For those who feel my video offerings have been too tank-centric as of late, here’s a video featuring the design choices behind everyone’s favorite flying tank killer, the A-10 Warthog.
(Hat tip: Regular reader Brandon Byers.)
For those who feel my video offerings have been too tank-centric as of late, here’s a video featuring the design choices behind everyone’s favorite flying tank killer, the A-10 Warthog.
(Hat tip: Regular reader Brandon Byers.)
Senile Joe became Racist Joe this week, with one of the most amazingly ill-considered answers since Gerald R. Ford said Poland didn’t suffer from Soviet domination. It’s this week’s BidenWatch!
Warning: This week is going to be Twitter-heavy.
"If you have a problem figuring out whether you're for me or Trump, then you ain't black."
Oh really, Joe.
— Lawrence B. Jones III (@LawrenceBJones3) May 22, 2020
#YouAintBlack if you don't vote for Joe Biden!?! đđ€Łđđ€Łđ pic.twitter.com/LwncUl5Yy5
— ZUBY: (@ZubyMusic) May 22, 2020
Joe Biden after telling the audience #YouAintBlack if you vote for Trump pic.twitter.com/bkGnF8nMxs
— Patriot J đ„ (@sirhottest) May 22, 2020
JOE BIDEN IS A RACIST!
I WANT EVERY BLACK PERSON TO SEE THIS VIDEO! PLEASE RETWEET
Iâm pissed off! Joe said #YouAintBlack if you donât support him!
He will never get my VOTE!
* RT & USE THIS HASHTAG
đ #JoeBidenIsARacist— Terrence K. Williams (@w_terrence) May 22, 2020
Every black person is aware of the power and pain of being considered an 'outsider' within one's own 'race'.
This happens everywhere, but it is a common phenomenon particularly amongst Black Americans, due to history and culture. (2/14)
— ZUBY: (@ZubyMusic) May 23, 2020
ALL black conservatives, libertarians, centrists, or even moderate liberals have been on the receiving end of at least one of these slurs.
Usually levied by another black person, but occasionally by a particularly bold 'woke white progressive' type. (4/14)
— ZUBY: (@ZubyMusic) May 23, 2020
So, to be considered 'not black' is like being an outcast of a community that often already feels alienated… (6/14)
— ZUBY: (@ZubyMusic) May 23, 2020
Most Black Americans don't have this SOLID sense of heritage.
People (of all colours) know this and weaponise it against them to prevent individuals from stepping out of the 'groupthink'.
Anyone who is perceived to go 'against' 'The Black Community' must be punished. (8/14)
— ZUBY: (@ZubyMusic) May 23, 2020
So, when Biden suggested that 'you ain't Black' if you consider voting for Trump instead of him, he exposed a much deeper form of racism.
The sense of 'ownership' of Black people. Unearned allegiance and entitlement.
It was a vile statement… (10/14)
— ZUBY: (@ZubyMusic) May 23, 2020
If you were born black, then you will die black. There is no such thing as being 'politically black'. This is nonsense designed to CONTROL you and keep you needy.
NOBODY can take away your âBlacknessâ. Your âBlack Cardâ is your birthright. Regardless of who you vote for. (12/14)
— ZUBY: (@ZubyMusic) May 23, 2020
That is all. I hope you enjoyed my TED talk.
Much love. đđŸ
Zuby #ImStillBlack
(fin)
— ZUBY: (@ZubyMusic) May 23, 2020
Jim Crow Joe needs to stop acting like a Slave Master.
He Doesn't Own Black People!#YouAintBlack #SayNoToJimCrowJoe— Diamond and SilkÂź (@DiamondandSilk) May 22, 2020
AYO! I'M DEAD! đ€Łđ€Łđ€Łđđđ pic.twitter.com/QChySW4KQn
— Minato ⥠Namikaze (@Duke_Lucas_) May 23, 2020
— MJ Mignacca (@mjmignacca) May 23, 2020
Some poor campaign aide picked the wrong day to take Joe Biden's ball gag off
— David Burge (@iowahawkblog) May 22, 2020
Yikes!!!! This is not a âperfect conversationâ
An audio recording of a conversation between Joe Biden and Petro Poroshenko on May 13, 2016 – YouTube https://t.co/7R2YxzDpGM
— Donald Trump Jr. (@DonaldJTrumpJr) May 19, 2020
Not mine: pic.twitter.com/PxAQPnLWxr
— Brian Cates //Flynn & Breitbart's Army! (@drawandstrike) May 23, 2020
ï»ż
None of this necessarily means that Tara Readeâs story is true. But the evidence is fairly convincing that Readeâs story is not just a campaign-season invention.
One point in Readeâs favor, in contrast to Blasey Ford, is how she has handled her accusation. She made (as Young notes) a few edits to one of her blog posts to tailor it more closely with her current story, but unlike Blasey Ford, she did not delete her social-media history to erase all traces of political rants (even the embarrassing Putin stuff) before coming forward. She was not initially rolled out by a public-relations firm and a partisan lawyer (though she has since retained an attorney who is a Trump donor). She has not hidden behind her representatives to carefully stage-manage who could talk to her, and under what conditions; while she has canceled a few interviews and seems hesitant to appear on Fox News, she has sat for lengthy questioning on and off air by a diverse array of outlets ranging from left-wingers such as Halper, to ex-Fox personality Kelly, to the Times, Post, CNN, the Associated Press, Vox, and National Review. Maybe Reade is enjoying the publicity, but she is not hiding from questioners.
Some clarity from Biden. What the teachers unions and public education bureaucracy want, they'll get. https://t.co/sttuITd1R5
— Boris Ryvkin (@BRyvkin) May 25, 2020
One columnist declared that former Vice President Joe Biden could boil babies and she would still vote for him. Feminist leaders have said they believe Biden raped a Senate staffer but they still endorse him. Good government advocates have opposed any investigation into prior sexual harassment or corruption claims against Biden. It seems politicians and pundits alike have discovered the glory of the âpresidential bull.â In this instance, Biden is akin to a papal indulgence that allows writers, members of Congress and journalists to forgive any sin in a holy crusade to retake Washington.
In the 11th century, Pope Urban II formalized the use of indulgences, which could be purchased to forgive sins. A papal bull of the Crusade accompanied those who fought in the Holy Land and committed atrocities in the name of a higher order. The practice was defended as essentially drawing from the âtreasury of meritâ created by Jesus Christ, the saints and the faithful.
Now the 2020 election has become the ultimate crusade, and President Trumpâs critics seem to be enjoying indulgences in tossing aside moral and ethical considerations. The freedom that is Biden is nowhere more evident than in a recent column by The Nationâs Katha Pollitt, who wrote about the allegations of sexual assault made by former Biden staffer Tara Reade. Pollitt dispensed with any struggle over feminist or moral qualms, declaring, âI would vote for Joe Biden if he boiled babies and ate them.â
As Pollitt explained, âWe do not have the luxury of sitting out the election to feel morally pure or send a message about sexual assault and #BelieveWomen.â Otherwise, Pollitt would have to deal with her column during the confirmation hearing for Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, in which she denounced âsome of his defenders [who] seem to be saying that even if the allegations are true, it shouldnât really matter.â
(Hat tip: Ann Althouse.)
— Sal the Agorist (@SallyMayweather) May 21, 2020
This is a statement from Joe Biden:
"and we're going to create a new bio-based multi-facturing – multi-manufacturing job pro..uh uh…environment" pic.twitter.com/qxsQRvb4nK
— Steve Guest (@SteveGuest) May 20, 2020
Unreal… https://t.co/IEQa3ut09H
— Eric Trump (@EricTrump) May 24, 2020
The most hilarious thing about Joe Biden's ongoing series of self-immolations is that all he has to do to win the presidency is what comes naturally: lying around being technically alive in a basement. And he can't.
— Ben Shapiro (@benshapiro) May 22, 2020
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) May 25, 2020
Her attempt to leverage a failed Georgia gubernatorial bid into a spot on the Democratic ticket is so brazenly absurd that itâs hard to think of precedents.
But the 46-year-old African-American activist isnât one to be constrained by standard political practice â or reality. She refused to concede her narrow but clear 2018 gubernatorial loss, instead alleging sheâd been undone by a massive voter-suppression scheme.
As she put it at a recent event, âmalfeasance and incompetence and my opponent, who was a cartoon villain, stole the voices of Georgians.â Usually, candidates who wonât acknowledge defeat are written off as sore losers. Such is the Âinflamed, paranoid state of Dems in the Trump era that rather than being embarrassed by the Georgianâs graceless and unsubstantiated claims of electoral theft, they have embraced and parroted them.
Abrams could be forgiven for thinking that if she could get her party to accept she is the rightful governor of Georgia, she has a chance to convince it that she Âdeserves to be a heartbeat away from the presidency in the administration of a 78-year-old man.
By her own estimation, sheâd be an âexcellent running mate.â She has no doubt that sheâs prepared to be president on Day One and touts her foreign-policy credentials of having visited more than a dozen countries.
President Trump has rewritten the rules of political experience, yet itâs still a stretch to imagine someone who has only served in the Georgia legislature â and as a state representative, not even a senator â is ready to become leader of the Free World. Even Pete Buttigieg has more executive experience.
Snip.
Abrams can reasonably boast of an ability to stoke turnout among minority and young voters â she won more votes than any state-wide candidate in Georgia ever. But given her high-octane progressivism, sheâd have limited appeal to working-class swing voters and suburban women. By picking her, Biden would also be undermining one of his chief arguments, namely, that heâs a low-risk, experienced, steady hand.
This means that Abrams is likely to be passed over â and, if the past is any guide, conclude that she got robbed.
This Sunday before Memorial Day we honor the life of Cpl. Henry F. Warner, an antitank gunner who single-handedly destroyed three German tanks and killed the commander of a fourth:
Serving as 57-mm. antitank gunner with the 2d Battalion, he was a major factor in stopping enemy tanks during heavy attacks against the battalion position near Dom Butgenbach, Belgium, on 20-21 December 1944. In the first attack, launched in the early morning of the 20th, enemy tanks succeeded in penetrating parts of the line. Cpl. Warner, disregarding the concentrated cannon and machinegun fire from 2 tanks bearing down on him, and ignoring the imminent danger of being overrun by the infantry moving under tank cover, destroyed the first tank and scored a direct and deadly hit upon the second. A third tank approached to within 5 yards of his position while he was attempting to clear a jammed breach lock. Jumping from his gun pit, he engaged in a pistol duel with the tank commander standing in the turret, killing him and forcing the tank to withdraw. Following a day and night during which our forces were subjected to constant shelling, mortar barrages, and numerous unsuccessful infantry attacks, the enemy struck in great force on the early morning of the 21st. Seeing a Mark IV tank looming out of the mist and heading toward his position, Cpl. Warner scored a direct hit. Disregarding his injuries, he endeavored to finish the loading and again fire at the tank whose motor was now aflame, when a second machinegun burst killed him. Cpl. Warner’s gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty contributed materially to the successful defense against the enemy attacks.
This Saturday before Memorial Day we honor the life of Gunnery Sergeant John Basilone, who was not only the first Medal of Honor winner in World War II for his actions on Guadalcanal, but left the cushy life of a Bond Drive hero to return to action in time for the invasion of Iwo Jima.
His actions on Guadalcanal put most movie action heroes to shame:
John Basilone was born on November 4th, 1916. Basilone was born and raised in Raritan, a small town in New Jersey. He was an adventurous and restless child always looking for something new and exciting. After finishing the 8th grade, Basilone elected not to go to high school. He searched for some adventure and excitement and, not finding any, he joined the Army in 1934. After his basic training Basilone was posted to the Philippines.
During his time at his base in Manila, Basilone developed a mechanical talent for working with guns, especially machine guns. Basilone also developed a talent for motivating and leading men. After his three year enlistment ended Basilone returned to Raritan. A couple of years later he once again found himself becoming restless and looking for new adventures. He decided to reenlist in the service but this time he joined the Marines.
Ten months into World War II, Basilone found himself on the island of Guadalcanal, it was August of 1942. The Americans had secured an airstrip that was vital to the war effort. The Japanese and Americans were involved in one of the fiercest battles of World War II. The Japanese were determined to take the airfield and had assigned an entire Japanese division to the task of capturing the airfield.
Standing between them was only one Marine Battalion. The odds were certainly not in favor of the Americans. Basilone, who was in charge of 16 men, established a defensive position with 4 heavy machine guns in front of Henderson Field. It was October 24th when the Japanese launched a massive attack. The strategy Basilone had established for his unit was to let the Japanese advance to within 30 yards. And then to âlet them have it.â
The plan worked. They fired at the first group of attacking Japanese, successfully wiping them out. This first charge was only the beginning of the overall enemy attack. They charged several more times. Eventually this attack took its toll. Basilone, while manning the left two machine guns, heard a loud explosion come from the right setup of the machine guns. Moments later, one soldier from the right side crawled over and informed him that both right guns were knocked out and that the crew was all dead or injured.
Basilone knew he had to get to the knocked out guns to see if he could get them working. The first gun was beyond repair, but the second gun had a chance. There was no light to aid in examining the damaged gun. Basilone would have to troubleshoot the problem in the dark, it was now that Basiloneâs expertise with machine guns would pay off. He was able to feel the parts to find out what was causing the gun not to fire. Basilone quickly had the gun working again. As soon as it was back in action, the enemy charged. With the extra gun now working, Basilone and his unit easily beat back the Japanese attack. The attacks kept coming. Basilone told two of his remaining Marines to keep the heavy machine guns loaded. Basilone would roll to one machine gun and fire until it was empty, then roll over to the other one that had been loaded while he was firing the first one. At about 3 AM they were almost out of ammunition.
The Marines had stored ammunition about 100 yards away. However, this would be a difficult 100 yards. There were enemy troops on both the sides and behind their position. Basilone ran and crawled through the jungle. Bullets flew off over his head and grenades exploded around him. But he continued and made it to the ammo dump. Basilone threw six heavy cartridge belts over his soldier.
As he started back to his men, bullets were whizzing all around him again. But he made it back and soon he found another challenge. One machine gun had been smashed. Basilone took parts from another knocked out gun and fixed it quickly. Later in the night, the ammunition ran low again. Basilone would need to go for more, but this time it would be to another ammunition dump, 600 yards away.
Once again the Japanese threw everything at him, but he snaked through the grass well enough so that the Japanese could not find a clear target. Basilone made it back with the much needed ammunition which held off the enemy attacks. Finally the attacks ended around sunrise.
The daylight revealed a scene of utter carnage on the ground. Hundreds of bodies laid dead in front of the American positions, In fact, the entire Japanese regiment, around 3000 men, had been âannihilated.â On this night of October 24th, and 25th the U.S. had turned the tide of the war and the previously undefeated Japanese were on their way to defeat. For his heroics that night Basilone was awarded the Medal of Honor.
He did his Bond Drive duty, but refused an officer’s commission and a chance to teach gunnery to return to active duty, shipping out of Camp Pendleton on August 11th, 1944…just a month after he had gotten married.
On February 19th, 1945 the Marines arrived at Iwo Jima and were ready to attack. The Navy had bombarded the island for 36 days. Some Marines hoped this intense bombing would allow them to take the island with little resistance. However, there were 22,000 Japanese warriors who were well dug in, heavily armed, and prepared to die.
The first U.S. invasion force landed on the beach at 9:05 AM. Basiloneâs group landed around 9:30 AM. They were surprised to find little opposition. The Marines got up on the beach and noticed that their feet could barely move in the soft black volcanic sand of Iwo Jima.
For one hour, the U.S. was able to get their transports up to the beach and unload the men without major resistance. Then, with the beach crowded with U.S. soldiers, the Japanese began their counter attack.
Suddenly the Japanese from their hidden blockhouses began firing away at the exposed U.S. troops. The Marines were getting annihilated. Survivors later wondered how anyone survived the initial Japanese barrage. The U.S. forces were on the beach, but they had little or no cover, were still disorganized, and had not yet gotten enough heavy equipment ashore to defend against this type of attack.
The troops had trained for years, but nothing could prepare them for what was happening all around them. The soldiers would later say how frustrated they were that they could not see the enemy to fight back. The Japanese counterattack had stalled the U.S. invasion. Most Marines were hiding in the sand. The beach was littered with damaged vehicles, equipment, and dead soldiers. The invasion was not moving.
Brave men with leadership ability were needed to rally the troops. Basilone rose to the occasion. Many survivors of the battle recall that in the midst of the battle, with everyone hunkered down in the sand, there was one Marine out in the open, running around, directing men. It was Basilone. He first guided a tank out of a mine field. Only a few tanks came ashore and they were needed to knock out Japanese blockhouses.
Basilone had noticed a particular Japanese bunker had been effectively shooting mortar shells and raging deadly fire upon the U.S. troops. This enemy strong position âhad to goâ. Basilone found and organized some machine gunners along with demolition men and directed them toward the bunker. Basilone instructed a demolition man to blow a hole in the concrete structure, while others gave cover against other nearby enemy positions.
A large explosion went off opening part of the bunker. Basilone then told the enthused machine gunners to hold their fire and directed a flamethrower operator to charge the pit. The brave flamethrower charged the pit as quickly as he could, stuck his nozzle in the pit and ignited the flame. Some of the Japanese soldiers ran out of the pit screaming as they tried to wipe away the jellied gasoline that was burning them. Basilone cut them down with a machine gun. Fellow soldier, Charles Tatum, said âfor me and others who saw Basiloneâs leadership and courage during our assault, his example was overwhelming.â
After knocking out the bunker, Basilone led twenty men off the exposed beach area to a location where they could take some cover and plan their next move. He ordered the men to stay while he went back to get more men and some heavy machine guns. Basilone gathered some troops and weapons and started back across the beach to the waiting soldiers. But Basilone was hit with a Japanese mortar shell which landed right in the middle of him and the men he was leading. He died from his wounds around thirty minutes later.
For his actions that day, John Basilone was awarded The Navy Cross. The military paid tribute to Basilone by naming a ship after him. An anti-submarine Navy Destroyer, the U.S.S. Basilone was commissioned on July 26th, 1949. His home town of Raritan honors him every year with a parade…Basilone remains the only soldier (non-officer) in U.S. history to be awarded both The Medal of Honor and The Navy Cross. He is also the only Medal of Honor winner to go back into combat and be killed in combat.
Here’s a link to his official Medal of Honor page.
Evidently Joe Rogan just inked a deal with Spotify reportedly worth over $100 million to make his podcasts exclusive to Spotify by the the end of the year.
This is a very lucrative deal for Rogan, but it’s probably a very savvy move for Spotify as well, the way Sirius XM expanded their market by locking up Howard Stern.
In a very possibly related story, Rogan is also considering moving to Texas:
Here, then, is an honest assessment of the pros and cons of moving to Texas:
Pros
Cons
So in summary: Come on down, Joe!
California is a nice place to visit, but you wouldn’t want to live there…
(Hat tip: Ann Althouse.)
Just when you think 2020 can’t get any weirder comes a story like this:
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has confirmed she is in talks with Joe Bidenâs campaign to become his running mate, as the race to join his ticket reaches an unseen fever pitch.
âIâve had a conversation with some folks,â Whitmer said in a Tuesday morning interview on the âTodayâ show.
âIt was just an opening conversation and itâs not something that I would call a professional formalized vetting,â she added.
A rising star in the Democratic Party who has garnered national headlines through her handling of the Wolverine Stateâs COVID-19 outbreak, Whitmer is considered one of several women on the shortlist to join Bidenâs ticket.
The 48-year-old governor joins Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth, who, according to a Senate colleague, was selected for an interview with the Biden camp over the role.
There’s no guarantee that Whitmer will be Biden’s running mate, and maybe he’s just doing his due-diligence on every remotely plausible female VP possibility.
But it’s also possible that Biden has been so isolated and insulated by his team that he’s unaware that Whitmer’ authoritarian Wuhan coronavirus lockdown missteps and overreactions have made her possibly the least popular governor in America:
It is difficult to describe, and impossible to exaggerate, just how badly Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmerâs COVID-19 response has been, and it has been a catastrophe from the very beginning. In early March, when the country was already becoming concerned about the spread of the virus, Whitmer did not cancel the Democratic presidential primary, and indeed, there was record turnout for the March 10 primary, which turned into a âsuper spreaderâ event in metropolitan Detroit. She has since bungled practically every aspect of the pandemic, including her deliberately punitive and irrational lockdown policy.
Her reaction to widespread protests against her? Naturally, she called protestors “racists” and “misogynists.”
More of Whitmer’s greatest hits:
One word keeps recurring in online discussions of Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmerâs latest orders to fight the stateâs raging COVID-19 outbreak: âinsanity.â Last week, the first-term Democrat issued an order extending the stateâs stay-at-home policy, which had been set to expire April 15, until May 1. Michigan has the third-highest number of coronavirus cases of any state in America, and certainly strong measures are required to get the pandemic under control. But the devil is in the details, and Whitmerâs new order instantly provoked a firestorm of outrage.
Among the complaints was that Whitmer had prohibited sale of seeds and other garden supplies at a time when vegetable gardens need to be planted. Executive Order 2020-42 is titled, âTemporary requirement to suspend activities that are not necessary to sustain or protect life,â and it is quite specific about which activities are and are ânot necessary.â Stores with âmore than 50,000 square feetâ (e.g., Walmart, Lowes, Home Depot) are ordered to close areas of the store âby cordoning them off, placing signs in aisles, posting prominent signs, removing goods from shelves, or other appropriate meansâ that sell carpet or flooring, furniture, and âgarden centers and plant nurseries.â So if grandma went to Walmart for groceries and hoped to pick up some tomato plants or cucumber seeds while she was there â sorry, grandma! You could get a thousand-dollar fine and 90 days in jail for disobeying Whitmerâs orders.
Posting photos from a Walmart in Grand Rapids showing the now-banned seeds cordoned off with yellow tape, one Twitter user declared, â@GovWhitmer has banned us from growing our own food. This is [bleeping] insane.â Another user posted a photo indicating that itâs now apparently forbidden to sell American flags in Michigan. Barbecue grills, lawn chairs â anything in the garden section is now streng verboten in Michigan. References to Whitmer as a âdictatorâ proliferated on social media over the weekend as Michigan residents came to grips with the consequences of the governorâs draconian order.
Whitmer imposed a strict prohibition on ânot necessaryâ travel, which means that Michiganders are forbidden even to visit their own private vacation cabins in the âUp Northâ part of the state. This prohibition includes exceptions, however, that expose the arbitrary nature of Whitmerâs policy. My friend Ray Patnaude remarked on Facebook, âIf you live in Chicago you can visit your Michigan Lake house. If you live in Michigan, nope. Unless you drove to another state first and come back in. Insane.â
Snip.
âInsanityâ â the word keeps cropping up in discussions of Whitmerâs reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic. Last month, the governor actually threatened the licenses of medical professionals who prescribed the anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) for coronavirus patients. A week later, however, Whitmer was trying to secure supplies of HCQ from the federal strategic stockpile. Erratic, arbitrary, deaf to criticism â she has thoroughly botched Michiganâs response to this crisis, and yet, despite her blatant failure, there is talk that Whitmer is on the list of potential running mates for presumed Democratic nominee Joe Biden. Such a choice would almost certainly destroy whatever hope Democrats still have of winning Michigan in November. A petition to recall Whitmer had nearly 150,000 signatures Sunday, and a Facebook group, âMichiganders Against Excessive Quarantine,â signed up a quarter-million members in a matter of days.
Moreover, she extended her state’s lockdown despite having authority from the legislature to do so.
Also, like Governor Andrew Cuomo of New York, she forced nursing homes to take coronavirus patients. “Whitmerâs order effectively turned the stateâs nursing homes into breeding grounds, exposing hundreds of vulnerable residents to the virus. Itâs no coincidence that 30% of Michiganâs COVID-19 deaths occurred in populous nursing homes.”
With the exception of Hillary Clinton, it’s hard to conceive of a plausible Biden running mate that would be less popular than Whitmer. Since you should never interrupt your enemy when they’re committing suicide, we should all hope Biden picks her for the VP slot.
— BattleSwarm (@BattleSwarmBlog) May 19, 2020
Texas governor Greg Abbott is lifting more Wuhan coronavirus-inspired business restrictions:
Monday saw new information released on Phase 2 of Texas’ recovery plan.
Gov. Greg Abbott announced the new guidelines at a press conference Monday.
Phase 2 includes opening dates and health and safety guidelines and checklists for everything from bars and breweries to day cares, summer camps and even aquariums.
After being effectively shuttered for months, and putting thousands of bartenders and servers out of work, bars in Texas will be allowed to reopen Friday, Abbott said.
Under new guidelines, bars will be allowed to reopen at 25 percent capacity under very strict guidelines, he said. Breweries, wineries and wine tasting rooms are also included under these new guidelines.
Likewise restaurants, which had already been allowed to reopen at 25 percent capacity will be allowed to increase to 50 percent capacity starting Friday.
Abbott also issued minimum standard health protocols that bars must follow to keep patrons safe.
The restrictions are more of the “mother may I” rules that both patrons and establishments will probably start ignoring almost immediately.
Abbott is also lifting restrictions on sports facilities (or at least letting such facilities apply to open without spectators), which is good, since the NBA is also allowing teams back in practice facilities (though with a restriction to four players in a facility at a time, actual team practices aren’t permitted yet).
Thanks to Republican control of all three branches of government, Texas hasn’t suffered under the extreme lockdown insanity that Democratic governors have imposed on places like Michigan and California. But given that Texas has suffered no spike in coronavirus cases, and that Georgia has also suffered no spike in cases despite lifting most of their lockdown order, Gov. Abbott’s reopening moves seem relatively timid. Republican activists are not impressed:
For more than two months, Texas has been ruled by the edicts from Gov. Greg Abbottâs office.
Itâs been the governorâand the governor aloneâwho has decided which businesses can reopen and how many people they can allow inside. The governorâs directives have strayed in the mundane operations of individuals, such as noting how often their employees must wash their hands.
As Empower Texans CEO Michael Quinn Sullivan asked rhetorically last week: âAre we finding we donât actually need a legislative branch, with all their pesky drama and hand-wringing?â
Such is the case in current-day Texas. This is the status quo in a state where the legislature and the Supreme Court have thus far refrained from reining in the power of whatâs essentially become an absolute executive.
As with the previous partial reopening announcements by Abbott, grassroots activists like Julie McCarty of the True Texas Project say Texans should not be satisfied with merely an additional portion of the freedom their leaders have taken from them.
âI get what Abbott is doing, heâs trying to save his own skin by doing just enough to not be fully blamed by either side. Thatâs appeasement, not leadership, and it accomplishes nothing,â McCarty told Texas Scorecard. âTexans have had enough with these made-up orders that donât follow common sense. Itâs time for Abbott to fish or cut bait; he doesnât deserve any praise for piecemeal actions that put his lack of leadership skills on full display.â
Biden panders to the left, banks mad Benjamins, slices up some more word salad, gives the high hat to Stacey Abrams, and his secret weapon is…#NeverTrump? It’s this week’s BidenWatch!
In an hourlong briefing with reporters on Friday, senior campaign officials pledged to have âover 600 organizing staff responsible for battleground statesâ in place by next month as they pursue an âexpanded mapâ with Arizona at the âtop of the listâ of new opportunities. They also said that they had doubled the size of the digital team âand it is growing,â and that they planned to implement a new livestreaming platform as they navigate the challenges of campaigning virtually during the coronavirus crisis.
So far these are not campaign plans, they’re boxes in a spreadsheet.
âThe most important thing for us and for the campaign is public safety and the safety of the vice president, the people around him, the staff, the press corps, the Secret Service,â Ms. OâMalley Dillon said, noting the current stay-at-home order in Delaware. âWe will travel physically to places when the time is right, driven by the experts and the guidelines that come and not a day before.â
Congratulations! Your friend posting “Horrible day! đ đ đ đ đ Can’t talk about it…” is no longer the Vaguebooking champion.
Yet news of the campaign expansion comes as some Democrats have expressed anxiety about Mr. Bidenâs visibility and the campaignâs agility, headed into a general election in which Mr. Trump has an enormous cash advantage and the bully pulpit of the presidency. The Biden campaign, which is now fund-raising with the Democratic National Committee, has $103 million in cash on hand, according to a slide show that accompanied the campaign presentation. The Trump campaign announced this week that, in conjunction with Republican fund-raising committees, it had $255 million on hand.
Some Democrats have also been dismayed by the poor quality of Mr. Bidenâs online appearances, citing the glitches that have marred some of his livestreams, and have urged him to significantly upgrade his digital operation and to find ways to drive a forward-looking agenda.
Legit concerns, but maybe you’d like to get back to that “how” thing?
The indicated that the campaign sees Arizona, Texas and Georgia as being in play. She is particularly âbullish,â she said, on Arizona, a traditionally red state. An accompanying slide described the Biden strategy in Arizona as a mix of persuading Romney-Clinton voters and others who have moved toward the Democratic Party recently, as well as increasing turnout among Latino voters and voters under 30.
(cue the music) They’ve got…HIGH HOPES…they’ve got…HIGH HOPES…
These are not plans for battleground states, these are aspirational wish lists. None of those states have Democratic governors, meaning voter fraud is going to be more difficult to commit. You know what states aren’t in that article? Ohio. Pennsylvania. Florida. Minnesota. Wisconsin. Michigan. Save Florida, I don’t see “young Latino voters” pulling them across the finish line in any of those. (And it’s not going to happen in Florida, either, but at least it’s conceivable there.) Either they’re doing a bad job of trying to headfake the Trump campaign or they’re repeating Clinton 2016 errors.
Joe Biden: "We're in the middle of a pandemic that has cost us more than 85,000 jobs as of today. Lives of millions of people, millions of people, millions of jobs." pic.twitter.com/P4b2CA27Yf
— The Hill (@thehill) May 14, 2020
- Biden earned $135,116 in a salary from the University of Pennsylvania, according to the latest report, which dates back to the start of 2019. He took a role as the Benjamin Franklin Presidential Practice professor in 2017 and went on unpaid leave in April 2019.
- Joe Biden made about $450,000 from just four speaking engagements at the end of 2018 and first month of 2019. Jill Biden made about $100,000 from three speaking engagements.
Nice work if you can get it…
âWe hear this every Presidential election cycle,â Harry Reid, the former Senate Majority Leader, told me in February, on the eve of the Nevada caucuses. âAt least every one Iâve been involved in for these many decades. âThe Party is moving too far to the left. Itâs just terrible. What are we going to do about it?â Well, when the primaries are over, the candidate moves back to the middle.â
Hear that, lefties? Harry Reid thinks you’re perpetual chumps!
At the time, we were talking about what it would mean for the Democratic Party to have a democratic socialist as its standard-bearer. Bernie Sanders appeared very likely to become the Democratic Presidential nominee. The question of the moment was, how would the ascendent [sic; nice work, New Yorker ] left win over the middle? But, of course, Sanders has suspended his campaign, and Joe Biden is the Partyâs de-facto nominee. And thatâs complicated the scenario that Reid and the Party have seen so many times. As the primaries ended, the general election began, and the coronavirus crisis hit, Biden, catching up to his own nomination, has spent as much time trying to move left as move forward.
âA united party is key to winning the White House this November,â Biden tweeted on Wednesday, linking to an article about the task forces that he and Sandersâerstwhile opponents, now alliesâhave appointed and charged with working toward Party unity in six policy areas: climate change, health care, immigration, education, criminal-justice reform, and the economy. âThe work of the task forces will be essential to identifying ways to build on our progress and not simply turn the clock back to a time before Donald Trumpâbut transform our country,â Biden wrote. The appointees to the task forces include pairings of new progressive stars with veterans of the Obama Administration: former Secretary of State John Kerry and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez will co-chair the climate-change group; Representative Pramila Jayapal and former surgeon general Vivek Murthy will co-chair the health-care group. For much of the primaries, Bidenâs rhetoric was that Donald Trump was an aberration, and that the soul of America needed to be restored. Now heâs saying that the country cannot âturn the clock back.â The blend of old and new faces on the task forces suggest that a Biden Administration will be a bit of both.
Oh boy, task forces! Participation trophies for everyone! Any that’s pretty much the extent of the piece, except for sucking up to Elizabeth Warren (AKA đ, who the left freaking hates).
Grandpa Badfinger just let slip that he has a secret weapon for November. No, his secret weapon is not the utter hypocrisy of a Dem base that is eagerly going all in on a senile old weirdo who, when he says â#MeToo,â means that he too treated women like inanimate objects as did his pals Teddy Glug-Glug Kennedy, Bill Cohiba Clinton and Harvey Sex Toad Weinstein. Their hypocrisy canât be a secret weapon because their hypocrisy is no secret.
No, Gropey Jâs secret weapon is â get this â âRepublicans for Biden.â
Stop looking at me like that. This is really a thing, according to the presumptive nominee whose nemesis is a particularly uppity squirrel living in his backyard.
Snip.
I assume President Trump is quaking in his Guccis at the impending onslaught of verbal pinching and slapping from the very secret, very butch roster of Never Trump literal and figurative heavyweights. The Beast further reports on the identity of these titans of treachery: âThose names include former Sen. Jeff Flake (R-AZ), Wisconsin-based political analyst Charlie Sykes, conservative media giant Bill Kristol, former Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele, longtime campaign operative Steve Schmidt, former Rep. David Jolly (R-FL), and columnist Mona Charen, among others.â
I assume George Conway and Anna Navarro will be waddling along too, assuming that the organizers keep their promise and bring doughnuts. Lots of doughnuts.
Nor should we count out egg-evoking fiscal conservative Evan McMullin, who it was reported conserved fiscally by not paying his campaign debts. Iâm sure David French will be part of it because heâs got nothing better to do. Maybe Jonah Goldberg will join too. He is alleged to have a new website, though most of us havenât gotten around to not reading it yet.
#NEW House Judiciary @Jim_Jordan requests clean copies/no redactions State Dept records. âThe documents released pursuant to FOIA provide additional details about the Obama-Biden Administrationâs actions toward Burisma.â Biden campaign not commenting. @CBSNews @BoKnowsNews pic.twitter.com/CDEIrOzcKc
— Catherine Herridge (@CBS_Herridge) May 14, 2020
65% chance Biden responds to Stacey Abrams with âThanks Kamalaâ during that MSNBC special.
— Stephen L. Miller (@redsteeze) May 13, 2020
Author of this @nypost cover deserves medal of freedom pic.twitter.com/OKt2qIAFsv
— Brent Scher (@BrentScher) May 14, 2020
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More tanks? More tanks!
This time Moran climbs around an M1A1 Abrams tank and talks about his time serving inside one during (I’m assuming) Desert Storm [evidently the Iraq War]. Highlights include how an Iraqi bullet missed his head by three inches, and how a tank designer including a pressure sensor on a loading door kept it from taking his arm off when they forgot to throw the proper safety switch.
Edited to add:
Desert Storm? Why do people keep thinking I'm that old…? Add about 13 years to the story….
— Nicholas Moran (@ChieftainWG) May 17, 2020