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Supply-Chain Crisis Fuels Latest Retreat From Globalization

Covid-19, climate and geopolitics shatter integrated global production, threatening to end an era of low costs and endless variety.

Nothing embodied the promise of globalization more than the humble supply chain. Thanks to the integration of production across and within borders, consumers have come to expect infinite variety, instantly available.

That is now under siege. The supply-chain crisis of 2021 is fueling the retreat from globalization, much as the global financial crisis of 2008 did.

Three big forces are driving this latest crisis: Covid-19, climate and geopolitics. All have played a part in the semiconductor shortage that has crippled automotive production world-wide. Covid-19-driven demand for consumer electronics diverted chips from car makers, and virus-control measures interrupted production in Malaysia. Extreme weather idled chip factories in Texas and threatened to do the same in Taiwan. And U.S. tariffs and export bans ran down chip inventories in the U.S. while prompting hoarding by Chinese buyers, according to Chad Bown of the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Those forces also contributed to Britain’s energy crisis. Covid-19 and Brexit reduced the number of truckers available to deliver fuel while a lack of wind reduced renewable power at a time when natural-gas reserves were low. China’s economy has been tripped up by shutdowns intended to stamp out all Covid-19 outbreaks or meet carbon reduction goals, and coal shortages were aggravated by a punitive ban on imports from Australia for demanding an inquiry into Covid-19’s origins.

Two decades ago, investors and bankers took for granted that credit would always be available at some price and built entire businesses around that premise. The result was a tightly interconnected financial system with no margin for error that seized up in the face of a shock.

Similarly, the supply-chain crisis was made possible by how integrated and efficient global production had become. Businesses adopted outsourcing and offshoring, just-in-time inventories, and “capital-light” models that split design from production. The share of world trade accounted for by global value chains—in which a product crosses at least two borders—rose from 37% in 1970 to 52% in 2008, where it plateaued, according to the World Bank.

Today, companies and governments are waking up to the risks of dependence on far-flung suppliers and the absence of shock absorbers in vital links, from seaborne freight to electricity transmission. For example, there are more than 50 points in the global semiconductor supply chain ”where one region holds more than 65% of the global market share,” according to a report by Boston Consulting Group and the Semiconductor Industry Association. “These are potential single points of failure that could be disrupted by natural disasters, infrastructure shutdowns, or international conflicts.”

Covid-19 is the biggest shock to this system, shutting down production, closing borders and driving workers out of the labor force. A mutating virus, resistance to vaccine mandates and China’s zero-Covid-19 policy all mean Covid-19 remains a threat to the supply chain. But it should recede as natural immunity and vaccination reduce the virus’s lethality and governments outside China conclude restrictions and border closures are too costly a response to outbreaks.

Climate risks are likely to grow, because of both more frequent extreme weather  and the transition to renewable energy, which lacks the capacity buffers of fossil fuels. The oil market is global: Supply in one place can meet demand in another. While oil’s price can gyrate, supply almost never disappears thanks to spare OPEC capacity, private inventories and government-maintained emergency reserves. Though less mobile than oil, natural gas can still be stored and, increasingly, exported in liquid form.

By contrast, solar and wind energy are generally consumed as they are generated, and can disappear altogether if wind or sun are absent. “No clean energy OPEC currently holds spare renewable energy capacity in reserve,” notes Kevin Book, research director of advisory ClearView Energy Partners LLC, in a recent report. This can only be solved through investment in transmission and battery storage, which lags far behind investment in generation, the International Energy Agency indicated last week, even as investment in fossil fuels flattens. “Something has to change quickly or global energy markets face a turbulent period ahead,” it warned.

Protectionism has been intruding on supply chains at least since 2008 when the Doha round of global trade talks collapsed. The U.S.-China trade war took those frictions to a new level. In its wake, the U.S., China and Europe are all pursuing self-sufficiency in key sectors such as semiconductors and batteries. Other threats loom, such as green tariffs on high-carbon imports. Meanwhile, arbitrary import bans and detentions are now routine parts of China’s foreign-policy tool kit, as export controls are part of the U.S.’s. Former President Donald Trump’s regular threat of sanctions and tariffs to further domestic goals ended when he left office, but companies and trading partners must plan for his possible return in a few years.

Not all the pressures on supply chains are against globalization. Technology continues to increase the potential to outsource, especially in services. Nonetheless companies are likely to revisit practices they once took for granted such as holding minimal inventories and sourcing key components from politically risky places. In a report this week, Bank of America equity strategists found companies in the S&P 500 index had 2% more manufacturing locations in the U.S. in 2000 compared with 2018, but 5% fewer in Asia.

Just as the financial crisis drove banks and regulators to prioritize resilience over efficiency, the supply-chain crisis will likely result in production networks more resilient to surprises but less able to delight consumers with ever more choice at ever lower cost.

China’s Bullying Is Becoming a Danger to the World and Itself

Ever since Deng Xiaoping opened China to the world in the late 1970s, many in the West wanted to see the country succeed, because we thought China — despite its brutal authoritarian political structure — was on a path to a more open economy and society. Alas, President Xi Jinping has reversed steps in that direction in ways that could pose a real danger to China’s future development and a real danger to the rest of the world.

Everything Xi is doing today is eroding trust among Chinese and foreign entrepreneurs about what the rules of business are now inside China, while at the same time eroding trust abroad that China — having swallowed Hong Kong — won’t soon move on Taiwan, which could trigger a direct conflict with the U.S.

While I don’t want Xi’s hard-line strategy to succeed — that would pose a danger to every free country and economy in the Pacific — I also don’t want China to fail or fracture. We’re talking about a country of 1.4 billion people whose destabilization would affect everything from the air you breathe to the cost of your shoes to the interest rate for the mortgage on your house. It’s a real dilemma. Alas, though, I don’t think Xi realizes just how much uncertainty his recent behavior has injected — inside and outside China.

For those of you who have not been keeping score at home, let me explain by starting with a question: What would you have thought if you’d looked at this newspaper in 2008, a year after the Apple iPhone was released, and the front-page headline said that Steve Jobs had disappeared? There would be millions of searches on Google: “Where is Steve Jobs?”

Well, if China has a Steve Jobs equivalent it’s Jack Ma, the co-founder of the e-retail giant Alibaba. Has anyone seen Ma lately? I guarantee you that more than a few people have asked Google this year, “Where is Jack Ma?”

Although news reports said that Ma had surfaced briefly in Hong Kong, there has also been talk that he may have been under some kind of house confinement during the last year. Ever since Ma gave a speech in October 2020 that criticized China’s financial regulators, Xi has cracked down on Alibaba’s global empire and blocked what would have been a record initial public offering of an affiliate company set to have taken place last November.

It was as if Xi said: “You know, if I have to choose either having Alibaba, Tencent, Baidu and all the other Chinese tech giants be global champions — with their own massive financial and data resources but growing beyond the grasp of the Chinese Communist Party — or having them be second-tier companies under my control, I’ll choose door No. 2.”

Xi has clearly watched how Western tech companies have exacerbated social tensions in their societies, widened income gaps and established monopolies that can dominate governments — and he wants none of that unfettered capitalism for China. I get that. But making their founders vanish? More than a few young Chinese innovators have to be asking themselves: “What’s my future here? What are the new rules?”

A second story: After the Australian foreign minister, Marise Payne, expressed support last April for an independent investigation into the origins of the coronavirus pandemic, China reacted by slashing its imports of Australian barley, beef, wine and coal. Really? It was an absurd, bullying overreaction that every one of China’s Pacific neighbors noted.

Then, two weeks ago, China sent 150 People’s Liberation Army aircraft to probe the airspace near Taiwan, just the latest reminder that China is seriously laying the groundwork to seize Taiwan by force. You should be afraid.

But so should Beijing. Because this bullying behavior could be a huge miscalculation by Xi — for many reasons, but none more than this: semiconductors.

Yup, those little chips that are the building blocks of the 21st-century digital economy are a hidden underbelly of this drama.

Taiwan is an austere rock in a typhoon-laden sea with 24 million people. But this little island has — by universal acclaim — the most sophisticated microchip manufacturer in the world, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, or TSMC.

About 100 miles away, across the straits, is mainland China, with 1.4 billion people. They are the same ethnicity, speak the same language and eat the same food as the people of Taiwan. But they have never been able to master the manufacture of the most advanced logic chips that TSMC makes.

TSMC is the world’s largest contract manufacturer of microchips, owning some 50 percent of the market, though Dan Wang, a technology analyst at research firm Gavekal, said in March of TSMC’s market share, “I think that still understates how important it is, because these are some of the most advanced chips out there.”

Indeed, TSMC and its South Korean rival Samsung have the only foundries in the world able to make the most advanced 5-nanometer chips, and TSMC is expected to begin next-generation 3-nanometer chips in 2022. The smaller the chip’s transistors, the more brain power you can pack onto it. China’s biggest chip maker, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation, is not even close. It is mainly competing at 28 nanometers and just starting to produce some 14-nanometer chips.

I recently spent time in Silicon Valley asking U.S. chip designers what is the secret of TSMC’s sauce that China cannot replicate.

Their short answer: trust.

TSMC is a semiconductor foundry, meaning it builds the chips that lots of different companies design — particularly Apple, Qualcomm, Nvidia, AMD and even Intel. Over the years, TSMC has built an amazing ecosystem of trusted partners that share their intellectual property with TSMC to build their proprietary chips. At the same time, leading tool companies — like America’s Applied Materials and the Netherlands’ ASML — are happy to sell their best chip-making tools to TSMC. This ensures that the company is always on the cutting edge of the material science and lithography that go into building and etching the base of every semiconductor.

And since it is the main supplier of chips for Apple products, TSMC is constantly being pushed to go beyond the frontiers of innovation to accommodate Apple’s nonstop and short product cycles for new phones and iPads. It forces the whole TSMC ecosystem to get better and better, faster and faster. So TSMC’s costs keep going down, the value of its ecosystem keeps going up and the number of people who can join and benefit from it keeps getting wider and wider.

“TSMC always acted like a start-up — it was driven — and it was always synthesizing the best of everyone,” explained Steve Blank, a semiconductor innovator, who runs a course at Stanford on the geopolitics of advanced technologies. Intel, America’s premier chip maker, kind of lost its way, making everything by itself and for itself, added Blank. “So it did not have customers pushing it, because Intel was its own customer, and as a result it became complacent.” Pat Gelsinger, Intel’s new C.E.O., has begun to reverse that.

I used to worry that Xi’s big idea — “Made in China 2025,” his plan to dominate all the new 21st-century technologies — would leave the West in the dust. But I worry a little less now. I have great respect for China’s manufacturing prowess. Its homegrown chip industry is still good enough to do a lot of serious innovation, supercomputing and machine learning.

But the biggest thing you learn from studying the chip industry is that all its most advanced technologies today are so complex — requiring so many inputs and super-sophisticated equipment — that no one has the best of every category, so you need a lot of trusted partners.

And if China thinks it can get around that by seizing Taiwan just to get hold of TSMC, that would be a fool’s errand. Many of the key machines and chemicals TSMC uses to make chips are from America and the European Union, and that flow would immediately be shut down.

Nope, you can’t make the best chips in the world today without silicon or trusted partners. And everything that Xi is doing — from Australia to Taiwan to Jack Ma — is driving them away. As one U.S. chip executive said to me of Xi, “The Chinese have replicated and mimicked,” but they have never created the kind of ecosystem like TSMC’s, “because there is no trust.”

Video: Army Training Includes Graphic Novel Where CDC, Vaccines Emerge as Saviors in “Zombie Pandemic”

Footage of US Army officers receiving “Zombie Pandemic” training has gone viral on socials, with many questioning what the US government could be up to.

In a TikTok uploaded two days ago now seen over a million times, an Army recruit films during a classroom lecture where the study material includes the CDC’s “Preparedness 101: Zombie Pandemic” graphic novel.

@brandonbutcher5

Cdc sayin somethin???😂🧟‍♂️🩸 #cdc #Army #biden #trump #wtf

♬ original sound – Brandon Butcher

“Cdc sayin something???” reads a video caption, followed by a cry face laughing emoji and hashtags including #biden, #trump and #wtf.

The comic book, which provides lessons on emergency preparedness, was created in 2011 and is evidently still being used as an Army training tool.

More on the comic’s origins via Wired, circa Oct. 2011:

LAST WEEK, JUST in time for NY Comic Con, the Centers for Disease Control went live with a graphic novel following up on their May blog post “Preparedness 101: Zombie Apocalypse.” The head of the CDC’s Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response was on hand at NYCC this past weekend, where he handed out hardcopies of the comic and even spoke on the “Zombie Summit” panel.

In the story, readers follow Todd, Julie and their dog Max as they learn of a virus, take appropriate preparedness actions and fend off the attacking zombies. Readers will also learn about how the CDC worked feverishly on a vaccine to combat the virus. By the end of the story, the vaccines are distributed to Todd and Julie, who are hunkered down in a shelter. Stay tuned for a surprise at the end!

Aside from being decade-old government propaganda, there are eerie similarities between the story’s plot and happenings during the current manufactured Covid crisis.

In the story, the CDC is propped up as the savior of the pandemic as the comic’s protagonist Todd immediately consults their website on what to do.

Local news reporters instruct residents to quarantine inside their homes, with the CDC promising a vaccine is being developed to stop the pandemic.

“The CDC is working with local health departments on a vaccine. Until then…bunker down and don’t go outside unless you have to!” a fictional TV news report states.

Next, more counties issue emergency stay-at-home orders, as “area hospitals are being overrun.”

The comic cuts to CDC researchers discussing how the zombie virus “appears to be a highly mutated form of the flu” labeled “Z5N1,” with scientists rushing to develop an untested vaccine.

Meanwhile, Todd and his family head to a school gymnasium converted into a makeshift shelter accessible only with a blood test screening and guarded by the US military.

In the end, the CDC ships out newly-created experimental vaccines which are set to be distributed amongst the general population.

In the graphic novel, Todd eventually wakes up and realizes his zombie nightmare was just a dream; sadly real life has not given us the same luxury.

Perhaps the comic wasn’t only a lesson in emergency preparedness, but also a foreboding signal of what was to come.

BIDEN FACES DEADLINE FOR RELEASE OF MORE JFK ASSASSINATION PAPERS

(The Intercept) John F. Kennedy was assassinated 58 years ago, but the U.S. government has balked at the full release of some secret CIA documents.

PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN will soon decide an obscure but potent question: Which secret files related to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy should be made fully public?

When President Donald Trump faced the same decision four years ago, he delayed in the name of national security. While releasing thousands of files about the 1963 Kennedy assassination, Trump acquiesced to the demand of CIA Director Mike Pompeo to keep portions of thousands more secret until October 2021, 58 years after Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested as the gunman. For all his “deep state” rhetoric, Trump issued a memo giving the executive branch agencies four more years of secrecy.

Will Biden follow the law? The JFK Records Act, passed unanimously by Congress in 1992, called for “expeditious public transmission” of all JFK files into the public record. Twenty-nine years later, the intent of Congress has been effectively nullified by the demands of federal agencies, particularly the CIA, which is responsible for 70 percent of the withheld records. The National Archives website says 15,834 JFK files that have been released remain redacted, though some redactions involve only a single word.

Kennedy was shot dead as his motorcade passed through downtown Dallas on November 22, 1963. Oswald, a 24-year-old leftist, was arrested 90 minutes later. He denied shooting Kennedy, claiming he was a “patsy.” The next day Oswald was shot dead on national TV by Jack Ruby, a nightclub owner with organized crime connections. The causes of Kennedy’s death have been debated ever since.

Federal Judge John Tunheim, chair of the civilian review board which declassified more than 300,000 JFK documents in the 1990s, called on Biden to release the JFK files without exception. “Why keep on holding back stuff?” Tunheim told The Intercept. “I don’t think there is any reason to protect any of it.”

What’s in the files?

The most sensitive JFK secrets involve U.S. operations against Cuba in 1963. Oswald was a public supporter of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, or FPCC, a popular campus group which defended Fidel Castro’s government from aggressive U.S. policies. Records declassified in the 1990s revealed that the CIA targeted the FPCC for disruption in September 1963. Within the records that have been partially released, propaganda sources, deception methods, and surveillance techniques are often redacted.

One passage in a file on Operation Northwoods, a top-secret Pentagon operation that aimed to provoke a U.S. invasion of Cuba, is still off-limits to the public. Approved by the Joint Chiefs of Staff in May 1963, the Northwoods plans envisioned an “engineered provocation” to replace Cuba’s socialist government with a pro-American regime. Northwoods called for the “the most trusted covert personnel” to stage a spectacular crime on a U.S. target and arrange for the blame to fall on Castro, so as to create a “justification for U.S. intervention in Cuba.” The Northwood plans were discovered by the Assassination Records Review Board in 1997. Two paragraphs of the 200-page document remain classified in 2021.

Other files that have not been fully released include the following:

  • The surveillance techniques that detected Oswald’s visits to the Cuban and Soviet embassies in Mexico City six weeks before Kennedy was killed are redacted in this 1963 memo and this internal CIA history.
  • Within hours of Kennedy’s assassination, CIA propaganda assets funded under a secret program called AMSPELL generated press reports linking Oswald to the FPCC, with the implication that Castro was behind the president’s murder. One 86-page AMSPELL file from 1964 contains 15 pages of redacted material.
  • The personnel file of George Joannides, a Miami-based undercover officer who guided and monitored the AMSPELL agents in 1963, is heavily redacted. In 2018, a U.S. Court of Appeals panel upheld the CIA’s rejection of the Freedom of Information Act request for Joannides’s files.
  • Another heavily censored file documents the AMLASH conspiracy, a CIA plot to kill Castro that failed, though not for lack of trying. The file runs to 232 pages with scores of redactions. The AMLASH plot became a focus of the JFK investigators in 1975 when it was revealed that a CIA officer had passed a lethal weapon to Castro’s would-be assassin on the day JFK was killed.
  • Some CIA files relate to propaganda operations inside the United States, nominally forbidden by the agency’s charter. A history of the Miami station is heavily redacted. So is the 1975 testimony of an undercover officer who described CIA activities in south Florida and New Orleans, including the use of “prominent newspaper officials in the Miami area.”

There are scores of similar erasures in the JFK files that illuminate how the letter and spirit of the JFK Records Act is being flouted by extreme claims of secrecy. The information withheld hardly seems earthshaking, but the full significance of the last of the JFK files can only be assessed after full disclosure. Biden’s decision is expected on October 26.

FBI reports 59 officers have been murdered this year, a 51% spike compared to 2020

The FBI is reporting that 59 law enforcement officers have been feloniously killed in the line of duty so far this year, a 51% spike compared to the 39 deaths at this time last year.

The 59 officer deaths mean about one officer has been murdered every five days this year, the head of FBI Boston’s division told the Herald on Monday.

The rising assaults on law enforcement officers are both “disturbing” and “alarming,” added Joseph Bonavolonta, special agent in charge of FBI Boston.

“There’s been a tremendous uptick in the felonious killings of officers,” he said, later adding, “And not only are the numbers dramatically rising over the last couple of years, the percent of unprovoked attacks has significantly risen.”

These unprovoked attacks, combined with pursuits, tactical situations and ambushes, have been the cause for 74% of the felonious deaths so far this year. In 2020, those four circumstances represented 28% of the deaths.

“It’s a real significant cause of concern for us,” Bonavolonta said.

“The increase of violence against law enforcement officers is alarming,” he added, saying the issue “quite frankly has not received the attention that it really deserves.”

The FBI is also reporting 46 accidental officer deaths so far this year, a 24% increase from the 37 deaths at this time last year.

Of the 46 deaths, 24 fatalities were a result of a motor vehicle crash — and 16 of those vehicle deaths happened while the officer was on patrol.

So far this year, 183 officers have died from the following medical conditions: 169 died in the line of duty from illnesses related to COVID, 12 officers died due to heart attacks, one officer died due to other natural causes, and one officer died from conditions associated with responding to 9/11.

The FBI has also released its annual report on law enforcement officers assaulted in the line of duty. Last year, more than 60,000 law enforcement officers were assaulted while performing their duties. That’s 4,071 more officers assaulted in 2020 than the 56,034 assaults reported in 2019.

Of the 60,105 officers who were assaulted in 2020:

* 18,568 sustained injuries

* 44,421 officers were assaulted with personal weapons (hands, fists or feet); 25.8% of these officers were injured

* 2,744 officers were assaulted with firearms; 6.1% of these officers were injured

* 1,180 officers were assaulted with knives or other cutting instruments; 9.7% of these officers were injured

* The remaining 11,760 officers were assaulted with other types of dangerous weapons; 16.8% of these officers were injured

Of all the officers assaulted in 2020, agencies reported officers were involved in these circumstances:

* Responding to disturbance calls such as family quarrels or bar fights (29.6%)

* Attempting other arrests (16.1%)

* Handling, transporting or maintaining custody of prisoners (12.6%)

* Investigating suspicious persons or circumstances (8.8%)

* Traffic pursuits or stops (8.4%)

* Civil disorder, such as mass disobedience or riots (4.1%)

* Handling persons with mental illness (3.9%)

* Burglaries in progress or pursuing burglary suspects (1.3%)

* Ambush situations (0.8%)

* Robberies in progress or pursuing robbery suspects (0.8%)

* All other types of circumstances (13.6%)

Colorado Teachers Allegedly Force Kids To Tape Masks To Their Faces, School District Launches Investigation

Middle school students ordered to tape masks to their faces, mom complains “It’s a type of a restraint to me.”

A Colorado school district says it has launched an investigation after Michelle Malkin shared the story of a 6th grade student in Colorado Springs who says students are punished by being forced to tape face masks to their face if they are caught letting it drift below their nose.

According to Malkin, the student’s mother “rushed to Chinook Trail Middle School” after receiving a text message from her daughter about being given “blue painter’s tape to seal the mask to her face.”

In text messages shared by Malkin, the mother confronts her child, Rylee, over the blue tape and demands to know why it is on her face. The 6th grade student replied, “It’s a new thing, if we can’t keep our mask on our nose, we get taped!” The student added, “I open my mouth and then the mask goes.”

The mother, identified as Stephanie M. by Malkin, asked who is instructing them to use this tape. “All teachers,” replied her daughter.

In an audio conversation about the school’s mask mandate shared to social media, the child explained, “First we get a warning and then like they give us tape, and we do it our selves so we can like learn.” An adult questioned, “What happens after the warning?”

The 6th grade student replied, “You get tape.” When an adult asked what happens if students refuse the tape, and whether any students have refused, the student replied, “No.”

On October 18, Malkin reported that she contacted the Chinook Trail Middle School principal and District 20 superintendent Thomas Gregory. “No response,” wrote Malkin. “Parents and 1 state rep. have pressed for a public parents’ meeting on the mask mandate since late September. No response.”

Malkin reports that Rylee, the student, has been pulled from the school effective last Friday. “It’s wrong. It’s child abuse,” Stephanie M. told Malkin. “And it was a horrible decision to implement the mask mandate.”

Local media later reported that the district had opened an investigation into the reports that children are given blue painter’s tape and must adhere masks to their face with the adhesive.

“With the mask mandates and everything… she likes them because they hide her face ’cause of acne or whatnot. What really made me sad was that she didn’t see what was wrong,” Stephanie told Fox 21 News. “It’s a type of a restraint to me,” she added.

“It’s developing some sort of mentality in our children,” she told the news outlet. “Your face is you, that is how people know you. They are just doubling down on hiding you and not letting you breathe and… it’s conformity to the extreme.”

Despite photos and statements made public by the student’s mother, the school district claims they “do not have concrete findings.” Describing the reports as “serious allegations” in an email to parents, the district then thanked parents for their “patience and support” while they “take the appropriate steps.”

“We’ve heard rumors that students did it on their own; we’ve heard rumors that teachers handed out the tape; we’ve heard rumors that teachers joked about it, but the students got the tape,” D-20 Chief Communications Officer Allison Cortez told the local television station. “There are so many versions of this story. That is why we need to actually talk with every single student and find out what really happened.”

Meanwhile, regardless of the exact scenario that led to children placing tape on their faces, the El Paso County Health Department advises against taping masks. In a statement obtained by Malkin, the agency explained that it “is not involved” in the allegations against the school, but at the same time, “EPCPH would not recommend taping masks.”

Joe Biden Job Approval Average Crashes to New Low

His Fraudulency Joe Biden’s average job approval rating has just hit a new low of 42 percent in the RealClearPolitics poll of polls.

In just two months, Biden collapsed from a healthy 50 percent average approval rating and 46 percent average disapproval rating to what is now 42 percent average approval rating and 51.3 percent average disapproval rating.

In other words, Biden had been four points above water. Today he is 9.3 points underwater. That’s a massive swing of 13.3 points to the negative in just eight or so weeks.

Of the last ten polls released, Biden has been upside down in eight of them. Only fake pollsters, such as CNNLOL and Reuters, have not shown Biden with a negative rating. CNNLOL embarrassed itself by releasing a poll that showed Biden with a 50 percent approval rating and a 50 percent disapproval rating. The Reuters hoax poll showed Biden at +1, with 48 approve, and 47 percent disapprove.

One of the most interesting developments we see in the polling is a couple of examples where Biden actually does worse with surveys of “all adults” than the tighter screened “registered voters.”

Democrats tend to poll better as you decrease the screening process, and they tend to do better with “all adults” as compared to “registered” and, most especially “likely” voters.

For example, one of the most left-wing pollsters out there, Quinnipiac, shows Biden with a 41 percent approval and 51 percent disapproval among registered voters. But among “all adults,” his job approval rating crashed further to 37 percent approving and 52 percent disapproving.

This finding is backed by a just-released Grinnell College poll that has Biden sitting at 37 percent approve, 50 percent disapprove among “all adults.”

On his handling of specific issues, the RealClearPolitics averages show nothing but bad news for Slow Joe.

By a margin of 42.3 percent approve and 50.8 percent disapprove, Rapey Joe is upside down on the economy by 8.5 points.

By a margin of 49.4 approve and 44.6 disapprove, Biden is only right-side-up 4.8 point on his handling of the coronavirus, which was supposed to be his strong suit. There was a time he was up by double digits.

On immigration, he’s upside down by a whopping 26.9 points thanks to a 31.8 percent approval rating and 58.7 percent disapproval rating.

On foreign policy, he’s upside down by 14.8 points. Only 38.4 percent approve, while 3.2 percent disapprove.

Where Biden is really crumbling is with Independent voters. In 2020, Biden allegedly beat  Trump among Independents by a margin of 52 to 43 percent.  Quinnipiac currently has Biden’s approval among Independents at just 28 percent.

Everything that could go wrong is going wrong under Biden, and it is going wrong because of Biden.

He’s the one who botched Afghanistan. He’s the one overheating the economy with the cruel tax of inflation created by his insane spending. He’s the one flooding the country with unvaccinated illegals.

He’s the one undermining confidence in the coronavirus vaccine. He’s the one who hired a sociopathic small-town mayor to run transportation and who went on paternity leave as our supply chains fell apart.

He’s the one strangling our energy sector, which is exploding energy prices.

White House Admits To Secretly Trafficking Planes Full Of Illegal Children From Border In Middle Of The Night

“It’s no surprise that kids can be seen traveling through states, not just New York.”

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki was forced to admit Tuesday that the Biden administration is shipping planeloads of illegal immigrant children to New York City and elsewhere in the middle of the night after photos and footage was captured by The New York Post.

The practice has been ongoing, with destinations not limited to New York, prompting Fox News reporter Peter Doocy to confront Psaki on it.

“Why is the administration flying thousands of migrants from the border to Florida and New York in the middle of the night?” Doocy asked.

“Well, I’m not sure that’s in the middle of the night. But let me tell you what’s happening here,” replied Psaki, prompting Doocy to point out that 2am is the middle of the night.

Psaki continued, “It is our legal responsibility to safely care for unaccompanied children until they can be swiftly unified with a parent or a vetted sponsor. And that’s something we take seriously.”

“As a part of the unification process, our Office of Refugee Resettlement facilitates travel for children in its custody to their families or sponsors across the country,” she added.

Psaki then admitted that “in recent weeks, unaccompanied children pass through the Westchester airport, which I think is what you’re referring to, in route to their final destination to be unified with their parents or vetted sponsor.”

“It’s no surprise that kids can be seen traveling through states, not just New York. It’s something that we’re also working to unite children with their family members or vetted sponsors in other parts of the country as well,” Psaki further admitted.

Watch:

Meanwhile, First Lady Jill Biden recently spoke at an event promoting the school of a donor whose non-profit instructs illegal immigrants on how to avoid arrest.

“El Centro’s nonprofit arm has published a series of videos on how illegal immigrants can avoid arrests, with tips such as ignoring ICE agents during any interactions and contacting ‘a member of the community who does have status,’” Fox News reported.

Texas Senator Ted Cruz has introduced legislation dubbed the “Stop the Surge Act,” which seeks to ensure that “Democrats face the disaster of their policies and the humanitarian misery they are causing” through normalizing illegal immigration.

In a statement, Cruz urged that “For the past ten months, President Biden and his administration have willingly surrendered the United States’ southern border to dangerous criminal cartels, with no thought given to the South Texas border communities like McAllen and Del Rio, which are running low on resources from dealing with this massive influx of illegal immigrants.”

The statement continues, “That’s why today I am introducing this crucial legislation to alleviate the massive overload at the southern border by establishing new ports of entry in Democrat-led communities such as North Hero, Vermont, where Bernie Sanders spends his summers, and Martha’s Vineyard, where Democrat elites host their cocktail parties.”

Labeling the surge at the border a “horrific humanitarian crisis,” Cruz further urged “If Washington Democrats had to endure even a fraction of the suffering South Texas families, farmers, ranchers, and small businesses have had to face, our nation’s immigration laws would be enforced, the wall would be built, and the Remain in Mexico policy would be re-implemented.”