peng denies making accusation of sexual assault

Video of the day

German man breaks a hula hooping world record

Thirty-year-old IT professional Kai Sandmeyer has cracked an unusual record: hula hooping while in the abdominal plank position, for 6 minutes 34 seconds.

And finally…

Could volcano tourism boost ravaged La Palma?

The devastating eruption on the island may have a silver lining for one of Spain’s poorest areas.

More from Reuters

COVID The Great Reboot Disrupted Legal News Breakingviews

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41.) CIVIL DEADLINE

Civil Deadline
Today’s Hot Stories
'The Masked Singer' Judges WALK OFF SET in Protest After This Singer is Unmasked
‘The Masked Singer’ Judges WALK OFF SET in Protest After This Singer is Unmasked
The Masked Singer is a wildly popular FOX Primetime series. Season…
BREAKING! GOP Just Seized Majority Control in Senate!
BREAKING! GOP Just Seized Majority Control in Senate!
Believe it or not, the Republicans currently have majority control…
BREAKING NEWS! Wisconsin Assembly Advances Resolution to Reclaim Wisconsin’s Electors For President Trump and VP Pence
BREAKING NEWS! Wisconsin Assembly Advances Resolution to Reclaim Wisconsin’s Electors For President Trump and VP Pence
Many people blindly bought into the mainstream media’s false narrative…
Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell Not Backing Down - Dominion Voting System in PANIC MODE
Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell Not Backing Down – Dominion Voting System in PANIC MODE
The whirlwind of evidence, combined with growing accusations concerning the fraudulent 2020 Presidential Election, is…
Wife of NFL Quarterback Goes Viral in EPIC Takedown of School Board (VIDEO)
Wife of NFL Quarterback Goes Viral in EPIC Takedown of School Board (VIDEO)
It took all of two minutes for Carrie Prejean Boller, wife of NFL quarterback Kyle…
Judge Makes One Last Ruling in the Kyle Rittenhouse Trial
Judge Makes One Last Ruling in the Kyle Rittenhouse Trial
There is actually another in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial believe it or not. You thought…
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42.) BO SNERDLEY’S MORNING B.S.

 

  

My dear friends,

It’s hard to believe it will be shortly coming up on a year since I picked my last stack of stories to submit to Rush. Many of you tell me you miss him every day, and I do too. But I also have a new sense of gratitude for the 33 years he spent doing his syndicated show, and find great comfort in knowing his spirit and our mission lives on. We have no choice but to continue pressuring the left and engaging in “the relentless pursuit of the truth,” with the same unwavering courage we were witness to. That’s why I’m emailing you today, and hope to each day, with the news I would have picked in my stack.

I know you, just like me, are bombarded with emails, text messages and unwanted spam calls every day. I’ll cut through all other B.S. but if you don’t want to get my daily stack, please let me know, here.

 

Today’s best political cartoons: Pelosi’s prize

CDC now considers changing vaccine protocol after acknowledging risk of heart inflammation

Stacey Abrams makes her pic with masked kids so much worse with round two of gasp-worthy excuses

Perpetually-offended get reality check after someone shouted ‘Let’s go, Brandon!’ to US skaters at Olympics

Ottawa mayor declares state of emergency to take out Freedom Convoy; Ted Cruz rails at GoFundMe ‘theft’

Pelosi calls climate crisis ‘a religious thing,’ yet reports show she spent over $500K on private jets

Learn more about Jeeng

NYC mayor maskless indoors after mandates for students: ‘Another let them eat cake moment’

Kanye thanks Candace Owens for having his back in feud with ex-Kim Kardashian

Truth behind heat on Joe Rogan in explosive, receipt-filled thread: ‘This is a professional political attack’

NFL star with five-year, $75 million contract arrested on battery charge hours after playing in Pro Bowl

Michael Matteo: Banning fiction vs censoring falsehoods

Learn more about Jeeng
Learn more about Jeeng

Cuomo’s revenge! Disgraced Governor wants to challenge Letitia James for AG, according to buzz

Comic passes out on stage, fractures her skull, just after joke about being triple vaxxed and boosted

Spotify CEO consoles employees in memo after Joe Rogan ‘N-word’ controversy explodes

Another Dem lawmaker flaunts maskless face in New York school surrounded by masked students

Biden will not change his totalitarian ways

Andrew Yang apologizes for defending Rogan, scrubs tweets after bully DNC chair, other blue checks attack

You Might Like
Learn more about Jeeng

Navy identifies SEAL candidate who died after shortly after completing ‘Hell Week’ training

Karma bites US-born skater who gave up citizenship to compete for China only to finish last on Beijing ice

Whoops! Stacey Abrams deletes incredibly tone-deaf pic with masked kids but not before Twitter notices

‘Narrative has completely collapsed’: Israeli hospital shows ‘80% of serious COVID cases are fully vaxxed’

GoFundMe relents on Freedom Convoy refunds while CEO runs for cover; DeSantis vows ‘fraud’ probe

  
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43.) REDSTATE

 

RedState Morning Briefing
Maher Lights up Biden, Dems on COVID Restrictions: ‘How Much Wrong Do You Get to Be?’

    READ STORY    
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Stacey Abrams Digs the Hole Much Deeper Over Her Deleted Picture

    READ STORY    
As the Racing Season Opens, NASCAR Finds Itself With Some Political Engine Trouble

    READ STORY    
WATCH: Counter-Protester Caught Faking Getting Hit by Freedom Convoy Truck

    READ STORY    
Michigan Candidate for Governor Holds a Fundraiser at Mar-a-Lago in Florida

    READ STORY    
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Manchin Is Going to Tick off More Dems Big Time With His Latest Remarks

    READ STORY    
Ottawa Declares State of Emergency; Reports of Police Arresting Truckers, Seizing Fuel

    READ STORY    
University Professor Goes the Route of ‘Ungrading’ — in Math

    READ STORY    
Ottawa Police Issuing a Tyrannical Edict Which May End the Freedom Convoy

    READ STORY    

 

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44.) WORLD NET DAILY

Peer-reviewed study finds one popular vitamin effective against COVID
Posted by Art Moore
While the powers that be keep pushing vaccines in the battle against COVID, an eye-opening study shows you probably have a very effective weapon already in your vitamin cabinet. Read more…
Related
GOP congressman warns ‘Deep State’ desperate now, ‘running in sheer panic’
Biden Claims Credit for Take Down of ISIS Leader – 6 Children Reportedly Killed During Raid
FBI ’roundup’ of innocent citizens who were in Washington Jan. 6 challenged
Candace Owens Dismantles ‘Spoiled Rotten Brat’ AOC After She Claims Republicans Don’t Work Hard
All-American company fires unvaxxed employees, asks them to sign 9-page agreement to stay silent: Report
School under serious fire for sticking to Bible definition of true sex
Posted by WND Staff
The pressure on Christians is getting even greater in this age of antichrist, and now merely supporting any kind of God-approved sex is putting believers in the crosshairs. Read more…
Related
County ban on criticism earns warning from civil rights legal team
Video Shows Liberty University Students Trolling Joe Biden, Chanting ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ During Game
Jury clears Judge Roy Moore of accuser’s defamation charge
GOP congressman warns ‘Deep State’ desperate now, ‘running in sheer panic’
Biden Claims Credit for Take Down of ISIS Leader – 6 Children Reportedly Killed During Raid
‘Traps in every question’: U.S. Marines blast ‘sham’ religious vaccine-exemption process
Posted by WND News Services
If you think religious exemptions against COVID vaccines were going to be honored, here’s a serious dose of reality.

The Pentagon ‘intends to dismiss all of us.’ Read more…

Related
Kim Jong Un Seen Limping, Struggling with Stairs in Latest Video from North Korea
Biden unleashes ‘offensive’ race term during prayer breakfast
Physicians campaign in support of unvaxxed patients denied lifesaving transplants
Israel: 80% of serious COVID cases are vaccinated
Revealed! Postal inspectors using tech to break into cell phones

 

U.S.-born figure skater who renounced citizenship and defected to China comes in dead last at Winter Olympics
Irony can be pretty ironic. Read more…
Dr. Robert Malone pounces on media for ‘fact checks’ of Rogan interview
They’re two of the hottest names in the news right now — Joe Rogan and Dr. Robert Malone — and now the good doctor is hammering one of the biggest news giants for not being honest with the public. Read more…
NASA enlists theologians to meet E.T.
‘It will be useful to have thought through the implications in advance’ Read more…
School under serious fire for sticking to Bible definition of true sex
The pressure on Christians is getting even greater in this age of antichrist, and now merely supporting any kind of God-approved sex is putting believers in the crosshairs. Read more…
Outrageous congressional plan to spy on everything online gets hammered
‘It’s a framework for private actors to scan every message sent online and report violations to law enforcement.’ Read more…
Peer-reviewed study finds one popular vitamin effective against COVID
While the powers that be keep pushing vaccines in the battle against COVID, an eye-opening study shows you probably have a very effective weapon already in your vitamin cabinet. Read more…
Black writer: Scandal-plagued BLM is harming blacks and donors
The media love to portray the whole Black Lives Matter movement in a very positive light. But what they’re suppressing is this very unnerving underbelly. Read more…
Sick: Crime victim hit with nasty surprise after heated meeting with mayor
The inspection found 6 violations.

No arrests or charges have been made in the smash-and-grab, however. Read more…

GoFundMe just got some horrific news as truckers emerge victorious
Donors have already given over $2,500,000. Read more…
Years before ripping millions from peaceful truckers, look what GoFundMe promoted
A Marxist takeover of an American city seems to not violate GoFundMe’s terms. Read more…
Hollywood star makes big admission about what she and others did at start of pandemic
This video was nearly universally criticized.
Read more…
American mayor reveals disturbing plans to seize your guns
Those found to have a firearm without paying the fee could lose the weapon. Read more…
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45.) MSNBC

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February 7, 2022

THE LATEST

Alternate text

Why Democrats’ Covid attitude may cost them the midterms

by Noah Rothman

The White House and Democrats were worried that omicron would be a major drag on the economy. So when it turns out nearly a half million jobs were added in January, it was a major shock. That “surprise comes, in part, because the information ecosystem in which consumers of mainstream news marinate maintained a steady drumbeat of pessimism throughout these last eight weeks,” Noah Rothman writes.

 

“This condition — Democratic pessimism in the face of all relevant data — has become an existential conundrum for the Biden White House,” Rothman writes. “This jobs report provides the White House with an offramp away from a state of permanent pandemic restrictions and the despondency they encourage.”

 

Read Noah Rothman’s full analysis in your Monday MSNBC Daily.

TOP STORIES

Alternate text

Charlie Sykes

There’s a reason the RNC is so terrified of Liz Cheney 

There’s a reason the RNC engaged in such an extraordinary display of self-humiliation on Friday. Read More

Zach Stafford

Florida ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill marks a hateful return to a more homophobic past

These new anti-LGBTQ bills are variations of old tricks trotted out by conservatives. Read More

Steve Benen

What made Trump’s response to Pence unexpectedly strange

We knew Trump would respond to Pence telling the truth about the electoral process. We didn’t know how. Read More

TOP VIDEOS

Alternate text

American Voices
‘Dear White Staffers’: Anonymous Instagram testimonials slamming workplace culture grip Capitol Hill

Ayman Mohyeldin

Minneapolis police kill Amir Locke while serving ‘no-knock’ warrant

Yasmin Vossoughian

The significance of Queen Elizabeth naming Camilla ‘queen consort’

American Voices

Has Facebook reached its peak?

MORE FROM MSNBC

Alternate text

“Into America” is teaming up with the Smithsonian’s NMAAHC for a special series called “Reconstructed,” which examines the post-Civil War era through perspectives of the newly freed people and explores the fight for true equality.

 

In the first episode of Into America’s Black History series, Trymaine Lee explores how Black people gained political power and liberated their people, told through the story of South Carolina Congressman Robert Smalls. Listen now. 

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BPR’s best political cartoons: Behind Pelosi’s warning …

Ottawa mayor declares state of emergency to take out Freedom Convoy; Ted Cruz rails at GoFundMe ‘theft’

Comic passes out on stage, fractures her skull, just after joke about being triple vaxxed and boosted

CDC now considers changing vaccine protocol after acknowledging risk of heart inflammation

Cuomo’s revenge! Disgraced Governor wants to challenge Letitia James for AG, according to buzz

Learn more about RevenueStripe...

Navy identifies SEAL candidate who died after shortly after completing ‘Hell Week’ training

Spotify CEO consoles employees in memo after Joe Rogan ‘N-word’ controversy explodes

Another Dem lawmaker flaunts maskless face in New York school surrounded by masked students

Biden will not change his totalitarian ways

Andrew Yang apologizes for defending Rogan, scrubs tweets after bully DNC chair, other blue checks attack

Learn more about RevenueStripe...

Stacey Abrams makes her pic with masked kids so much worse with round two of gasp-worthy excuses

Perpetually-offended get reality check after someone shouted ‘Let’s go, Brandon!’ to US skaters at Olympics

Truth behind heat on Joe Rogan in explosive, receipt-filled thread: ‘This is a professional political attack’

NFL star with five-year, $75 million contract arrested on battery charge hours after playing in Pro Bowl

Pelosi calls climate crisis ‘a religious thing,’ yet reports show she spent over $500K on private jets

NYC mayor maskless indoors after mandates for students: ‘Another let them eat cake moment’

Michael Matteo: Banning fiction vs censoring falsehoods

Karma bites US-born skater who gave up citizenship to compete for China only to finish last on Beijing ice

Whoops! Stacey Abrams deletes incredibly tone-deaf pic with masked kids but not before Twitter notices

‘Narrative has completely collapsed’: Israeli hospital shows ‘80% of serious COVID cases are fully vaxxed’

GoFundMe relents on Freedom Convoy refunds while CEO runs for cover; DeSantis vows ‘fraud’ probe

Zero evidence of threats to Palm Beach County School Board

You Might Like
Learn more about RevenueStripe...
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47.) ABC

February 7, 2022 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
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Morning Rundown
US COVID-19 death toll tops 900,000 despite receding case rates: The U.S. surpassed 900,000 confirmed COVID-19-related deaths, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. The staggering number of deaths due to COVID-19 is now higher than the number of Americans who died of heart disease or cancer in 2020, and about the same as the population of Columbus, Ohio. According to data from Johns Hopkins University, no nation has reported more people lost to the virus than the U.S., although, on a per-capita basis, the U.S. ranks 19th for COVID-19 deaths. While Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said last week that new cases are falling, hospitalizations are still high, leaving many health care facilities overwhelmed. About 62 million eligible Americans also remain completely unvaccinated and 84 million Americans — about half of those eligible — remain without a booster shot, according to federal data. Meanwhile, Walensky gave the green light for full approval for Moderna’s vaccine for all adults Friday — the last step in the process for the vaccine to move from an emergency use authorization to a permanent approval.
Navy SEAL candidate dies after ‘Hell Week’ training: A Navy SEAL candidate has died and a second is in the hospital after falling ill on Friday just hours after both had successfully completed the grueling culmination of initial SEAL training known as “Hell Week.” Both sailors were quickly taken to local hospitals hours after they began showing symptoms of illness. On Sunday, the Navy identified Seaman Kyle Mullen, 24, of Manalapan, New Jersey, as the SEAL candidate who died. He was assigned to the Naval Special Warfare Basic Training Command in San Diego, California. Officials said the cause of Mullen’s death remains under investigation. The other SEAL candidate who is hospitalized and whose name was not released, is in stable condition at Naval Medical Center in San Diego. While it’s unclear what caused Mullen’s death, a statement from the Navy’s Special Warfare Command noted that both SEAL candidates were taking part in the phase of the Navy SEAL assessment and selection pathway, a Basic Underwater Demolition SEAL (BUD/S). For SEAL candidates, training is grueling and more than half of the SEAL candidates who go through Hell Week do not complete the week of training. “From time to time training fatalities do occur,” said Eric Oehlerich, a retired SEAL and ABC News contributor. “Although tragic, adhering to the training curriculum keeps SEALs alive in combat.”
NFL commissioner addresses issues with diversity following Brian Flores lawsuit: Days after former Miami Dolphins Coach Brian Flores sued the NFL over allegations of discrimination, commissioner Roger Goodell told teams Saturday that the league’s efforts to promote diversity among head coaches “have been unacceptable,” ESPN reported. In a letter, Goodell addressed Flores’ suit and the allegations that the league and team owners have been sidelining Black candidates for coaching positions, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, who tweeted out the letter. The commissioner reiterated the league’s earlier messages that it “adopted numerous policies and programs” to promote diversity, but acknowledged that there is still more work to be done. Douglas H. Wigdor and John Elefterakis, Flores’ attorneys, said in a statement that Goodell’s letter was “a positive first step,” but seemed like more of a “public relations ploy than real commitment to change.” They added that Goodell hasn’t reached out to them or their client to discuss his concerns.
Queen Elizabeth asks for daughter-in-law to be queen: As Queen Elizabeth celebrated 70 years on the throne over the weekend, she had a special request that her daughter-in-law Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, be known as queen consort when her son Charles succeeds her as king. “When, in the fullness of time, my son Charles becomes King, I know you will give him and his wife Camilla the same support that you have given me,” Elizabeth wrote in a statement. “It is my sincere wish that, when that time comes, Camilla will be known as Queen Consort as she continues her own loyal service.” The title, Queen Consort, is given to the spouse of a king and under U.K. law, whoever is married to a king would immediately become that and be known as Queen. In response, a spokesman for Prince Charles and Camilla told ABC News they are “touched and honoured by Her Majesty’s words.” The couple, who married in 2005, stirred some debate as to what title Camilla, a divorcee, would take when Chales became King. But in the past year, there have been indications that giving Camilla the title of Queen Consort was her intention and that she is grateful to her daughter-in-law for the support she gives her son.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” country music superstar Luke Bryan joins us live to talk about his upcoming Las Vegas residency that starts this Friday. And for Black History Month, Tracey Michae’l Lewis-Giggetts, author of the book, “Black Joy: Stories of Resistance, Resilience, and Restoration,” joins us to talk about encouraging joy within the Black community and why she feels it is an important part of the Black experience in America. Plus, Jodie Sweetin joins us live and gets candid about life, love and her late co-star, Bob Saget. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Meet the trailblazing founder behind Ami Colé, a brand rooted in celebrating Black beauty
Meet the trailblazing founder behind Ami Colé, a brand rooted in celebrating Black beauty
Diarrha N’Diaye-Mbaye is making Black beauty history.
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PHOTO: FILE - Travis Scott, left, and Kylie Jenner, right, attend the 72nd annual Parsons Benefit presented by The New School at The Rooftop at Pier 17 on Tuesday, June 15, 2021, in New York. They welcomed their second child on Feb. 2, 2022. Kylie Jenner welcomes 2nd child with Travis Scott
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN

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Today’s Top Stories from NBC News

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2022

Good morning, NBC News readers.

 

Today we take a closer look at a bipartisan group of senators’ determination to protect the integrity of the presidential electoral process. Plus, we get a peek inside the “closed loop” at the Beijing Winter Olympics and have the latest results from the Games.

 

Here’s what we’re watching this Monday morning.

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Ignoring Trump’s attacks, Congress persists in trying to prevent stolen elections 

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More than a year after he tried to exploit the system, former President Donald Trump has continued to claim that Vice President Mike Pence could have overturned his election defeat. The effort culminated on Jan. 6, 2021, when a violent mob stormed the Capitol, disrupting what had traditionally been a rote and uneventful procedure.

 

While Pence had previously resisted calling out his former boss by name, he took direct aim at Trump’s interpretation of the law on Friday. “Trump said I had the right to overturn the election. President Trump is wrong,” Pence said during a speech in Orlando, Florida.

 

Despite ongoing attacks from Trump, a bipartisan group of senators are busy working away on a plan to update the Electoral Count Act, the 1887 federal law that established the convoluted process by which Congress certifies the presidential election result. Read the full story here.

2022 Winter Olympics

Enter the ‘closed loop’: What life is like for Olympians in Beijing amid Covid concern

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The athletes have arrived, competition has begun and Friday’s spectacular ceremony opened the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.

 

But for the athletes and the others attending, this year’s Games are like no other.

 

Participants and foreign visitors are being kept inside what organizers call the “closed loop.”

 

Designed to prevent Covid from spreading, it keeps residents far apart from visitors, so China can host the Olympics and still pursue its “zero-Covid” strategy, which has been in place since the pandemic first broke out in Wuhan in 2019.

 

The strategy presents unique challenges for teams and athletes, as they navigate all the Covid-related rules and regulations on top of the usual stress of international competition.

 

“This year, it’s been an absolute nightmare,” American snowboarder Jamie Anderson told a news conference Wednesday. “It’s definitely a more complicated Olympics.”  Read the full story here.

 

More headlines from the Games:

  • Mikaela Shiffrin crashes out on first run of giant slalom
  • Russian figure skater becomes first woman to land a ‘quad’ at the Olympics, helping her team earn gold
  • Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai again denies making sexual assault allegation
  • U.S. figure skater Vincent Zhou tests positive for Covid

Monday’s Top Stories

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Russia has massed 70 percent of forces needed to invade Ukraine, source says

“There are fewer and fewer doubts that Russia could mount a major escalation if it wished to, and Ukraine and its Western partners have no option but to prepare,” one expert said.

READ MORE
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Spotify CEO apologizes but backs Rogan after racial slur episodes are removed

Daniel Ek sent a letter to company employees Sunday apologizing for the controversy surrounding Joe Rogan but also backing the podcaster, saying he did “not believe that silencing Joe is the answer.”

READ MORE
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‘Net-zero’ promises from major corporations fall short, climate groups say

An analysis of the climate pledges of 25 of the world’s largest companies found that they are using false or misleading net-zero announcements to avoid meaningful and immediate greenhouse gas emissions cuts.

READ MORE

Also in the News

Ministry that once nourished Duggar family’s faith falls from grace 

Stock ban proposed for Congress to stop insider trading among legislators 

Americans are paying higher prices for many consumer products. College tuition is next. 

Crossing party lines, Manchin endorses Murkowski for reelection

Ottawa declares state of emergency as trucker protest paralyzes capital’s core

Build-A-Bear releases line of ‘adult’ bears for ‘After Dark’

Editor’s Pick

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Royal controversies loom over Queen Elizabeth’s 70th year on the throne

“We need to look at whether the public supports the institution or if the institution is riding the coattails of the queen,” the founder of the British Monarchists Society said.

READ MORE

Select

Here’s everything you need to know about what’s included in an Amazon Prime membership, and price increases for new and existing subscribers in 2022.

One Fun Thing 

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Gaming board tracks down Las Vegas $229,000 jackpot winner after slot machine malfunction

The winner of a Las Vegas slot machine jackpot didn’t know he won more than $229,000 because of a “communications error” in the machine, the Nevada Gaming Control Board said.

 

But that didn’t stop the gaming board from tracking him down to give the lucky winner his money. Read the full story here.

Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.

 

If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com 

If you’re a fan, please forward it to your family and friends. They can sign-up here.

 

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49.) NBC FIRST READ

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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Ben Kamisar, Bridget Bowman and Alexandra Marquez

FIRST READ: Here’s what four Pennsylvania GOP Senate candidates say about Biden’s legitimacy

If it’s Monday… President Biden meets with German Chancellor Scholz at the White House and holds a joint news conference with him at 3:15 pm ET… Russia has already assembled a sizable force needed to invade Ukraine… Stacey Abrams deletes tweet of her sitting mask-less with masked Atlanta schoolchildren… Joe Manchin endorses Lisa Murkowski… And meet the 2022 boogeymen (and boogeywomen).

 

Also, we want to hear from you to improve your experience reading our newsletter, so go here to complete a brief survey.

 

But FIRST… NBC’s Dasha Burns interviewed four of the Pennsylvania Republicans running for the Senate seat being vacated by retiring Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa.

 

And here’s how all four of them answered, in separate interviews, the question of whether Biden legitimately won the 2020 presidential election.

Samuel Corum/Getty Images

Celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz: “Well, you can tell he’s the president. I think it’s pretty obvious from the mistakes we’ve been making.”

 

Former hedge fund executive David McCormick: “Well, listen, it’s you can’t go across Pennsylvania without hearing over and over again about the broad irregularities in our elections. So the three-day extension of the ballot, the lack of secure ballot boxes, the lack of oversight in many of the precincts of Philadelphia, so the majority of Republican voters in Pennsylvania do not believe in the outcome of the election. That’s a terrible thing. If you’re somebody who served in the military for the specific purpose of making sure that our democracy thrives, that’s a major problem. So we have to fix that and one way to fix that is to have a great senator win in 2022. That makes sure that we have an accurate election in 2024.”

 

2018 Lt. Gov. nominee Jeff Bartos: “Well, I’ve been asked this many, many times over the last year, as you probably know, and each time I’ve consistently said, I believe Joe Biden won the state of Pennsylvania and won the presidency. We definitely had problems here in Pennsylvania.”

 

Conservative political commentator Kathy Barnette: “I believe there are a number of questions and I believe, unfortunately, our nation has not allowed those voices who feel uncomfortable about what happened.”

 

Be sure to check out Burns’ snapshot of the GOP’s PA-SEN race, which will air today on MSNBC and NBC News Now.

Tweet of the Day: “I did not see a lot of legitimate political discourse”

Data Download: The number of the day is … 70 percent

That’s how much of the fighting force needed to invade Ukraine that Russia has already assembled, a U.S. official with direct knowledge of the situation estimated. The official also estimated that an invasion would lead to 50,000 civilian casualties (dead or wounded), and lead to up to 5 million people becoming refugees.

 

That estimate comes as things remain tense on the border between the two nations, with White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan telling “Meet the Press” Sunday that “an invasion of Ukraine could happen at any time.”

 

Sullivan went on to warn that America and its allies “are ready” in case of an invasion and that “President Biden has spoken to the fact that if a Russian tank or a Russian troop moves across the border, that’s an invasion.”

Other numbers you need to know today

3: The number of medals, all silver, that the U.S. Olympic Team has won so far in the Winter Olympics. Russia currently leads with six medals.

 

14: The number of current and former staff at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy who have raised concerns about a toxic work environment, per a Politico report on a new internal investigation.

 

$100 million: The amount pledged by Spotify Chief Executive Daniel Ek toward spending on content from “historically marginalized groups” as he defended the streaming platform amid criticism for hosting controversial podcaster Joe Rogan.

Midterm roundup

Republicans are expected to make gains in November, but NBC’s Peter Nicholas and Allen Smith report that the RNC meeting in Salt Lake City ended with the party divided over whether to focus on former President Donald Trump‘s grievances about the 2020 election or the upcoming midterms. Smith also unpacks how that divide is playing out in the battlegrounds.

 

Georgia Democrat Stacey Abrams caught some heat from her GOP opponents for governor for a now-deleted tweet of a photo of an unmasked Abrams with masked children, NBC’s Blayne Alexander and Charlie Gile report. Gov. Brian Kemp‘s spokesman Cody Hall said to expect to see this photo in campaign ads, while Kemp’s primary challenger, former Sen. David Perdue, released a video highlighting the photo. An Abrams campaign aide confirmed to NBC News Abrams wore a mask to the event, removing it temporarily for the photo and while speaking to be heard better.

 

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., crossed party lines to endorse Alaska Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski for re-election. It’s not the first time he’s done this – Manchin backed Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, in 2019.

 

Members of the Pennsylvania GOP state committee declined to endorse a candidate in the crowded Senate or governor’s races.

 

In case you missed it on Friday: The North Carolina Supreme Court struck down the state’s newly drawn congressional and legislative maps. State lawmakers have until Feb. 18 to redraw the maps.

 

And Democrat Val Arkoosh, chair of the Montgomery County Board of Commissioners, ended her campaign for Pennsylvania’s Senate seat. Arkoosh was the only high-profile woman competing for the Democratic nomination.

Ad watch: Meet the boogeymen (and boogeywomen)

A new ad from gubernatorial candidate Tim James, R-Ala., attacks quite a few “boogeymen” rather than any of his opponents. In the commercial, which has aired in Alabama over 150 times since Friday, James vows to “fight back” against looting and riots, LGBTQ norms, Democratic politicians and cancel culture.

 

“If you stand up to them, they’ll get you fired from your job. The hour’s late. This may be our last chance to get it right,” James, a businessman and son of former Gov. Fob James, says in the ad.

 

Calling out “boogeymen” rather than one’s own opponent has been a trend in political ads. An NBC News analysis found that in January, 45 of 129 ads we tracked featured a “boogeyman.” The top boogeyman was President Joe Biden, with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and China joining the president near the top of the list.

 

We’ll continue tracking the top boogeymen of the election cycle and we’ll update you each month with our findings.

ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world

The New York Times reports that Jill Biden, the first lady, will admit Monday that her signature policy, two years of free community college, is “no longer a part” of the Build Back Better negotiations.

 

New Jersey is dropping its mask mandate in schools.

 

A handful of Georgia Republicans are trying to take down Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene in a primary.

President Biden called Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra to offer him supportamid criticism about his low profile, which has been simmering for months.

Thanks for reading.

If you’re a fan, please forward this to a friend. They can sign up here.

 

We love hearing from our readers, so shoot us a line here with your comments and suggestions.

 

Thanks,

Chuck, Mark, Ben, Bridget and Alexandra

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50.) CBS

 


51.) REASON

GoFundMe Rejects Fundraising for Canadian Freedom Convoy

Plus: Is Web3 a scam? Does the Joe Rogan/Spotify controversy have anything to do with Section 230? And more…

GoFundMe calls Freedom Convoy an “occupation.” What started as a protest against vaccine rules for border-crossing Canadian truckers has morphed into a massive—and more than a week long—demonstration against all sorts of COVID-19 mandates in Canada. Things have been largely peaceful, but the city of Ottawa is declaring a state of emergency and the crowdfunding platform GoFundMe is refusing to turn over millions of dollars raised for the protests.
“GoFundMe supports peaceful protests and we believe that was the intention of the Freedom Convoy 2022 fundraiser when it was first created. We now have evidence from law enforcement that the previously peaceful demonstration has become an occupation, with police reports of violence and other unlawful activity,” the company declared in a statement.
Initially, GoFundMe said donations whose makers did not request a refund would be sent “to credible and established charities chosen by the Freedom Convoy 2022 organizers.” In an update, it said that “due to donor feedback,” it would “automatically refund all contributions directly—donors do not need to submit a request.”
That means more than $8 million will be refunded, reports The Washington Post. Since the GoFundMe rejection, protesters have raised $3.5 million on the Christian crowdfunding site GiveSendGo.
GoFundMe said it’s rejecting Freedom Convoy funds because the protest violated its terms of service—specifically, a prohibition on “the promotion of violence and harassment.” But it’s unclear to what exactly GoFundME is referring.
By all accounts, the protests—which have included thousands of Canadians in multiple cities—have been mostly nonviolent. Ottawa Police Service reported Sunday that they’ve seen “extremely disruptive and unlawful behaviour” from protesters. But when they spell out what this means, most of it is relatively minor stuff. For instance, Ottawa cops issued 450 tickets for infractions that include “excessive noise,” fireworks displays, seatbelt violations, disobeying a sign, an “improper muffler,” an obstructed license plate, driving on a suspended license, running a red light, and “driving through a no truck route.”
Criminal offense investigations have been opened, but these seem to have led to relatively few arrests. On Sunday evening, OPS said that it had opened “over 60 criminal investigations so far related to the demonstration.” It reported just seven arrests—five people were arrested for unspecified “mischief,” one “for mischief relating to property damage of a downtown business,” and another “for driving while prohibited.”
OPS also reports investigations into hate crimes, but does not offer more details. A special hate-crime hotline it set up “received over 200 calls, and Detectives are ensuring every report is investigated,” the OPS statement said.
Several incidents of harassment by demonstrators have been reported. But a few alleged bad apples in a mix of thousands of protesters spanning cities seems extremely weak rationale for the GoFundMe cancellation.
One serious incident has been alleged in the days after GoFundMe’s decision: an attempted arson. But this event has not been substantiated (and some of the claims surrounding it are a bit far-fetched).
As a private company, GoFundMe can associate with whatever causes it wants. But the move is, nonetheless, disappointing. It feels very much like a pretense to disassociate from a cause that’s critical of government and unpopular with political leaders.
Protester James MacDonald told CNN that “the whole event has gone beyond just vaccines and it is now about the entire ordeal,” including mask mandates, lockdown measures, and more. The truckers are now joined by all sorts of folks, and the protests have spread beyond their original locale in Ottawa to cities throughout Canada, though the bulk of the action remains in Ottawa.
On Sunday, Ottawa’s mayor declared a state of emergency. “Declaring a state of emergency reflects the serious danger and threat to the safety and security of residents posed by the ongoing demonstrations and highlights the need for support from other jurisdictions and levels of government,” said the city in a statement.

FREE MINDS

Is Web3 a scam? “At its most basic, Web3 imagines a massive shift away from the habit of accessing the web via centralized platforms such as Facebook and Google, and toward a norm of communicating, storing information, and making payments through a supposedly incorruptible, uneditable, fail-proof system,” notes The Atlantic‘s Kaitlyn Tiffany. “But for various reasons it has so far been a bit of a farce.”

See also, from Reason:

  • “What Is Web3 and Why Is Everyone Suddenly Talking About It?“
  • “The Biggest NFT Video Game’s Economy Is Collapsing Because NFT Games Don’t Work“

FREE MARKETS

“Spotify’s decisions about Rogan (and Young and others) has absolutely nothing to do with Section 230. At all,” writes Mike Masnick. In case you’ve been living under a rock: Neil Young and several other perfomers have removed their music from the digital listening platform Spotify to protest the company’s ties to the popular podcaster Joe Rogan. The musicians initially threatened to go if Spotify wouldn’t ditch Rogan’s show; Spotify wouldn’t.
Some—including Los Angeles Times reporters, tech writer Kara Swisher, and the activist group Sleeping Giants— have linked this fight to Section 230, a law that protects websites and other digital mediums from certain liabilities for user-generated content. “But the question of Spotify’s decision to keep Rogan or not has nothing to do with Section 230 at all,” notes Masnick:
Spotify has every right to decide whether or not to keep Rogan in the same manner that a book publisher gets to decide whether or not they’ll publish a book by someone. And that right is protected by the 1st Amendment. If someone sued Spotify for ‘hosting Joe Rogan,’ Spotify would win easily, not using Section 230, but for failure to state any actual claim, backed up by the 1st Amendment right of Spotify to work with whatever content providers they want (and not work with ones they don’t).
A lot of people want to find a way to blame Section 230 for Spotify’s right to host Joe Rogan. But as with so many instances where Section 230 is blamed, what they’re really mad at is the First Amendment. It’s just that saying one hates the First Amendment and doesn’t believe in free speech isn’t so popular, so people try to complicate matters by invoking a law that many people either don’t know about or don’t understand, and are trying to act as if this comes down to tech companies having some sort of special rights.
Masnick points out that if Section 230 didn’t exist, Spotify would still have a First Amendment right to air whatever music and podcast it chooses and cut deals with their creators:
Spotify, just like a publishing company, a newspaper, a TV cable news channel, would have a 1st amendment editorial right to determine who to allow on its platform and who not to. 230 doesn’t create a right to editorial discretion (both up and down). That already exists thanks to the 1st Amendment.
Indeed, if you’re thinking that Spotify might somehow be liable if someone gets hurt because they listened to someone spreading stupid advice on Rogan’s podcast, that’s not going to fly—but, again, because of the 1st Amendment, not Section 230. As Section 230/1st Amendment expert Prof. Jeff Kosseff explained in this great thread, book publishers have (multiple times!) been found to be not liable for dangerous information found in the books they publish.

QUICK HITS

• An AP investigation into a federal prison for women in Dublin, California, “has found a permissive and toxic culture at the Bay Area lockup, enabling years of sexual misconduct by predatory employees and cover-ups that have largely kept the abuse out of the public eye.”
• Rising mortgage rates are unlikely to thwart inflation in the housing market.
• An Illinois judge has ruled against the state’s masks-in-schools mandate.
• The Atlantic explores “what college students really think about cancel culture.”
• That feeling when you agree with ice cream:

You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war. ⁰⁰We call on President Biden to de-escalate tensions and work for peace rather than prepare for war. ⁰⁰Sending thousands more US troops to Europe in response to Russia’s threats against Ukraine only fans the flame of war.

— Ben & Jerry’s (@benandjerrys) February 4, 2022

• Always read the fine print:

The CDC’s tiny footnote for cloth masks says that the data for it was “not statistically significant.” https://t.co/9ezUJnXaFt

— Jerry Dunleavy (@JerryDunleavy) February 5, 2022

More on that mask research and its flaws here.

Most Popular Stories from Reason.com

 

Clueless Newsom Shocked at California’s ‘Third World’ Conditions
A California Sheriff Remains Free To Rob Armored Cars Carrying Money From State-Licensed Marijuana Businesses
Educators, Please Stop Teaching the Characteristics of ‘White Supremacy Culture’
Amir Locke’s Death Should Incense Anyone Who Cares About Gun Rights
California City Says It Can’t Allow Duplexes Because It’s Already Overrun by Mountain Lions
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.

Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.

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THE ROCK JOINS AUTHOR USING RACIAL SLURS AND TROLL WHO SUPPORTS CHILD RAPE, TAKES BACK SUPPORT OF JOE ROGAN

The Rock was vocal in supporting his friend Joe Rogan against Spotify. WAS, being the operative term. Someon … MORE

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WATCH: AOC DEMANDS BIG TECH CENSOR OPPONENTS EVEN MORE THAN THEY ALREADY DO

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54.) TOWNHALL

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Columnists
Conservatives Must Stop Tolerating Commie Nonsense
Kurt Schlichter
The Liz Cheney Delusions 
Derek Hunter
The CNN Sex Party Comes To An End
Derek Hunter
It IS Russia and it IS NOT a Hoax!
Kevin McCullough
Why The Left Hates Joe Rogan
Scott Morefield
Propaganda and Fear Turns Free People into Bugs
Will Alexander
A Quick, Compelling Bible Study Vol. 99: What We Can Learn from David and Bathsheba
Myra Kahn Adams
Accelerated Buck Passing Ahead
Gil Gutknecht
Conservatives Need to Say Goodbye to GoFundMe
Jeff Crouere
Tipsheet
Here’s What Spotify’s CEO Told Employees After the Latest Rogan Controversy
Leah Barkoukis
Honk! Honk! Canadian PM Won’t Send the Army to Remove Anti-Mandate Truckers for a Simple Reason
Matt Vespa
New Zealand’s COVID Policy is So Atrocious, Pregnant Reporter Was Forced to Turn to Taliban for Help 
Rebecca Downs
House Passage of COMPETES Act Emboldens Congressional Candidates for Midterm Elections
Rebecca Downs
Ted Cruz Calls for Investigation into GoFundMe for Ending Fundraiser for Canadian Truckers
Rebecca Downs
What Happened to One Woman in the ‘Metaverse’ Proves Humanity Isn’t Ready For It…At All
Matt Vespa
Substitute Teacher Ousted After Comparing Student’s Thin Blue Line Mask to to the Confederate Flag
Landon Mion
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1984 Is Somewhat Here, the Left Has Just Cleverly Disguised Government Control as Private Actors
Rachel Alexander
DeSantis, Cruz Want Answers Over GoFundMe Freeze But Money Still Flowing to Truckers
David Krayden
A Suggestion for Joe Rogan that Could Educate the Masses
Michael Brown
Israel’s Apartheid Failure
Jonathan Feldstein
A Triple Threat to Freedom of Speech
Keith Ablow
America Is in Dire Need of a Course Correction
Walker Wildmon
Republicans Slam RNC Over Claim That Jan. 6 Was ‘Legitimate Political Discourse’
Landon Mion
Joe Biden’s Move on Sanctions Waivers for Iran Pleases Nobody
Rebecca Downs
U.S. Ambassador Says China Was Attempting to ‘Distract Us’ By Picking Uyghur to Light Olympic Flame
Landon Mion
Political Cartoons
Bearing Arms
Suspended college prof claims 2A gives white men right to “shoot Black people” | Cam Edwards
Just how commonly are guns found in unlocked cars? | Tom Knighton
Are longer waits for background checks coming to Vermont? | Tom Knighton
Chicago-area man charged with 27 straw buys | Tom Knighton
Bill introduced to create “active shooter” alert system | John Petrolino
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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 Monday, Feb. 7, and we’re covering a big visit from Germany, a continuing drop in COVID-19 cases, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
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NEED TO KNOW

Willkommen Scholz

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz is scheduled to meet with President Joe Biden today, during his first visit to Washington, DC, since succeeding longtime head Angela Merkel in December. The sit-down comes amid the looming possibility of a Russian-led invasion of Ukraine.

 

Germany, a key member of the NATO alliance in Europe, has received criticism for remaining relatively muted as Russian troops amassed on Ukraine’s eastern border. While Ukraine is not a NATO member—a possibility Russia has strongly resisted—some analysts have pointed to Germany’s energy reliance on Russia as influencing decision-making. Germany gets between one-third and one-half of its natural gas supply from Russia.

 

US intelligence has said Russia is at 70% of the military buildup needed along the border to mount a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Scholz is scheduled to meet with Putin next Tuesday.

Omicron Downswing

The average number of new COVID-19 cases in the US has fallen to around 300,000 per day, down more than 60% since the peak of omicron infections in mid-January. The total remains higher than that seen last January, though hospitalizations have dropped to around 110,000 total COVID-19 patients, down roughly about 15% compared to January 2021.

 

Deaths, which lag both case and hospitalization rates, appear to have plateaued at just under 2,500 per day (see data). While less than the daily death rate seen in January 2021, the omicron wave has contributed to a total US death toll from the disease that surpassed more than 900,000 victims over the weekend. More than 75% of deaths have come in those aged 65 years and above.

 

As the presence of the omicron variant subsides, many officials are considering how to treat COVID-19 as endemic—here’s what that means and why endemic diseases may still represent a significant public health threat.

Jobs Upswing

The US economy added 467,000 nonfarm jobs in January, significantly exceeding predictions of 150,000, according to government data released Friday. The unemployment rate rose slightly to 4%, up from 3.9% in December.

 

Officials had foreshadowed a potentially weak report, largely due to a surge in COVID-19 cases that left many businesses and job seekers in limbo. Analysts said the report signals the job market may bounce back quicker than expected as the omicron variant fades.

 

Most of the jobs were added in leisure and hospitality (151,000), professional and business services (86,000), retail (61,000), and transportation and warehousing (54,000), the data showed.

 

The report also revised the job growth for December, which was originally reported at 199,000 jobs added and is now recorded at 510,000. Analysts say the data illustrate economic recovery has been better than expected.

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Gymnema Sylvestre could be the key to destroying your sugar habit. And it’s a key ingredient in Sakara’s Metabolism Super Powder. By masquerading as sugar, it can help your body decrease sugar cravings throughout the week. And moreover, other active ingredients in the Metabolism Super Powder help increase metabolism, promote gut health, boost energy, and ease bloat.

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IN THE KNOW

Sports, Entertainment, & Culture

> Three-time Olympic gold medalist Shaun White, 35, announces this will be his last snowboarding competition (More) | Snowboarder Julia Marino, 24, wins silver, USA’s first medal of this Olympics (More) | See latest medal count (More)

 

> Queen Elizabeth II wants Prince Charles’ wife Camilla to get title of Queen Consort once Charles becomes king (More) | Iconic Bollywood singer Lata Mangeshkar dies at 92 of COVID-19 (More)

 

> Senegal tops Egypt in penalty kicks to win its first-ever Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) title (More) | AFC tops NFC 41-35 in 2022 NFL Pro Bowl (More)

Science & Technology

> Astronomers make first observation of a free-floating black hole; the object has been long theorized but never confirmed directly (More)

 

> Archaeologists uncover the oldest hominin fossil ever found; the 1.5 million old vertebrae suggests human ancestors expanded out of Africa in waves (More)

 

> Researchers discover a highly transmissible and virulent strain of HIV circulating in Europe; officials say current drugs remain effective against the variant (More)

Business & Markets

In partnership with The Ascent
> Technology stocks lead Nasdaq higher Friday (S&P 500 +0.5%, Dow -0.1%, Nasdaq +1.6%); Amazon surges 13%, posts the largest one-day market value gain ($191B) in US history (More)

 

> US gas prices increase to highest level in more than seven years as US oil prices top $90 per barrel, last seen in 2014 (More)

 

> Shares of Peloton surge near 30% in after-hours trading after reports Nike, Amazon, and others are exploring a potential acquisition of the connected fitness business (More)

From our partners: 2022—Your year for a one-card wallet. This card offers up to 5% cash back at places you already shop and 0% APR until 2023 on purchases and balance transfers. All with no annual fee. Making this card the only you need.

Politics & World Affairs

> At least 10 people killed after cyclone passes over Madagascar; an estimated 50,000 people remain displaced, with reports of entire villages swept away by high waters (More)

 

> Crowdfunding website GoFundMe to return an estimated $8M in contributions made to Canadian antivaccine mandate protest (More) | Four injured during a hit-and-run in Winnipeg; officials suggest incident not motivated by protest (More)

 

> Five-year-old Moroccan boy passes away after being pulled from a 100-foot well; rescue effort included four days of excavation, capturing global attention (More)

BALANCE & BLISS

In partnership with Sakara

Sakara’s Metabolism Super Powder harnesses the power of plants to help you transform and feel great in your body. Using ingredients like L-Glutamine (an amino acid that enhances energy) and Fucoxanthin (a plant-based antioxidant that lowers inflammation), you’ll be able to supercharge your mornings and go about the day feeling better.

With noted benefits like decreased sugar cravings, improved gut health, and faster metabolism, the Sakara Metabolism Super Powder is the plant-based, gluten-free, delicious chocolatey powder you didn’t know you needed. Start a new morning ritual to bring balance and bliss to your body—use code SAKARA1440 for 20% off.

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ETCETERA

Rents are still skyrocketing.

 

Natural disasters since the year 1900.

 

Wanderlust: Ranking the world’s best island beaches.

 

Footage from the nation’s capital in the 1940s, colorized and remastered.

 

National Park photographer captures a massive moose.

 

What’s the deal with Central Park’s mysterious gold cube?

 

Chinese bartenders are serving drinks in hazmat suits.

 

Kleptomaniac parrot steals family’s GoPro. (w/video)

 

Clickbait: Competitive eater defeats giant rabbit.

 

Historybook: Charles Dickens born (1812); US bans all Cuban imports and exports (1962); HBD Garth Brooks (1962); “Beatlemania” arrives in America (1964); RIP author and pilot Anne Morrow Lindbergh (2001).

“A day wasted on others is not wasted on one’s self.”

– Charles Dickens, “A Tale of Two Cities”

Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com.

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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH

 


64.) NATIONAL REVIEW

TODAY’S MORNING JOLT WITH JIM GERAGHTY
IS PRESENTED BY

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WITH JIM GERAGHTYFebruary 07 2022
hero

Stacey Abrams’s Outrageous Mask Hypocrisy

 

On the menu today: On Friday, Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacy Abrams visited an elementary school in the Atlanta suburbs and apparently didn’t wear a mask at all, even though all the children and staff around her wore masks. Her campaign now declares that if you object to that absurdity, you are “shameful” and “pitiful and predictable.” Elsewhere, the CEO of Delta Airlines wants the Department of Justice to create a new, second “no-fly list” for disruptive passengers.

Stacey Abrams Doesn’t Believe in Wearing Masks in Schools . . . at Least for Herself

On February 4, Stacy Abrams visited Glennwood Elementary School in Decatur, Ga., participating in the school’s third annual “African-American Read In,” as described by the school’s principal Dr. Holly Brookins.

Abrams tweeted, “Spending time with Glennwood’s amazing students, faculty and staff ranks as spectacular, delightful and outstanding …   READ MORE

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Know the Name of Jimmy Lai

The billionaire Catholic dissident remains in prison, facing possible death for his brave opposition to the …

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New Jersey Governor to End School Mask Mandate

Under the new policy, which takes effect in mid-March, individual districts will still be permitted to implement …

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The CEO said Rogan independently decided to remove more than 100 episodes of his podcast from the platform. 

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65.) POLITICAL WIRE

 


66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS

 


67.) ZEROHEDGE

 


68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT

 


69.) FRONTPAGE MAG

 


70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE

 


71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF

 


72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION

 


73.) POPULIST PRESS

BUSTED! The DOJ is fully weaponized against conservatives

🔥YUGE: Tucker Carlson Targeted By Feds After Exposing Bombshell on Biden

 

TOP STORIES: 

  1. BREAKING: Trump Just Revealed FIRST THING He Will Do If Elected

  2. Bannon Goes For Jugular of FBI After What He Caught Them Doing…

  3. Trump just praised the Republican Party…

  4. Eric Holder’s Plot To Steal The Mid Terms Exposed… He Must BE STOPPED!
  5. Trump Gets Revenge On Pence After Spreading Sick Lie
  6. Tucker Carlson Targeted By Feds After Exposing Bombshell on Biden
  7. Meta’s Disturbing Internal Memo Leaked — It’s Criminal
  8. BREAKING: Car Plows Through Trucker ‘Freedom Convoy’
  9. Mike Pence Goes To Florida, Immediately Stabs Trump In The Back
  10. Communist Chinese Goons Drag Away Reporter Doing Live Olympic Interview
  11. AVENATTI GUILTY AGAIN FOR UNBELIEVABLE LATEST CASE

IN DEPTH… 

  1. It IS Russia and it IS NOT a Hoax!  New
  2. ‘It’s a miserable time’: Retired Navy SEAL chief on ‘Hell Week’ after candidate’s death  4 hours ago
  3. Thousands of Afghan evacuees in ‘legal limbo’ in US  4 hours ago
  4. Man charged for running over four Freedom Convoy protestors in Winnipeg  4 hours ago
  5. Trump applauds RNC censure of renegade Reps. Cheney, Kinzinger  4 hours ago
  6. (Video) Dan Bongino: Misinformation Nation  4 hours ago
  7. Pennsylvania GOP refuses to endorse Senate candidate  4 hours ago
  8. How Russia Could Create an Excuse to Invade Ukraine  4 hours ago
  9. Chesa Boudin’s office accused of rigging case against cop  4 hours ago
  10. U.S. Military Wants to Electrify Its Vehicles – With Help From Detroit  4 hours ago
  11. F‑15 Crash Highlights Japan’s Aging Aircraft  4 hours ago
  12. This is a Nuclear Control Initiative China Should Welcome  4 hours ago
  13. Japan Pushes Masks for 2‑Year-Olds ‘When Possible’  4 hours ago
  14. Can Border Patrol Survive the Biden Administration?  4 hours ago
  15. U.S. Officials: Russian Forces at 70% of Level Needed for Full Ukraine Invasion  4 hours ago
  16. Police Have Picture of Boris Boozing at his Birthday Bash: Reports  4 hours ago
  17. First U.S. Reinforcement Forces Arrive in Poland, With More Expected to Arrive  4 hours ago
  18. Democrats Lost Their Majority in the Senate (For Now) and That’s Kind of a Big Deal  4 hours ago
  19. Rand Paul: Mask Mandates About Submission, Collectivism  4 hours ago
  20. Raheem Kassam: Canada’s Politicians Only Have Themselves to Blame for Trucker Protests  4 hours ago
  21. AOC Says Capitalism Is Not a ‘Redeemable System’ for Most Americans  4 hours ago
  22. 77% Of Students At One Baltimore High School Read At Elementary, Kindergarten Level | The Daily Wire  4 hours ago
  23. Critical race theory is about to segregate America like an open-air prison yard  5 hours ago
  24. The Right to Life Movement Needs to Fight As Hard as the Left  5 hours ago
  25. The border stampede isn’t a Biden a ‘failure’ — it’s exactly what he and Dems want  5 hours ago
  26. Lawsuit Claims Foreign Powers Sought To Help Clinton In 2016  5 hours ago
  27. Biden administration waives sanctions on Iranian civilian nuclear activities as deal talks hang in balance  5 hours ago
  28. Bloomberg Issues Apology After Reporting That Russia Invaded Ukraine  5 hours ago
  29. Baltimore top prosecutor pleads not guilty on fraud, perjury charges  5 hours ago
  30. WhoopiGate Just Got Worse: ‘Anti-Semitic’ Charity Cookbook Recipe Emerges  5 hours ago
  31. Beijing Olympics: Coca-Cola quiet on Uyghur genocide after criticizing Georgia election law  5 hours ago
  32. Spotify Censors Episodes of Joe Rogan’s Podcast — Again  5 hours ago
  33. Maher: Making Kids Wear Masks ‘Is Unnecessary and Horrible,’ and Hurts ‘Their Education, Their Sanity, and Their Social Skills’  5 hours ago
  34. Dwayne Johnson Quietly Deletes ‘Violent Transphobic Tweet’ After Denouncing Joe Rogan  5 hours ago
  35. Share the AMC insanity: ‘Ape’ cult hits its last stand as stock falters  5 hours ago
  36. Ford says chip shortage will force it to halt or cut production at 8 plants: reports  5 hours ago
  37. Delta Asks DOJ to Put Unruly Travelers on No Fly List  5 hours ago
  38. Rumble offers to help GiveSendGo with server problems as fundraiser for Canadian truckers breaks the internet  5 hours ago
  39. BREAKING: GiveSendGo fundraiser for Canadian truckers fighting for freedom reaches $2 MILLION  5 hours ago
  40. Athletes Raise Concerns with Conditions at Quarantine Hotels for Olympic Games  5 hours ago
  41. David Chao, MD: LeBron James’ Knee Swelling Is A Long-Term Concern  5 hours ago
  42. Putin Appears To Fall Asleep While Ukrainian Team Is Introduced At Olympics  5 hours ago
  43. Feds steer $200M in COVID-19 relief to left-wing nonprofit to aid illegal entrants  5 hours ago
  44. NBC Refuses To Air Anti-China Ad During The Olympics, According To Congressman Mike Waltz  5 hours ago
  45. Shaun White says Winter Olympics 2022 will be his final Games  5 hours ago
  46. Canceled: Woke Soccer Player Megan Rapinoe Left Off U.S. Women’s Team Roster  5 hours ago
  47. First responders seeking freedom from unions in Illinois and elsewhere  5 hours ago
  48. Coronavirus school closures hurt low income, minority kids most, study finds  5 hours ago
  49. Virginia House passes bill to prohibit police arrest quotas  5 hours ago
  50. Jan 6 Committee: ‘Devastated for Our Democracy’ over Jeff Zucker’s CNN Ouster  5 hours ago
  51. Poor Nations Face $35 Billion Bill as Debt Restructuring Slips  5 hours ago
  52. Why the $30 Trillion National Debt Could Soon Blow Up in Our Face — Based Politics  5 hours ago
  53. Spotify Begins Deleting Joe Rogan Episodes as Censorship Pressure Mounts  5 hours ago
  54. Why Legendary Investor Ray Dalio Thinks America is Headed Towards Civil War  5 hours ago
  55. White House set for pivot on pandemic…  6 hours ago
  56. As alcohol returns to planes, flight attendants fear ‘unsafe’ workplace…  6 hours ago
  57. Passengers in chaos after cruise ships seized by Feds in Bahamas…  6 hours ago
  58. ‘JACKASS’ Leads Box Office…  6 hours ago
  59. ROLLING STONE mag buys a music festival of its own!  6 hours ago
  60. FACEBOOK metaverse creates ‘personal bubble’ around avatars after rampant groping…  6 hours ago

 

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74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL

 


75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS

 


76.) THE DAILY DOT

Daily Dot

Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect online disinformation—one dumb conspiracy at a time. Today, we take a look at the QAnon world’s latest execution fantasy.

Curated by:

Mikael Thalen

Mikael Thalen, Staff Reporter

Did a friend forward this? Subscribe here.

Former Vice President Dick Cheney

Gage Skidmore/Flickr

ONE DUMB CONSPIRACY 

QAnon followers fall for another execution fantasy—this time involving Dick Cheney

Followers of the QAnon conspiracy theory are once again claiming that a high-profile politician has been executed at Guantanamo Bay.

 

This time, conspiracy theorists are convinced that former Vice President Dick Cheney was hanged at the notorious U.S. military prison.

 

The claim began circulating online last week after an article appeared on a blog known as Real Raw News.

 

The article sensationally claimed that Cheney had been executed at the detention facility after being charged with “treason.”

“Cheney, who on 18 January was convicted of treason and murder and sentenced to death, was hanged at Guantanamo Bay Saturday morning before a quorum of military brass—Rear Adm. Darse E. Crandall and ‘White Hat’ loyalists from other branches of the Armed Forces, excluding the National Guard and Coast Guard,” the blog claimed.

Not only that, the story went on to allege that Cheney had initially survived the execution after a trap door failed to open.

 

Incredibly, the outlandish story quickly spread across the internet. Dozens of accounts shared the allegation on sites such as Twitter.

 

Followers of the QAnon conspiracy theory—which centers around people believing former President Donald Trump is in a secrete battle against a cabal of child-eating pedophiles—have a long-running obsession with Guantanamo Bay.

 

Statistics on the Real Raw News blog itself claim that more than 53,000 readers had viewed the article since its publication.

 

Over 900 commenters on the article gleefully celebrated what they believed was a legitimate news report.

 

“Yay!!!! One less DICK in the world, glad he is dead, jumping for joy, just wish I could have witnessed this mass-murdering bastage [sic] meet the end of that rope,” one commenter said.

 

As should be obvious, the news article is not credible. Real Raw News openly admits in its “About Us” section that the website “contains humor, parody, and satire.”

 

The column continues below. 

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Not only that, the article’s author, who operated under the pseudonym Mike Baxter, has been a well known spreader of disinformation for years.

 

In a statement to the fact-checking website Lead Stories, a duty officer at the Pentagon called the story’s claims “false.”

 

This is far from the first time that Real Raw News has duped QAnon adherents into believing that high-profile politicians were executed at Guantanamo Bay.

 

The site previously made the same claim with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, among others.

Conspiracy theorists’ obsession with Guantanamo Bay led to a frenzy online last August after the naval base announced a routine training drill.

 

QAnon supporters were convinced that the drill was a cover for “The Storm,” a mythical day in QAnon lore in which former President Donald Trump finally executes his political enemies.

 

Yet just like with every other single prediction, the so-called “Storm” never came to pass.

 

Despite the absurdity of such claims, conspiracy theorists just can’t seem to get enough of fake execution claims.

 

—Mikael Thalen

MUST-READS

A photo of the ''Freedom Convoy.''

Conservatives loved the Canadian trucker convoy—until they became convinced it was a false flag

Paranoia runs so deep among some conservatives that even perceived victories are viewed with suspicion.

A vile of wormwood.

Anti-vaxxers are buying stores out of wormwood, which they believe is the next miracle COVID cure

It’s replaced ivermectin as the new miracle cure.

A screenshot of part of a fake meme Rep. Thomas Massie shared on Twitter.

‘In the running for biggest moron in Congress’: Republican shares quote thinking it’s by Voltaire, but is actually from a neo-Nazi

Rep. Thomas Massie is being criticized for sharing the misattributed quote.

Problematic Fave

Can ‘Buffy’ survive Joss Whedon? How to love a problematic fave 

Here are some tips for indulging in your fave comfortably and consciously.*

Jesse Watters

QAnon believers think a Fox News host dropped them a secret symbol on-air

Conspiracy theorists believe Jesse Watters flashed them the letter ‘Q.’

*The Daily Dot may receive a commission in connection with purchases of products or services featured here.

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77.) HEADLINE USA

 


78.) NATURAL NEWS

 


79.) POLITICHICKS

 


80.) BLACKPRESSUSA

 


81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL

 


82.) CNN

  Listen to CNN 5 Things View in browser

5 things

Alternate text

Monday 02.07.22

Tired of seeing empty shelves at your favorite grocery store? More shoppers are turning to smaller convenience stores as a backup, but they’re struggling to stay fully stocked too, especially in rural areas. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day.
By Alexandra Meeks

Police officers walk past parked tractors in Ottawa as demonstrators continue to protest Covid-19 vaccine mandates across Canada.

1

Coronavirus

 

Protests in Canada against Covid-19 restrictions grew over the weekend as authorities face mounting pressure to address blocked roads and increasingly disruptive demonstrations. The Mayor of Ottawa declared a state of emergency yesterday, following two weeks of protests initiated by a group of truckers who began blocking traffic on January 29. Other protests sprouted over the weekend in major cities spanning the nation, including Vancouver, Winnipeg, Toronto and Quebec City. At least seven arrests were made yesterday and about 450 citations have been issued, according to the Ottawa Police Service. The blockades are severely crippling businesses, but some of the protesters say they’re not moving until changes are made.

 

2

Capitol Riot

 

Marc Short, the former chief of staff for Mike Pence, says the former vice president chose to rebuke former President Donald Trump last week because his comments about Pence’s ability to overturn the 2020 election “merited response.” Pence called out his former boss by name on Friday, saying that “President Trump is wrong” in claiming that the then-vice president had the right to overturn the election on January 6, 2021. Short said yesterday he does not believe the riot was “legitimate political discourse,” contrary to a recent statement from the Republican National Committee. Separately, as the House select committee steadily moves forward with its investigation into the insurrection, newly obtained records show Trump spoke with Republican Rep. Jim Jordan the day of the riot. This revelation has prompted the committee to consider moving forward with a subpoena for Jordan after he refused to voluntarily appear for an interview.

3

Electoral Count

 

Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin and Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski are signaling optimism about their work to reform the Electoral Count Act, with Manchin going so far as to say it will “absolutely” pass. The act specifically makes changes to a 19th century law that was intended to give Congress a process to certify the Electoral College votes submitted by the states. Election law experts and those urging reform have repeatedly warned that in light of the attack on the US Capitol, the law needs to be updated and strengthened to ensure that a losing party can never subvert the results of the Electoral College. In an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper yesterday, Manchin cautioned that some representatives are not on the same page about the legislation, but said it is generally receiving bipartisan support.

4

Jubilee

 

Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II used the historic milestone of her Platinum Jubilee to redefine the future of the monarchy, calling for the Duchess of Cornwall to be known as Queen Camilla when Prince Charles becomes King. Prince Charles paid tribute to his mother on her special day, congratulating her as she marks her 70th year on the throne and expressing gratitude for the significant step to redefine royal titles. When Charles married Camilla in 2005, the couple announced she intended to be known as “Princess Consort” despite having a right to the title of Queen. It was seen as a recognition of the sensitivities around a title that was destined for Charles’ first wife, the beloved Princess Diana. The historic celebration over the weekend unfolded under the shadow of ongoing controversy surrounding Prince Andrew, the Queen’s second son, who is fighting a sexual assault case in the US.

5

Joe Rogan

 

Joe Rogan issued an apology on Instagram over the weekend after a compilation of him frequently using the n-word on his podcast spread widely on social media. Rogan said it’s the “most regretful and shameful thing” he has ever had to address publicly. He is also apologizing for a video of him comparing a Black neighborhood to a “Planet of the Apes” movie. Spotify CEO Daniel Ek addressed Joe Rogan’s use of racial slurs yesterday, telling his staff in a memo that while he found the comments “incredibly hurtful” and inconsistent with company values, he did not believe “silencing” the podcaster was the answer. Spotify has removed more than 70 episodes of Joe Rogan’s podcast since last week.

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Kylie Jenner and Travis Scott welcome their second child

Are you still keeping up with the Kardashians? Fans are celebrating the new celebrity baby born on 2/2/22!

 

Why it feels like movies are getting longer

At least warm popcorn can help distract you from the pain of sitting in theater seats for nearly 3 hours.

 

Kelly Slater wins surfing competition days shy of his 50th birthday

Age is just a number! The elite competitor scored another career victory, beating out guys half his age.

 

Bengals’ viral sensation ‘The Cart’ is heading to the Super Bowl

Bengals fans have a quirky affection for this three-tiered metal cart. It even has a dramatic hype video!

 

Billie Eilish paused her concert to help a fan get an inhaler

The popular singer handled the situation so gracefully. We’re sending you air-hugs for this, Billie.

Olympics update

 

Defending Olympic champion Mikaela Shiffrin crashed out of the giant slalom on her first run. “I won’t ever get over this,” said Shiffrin, who is competing in all five alpine skiing disciplines in Beijing.

 

Follow the latest news and highlights from the Winter Olympics here.

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$230,000

That’s how much a tourist in Las Vegas won at a slot machine last month, but was never informed due to a malfunction in the machine. After an exhaustive search, the Nevada Gaming Control Board identified the winner by combing through hours of surveillance videos, interviewing witnesses and analyzing ride share data. Gaming officials said the lucky winner will return to Vegas to collect his overdue prize.

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Does your church need armed guards? Cause our synagogue does.

— JewBelong, a non-profit organization created to welcome and inspire Jewish people, put up four billboards with striking messages throughout South Florida last week to raise awareness about anti-Semitism and make people think about its effects.

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A breathtaking view from the International Space Station

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83.) THE DAILY CALLER

 


84.) POWERLINE

Daily Digest

Link to Power LinePower Line

  • A Cuomo Comeback?
  • A congressional covid committee? No thanks.
  • Common good constitutionalism vs. originalism
  • Crisis for the Climate Models?
  • Trudeau vs. Reality
A Cuomo Comeback?

Posted: 06 Feb 2022 08:59 PM PST

(Steven Hayward)What could be better than Anthony Weiner, Elliot Spitzer, or Hillary Clinton attempting a comeback?

Andrew Cuomo making a comeback, that’s what.

From Monday’s Wall Street Journal:

Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and his aides are intensifying an effort to revive his public standing, including discussing how to make his first public appearance since resigning in August, according to people close to him. . .

Mr. Cuomo and his remaining aides have been calling former allies and political operatives to complain about New York Attorney General Letitia James, who oversaw an investigation that concluded Mr. Cuomo sexually harassed 11 women, including current and former state employees. . .

Here’s the money shot:

Some political operatives who have spoken with Mr. Cuomo or his aides said they think he is considering a run for attorney general this year against Ms. James.

Oh please, please do this. I need more free entertainment. I’m sure there are lots of New Yorkers pining to have him back in office.

Question: What will the nursing home vote look like? Why do I think the vote talley will be higher than the number of occupants of nursing homes on election day?

  
A congressional covid committee? No thanks.

Posted: 06 Feb 2022 05:49 PM PST

(Paul Mirengoff)According to this report, there is bipartisan support for creating a congressional Covid-19 Commission. It would be modeled after the one that, for better or (in my view) worse, examined the 9/11 attacks. The proposed commission would investigate the origins of the coronavirus pandemic and the responses of the Trump and Biden administrations.

The plan is proposed by the top Democrat and Republican on the Senate Health Committee — Sens. Patty Murray and Richard Burr. It calls for a 12-member panel with subpoena power to “get a full accounting of what went wrong during this pandemic,” (Murray’s words) and to make recommendations for the future.

The fact that Patty Murray wants such a commission is two strikes against it. Burr’s support leaves the count at 0-2. Call it a foul ball.

There is probably some merit to conducting a sober investigation of the pandemic, if any entity could be trusted to do it well. But the pandemic has been so politicized that I doubt such an entity exists or could be created.

If there is a body capable of fairly and competently investigating the pandemic, it’s certainly not Congress. Strike three.

However, I can see why members of both parties might want such a commission. There are plenty of Republicans in Congress who either dislike Trump or just don’t want him to be the GOP nominee in 2024. Similarly, a growing number of congressional Democrats would be happy to see Joe Biden swept aside.

A Covid-19 Commission would pave the way for highly publicized attacks, fair and unfair, on the way Trump and Biden handled the pandemic. On the surface, the attacks would seem partisan — Dems attacking a GOP president and Republicans attacking a Democratic one. But the Democratic attacks would serve the purposes of some Republicans and vice versa.

Or am I being too cynical?

  
Common good constitutionalism vs. originalism

Posted: 06 Feb 2022 04:55 PM PST

(Paul Mirengoff)Adrian Vermeule is a law professor at Harvard and a leading proponent of Common Good (or National) Conservatism. He has written an op-ed for the New York Times called “The Supreme Court is on the wrong path.”

I’m not sure what path the Supreme Court is on (we’ll probably have a better idea by the end of June). Therefore, I neither agree nor disagree with proposition set forth in the title.

In the article itself, Vermeule criticizes what he calls “today’s reigning theories of law.” The first is “progressivism,” which he says (and I agree) “shamelessly instrumentalizes the law in the service of a particular vision of social justice centered on identity politics and libertine social and sexual mores.” The second is “originalism,” which he says “pretends to separate law from justice [and] rests on an invented tradition that has projected itself back into the past.”

As evidence that originalism is the wrong track, Vermeule points to the Court’s decision in Bostock v. Clayton County, which found that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 protects against discrimination based on sexual orientation and transgender identity. Justice Gorsuch, a hardcore textualist, wrote the opinion.

But other originalists/textualists reject the conclusion Gorsuch reached. Justice Alito memorably called Gorsuch’s opinion “a pirate ship” that “sails under a textualist flag.”

Thus, the decision in Bostock is less a stain on originalism or textualism than evidence that, like any moderately sophisticated approach to interpretation, originalism and/or textualism can lead to different results depending on which originalist/textualist is doing the interpreting.

As Justice Scalia used to say, proponents of originalism don’t have to show their approach is without flaws. They only need to show that it’s better than the alternatives.

Is common good constitutionalism better than originalism? I doubt it, for reasons set forth below.

In any event, it seems clear that interpreting texts based on what outcome serves the common good can yield different answers to the same question — including whether Title VII protects sexual orientation and transgender identity. Unless the common good is defined theocratically, and maybe even then, it will often be in the eye of the beholder.

Michael Ramsey, a law professor at the University of San Diego and a former Scalia clerk (as is Vermeule), offers this response to Vermeule at The Originalism Blog:

[S]o far I confess that I am entirely unable to understand how [professor Vermeule’s] program is anything other than “courts should rule in accordance with my moral intuitions because that’s best for everyone.” For example. . .I don’t see that common good constitutionalism explains how Bostock should have been decided (though I bet if I knew what his moral position on private sexual orientation discrimination is, I would know how he thinks it should have been decided). And, though I agree on the need to improve the health of the constitutional order, I don’t see how a jurisprudence of common good is going to provide a remedy where there is no agreement on what constitutes the common good.

Though I have no easy solutions to the health of the constitutional order, I would guess that empowering judges to aggressively pursue the common good (as they see it) is not the solution. Instead, I might suggest (1) judges undertake to say what the law is rather than what it should be, and (2) when judges are unsure what the law is, they stay out of it.

(Emphasis added)

That’s how it seems to me, too.

  
Crisis for the Climate Models?

Posted: 06 Feb 2022 01:18 PM PST

(Steven Hayward)One of my heterodox positions on climate change is that many of our scientific efforts to improve our grasp of the earth’s climate system since it became a hot topic (no pun intended) back in the 1970s have actually moved our knowledge backwards. That is, we actually understand it less well than we did 40 years ago.

This is especially true of the heart of the matter: the computer climate models we use to make predictions about future changes in the climate. But as our computer climate models are refined with more and more raw data and endless tweaks of the climate simulations, the uncertainties have arguably grown larger rather than smaller. This is not as outlandish as it may seem, given we are expecting scientists to get a grasp of a phenomenon with so many factors and scientific sub-specialties, from oceanography to forestry.

Few of these difficulties ever make it into mainstream media coverage of climate science—until today. The Wall Street Journal has posted online a long feature that will appear in tomorrow’s print edition entitled “Climate Scientists Encounter Limits of Computer Models, Bedeviling Policy.” Read the whole thing if you have access to the Journal; if not I’ll cover some key excerpts here.

First, deep in the story is an excellent description of the complexity—and also the defects—of climate models. The main climate models contain over 2 million lines of computer code (much of it apparently still in Fortran). Even after an intensive five-year process to rework the code and acquire better data at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), “The scientists would find that even the best tools at hand can’t model climates with the sureness the world needs as rising temperatures impact almost every region.”

One big problem is the resolution of the models, described thus:

Even the simplest diagnostic test is challenging. The model divides Earth into a virtual grid of 64,800 cubes, each 100 kilometers on a side, stacked in 72 layers. For each projection, the computer must calculate 4.6 million data points every 30 minutes. To test an upgrade or correction, researchers typically let the model run for 300 years of simulated computer time. . .

But as algorithms and the computer they run on become more powerful—able to crunch far more data and do better simulations—that very complexity has left climate scientists grappling with mismatches among competing computer models.

The problem is that the 100 km resolution of the models simply isn’t high enough to predict the climate accurately. Steven Koonin’s recent book Unsettled: What Climate Science Tells Us, What It Doesn’t, and Why It Matters, which contains one of the best discussions for the layperson of how climate models work that I’ve ever seen, gilds this point: “Many important [climate] phenomena occur on scales smaller than the 100 km (60 mile) grid size (such as mountains, clouds, and thunderstorms).” In other words, the accuracy of the models is highly limited. Why can’t we scale down the model resolution? Koonin, who taught computational physics at CalTech, explains: “A simulation that takes two months to run with 100 km grid squares would take more than a century if it instead used 10 km grid squares. The run time would remain at two months if we had a supercomputer one thousand times faster than today’s—a capability probably two or three decades in the future.” (I’ll have a long review of Koonin’s book in the next edition of the Claremont Review of Books.)

The Wall Street Journal reports that the newest models kept spitting out even more dire predictions of future warming than many previous models—but that the climate modelers don’t believe the projections:

The scientists soon concluded their new calculations had been thrown off kilter by the physics of clouds in a warming world, which may amplify or damp climate change. “The old way is just wrong, we know that,” said Andrew Gettelman, a physicist at NCAR who specializes in clouds and helped develop the CESM2 model. “I think our higher sensitivity is wrong too. It’s probably a consequence of other things we did by making clouds better and more realistic. You solve one problem and create another.” . . .

Since then the CESM2 scientists have been reworking their climate-change algorithms using a deluge of new information about the effects of rising temperatures to better understand the physics at work. They have abandoned their most extreme calculations of climate sensitivity, but their more recent projections of future global warming are still dire—and still in flux.

Kudos also for the Journal reporting that the latest IPCC report last summer draw back from some of the previous extreme predictions of future doom, something not widely reported, if at all, in the media: “In its guidance to governments last year, the U.N. climate-change panel for the first time played down the most extreme forecasts.”

This passage is also a big problem for the climatistas:

In the process, the NCAR-consortium scientists checked whether the advanced models could reproduce the climate during the last Ice Age, 21,000 years ago, when carbon-dioxide levels and temperatures were much lower than today. CESM2 and other new models projected temperatures much colder than the geologic evidence indicated. University of Michigan scientists then tested the new models against the climate 50 million years ago when greenhouse-gas levels and temperatures were much higher than today. The new models projected higher temperatures than evidence suggested.

Watch for the climatistas to say, “Move along, nothing to see here.”

One big reason the 100 sq km resolution of climate models is inadequate is that the behavior of clouds and water vapor can’t be adequately modeled—something the IPCC reports usually admit in the technical sections the media never read. The WSJ story is similarly revealing on this point:

“If you don’t get clouds right, everything is out of whack.” said Tapio Schneider, an atmospheric scientist at the California Institute of Technology and the Climate Modeling Alliance, which is developing an experimental model. “Clouds are crucially important for regulating Earth’s energy balance.” . . .

In an independent assessment of 39 global-climate models last year, scientists found that 13 of the new models produced significantly higher estimates of the global temperatures caused by rising atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide than the older computer models—scientists called them the “wolf pack.” Weighed against historical evidence of temperature changes, those estimates were deemed unrealistic.

By adding far-more-detailed equations to simulate clouds, the scientists might have introduced small errors that could make their models less accurate than the blunt-force cloud assumptions of older models, according to a study by NCAR scientists published in January 2021.

Taking the uncertainties into account, the U.N.’s climate-change panel narrowed its estimate of climate sensitivity to a range between 4.5 and 7.2 degrees Fahrenheit (2.5 to 4 degrees Celsius) in its most recent report for policy makers last August. . .

A climate model able to capture the subtle effects of individual cloud systems, storms, regional wildfires and ocean currents at a more detailed scale would require a thousand times more computer power, they said.

But shut up, the science is settled.

  
Trudeau vs. Reality

Posted: 06 Feb 2022 11:06 AM PST

(John Hinderaker)The Canadian truckers’ revolt is a classic 21st century conflict. On one side, working people of all sorts (it’s gone way beyond truckers) standing up for freedom. On the other side, vicious plutocrats trying to hang on to their corrupt powers by smearing those who dare to stand up for their rights. Via InstaPundit, check out this wonderful video that contrasts Justin Trudeau’s farcical condemnation of the Ottawa protest with video footage of the reality:

Trudeau’s words versus the reality. Brilliant video!pic.twitter.com/J1mIBqfeHs

— Truckistani Sunqueen (@sunqueentrg) February 3, 2022

Are Trudeau and his supporters delusional? I don’t think so; not Trudeau in any event. He can’t possibly be that clueless. He knows he is lying. What is being exposed here is how out of ammo the left is. They have to continue to pretend that those who advocate for freedom are Nazis in disguise because they can’t deal with the truth.

  
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION

 


86.) THE PATRIOT POST

 


87.) DECISION DESK HQ

 


88.) DIGG

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GOOD QUESTION
How Can I Convince My Husband That The Language He Grew Up Speaking Is Not A Real Language, And Other Advice Column Questions
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LV Anderson rounds up the best advice column questions and answers from the week. This week we have a person who dropped their freeloading brother off at their aunt’s house, a person whose mom thinks their cat is evil and more.
WHAT A DISASTER
Mold, Leaks, Rot: How Brad Pitt’s Post-Katrina Housing Project Went Horribly Wrong
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The non-profit project was launched to feverish buzz with support of celebrities from Snoop Dogg to Ellen DeGeneres to Bill Clinton.
THE PLOT TO SICARIO 3?
Armed Raids, Crooked Cops, And The Wild Battle Over A Breathtaking American Hotel In Tulum
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Impresarios are at war over one of the most gorgeous beachfront properties in the luxury tourist resort town and celeb hang-out of Tulum.
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Someone Built The Coolest ‘Secret Hiding Den’ Inside Their House And Getting There Is Only Half The Fun
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TikToker @partyweave describes himself as “a kid trapped inside an old man’s body” which is even more evident when you see the secret hiding place he built in his house.
‘COME WASH MY BACK!’
What Is the Most Memorable Stunt In ‘Jackass’ History?
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The disgusting yet brilliant franchise returned on Friday. To be honest, though, it’s never really left us.
IT’S GONNA BE DRE DAY SOON
Opinion: Super Bowl 2022 Halftime Show Part Of Nation’s Culture Wars
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The Super Bowl halftime show could end up being the best ever. But even before the event, some are attacking Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg as anti-American.
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‘WE’RE GETTING DRAGGED AWAY HERE’
Here’s The Harrowing Footage Of A Dutch Reporter Being Dragged Away By Chinese Police During A Winter Olympics Live Shot
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Sjoerd den Daas got dragged away by Chinese security officials while attempting to report about the opening ceremony on Friday.
IN THE NEWS
Australia To Reopen To Vaccinated International Travelers This Month
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“There’s been an amazing medical innovation in human culture, and that’s vaccines,” Joe Rogan told infectious disease expert Michael Osterholm back in March 2020.
Today in 1964, the ‘British Invasion’ began when the Beatles arrived in New York City, set to perform on The Ed Sullivan Show two days later.
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK

 


90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE

 


91.) USA TODAY

usatoday.com
Daily Briefing
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7
Annie Polite puts on a button for Ahmaud Arbery outside the Glynn County Courthouse as the jury deliberates in the trial of the killers of Ahmaud Arbery on Nov. 24, 2021 in Brunswick, Georgia.
Ahmaud Arbery’s killers return to court
Federal hate crime trial of men who killed Arbery, Nathan Chen takes the ice in Beijing and more news you need to know Monday.
Good morning, Daily Briefing readers. Jury selection is set to begin in the federal hate crime trial of the men who killed Ahmaud Arbery. Nina O’Brien, the top U.S. woman in the giant slalom, is “alert and responsive” after a scary crash just ahead of the finish line at the Beijing Olympics. And, skating sensation Nathan Chen will take the ice again, this time in the men’s short program.
It’s Jane, with Monday’s news.
🏅 Team USA took home the silver in the team figure skating competition at the Beijing Olympics after Madison Chock and Evan Bates turned in a season-best score in the ice dancing free program. Tap here for the latest updates.
⛷ Nina O’Brien, the top U.S. woman in the giant slalom after Mikaela Shiffrin went out, crashed just ahead of the finish line and appeared to seriously injure her left leg.
Nina O'Brien is attended to after she was injured in a crash during the women's giant slalom.
Nina O’Brien is attended to after she was injured in a crash during the women’s giant slalom.
Eric Bolte, USA TODAY Sports
🔴 “He unified humanity”: The world is mourning Rayan, a 5-year-old boy who died after he was extricated from a Moroccan well after four days.
🧪 “It has very unusual properties”: MIT researchers have developed a new material that’s as strong as steel but as light as plastic.
🎤 “Shameful”: Joe Rogan has apologized after a compilation surfaced that showed him using a racial slur in 12 years’ worth of episodes of his podcast.
👶🏼 Kylie Jenner is a mom again! The Kylie Cosmetics founder announced she gave birth to her second child with boyfriend Travis Scott in a social media post.
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, money and tech reporter Michelle Shen tries to answer whether people are actually leaving Facebook. You can listen to the podcast every day on  Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
Here’s what’s happening today:

Federal hate crimes trial against Ahmaud Arbery’s killers set to begin

The three white men convicted last November of murdering Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery will return to court Monday, with jury selection set to begin in their federal hate crime trial. Last week, Travis McMichael, 35, pleaded guilty to a charge of interference with rights that would have given him a sentence of 30 years in federal prison to serve concurrently with his life-plus 20 years sentence for Arbery’s murder. McMichael withdrew that plea Friday. His father, 65-year-old Gregory McMichael, also withdrew his plea agreement in court filings filed late Thursday. The withdrawals come after a judge rejected the initial terms of the binding agreements, saying she did not have enough information to conclude it was a fair deal. Arbery’s family urged her to reject the deal. The hate crime case will continue against the McMichaels and William “Roddie” Bryan, the neighbor who filmed Arbery’s killing in Brunswick, Georgia, in February 2020.

Day of diplomacy as Russia reportedly builds up troops near Ukraine

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz heads to the White House on Monday amid stirrings of war by Russia over Ukraine and questions of German resolve in Washington. The meeting comes after a report that Russia has assembled at least 70% of the military firepower it plans to have in place to give President Vladimir Putin the option of launching a full-scale invasion of neighboring Ukraine. Scholz is facing criticism over Germany’s economic ties with Russia, particularly the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline that would directly run from Russia to Germany, increasing Europe’s dependence on Moscow for its energy. Also Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron will travel to Moscow for a one-on-one meeting with Putin.

Just for subscribers:

🔴 A Florida man killed his wife and 7-year-old twins. Did medication lead to murder?
⚖️ Supreme Court fight shows why Americans have such a hard time talking about equity for Black women.
🐋  Right whales giving birth are a cause for excitement, but not enough to save the endangered species.
🔵 “This is unacceptable”: After Biden reversed Trump’s Muslim ban, advocates say little has changed.
🗄 Not separate, still not equal: Pressure grows on America’s companies to fix failures of the past.
These articles are for USA TODAY subscribers. You can sign up here. Here is all of our subscriber content.

Nathan Chen set to take the ice again at Beijing Olympics

Men’s figure skating star Nathan Chen is set to take the ice again Monday night for the men’s short program. Chen is coming off winning a silver medal with Team USA in the figure skating team event, starting Thursday by landing both of his quads and a triple axel en route to a season-best score of 111.71 in the short program portion. Also taking place Monday will be a highly-anticipated matchup between the U.S. and Canada in women’s hockey, scheduled for 10:45 p.m. ET on the USA Network. Team USA will look to carry momentum from a dominant 8-0 victory over Switzerland Sunday. For a complete schedule of Monday’s events, check out USA TODAY’s listings.
⛸ Nathan Chen at the Olympics: Get to know the Team USA star.
🏅 Get texts from us from Beijing: Go behind the scenes with updates from our reporters.
🏅 The full picture: Get everything you need to know about the Winter Olympics right in your inbox.
American Nathan Chen competes in the men's short program of the figure skating team event during the 2022 Winter Olympics.
American Nathan Chen competes in the men’s short program of the figure skating team event during the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Anne-Christine Poujoulat, AFP via Getty Images

Probe into Navy SEAL candidate’s death after ‘Hell Week’ training

An investigation is expected to continue Monday to determine why one Navy SEAL candidate died and another was hospitalized after completing “Hell Week” training. The two sailors were rushed to San Diego-area hospitals Friday, several hours after their Basic Underwater Demolition class successfully completed part of the first phase of the SEAL assessment and selection program, the Navy said. The sailors were not actively training when they reported being ill, it added. On Sunday, the Navy identified the sailor who died as Kyle Mullen , 24, of Manalapan, New Jersey. Mullen died at Sharp Coronado Hospital in Coronado, and the other sailor was in stable condition at Naval Medical Center San Diego.

ICYMI: Some of our top stories yesterday

🏈 Opinion: Eric Dickerson’s ailments are a grim reminder of NFL glory’s heavy bodily toll.
📺 Fact-checking “Pam & Tommy”: Pamela Anderson, Tommy Lee and the stolen sex tape.
💰 If you’re anticipating that Social Security benefits are going to help cover most of your expenses as a retiree, you’re in for a big disappointment.
🔵 “I never want to color it again”: “Jackass” Johnny Knoxville talks going gray and his brain hemorrhage.

Court hearing for Saints Pro Bowl running back Alvin Kamara

A court hearing for Saints Pro Bowl running back Alvin Kamara is scheduled for Monday, after he was arrested and charged with battery Sunday soon after he finished playing in the NFL’s annual Pro Bowl. Las Vegas police say they were called to a hospital on Saturday night, when the alleged victim reported being injured in an altercation at a nightclub on the Las Vegas Strip. An investigation led authorities to Kamara, who was taken into custody without incident. Kamara was booked for battery resulting in substantial bodily harm. He remained in jail Sunday night. His bail was set at $5,000.

📸 Platinum Jubilee: Britain’s queen celebrates 70 years on the throne 📸

Queen Elizabeth II cuts a cake to celebrate the start of the Platinum Jubilee during a reception in the Ballroom of Sandringham House on Feb. 5, 2022 in King's Lynn, England.
Queen Elizabeth II cuts a cake to celebrate the start of the Platinum Jubilee during a reception in the Ballroom of Sandringham House on Feb. 5, 2022 in King’s Lynn, England.
Pool photo by Joe Giddens
By definition, Accession Day – the anniversary of when Queen Elizabeth II became the monarch – is as much a day of mourning as a celebration, because it’s also the 70th anniversary of the death of her beloved father, King George VI.
Thus, Feb. 6 has traditionally been a muted affair, one the queen marks by somber reflection in private, usually at Sandringham, her Norfolk estate where the king died in 1952 at age 56 following surgery for lung cancer.
But this is simultaneously the 70th anniversary of the queen’s accession, the longest-ever reign for a British or English monarch. It’s an important milestone and will be marked with royal hoopla during a four-day Platinum Jubilee beginning June 2, when the weather is (usually) better.
Scroll through the gallery of the low-key celebrations over the weekend.
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The Tragic Story of Mike Lindell’s Quack COVID ‘Cure’

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The MyPillow CEO was associated with a “dark money” organization backing the snake-oil coronavirus treatment oleandrin—which has had fatal results.

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‘Euphoria’ Descends Into Total Chaos. What the Hell?!

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The fifth episode of the hit HBO series’ second season sees Zendaya deliver her most comically over-the-top performance to date as her Rue goes on the hunt for drugs.

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1. Trump ‘Confused’ Why Staff Didn’t Enjoy His Riot Rewinds: AP

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The ex-president reportedly didn’t understand why aides weren’t as excited by the footage as he was.

2. Nervous Wait for U.S. Skater After Positive COVID Test

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Vincent Zhou tested positive for the coronavirus hours after helping the U.S. team score a silver medal in the team event.

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4. Baby Dies in Mom’s Arms After Officer Shoots at Migrant Boat

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The boat was traveling from Venezuela when the Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard opened fire.

5. Late-Blooming Old Man of Downhill Just Misses Out on Gold

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At 41 years and 29 days of age, Johan Clary came within a tenth of a second of becoming Alpine skiing’s oldest champion ever.

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93.) JUST THE NEWS

 


94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON

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Untouchable Subjects. Fearless, Nonpartisan Reporting.
(READ) CDC: A quarter of US adults are too inactive
The Centers for Disease and Control (CDC) recently released updated maps representing America’s high level of inactivity. According to the data, more than 1 in 5 adults are said to be inactive in all but four states: Washington, Utah, Colorado and Vermont. (See state maps here) Physical inactivity for adults was defined as not participating […]
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The following post that includes a charitable offer to readers. Some of you know that at the beginning of the Covid shutdowns, I gave away $10,000 total to 100 people who wrote me and said they needed help with groceries. It wasn’t much, but it was something that I hope helped these people and families […]
(WATCH) Canada’s ‘Freedom Convoy 2022’ explained (UPDATED)
The following is a news analysis. Wow, absolutely incredible. pic.twitter.com/MwLgLSj4DF — The Columbia Bugle 🇺🇸 (@ColumbiaBugle) February 6, 2022 The welcome party for Vancouver’s Freedom Convoy. pic.twitter.com/tYTQsbSa43 — Aaron Ginn (@aginnt) February 6, 2022 The massive Freedom Convoy in Canada is still going strong after a full week. The movement’s momentum does not seem to […]
(READ) Trump on Cheney censure, Iowa caucus
– February 5, 2022 –  Statement by Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States of America Congratulations to the Republican National Committee (RNC) and its Chairwoman, Ronna McDaniel, on their great ruling in censuring Liz Cheney and Cryin’ Adam Kinzinger, two horrible RINOs who put themselves ahead of our Country. They have almost […]
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG

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BOMBSHELL: Democrats LOSE U.S. Senate In Stunning Happenstance
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Democrats LOSE U.S. Senate In Stunning Happenstance
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A superfood tree has been quietly making its way into many American backyards.

If you can spot this peaceful invader he’ll provide you with food (all parts are edible), water (it can purify it), more protein and calcium than milk, four times the iron of spinach and… a LOT more:

The Tree That Every Prepper Should Grow in His Backyard

I planted one in my backyard and was absolutely blown away by how fast it grew – over 4′ feet in just 2 months.

Best of all, this tree already grows in many American backyards, so see if it grows in your own backyard as well.

REVEALED: The DOJ Just Unveiled Its NEW GUN TARGET – And It’s Downright Chilling
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The DOJ Just Unveiled Its NEW GUN TARGET - And It's Downright Chilling
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96.) NOT THE BEE

Not the Bee

Not the Bee Daily Newsletter

Feb 7, 2022

Bestselling author Don Winslow slammed Joe Rogan for that N-word clip. Then someone looked through his books.

ImageBestselling author Don Winslow is the type of liberal public figure who ought never to hop on a new pop culture cancellation.

Coast Guard + good Samaritan rescue 18 people stranded on Lake Erie after ice floe breaks off from Ohio coast

ImageWell this is intense:

The awfulness of February, brilliantly condensed into a depressing 2-minute news segment

Image“February is the worst month of the year, but it’s an honest month…”:

Tennessee BLM founder sentenced to 6 years in prison for voting illegally

ImageJust in case the recent news hasn’t been enough to convince you of the undeniable truth that BLM is nothing but a massive griftalicious power and money grab – here’s another shot for ya.

Stacey Abrams actually shared this pic of her bare commie face smiling for a photo op while surrounded by masked-up young children

ImageThis balloonheaded gubernatorial candidate, Stacey Abrams, is so shamelessly comfortable with her status as a ruling class commie to whom no rules apply that she went to an elementary school this week and took this pic:

Enjoy this compilation of powerful Democrats gleefully going maskless while their lowly subordinates are forced to cover their faces 😷

ImageIt seems, after two years of pandemic mania, that there exists two different sets of coronavirus rules throughout the country—one for Democrats, one for the rest of the rabble. Think Gavin Newsom’s maskless, social distance-less Michelin starred dinner, or Deborah Birx’s multigenerational Thanksgiving dinner.

Russell Brand roasts Brian Stelter over Joe Rogan debacle and it’s actually quite good

ImageThis is worth the watch:

For the first time astronomers have located a lone black hole drifting through the galaxy, and it’s kind of a big deal

ImageAstronomers have pretty confidently determined that massive black holes exist at the center of most large galaxies, eating up anything that ventures too close and slowly growing larger.

An American security expert was targeted by North Korean hackers … so he responded by turning off North Korea’s entire Internet

ImageMost of us, when we get hacked, will do the usual: Change our passwords, update our Norton AntiVirus, maybe call the IT guy at work and get some advice.

“Freedom Convoy” truckers amazed by “incredible” support from countrymen providing food, gas, rides: “I’ve never been more proud to be a Canadian”

ImageJust imagine the most beautiful Canadian accent in your mind as you read these truckers describe the support they’ve felt from their countrymen over the past few days.

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97.) FIRST RIGHT

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February 7th, 2022

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02/07/2022 05:02 CDT


LIBERAL GROUP TRIES TO STOP TRUCKER DONATIONS AND MOVE BACKFIRES HORRIBLY; ILLINOIS JUDGE BLOCKS DEMOCRAT MANDATES


TODAY’S TOP TEN

LIBERAL GROUP’S ATTACK ON TRUCKERS BACKFIRES

AFTER BACKLASH, WOKE GOFUNDME will automatically refund “Freedom Convoy” donations. Daily Wire.

NBC REFUSES TO AIR ANTI-CHINA AD during the Winter Olympics. Daily Caller.

BIDEN ADMINISTRATION LOOSENS RESTRICTIONS on Iran nuclear program. ZeroHedge.

WISCONSIN AND PENNSYLVANIA SUPREME COURTS set to rule on 2020 voting laws. Breitbart.

ILLINOIS JUDGE BLOCKS SCHOOLS from enforcing Democrat Governor Pritzker’s mask, vaccine mandates: A “type of evil.” The Center Square.

BUTTIGIEG EXPANDS PROGRAM used to add bike lanes on roads despite soaring cyclist road deaths. Just the News.

AWARD-WINNING JOURNALIST LARA LOGAN quits Twitter, Facebook, Instagram because of their exploitation of children. Daily Wire.

RACHEL MADDOW DECEPTIVELY EDITED DESANTIS’ remarks to claim he never condemned Nazis. NewsBusters.

FEDS STEER $200 MILLION IN COVID RELIEF to left-wing nonprofit to aid illegal entrants. Just the News.

NEW JERSEY MOM, FORCED TO GET VACCINE before a family wedding, ends up in ER. Fox News.


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COMMENTARY WORTH READING

  • Censoring of Joe Rogan is a tactic right out of old Soviet Union. Rebekah Koffler.
  • Are “climate lockdowns” on the horizon? Kristin Tate.
  • Why they are blocking Ivermectin. Henry Smith Jr., MD.

VIDEO WORTH WATCHING

  • Ingraham: BLM under investigation. Fox News.
  • Rubio: Jan. 6th committee a partisan scam. Real Clear Politics.
  • Florida AG slams GoFundMe for potentially illegal business practices. Fox News.

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  • An interview with conservative commentator Rachel Bovard. Rumble.

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  • Couple rescued after being stuck inside a cabin for almost two months. Daily Caller.

TWEETS OF NOTE

  • (@GovRonDeSantis) Physicians in Florida should be able to practice medicine and express opinions without facing sanctions simply because they are not parroting the prevailing “narrative.” Tweet.
  • (@mchooyah) Glacier National Park had signs up warning that the glaciers would be gone by 2020. Ya know, climate change. They’re gone now… the signs. Not the glaciers. Tweet.

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  • RIGHTS GROUP LISTS 10 WORST COLLEGES in America for upholding free speech. FIRE.

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  • War on Cops Escalates Under Biden BONGINO REPORT.

98.) NEWSMAX

 


99.) MARK LEVIN

February 4, 2022

Posted on February 4, 2022

February 4, 2022

On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, Mr. Call Screener and ‘This Is America’ podcast host, Rich Valdes fills in for Mark Levin. There is an information war going on, and we were warned about it by none other than Ronald Reagan. The media is leading this charge, constantly covering for President Biden after a year of lying about Donald Trump, proving they are the enemy of the people. Also, things are out so of control in New York City that Biden had to visit and blame lack of funding among other things. This comes after years of the pro-crime Left’s push to defund police. Crime rates are skyrocketing thanks to liberal policies and lawless District Attorneys, especially in NYC, where two officers were recently murdered. The left has abandoned blue-collar workers. Later, parents need to keep standing up for their children and speaking up at school board meetings. Teaching our kids to be ashamed of their skin color cannot take place in our classrooms. Finally, the White House is reporting on a Russian false flag attack to frame Ukraine and justify an invasion, and the Biden Administration can’t provide one example of proof.

THIS IS FROM:

American Greatness
The ‘Civil War’ Psy-Op

Newsweek
Trump Touts ‘Great Relationship’ With Hispanic Voters as They Sour on Biden

Right Scoop
Gofundme DELETES Canadian Freedom Convoy fundraiser

Rumble
AP to Psaki: Do You Believe Journalists Are Repeating Russian Propaganda by Asking Tough Questions?

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

Image used with permission of Getty Images / Dirck Halstead


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.


KARMA: Facebook Loses $322 Billion Overnight, Mark Zuckerberg Loses Another $2 billion In Net Worth as Facebook stock continues to plummet

Loving the Facebook flame-out on Wall Street.Suspending and censoring users should result in suspending and crushing stock prices. Mark Zuckerberg committed corporate suicide. He destroyed the very mission of Facebook- sharing with family, …

Continue Reading on Site

‘Shambolic’ Covid PCR testing rules meant one in three who isolated were never contagious

More news the Democrat-media-complex is censoring from the American people. Subscribe to GellerReport.com or go to foreign media sources.‘Shambolic’ Covid PCR testing rules meant one in three who isolated were never contagious

Many …

Continue Reading on Site

‘Genocide games’: NBC refuses to run ad critical of China by NBA’s Kanter, Florida congressman

Shame on NBC. Don’t watch these Olympics! Embrace our athletes when they return. But do not reward NBC for broadcasting an Olympics that glorifies Communist China. The ad below from Rep. Mike Waltz is a must watch.Related – GOP congressman …

Continue Reading on Site

China and Russia unveil plan for new world order

The incompetent Biden administration has in one year wrecked America’s strength, credibility, and deterrence. This is the result. Brace yourself for what could be coming in the next three years. Most especially after the Winter Olympics is over. …

Continue Reading on Site

DeSantis, Republican Attorneys General To Launch Probe Into GoFundMe Over Freedom Convoy’s Fundraiser

One immediate action is revoke GoFundMes charitable foundation status. Clearly they are a political organization.If you have a GoFundMe account – delete it.

Any AG not doing the same is an accessory to this crime https://t.co/WbU9n1LeFK …

Continue Reading on Site

WATCH! Schools across America implement BLM Week of Action, calls for ‘disruption of Western nuclear family’

Sending your children to government schools is child abuse.A school in DC forced kindergarteners to march around with BLM signs and chant “Black Lives Matter” pic.twitter.com/wGiuBY13Yg

— Libs of Tik Tok (@libsoftiktok) February 4, …

Continue Reading on Site

‘80% of serious COVID cases are fully vaccinated’: Israel, One of Most Vaccinated Countries in the World, Sets New COVID-19 Case Record

When will the vaccine madness end? When will the vaccine madness end? For the elites and the Democrat media complex Just another data point that will be totally ignored and prohibited.Israel, One of Most Vaccinated Countries in the World, …

Continue Reading on Site

New Jersey mom, forced to get vaccine before a family wedding, ends up in the ER

NJ mom, forced to get vaccine before a family wedding, ends up in the ERMom Kathleen Zemlachenko of Raritan Township, NJ, had COVID plus the antibodies, but needed the jab ahead of a wedding-dress fitting

By Michele Blood | Fox News | …

Continue Reading on Site

Fired Pharmaceutical Workers Explain Why They Didn’t Get COVID-19 Shots

“A lot of us were questioning the shots because they didn’t go through the proper safety and efficacy studies that are traditionally required for all medications. And being in the medical industry, part of our job is discussing safety and …

Continue Reading on Site

Mehdi Hasan and the Cancel Culture Double Standard

The double standard is glaring and obvious, and everyone knows it’s there: when someone who dissents from the Leftist agenda offends Leftist sensibilities, his or her career is ruined for good. Remember Roseanne Barr, Tim Allen, and a host of …

Continue Reading on Site

‘The MAGA Movement Is Here to Stay’: Donald Trump Raises Whopping $122 Million

President Trump is running for POTUS in 2024. And he’s going to win. #Trump2024!Related – Biden approval rating drops to a new low of 41%, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds

‘The MAGA Movement Is Here to Stay’: Donald Trump Raises Whopping …

Continue Reading on Site

At the UN, Israeli Resolution on Holocaust Denial Adopted by Consensus

On Thursday, January 20, the United Nations General Assembly passed “by consensus” – meaning no vote was taken – a resolution calling on the world’s states, and on the tech giants of the Internet, to work to combat Holocaust denial.A …

Continue Reading on Site

Trump Peace: Israel signs security memorandum with Bahrain, its 2nd with an Arab nation

It was more than just a whirlwind stop in Bahrain by Israel’s Defense Minister. History was once again made because of President Trump’s Abraham Accords. When we have a competent POTUS in 2025, the momentum of Abraham Accords will resume. And …

Continue Reading on Site

Geller Report News

  • Freedom Goes GLOBAL

  • WATCH: Cowboys Join Truckers Freedom Convoy

  • BREAKING: Biden Lifts Sanctions On Terror Regime Iran’s Nuclear Program

  • Left-wing groups tell Congress to reject ‘dangerous’ peace accords with Israel

  • Facebook Shuts Down U.S. Trucker Convoy Group
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108.) SONS OF LIBERTY

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Former Pfizer VP: Excessive Deaths Soar In Countries When “Vaccine” Uptake Is High
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GOFUNDME Pulls Truckers Donation Page – GiveSendGo Then Raises More Than $1 Million In 12 Hours, Falls Under DDOS Attack
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First It Was The Truckers, Then It Was The Farmers – Now, Look Who Just Rode In To Support The Truckers Convoy (Video)
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Attorney Reiner Fuellmich Presents Opening Statements At Grand Jury, Court Of Public Opinion: “There Is No Corona Pandemic, Only A PCR Test Plandemic” (Video)
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Kate Shemirani: The Disease Process & Those Who Blazed The Trail In Dietary Healing (Video)
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Just Like Those Leading The Way, From Coast To Coast, Students Stage Multiple Protests To Let The Tyrants Know They Are Done With Masks (Video)
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Registered Nurse Claims Tyrant Justin Trudeau’s “Vaccination” Was Faked (Video)
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Pfizer’s Confidential Documents Confirm Their COVID Shot Could Cause VAED
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109.) STARS & STRIPES

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February 6, 2022 | View in browser
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82nd Airborne troops begin to arrive in Poland

In all, 2,000 troops from Fort Bragg are taking part in the mission in Germany and Poland, which is focused on reassuring allies worried about potential Russian aggression connected to Moscow’s military buildup around Ukraine.

Read more >

https://www.stripes.com/incoming/ah6wom-2-6-22-navy-seal-death-ap.jpg/alternates/LANDSCAPE_300/2-6-22%20navy%20seal%20death%20ap.jpg

Navy identifies SEAL trainee who died after ‘Hell Week’

Seaman Kyle Mullen died at a San Diego area hospital on Friday after he and another SEAL trainee reported experiencing symptoms of an unknown illness, the Navy said.

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As US predicts Russia could seize Kyiv in days, Moscow calls assessment ‘scaremongering’

A senior Russian diplomat dismissed new U.S. military and intelligence assessments — which estimated Russia could seize Kyiv in days and leave up to 50,000 civilians killed or wounded — as alarmist and as unlikely as an attack by Washington on London.

Read more >

https://www.stripes.com/incoming/qi357n-AP22034407586724.jpg/alternates/LANDSCAPE_300/AP22034407586724.jpg

US looks to build on security guarantees to UAE after Houthi missile attacks

U.S. Marine Corps Gen. Kenneth McKenzie Jr. arrived in the United Arab Emirates on Sunday to build on recent measures announced by the Pentagon to help reinforce the UAE’s defenses after attacks by Iranian-affiliated rebels in Yemen.

Read more >

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Former Pentagon chief Mark Esper drops lawsuit over memoir

Former Defense Secretary Mark Esper has dropped a lawsuit against the Defense Department in which he claimed that material was being improperly withheld from his use as he wrote a memoir about his tenure in the Trump administration.

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Mississippi soldier, missing in action in 1942, finally ID’d

The fate of Pvt. Andrew Ladner, a soldier from Harrison County, has been unknown since he disappeared during World War II, during the Battle of Buna-Gona.

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US looks to build on security guarantees to UAE after Houthi missile attacks

U.S. Marine Corps Gen. Kenneth McKenzie Jr. arrived in the United Arab Emirates on Sunday to build on recent measures announced by the Pentagon to help reinforce the UAE’s defenses after attacks by Iranian-affiliated rebels in Yemen.

Read more >

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Crews keep giant C-5M Super Galaxies flying high at Westover Air Reserve Base

The galaxies are used to transport military assets and emergency supplies around the world.

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USS Puller’s ‘Blue Crew’ writes own rule book — one outside job at a time

Blue Crew’s 100-plus sailors often take on jobs outside their official rating. Along with a team of civilian mariners who handle some navigation and the engine room, they run one of the largest and newest kind of ships in the Navy.

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Kremlin is top destination for spooked European leaders

European leaders are hoping to get through to President Vladimir Putin, the man who singlehandedly shapes Russia’s course amid its military buildup near Ukraine and whose designs are a mystery even for his own narrow inner circle.

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Coast Guard rescues 18 stranded on Lake Erie ice floe

Officials said an MH-65 Dolphin helicopter from Air Station Detroit noticed a group of people on the floe near Catawba Island at about 1 p.m. Sunday with several all-terrain vehicles seeking a route back to land.

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111.) UNITED VOICE

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And today, my good friend and colleague, Dr. Steven Gundry, is pulling back the curtain on exactly what it is:

==> This Vegetable Could Be The #1 Danger In Your Diet

DEVELOPING: FBI Finally Reveals NAMES in College Bomb Threat Plot
Details are coming out.  >>
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BREAKING: Liberal Media TITAN Resigns In Disgrace
Good riddance!  >>
[LOOK] – Mysterious Book Found At Library – We Now Know Who Wrote It
It all makes sense.  >>
BREAKING: $200 Million GONE? – U.S. Military Scandal Spirals Out Of Control
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112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO

February 06, 2022

Susan Sarandon Apologizes For Incendiary Post Mocking NYPD Funeral

By Hank Berrien

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CNN ‘Needs To Step Up And Fire Brian Stelter’: CNN Insider

By Ben Johnson

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Cruz Takes Action In Pushing Federal Agency To Investigate GoFundMe For Canceling Freedom Convoy

By Ryan Saavedra

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Co-Host Sara Haines Lectures Public On Whoopi: ‘Prioritizing Punitive Measures’ Instead Of ‘Teaching Moment’ Is ‘Misguided’

By Hank Berrien

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WATCH: Martha MacCallum Challenges National Security Directly On American Energy Independence — He Responds With Uncomfortable Pause

By Virginia Kruta

Read Now

Roger Goodell Calls Lack Of Diversity In Head Coaching Ranks ‘Unacceptable’

By Joe Morgan

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113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES

Former Top House Lawyer Warns Jan. 6 Committee About Going too Far: 'Just Wait If the Republicans Take Over'

Former Top House Lawyer Warns Jan. 6 Committee About Going too Far: ‘Just Wait If the Republicans Take Over’

‘They think they’re fighting for the survival of the democracy and the ends justify the means. Just wait if the Republicans take over.’

READ MORE »
Rep. Jim Jordan and Sen. Roger Marshall Expose Fauci's Web of Deceit

Rep. Jim Jordan and Sen. Roger Marshall Expose Fauci’s Web of Deceit

More than two years into the pandemic, it’s becoming increasingly clear that Americans don’t trust Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top White House COVID-19 adviser….

READ MORE »
Abrams Slammed For Being Maskless Next To Masked Children: ‘This Photo Is Catastrophic’ For Democrats

Abrams Slammed For Being Maskless Next To Masked Children: ‘This Photo Is Catastrophic’ For Democrats

 

READ MORE »
US-Born Figure Skater Who Renounced Citizenship and Defected to China Comes in Dead Last at Winter Olympics

US-Born Figure Skater Who Renounced Citizenship and Defected to China Comes in Dead Last at Winter Olympics

The Chinese people are turning on this Olympic defector after an abysmal performance.

READ MORE »
Texas Drops The Hammer On Border Crossers - They Just Sent Democrats Into A Panic

Texas Drops The Hammer On Border Crossers – They Just Sent Democrats Into A Panic

 

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CNN's New Owner Confirms Network Is 'Leader in News to the Left,' Comms Team Now in Damage Control Mode

CNN’s New Owner Confirms Network Is ‘Leader in News to the Left,’ Comms Team Now in Damage Control Mode

One defense given was that Zaslov was not able to ‘finish his thought.’

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Disgusting: NYC Mayor Used Racist Slur While Bragging About Being Better Than White NYPD Officers

Disgusting: NYC Mayor Used Racist Slur While Bragging About Being Better Than White NYPD Officers

At a time when America is more divided than ever, this disgusting and hateful speech should be condemned by all.

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114.) WAKING TIMES

 


115.) UNCOVER DC

 


116.) DC DIRTY LAUNDRY

 


 


 


 


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