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Daily Archives: August 6, 2021
Libertarian vs. Liberation creates third-party conundrum on Virginia ballots – Virginia Mercury
Posted: August 6, 2021 at 10:37 pm
Most Virginia voters go for candidates with a D or R next to their name, but who should have dibs on the L?
This year, election officials preparing Novembers ballots were faced with the dilemma of how to differentiate the Libertarian Party from the Liberation Party, the newly formed initiative from gubernatorial candidate and social justice activist Princess Blanding.
We didnt want to list them both as L. Because thats a really bad idea, Dave Nichols, elections services manager for the Virginia Department of Elections, said at a state Board of Elections meeting Tuesday.
To resolve the issue, the state reached out to both parties for ideas.
We believe the identification of L for Libertarian has long been used in Virginia and voters understand that L officially represents a vote for the Libertarian Party, Joe Paschal, the chair of the Libertarian Party of Virginia, wrote in response. We believe it would be unfair to ask our party to change the ballot identification of L after spending years establishing this familiarity with voters. As such, we request L for the Libertarian Party on all ballots in Virginia.
The Liberation Party, which Blanding chairs, seemed to concur. In her own letter, Blanding suggested LP, LTP, or LBP as possible abbreviations for her party.
The state board voted to go with LP as the default abbreviation for the Liberation Party, keeping the other two suggestions on file for backup use.
Libertarian Robert Sarvis was on the ballot for governor in 2013 and the U.S. Senate in 2014. The party does not have any statewide candidates this year. However, there are a few Libertarians running for seats in the House of Delegates, meaning some voters will see both Libertarian Party and Liberation Party options on their ballots.
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Libertarian vs. Liberation creates third-party conundrum on Virginia ballots - Virginia Mercury
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Could a Conservative Replace Gavin Newsom? – The Wall Street Journal
Posted: at 10:37 pm
What are the odds that California would elect a conservative Republican governor in the 2020s? Slim to none, one might have said. But that was before Larry Elder entered the room.
When the California Patriot Coalition launched an effort to recall Gov. Gavin Newsom in February 2020, their effort looked hopeless. It still seemed implausible in April 2021, when the secretary of state certified that the effort had enough signatures to trigger a vote. Most polls showed a majority or a substantial plurality opposing the recall, and no other high-profile Democrat entered the race to succeed Mr. Newsom if he is recalled. There was little enthusiasm for the Republicans whod joined the race, including Caitlyn Jenner, former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer and John Cox, who lost to Mr. Newsom in 2018.
But suddenly its a contest. Ballots for the Sept. 14 vote will start being mailed in the coming weeks, and three recent polls show Mr. Newsom is vulnerable. An Inside California Politics/Emerson poll this week found that only 48% of registered voters would vote to keep Mr. Newsom in office while 46% would remove him, within the margin of error. On Wednesday Survey USA released a poll that showed Mr. Newsom losing the recall vote, 51% to 40%.
A California recall ballot has two parts. The first asks a yes-or-no question: Shall the officeholder be recalled? The second offers a list of successor candidates46 have qualified in this recall. Each voter chooses one of them, and if the recall is successful, whichever candidate earns a plurality fills out the term.
Mr. Elder was a late entrant to the race, announcing his candidacy on July 12. He was motivated by fire in the belly to see if I can do something ... to move the needle in the right direction, he told a reporter. He instantly emerged as a front-runner, polling 10 points ahead of the closest would-be GOP Newsom successor. (The new Survey USA poll has him slightly behind Democrat Kevin Paffrath, a 29-year-old YouTube personality.) That was before he even qualified for the ballot, which ended up requiring a trip to court.
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Could a Conservative Replace Gavin Newsom? - The Wall Street Journal
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Shelter Island Reporter Letters to the Editor: Aug. 5 – Shelter Island Reporter – Shelter Island Reporter
Posted: at 10:37 pm
Thoughts on housing
To the Editor:
Im so old that all my communications once required licking the back of an envelope. So I try to not just hit send when I have something to say.
Sometimes stated facts are not really facts. They are conclusions resulting from incomplete or false assumptions. I found two examples at the June 24 Community Housing Board presentation. The first I term the cancer canard, in our case, linking housing density to increased nitrates. Californias Proposition 65 lists over 900 cancer-causing chemicals. Enjoy swimming in your pool? As a potential carcinogen, chlorine is banned in Germany. Feasting on your BBQ meats? MD Anderson, the renowned cancer center, has concerns.
A water treatment expert I spoke to assured me that for well under $1,000, nitrates could be filtered from drinking water. My point: Using cancer as a political tool to stop housing may be convenient, but is dishonest.
The second error, invoking the Libertarian argument that the free market should decide all economic issues, is more complex. What was presented the anticipated inability of the fixed-income elderly to pay increased town taxes and thus remain in their homes was disingenuous from a Capitalist model for two reasons: 1) All elderly do not rely solely on fixed incomes. Many do, but many have diverse income sources and equity in their homes. These can and do rise with markets. 2) Sadly, its not only the elderly who are struggling to make ends meet. So are young families and single parents. What Libertarian free marketers are not supposed to do is create a protected class in this case Social Security recipients at the expense of others. That is pure socialism, the town picking winners and losers.
Historically, the elderly have moved to smaller residences, lower-cost communities, or taken out home equity loans. Dont we all know civil servants who retire from town jobs in their 40s and promptly move south? A community is a living thing. Denying services or negating the needs of people for whom housing is an issue should be an Island-wide discussion and decision, of which taxes are only one aspect.
Theres a strong Libertarian streak in my political thinking. However, affordable housing opponents claims to free market thinking and anti-socialist agendas should not be twisted into denying the community what it needs to thrive and survive.
JONATHAN RUSSO, Shelter Island
Concerned
To the Editor:
I am opposed to any special permit requested by Gardiners Bay Country Club (GBCC) to downzone a double A (AA) zone to build multiple residency units for any purpose.
I have lived at my home in Hay Beach, for 42 years. This GBCC request is an attempt to undermine the zoning which protects Hay Beach and Dering Harbor from being denigrated in water/aquifer quality, quality of life and security in a well-established community, and in the quality of real-estate values.
The GBCC is trying to pretend that any downzoning will only affect properties that abut the course. This is far from the truth. Any downzoning in a traditional AA zone will affect all the Island and set precedents for future pillaging of our island.
Shelter Island is not any place. An island is not an ordinary place. It may be that people who come from Southampton do not appreciate our island and intend to siphon off all the water and leave their waste behind. Do Shelter Islanders want that? Is Shelter Island to be a colony of Southampton transients? Elected and appointed officials are in their places to protect the rights of the Shelter Island residents. A business cannot put a boot into the face of property owners. Anybody can shill for a corporation and I am sure monetary rewards will follow.
But Shelter Island should not be destroyed by one business a business already using much water and flexing its muscles. Former employment partnerships or friendships should not interfere with decisions that are Island-wide concerns. Of course, anyone with a conflict of interest should recuse himself/herself from judging and deciding the GBCC Special Permit Appeal.
It seems a group of people, most with no ties to the island, want to cheapen the area by using the cheapest labor possible, if the huge dormitory is to be for housing of transient workers a plantation barracks. Multiple unit housing does not belong in a neighborhood of AA zoning. Multiple unit housing does not belong on a fragile aquifer.
Once any downzoning is established Shelter Island will be under pressure for other dominoes to fall, and then the marauders with contempt for our island will turn this precious place into a hodgepodge of over-developed, water-deprived, crowded monstrosities for off-Island control and profit. The Island will be destroyed.
Concerned? Attend Town Hall, August 25, 7:30 PM, hearing on Notice of Appeal.
VIRGINIA SHIELDS WALKER, Shelter Island
Opposed to Country Club project
To the Editor:
I have lived full-time in Hay Beach for 43 years. I am totally opposed to the employee housing building proposal, violating our zoning, made by the Gardiners Bay Country Club.
The plans show what looks like a hotel. Nothing being said by the Country Club sounds honest.
R. NEEDHAM, Shelter Island
For the birds
To the Editor:
What a summer this has been, and still six more weeks to go.
To every person who participated in A Hill of Beans, thank you! It was summer theater and Shelter Island at its best.
My osprey family, Tom, Tillie, Tom Jr. and the two little ones, keep me entertained daily. Flight lessons are beyond entertaining. Tom seems to find the best looking fish for lunch everyday its amazing how programmed they are. This place really is for the birds. If my feeder is not full by 8 a.m., I hear about it, and the bird bath is a steady job keeping it full. However, the blue jays have no manners whatsoever.
Theres lots of animosity within our little town. It seems there aint nobody happy about one thing or another. So what to do? Ferry fares, water quality, affordable housing, ticks, jelly fish, Range Rovers, bicycle people, joggers, all seem to perpetrate angst against some citizens. I guess we need to get creative somehow, but how? Possibly by exercising our right to vote and finding qualified Islanders to run their town. My town.
Theres lots more to come this summer, so lets all enjoy and be nice to all creatures great and small. And as the mole said to the boy, when the boy seemed perplexed, One of our greatest freedoms is how we react to things. Think about that statement for a moment.
GEORGIANA KETCHAM, Shelter Island
Start time
To the Editor:
I was surprised and dismayed to learn that the town has no restrictions regarding the time construction can begin in the morning. There is a house being built near us and they start hammering away at 7 a.m.
Bang, bang, bang. Thats what I hear while trying to enjoy my morning coffee. I think a law should be passed with a start time of 8 a.m.
MELANIE CORONETZ, Shelter Island
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The Worst Season Of Parks And Recreation According To 20% Of People – Looper
Posted: at 10:37 pm
One potentially obvious answer to the question of which"Parks and Recreation" season was the worst is the six-episode first season. In addition to there being substantially less episodes overall, the show was very clearly still figuring itself out during year one. The pilot episode was just that a pilot, with all the pitfalls that come along with them. Moreover, there was a lot of focus on Leslie Knope's ill-fated "romance" withMark Brendanawicz (Paul Schneider), a ho-hum B-story that was quickly dropped. However, Season 1 was actually the No. 2 choice in this survey after just over 16.3% of respondents chose it.
Curiously, Season 3, which yielded the arrival of fan-favorite charactersChris Traeger (Rob Lowe) and Ben Wyatt (Adam Scott), finished a close third with 16% of the vote. In the end, the top pick for the worst "Parks and Recreation" season as chosen by more than 20% of respondents was the seventh season of the show. And really, its placement here should come as no surprise.
After playing the push-and-pull dynamic of occasionally-reluctant but always there for each other friends Leslie and Ron Swanson to perfection for six years, the show made a sharp left turn and the two became bitter enemies for a significant portion of the season. The final, 13-episode run also featured some jarring time jumps. It still featured some great moments but the show had clearly run its course by that point.
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The Worst Season Of Parks And Recreation According To 20% Of People - Looper
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Health News Roundup: Japan COVID cases hit 1 million as infections spread beyond Tokyo; U.S. nurses’ COVID-19 grief pours out online: ‘I just don’t…
Posted: at 10:37 pm
Following is a summary of current health news briefs.
Japan COVID cases hit 1 million as infections spread beyond Tokyo
Japan reached the milestone of one million coronavirus cases on Friday, domestic media reported, as infections soared in Olympic host Tokyo and other urban areas as the country struggled to contain the Delta variant. New cases in Tokyo hit 4,515, the second-highest after Thursday's record 5,042, while the neighboring, populous prefecture of Kanagawa saw its cases soaring to more than 2,000, quadrupling in less than two weeks.
U.S. nurses' COVID-19 grief pours out online: 'I just don't want to watch anyone else die'
Nichole Atherton couldn't take it anymore. The intensive care nurse watched helplessly last year as COVID-19 sufferers died in her Mississippi hospital - slowly, painfully and alone. Then in July she was again confronted with a wave of deathly ill patients, even though almost all likely could have saved themselves by getting the coronavirus vaccine.
Delta spreads in Sydney as Australia widens COVID-19 restrictions
Australian officials warned Sydney residents on Friday to brace for a surge in COVID-19 cases after the country's largest city logged record infections for the second straight day despite a weeks-long lockdown to stamp out an outbreak of Delta variant. "Just based on the trend in the last few days and where things are going, I am expecting higher case numbers in the next few days and I just want everyone to be prepared for that," New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian told reporters in Sydney, the state capital.
EU regulator advises updating J&J shot label with new disorders
Europe's drugs regulator on Friday advised that low platelets, dizziness and ear ringing be added as adverse reactions following vaccination with J&J's COVID-19 shot, and said it had not found a link between coronavirus vaccines and menstrual disorders so far.
EU: too early to say if COVID booster needed as Germany, France press ahead
There's not enough data to recommend using COVID-19 vaccine boosters, the European Union's drugs regulator said on Friday, after major EU states said they would roll out a third dose for the most vulnerable from September. The European Medicines Agency (EMA) had said in mid-July that more data was needed before it could make a recommendation on boosters, but the EU's biggest countries Germany and France are ploughing ahead with plans to roll out some anyway.
Factbox-COVID-19 and the U.S. courts: challenges to vaccine requirements
The resurgence of COVID-19 cases in the United States due to the Delta variant has prompted public and private employers and schools to mandate coronavirus vaccines, drawing legal challenges from civil libertarians and vaccine skeptics. Below is a selection of some key cases.
Seven die after outbreak of Colombian variant of COVID-19 at Belgian nursing home
Seven residents of a nursing home in Belgium have died after being infected with the Colombian variant of the coronavirus, despite being fully vaccinated, the virology team that conducted tests said on Friday. The variant of COVID-19 that originated in Colombia, or B.1.621, has been detected in recent weeks in the United States but cases in Europe have been rare.
Senegalese doctors, cemetery workers battle COVID-19 surge
At Dalal Jamm hospital in Dakar, only the whooshing sound of a ventilator and beeps from a monitor indicated that the pregnant COVID-19 patient in the intensive care bed was still alive. A few cubicles down, another woman was on oxygen after giving birth while sick with the coronavirus as a third wave threatened to overwhelm Senegal's hospitals and some of its cemeteries.
Early signs COVID-19 vaccines may not stop Delta transmission, England says
There are early signs that people who have been vaccinated against COVID-19 may be able to transmit the Delta variant of the virus as easily as those who have not, scientists at Public Health England (PHE) said on Friday. The findings chime with those from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which last week raised concerns that vaccinated people infected with Delta could, unlike with other variants, readily transmit it.
United Airlines makes COVID-19 shots compulsory for U.S. employees
United Airlines Inc on Friday became the first U.S. airline to require all its domestic employees to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19. The airline said employees would need to show proof of vaccination, five weeks after the U.S. drug regulator fully approves any of the vaccines from Pfizer Inc, Moderna Inc or Johnson & Johnson - expected sometime in the fall - or by Oct. 25, whichever is earlier.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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Health News Roundup: Japan COVID cases hit 1 million as infections spread beyond Tokyo; U.S. nurses' COVID-19 grief pours out online: 'I just don't...
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Commentary: We Have Misconstrued Freedom in the Fight against COVID – The Peoples Vanguard of Davis
Posted: at 10:37 pm
FILE PHOTO: REUTERS/Dado Ruvic
By David M. GreenwaldExecutive Editor
Since the start of the pandemic, issues of government and health based restrictions have been framed by thoseespecially on the right, though not exclusivelyas an issue of freedom and rights. The argument goes that the individual and not the government should determine issues like masking, social distancing, and the like.
That issue has been amplified severalfold with the issue of vaccinations and whether or to what extent government and/or employers can mandate them.
In this piece I will argue that, while there are issues of freedom and rights embedded into this debate, for the most part and this extends well beyond the realm of COVID, we have misconstrued the issue of freedom way too narrowly.
When people yell freedom in this society, most often they are thinking along narrow self-interested lines. I want the freedom to do what I want.
The problem is that the government cannot operate along those lines of freedom. The government generally thinks not in terms of freedom but in terms of rights. Allowing someone to exercise their rights is relatively straightforward. Where government exists, however, is at the point where rights conflictgovernment has a responsibility to arbitrate and weigh on situations where my rights conflict with yours.
Many people yelling freedom forget this fact. The government has the obligation in my view of not only arbitration in the conflict of rights, but ensuring that the laws, to the extent possible, offer equal protection.
We may often think of freedom versus safetythe but reality is that safety is another way of designating other peoples rights. You may have the right to run down the street. But when you run into the street, you are putting other peoples rights in jeopardynot only their freedom of movement but also their freedom to live.
So the government preemptively steps in to create a set of rules that we follow. So we have traffic laws that prescribe and proscribe movements and govern when and where pedestrians can cross roadways and which laws that drivers have to obey to create as safe of an environment as possible.
What determines those laws? In part, community standards. But in part, a risk assessment.
Let us use speed limit as a case example here. In most places there are laws governing the maximum speed. Those laws generally allow people to drive at a faster rate of speed on the open road than on narrow and crowded city streets where there are more likely to be pedestrians and traffic controls.
Speed limits are limits on freedom. Thats one way to look at it. But another way is it is the governments decision to arbitrate between competing rights. My freedom of movement is circumscribed by your need to be able to safely move from point A to point B.
How does the government determine speed limits? A lot of it is based on risk assessment. The faster you go, the more freedom you have to determine your own safe rate of speed. But we know from studies, the faster you go the more likely driver error or roadway conditions are to create hazards, and so we weigh freedom against risk and arrive at a somewhat subjective limit for upper speed. That can vary state to state and also by location, but at the end of the day, risk assessment guides it.
In general, in the non-economic realm, I tend to be more libertarian. In fact, I generally consider myself a civil libertarian. I oppose government limits on free speech, think that most drugs should be legalized and, if not, decriminalized. I think things like sex work should be legalized but regulated.
I am more libertarian on things like gun laws than many on the left.
But I have a hard time understanding the freedom dimension to reasonable regulations with regard to COVID.
The problem again with COVID is that regulations are not about individual liberty exclusively. For example, if COVID were such that the precautions only impacted your own healththen by all means take whatever risks you want.
Let us take smoking as a good example here. If someone wants to smoke, that puts their health at risk. I am fine with that (we can debate the extent to which society should have to pay the bill for cancer treatment or the extent to which it is fair that we have to pay higher health insurance premiums to mitigate that risk, but thats a slightly different question).
But most places determined that you may have the right to smoke by yourself outside, but smoking can also impact others. Second hand smoke poses a health risk, and so most indoor places in most states have now forbidden ityou used to be able to smoke on planes, in restaurants, at bars, now you cant.
Wearing a mask is pretty much the same issue. When you dont wear a mask, you actually put other peoples health at risk, not your own.
Government therefore has a compelling interest in mandating masks to prevent disease spread.
I have heard people argue that if you want to live in fear, thats fine, but they dont choose to. But the mask issue is more complicated. If it again were merely about you avoiding getting sick if you didnt wear a mask, there would be a more compelling argument. But the mask issue is actually the opposite, it prevents you from spreading the virus to others. Thats a little different.
Vaccination, of course, is more complicated. You are not talking about a temporary and passive use of masks. You are talking about whether the government has an interest to compel an individual to inject something into their body.
I would argue that they dont.
However, freedom to act is not freedom to live without consequences or choices.
The government in my view, does have a compelling interest in regulating who can operate in the public realm and create increased levels of risk. Therefore the government I think has the ability to regulate who can enter public buildings, it has the ability to regulate who can go to restaurants, bars, and gyms, and it has the ability to weigh your freedom to not vaccinate against societys freedom to incur undo risk at entering the public realm.
Bottom line, I think the government does have the right to place restrictions on those who CHOOSE not to vaccinate. They are making a choice.
I have seen people say that they can choose not to wear a mask or not vaccinate and if I dont like it, I can choose not to leave my home.
Sorry, but we both have equal freedoms here. Our rights conflict. And there when rights conflict, the government has the duty to arbitrate those conflicts and they do so by managing risk. Right now in the middle of a pandemic, the government interest in protecting health and safety outweighs other factors.
When that risk is reducedas we have seen at various timesgovernment can and will remove those restrictions.
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Commentary: We Have Misconstrued Freedom in the Fight against COVID - The Peoples Vanguard of Davis
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Editorial pieces critique Youngkin; two L’s on the ballot; VA Beach Republican gets caught red-handed saying one thing and doing the opposite -…
Posted: at 10:37 pm
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Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin was hit with two editorials in the last 24 hourscritiquing his campaign.
Glenn Youngkin, the blankest of blank slates ever to run for Virginia governor, has finally started to fill in some of those blanks on policy, wrore theRoanoke Time editorial board. The result is pretty disappointing, and something of a gut punch for the rural areas that are the base of his own Republican Party.
The editorial board continued by calling Youngkinsrecent announcementto invest in all Virginians a recitation of standard Republican talking points mostly tax refunds and tax breaks.
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Youngkin was also critiqued by Josh Kraushaar at the National Journalwith Kraushaar writing: The GOPs gubernatorial nominee in Virginia is reminiscent of Michael Bloomberg: He has lots of money to spend, but lacks a clear campaign argument. Kraushaar then continued: Youngkins early efforts at introducing himself to Virginians are more reminiscent of Romney than McDonnell. There are only three months until the election against Democrat Terry McAuliffe, yet his campaign message is unclear. His advertisements, blanketing the airwaves all summer thanks to his willingness to self-fund his campaign, show him playing basketball but dont offer clarity on what hed actually do as governor. Hes kept his distance from former President Trump, but isntoutright rejecting the election conspiracy theoriesthat drive the right-wing base.
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Greg Schneider from the Washington Postwrote an in-depth lookat Youngkins timespent with global investment firm The Carlyle Group. After talking to several people within the company, Schneider wrote that Youngkin had taken on more of an administrative role within the firm in recent years and was not very involved in the individual deals being made. Youngkin said this year on a campaign stop, however, that he will own anything that the firm did while he was working there.
Taking on those roles, another former Carlyle executive said, was something of a sacrifice for Youngkin leaving behind the more exciting world of deals for the sometimes thankless task of corporate operations, Schneiderwrote.
More from the Washinton Post article:One longtime Carlyle joint-venture partner, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk frankly about the firm, said Youngkin was smart and personable but not one to shake up the status quo. A phrase that was kicked around is hes like Wonder Bread dipped in whole milk, the joint-venture partner said.
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Republican candidates Jason Miyares (Attorney General) and Winsome Sears (Lieutenant Governor) confirmed (first with the Richmond Times-Dispatch) that they will not be attending theelection integrity eventbeing held at the Liberty University this weekend. Both candidates will be stumping for a Republican House candidate in Northern Virginia instead.
Glenn Youngkin, the Republican candidate for governor hasrecently saidthat he will be stopping by the event to discuss voter ID laws. His campaign has not said anything different since that statement.
FromRichmond Times-Dispatch:GOP gubernatorial nominee Glenn Youngkins campaign would not say whether he still plans to attend the event at Liberty University in Lynchburg, which is coordinated by the 5th congressional district Republican committee and includes a banquet on Friday and forums on Saturday. Asked if he was still scheduled to speak, campaign spokeswoman Macaulay Porter declined to answer on Tuesday and sent the Richmond Times-Dispatch a statement attacking Democratic nominee Terry McAuliffe.
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Tim Anderson, a firebrand Republican House of Delegates candidate in Virginia Beach is facing backlash after he campaigned against COVID-19 relief but accepted $750K in relief funds for his own company. According toThe Virginian-Pilot: since April 2020, however, his businesses have taken in over $742,000 in federal COVID relief money, according to data from the U.S. Small Business Administration.
This news comes less than one month after Andersonwrote on his Facebook pagethat it should all be given back. We should give it back. We dont need it. Virginia has hundreds of millions in Surplus already. This is borrowed money and we should only spend what we absolutely need which is Zero.
Anderson did not respond to multiple requests for comment from The Virginian-Pilot.
Anderson is running against Democratic Delegate Nancy Guy in House District 83.
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The Virginia Gazette wrote about Princess Blanding, the Liberation Party candidatewho is running against Terry McAuliffe and Glenn Youngkin for governor.
From Virginia Gazette: As a longtime educator, Middlesex resident Princess Blanding said she never imagined she would follow a path into politics. She had worked her way up to an administrative position at the Essex County public school division and there, she planned to stay. But, her path veered in 2018, when her brother, Marcus David-Peters was fatally shot by the Richmond City Police Department. He was suffering from a mental health crisis and was unarmed.
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Graham Moomaw from Virginia Mercury wrote about the conundrum facing election officials with a new L party on the ballot. McAuliffe with have a D next to his name, Youngkin will have an R next to his name, but while L usually stands for Libertarian on the ballot, officials now have to figure out how to decipher between Libertarian and Liberation.
Moomaw reports:
To resolve the issue, the state reached out to both parties for ideas.
We believe the identification of L for Libertarian has long been used in Virginia and voters understand that L officially represents a vote for the Libertarian Party, Joe Paschal, the chair of the Libertarian Party of Virginia, wrote in response. We believe it would be unfair to ask our party to change the ballot identification of L after spending years establishing this familiarity with voters. As such, we request L for the Libertarian Party on all ballots in Virginia.
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General Michael Flynn is set to headline Republican congressional candidate Jarome Bells Rally to Right the Shipin Virginia Beach this weekend. Bell is seeking the Republican nomination to run in Virginias second congressional district, currently represented by Congresswoman Elaine Luria.
Flynn was President Trumps national security advisor for a short time before being fired 25 days into the administration for lying to the FBI and vice president about his contacts with Russia. After pleading guilty to the charges, Flynn was eventually pardoned by President Trump. It is my Great Honor to announce that General Michael T. Flynn has been granted a Full Pardon,Trumpsaid at the time
Now Flynn is endorsing Bell in the VA-02 nomination contest. Bells 27 years of service in the U.S. Navy as a Chief Petty Officer, as well as his understanding that his oath never expires, proves Jarome will stand his ground against the constant onslaught by the socialist left, anti-American attacks, Flynn said in an announcement for the event. I am strongly and wholeheartedly endorsing Jarome for the Commonwealth of Virginias 2nd Congressional district.
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by Greg Schneider and Laura Vozzella
Two minutes. Thats what House Minority Leader Del. Todd Gilbert (R-Shenandoah) figured the GOP had on Tuesday to try to score some political points over the spending plan that Virginia Democrats have engineered for $4.3 billion in federal coronavirus relief funds.
Democrats who control the General Assembly had reached an agreement with Gov. Ralph Northam (D) on how to allocate the federal relief money even before the special legislative session started on Monday, including $800 million for the unemployment trust fund, $250 million for school ventilation systems, $700 million for rural broadband and more.
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By NED OLIVER AND GRAHAM MOOMAW
Republicans in the Virginia House of Delegates offered their own proposal Tuesday for how to spend billions in federal rescue funds, floating a plan they said would ban door-to-door vaccination campaigns, give $5,000 bonuses to every police officer in the state and limit how students are taught about race and discrimination.
After a two-minute floor speech by House Minority Leader Todd Gilbert, R-Shenandoah, the measure was promptly voted down by the Democratic majority.
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Matt Gaetz Says Fox News ‘Isn’t What It Used to Be’ and Blames Paul Ryan – Newsweek
Posted: at 10:36 pm
Representative Matt Gaetz criticized Fox News and claimed it is "not what it used to be" in the first episode of his new podcast on Thursday. He appeared to place the blame on former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan.
Gaetz, a Republican who represents Florida's 1st congressional district, took aim at the network in the premiere episode of his podcast Firebrand and praised former Fox Business Network host Lou Dobbs, whose show was canceled in February.
The congressman focused much of his criticism on Ryan, who was speaker of the House from 2015 and 2019 and became a member of the Fox Corporation's board of directors two months after leaving Congress.
Gaetz, who has been a frequent guest on Fox News, said: "I appreciate the platform Fox News gave me for years."
"It allowed me to get key information to the country. I have many friends still at Fox News and I enjoy our discussions, whether they're on air or off air," he said.
"That said, Fox News isn't what it used to be. It probably has something to do with their corporate board member, Paul Ryan."
Gaetz then discussed Lou Dobbs' cancelation from the Fox Business Network earlier this year. Dobbs had hosted a show on the network, Lou Dobbs Tonight, from 2011 to February 2021.
The decision to cancel his show came a day after voting technology company Smartmatic filed a $2.7 billion defamation suit against the Fox Corporation alleging it had been "irreparably harmed" by on-air claims that the 2020 presidential election was rigged. Dobbs was named as one of the individual defendants in the suit.
"One of my favorite shows on the Fox platform was Lou Dobbs Tonight. Sweet, sweet Lou, like America's angry uncle, politically incorrect sometimes, red in the face and usually right about stuff," Gaetz said.
Gaetz then showed a montage of clips from Dobbs where the former Fox Business Network host criticized Ryan, including one where Dobbs says Ryan "betrayed" the Republican Party.
"Now that Paul Ryan has concentrated power at Fox News, Lou Dobbs is no longer on air," Gaetz said. "He can't guide the populist right away from the invade everywhere, invite everyone version of Republicanism that sells out to K Street and abandons Main Street."
"Paul Ryan never used his considerable power as speaker for Trump's wall or other key immigration reforms, but he was able to use his power at Fox News to cancel the great Lou Dobbs," Gaetz went on.
At the time Dobbs' show was canceled, the Fox Business Network said: "Plans have been in place to launch new formats as appropriate postelection, including on Fox Business."
"This is part of those planned changes," the network said.
Fox News Media, which operates Fox News and the Fox Business Network, defended its coverage of the 2020 election, and Fox News has asked that Smartmatic's suit be dismissed. The matter will be considered by the New York Supreme Court on August 17.
"FOX News Media is proud of our 2020 election coverage, which stands in the highest tradition of American journalism, and will vigorously defend against this baseless lawsuit in court," a spokesperson said in a statement to Newsweek on March 26.
Newsweek has asked Fox News for comment.
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Matt Gaetz Says Fox News 'Isn't What It Used to Be' and Blames Paul Ryan - Newsweek
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Lane Johnson is Handling Business with the Eagles’ Young O-Linemen – Sports Illustrated
Posted: at 10:36 pm
PHILADELPHIA - Lane Johnson has his own work to do and the veteran offensive lineman has gotten in the best shape of his career, intent to prove there is still plenty of gas left in the tank after a persistent ankle injury resulted in two surgeries and limited the former All-Pro to seven games in 2020.
Johnson is busy serving two masters - his own comeback and an attempt to pay his success forward to the next generation of Eagles' offensive linemen like Nate Herbig and Jack Driscoll.
Through the first eight days of Eagles training camp, starting left guard Isaac Seumalo has been a spectator while rehabbing from a hamstring injury. In his place has been Herbig, a call back from the 2020 season when the Stanford product was forced into action due to Philadelphia's historic attrition on the offensive line.
The results were generally positive with Herbig piling up 894 offensive reps and grading out more than respectfully with ProFootballFocus.com ranking the former undrafted free agent as the 13th best guard in the NFL in 2020.
Eagles offensive line coach Jeff Stoutland isn't the type to hand out bouquets of roses, though. Instead, the stern taskmaster focuses on what his students can do better, a style that had developed All-Pro players like Jason Kelce, Brandon Brooks, and Johnson.
One of the teaching points for Herbig was conditioning and Johnson pitched in from his somewhat famous "Bro Barn" in South Jersey.
We ran the hell out of him, Johnson said of Herbig. We had a hard offseason with him. Hes been great, hes got a great attitude. I think when he stepped in last year he performed very well. Hes just trying to keep progressing and going on. As far as his body, hes taking it a lot more serious than he used to."
RELATED:Lane Johnson Weighs in On Battle to Start at Left Tackle ...
That seriousness had Herbig dropping down from 355 to about 325, according to Johnson.
Herbig pegged the weight loss at about 20 pounds but the real point is that he is a better-conditioned athlete that should have plenty of gas left in the tank if forced to play full games again.
He pushed me hard, Herbig said of Johnson. I wanted to do it, too, for myself and for the team to put myself in a better position. I wanted to be quicker, in better shape, lighter and leaner."
Johnson has his own Padawan so to speak at right tackle, second-year pro Jack Driscoll.
Jack Driscoll after Thursday's practice.
Driscoll played 300 snaps as a rookie fourth-round pick out of Auburn last season, often in the most difficult of circumstances when Johnson was in-and-out of the lineup with the balky ankle.
Driscoll showed a quick affinity for pass blocking but struggled a bit when trying to move the pile, hardly a strange occurrence with O-Linemen trying to make the transition from college to the pros.
A cerebral young player, Driscoll has gotten his own first-team reps at camp at right tackle when 31-year-old Johnson is given a maintenance day at the behest of the team's medical and training staffs, something that's happened twice in the first eight days of work.
A more normal setting has already helped Driscoll with 2020's strict COVID-19 protocols left in the rear-view mirror, at least for now.
Its been so nice, Driscoll said. Even just eating breakfast, lunch, and dinner with your teammates. Last year, we were sitting in those tents outside with masks on spaced out, not really able to talk. Its kind of tough when youre introduced to a new group of people and you really cant socialize that much and all your meetings are on Zoom."
MORE FROM CAMP:Training Camp Thoughts Day 8: Tough Love Works with Jalen Reagor
The one downside of the personal contact?
Johnson's quick wit and politically incorrect comedy act in the O-Line room.
We just give each other hell, Johnson joked. Were mean to each other.
Enter Driscoll.
What dont they make fun of me for?" the second-year man joked. "No beard, just a lot of stuff."
Its phenomenal, Herbig added of the chemistry of the offensive line. ... We all make fun of each other, but thats just how our O-line room is. Its all in good spirits. Lanes a jokester. I love it.
The goal of Johnson's tough love is simple.
Were pretty mean to each other," he said, "but we keep it light-hearted, keep them laughing, and when its time to go to work and handle business."
MORE FROM CAMP:Philadelphia Eagles Nick Sirianni Still Not Naming Jalen Hurts ...
John McMullen contributes Eagles coverage for SI.com's EagleMaven and is the NFL Insider for JAKIB Media. You can listen to John, alongside legendary sports-talk host Jody McDonald every morning from 8-10 on Birds 365, streaming live on both PhillyVoice.com and YouTube. John is also the host of his own show "Extending the Play" on AM1490 in South Jersey. You can reach him at jmcmullen44@gmail.com or on Twitter @JFMcMullen
Ed Kracz is the publisher of SI.coms Eagle Maven and co-host of the Eagles Unfiltered Podcast. Check out the latest Eagles news at http://www.SI.com/NFL/Eagles or http://www.eaglemaven.com and please follow him on Twitter: @kracze.
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For once, Family Guy does not want to be controversial – Washington Examiner
Posted: at 10:36 pm
For a show described as sick, twisted, politically incorrect, it seems that Family Guy is not living up to its vexing, heterodox brand.
The Huffington Post reported that the shows creator, Seth MacFarlane, was frustrated over the Fox TV Networks relationship with Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who recently published an op-ed pointing out that COVID-19 vaccines are not preventing new infections and accusing Democrats of moving the goalposts with their new mask requirements. MacFarlane tweeted in response, Tucker Carlsons latest opinion piece once again makes me wish Family Guy was on any other network.
This is not the first time MacFarlane criticized individuals for expressing contentious positions on the COVID-19 pandemic. Last year, he sparred with Fox News host Laura Ingraham over her (perhaps hyperbolic) claim that The Washington Post is rooting for the shutdown to continue indefinitely.
MacFarlane also called out talk show host Oprah Winfrey for giving a platform to Dr. Phil McGraw (better known as televisions Dr. Phil) and other COVID-19 skeptics. He remarked, Oprah has done some wonderfully altruistic things with her career, but the use of her platform to amplify the voices of dubious characters rather than legitimate scientists has been a disservice.
Setting aside the merits of Carlson's and McGraws arguments, it is surprising that the creator of Family Guy, of all programs, sees these individuals as controversial, to say nothing of his criticism of Winfrey giving Dr. Phil a platform.
After all, Family Guy is the show that has not hesitated to wade into contentious political debates on abortion (Season 8's Partial Terms of Endearment), immigration (Season 6's Padre de Familia), religion (Season 10's Livin on a Prayer), and even, yes, the anti-vaccination movement (Season 15s Hot Shots).
MacFarlane himself has lamented the rise of political correctness and the aversion (of some on the Left) to open discussion. He famously told an audience in 2015, "Most people are capable of deciphering comedic situations from actual offenses." And after former President Donald Trumps 2016 election victory, the comedian accused the Left of losing because it had expended so much energy over the last several years being outraged over verbal missteps, accidental innuendo, tasteless tweets.
Before the pandemic, it would be difficult to imagine that the guy whose program thrived on controversy would be outraged over tasteless tweets made by a Fox News host. Then again, hypocrisy has become a fixture of todays mainstream culture.
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For once, Family Guy does not want to be controversial - Washington Examiner
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