Friday, July 31, 2020

WaPo
Wisconsin sells more paper, employs more people and has more paper mills than any other state. The industry was already in decline, but the coronavirus delivered a death blow.
Real Clear Politics:
Politics, not science, keeping schools closed
Legal Insurrection:
Oregon’s U.S. Attorney Tells Media Their Distorted Portland Riots Coverage Is Part of the Problem
Rich Thau, CNN: Critical Swing Voters Still Back Trump
Townhall: Seattle Moves to Abolish Entire Police Force
Rasmussen: Donald Trump Approval Rating Bounces Back to 50 Percent
Scott Adams, Episode 1076:

Trump is Medically Correct re HCQ and CNN Might Be Killing Tens-of-Thousands

Obama/Hilary voter Ann Althouse:

An effective presentation of what Trump got right and Biden got wrong about the coronavirus.

Ed Yardeni: Welcome to Oz, Where MMT Enables the Government to Get Bigger!
The Federalist: Nearly Half Of Young Americans Say It’s Okay To Fire People Who Support Trump
American Thinker
COVID-19 can cause a fever, but nothing like the fever of hysteria gripping broadcast and social media over hydroxychloroquine, a potential treatment for the Wuhan flu.
On this day in 1975,

Jimmy Hoffa Reported Missing



On his birthday,

Milton Friedman: Capitalism v. Socialism

Who are these virtuous angels who would run a socialist society?

Video
New England Journal of Medicine: It is safe to reopen schools

Thursday, July 30, 2020

CDC Director Redfield:

COViD-19 quarantines and school closings causing more suicides and drug overdose deaths than virus deaths
David Winston
With silencing of speech, is America entering Orwellian territory?
Increasing numbers of people leaving Seattle and Portland driving up U-Haul rates to get out
Tyler Perry on ‘Defund Police’ Push: ‘I Think We Need More Police’
Ann Althouse:

Lib Media Schizophrenia: "Trump is like [Joe] McCarthy, who loved chaos, and Trump is like George Wallace, who loved law and order. Oh, that Trump — he's everything you need him to be."

Tom Cotton defends bill to eliminate funds for teaching 'kids to hate America' with 1619 Project
On this day in 1965,

LBJ Signs Medicare Into Law




Video: The History of Medicare
On this day n 1956,

"In God We Trust" 

Becomes Official National Motto



Yale epidemiologist: Dr. Fauci running 'misinformation campaign' against hydroxychloroquine

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Tucker Carlson: ‘People Who Run This Country Are No Longer Shocked by Political Violence — They Welcome It’
On this day in 1932,

Federal Troops Rout 

WWI Veteran Bonus Marchers from D.C. Camp

MacArthur, Patton and Eisenhower Lead Attack


Video summary
From The Sad Tale of the Bonus Marchers:
Following World War I, the U.S. federal government anticipated that its war-risk insurance plan would adequately protect American soldiers and sailors who had served during the war, and that there would be no demand for compensation to those who had suffered no injury during their service in the army or navy. In 1924, however, Congress enacted a law, over the veto of President Calvin Coolidge, providing for a system of adjusted compensation based on length of service, with a distinction made in favor of service overseas. Under this plan, veterans entitled to receive $50 or less were to be paid in cash; those entitled to receive more than $50 were to receive certificates maturing in 20 years.
Veterans up to the rank of major with at least 60 days service each received a dollar for each day of domestic service up to $500 and $1.25 for each day of overseas service up to $625. The bond that each received in 1924 (in lieu of cash) would accumulate compound interest, resulting in an average payment of about $1,000 for each veteran in 1945.
In order to meet full payment of these certificates when they matured in 1945, Congress provided that a trust fund be created through the appropriation of twenty annual installments of $ 112 million each. This would yield a total of $2.24 billion. Interest compounded annually would increase this sum approximately to the amount required to meet the face value of the certificates at maturity. By April 1932, there were 3,662,374 of those certificates outstanding, bearing an aggregate face value of $3.638 billion. By this time eight annual installments of $ 112 million had been paid into the fund by Congress, making a total of $896 million, and accrued interest had added $95 million, bringing the fund to $991 million. 
However, because of the national depression, in 1931 Congress expanded the privilege of borrowing with an amendment adopted over the veto of President Herbert Hoover, increasing the loan value of the certificates from 22 1/2 per cent to 50 per cent of face value. 
By April 1932, loans amounting to $1.248 billion were outstanding. The difference between this figure and the total face value of the certificates, $3.638 billion, was $2.390 billion. This was the additional sum which the veterans would receive if Congress, again over the President's veto, approved a new proposal for immediate redemption of the certificates at face value, thirteen years before maturity in 1945. 
This early redemption capability came to be referred to by members of Congress and veterans groups as a bonus, and during the early months of 1932 the bonus was a topic of ongoing discussion in the legislature. Because of the opposition of President Hoover and many senators and members of the House, due primarily to the fact that the country was trying to work its way out of the depression and this action would put a severe strain on the federal budget, veterans groups began to organize around the country with the idea of marching on Washington, D.C. to press their demands. 
Beginning in May, 1932, groups of World War I veterans began difficult journeys across the country, traveling in empty railroad freight cars, in the backs of trucks, in cars, on foot and by any other means that became available. By mid-June it was estimated that as many as 20,000 veterans and some family members had arrived in Washington, and were camping out, often in dirty, unsanitary conditions, in parks and military bases around the city, depending on donations of food from a variety of governments, churches and private citizens. On June 16, the House passed the bonus bill by a vote of 209-176, but on June 18, the Senate defeated the bill 62-18. 
At this point, the federal and district governments began to make arrangements to force the veterans to go home, but very few accepted the offer, vowing to stay until they received their bonus. Throughout July the veterans, known as the Bonus Expeditionary Force, continued to hold marches and rallies despite the fact that they were receiving ultimatums to leave, with the White House proposing use of troops to force an evacuation. 
Then on July 29, 1932, troops did storm several buildings that the veterans were occupying as well as their main camp, setting tents on fire and forcing an evacuation. When it was over, one veteran had been killed and about 50 veterans and Washington police had been injured in various confrontations. Over the next several months, a much smaller group of Bonus Expeditionary Force members continued to pressure Congress, and in May 1933 about 1,000 veterans marched again on Washington. Newly-elected President Franklin Roosevelt also opposed the bonus but demonstrated his concern for the unemployed veterans by issuing an executive order permitting the enrollment of 25,000 of them in the Citizens' Conservation Corps for work in forests. When the veterans realized that President Roosevelt would also veto the bonus bill but was offering an alternative solution they gradually backed away from their demands, and the issue of the veterans' bonus eventually faded from the news. 
Source Artice 
Wikipedia
History.net

Monday, July 27, 2020

On this day in 2017,

John McCain casts decisive "no" vote

 preventing Obamacare repeal


Video: CBS News reports

Grammar is racist.  Rutgers will alter its standards to "limit emphasis on grammar [and] sentence-level issues so as to not put students from multilingual, nonstandard, ‘academic' English backgrounds at a disadvantage."
The Federalist
The Media Is Hysterically Lying About Trump’s Alleged Fascism
‘This Is How Revolutions Start’: America’s Youth Acting Out on Decades of ‘Leftist Indoctrination’
On this day in 1974,

House of Representatives Judiciary Committee 

 Impeaches President Nixon



Video of House Judiciary Committee vote 
On this day in 1794,

Robespierre Guillotined 

Reign of Terror to Enforce Republic of Virtue Ends

Meets same fate as 17,000 opponents he guillotined
 to advance the French Revolution

History Channel video

Portland police find loaded rifle magazines and Molotov cocktails near federal courthouse
Creator of Cognitive Test Trump Took: POTUS Did Better Than 'Most Patients,' 5-Word Recall Especially Tough

Sunday, July 26, 2020

HARVEY A. RISCH, MD, PHD , PROFESSOR OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, YALE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH:

The Key to Defeating COVID-19 Already Exists. IT'S HYDROXYCHLOROQUINE.  We Need to Start Using It

Murdered In Broad Daylight — Famous Black Trump supporter shot to death in Milwaukee hours after giving pro-Trump interview

National Review: Is There a Connection between Coronavirus and Air Conditioning?
"We support everyone’s First Amendment right for free speech and to gather and assemble in such a way. But what we saw today was not peaceful." "It was not a peaceful demonstration at all, and criminal acts were occurring throughout the city, and many people were at risk." Said the Seattle police chief, Carmen Best
Rasmussen: Most voters approve of President Trump’s decision to use federal agents to fight the growing violent crime in some major cities. They also believe many of these cities bring the criminal problems onto themselves.
Kanye: I'm running for president because I want Joe Biden to lose
WNBA Players walk off court for National Anthem
Two years ago

Peter Thiel: Free Trade Theory ‘Totally at Odds’ with Reality of ‘Massive’ China Trade Deficits

Ed Yardeni:
More Declarations of War Signal US-China Cold War Heating Up