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Project Veritas leaks unreleased CNN ‘documentary’ celebrating AOC

“That impact was doubled that day because of the misogyny and the racism that was so deeply rooted and animated—that attack on the Capitol, you know, white supremacy and patriarchy are very linked.”

Update: YouTube has removed the Project Veritas video because it “contains content from Turner CNN, who has blocked it on copyright grounds.”

“Big tech is colluding with @CNN to take down the #BeingAOC leak,” commented Project Veritas chief of staff Eric Spracklen. “This is as Orwellian as it gets.”


Project Veritas
 released footage on Tuesday from a yet to be aired CNN documentary featuring Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who talks about her experience on January 6 and ties that afternoon’s riot her own sexual assault.

AOC told anchor Dana Bash that on January 6 as someone who turned out to be Capitol Police knocked on her door, she was “psychologically preparing” herself for the “worst,” adding that she was worried that she wouldn’t just be killed, but also raped. The officer was actually checking in to make sure she was okay.

“That impact was doubled that day because of the misogyny and the racism that was so deeply rooted and animated—that attack on the Capitol, you know, white supremacy and patriarchy are very linked in a lot of ways. There’s a lot of sexualizing of that violence,” said the New York representative in reference of her sexual assault.

Pro-Life Activists Think Upcoming Supreme Court Case Could Overturn Roe Decision

Mississippi’s recent call for the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 ruling that made abortion lawful throughout the United States, has been warmly received by pro-life activists who say it could be the vehicle the court uses to finally right what they consider to be an egregious wrong.

Mississippi’s petition for review says the caselaw is wrong and notes that the state enacted H.B. 1510, the Gestational Age Act in 2018, which it says “protects the health of mothers, the dignity of unborn children, and the integrity of the medical profession and society by allowing abortions after 15 weeks’ gestational age only in medical emergencies or for severe fetal abnormality.”

The Magnolia State statute has been enjoined by the federal courts, prompting the appeal to the Supreme Court.

Lynn Fitch, the state’s Republican attorney general, filed a brief with the court July 22 arguing that  Roe v. Wade is “dangerously corrosive to our constitutional system.” She urged that the 48-year-old precedent be reversed, saying that a state may prohibit elective abortions before the unborn baby is viable for life outside the womb.

It may do so because “nothing in constitutional text, structure, history, or tradition supports a right to abortion,” she wrote. “A prohibition on elective abortions is therefore constitutional if it satisfies the rational basis review that applies to all laws.”

“This case is made hard only because Roe v. Wade … and Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey,” a 1992 Supreme Court ruling, “hold that the Constitution protects a right to abortion.” Those precedents held that “a state law restricting abortion may not pose an ‘undue burden’ on obtaining an abortion before viability.”

“Roe based a right to abortion on decisions protecting aspects of privacy under the Due Process Clause. … but Roe broke from prior cases by invoking a general ‘right of privacy’ unmoored from the Constitution.”

The defense of Roe’s result appearing in the Casey decision “repeats Roe’s flaws by failing to tie a right to abortion to anything in the Constitution. And abortion is fundamentally different from any right this Court has ever endorsed. No other right involves, as abortion does, ‘the purposeful termination of a potential life,’” Fitch wrote, quoting Harris v. McRae (1980). “So Roe broke from prior cases, Casey failed to rehabilitate it, and both recognize a right that has no basis in the Constitution.”

Abortion Cases

The justices of the Supreme Court took nearly a year to decide whether to hear the appeal, known as Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, court file 19-1392, which was filed with the court June 15, 2020. Thomas E. Dobbs is the state health officer of the Mississippi Department of Health.

When it began considering the petition for review, liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was alive, but she died Sept. 18, 2020. She was replaced weeks later by then-President Donald Trump’s nominee, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, and the conservative majority on the 9-member court increased from 5 to 6. When the members of the high court voted to accept the case May 17, 2021, no justices indicated they disagreed. The oral argument in the appeal has not yet been scheduled.

Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves, a Republican, hailed the court’s decision to accept the appeal, saying at the time that a review of the nation’s abortion laws was “long past due.”

On June 29, 2020, when Ginsburg was alive, a divided court ruled 5-4 in June Medical Services LLC v. Russo, that Louisiana’s Act 620 that required abortionists to have hospital admitting privileges close to where the procedure took place was unconstitutional, as previously reported by The Epoch Times.

Justice Stephen Breyer wrote the plurality opinion, representing his views along with those of three other liberal justices, including Ginsburg. Breyer cited the Casey precedent repeatedly. Chief Justice John Roberts, considered to be a member of the conservative bloc on the court, wrote his own separate concurring opinion agreeing with the result. Roberts cited both the Roe and Casey precedents. Four conservative justices dissented.

In the Dobbs case, the court said in an unsigned order that it would consider only “whether all pre-viability prohibitions on elective abortions are unconstitutional,” setting the stage for a legal battle over Roe and Casey.

The high court also voted March 29 to hear a separate appeal that could clear the way for a future defense of a 2018 Kentucky ban on dilation and evacuation (D&E) abortions. The case, Cameron v. EMW Women’s Surgical Center, court file 20-601, is scheduled for oral argument Oct. 12.

Then-Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin, a Republican, signed the law, the Human Rights of Unborn Children Act, which stopped D&E abortions after 11 weeks of pregnancy and was subsequently enjoined by federal courts. The succeeding administration of Gov. Andy Beshear, a Democrat, refused to defend the statute in court, but Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, a Republican, indicated that he wanted to do so.

The legal issue to be examined isn’t the constitutionality of the Kentucky statute as such, but standing—that is, whether a state attorney general vested with the power to defend state law should be permitted to intervene after a federal court of appeals invalidates a state statute when no other state actor will defend the law.

Racism and Abortion

Mat Staver, founder and chairman of Liberty Counsel, a public interest law firm that filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case, said he is optimistic about the Dobbs case.

“I think that we are on the verge of potentially discarding Roe v. Wade,” Staver told The Epoch Times in an interview.

“I have no doubt that I will see the overturning of Roe v. Wade in my lifetime. I believe this is the case that could do it,” he said.

The Supreme Court would not have taken the case if it wasn’t considering reversing the abortion precedent, Staver said.

“In order to take a case, they need four justices. But in a case like this, I don’t think four justices would vote to take a case unless they could rely upon or reasonably count a fifth vote to overturn Roe because this really is a direct challenge to Roe and the Mississippi statute.”

Overturning Roe was “our focus from the very beginning,” he said.

The firm’s brief was written on behalf of: the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference; the Frederick Douglass Foundation; the Roman Catholic Diocese of Tyler, Texas; Deacon Keith Fournier of the Common Good Foundation; and Rev. Alveda King, president of Stand for Life and niece of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

“Our case has a very unique component to it because it puts abortion and the Supreme Court decisions directly on the foundation of racist eugenics to eliminate black and brown populations,” Staver said.

“Abortion grew out of Darwinian eugenics to eliminate certain races in order to evolve a superior, quote, unquote, superior white race,” he said.

“On the Origin of Species” author and naturalist Charles Darwin “was a white supremacist, and he believed that whites were more evolved than other minorities, particularly blacks and others. ”

Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger “was a follower of Charles Darwin, so was Adolf Hitler. And so Sanger with her contraception clinics wanted to eliminate these ‘undesirable’ races.”

When the Supreme Court issued in 1973 the Roe v. Wade decision, Sanger’s organization, Planned Parenthood, opened abortion clinics, following on Sanger’s work with contraception clinics. “And that’s the reason why even to this day, these clinics are in predominantly black and brown neighborhoods,” Staver said.

Catherine Glenn Foster, president and CEO of Americans United for Life, said Attorney General Fitch’s Supreme Court brief was “right on the money.”

“In Roe v. Wade, and its deadly progeny Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the Court conjured constitutional fictions to justify the unjustifiable,” Foster told The Epoch Times via email.

“The Court rejected the first and foundational human right to life. The Court condemned millions to death by abortion and a toxic culture of moral indifference. The Court, through its abortion rulings, has done violence to the American way of life. Now the Court has the chance to set things right. The Court must ultimately restore the human right to life in our culture, law, and policy, and it starts by relinquishing control over these decisions to the American people.”

Rand Paul Keeps Promise — Delivers Criminal Referral On Dr. Fauci To Top Biden Cabinet Member

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul has delivered on his statement last week that he will ask the Department of Justice (DoJ) for a criminal investigation of Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and chief medical advisor to the president, for allegedly lying to Congress

The Republican senator sent the criminal referral of Fauci Attorney General Merrick Garland on Wednesday, The Washington Examiner said in a report.

“I write to urge the United States Department of Justice to open an investigation into testimony made to the United States Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions by Dr. Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, on May 11, 2021,” Paul said in the referral, according to the news outlet.

Paul also maintained in the referral that grants from the NIH to EcoHealth Alliance, which were eventually sent to the Wuhan Institute of Virology lab for the purposes of conducting research on bat coronaviruses, “fits the definition of gain-of-function research” — although Fauci has earlier insisted they didn’t fund gain-of-function research at the said Chinese lab.

According to the Washington Examiner report, the Kentucky Republican senator also referred to comments by molecular biologist Dr. Richard Ebright, who said in May, that the research funded by the NIH “matches, indeed, epitomizes the definition of ‘gain-of-function research of concern’ for which federal funding was ‘paused’ in 2014-2017” in his referral to the Justice department.

Homeschooling on the rise amid COVID-19 pandemic

Because of the pandemic, more people have tried homeschooling and no longer want to send their children to the traditional schools.

The percentage of children being homeschooled in the U.S. has nearly doubled since the start of the COVID-19, according to a U.S. Census Bureau report. 

The number of students increased from 5.6% in March 2020, to 11% in Sept. 2020, according to the most recent bureau report on the issue, released in March.

Prior to the pandemic, roughly 3.3% of U.S. households homeschooled children. 

Black households saw the largest increase. Their homeschooling rate rose from 3.3% in the spring of 2020 to 16.1% in the fall according to the report.

Former Matt Drudge deputy starts rival to Drudge Report

NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio Says ‘Voluntary Phase’ of Vaccination ‘Is Over’

Trump Weighs in on Contentious Texas AG Primary Race

Former President Donald Trump weighed in on the contentious GOP primary for Texas Attorney General. Incumbent Ken Paxton (R-TX) received the support of the former president over George P. Bush, who launched a primary challenge to Paxton. Bush courted Trump for support:

The former commander-in-chief ultimately sided with Paxton, commending him for being “on the front line” in the fight “or Texas, and America, against the vicious and very dangerous Radical Left Democrats.”

“Attorney General Ken Paxton has been bravely on the front line in the fight for Texas, and America, against the vicious and very dangerous Radical Left Democrats, and the foolish and unsuspecting RINOs that are destroying our Country. Ken is strong on Crime, Border Security, the Second Amendment, Election Integrity and, above all, our Constitution,” Trump wrote in an endorsement of Paxton. “He loves our Military and our Vets. It is going to take a PATRIOT like Ken Paxton to advance America First policies in order to Make America Great Again. Ken has my Complete and Total Endorsement for another term as Attorney General of Texas. He is a true Texan who will keep Texas safe—and will never let you down!”

‘Leftist’ ESPN columnist jeered after claiming US-flag waving at Olympics reminds him of ‘rise of white nationalism’

A veteran sportswriter has come under fire after suggesting that United States flags on display during the opening ceremony at the Tokyo Olympics were a visual reminder of the alleged surge of white nationalism in the US.

ESPN columnist Ben Rhoden told ‘CBS This Morning’ that the opening ceremony used to be one of his favorite parts of the Olympics, but that this year he felt differently about the event. 

I love the opening ceremonies, the march of countries. Then I just realized: You know, man, particularly after these last four years, I had it wrong. Nationalism is not good. We’ve seen the rise of white nationalism.

Extrapolating on his insights, Rhoden said the sports ceremony made him think back to the January 6 Capitol riots, where he “saw a lot of US flags.”

“So now when I see the flag… what America am I living in?” he asked. 

According to the ESPN writer, the Tokyo Olympics should be a “time of soul searching” for the United States, adding that winning medals might be “antithetic” to the quiet introspection that the nation so desperately needs. 

His provocative commentary failed to score points with many on social media. 

Jonathan Gilliam, a popular conservative commentator and former Navy SEAL, described Rhoden’s performance as a “brain dead leftist rant.” 

Big Tech Companies Agree To Work Together In Internet Freedom Crackdown

Now the ADL will decide whether you get to keep your Paypal account or not.

A simultaneous move by Big Tech companies to work together to counter “right wing terrorism” by coordinating censorship, along with Paypal announcing that it will be partnering with the notorious leftist political group the Anti-Defamation League, prompted critics to warn of a renewed move to crush internet freedom.

Reuters reported Monday that “A counterterrorism organization formed by some of the biggest U.S. tech companies including Facebook (FB.O) and Microsoft (MSFT.O) is significantly expanding the types of extremist content shared between firms in a key database, aiming to crack down on material from white supremacists and far-right militias.”

Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Microsoft and others will actively share information under the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism (GIFCT), a body previously reserved for targeting Taliban and Al Qaeda content. 

As is always the case, there is no definition of what “extremist content” is, or what “white supremacists” or the “far right” are, but you can rest assured that past experiences have proven that these terms will encompass anything to do with being white, Christian, not a Marxist, and having an opinion that doesn’t jive with leftists in Silicon Valley.

As we have seen, Facebook is essentially an arm of the Biden administration at this point, and has been working with virulently leftist organisations to censor ‘wrong think’ for years.

In addition, The ADL announced Monday that they are partnering with PayPal “to fight extremism and hate” by coming together to analyze “how extremists leverage financial platforms to fund criminal activity.”

In other words, cutting off the accounts of people they disagree with, like the state does in communist China.

Reuters notes that “The initiative will be led through ADL’s Center on Extremism, and will focus on uncovering and disrupting the financial flows supporting white supremacist and anti-government organizations.”

Dem-sponsored changes to death taxes could cost almost 1M US jobs, study finds

Republicans and Democrats are at odds over ending the stepped-up basis provision.

A Democratic proposal to eliminate the stepped-up basis tax provision could kill nearly 1 million U.S. jobs, a new study shows.

Sustained annual job losses from eliminating the provision as outlined in the STEP Act would range from 500,000 to nearly 1 million, according to an analysis conducted by the nonpartisan firm Regional Economic Models Inc. (REMI), which was commissioned by the conservative-leaning Committee to Unleash Prosperity.

The STEP Act would eliminate step-up in basis by taxing unrealized capital gains when heirs inherit assets on which the original owner never paid income taxes.

In addition to job losses, REMI’s analysis projected a $1 trillion loss in GDP over 10 years and a $600 billion loss in private investment over the same time period. Projected losses in personal income over the course of a decade were about $1 trillion, which would translate to $8,000 to $10,000 per household.

Conservative economist Steve Moore, who is a principal at the Committee to Unleash Prosperity and served as an economic adviser to former President Trump, said the study shows President Biden’s death tax scheme would “assault” the American tradition of passing on family-owned business over generations.

“Many families will literally have to sell the farm to pay the Biden taxes,” Moore said in a statement. “The damage to jobs and the economy would be multiple times larger than any revenue gained for the government from this unfair tax proposal.” 

The analysis was based on a top combined capital gains tax rate of 43.4%, which includes the administration’s proposed 39.6% top capital gains tax rate and the existing 3.8% net investment income tax. It did not take state tax rates into account.

Proponents of the STEP Act maintain that it would target accumulated fortunes among the ultra-wealthy, who have largely been able to avoid paying taxes on their wealth because of the stepped-up basis provision.

The legislation would allow the exclusion of up to $1 million in unrealized capital gains, and some taxpayers would have the option of paying in installments over the course of 15 years if the tax applied to illiquid assets like farms.

The STEP Act is supported by Democratic Sens. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, Cory Booker of New Jersey, Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island and Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.