Originally published on August 31, 2020
From the Hill:
But COVID-19, now听the third biggest cause of death in this country, is so serious that it merits analysis. And with the way we are polarized today, COVID-19 will have a death effect precisely because it hits Americans unequally. In America in 2020, even death is polarized鈥onsequently, nationwide, we predict a roughly 22,000-vote advantage for Trump in the popular vote as a result of COVID-19 deaths.
鈥擩eremy Mayer and Laurie Schintler
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From the Washington Post:
So, why is the president considering it, and why now, less than 80 days from the election? Are some of the people Trump is hearing from sitting in the Kremlin?
鈥擬ichael Morell and Mike Vickers
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From the Washington Post:
Of course, any honest search for who is responsible for the rise of Big Tech would also include the members of Congress themselves, who for three decades have sat on their thumbs as judges infatuated with free-market ideology were allowed to so hollow out American antitrust law that regulators are now almost powerless to restrain the tech giants. At this point, only a major rewrite of the industrial era antitrust statutes can bring the tech titans to heel.
鈥擲teven Pearlstein
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From the Washington Post:
All of this comes amid the persistent echo from the left to 鈥渄efund the police,鈥 a politically poisonous slogan for Democrats in their suburban strongholds. Never mind that it rarely means actually dismantling police departments but, rather, reorganizing them. In politics, if you鈥檙e explaining, you鈥檙e losing.听
鈥擬ark J. Rozell
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From USA Today:
Working longer also allows for additional retirement contributions (possibly including employer contributions) and reduces the number of years over which retirement savings must be stretched. Our research suggests that听when inflation-adjusted interest rates are zero, working and delaying听Social听Security听by only听three to six听additional months is just as effective in raising one鈥檚 retirement living standards as saving an additional one percent of earnings over 30 years.
鈥擲ita Slavov and John Shoven
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From Asia Times:
But few see any early prospects for a return to diplomacy aimed at the two-state solution. The Emirati public rationale notwithstanding, there鈥檚 no celebration in Palestine. The deep cynicism and despair that is听now reflected in polling听was on display as Palestinians denounced the new agreement as a betrayal.
鈥擡llen Laipson
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From the Hill:
If the wolf of budgetary crisis is not at the door, politicians can hear him growling. And when he begins to bite into the real meat of government, the question will arise: Sell a few acres, or close a clinic?听Fire teachers? Cut pensions? Or part with a park or some old school land?听
鈥擩eremy Mayer
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From DefenseOne:
Budget limits and legal restrictions on how often the government can mobilize reservists for training make this approach a fool鈥檚 errand. The Tsai administration should instead consider a more transformational vision: reconstitute most of its reserve units as a territorial defense force. Preparing Taiwan鈥檚 reservists to defend their homes and communities would be cheaper than trying to turn an unwieldy reserve force into a second ground army; and more effective, since it means reservists will fight on ground they know to protect the people they care most about.听
鈥擬ichael Hunzeker and Brian Davis (Schar School PhD student)
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From African Eye Report:
The new director-general at the WTO will not speak for Africa alone, but having an African at the helm will be symbolically important for the continent: offering smart economic diplomacy, and demonstrating the advantage in its products from cotton to the creative industries.
鈥擩.P. Singh
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From the Hill:
The coronavirus is Trump鈥檚 Vietnam. It will bring him down just as the war in Vietnam ended the political career of Lyndon Johnson in 1968. The difference is that LBJ became obsessed with Vietnam, whereas Trump would like to ignore the pandemic. 鈥淭he president got bored with it,鈥澨齛 Republican operative听told the New York Times. Asked by an Axios interviewer about the staggering death toll from the pandemic,听Trump responded, 鈥淚t is what it is.鈥
鈥擝ill Schneider
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From the Hill:
A few strokes of the presidential pen have turned the Postal Service inside out and sent it back to the pre-1970 reform days of presidential control. This poses a risk to one of the foundations of our democracy.听
鈥擜. Lee Fritschler
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From the Washington Post:
While we will never know to what extent Russia actually swung votes in Trump鈥檚 favor, we can put to rest forever that Putin鈥檚 motivation was to do just that.
鈥擬ichael Morell and Marc Polymeropoulos