Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) moved quickly on Tuesday to advance Democrats’ $3.5 trillion budget resolution bill, coming soon after the Senate voted to pass a $1.2 trillion infrastructure measure.
No GOP senators voted in favor of the budget measure, although 19 of them voted for the infrastructure measure.
Ahead of the second vote, Schumer attempted to assuage left-wing Democrat Congress members, saying the budget would meet their requirements.
“To my colleagues who are concerned that this does not do enough on climate, for families and making corporations and the rich pay their fair share: we are moving on to a second track which will make generational transformation in these areas,” he said on the floor.
Democrats on Monday, including Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), said they would attempt to pass the massive spending package via budget reconciliation, which only requires a simple majority. The Senate Parliamentarian’s office has not issued a statement on whether certain provisions can be included.
Some centrist Democrats, including Sens. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) and Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), may not support the measure. With no GOP support, Democrats can’t lose a single member of their caucus.
“I have also made clear that while I will support beginning this process, I do not support a bill that costs $3.5 trillion–and in the coming months, I will work in good faith to develop this legislation with my colleagues and the administration to strengthen Arizona’s economy and help Arizona’s everyday families get ahead,” Sinema said in a statement.
Manchin, meanwhile, said he’s concerned the $3.5 trillion measure would add too much to the national deficit amid fears of rising inflation. The senator, whose home state of West Virginia relies heavily on energy production and mining, told The Associated Press that he isn’t “making any promises” about whether he’ll back the bill.
The legislation’s climate-related provisions would have to move through the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, which Manchin chairs, he noted to AP.
From across the ideological divide of the Democrat Party, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) told CNN on Aug. 1 that there will be “more than enough” votes to block the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill until left-wing members of the House get investments they want via the $3.5 trillion package.
On Monday, according to Sanders’ office, the budget bill would create free pre-Kindergarten for 3- and 4-year-olds and two years of free community college, extending tax breaks for children and some low-income workers, and establishing paid family and sick leave. Medicare coverage would be expanded to cover dental, hearing, and vision benefits. Spending would increase for housing, home health care, and job training, and new resources would go toward efforts encouraging a faster transition to green energy.
There is an old Soviet tale about Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. At lunchtime, he would retreat into his office and stare at the map of the world. The map was centered on the Soviet Union. The old Bolshevik would just glare at it as if it were a giant chessboard awaiting Moscow’s next move.
One can imagine similar scenes playing out in Zhongnanhai, with Chinese President Xi Jinping contemplating a map showing a communist Middle Kingdom as the epicenter of a new world order.
Xi believes that he is a revolutionary leader with an opportunity to join Chairman Mao and Deng Xiaoping in the Chinese pantheon. To accomplish this, he must dethrone the United States as the world’s most powerful nation.
AEI Scholar Dan Blumenthal points out that the Xi “will no longer hide China’s capabilities” and will forcefully “move China to center stage to create a favorable environment for building a great modern socialist country.” His first step is to reduce and neutralize American influence across the Indo-Pacific region.
It is America’s strategic mission to ensure the freedom of the international commons and to rally itself and the world to oppose any nation or collective nations that threaten that order.
In ancient China, peoples and countries wishing to interact with China had to pay tribute to the mandarins. Corporate America is fulfilling Xi’s new tribute model. Silicon Valley, Wall Street, Coca Cola, Hollywood, and the NBA have all paid obeisance to Beijing, ignoring China’s monstrous human rights abuses while leading the woke parade at home.
Xi’s foreign policy seeks to extort tribute from China’s neighbors in the Pacific and around the world. Like Mao, the more powerful Xi has become, the more geopolitical chances he is willing to take. During the Cultural Revolution, Mao picked fights with India, launched border incursions against the Soviet Union, and opened the military supply spigot to North Vietnam. Xi has launched military operations against India, attempted to intimidate Vietnam and the Philippines, threatened Japan with nuclear incineration, and raised rhetorical and economic threats against Western Europe and Australia.
Foreign adventurism and military modernization help Xi distract attention from massive problems at home. China’s population is rapidly aging. The Communist Party has laid environmental waste to vast swaths of the mainland. Corruption is rampant, while public morals and ethics have deteriorated. And, as evidenced by the crushing of the democratic movement in Hong Kong, the CCP fears that the Chinese people are growing restless under the increasing repressiveness of the state. As former U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates has noted, China’s leaders are “deathly afraid of their own people.”
Where stands America? Sadly, it did not take the Biden administration long to signal American weakness in the Pacific. It seems as if the White House is more invigorated by the prospect of managing American decline than by protecting America’s status as the world’s dominant power.
The Administration sent the Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to Asia to reassure allies haunted by memories of Obama-era indifference that President Biden is cut from a different cloth. Yet even as Austin offered these assurances, the Administration was proposing a flat defense budget, one insufficient even to maintain purchasing power. The Chief of Naval Operations has warned he may have to cut ships in an already over-stretched Navy simply to keep the rest operating. The incongruity is not lost on nations looking to stand together with Washington to prevent Chinese military dominance of the Pacific.
A failure to act decisively means business as usual when it comes to China’s ongoing theft of intellectual and cyber property. It means a continuing flood of Chinese funding and influence within American universities and research institutions. It means ending sanctions imposed due to the repression of freedom in Hong Kong. It means crippling the U.S. economy in the name of fighting climate change while Beijing laughingly breaks its environmental promises. Perhaps it means silence in the face of the genocide of the Uighurs. In the first Taiwan Strait Crisis, Ike sent the fleet. What happens the next time Taiwan is threatened?
To adjust to the reality of an ever more belligerent China, we must pivot as Harry Truman did when he, broke America’s historic aversion to permanent alliances and formed NATO in 1949. China is surrounded by nations with thousand-year memories of Chinese aggression and imperialism. In the last 60 years, China has fought wars with Vietnam and India. Those nations, as well as longstanding allies and partners such as Japan, Australia, Singapore, New Zealand, and the Philippines, are willing to work with the United States to protect them from the new mandarins. Strengthening them weakens Beijing.
When the Soviet Union’s brilliant naval chief Sergey Gorshkov expanded the Soviet Navy beyond its traditional territorial limits, the United States responded. Operating within a coherent strategy, Ronald Reagan and his Navy Secretary, John Lehman, extended the forward presence of a near 600-ship U.S. Navy, forcing the Soviets to recognize that they could not control the seas. We still have a qualitative maritime advantage, but China has 100 naval shipyards, and we have 10. If we do not act, quantity will begin to tip the balance. The same applies to air and space.
Western opinion is moving against Beijing—the COVID disaster has accelerated the trend. China has now been added to NATO’s agenda. In the Pacific, the focus must be on America enhancing the sovereignty of its partners. We must increase air, space, and maritime operations and make China think first about its home waters.
It also means making it easier for our partners to share and obtain the military capabilities they require—breaking down the Cold War guardrails that made it difficult for allies like Japan and Australia to take advantage of American power and technology. There is no reason why America cannot expand Boris Johnson’s D-10 formula to add Asian powers to the G-7 and formally anchor western Europe in the Indo-Pacific. Deterring China is a global task.
The bottom line is that Xi Jinping is a militant communist. Underneath his Savile Row suit is a Mao jacket. That he has been able to fool so many in the West says more about us than it does him. We still have time to wake up to the reality of Beijing’s threat, but only if we take the blinders off and confront the schoolyard bully. All of Gromyko’s staring at the Soviet map gained him nothing; let’s help Xi experience the same disappointment.
The Texas Democrats who fled to Washington, D.C., are showing signs of division as some of their number returned to Austin, infuriating their colleagues.
At least four Democrats who returned to the statehouse on Monday were accused of undermining the rest of the conference by nearly granting the Republican majority a quorum to conduct business. If just five more lawmakers were present at the statehouse, Republicans would have been able to advance a controversial election security bill that Democrats sought to block by leaving the state.
“You all threw us under the bus today!” Rep. Ana-Maria Ramos (D) declared on social media. “Why?”
— Representative Ana-Maria Ramos (@Ramos4Texas) August 9, 2021
The four Democrats who returned to Texas are Reps. Joe Moody, James Talarico, Mary González, and Art Fierro. Moody is one of the Democratic leaders and the former speaker pro tem, a title that House Speaker Dade Phelan (R) had stripped from him last month as a disciplinary measure for breaking quorum.
In a follow-up tweet, Ramos called out three of those Democrats, accusing them of selling out the rest of the conference.
“Today @jamestalarico was one of those Texas Dems who showed up at the Capitol to help Republicans pass anti-voter bills,” Ramos said. “@jamestalarico was in DC 2 days ago with Dems and showed up in Austin with Republicans & @moodyforelpaso @RepMaryGonzalez to sell us out.”
— Representative Ana-Maria Ramos (@Ramos4Texas) August 9, 2021
On Monday, Talarico announced he had returned to Texas to “clean up [Gov.] Greg Abbott’s latest messes” and said he was confident the Democrats’ decision to go AWOL “shined a national spotlight on the TX voter suppression bill and pushed Congress closer to passing a federal voting rights act to override it.”
I’m home!
Our quorum break shined a national spotlight on the TX voter suppression bill and pushed Congress closer to passing a federal voting rights act to override it. I’m confident they will.
Hours before lawmakers met at the statehouse, a district judge issued a temporary restraining order blocking Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s administration from following through on a promise to arrest any Democrats who returned to the state and drag them to the Capitol to make quorum so the legislature could open for business.
Some of the irate Democrats remaining in Washington, D.C., made note of this, criticizing the members of their “team” who went to the statehouse voluntarily even after a judge said they couldn’t be forced to show up for work and make quorum.
“I’ve said this before… it’s a Team Sport… now we see who plays what positions on the Team… The fact that some of us secured a Temporary Restraining Order to protect ALL of us, yet some are trying to please the Governor and His OPPRESSIVE Agenda?! JUST WOW! #txlege,” Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Dallas) tweeted.
I’ve said this before… it’s a Team Sport… now we see who plays what positions on the Team… The fact that some of us secured a Temporary Restraining Order to protect ALL of us, yet some are trying to please the Governor and His OPPRESSIVE Agenda?! JUST WOW! #txlege
“We have a vote this week in the US Senate on voting rights. They could at least wait until the vote. There’s nothing so pressing ar [sic] this moment to show up. Not to mention the restraining order allows you to be working in your district instead of on the floor against your district,” Crockett said.
We have a vote this week in the US Senate on voting rights. They could at least wait until the vote. There’s nothing so pressing ar this moment to show up. Not to mention the restraining order allows you to be working in your district instead of on the floor against your district
When New York Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul takes over as governor in two weeks, it won’t be the first time she’s entered high office by replacing a man who behaved badly.
Hochul will become New York’s first female governor on Aug. 24 with the departure of Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a fellow Democrat who resigned from his position on Tuesday. The move came one week after state Attorney General Letitia James released a report that found he sexually harassed 11 women, including staffers and others who did not work for his administration.
Hochul won a House seat in Western New York a decade ago after GOP Rep. Chris Lee resigned over reports he had solicited a woman on Craigslist, including sending a shirtless photo. Hochul won an upset victory in the May 2011 special election, a badly needed morale boost for House Democrats after losing their House majority six months earlier.
The cheer was short-lived, as Hochul lost her 2012 reelection bid against Erie County executive and businessman Chris Collins (who in 2019 pleaded guilty to insider trading and making false statements and was then pardoned by President Donald Trump).
But Hochul built enough of a political profile statewide that, in 2014, Cuomo selected her as his running mate when he sought a second four-year term. The pair won easily, and Hochul became lieutenant governor on Jan. 1, 2015.
But as often happens with governors and their understudies, even of the same party, relations were never close. The imperious Cuomo was loath to cede the spotlight and froze Hochul out of his inner circle. Hochul largely focused on economic development issues around the state, visiting all of New York’s 62 counties multiple times. When Cuomo’s sex scandals hit earlier this year, she said nary a word in his defense. The pair reportedly hadn’t spoken in months.
Hochul did fall in line with Cuomo on one major issue in 2018, saying she supported legislation to provide driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants. She had opposed that position in 2007 as Erie County clerk in 2007, going so far as to say she would seek to have any such applicants arrested.
And while Andrew Cuomo cut a figure as an aggressive New York City-area pol, as the son of former Gov. Mario Cuomo, a liberal icon, Hochul hails from the opposite end of the state. She grew up in a working-class family of Irish American Catholics in Buffalo. Hochul, a Syracuse University graduate, earned a law degree at Catholic University in Washington, D.C. She then worked as a legal counsel and legislative assistant to Rep. John LaFalce, a Democrat who represented the Buffalo area in the House for 28 years, and Democratic Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
Hochul was elected to the Hamburg Town Board in 1994 and appointed Erie County clerk a dozen years later. She is married to Bill Hochul, who was a U.S. attorney for the Western District of New York from 2010 to 2016, appointed by President Barack Obama.
Now, Hochul is set to assume New York’s highest statewide office, and one of the most prominent political roles in the country, under strained circumstances. Gov. Andrew Cuomo had repeatedly insisted that he would not resign and apologized to his accusers while denying any inappropriate behavior.But facing impeachment by the New York Assembly and his likely conviction and removal by the state Senate and jurists, Cuomo relented.
Hochul will be in familiar territory replacing a scandal-tarred incumbent, if on a larger stage than when she took office in Washington a decade ago.
The lawsuit, filed by over 20 Democrat State House Reps., say efforts by Abbott to bring them back to Texas for a special legislative session, “infringe on their constitutional rights.”
In the lawsuit, the 22 Democrat State Reps claim that they have been “deprived of liberty for substantial periods of time, suffered much anxiety and distress over separation from their families, and much discomfort and embarrassment.”
And seeing an opportunity to pull the race card, the suit also claims that several of the Democrats were targeted because of race, however there is no supporting evidence that is the case.
The Texas Tribune reports that the attorney for the Democrats is allegedly practicing law under a probationally suspended license.
The Texas Supreme Court denied Democrats' request to overturn my veto of the Legislature's funding because the Democrats walked out on doing their job.
Contrary to Democrats & pundits, my veto was legal.
Last month, Texas House Democrats fled to Washington D.C. in hopes of denying a quorum on a Republican-led voter integrity bill.
Gov. Abbott stated that upon returning to Texas, the lawmakers would be arrested and brought to the Capitol for a vote.
Abbott stated, “Once they step back into the state they will be arrested and brought back to the Capitol and we will be conducting business.”
The Texas Democrats who fled the state to stop a Republican elections bill from becoming law have now sued Gov. Greg Abbott. The lawsuit is really funny. Thread:
On Monday, cracks in the Democrats’ unity were starting to be visible. A good number of the members remain in Washington, but some had returned to Texas as a Travis County judge issued an order blocking the arrest of any members.
Enough Democrat House members had returned so that as many as 95 members were on the Floor by Monday afternoon. This brought the House within five members of the needed quorum. There were four Democrats included in the total number of members present.
Those who still opposed returning to Austin were vocal about the actions of their colleagues who had done so. State Rep. Ana-Maria Ramos tweeted, “you all threw us under the bus today! Why?” State Rep. Gina Hinojosa also tweeted, “Quorum is still not met. Praying no other Democrats willingly go to Floor.”
Texas Lt. Gov. Patrick slams Democrats for suing Abbott for demanding their return to workhttps://t.co/jqWKSxM3EG
On Monday, Abbott and House Speaker Phelan appealed to the Texas Supreme Court to overturn the district court judge’s order that blocks Abbott from arresting the lawmakers upon returning to Texas.
The case will not be heard in district court until August 20.
Texas Solicitor General Judd E. Stone II argued in an emergency motion to the Texas Supreme Court that because of the delay, “virtually guarantees that no significant legislation will be passed during this session.”
The state has requested that the state high court block the district judge’s order no later than 5 p.m. on Tuesday. But not all Democrats will be returning to Austin. The Texas Tribune reports that State Reps. Julie Johnson and Jessica Gonzalez, along with Johnson’s wife and Gonzalez’s fiance are vacationing in Portugal.
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas Democrats again fail to show up to state Capitol as Republicans begin 3rd attempt at passing new voting laws.
More than 1,600 people who have been affected by the September 11 attacks released a letter addressed to President Joe Biden to say they could not “in good faith” welcome his visit to mark the 20th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the twin towers until he “fulfills his commitment” to release documents so far blocked by the government.
The US Department of Justice (DOJ) has announced that it will review previously withheld information related to the September 11, 2001, attacks as pressure mounts for greater transparency in the run-up to the 20th anniversary of the tragedy.
Four California-bound passenger planes were hijacked by al-Qaeda* terrorists on 11 September 2001: one crashed into the Pentagon, one into the north tower of the Twin Towers of the World Trade Centre and another into the south (both of which collapsed), and the last crashed in a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania having been brought down by the passengers. The attack resulted in just under 3,000 deaths.
The two-page letter filed in Manhattan’s federal court on Monday said that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) had recently concluded an investigation scrutinising some of the 9/11 hijackers and potential co-conspirators.
Accordingly, it is now in a position to determine whether information it previously considered sensitive could now be shared, despite prior court rulings “upholding the government’s privilege assertions”.
No details of the probe, referred to as the ‘Subfile Investigation’ were contained in the filing.
“The FBI will disclose such information on a rolling basis as expeditiously as possible,” stated the DoJ.
President Joe Biden hailed the department’s move, saying his administration was “committed to ensuring the maximum degree of transparency under the law.”
New from @POTUS on DOJ filing related to 9/11 records:
"As I promised during my campaign, my Administration is committed to ensuring the maximum degree of transparency under the law … My heart and my prayers continue to be with the 9/11 families."https://t.co/P8IkKUJRtm
“In this vein, I welcome the Department of Justice’s filing today, which pledges to conduct a fresh review of documents where the government has previously asserted privileges, and to do so as quickly as possible,” said Biden.
Government ‘Withholding’ Crucial Info
The DoJ decision follows long-standing criticism from relations of those who died in the terrorist attacks over the US government’s handling of key details pertaining to the investigation.
Last week, more than 1,600 people affected by the September 11 attacks released a letter addressed to Biden, reminding him of his campaign pledge in October 2020 to the 9/11 community to “err on the side of disclosure” in the name of “full truth and accountability”.
Ahead of 9/11’s 20th anniversary, the letter urged President Biden to refrain from his stated desire to visit Ground Zero in New York City to mark the occasion until he “fulfills his commitment”.
The letter underscored that the conclusion of the 9/11 Commission’s work in 2004 had amassed investigative evidence implicating Saudi government officials in supporting the attacks, yet the DoJ and FBI had sought to keep this information secret.
An advocate for 9/11 victims, Brett Eagleson, whose father perished in the attack on the World Trade Center, said in a statement that “we have heard many empty promises before.” CNN cited him as adding:
“We hope the Biden administration comes forward now to provide the information the 9/11 community has waited to receive for 20 years, so we can stand together with the president at Ground Zero on 9/11.”
“We appreciate that President Biden recognises that long-standing questions about the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s involvement in the worst-ever terrorist attack on American soil remain unanswered, but nobody should be fooled by this half-hearted, insufficient commitment to transparency [that] only applies to a subset of cherry-picked documents that the FBI has already identified for review.”
This comes as a long-running Manhattan lawsuit on behalf of thousands of victims accusing Saudi Arabia of complicity in the attacks witnessed a spate of depositions this year, with former Saudi officials questioned. However, the trove of sensitive documents remains sealed.
A multitude of US government investigations investigated ties between Saudi nationals and some of the airplane hijackers – 15 of the 19 terrorists were Saudi, as was Osama bin Laden, whose al-Qaeda network masterminded the attacks. However, the investigations claim to have fallen short of establishing direct involvement of the Saudi government.
Public documents released in the past two decades – including by the 9/11 Commission, which assembled a timeline of the run-up to the attacks – have revealed how the first hijackers to arrive in the US, (Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Mihdhar), were met and helped by a Saudi, Omar al-Bayoumi, who helped them navigate western society and lease an apartment in San Diego. The man had ties to the Saudi government, investigators have said.
In 2004 the commission said it had found no evidence the Saudi government or senior Saudi officials had funded al-Qaeda. The Saudi government has denied any connection to the hijackers or to Osama bin Laden.
*al-Qaeda is a terrorist group banned in Russia and many other countries.
Oregon Governor Kate Brown quietly signed a bill last month that removed the requirement for graduating high school children in the state to be proficient in reading, writing, and math, in an effort to aid “students of color.”
Brown signed Senate Bill 744 on July 14, but did not issue a press release or hold a ceremony to mark the occasion, instead opting to pass the bill into law as quietly as possible, according to the Oregonian. The bill also wasn’t entered into a legislative database until two weeks after its signing – an abnormality, as bills are typically entered on the same day.
Though Brown was quiet about the bill, the governor’s deputy communications director, Charles Boyle, told the Oregonian that suspending the reading, writing, and math proficiency requirements would benefit “students of color” while the state comes up with a new set of “equitable” graduation standards.
Until then, the suspension will apparently help those who are “Black, Latino, Latina, Latinx, Indigenous, Asian, Pacific Islander, [or] Tribal.”
Boyle said that “leaders from those communities have advocated time and again for equitable graduation standards, along with expanded learning opportunities and supports.” However, lawmakers reportedly have not passed any actual concrete support this year to help those groups.
Any new graduation requirements that do pass will reportedly not take effect until 2027, meaning five years of classes could graduate without needing to demonstrate proficiency in three basic areas.
Oregon Republicans attempted to push back against the bill, with Oregon House Minority Leader Christine Drazan arguing that it would “lower our expectations for our kids” at a time when “we have had this year of social isolation and lost learning” due to Covid-19. They were unsuccessful, however, as the Democrat-controlled legislature overwhelmingly supported the move.
Gov. Kate Brown signed a law to allow Oregon students to graduate without proving they can write or do math.
Florida Republican congressional candidate Vic DeGrammont called the bill “insane,” while Oregon’s Senate Republicans wrote, “This was perhaps the worst bill that passed this session and Democrats can’t come up with a good reason for it.”
Politician and commentator Barrington Martin II – who has been a Democratic Party candidate in several Georgia elections – said that while the bill was aimed at giving “struggling races a shot,” all it does is set them up for failure. “The road to hell is indeed paved with good intentions,” he wrote.
It’s official. New York’s Democrat Governor Andrew Cuomo submitted his resignation Tuesday afternoon and will leave office in 14-days. Cuomo’s resignation comes after state Attorney General Letitia James released a scathing and lengthy report detailing sexual misconduct allegations from 11 women.
“Today closes a sad chapter for all of New York, but it’s an important step toward justice,” James released in a statement. “I thank Governor Cuomo for his contributions to our state. The ascension of our Lieutenant Governor, Kathy Hochul, will help New York enter a new day. We must continue to build on the progress already made and improve the lives of New Yorkers in every corner of the state. I know our state is in good hands with Lieutenant Hochul at the helm, and I look forward to continuing to work with her.”
But just last year President Joe Biden, whose Department of Justice dropped a civil rights investigation into his nursing home scandal in July, praised Cuomo as the “gold standard” in leadership.
Don’t forget that Joe Biden said that Andrew Cuomo was “the gold standard” who has “done one hell of a job.” pic.twitter.com/hk1wxBP6yJ
Before his resignation, Cuomo was the of the Democrat Governors Association and led weekly Wuhan coronavirus calls with the White House and governors across the country.
Though Trump’s Operation Warp Speed rapidly increased Covid-19 vaccination distribution, The New York Times ran an opinion piece claiming Americans are “turning away a vaccine” because they’re “slavishly devoted to Trump.”
QUICK FACTS:
The New York Times (NYT) ran an opinion piece titled “Anti-Vax Insanity.”
The author blames “Donald Trump’s scorched earth political strategy” for having “fooled millions of Americans into flirting with death.”
He laments the fact that “The public had been poisoned by partisanship,” that masking and social distancing became “a political statement,” and that “Receiving the vaccine, for far too many, was a political statement.”
The author says the following should have happened: “We should all have been celebrating in the streets and running to a lifesaving serum with our sleeves rolled up and a smile on our face.”
Every eligible American, according to the NYT author, should have “simply chosen to be vaccinated.”
“But they didn’t. They haven’t. They are too dug in, too committed to the lies and conspiracies, too devoted to rebellion,” he says.
“The vaccine is safe, incredibly safe” and “There are no microchips or magnets in it. It does not cause Covid and it is not more dangerous than Covid.”
The author claims that Americans are turning away the vaccine “because of their fidelity to the lie and their fidelity to the liar (Trump),” to whom these Americans are “slavishly devoted.”
But also “because many politicians and conservative commentators helped Trump propagate his lies.”
In Opinion
"It is a luxury to be irresponsible in a society where others would be responsible for you," @CharlesMBlow writes, "where you simply assumed that you were safer because others took the appropriate precautions to be safe." https://t.co/wtAbQR4NvF
TRUMP’S ‘OPERATION WARP SPEED’ DEVELOPED THE COVID VACCINE IN TEN MONTHS INSTEAD OF TEN YEARS:
President Donald Trump’s administration announced the installation of Operation Warp Speed (OWS)—which accelerated the development, manufacturing, and distribution of Covid-19 vaccines—on May 15, 2020.
The Hill explains OWS “called for clinical trials, manufacturing, and logistics to be conducted on a parallel rather than a sequential basis. The pursuit of multiple vaccine types built redundancy into the program to insure as many approved vaccine types as possible.”
Ten months later, “On Dec. 11, 2020, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved for emergency use authorization (EUA) a vaccine produced by Pfizer” for “the prevention of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in individuals 16 years of age and older.”
“Approval of Moderna’s vaccine followed seven days later,” notes The Hill.
And “The first Americans were vaccinated on Dec. 15, 2020, only four days after FDA approval of the Pfizer vaccine.”
The OWS goal of 300 million was “met much sooner than would have been conceived as the program was launched.”
Although “OWS was launched to almost universal skepticism and even scorn”—namely expressed in “the June 6, 2020 issue of the medical journal Lancet opined that “on average, it takes 10 years to develop a vaccine”—, it nevertheless signified “a rare private-public partnership that has met its performance benchmarks,” according to The Hill.
President Trump recently toldFox News’ Dan Bongino “The vaccines turn out to be a tremendous thing.”
He called his work spearheading OWS “something I’m very proud of.”
“I think if we didn’t come up during the Trump administration with the vaccine, you could have 100 million people dead just like you had in 1917,” Trump said.
“And in our country, you know in a sense, in a true sense, we saved our country with the vaccine,” he also said.
“I think this — I have to be a big vaccine fan, because I’m the one that got it done so quickly. Got it done in less than nine months; it was supposed to take five years. They would have never even gotten it done. So, I’m a big fan,” Trump went on to say.
While Trump said he’s “a big fan of our freedoms, and people have to make that choice for themselves,” he nevertheless added, “I would recommend that they get [the vaccine], and they get it done, and they’re being protected. And the vaccines turned out to be a tremendous thing… .”
You deserve the truth. Here’s what really happened with my Donald Trump interview. 👇🏻https://t.co/Zpjx7TlNSe
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) Director Anthony Fauci recently credited President Trump’s “wise investment” in the COVID vaccine.
Dr. Fauci explained that while vaccines “typically need to go through multiple lengthy phases to be approved, Trump’s Operation Warp Speed initiative significantly helped to accelerate the process.”
“Because of the wise investment in Operation Warp Speed—and we give credit to the Trump administration for doing this, particularly Secretary Alex Azar, who was an important component of that—what you did was make an investment to prepare for phase two and phase three, even before you knew that phase one worked or not, and to start manufacturing,” Fauci said.
“When you do that, you make a major investment in resources,” he continued. “If the vaccine doesn’t work, you’ve lost a lot of money; if the vaccine does work, you save a lot of time. And that’s exactly what happened.”
Dr. Fauci says "we give credit to the Trump administration" for Operation Warp Speed, which led to the rapid development of COVID-19 vaccines: "When people say, 'I'm concerned that this went too fast' — it did not go too fast. It was a major investment " https://t.co/Nj065CIsxppic.twitter.com/Bo2nOH7rID
The National Security Agency (NSA) announced an investigation into allegations raised by Tucker Carlson, that the agency spied on the Fox host.
QUICK FACTS:
The NSA’s Inspector General will open an investigation into what it described as an “alleged targeting” of a U.S. member of the media after Fox News host Tucker Carlson claimed the agency spied on him earlier this year, according to The Hill.
The announcement did not specifically mention Carlson by name.
A source close to the investigation toldThe Wall Street Journal on Tuesday that the review is in fact related to Carlson’s claims, according to American Military News.
The inspector general said in a statement on Tuesday that the agency was officially conducting a “review related to recent allegations that the NSA improperly targeted the communications of a member of the U.S. news media.”
The NSA was “examining NSA’s compliance with applicable legal authorities and Agency policies and procedures regarding collection, analysis, reporting, and dissemination activities, including unmasking procedures.”
The statement also said the NSA is examining, “whether any such actions were based upon improper considerations.”
“If circumstances warrant, the OIG will consider other issues that may arise during the review,” the statement went on to say.
BACKGROUND:
Media such as CNN had called Carlson’s claims “unsubstantiated,” noting that Biden’s White House “dismissed Carlson’s allegations.”
CNN also claimed that Carlson “has a history of peddling conspiracy theories.”