Marie Prevost (1896-1937) |
The “unheard of” early return trend comes amid new controversy over California Republicans’ self-proclaimed “ballot harvesting program” through the use of unofficial ballot collection boxes.
—Voice of OC
“It’s one more indication of an increasingly motivated electorate,” reacted Fred Smoller, political science professor at Chapman University, in a Tuesday interview. “There’s a lot of interest in this election; people feel there’s a lot at stake and are expressing that by voting early.”
. . .
“What’s really significant for me is we just mailed the ballots, and within a few days we had return rate figures of 100% above four years ago — that’s unheard of,” [Orange County Registrar of Voters Neal] Kelley said to Voice of OC on Tuesday. “You might see that a couple of weeks in, but a few days after sending them out? That’s historic. It’s never been done before.”
Experts see a sharp contrast between Trump and Biden when it comes to investments in federal research funding and respect for science itself.
—Inside Higher Ed
…Trump’s continued efforts to downplay the severity of the pandemic, seen most recently in the wake of his own COVID-19 diagnosis, his rejection of public health guidance -- including, perhaps most consequentially, his mockery and failure of role modeling when it comes to face masks -- and reported efforts by his administration to interfere in scientific decision making in the nation’s public health agencies and sideline experts have raised alarms among scientists and many others. Scientists have criticized the president for rejecting scientific and other forms of expertise, including by forcing out or muzzling government-employed scientists and by eliminating many advisory committees comprised of outside experts….
Ed-tech start-up Engageli has raised $14.5 million to build a videoconferencing platform. Unlike Zoom, the platform has been purposefully designed with college and university faculty members and students in mind.
—Inside Higher Ed
—CHE
—NYT
Bessie Love (1898-1986) |
Footage obtained by The Post, covering dozens of hours of closed-door meetings of the Council for National Policy in February and August, reveals the group’s obsessions, fears and plans at a pivotal moment for conservatives.
—WashPo
Opinion by Max Boot
—WashPo
—WashPo
✅At a glance: See the biggest spenders in California’s prop battles -- Californians are voting on 12 propositions, but not all are funded equally. Just take a look at that fat slab of lilac in the graphic below. Ben Christopher CalMatters -- 10/14/20
No surprise for even the most dimly engaged Californians who have been bombarded with ads for weeks now: Funding for Proposition 22, a measure to exempt gig-economy companies from a new state labor law, dwarfs just about everything else. To date, its yes campaign has raised nearly $188 million. That’s $3 of every $10 that’s been spent for or against any proposition on the November 2020 ballot.
✅Newsom’s office recommends changes for policing protests --Police should avoid unnecessary enforcement that could provoke conflict among protesters, avoid looking too militaristic, and use rubber bullets and tear gas only as a last resort when handling demonstrations and protests, according to recommendations released Tuesday by Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office. Teri Figueroa in the San Diego Union-Tribune$ Alexei Koseff in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 10/13/20
✅Trump urges California GOP to 'fight on' with unofficial ballot boxes despite prosecution threat -- President Donald Trump took to Twitter on Tuesday to urge the California Republican Party to “fight on” in its move to collect ballots in unofficial “drop boxes’’ around the state, in defiance of legal threats from state officials. Carla Marinucci Politico -- 10/13/20
Roughly 15 million Americans have already voted, setting a trajectory that could result in a majority of voters casting ballots before Election Day for the first time in U.S. history.
—WashPo
✅Chapman University works to contain coronavirus outbreak among students -- The university reported that 17 students living in dormitories are infected with COVID-19, as well as 19 living in off-campus housing near the school and one more in an unknown type residence. No faculty or staff have been infected. The item is in the Orange County Register -- 10/13/20
Louise Brooks (1906-1985) |
✅California poised to reject affirmative action measure despite summer of activism -- Polls suggest the Legislature may have miscalculated when it placed a measure on the November ballot to reinstate affirmative action. Alexander Nieves Politico -- 10/13/20
✅Arellano: Latino Republicans face a tough task: turning blue Orange County red again -- So Avila has taken on a mission that seems downright Sisyphean: Not only help take Orange County back for the Republicans, but also bring Latinos to a party that demonized them, in this very county, decades before Trump sauntered into the White House by calling Mexicans “rapists.” And you thought fighting the Bobcat fire was tough. Gustavo Arellano in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 10/13/20
✅OC Covid numbers: 19 new deaths reported
6 comments:
Those professionals working in academics should know better than to misquote anyone, including president Trump.
As I recall, he said (paraphrasing) Mexico (meaning the Mexican government) has been sending us their worst because they don't want to deal with them anymore. They're sending us their drug dealers, their rapists, their murderers, their etc...
I challenge the dtb team to carefully reread the actual transcripts and report your findings. Thank you.
1:03, you should direct your point to Arellano, who referred to Trump's infamous remark, not me. But here's what Trump said:
"The US has become a dumping ground for everybody else's problems. Thank you. It's true, and these are the best and the finest. When Mexico sends its people, they're not sending their best. They're not sending you. They're not sending you. They're sending people that have lots of problems, and they're bringing those problems with us. They're bringing drugs. They're bringing crime. They're rapists. And some, I assume, are good people." —Trump thus implied that the Mexicans who cross the border into the US are rapists. At the time he said this, he was challenged to provide any evidence that these immigrants are rapists. Notoriously, he offered none. There is no evidence.
Speaking of rapists, didn't Trump have to settle, through Mr. Cohen, a number of cases involving over aggressive behavior by Trump toward women victims? Or, perhaps, he crossed the border. Well, he did: violated legal and ethical border issues.
According to USA Today:
“After nearly half a decade of repeated allegations, another woman has publicly accused President Donald Trump of sexual assault.
Amy Dorris, a former model, said Trump forced his tongue down her throat and groped her against her will at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in 1997, when she was 24 years old, according to a report in The Guardian published Thursday. Dorris said he ignored her demands to stop.
. . .
Trump has denied similar allegations from more than twenty other women, including writer E. Jean Carroll, who last year accused Trump of raping her in a department store dressing room, also in the mid-1990s. Trump denied the allegations and Carroll sued him for defamation in November in a case the Department of Justice this month has argued it should handle.”
PBS offers a good overview of the many assault and rape charges against Trump over the years here.
And let's not forget Trump's famous "Access Hollywood" remarks: "I don't even wait. And when you're a star, they let you do it. You can do anything. ... Grab ‘em by the pussy. You can do anything.”
And THIS is the man people want for their President. Unbelievable.
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