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GOP Hits House Democrats, Demands Newsmax, Networks on Capitol TVs

Two GOP congressmen are opening a new front to “fight back against cancel culture” by working to ensure several cable networks, including Newsmax, remain available in the U.S. Capitol as some Democrats push to rid them from the air.

Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan and Illinois Rep. Rodney Davis on Tuesday sent a letter to House Administration Committee Chair Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., after attempts by members of her own party to pressure cable providers to drop numerous news networks.

“The House of Representatives can fight back against cancel culture by ensuring that Members and staff have access to these targeted news networks on the House’s internal television system,” Jordan and Davis wrote in the letter, which was obtained by Newsmax’s Logan Ratick. “We therefore ask you, as chair of the committee responsible for internal House operations, to reject cancel culture and ensure that the House’s television system carries Fox News, OANN, and Newsmax.”

Newsmax in a statement lauded the letter.

“The House Democrats’ continuing support of Cancel Culture is a cancer on society,” the statement said. “Free Speech, the free exchange of ideas, and First Amendment rights are foundational to our nation, and our courageous servicemen and women have given their lives protecting these rights. We strongly support the letter from Representatives Davis and Jordan.”

Jordan told Newsmax in an interview that the failure to add Newsmax and continue carrying Fox News and OANN would be “chilling” as cancel culture quickly emerges as a significant “threat to freedom.”

“The cancel culture won’t just stop with Republicans and conservatives … the appetite with the cancel culture is never satisfied … it will come for Democrats, too,” Jordan said.

Jordan implored Democrats to show their liberal bona fides by standing up for free speech.

“You’ve got all the left-wing networks as part of the package … and you have two of the three conservative networks – why not Newsmax?” Jordan said. “… Show that (Democrats) are committed to the First Amendment.”

He added: “It would be a nice message to send.”

Davis is the ranking member on Lofgren’s committee, while Jordan, a staunch and vocal opponent of “cancel culture,” is the ranking member on the Judiciary Committee.

The letter added: “This attempt to cancel Fox News, OANN, and Newsmax is not just a radical attack on the First Amendment’s freedom of the press. It also blatantly ignores how left-wing news outlets regularly pushed false narratives about President Trump and the Trump Administration, including debunked allegations of Russian collusion.”

Jordan and Davis sent their letter in response to a series of Feb. 22 missives from Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Calif., and Rep. Jerry McNerney, D-Calif., who urged twelve “cable, satellite, and streaming television providers” to “disassociate with Fox News, OANN, and Newsmax.”

“The House of Representatives must stand together in rejecting cancel culture and fighting attempts to restrict the freedom of the press,” Jordan and Davis wrote.

They added: “Even in the face of our sharp disagreements on policy, the House should always promote the free exchange of ideas rather than cancel the ideas with which we disagree.”

Right-leaning politicians and conservatives have been chief among those who’ve increasingly found themselves silenced by media, corporations, and big tech as “cancel culture” takes hold. Just in the last two months, former President Donald Trump was booted from Twitter and Facebook and countless news organizations have found themselves victimized by often controversial “fact checks” that rely on liberal experts or assessments.

Coalition to Protest SpaceX Satellite Program, Citing Radiation Threat

Children’s Health Defense is one of several groups planning a March 19 protest at SpaceX headquarters to demand the company end its planned deployment of 42,000 low-orbit satellites.

By Coalition to Protest SpaceX Satellite Program

Safe technology advocates, environmentalists and astronomers from California and beyond will gather March 19, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. PT at SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, Calif., to demand the company end its planned deployment of 42,000 low-orbit satellites.

Participating organizations include Children’s Health DefenseAmericans for Responsible TechnologyMoms Across America and 5G Free California.

The groups are gathering signatures worldwide on an open letter to Elon Musk and SpaceX, urging Musk to sit down with scientists, astronomers and all stakeholders to discuss the dangers of satellite programs. A group of children will hand-deliver the letter at the March 19 rally.

The SpaceX low-orbit satellites, using 5G technology, would bathe the world with microwave radiation including the mid-ocean, Antarctic and wildlife preserves and protected natural areas. Other companies such as One Web and Amazon have plans to launch up to 40,000 additional satellites.

Opponents say the environmental and health impacts of the satellites will far outweigh any potential benefits, and the environmental impacts alone will be devastating.

The SpaceX Starlink program calls for 8,400 satellites, each with a lifespan of only 5 years, to be built, launched, deorbited and burned up each year. This will add to ozone depletion, space debris and collisions, the conversion of deorbited satellites to toxic dust and smoke as they burn up in the atmosphere, and the proliferation of spaceports on pristine land and ground and water pollution around them.

Of particular concern is the global increase in microwave radiation from the satellites, ground stations and millions of  “user terminals” which are, in effect, cell antennas all over the planet, one for each subscriber.

On Feb. 26 Children’s Health Defense filed a case against the Federal Communication Commission challenging an amendment to the “Over the Air Reception Devices” rule (OTARD). Among other things, the amended rule enables the deployment of at least 1,000,000 antennas which will provide the ground infrastructure for the SpaceX satellites. The amended rule goes into effect March 29.

“We are literally guinea pigs for this technological experiment about which we have not been consulted, and for which we have not given our consent,” said David Goldberg, an event organizer. “This is the same technology used in the microwave attacks on diplomats, currently under federal investigation. Safer and more energy-efficient wired technologies are available and should be implemented, instead of thousands of satellites and millions of cell antennas that will increase wireless radiation and harm the environment.”

Participants are being asked to please abide by all California COVID-19 public health laws and mandates. For more information on the planned protest, click here.

Watch this video on the planned protest:

In 8-1 SCOTUS Ruling, Chief Justice John Roberts Is The Only One To Side Against Christian Students Whose Free Speech Was Trampled

Chief Justice John Roberts was the only dissenter in the U.S Supreme Court’s most recent ruling favoring a couple of Christian students who challenged their university for restricting when, where, and how they could speak about their faith and disseminate materials on campus.

Uzuegbunam et al. v. Preczewski et al. first materialized after Chike Uzuegbunam, a student at Georgia Gwinnett College, was stopped by campus police for handing out religious materials on campus, a reported violation of the school’s “Freedom of Expression Policy,” which limited distributions and other expressions to free speech zones only with permission from the administration. Even after Uzuegbunam moved to the designated areas with permission, however, campus police attempted to stop him from speaking and handing out religious literature, prompting him and another student, Joseph Bradford, to take legal action against the university for violating their First and 14th Amendment rights and seek nominal damages.

The students’ attempts to sue the school, however, were shot down by both a district court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit after Georgia Gwinnett College changed its “Freedom of Expression” policy to remove barriers on when and where students could speak on campus and filed a motion to dismiss the case as moot. The Supreme Court took up the case after Uzuegbunam and Bradford noted that their rights were still violated no matter what the university modified its policy to reflect and still required a ruling on nominal damages.

Justice Clarence Thomas authored the opinion of the court, agreeing with the students’ case.

“Applying this principle here is straightforward. For purposes of this appeal, it is undisputed that Uzuegbunam experienced a completed violation of his constitutional rights when respondents enforced their speech policies against him. Because ‘every violation [of a right] imports damage,’ Webb, 29 F. Cas., at 509, nominal damages can redress Uzuegbunam’s injury even if he cannot or chooses not to quantify that harm in economic terms,” Thomas concluded.

Roberts, however, in his first solo dissent, wrote that the court was acting as “a moot court” in deciding this case and their ruling.

“When plaintiffs like Uzuegbunam and Bradford allege neither actual damages nor the prospect of future injury, an award of nominal damages does not change their status or condition at all. Such an award instead represents a judicial determination that the plaintiffs’ interpretation of the law is correct — nothing more,” Roberts stated.

Cuomo ordered group homes for disabled to accept COVID-19 patient, at least 552 have died

The executive order, which remains in effect, mirrors Cuomo’s controversial nursing home order

As New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) faces articles of impeachment over covering up COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes and multiple allegations of sexual harassment, there is renewed scrutiny of his administration’s mishandling of the pandemic, including focus on an executive order that required homes for people with developmental disabilities to accept coronavirus patients.

Cuomo’s nursing home scandal, in which the governor issued an executive order to move COVID-19 patients from hospitals to nursing homes and then manipulated data to hide how many senior citizens contracted the coronavirus and died, is well documented. But another directive issued by the governor has until now received little attention.

The April 10 executive order, first highlighted by Maria McFadden Maffucci for National Review, directed residential group homes for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities to accept positive COVID-19 patients released by hospitals, just like the executive order for nursing homes. Cuomo’s nursing home order was eventually rescinded, but the order relating to homes for people with disabilities remains in effect. The results were tragic.

According to a study published in Disability and Health Journal in June and cited by McFadden Maffucci, New Yorkers with disabilities living in residential group homes were more than twice as likely to have severe outcomes and deaths from COVID-19. “Circumstances and decisions made early in the pandemic may have contributed to the higher case rate of people living with IDD in residential group homes. Those who tested positive for COVID-19 or who had presumed infection (during the time of limited testing availability) were required to return to their residential setting with instructions to sequester,” the study’s authors wrote.

Now, Fox News reports that 552 residents at homes for people with disabilities have died of COVID-19, according to the New York Office for People with Developmental Disabilities.

Additionally, more than 6,900 of the more than 34,552 people living in these homes have been infected with coronavirus.

“These group homes were required to have a process in place to expedite the return of asymptomatic residents from the hospital, who were deemed appropriate for return to their OPWDD certified residence,” an agency spokeswoman said. “In other words, OPWDD providers could accept individuals only if they could safely accommodate them in the group home.”

She added that people “who could not be safely accommodated either remained at the hospital or were served in one of the over 100 temporary sites established for COVID-19 recovery efforts in partnership with OPWDD provider agencies.”

New York State Republicans that gave statements to Fox News said they have begun investigating Cuomo’s directive and have requested updated data on COVID-19 deaths and infections among New York’s IDD community.

“I am deeply concerned that the April 10th order from OPWDD needlessly put some of our most vulnerable citizens in harm’s way. Close on the heels of the deadly nursing home order from the Department of Health (DOH), this order appears both dangerous and tone deaf. Transparency has been a major failing of this administration at all levels,” state Sen. Mike Martucci, a Republican signatory of the letter and ranking member of the Senate Disabilities Committee, said.

New York has prioritized people with disabilities living in group homes for vaccines and anyone with an intellectual and developmental disability has been eligible to receive a vaccine since Feb. 15.

RNC Tells Trump It ‘Has Every Right’ to Use His Name, Image in Fundraising Appeals

The Republican National Committee (RNC) is insisting it has the right to use former President Donald Trump’s name and likeness in fundraising appeals, after Trump sent cease-and-desist letters to the committee.

In a March 8 letter obtained by The Epoch Times, the RNC’s chief counsel Justin Riemer told Trump’s Save America political action committee that the RNC “has every right to refer to public figures as it engages in core, First Amendment-protected political speech, and it will continue to do so in pursuit of these common goals.”

Riemer also said that Trump and RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel enjoy a close relationship, alleging the former president over the weekend reaffirmed to her that he approves of the RNC’s current use of his name in fundraising and other materials, including for an upcoming donor retreat event in Palm Beach in which Trump is slated to participate.

“The RNC has not sent any fundraising requests in President Trump’s name or used his image since before he left office, nor would it do so without his prior approval,” the lawyer wrote.

The Save America committee didn’t respond to a request for comment.

A Trump adviser told The Epoch Times that Trump sent cease-and-desist letters not only to the RNC, but also to the National Republican Senatorial Committee and the National Republican Congressional Committee.

The letters demanded the groups stop using Trump’s name and likeness to raise funds.

Epoch Times Photo
Former President Donald Trump speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando, Fla., on Feb. 28, 2021. (Joe Skipper/Reuters)

The pressure on the groups is part of an intra-party struggle over who heads the GOP. A growing number of Republicans have publicly opposed the former president, including 17 who sided with Democrats in the latest impeachment saga.

Trump plans on supporting primary opponents to some sitting lawmakers, including Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), one of seven senators who voted to convict him on a charge of incitement of insurrection.

Trump was ultimately acquitted because 43 senators voted against the charge.

Trump urged supporters on Monday to stop giving money to so-called RINOs, or Republicans in Name Only.

“They do nothing but hurt the Republican Party and our great voting base—they will never lead us to Greatness. Send your donation to Save America PAC at DonaldJTrump.com. We will bring it all back stronger than ever before!” he said.

Trump told a crowd at the recent Conservative Political Action Conference that he opposes House Conference Chair Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) staying in office, before telling supporters to “get rid of” all the members of Congress who voted against him in the latest impeachment saga.

“I will be actively working to elect strong, tough, and smart Republican leaders,” Trump declared. “RINOs will destroy the Republican Party … and the American workers.”

Ivan Pentchoukov and Jack Phillips contributed to this report.Follow Zachary on Twitter: @zackstieber

Buckingham Palace responds to Meghan Markle, Prince Harry’s Oprah Winfrey interview

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex sat down for a tell-all interview with Oprah Winfrey

Buckingham Palace issued a statement regarding the explosive interview between Meghan MarklePrince Harry and Oprah Winfrey on Sunday. 

“The whole family is saddened to learn the full extent of how challenging the last few years have been for Harry and Meghan,” a statement from the Palace provided to Fox News reads. “The issues raised, particularly that of race, are concerning.  While some recollections may vary, they are taken very seriously and will be addressed by the family privately.”

The statement concludes: “Harry, Meghan and Archie will always be much loved family members.”

The statement comes after the royals faced some criticism over their silence on the matter following the interview’s broadcast in the U.S. on Sunday and the U.K. on Monday. 

Representatives for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex had no comment when reached by Fox News.

During the televised tell-all, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex detailed how they were allegedly mistreated by Britain’s royal household, as well as “The Firm,” referring to senior members of the family.

Markle described feeling so isolated and miserable inside the royal family that she had had suicidal thoughts, yet when she asked for mental health help from the palace’s human resources staff she was told she was not an employee. 

Markle also said a member of the family had expressed “concerns” to Harry about the color of her unborn child’s skin.

Winfrey, 67, later said Harry told her off-camera that the family member was not Elizabeth or Philip, sparking a flurry of speculation about who it could be.

Harry also revealed the stresses the couple endured had ruptured relations with his father, Prince Charles, heir to the British throne, and his brother, Prince William, illuminating the depth of the family divisions that led the couple to step away from royal duties and move to California last year.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex married at Windsor Castle in May 2018. Their son, Archie, was born a year later. During the interview, the couple shared they are expecting a girl due this summer.

‘TRUTH’ With RFK, Jr. and Naomi Wolf: Fighting for Our Constitutional Rights

CHD Chairman Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and author, journalist and former political advisor Naomi Wolf weigh in on the battle to maintain the rights put in place by our founding fathers.

In the latest episode of “TRUTH” with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., Kennedy sat down with the iconic Naomi Wolf for a spirited discussion on abuse of power, standing up to tyranny and preserving our Constitution. Wolf explained how tyrants always follow the same predictable route in their attempts to bring democracies to a close and how she believes our society has reached “Step 10” of her “Fascism in 10 Easy Steps.”

Highlights of their conversation include:

  • We’re reaching a point reminiscent of what led to the American Revolution: People were willing to die rather than give up their rights.
  • The Constitution wasn’t written for easy times but for emergencies such as the current COVID crisis.
  • Arbitrary restrictions are being put in place by those abusing emergency powers at local, state and federal levels.
  • In a free society, points are made and arguments won through free speech and open debate rather than censoring opinions that differ from ours.
  • Authoritarianism has no place in medicine although most liberals are accepting edicts promoted by Dr. Fauci and Bill Gates.
  • Direct-to-consumer advertising that started in 1997 marked the beginning of Pharma’s takeover of American media.
  • The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation neutralized once-independent media including The Guardian, NPR and public television through financial gifts.
  • Democrats are leading the “biofascism” charge.
  • There’s no science to back up the widespread suspension of our Constitutional rights.
  • Non-partisan grassroots efforts are gaining momentum and can preserve our freedom and prevent totalitarian takeover.

All “Truth” episodes can be found on Children’s Health Defense’s social media and on Children’s Health Defense’s channel found on Peeps TV, a network on Roku. Roku is accessible from any Smart TV and can be purchased separately for older TVs.

https://childrenshealthdefense.org/?post_type=defender&p=110054&preview=true?utm_source=salsa&eType=EmailBlastContent&eId=2925182b-373c-4e8f-95aa-00c4b77b4082

Tesla’s ‘Brutal Selloff’ Worsens, Market Value Losses Hit $300 Billion As Investors Move Away From Big Tech

TOPLINE

Shares of electric carmaker Tesla–last year’s best-performing S&P 500 stock—plunged to their lowest level in three months Monday as the broader market rallied—yet another sign the recently booming market for tech stocks could be over, once postpandemic spending drives growth into other industries.

KEY FACTS

While the Dow Jones industrial average rallied by more than 400 points Monday afternoon, Tesla stock fell as much as 6%, as momentum from the Saturday passage of President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus plan helped drive investors back into blue chips in cyclical industries (like General Electric, up 4%) and away from big tech firms.

Tesla shares are down 20% in the past week alone, after plunging 8% Thursday when billionaire money manager Ron Baron—a longtime Tesla bull who’s declared the stock could swell thirtyfold in his lifetime—told CNBC he made the “painful” decision to sell 1.8 million shares for “risk management.”

Though Baron reiterated that prices could rocket toward $2,000 over the next decade, he said the move helped reduce risk in his portfolios after Tesla’s nearly 20x increase since he started buying shares in 2014, echoing concerns among other experts over the stock’s heightened volatility. 

The Tesla selloff steepened after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Thursday that inflation will rise as the economy recovers, a development that sent Treasury yields surging–and stocks tumbling. 

“Higher yields tend to hit highfliers harder,” Ally Invest Chief Investment Strategist Lindsey Bell said in a Thursday note, adding: “That’s why we’ve seen stocks like Tesla and Peloton fall more than 30% this year.”

Concerns over rising rates have also hit high-flying ETF provider Ark Invest, which has soared in popularity amid tech’s dominance for its investments in “disruptive innovation” but is now facing double-digit percentage losses and growing investor outflows.

CRUCIAL QUOTE

“It’s been a brutal selloff for the electric-vehicle sector over the past month, which, along with tech stocks, have sold off markedly after a historic rally over the past year,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives said in a note Monday. “The poster child for electric vehicle weakness the last few weeks has been Tesla,” he adds, attributing the firm’s “painful risk-off moment” to valuation concerns specific to electric vehicle companies (rival Nikola is down 9% this year), competition heating up in the industry, chip shortages and dwindling demand for the vehicles in China.

SURPRISING FACT

Tesla, which carries about 1.5% of the S&P 500’s weight, is the worst-performing top ten stock in the index on Monday. Other big underperformers include Apple and Alphabet—both down about 3%. Though it’s still up 365% over the past year, Tesla has plunged 35% since its high on January 26; over the same period, the S&P is virtually flat.

BIG NUMBER

$308 billion. That’s how much market value Tesla has lost since January 26, when the firm was worth about $848 billion. CEO and chairman Elon Musk is worth about $145 billion, according to Forbes. 

TANGENT

In February, value stocks outperformed growth stocks like Tesla by the widest margin since the dot-com bubble burst in 2000, Bank of America said in a note to clients last Tuesday. Underperformance among growth stocks was led by the five biggest ones–Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Facebook and Tesla–which fell an average of 5% last month.

KEY BACKGROUND

Markets have gotten a taste of yield-induced panic in recent weeks, with the Dow Jones industrial average plunging as much as 1,000 points in late February as yields hit a one-year high. Fed Governor Lael Brainard earlier this month became one of the first U.S. central bankers to express concerns over rising yields, saying at a conference that the recent boom “caught [her] eye.” It’s likely the Fed will be pressured to raise historically low interest rates in order to contain yields if they continue to grow, but experts have warned that any such hawkishness could tank stocks. “The difficulty today is that we have the most interest-rate-sensitive stock market in Wall Street history,” Jim Stack, the president of Whitefish, Montana’s InvesTech Research told Forbes in February.

FURTHER READING

Tesla Has Plunged 25% And Lost $200 Billion In Market Value Since Its Bitcoin Investment (Forbes)

Dow Plunges Nearly 700 Points After Powell’s Speech Fails To Ease Investor Worries (Forbes)

‘Not At All Likely’ U.S. Will Reach Maximum Employment This Year: Fed Chair Powell (Forbes)

Meghan and Harry: Aristocratic Victims for Our Times

When some future historian, or perhaps some honest parodist of our modern mores, seeks an event that captures the inversion at the core of our continuing cultural revolution, he should examine closely the television spectacle that aired on CBS Sunday evening.

There they were, assembled dreamily in the verdant grounds of a California mansion, poster victims of our irredeemably unjust system: the sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom, his wife, a so-so actress who nonetheless enjoyed considerable fortune before she married into the highest levels of the English aristocracy, alongside one of the most successful television celebrities on the planet, bemoaning the injustices that have befallen them in a systemically cruel society.

You’d struggle to find a better metaphor for one of the dominant narratives of our age: our elites parading their grievances and preoccupations for the masses, demanding sympathy, issuing a call for the ordinary people to do better to acknowledge their own sinfulness.

Economic inequality is greater than it has been in decades, and widening still further after a great recession and a global pandemic. The poorest neighborhoods in this country, many of them dominated by ethnic minorities, are beset by levels of violent crime and disorder not seen in a generation. Educational opportunities for those most blighted are drowning in a sea of neglect, ideological rectitude and acquiescence to the demands of teachers unions. All the while, we are forced to listen as chief executives, tenured academics, Hollywood celebrities and now a prince and his wife lecture us about what are supposed to be the real systemic flaws in our society: the terrible legacy of American history; sexism, racism and “transphobia”; the endless stream of microaggressions caused by an errant word, a contentious writer or the illustrations in the Dr. Seuss books.

None of this is to deny that our three figures, up there on their little Californian Calvary on Sunday, have, like all of us, had to bear their crosses.

Oprah Winfrey was there as the facilitator. She is a woman of exceptional talent and character who overcame crushing hardship in early life to achieve deserved success. When she speaks—or in this case facilitates a discussion—about hardship, we are well-advised to listen.

The duke of Sussex—the name provides a clue—had no such misfortune of birth, though he did suffer the unspeakable grief of losing his mother at a young age in violent and public circumstances, an event that surely left the deepest of psychic scars.

Even the duchess, the squeakiest of the wheels, commands some sympathy. The costs of marrying a royal are sometimes overlooked. Whatever their virtues, the Windsors will never be known for an openness of manner or spirit. They seem to have combined in their personalities in fact the relaxed informality of their German heritage and the sunny warmth of their adopted English homeland, so, we can assume Meghan’s distinctly New World style probably went over like supermarket kibble in the corgis’ breakfast bowl. And while claims about a yearning for privacy can be taken with a pinch of salt coming from an actress with a penchant for self-publicity that was notable even by the standards of her profession, it’s also true that the British press can be aggressively intrusive in ways anyone would find painful.

But the personal struggles, real as they are, aren’t the subject matter of the lesson we are enjoined to learn from them. The ex-royal couple have enough wit to understand that their own hardships don’t occasion many tears outside their lachrymose celebrity friends.

Instead they frame themselves as victims of much larger societal evils.

Harry and Meghan have seized the moment to sign on fully to the woke creed, ascribing their trials to that original sin of racism, not just from the royal family itself, but from the British press, feeding the ugly prejudices of the masses. They conveniently forget that the arrival of Meghan was greeted by the same press—and the same masses—with joyous acclaim, that she was portrayed as somewhere between Grace Kelly and Diana Ross.

But that’s the beauty of the new dispensation: You can always blame systemic injustice. Meghan may be pointing the finger at unnamed royals for her victim status, but we know that’s just a proxy for the wider evil that, improbable as it seems, makes her the victim. Even as you sit there in your alabaster palaces, your Silicon Valley boardrooms or your elegantly appointed dressing rooms, you can point to the real cause of society’s inequity: the Trump- and Brexit-voting hordes with their unenlightened views on immigration, crime, the climate, Western history.

And it’s one of the ironies of our leading social-justice revolutionaries, fighting to overturn the social order. When you have on your side the people who control most of the nation’s corporations, newsrooms, universities, celebrities, the federal government—along with a duke and a duchess—can you really be that oppressed?

World Economic Forum promotes ‘artificial sun’

Klaus Schwab’s World Economic Forum (WEF), the organization behind the Great Reset, is promoting an artificial sun called “Urban Sun.”

A Dutch artist has launched an installation he says “aims to make public spaces safe by using UV light to kill the virus causing COVID-19,” according to ABC Eyewitness News.

Video shows artist Daan Roosegaarde’s installation, dubbed “Urban Sun,” on display in Rotterdam in the Netherlands.

ABC reports:

The studio said the project was based on “multiple peer-reviewed journal articles authored by scientists from Columbia University and Hiroshima University” which found coronavirus airborne droplets were killed when exposed to a particular wavelength of ultraviolet-C (UV-C) light.

“Research shows that though traditional 254nm UV light is harmful, the new far-UV-C light with a wavelength of 222 nanometers can actually sanitize viruses safely,” the studio said.

Roosegaarde hopes to install the lights at festivals in the summer as COVID-19 restrictions ease but said it was not a replacement for a vaccine or government rules, Reuters reported. The actors involved in the project, who are seen in this footage, were tested for the coronavirus before filming and were only exposed to the light for a few minutes at a time, the agency reported.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has said UV-C radiation may be effective in inactivating SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, but there is “limited published data about the wavelength, dose, and duration of UV-C radiation required” to do so.

The administration also warned that there have been “reports of skin and eye burns resulting from improper installation of UV-C lamps.”

The WEF has been eyeing sun-replacement technology for years now. A June 2017 WEF publication praised German scientists for their creation of “the world’s largest artificial sun.”

The WEF is now showcasing the Urban Sun on their website as means of destroying “up to 99.9% of virus particles.”