Join the conversation and help us build an alternative social news media platform by emailing your comments to editors@thehustings.news  

Scroll down this column to read ….

•David Amaya on the future of nation building by the U.S. government.

•Our flash debate on the Pandora Papers released by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. 

•Our flash debate on the controversy surrounding Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff regarding his portrayal in the book Peril, by Bob Woodward and Robert Costa. 

•Pundit-at-large Stephen Macaulay, “The Seriousness of China,” on the growing Cold War with the country.

•The California gubernatorial recall and the future of Trump’s GOP, by Jessica Gottlieb.

•Reader comment on the Biden Administration’s vaccine mandate.

•Macaulay on the vaccine mandate.

____________________________________

Join the conversation and help us build an alternative social news media platform by emailing your comments to editors@thehustings.news   […]

President Biden flies to Rome tomorrow to meet with Pope Francis, ahead of a trip to Glasgow, Scotland, Sunday for next week’s United Nations climate conference.

Email your comments on the latest news and our debates to editors@thehustings.news

Billionaire Income Tax and Half-Trillion for Climate Change Push Negotiations –Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-OR, released a “billionaires income tax” proposal targeting about 700 Americans to help pay for the White House’s Build Back Better budget reconciliation bill currently under intense negotiations between moderate and progressive Congressional Democrats, according to multiple sources, including Punchbowl News and NPR’s Morning Edition.

The proposal appears to have widespread support among the two Democratic factions. The budget reconciliation framework has a current target price of $1.75 trillion to $1.9 trillion, but that would be spread out over a number of years, and the approximately $300 billion the billionaires’ tax is expected to raise would cover much of the cost.

On the spending side, Axios reports that the White House is telling lawmakers that the climate change provisions in the reconciliation bill are “largely settled” at $500 billion to $555 billion, making it likely the costliest single expense. This would give President Biden something to talk up when he attends the 2021 United Nations climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland, next week, though he may have to describe it as a proposal, rather than legislation passed by Congress.

How the Billionaire Income Tax Would Work: Wyden’s proposal would tax more than $1 billion in assets, or more than $100 million income over three straight years, including “tradable assets,” known as “marked to market” in which billionaire taxpayers would pay taxes on investment gains or take a deduction on investment losses. This would tax, for example, gains on a stock’s value even if the billionaire investor does not sell the stock to pocket the gain. 

Wyden’s proposal also would impose a minimum tax rate on corporations of 15%, regardless of whether the company posts income or loss in a given year. 

The Finance Committee notes that the Joint Committee on Taxation has not yet scored the proposal, Punchbowl News says.

•••

Lost the Election and >130,000 People: Dr. Deborah Birx, coronavirus response coordinator in the Trump Administration, told the House Coronavirus Crisis Select Subcommittee, “I felt like the White House had gotten somewhat complacent through the campaign season,” in an excerpt released by the subcommittee quoted by The Washington Post. Birx is also quoted: “I believe if we had fully implemented the mask mandates, the reduction in indoor dining, the getting friends and family to understand the risk of gathering in private homes, and we had increased testing, that we probably could have decreased fatalities into the 30%-less to 40%-less range.” Or about 130,000 people.

Trump spokeswoman Liz Harrington responded in a statement: “President Trump led an unprecedented effort to successfully combat the coronavirus, delivering PPE, hospital beds, treatments, and three vaccines in record time. Unfortunately, this approach was not taken up by the current government, and more lives have been lost from covid this year than the entirety of 2020, which the Fake News media places no blame onto Joe Biden.” 

Note: Isn’t the phrase “successfully combat the coronavirus” used by Harrington essentially undercut by reality? Aren’t Joe Biden’s declining poll numbers, regularly quoted by news outlets that are undoubtedly considered “Fake” by Trump and his acolytes, associated with the pandemic? Although there have been some 353,000 deaths this year associated with COVID according to Johns Hopkins University, which exceeds the estimated 352,000 in 2020, doesn’t Harrington realize that were people to have undertaken the recommendations that Birx enumerates, there would have been fewer people infected, which means that there would have been fewer fatalities — in 2020 and 2021?

•••

McConnell Endorses Trump Senate Candidate – In the ongoing gauge of which way the GOP winds are blowing in relationship to Donald J. Trump’s control of the party, this one counts as a “win” for the twice-impeached former president. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-KY, has endorsed Herschel Walker for next year’s GOP primary to run against incumbent Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-GA, who won his seat in Georgia’s January runoffs to help Democrats take their tie breaker-thin majority.

“Herschel is the only one who can unite the party, defeat Sen. Warnock, and take back the Senate,” McConnell said in a statement issued to Politico. The Senate’s number-two Republican, John Thune of South Dakota, had endorsed Walker on Monday. There has been some concern among Republicans regarding Walker’s personal life, including allegations he drew a gun on his ex-wife.

Walker, the 1982 Heisman Trophy winner as University of Georgia running back, served as co-chair of the President’s Council on Sports, Fitness and Nutrition under the Trump administration. Before playing for several NFL teams, Walker played for the New Jersey Generals, a team of the short-lived U.S. Football League once owned by Trump.

Note: McConnell is still stinging for the GOP’s loss of both Senate seats from Georgia in last January’s special run-offs, after Trump apparently dissuaded Republicans in the state from showing up to the polls with his false “voter fraud” claims, and he clearly sees Walker as providing his best path to retaking the Senate majority leader’s gavel. At a recent rally, Trump threatened another Georgia January: “If we don’t solve the presidential election fraud of 2020 … Republicans will not be voting in ’22 or ’24. It’s the single most important things for Republicans to do.”

•••

Comedian/Satirist Mort Sahl Dies – Joke-writer for John F. Kennedy and personal friend of Ronald Reagan, and cited by the Library of Congress as the “earliest example of modern stand-up comedy on record” for “At Sunset,” recorded in 1955, according to his New York Times obituary, Mort Sahl has died, in Mill Valley, California. He was 94. Sahl’s particular brand of political humor – explaining the “horse shoe” of left-and-right political philosophy, for example -- in the late 1950s and 1960s made him an influence on numerous comedians to come.

--Edited by Todd Lassa, Gary S. Vasilash and Charles Dervarics

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2021

Executives for TikTok, YouTube and Snapchat testify before the Senate Commerce Committee’s consumer protection panel today on how well their social media platforms protect children online (WaPo).

Moderna has announced it will deliver up to 110 million doses of its COVID-19 vaccine to countries on the African continent, the AP reports. The first 15 million are to be delivered by the end of this year, with another 35 million doses in the first quarter of 2022, and 60 million in the second quarter.

President Biden will announce Tuesday a $100 million initiative to strengthen the U.S. relationship with South East Asia Politico reports, citing the White House. Biden joins a virtual summit today with the 10-member Association of South East Asian Nations, (ASEAN), the first time for a U.S. president since Donald Trump in 2017.

Billionaire Tax Proposed for Budget Reconciliation – A Democratic proposal for a billionaires’ tax to pay for the Build Back Better budget reconciliation bill – now targeted at $1.75-1.9 trillion – is “gaining momentum,” according to The Hill, while Republicans are calling it “too cumbersome” compared with raising taxes on corporations and the wealthy, the Associated Press reports. 

These two interpretations are not mutually exclusive, though they could indicate why Sen. Krysten Sinema, D-AZ, has yet to weigh in on it. Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-WV, seems to approve the provision, according to the AP, while Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-KY, calls it a “hare-brained scheme.”  Some Republicans say the tax scheme, which is meant to raise funds to pay for the budget reconciliation bill without raising the federal debt, could be challenged in court.

It’s based on a 2019 bill by Ron Wyden, D-OR, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, and would tax the assets of billionaires, many of whom don’t pay much, or anything in taxes on annual income, but earn millions per year from investments. The proposal also would  set a 15% minimum tax rate on corporations, regardless of how they report profits. [GV1] 

According to Roll Call, taxing unrealized capital gains – on stock prices that go up over the tax year but are not cashed in, called “market-to-market” – is gaining momentum given Sinema’s opposition to increased taxes on individuals[GV2]  earning more than $400,000 per year ($450,000 for couples). 

Note: Some Democrats appear ready to call McConnell’s bluff and simply proceed with the tax increases, while Sinema hasn’t publicly weighed in yet – perhaps waiting to see which way the tax winds are blowing.

•••

UN Report Says Global Emissions Will be Up 16% by 2030 – A new United Nations report says global emissions are set to increase as much as 16% by the end of the decade, The Washington Post reports. The new UN report, coming ahead of its climate summit beginning Sunday in Glasgow, Scotland, is based on 192 countries’ commitments to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

In other words, it’s not enough. 

The U.S. and Australia both have committed to becoming carbon neutral by 2050, though President Biden’s target date will be affected by cuts to his climate change proposal in the Build Back Better budget reconciliation bill, and Australia plans to do it, according to the BBC, without shutting down coal or gas production. China has committed to carbon neutrality by 2060.

If countries don’t get more aggressive with plans to cut greenhouse gases, the UN report says, the Earth is expected to be 2.7 degrees Celsius warmer by the end of the century, “far above” the 2C benchmark set in 2015, WaPo says.

•••

Alabama Governor Resists COVID Vax Mandate — “Alabamians are overwhelmingly opposed to these outrageous, Biden mandates, and I stand with them,” Alabama’s Republican Gov. Kay Ivey said in a statement, according to The Washington Post. She has signed an executive order that is meant to counter the federal mandate that requires workers at federal contractors, federal employees, and health workers at facilities Medicare and Medicaid money be vaccinated.

Note: Note the “federal.” The vaccination rate, the Post says, was 44.4% in Alabama, as of late Monday. Aren’t governors supposed to protect their people?

•••

U.S. Aid to Sudan Suspended Following Coup – The Biden administration has suspended $700 million in financial aid to Sudan following yesterday’s military coupe, the AP reports. The aid is on “pause” pending review of developments in Khartoum. The State Department has called for the immediate release of those arrested, including Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok.

•••

Trump Jr. Sells T-Shirts Mocking Alec Baldwin Shooting – Donald Trump, Jr., is selling t-shirts on his website mocking the fatal shooting of the cinematographer on Alec Baldwin’s Rust movie set, The Hill reports. We won’t repeat the t-shirt’s words, nor the website’s address here with the same warning the NRA often made after several multiple shootings, that now is not the time to politicize a tragedy.

Note: Baldwin had done a masterful job of eviscerating Trump Senior on Saturday Night Live. Presumably Junior is still smarting over that.

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Gary S. Vasilash


MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2021

Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen testifies before the British Parliament today, as new revelations show that the social media platform “meticulously” tracked international harms while ignoring warnings by its own employees about the way poor design decisions affected vulnerable communities around the world (WaPo).

Democrats are looking to wrap up negotiations on the budget reconciliation bill and move its framework along while passing the bipartisan infrastructure bill Wednesday, and finally deliver it to President Biden’s desk before he departs for a trip to Rome on Thursday (The Hill and Punchbowl News.) Details below…

Sudan’s top general has arrested the nation’s prime minister and other top officials in a military coup Monday, the AP reports. Thousands of citizens are reported to have flooded the streets of the capital Khartoum, and its twin city of Omdurman, as Gen. Abdel Fattah Burhan dissolved the government of Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok.

Delivering Budget Reconciliation on Time? – Medicare expansion and taxes on billionaires are among the key remaining issues Democrats must figure out before moving forward a compromise of President Biden’s Build Back Better budget reconciliation, now expected to come in at $1.75 trillion. 

“In terms of where we are, I have already said we have 90% of the bill agreed to and written,” House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-CA, said on CNN’s State of the Union Sunday. “We just have some of the last decisions to be made.” 

A key swing vote, Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-WV, is amenable to new taxes on billionaires and certain corporations to pay for the pared down social service and climate change programs, the Associated Press reports, after meeting at Biden’s Wilmington, Delaware home with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-NY. 

Democrats already had missed its latest self-imposed deadline Friday for the budget reconciliation framework and worked through the weekend to get to that 90%. 

Note: Congressional Democrats also are crashing against the end-of-the-month expiration of highway funding (already extended by a month), and Biden’s planned appearance at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Scotland. Biden will have much less to show at that conference, with his Build Back Better program having been cut in half. But wait, there’s more. Virginia’s gubernatorial election is November 2 – one week from tomorrow (early voting has already begun) – and Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe needs a Biden legislative victory to give his campaign against Republican candidate Glenn Younkin a bump. Polls say the two Virginia candidates are in a dead heat, but with momentum on the Republican’s side.

Doing the Math:  The numbers behind “trillions of dollars” of White House budget proposals have been thrown around, sometimes willy nilly, in the past half year or so. President Biden had initially proposed $3.5 trillion in spending for 10 years in his Build Back Better budget reconciliation proposal. Sen. Manchin had set an upper limit of $1.5 trillion for the bill, but the latest intel from the AP suggests he will accept up to $1.75 trillion. The bipartisan infrastructure bill – the one the Senate already passed  and is sitting in the House waiting for the budget reconciliation bill, is about $1.2 trillion total, though it’s actually just $550 billion in new spending above programs already funded. 

•••

Members of Congress Involved in January 6 Planning? — Two planners of the January 6 rallies in Washington are alleging “that multiple members of Congress were intimately involved in planning both Trump’s efforts to overturn his election loss and the January 6 events that turned violent,” according to a story in Rolling Stone by Hunter Walker. Walker also writes, “Along with [Marjorie Taylor] Greene, the conspiratorial pro-Trump Republican from Georgia who took office earlier this year, the pair both say the members who participated in these conversations or had top staffers join in included Rep. Paul Gosar, R-AZ, Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-CO, Rep. Mo Brooks, R-AL, Rep. Madison Cawthorn, R-NC, Rep. Andy Biggs, R-AZ, and Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-TX.” 

Also, Walker writes that the sources say Gosar “dangled the possibility of a ‘blanket pardon’ in an unrelated ongoing investigation to plan the protests.”

Note: If this is even partially true, isn’t this a description of a conspiracy to overthrow the Constitution? Party of law and order? 

•••

Charlottesville Civil Trial Begins – Jury selection is set to begin today in the civil trial filed by nine local residents against organizers of the deadly 2017 rally by white supremacists and militia members in Charlottesville, Virginia, per The Washington Post. Defendants include neo-Nazi Jason Kessler, who was a main organizer, and Richard Spencer, a featured speaker. The jury will decide whether the organized rally amounted to a conspiracy to engage in racially motivated violence. The trial is expected to run through November 19.

Note: Recall that Charlottesville’s rally is perhaps most notorious for the comments of then-President Trump, who said there were “very fine people, on both sides,” which he followed up with several dog-whistle comments through the rest of his administration.

•••

Pediatric Vaccinations Coming Next Month – A Food and Drug Administration advisory committee meets Tuesday to discuss a request by Pfizer and BioNTech to allow pediatric COVID-19 vaccinations for five- to 11-year-olds, The Washington Post reports. The advisory committee will inform the FDA’s decision on the request, which then will go on to the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, which could approve the vaccine for children in that age group, Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, said on ABC News’ This Week Sunday.

--Edited by Todd Lassa, Gary S. Vasilash and Nic Woods

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•President Biden flies to Rome tomorrow to meet with Pope Francis, ahead of a trip to Glasgow, Scotland, […]

Join the conversation and help us build an alternative social news media platform by emailing your comments to editors@thehustings.news  

Scroll down this column to read…

•David Iwinski on the future of nation building by the U.S. government.

•Our flash debate on the Pandora Papers released by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. 

•Our quick-take debate on the controversy surrounding Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff regarding his portrayal in the book Peril, by Bob Woodward and Robert Costa. 

•Right-column pundit Bryan Williams, “New Competition May Do Us Some Good,” on the growing Cold War with China.

•Williams again, on the California gubernatorial recall and the future of Trump’s GOP.

•David Iwinski on the Biden administration’s vaccine mandate.

____________________________________

Join the conversation and help us build an alternative social news media platform by emailing your comments to editors@thehustings.news   […]

Scroll down past News & Notes for a debate on the future of nation building by the United States. David Amaya offers his perspective in the left column, and David Iwinski comments from the right, in a preview of an upcoming, October 28 Braver Angels national debate on the issue. 

Join the conversation on this issue, or any of the debates listed below by emailing your comments to editors@thehustings.news

Also in the left column …

•Our flash debate on the Pandora Papers released by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. 

•Our flash debate on the controversy surrounding Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff regarding his portrayal in the book Peril, by Bob Woodward and Robert Costa. 

•Pundit-at-large Stephen Macaulay, “The Seriousness of China,” on the growing Cold War with the country.

•The California gubernatorial recall and the future of Trump’s GOP, by Jessica Gottlieb.

•Reader comment on the Biden Administration’s vaccine mandate.

•Macaulay on the vaccine mandate.

_____
Please email your comments to editors@thehustings.news

President Biden says he would potentially support Senate Democrats removing the legislative filibuster for a voting rights bill, and “other issues,” in a CNN Town Hall Thursday night. 

”Are you close to a deal?” on the Build Back Better budget reconciliation package, CNN’s Anderson Cooper asked Biden. “I think so,” the president responded.

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-AZ, has reportedly accepted a package of tax changes that would help pay for the budget reconciliation package, NPR’s Morning Edition reports. Moderate and progressive Democrats have negotiated the package to somewhere between $1.75 trillion and $1.9 trillion.

Moderate and Progressive Democrats Still Aren’t There – Despite all the sunshine and bunnies evoked by President Biden and Sen. Krysten Sinema, the two sides aren’t that close to a deal on budget reconciliation. “Democrats are unlikely to strike a framework deal … this week,” The Hill suggests, “as divisions between centrist Democrats and progressives continue to plague negotiations and threaten to derail them entirely.”

In a separate story in The Hill, Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-WV, provided an explanation for the “bullshit” Mother Jones story that said he had threatened to leave the Democratic caucus to become an “American independent.” According to the Capitol Hill newsletter, Manchin told Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-NY, “that if it would help (the Democratic caucus) ‘publicly’ to become an independent who still caucuses with the party” as they negotiate a bill as large as possible in order to appease progressives, he was willing to do so.

Note: Typical storm before the vote, as the herd of Democratic cats keeps trying to gather itself up to vote for the reconciliation bill. Prospects are probably better than it looks – but will either side of the party be satisfied with the outcome?

•••

House Vote is 229-202 to Hold Bannon in Contempt – The full House of Representatives voted 229-202 to hold former Trump advisor Stephen K. Bannon in contempt of Congress for failing to respond to a subpoena to question him for his role in the January 6 Capitol insurrection. Nine Republicans joined House Democrats voting for the contempt charges. Former Vice President Mike Pence’s brother, Rep. Greg Pence, R-IN, did not vote.

Select Committee on January 6 Chairman Bennie Thompson, D-MS, said Bannon “stands alone in his complete defiance of our subpoena,” according to Roll Call. The committee unanimously voted to move Bannon’s contempt charges forward to the full House. The two Republicans on Thompson’s committee, Reps. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, and Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, were among the nine members of their party voting for the charges in the full House.

The others were:

•Peter Meijer and Fred Upton, Michigan.

•John Katko, New York.

•Nancy Mace, South Carolina.

•Anthony Gonzalez, Ohio.

•Brian Fitzpatrick, Pennsylvania.

•Jaime Herrera Butler, Washington.

•••

McCarthy to GOP Consultants: It’s Me or Cheney – A prominent Washington lobbyist close to Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-CA, is warning political consultants to choose between the House minority leader and January 6 Select Committee member Liz Cheney, R-WY, The New York Times reports. This has prompted “one fund-raising firm to disassociate itself from Ms. Cheney,” according to the report. 

The Morning Group has informed Cheney it can no longer work on her 2022 primary campaign, the NYT says. 

Note: Back in July, Cheney told Fox News she had set two straight record fund-raising quarters in a row after McCarthy ousted her from GOP House leadership, per the conservative-turned-Trumpist magazine, National Review. McCarthy obviously intends to put an end to that, and The Morning Group’s acquiescence to the minority leader will force Cheney to seek help outside the usual channels. This will be a test of how large and serious the post-2016 anti-Trumpist conservative movement really is.

••

Maybe It Wasn’t the Autopilot — Tesla is under investigation by both the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB — which you’re probably more familiar with vis-à-vis plane crashes) and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). 

The issue is whether the company’s so-called “Autopilot” system is the cause of fatalities or crashes, as there seems to be an unfounded understanding that the Tesla vehicles can drive themselves (they can’t). In August, NHTSA opened an investigation of 11 crashes “in which Tesla models of various configurations have encountered first responder scenes and subsequently struck one or more vehicles involved with those scenes.” 

NTSB has been looking at an accident that occurred in Spring, Texas, last April in which there were two fatalities. The NTSB released an update yesterday, according to Automotive News, which indicate that the driver was behind the wheel of the Model S, not in the rear passenger seat, as had been initially claimed by some outlets. The investigation is on-going.

Note: What is interesting about this from a political point of view is that Tesla has been remarkably blasé about the claims that it makes for its “Autopilot” and “Full Self-Driving” (it isn’t) systems. More conventional OEMs have tended to be more responsive to addressing the concerns of federal investigatory agencies. Seems like the same indifference to things like subpoenas by both public servants and private citizens has made its way to corporations, as well.

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Gary S. Vasilash

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2021

The full House of Representatives votes today on whether to charge former Trump advisor Stephen K. Bannon with contempt of Congress for failing to respond to the January 6 Select Committee investigating his alleged role in the Capitol insurrection. The House is expected to vote in favor of the charges mostly along party lines, plus committee members Reps Liz Cheney, R-WY, and Adam Kinzinger, R-IL.

The FDA has authorized Johnson & Johnson and Moderna COVID-19 vaccine boosters, as well as mixing and matching of the coronavirus vaccines, including Pfizer-BioNTech. In other words, whatever you had as a vaccine, you can take a different booster shot.

Magazine: Manchin Considers Ditching Democratic Party – Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia has told associates he is considering leaving the Democratic Party to become an “American Independent,” and has an exit plan if the $3.5-trillion Build Back Better budget reconciliation isn’t cut in half to $1.75 trillion, according to a scoop by Mother Jones Washington bureau chief David Corn. The revelation in the progressive magazine comes after President Biden appears to have convinced both factions of the party that the ceiling on the budget reconciliation bill will be no higher than $1.9 trillion, in part by reducing the length of key programs within the bill down from 10 years. More important to the coal country senator, the plan would seriously pare down a program to promote clean energy alternatives for powerplants.

Note: The Mother Jones scoop comes just as progressive and moderate Democrats appear to have made progress negotiating the reconciliation bill. Indications are that the White House had agreed to a target price of $1.75 trillion to $1.9 trillion after meeting with progs and moderates separately early this week. Agreeing to the lower price tag will be key to passing the reconciliation budget by the end of October as planned. Manchin can then wait until the end of the year to join independent Sens. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, and Angus King of Maine as officially without a party.

•••

Build Back Faster — President Joe Biden gave a speech yesterday at the Electric City Trolley Museum in Scranton, Pennsylvania, a hometown speech meant to gin up support for the Build Back Better bills that are stalled in the Democratic meeting rooms on Capitol Hill. Biden has been criticized by many in his own party for being insufficiently vocal in support of the legislation. The speech ran for some 8,200 words. Gettysburg Address? About 270. Biden’s speech was about 30 times wordier. 

Note: Biden talked about his parents, grandparents, siblings, neighbors, neighborhoods, riding the trolley, racking up miles on Amtrak, the space race, a school-age nickname, and a variety of other folksy topics. While he did hit on things from job creation to health care to child care, much of it was buried in the vignettes. 

In his peroration Biden said, “I ran for President saying it was time to build the backbone of the nation. And by that, I was very precise: The middle class has been the backbone of this nation.”

Biden buried the lede.

•••

Cloture Fails, as Expected, in Freedom to Vote Act – The Senate on Wednesday rejected Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s, D-NY, cloture vote on S 2747, the Freedom to Vote Act, along party lines. The bill was Sen. Joe Manchin III’s, D-WV, proposal in September to pare down other bills that seek to counter several state Republican legislatures that are tightening their voting laws in the wake of President Biden’s “landslide” victory over incumbent Donald J. Trump last November. 

Schumer promises to bring other such bills back before the Senate, where he doesn’t have 10 Republicans willing to overcome a filibuster. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-KY, has kept his 49 fellow caucus members in line by objecting to federal laws that he says would usurp states’ rights on election laws.

Note: It’s the age-old struggle that goes to the question of whether we’re more a democracy or a republic, and entails filibusters, the electoral college, and representation in the Senate itself. Schumer & party are caught in a vicious loop in which filibusters on voting rights bills won’t be overcome without Democrats gaining 10 seats in the Senate, and that won’t happen so long as voting rights legislation continues to fail.

•••

Dead Heat in Virginia Gubernatorial Race – Less than two weeks before Virginia’s election day, with early voting ballots already flooding in, Republican candidate Glenn Youngkin has pulled up to a dead heat in the polls with Democrat Terry McAuliffe. Each has a 46% share of those polled by Monmouth University. McAuliffe, who served as Virginia’s governor from 2014 to 2018, previously had a 2- to 7-point lead in earlier polls.

Note: The gubernatorial election in purple Virginia will be a big indicator of Donald J. Trump’s influence over the GOP, and the electorate in general. While Youngkin, a former CEO of private equity firm The Carlyle Group, has tried to distance himself from the ex-president, Trump endorsed him last weekend, and former Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani put out a bizarre video Wednesday in which he dressed as Abraham Lincoln and criticized McAuliffe for “selling” the Lincoln Bedroom in the White House during the Clinton administration, when he was party chairman – a long-disproven scandal.

•••

Zuckerberg Added to Data Mining Lawsuit – Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been added to the District of Columbia’s lawsuit over the Cambridge Analytica data-mining scandal, Washington’s attorney general, Karl Racine announced on Twitter. Racine tweeted that his investigation, begun in 2018, has revealed that Zuckerberg was “personally involved in decisions related to Cambridge Analytica and Facebook’s failure to protect user data,” The Verge reports.

Note: Facebook coincidentally has announced it will change its name, though apparently Zuckerberg hasn’t decided, or at least said, what the new moniker will be. It will not be called Truth Social, which is the new social media platform designed as an alternative to big tech like Facebook, announced yesterday by Donald J. Trump.

--Edited by Todd Lassa, Gary S. Vasilash and Charles Dervarics

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2021

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-NY, will hold a cloture vote on the Freedom to Vote Act today. The procedural vote will fail. Details below...

Another Stab at Expanding Voter Rights to Fail – Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-KY, will filibuster S 2747, the Freedom to Vote Act, which Schumer has promised to bring to the floor for a vote. The bill is a pared down version of more expansive bill languishing on Capitol Hill that sought to restore key provisions of the 1965 Voting Rights Act that were negated by the 2013 Supreme Court ruling in Shelby v. Holder. The Freedom to Vote Act was sponsored in September by Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-MN, and is meant to address new, restrictive voting laws in Georgia, Texas, Iowa, and pending in other states. 

Senate Republicans are not receptive to any federal law that ultimately would give them a disadvantage in future elections, and the only way for this bill to succeed would be a vote ending the legislative filibuster, which Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-WV, opposes. 

Key provisions of S 2747 are:

•Makes election day a federal holiday.

•Expands same-day, and other voter registration rules.

•Expands voter access, including vote-by-mail and early voting.

•Limits removal of voters from the rolls.

•Allows those convicted of a crime to vote, unless serving a felony sentence at the time of the election.

•Establishes certain federal offenses for violating voter laws.

•Requires states to conduct post-election audits for federal elections.

•Addresses redistricting, including “generally” prohibiting mid-decade redistricting.

•••

Yesterday’s Separate White House Talks with Progs, Moderates, Worked – Why not gather progressive and moderate Democrats together in one meeting in order to work out the $3.5-trillion Build Back Better budget reconciliation bill?, we asked yesterday. President Biden met with both groups separately, and it seems to have worked, with NPR reporting “new momentum” toward reaching a deal that would guarantee support from nearly all the House Democrats and absolutely all 50 Senate Democrats. 

Rep. Ro Khanna, D-CA, told NPR’s Morning Edition he feels “closer than ever before” on a deal. The Washington Post reports that Biden has told Democrats that the new target should be a package of between $1.75 trillion and $1.9 trillion. Biden had previously promised the budget reconciliation would be paid for, though funding still apparently must be hashed out.

Note: This compromise will seem to be a victory for moderate Democrats, as Congress cuts the child care tax credit down to a one-year extension, and two years of free community college becomes an expansion of the Pell Grant program. The big winner of course, is Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-WV, who has won some pushback against the climate change programs within the bill. Progressives appear satisfied that some climate change provisions as well as expansion of Medicare benefits will prevail (per WaPo). Paid maternity leave will be pared down to four weeks from the original bill’s 12 weeks.

While it’s a much smaller bill, progressive Democrats appear satisfied that the package provides them some sort of victory – a pretty good win, in fact considering the party’s very narrow majority – as the $1.2-trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill now can finally move through the House and make its way to Biden’s desk to hand him a much-needed victory.

•••

January 6 Committee Forwards Bannon Contempt Charge to House – The House Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol insurrection unanimously recommended to charge former Trump advisor and provocateur Stephen K. Bannon be held in contempt for ignoring a subpoena in the case. The full House of Representatives is expected to vote for contempt charges, though Bannon’s failure to appear, and the question of whether he will be compelled to testify, as well as Donald J. Trump’s lawsuit seeking to block the committee from obtaining his White House records, and the Library of Congress from providing them, Roll Call reports.

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Charles Dervarics

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2021

President Biden will host progressive and moderate Democrats at the White House today in separate meetings in his continuing effort to reach a deal on his Bring Back Better social infrastructure program, the budget reconciliation bill with the $3.5 trillion sticker price. Wouldn’t it be more productive to get both sides in the same meeting?

The Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the Capitol is expected to approve contempt charges against Stephen K. Bannon for his failure to respond to a subpoena in a 7:30 EDT session tonight.

Booster shots for COVID-19 do not have to be from the same source as the initial vaccines, the CDC has ruled. Those who have received the single-jab initial vaccine from Johnson & Johnson, which has proved to be less effective than Pfizer or Moderna two-shots, would be better off with a Moderna booster (WaPo).

Trump Sues Committee to Block Release of his White House Records – Former President Trump has filed suit in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to block the January 6 Select Committee from obtaining records related to the Capitol insurrection. Trump’s attorneys argue the House of Representatives Select Committee’s request is “almost limitless in scope,” and that most records sought are covered by executive privilege, reports NPR’s Morning Edition.

Note: We’re off to the races, as Trump attempts to block release of the records long as possible. Most analysts and Constitutional scholars agree that the ex-president doesn’t have a legal leg to stand on, though that hasn’t stopped him in more than 4,000 lawsuits during his real estate, reality television and political career. The longer Trump can draw this out, even into next year’s midterm election campaigns, the better for him. Meanwhile, Washington is agog waiting to see whether former Trump adviser Stephen K. Bannon, who was never an official in the administration and nevertheless claims executive privilege, will be carted off to jail.

•••

Colin Powell’s Multiple Myeloma Compromised COVID Vaccine Effectiveness – It shouldn’t be necessary to say this, but former Secretary of State Colin Powell’s death at age 84 Monday from complications of COVID-19 despite having been fully vaccinated was related to his suffering with blood cancer that compromised his immune system. But there are reports that right-wing social media used his death to again question the effectiveness of the vaccines.

“I’ve got multiple myeloma cancer, and I’ve got Parkinson’s disease, but otherwise I’m fine,” Powell told The Washington Post’s Bob Woodward in July, in what was likely his last interview. “Don’t feel sorry for me,” he added.

•••

Alternative to Clean Electricity Program? – Sen. Joe Manchin III’s, D-WV, refusal to accept a $150 billion clean electricity provision in the $3.5 trillion Bring Back Better budget reconciliation bill is sending his congressional colleagues back to the drawing board, as they look for an alternative to appease the coal country senator. 

“I’ve been told it would be prudent to plan alternatives and be very happy if it’s not out,” said Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-RI, described by Roll Call as one of the Senate’s climate hawks. 

Manchin opposes the clean electricity provision, which seeks to fund a shift to solar, wind, nuclear and other renewable energy sources, because “he thinks energy companies are already making the transition,” Roll Call says. 

Note: Punchbowl News says “I told you so,” in a post Tuesday noting that Manchin is sticking with the position he has taken since negotiations begun. That includes a $1.5 trillion cost ceiling with little wiggle-room even though progressive and moderate Democrats reportedly are zeroing in on a final price tag closer to the $2 trillion mark. 

But Manchin’s receptiveness to negotiation was on display yesterday, as he and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT, posed for news cameras together on the Capitol grounds. News & Notes finds it notable that while Roll Call calls Manchin a “moderate Democrat” in its report, Punchbowl News uses the term, “conservative Democrat.” We’d bet the latter tag determines Manchin’s final position, and that the progs will want to develop that clean electricity alternative tout suite.

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Nic Woods

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2021

Former President Bill Clinton has been released and is heading home to New York after spending six days in an Orange County, California, hospital for a non-COVID infection, NPR reports.

Jury selection begins in Georgia today in the trial of Greg McMichael, his son Travis McMichael and neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan for the February 2020 shooting of an unarmed Black jogger, Ahmaud Arbery, in their suburban neighborhood. Jury selection could take weeks, and location for the trial may be moved to a different region of Georgia, WaPo says. 

Two Weeks in Washington – Prepare for two weeks of tortuous negotiations between progressive and moderate Democrats on Capitol Hill as the two sides haggle over how to cut President Biden’s Build Back Better program, the $3.5-trillion budget reconciliation bill, to about $2 trillion, The Hill previews. 

On Saturday The New York Times reported that Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-WV, told the White House he “strongly opposes” a $150-billion provision in the bill to quickly replace coal- and gas-fired powerplants in the U.S. with wind, solar and nuclear energy. Biden travels to Glasgow in two weeks for a United Nations summit on climate change, and Manchin’s demands to remove the $150 billion provision will make it difficult to convince the rest of the world that the U.S. is serious about the problem, the NYT notes.

Another point of contention to be hashed out in two weeks is a provision in the bill, also championed by progressives, to reduce the cost of prescription drugs. It faces opposition by Sens. Bob Menendez, D-NJ, and Krysten Sinema, D-AZ, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Note: While conventional wisdom on Capitol Hill says that Congress loves deadlines and will work all this out in two weeks, these points of contention appear to be more of a power struggle between the two sides of the Democratic Party than simply differences in political philosophy. The $1.2-trillion infrastructure bill has been under threat since House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-CA, agreed to connect its passage to the budget reconciliation bill, and now the U.S.’s already poor image on climate change seems likely to suffer, too, as Donald J. Trump’s GOP watches Biden’s presidency fail under the weight of his own party.

•••

Buttigieg Says Supply Chain Won’t Be Fixed Soon — “A lot of the challenges that we have been experiencing this year will continue into next year,” Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said on CNN’s State of the Union, regarding the global supply chain. As for what the Administration can — or can’t — do, he said on NBC News’ Meet the Press, “Nobody wants the federal government to own or operate the stores, the warehouses, the trucks or the ships or the ports. Our role is to try to make sure we’re supporting those businesses and those workers who do.”

Note: Those last comments would qualify Buttigieg for hurrahs from the traditional Republican party, were such a thing still in existence.

One of the things that somehow seems to get overlooked when there are discussions of the broken supply chain is the fact that there has been a global pandemic since March 2020. Had all the countries in the world gotten after it when it first started spreading rather than, in some cases we are familiar with, thought it would go away on its own through some magical thinking, it would not have the magnitude that it has — and will continue to have. Sick workers can’t make microchips.

In addition to which, it is worth recognizing that this is a global problem, and not something that is the consequence of Joe Biden’s presidency.

•••

China’s Economy Stalls – China’s economy grew 4.9% over the last year, The Wall Street Journal reports, and while this may seem positive by the standards of the world’s largest economy (yes, the U.S. is still number-one), for number-two, it’s not that good. The Chinese economy is up this year only in comparison with the nadir from the effects of the coronavirus pandemic, and even then it pales next to China’s annual increases during the last decade that were typically in the 8-10% range. 

Compounding the poor economic outlook are a.) reports of electricity outages across China due to energy shortages and b.) the expected collapse of Evergrande, the country’s most indebted real estate developer. Companies like Evergrande have overbuilt real estate in China for decades, resulting in “ghost” buildings and even “ghost” cities according to numerous reports.

Note: China’s dominance of the global economy may not be quite the threat we thought, though Evergrande’s fate will affect the U.S. economy as well. More troubling is how China’s economy could continue to affect the supply chain for computer chips and electronic devices, and how it might affect the urgency of China’s urgency in retaking control of Taiwan.

•••

Obituary: Former Secretary of State Colin Powell – Colin Powell, the four-star general who became the first Black chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, under President George H.W. Bush, and the first Black secretary of state under President George W. Bush, died Monday from complications of COVID-19. Powell was once considered a potential candidate for president, though he declined to run. As Bush 43’s secretary of state, Powell launched war against Iraq to prevent Saddam Hussein’s government there from using “weapons of mass destruction” (WMDs), that were later revealed to not exist. Powell, 84, was awarded the Congressional Medal of Freedom twice. He was fully vaccinated, his family said in a Facebook post. (From reports by Politicoand NPR’s Morning Edition.)

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Gary S. Vasilash

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Scroll down past News & Notes for a debate on the future of nation building by the United States. David Amaya offers his perspective in the left column, and David Iwinski comments from the right, in a preview of an upcoming, October 28 Braver Angels national debate on the issue. 

Join the conversation on this issue, or any of the debates listed below by emailing your comments to editors@thehustings.news

Also in the right column …

•Our flash debate on the Pandora Papers released by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. 

•Our quick-take debate on the controversy surrounding Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff regarding his portrayal in the book Peril, by Bob Woodward and Robert Costa. 

•Right-column pundit Bryan Williams, “New Competition May Do Us Some Good,” on the growing Cold War with China.

•Williams again, on the California gubernatorial recall and the future of Trump’s GOP.

•David Iwinski on the Biden administration’s vaccine mandate.

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Please email your comments to editors@thehustings.news

By David Amaya

It is a strange task to elucidate how the world’s most robust and influential military belongs to a liberal democracy that is not afraid to use its force to prop up democratic political regimes in foreign nations (i.e., nation build). American Exceptionalism would summarize this Wilsonian mission as benevolence. Germany and Japan are two shining examples of successful American nation building – both have successful economies and democracies. Since those two efforts (which have roots in World War II), public opinion seems to gravitate towards exiling nation building and instead align itself with ex-President Trump’s isolationist agenda – “America First.”

One bridge that connects the American political divide is the overwhelmingly negative response to America’s nation building attempt in Afghanistan. An ability to nation- build that once gave us credibility and respect (Germany’s and Japan’s democracies) has now become our folly and walk of shame as we exit Afghanistan. 

The question of whether America should continue or cease nation building efforts is suspicious. Respondents must realize their answers are a pseudo-prescient anecdote that doesn’t consider the volatility and unpredictability of our (that is, the world’s) human nature. No one should be against humanitarian intervention; the dignity of man is worth preserving across the globe and history. 

A separate question we hesitate to answer is whether nation building can succeed without the world's most powerful military placing bets it can successfully prop up an authentic democratic regime. Another: can a nation’s sovereignty and self-determination be persuaded through other means to believe in democracy for themselves? Suppose the United States ever finds itself nation-building without the use or threat of its military prowess. In that case, we will find ourselves in a new era of foreign policy that can bring honor to democracy and American Exceptionalism yet again. Today, I believe everyone wants our troops home so we can all have this conversation together. 

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By Todd Lassa

Search “nation building” and you’ll turn up an article reposted all over the Internet, including newly minted Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Maria Ressa’s website, Rappler, as well as a number of left-leaning outlets, that cite an interview former National Security Advisor John Bolton gave shortly before the fall late last summer of Afghanistan to the Taliban, in which he blames the U.S. failure there after 20 years on the “change in our mission from anti-terrorism to nation building.”

Bolton’s comments might surprise supporters of both ex-President Trump, who employed Bolton as his national security advisor from April 2018 to September 2019, and supporters of President Biden, who has sided with his predecessor on a couple of key policy issues, including the need to completely extract the U.S. military from Afghanistan. In this case, both Trump and Biden should be at odds with Bolton, who is known more for his push while working for the George W. Bush administration to invade Iraq after the September 11, 2001 attacks in order to remove Saddam Hussein despite no evidence he had anything to do with the terrorism, or had a secret stash of nuclear warheads. 

That brings us back to the present day. On Sunday, October 10, Iraqis held an election for its parliament, but turnout according to myriad news reports was low, Politico reports, with some voters simply vandalizing their own ballots in protest. Like Afghanistan, Iraq’s democratically elected government has been rife with corruption and incompetency, even with six such parliaments following the 2003 eradication of Hussein.

While our experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan are vastly different in the details – especially the post-U.S. fate of the Afghanis -- they raise the same key question: Was it a mistake to try and remake both these nations in our own image? One prevalent post-mortem on Afghanistan is that we fought not one 20-year war, but instead, 20 one-year wars. How did Iraq get to six national elections in 18 years? 

Conversely, advocates of American nation building counter that the U.S. has the responsibility to spread freedom and democracy among countries that suppress their citizens, or are suppressed by bigger, more powerful countries. In the much-repeated op-ed cited at the beginning of this column, author Waldon Bello, a senior analyst for Focus on the Global South and international adjunct professor of sociology at State University of New York at Binghamton, writes that American nation building did not begin with Vietnam, but instead with the Philippines in the late 19th century, and worked in rare occasions, such as the rebuilding of Japan after its World War II defeat. He concludes, however, that nation building does not work. 

On October 28, Braver Angels will hold a national debate, Resolved: America Should Stop Nation Building. 

In the left and the right columns, you’ll find but two perspectives in preview of some of the points of view to be expressed. Go to braverangels.org for details on how to participate in the debate.

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By David Iwinski

While many claim the United States has never successfully engaged in the process of nation building and, thus, should swear off this process forever, it turns out that's not exactly the case. We don't have to go all the way back to the beginning of the Republic to find at least two superb examples of how the influence, funding and process of American engagement led directly to significant changes in political orientation and global cooperative participation.

At the end of World War II, Germany was not only in financial shambles but with the shattering of the dominant Nazi party and their ideology, they faced a crisis of identity and national meaning. One of their allies, Japan, was in even more catastrophic shape. Clobbered by two atomic bombs designed to rapidly end the war and stop both the deaths of American soldiers and Japanese civilians, they also faced the utter shock of coming to the reality that perhaps the Emperor was not directly connected to God and could not be considered omnipotent. They also had a long history of hyper-aggressive militant behavior that manifested itself in their outward relations with the world.

The Marshall Plan, also known as the European Recovery Program, was a U.S. program providing aid to Western Europe following the devastation of World War II. American money helped rebuild the cities, factories, railroads and other modes of transportation while simultaneously engaging in the reconstruction of governmental entities and policies with a focus on cooperative behavior and economic development. In short order, Germany became one of the leading manufacturers in Europe – it is the continent’s leader today, providing German citizens with not only a wealthy lifestyle but also a safe one promoting cooperation and peaceful engagement with its neighbors.

In Asia, General MacArthur went into Japan and after writing them a new Constitution, essentially restructured and rebuilt the nation from the ground up. He instituted such radical reforms as universal suffrage and other changes designed to not only modernize the landscape of Japan but also the thinking of the people. Japan embraced these changes to such an extent that within a couple decades it became a successful manufacturing colossus and is now one of the world’s leading economies.

What's interesting are the preconditions for these extraordinarily successful nation-building efforts. The first is that the aggressive and dysfunctional existing governments had to offer complete surrender and capitulation, not only being rejected by outside nations but the good citizens of their own country as well. The second is that the American efforts were direct and structural, going to the heart of what needed to be done and doing it fast.

As I see it, the major problem with nation building in the modern era is that dysfunctional governments we have attempted to reform may have been militarily conquered or humbled, but they have never surrendered nor acknowledged defeat. They have remained in a state of semi-power and, as a result, the people in these nations have not had the ability to fully embrace a new regime or a new way of thinking.  Peace was maintained by virtue of American troops, guns and money but there was no fundamental change of heart from people living in these nations on the ground.

Modern nation building, as it seems to exist today, tries (and fails) because we strive to be "kinder and gentler" and think of wholesale social change can be accomplished via soft persuasion and sweet slogans. We desire to change hearts and minds while leaving in place those negative elements that created the problem in the first place. We think if we can just be a good example and plant a few crops that the people who were brutally dominated under the old regime will have the intestinal fortitude to fight them off once we walk out the door. With that in mind, I would say that our post-World War II nation building efforts have had this fundamental flaw, making them a terrible waste of blood and money.

If we desire to truly help the beleaguered people of a nation run by tyrannical despots who shower brutality upon their own people, the rules of engagement must allow us to go in hard and fast to root them out and completely dominate the terrain of both the land and the political landscape so that they have nowhere to hide and either face, as the Japanese did in 1945 the decision to capitulate or be completely destroyed. Under those circumstances, we would have a chance of a successful effort in the participative democracy and the establishment of successful republics.

Is this vision likely to occur? Honestly, I think not. When we try to run wars based on calling back home for legal advice before we decide which terrorist we can shoot, we are so far away from helping the people we claim to be trying to save that we might simply be better off staying home. 

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Please email your comments to editors@thehustings.news

Scroll down past News & Notes for a quick-take debate on a House bill to de-schedule marijuana as a controlled substance by federal law, and implications for state laws legalizing or de-criminalizing it. Join the conversation: email your comments to editors@thehustings.news.

Also in this column …

•Quick-take debate on the Pandora Papers released by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. 

•A quick-take debate on the controversy surrounding Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff regarding his portrayal in the book Peril, by Bob Woodward and Robert Costa. 

•Pundit-at-large Stephen Macaulay, “The Seriousness of China,” on the building Cold War with the country.

•The California gubernatorial recall and the future of Trump’s GOP, by Jessica Gottlieb.

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To comment on any of these issues, please email editors@thehustings.news

Former President Bill Clinton, 75, is hospitalized in Orange County with an infection not linked to COVID-19, according to a spokesman and two of his physicians, the L.A. Times reports. Clinton was in Southern California for a private reception and dinner for the non-profit Clinton Foundation.

A federal court has sided with Texas on its controversial abortion law, which will remain in effect pending further review.

Retail Sales Rise 0.7% in September – Here’s some good economic news: retail sales rose 0.7% in September according to the Commerce Department, despite supply constraints, the Delta variant of the coronavirus and the end of unemployment benefits, The Wall Street Journal reports. The September rate of inflation was 0.4%, although it stands at 5.4% for the year. 

•••

Bannon Faces Contempt Charges – The House Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol insurrection meets next Tuesday to begin contempt charges against former Trump advisor Stephen K. Bannon for his refusal to respond to a subpoena, The Washington Post reports. Former Trump administration aides Mark Meadows and Kash Patel were initially expected to testify before closed doors this week but will be granted an extension or continuance. 

Dan Scavino, former White House deputy chief of staff for communications also has had his hearing before the committee postponed after delivery of his subpoena was delayed.

Note: While the House committee considers Bannon potentially the key witness in its investigation of January 6, his refusal to appear by excuse of “executive privilege,” which doesn’t exist (i.e., Trump is no longer president, so that privilege is moot), is nothing more than red meat for the most die-hard of Trump’s supporters. Bannon will revel in his continuing defiance of the “deep state.” And may find himself in an orange jump suit.

•••

You’re Not Fired, After All – Andrew McCabe, former deputy director of the FBI has had his full law enforcement benefits restored by the Justice Department, NPR’s Morning Edition reports, more than three years after he was fired in a dramatic television reality show-like Trump administration stunt. Trump fired McCabe hours before his retirement package was set to take effect after the ex-president’s Justice Department charged the career FBI official with “lack of candor” in a media leak investigation. 

Note: The “lack of candor” phrase came from then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions regarding McCabe’s authorization of a conversation between the FBI and The Wall Street Journal. McCabe became FBI director in 2017, after James Comey was fired by Trump. Sessions was to be fired by Trump in November 2018. All the best people.

•••

Pledge of Allegiance Made to January 6 Flag – Participants in a “Take Back Virginia” rally in which former President Trump endorsed Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin recited the Pledge of Allegiance to a flag apparently carried at the January rally preceding the Capitol insurrection, Newsweek reports. 

Youngkin has tried to distance himself from Trump in Virginia as the campaign heats up ahead of the November 2 election. He put out a statement Thursday that “While I had no role in last night’s event, I have heard about it from many people in the media today. It’s weird and it’s wrong to pledge allegiance to a flag connected to January 6. As I’ve said many times before, the violence that occurred January 6 was sickening and wrong.”

Outgoing Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, a term-limited Democrat, and Terry McAuliffe, the Democratic candidate running against Youngkin for governor both condemned the event, with McAuliffe calling it a “racist dog whistle,” according to Politico. A Fox News poll finds that Trump has a 53% unfavorable rating in purple Virginia, with McAuliffe, Youngkin and President Biden all more popular.

Note: We’ve for a long time said that the Virginia race for governor is the first true test of Trump’s post-January 6 popularity. Most recent polls have Youngkin pulling close to a dead heat with McAuliffe, but the pro-Trump rally and Trump’s endorsement of Youngkin is likely to wake up Virginia’s Democratic and independent voters despite the Republican candidate’s efforts to distance himself from the ex-president.

•••

DeSantis to Sue Over Vaccine Mandates — Florida’s Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis said he will challenge in federal court vaccine mandates proposed by President Joe Biden in September to be enforced by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Politico reports. According to Politico DeSantis said at a news conference, “Let's not have Biden come in and effectively take away — threaten to take away — the jobs of people who have been working hard throughout this entire pandemic. I am offended that a police officer could potentially lose their job.”

Note: Interesting that DeSantis is playing the law-and-order card when it seems that obeying the law is something that is selective according to many Republicans, including a resident of his state. While the duty of many police forces is “protect and serve,” (1) there have been 722,000 deaths associated with COVID and (2) studies show that the available vaccines have a high effectiveness of protecting individuals from contracting — and consequently passing — the virus, supporters of that ethos should have been first in line when the vaccines became available.

In addition to which, has DeSantis forgotten that the vaccines were the result of “Operation Warp Speed,” which was arguably his apparent role model’s only tangible accomplishment?

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Gary S. Vasilash

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2021

A Moderna booster shot for recipients of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine triggered more antibodies than either Pfizer or J&J boosters, according to an FDA review and a separate ‘pre-print’ study (WaPo).

Two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Nicholas Kristof has left the NYT for a likely run for the 2022 Democratic primary for governor of Oregon (Politico).

Lowest Unemployment Claims Since Pandemic Began – New unemployment claims for the nation fell to 293,000 for the week ending October 9, compared with an adjusted 329,000 claims the previous week, the Department of Labor reported Thursday. The latest numbers represent the lowest initial claims since the beginning of shutdowns over the pandemic. New unemployment claims were 256,000 for the week of March 14, 2020.

•••

Another 1/6 Committee Subpoena – The House of Representatives January 6 Select Committee Wednesday subpoenaed former Trump administration Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark as it took more than eight hours of closed-door testimony from former acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen (per The Washington Post) regarding the final days of the 45thpresidency. Rosen had replaced President Trump’s longest-serving AG, William Barr, just before Christmas. Leading up to the January 6 Capitol insurrection, Clark, as a Justice Department official who was ready to lend DOJ resources to Trump’s false claims of election fraud, was ready to replace Rosen as acting AG. 

Former Trump administration officials due to appear before the committee today include the ex-president’s chief of staff, Mark Meadows, former deputy chief of staff Dan Scavino, and Kashyap Patel, former chief of staff to then-acting Defense Secretary Christopher Miller. The fourth, ex-advisor Stephen R. Bannon, already has refused to testify on the grounds of executive privilege, despite that those grounds do not apply to former presidents, let alone their associates and staff.

Note: The House select committee is currently sorting out with the current DOJ how to enforce the subpoenas and force Trump officials, and Bannon, to testify on how close they had come to organizing an inside coup for the lame-duck president. In other words, expect more MAGA rallies like Trump’s appearance in Iowa last weekend, as he heads toward another run in 2024.

•••

Trumped Again? — Thirty-five percent of those surveyed in a Morning Consult/Politico poll say that Donald Trump should “definitely” (25%) or “probably” run for president in 2024. Of the Republicans queried, 67% give him the nod.

Note: Odd how a man twice impeached and twice soundly beaten in the popular vote would be of appeal to what has now become the Republican Party, a party once known for ideas and now known for conspiracy theories and little in the way of support of democratic principles and the rule of law.

The survey also shows that for those who don’t want Trump to run, 26% say that Mike Pence, the former vice president whose life was openly threatened by Trump supporters during the January 6 insurrection, should be the candidate.

•••

Dueling Parties – Capitol Hill may be gridlocked in place with Republicans stonewalling Democrats, and Democrats fighting against each other, but there’s plenty of action on the campaign front according to third-quarter fundraising reports, as covered by Politico. Sen. Tim Scott, R-SC, raised nearly $8.3 million for the latest reporting quarter as he is expected to sail to re-election next year and potentially set up a run for the GOP presidential nomination for 2024. Scott, the only Black Republican in the Senate, reported $9.6 million raised in Q2, more than twice the second-highest number reported, by Sen. Marco Rubio, R-FL, who also faces re-election in the midterms.

In addition, the Opportunity Matters Fund, a political action committee supporting Scott, received a $10 million contribution from Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, Politico notes.

But Scott’s Q3 number was not number-one among all midterm candidates. Rep. Val Demings, D-FL, raised $8.4 million in the quarter for his bid to challenge Rubio in the November 2022 Senate election. 

•••

Former Michigan Congressman Kildee Dies – Former U.S. Rep. Dale Kildee, a Democrat from Michigan, has died. Described in Roll Call as the “Cal Ripken of Congress” for casting more than 20,000 votes in the House between 1977 and 2012, he was known for his “quiet work to protect the auto industry and labor unions,” and to improve public schools. His nephew Dan Kildee, who won the seat representing the Flint area in 2012, announced the former congressman’s death but did not give a cause. Kildee was 92.

--Edited by Todd Lassa, Gary S. Vasilash and Nic Woods

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2021

The House of Representatives voted 219-206 yesterday to adopt the $480-billion increase in the debt limit as passed in the Senate last week, increasing the Treasury Department’s borrowing authority to about $28.9 trillion, Roll Call says. The hike prevents defaults that Treasury Secretary Janet Yellin warned would have begun next Monday, instead through early December.

Opening arguments in a Manhattan federal court begin today for Rudy Giuliani associate Lev Parnas, accused of illegally funneling $300,000 in Russian funds to U.S. political campaigns and groups, including a political action committee controlled by Trump allies (per Politico).

William Shatner is spending the day in space, as the actor who portrayed Capt. James T. Kirk in Star Trek takes a ride on Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin spacecraft, at age 90.

Inflation Rate Hits 5.4% for September – The Consumer Price Index was up 0.4% in September, for a 5.4% annual rate, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday. Food prices were up 0.9% overall, with a food at home inflation rate of 1.3% for the month. 

Energy was up 1.3% for September, with gas and diesel at the pump up 1.2% for the month. New vehicle prices rose 1.3% reflecting in part the new 2022 model year, though the continuing computer chip shortage is contributing to a supply-demand imbalance. Used vehicle prices, a leading contributor to inflation until recently, fell 0.7%, though they are up 24.4% for the last 12 months. 

Note: Treasury Secretary Janet Yellin maintains the nation’s high inflation remains a temporary problem, which will be overcome once supply chain bottlenecks free up. Her guidance on inflation is a counter-argument against Republicans who say President Biden’s $3.5-trillion Build Back Better budget reconciliation will simply boost sky-high inflation. With energy prices hitting record highs and with container ships clogging ports worldwide, high inflation globally could be measured in years, rather than months.

•••

No Apparent Movement in Budget Reconciliation Deal Among Democrats – House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-CA, said that crucial decisions need to come “in the next few days” about how to cut parts of the White House’s $3.5-trillion Build Back Better budget reconciliation package in order to meet deadlines, Roll Call reports. The deadlines already have slipped past September. 

Much of the delay appears to be coming from the Senate side, where even Sens. Joe Manchin III, D-WV, and Krysten Sinema, D-AZ, have different priorities. What should be cut? “That’s a negotiation,” Pelosi told reporters. “That’s not something I would be announcing here and I don’t even know what that would be.”

Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-WA, and a leader of the party’s progressive wing in the House, seems to be much less intransigent, and is leading the way on cutting the package by years of lifecycle rather than by specific dollar amounts on the “social infrastructure” programs. The $3.5 trillion package is designed to cover child care, family leave, climate change and other such programs for 10 fiscal years and must be cut to somewhere in the $2- to $2.3-trillion range to satisfy Manchin and Sinema.

Note: While it first seemed like progressive House Democrats were trying to maintain their high expectations by passing a sweeping package with wafer-thin majorities in both chambers, it now seems the two moderate senators are holding up negotiations.

•••

Michigan Protestors Call for “Forensic Audit” of 2020 Results -- Approximately 300 protestors assembled at the state capitol in Michigan yesterday calling for a “forensic audit” of the results of the 2020 presidential election, the AP reports. Donald Trump, who lost the state by 154,189 votes, had urged attendance at the protest. According to Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, there have been more than 200 audits conducted, proving that the election was not fraudulent.

Note: The “forensic audit” in Arizona, which found no fraud, will cost taxpayers some $3 million to replace the vote-counting machines that were compromised by being turned over to the Cyber Ninjas. The protestors in Michigan should keep that in mind. A lot of potholes can be filled for $3 million.

And here’s a question: if they are concerned about election integrity predicated on what are admittedly close results, where were they in 2016, when Trump took Michigan by 10,704 votes?

One of the arguments that is raised about so-called election fraud is that in some states Trump was leading . . . and then he fell behind and lost.

Perhaps this will make things clearer for some people to understand why the person who is leading at the start doesn’t necessary end in front: according to the The Daytona Beach News-Journal, the driver on the pole of the Daytona 500, which has been run since 1959, has won the race just seven times.

•••

U.S. Border to Reopen to Canadians – The U.S. will open its northern border to fully vaccinated Canadians, and its southern border to fully vaccinated Mexicans, in November, Homeland Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas announced in a news release Tuesday, according to The Globe and Mail. Opening of the northern border affects land and ferry crossings and is based on recommendations by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

No exact reopening date has been reported. Canada opened its border to vaccinated U.S. citizens last August. The border had been closed off due to the pandemic since March 2020.

Note: No reaction so far, from Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.

--Edited by Todd Lassa, Gary S. Vasilash and Charles Dervarics

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2021

Members of the House of Representatives return to the Capitol to approve the $480-billion hike in the debt limit ceiling, which the Senate approved 50-49 last week in order to keep the federal government’s lights on through December 3. President Biden is expected to sign the bill this week, the Associated Press says. Next Monday marks the day Treasury Secretary Janet Yellin says the government would begin defaulting on payment for programs approved in the past, without the extension.

Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay writes about Sen. Chuck Grassley’s fealty to Donald J. Trump at Sunday’s MAGA rally in “Iowa: Maybe Not What You Think.” Read his column at thehustings.substack.com.

Believe Science Now? – At least 85% of the world’s population have experienced weather events made worse by climate change, a new study in the journal Nature Climate Changereports. The study used machine learning to analyze and map more than 100,000 studies of events, according to The Washington Post, paired with a well-established data set of population shifts caused by fossil fuel use and other carbon emission sources.

“We have a huge evidence base now that documents how climate change is affecting our societies and ecosystems,” said lead author Max Callaghan of Germany’s Mercator Institute of Global Commerce and Climate Change. 

Note: All too obviously, this study comes as moderate and progressive Democrats argue over the large components in President Biden’s $3.5 trillion Bring Back Better budget reconciliation bill that attempt to address climate change and heading toward a carbon neutral fossil fuel use. Sen. Krysten Sinema, D-AZ, has proposed $100 billion in cuts to the bill’s environmental provisions, while Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-WV, of course is trying to protect his state’s  already dwindling coal economy.

•••

North Korea Creating First-Strike Capability — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, while reviewing a parade of missiles that are said to be capable of reaching the U.S. mainland with nuclear warheads, said; “The U.S. has frequently signaled it’s not hostile to our state, but there is no action-based evidence to make us believe that they are not hostile,” and “The U.S. is continuing to create tensions in the region with its wrong judgments and actions,” according to the Associated Press, citing the official Korean Central News Agency. Kim is also quoted as saying they are working to develop an “invincible military capability.”

Note: According to the CIA World Factbook, commodity exports of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea are watch components, fake hair, iron alloys, instructional models, tungsten.

If a nuclear power that makes those exports isn’t frightening, we don’t know what is.

•••

Texas Governor Bans Vaccine Mandates – Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has signed an executive order banning any entity in Texas from mandating coronavirus vaccines for workers or customers, The Washington Post reports. His action expands prior executive orders that placed such restrictions on state government office from imposing similar requirements.

Abbott also has asked the Texas legislature to enact his ban into law, Texas Public Radio reports.

Note: At this point, Abbott’s actions appear to be an attempt to pile on beleaguered President Biden’s failed promise to bring COVID-19 under control, which was partially undermined by last summer’s Delta variant, vaccine deniers and people like Abbott, who previously banned mask requirements. It is worth noting that the governor’s actions run counter to traditional Republican values of hands-off attitude toward private business -- apparently, these values belong to the “RINO” arm of the GOP.

Also note: WaPo reports in a separate story that two Wisconsin mothers are suing their children’s elementary schools after their sons contracted COVID-19. The children were required to wear masks when they returned to class during the last school year but were not required to do so when classes resumed this fall. The mothers, Shannon Jensen and Gina Kildahl, required their sons to wear masks to a Waukesha and a Fall Creek school, respectively anyway, but that did not prevent them from contracting the virus. Lawsuits filed in two Wisconsin federal courts blame the schools for lax attitude toward masks, quarantining and social distancing.

•••

Prison Labels Russian Dissident ‘Terrorist’ – Alexei Navalny says the prison that has held him since he returned to Russia in January after treatment for a nerve agent has changed his designation from “escape risk” to “extremist” and “terrorist,” Politico EU reports. Navalny is serving two years, eight months for alleged parole violations, and in June, a Russian court banned his Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK) from operating, labeling it “extremist.” In an Instagram post, Navalny said the new designation requires him to confirm his presence in the prison via video recording every two hours.

Note: One assumes that prison authorities know precisely where Navalny is and what he is doing every moment. The check-in requirement is undoubtedly just another way to keep the prisoner in line.

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Gary S. Vasilash

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2021

It’s the U.S.’s first Indigenous People’s Day (and traditionally, Columbus Day).

Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay comments on Donald J. Trump’s Iowa rally and the changing demographics of the state, today at The Hustings/Substack; 

thehustings.substack.com.

Grassley Accepts Trump’s 2022 Endorsement – Donald J. Trump gave his “complete and total” endorsement to Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-IA, already the oldest senator at 88, in his bid for an eighth term next year, at a rally the former president held at the Iowa State Fairgrounds Sunday. “I was born at night, but not last night,” Grassley said at the rally, according to the Des Moines Register. “So if I didn’t accept the endorsement of a person that’s got 91% of the Republican voters in Iowa, I wouldn’t be too smart. I’m smart enough to accept that endorsement.”

Note: Funny how Grassley almost grudgingly accepts Trump’s endorsement. The Iowa senator has danced around the former president’s lies and two impeachments, voting against conviction along with the majority of his fellow Republican senators, but not quite hanging with the group of Trump’s most loyal sycophants. On February 13, after the second impeachment, Grassley put out a statement that says, in part:

“The reality is, he lost. He brought over 60 lawsuits and lost all but one of them. He was not able to challenge enough votes to overcome President Biden’s significant margins in key states. I wish it would have stopped there. It didn’t. President Trump continued to argue that the election had been stolen even though the courts didn’t back up his claims. He belittled and harassed elected officials across the country to get his way. He encouraged his own, loyal vice president, Mike Pence, to take extraordinary and unconstitutional actions during the Electoral College count. My vote in this impeachment does nothing to excuse or justify those actions. There’s no doubt in my mind that President Trump’s language was extreme, aggressive, and irresponsible.”

What happened to that sentiment? Does Trump know about it?

Expect more political shifting and groveling from other Republicans who want to avoid being “primaried” for the midterms next year, as Trump teases his inevitable ’24 presidential campaign.

•••

Contempt for Bannon? – The House Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol insurrection may issue former Trump political advisor Steve Bannon contempt of Congress referral to the Justice Department, if he doesn’t comply with a subpoena issued last Thursday. Bannon has said he won’t appear in front of the committee, claiming executive privilege. Conversely, former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and former Defense Department official Kashyap Patel have indicated they are “engaging” with the committee, The Hill reports. 

Dan Scavino, former deputy chief of staff for White House communications under the Trump administration, was not mentioned in a joint statement issued by committee chairman Rep. Bernie Thompson, D-MS, and vice chair Rep. Liz Cheney, R-WY, Friday, the day after the October 7 deadline to respond to the subpoenas.

“While Mr. Meadows and Mr. Patel are, so far, engaging with the Select Committee, Mr. Bannon has indicated that he will try to hide behind vague references to privileges of the former president,” they said in their written statement. 

Note: Trump cannot claim “executive privilege” for himself or for any former associates as a former president, himself. President Biden, who can make the claim, says he will release documents from the last administration for the investigation. 

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Gary S. Vasilash

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To comment on any of these issues, please email editors@thehustings.news

Scroll down past News & Notes for a quick-take debate on a House bill to de-schedule marijuana as a controlled substance by federal law, and implications for state laws legalizing or de-criminalizing it. Join the conversation: email your comments to editors@thehustings.news.

Scroll down past News & Notes for a quick-take debate on the Pandora Papers released by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. Join the conversation by emailing your comments to editors@thehustings.news.

Also in this column …

•Quick-take debate on the Pandora Papers released by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. 

•Quick-take debate on the controversy surrounding Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff regarding his portrayal in the book Peril, by Bob Woodward and Robert Costa. 

•Right-column pundit Bryan Williams, “New Competition May Do Us Some Good,” on the growing Cold War with China.

•Williams again, on the California gubernatorial recall and the future of Trump’s GOP.

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To comment on any of these issues please email editors@thehustings.news

Don't we think it's about time that the federal law that classifies marijuana a Class 1 narcotic gets thrown out? We think so. Since the Nixon era, several hundred thousand Americans have been jailed for simple possession, and several thousand more for dealing, even if they weren't dealing any serious weight. With so many states already selling medical and recreational marijuana to adults, it's pretty clear that the national opinion is pro-marijuana. The tax benefits to the states are huge, but they probably don't offset all the money that police agencies continue to get from the feds for drug enforcement equipment and personnel. 

Once again, it's the cops against the rest of us. I have been a consistent user since 1968, so I am vehemently in favor of getting rid of this stupid law.
--Jim McCraw

***

Decriminalizing marijuana is not enough. We need it to be legal.

--Jessica Gottlieb

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Eighteen states plus the District of Columbia have legalized recreational marijuana use. Another 18 states have made it legal for medical use, some of them also decriminalizing it recreationally. But marijuana remains a Schedule 1 controlled substance by the federal Drug Enforcement Agency, which makes it dangerous for users to transport it across state lines and for the burgeoning marijuana retail industry to procure conventional banking services, including business loans. 

Though not a priority on Capitol Hill these days, there is an ongoing movement to change federal laws restricting marijuana use. Late in September, the House Judiciary Committee voted, 26-15, to advance a bill that would decriminalize and deschedule cannabis, following a two-day markup. 

Two Republicans, Matt Gaetz of Florida, and Tom McClintock of California, joined 24 Democrats on the committee in favor of moving it forward, according to Roll Call. The vote came after a two-day markup in which the panel also approved a bipartisan[CD1]  plan to lower drug prices.

The proposed legislation is based on a bill that Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-NY, introduced in 2020. That bill passed the House but stalled in the Senate, which last year was controlled by the GOP. Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-NY, now majority leader, proposed similar legislation last year. 

But even with apparent support in the House of Representatives and the Senate, it faces a potential veto from President Biden, who has endorsed decriminalization but not legislation removing it from the DEA’s list of controlled substances. Biden’s position means that even more states could decriminalize or legalize, but marijuana consumers still will not want to carry it on an airplane, and banks will still be reluctant to give business loans to head shops.

What do you think? Legalize it, or no? Read the left and right columns for a few of our contributing pundits’ opinions.

--Todd Lassa


 [CD1]I was checking the Hustings site and you sometimes use bipartisan and other times bi-partisan.  I’d go without the hyphen.

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Should marijuana be made legal at the federal level? Somehow this seems as though it is going to be inevitable for the simple reason that the Feds are going to want to get as much tax revenue as they can get, and given that there are a number of states collecting their cut from what some fondly recall as a “nickel bag,” the Feds won’t be far behind.

--Stephen Macaulay

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Please email your comments to editors@thehustings.news