Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Pope rejects US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meeting

 

The Vatican has denied US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo an audience with Pope Francis.
The Holy See said the Pontiff does not receive politicians during an election period.
The move adds to a diplomatic row following comments by Mr Pompeo about China and the Catholic Church.
The Vatican accused Mr Pompeo of trying to use that issue to attract voters in November's US presidential election.
 
 
In an article earlier this month, Mr Pompeo said the Catholic Church was risking its "moral authority" by renewing an agreement with China regarding the appointment of bishops.
Donald Trump receives support from conservative religious movements, including conservative Catholic voters, some of whom think Pope Francis is too liberal.
Human rights groups say many Catholics in China are persecuted and driven underground for pledging allegiance to the Pope instead of an official Chinese Catholic association.
Despite this, in 2018 the Vatican made a deal with China to have some say over the appointment of Chinese bishops.
At the time Pope Francis said he hoped the deal "will allow the wounds of the past to be overcome" and bring about full Catholic unity in China.
 
 
The agreement is expected to be renewed next month in the face of opposition from some Catholics, including in the US.
In a speech on Wednesday in Rome Mr Pompeo called on the Vatican to defend religious freedom in China, saying "nowhere is religious freedom under assault more than in China." 
 
 
 
The Vatican's two top diplomats, Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin and Foreign Minister Archbishop Paul Gallagher, said Pope Francis will not receive Mr Pompeo.
"The Pope had already said clearly that political figures are not received in election periods. That is the reason," Cardinal Parolin said, according to AFP news agency.
The two politicians also described Mr Pompeo's public criticism of the Pope as a surprise and Archbishop Gallagher commented that issues for discussion should be negotiated "privately".
Cardinal Parolin also said it is possible Mr Pompeo's comments were designed to encourage Catholics to support Mr Trump at the polls in November.
"Some have interpreted it this way - that the comments were above all for domestic political use. I don't have proof of this but certainly this is one way of looking at it," he suggested.

Astronauts to Vote in Space

 Americans exercise their right to vote from all over the world, and for November’s election, few ballots will have traveled as far as those cast by NASA astronauts living and working aboard the International Space Station. During earlier days of human spaceflight, astronauts would only visit space for days, or maybe weeks, at a time. Today, astronauts typically stay in space for six-month missions on the space station, increasing the odds of a spacefarer off the planet during an election. So how does one vote from space?

 

 

 

How it Works

Like other forms of absentee voting, voting from space starts with a Federal Postcard Application, or FPCA. It’s the same form military members and their families fill out while serving outside of the U.S. By completing it ahead of their launch, space station crew members signal their intent to participate in an election from space.

Because astronauts move to Houston for their training, most opt to vote as Texas residents. Of course, NASA’s astronauts come from all over, so those wishing to vote as residents of their home states can work with their counties to make special arrangements to vote from space.

Once their FPCA is approved, the astronaut is almost ready to vote. Like many great things in space, voting starts with an experiment. The county clerk who manages elections in the astronaut’s home county sends a test ballot to a team at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. Then they use a space station training computer to test whether they’re able to fill it out and send it back to the county clerk.

After a successful test, a secure electronic ballot generated by the Clerk’s office of Harris County and surrounding counties in Texas, is uplinked by Johnson’s Mission Control Center to the voting crew member. An e-mail with crew member-specific credentials is sent from the County Clerk to the astronaut. These credentials allow the crew member to access the secure ballot.

The astronaut will then cast their vote, and the secure, completed ballot is downlinked and delivered back to the County Clerk’s Office by e-mail to be officially recorded. The clerk has their own password to ensure they are the only one who can open the ballot. It’s a quick process, and the astronaut must be sure to submit it by 7 p.m. local time on Election Day if voting as a Texas resident.

 

Will astronauts vote in this election?

Expedition 63/64 crew member Kate Rubins is assigned to a six-month mission launching Oct. 14, and will vote from space. It won’t be her first time – Rubins also cast her vote from the International Space Station during the 2016 election.

With a SpaceX Crew Dragon scheduled to carry three additional U.S. crew members to the space station on Oct. 31 as part of the Crew-1 mission, Mike Hopkins, Victor Glover and Shannon Walker will make it to the space station just in time to cast their ballots there, as well. All three have filled out the paperwork and are ready to do so. 


Voting in space has been possible since 1997 when a bill passed to legally allow voting from space in Texas. Since then, several NASA astronauts have exercised this civic duty from orbit. As NASA works toward sending astronauts to the Moon in 2024 and eventually on to Mars, the agency plans to continue to ensure astronauts who want to vote in space are able to, no matter where in the solar system they may be.

 

https://www.nasa.gov/feature/astronauts-to-vote-in-space 

 


 

 

The (not so) presidential debate, a different take


Article by Paul Mirengoff in PowerLine

The (not so) presidential debate, a different take

My friend Stanley Kurtz has a far more optimistic take on last night’s debate than the ones Scott and I (and nearly all other conservatives I’ve read) have presented. Stanley is a keen observer of the political scene, so I was glad to learn that he doesn’t share my pessimism.

Here are key excerpts from Stanley’s article, with my commentary sprinkled in:

A lot of folks are saying the debate was an ugly, insult-filled shouting match that barely got down to cases. Actually, I thought it was a highly entertaining exchange that helpfully spotlighted the candidates’ differences on issues.

An ugly, angry exchange? Well, at least it looked like America. If you took all the people who bite their tongues instead of saying what they really think of folks on the other side, put them in a room together and let them loose, this is what we would sound like. Pretty? No. Honest. Yes.

The debate’s decorum was a snapshot of where we are as a country. I think that’s less because of the president’s personality than because we don’t agree with each other about some pretty fundamental things—and because much of what we disagree about is the motivation of the other side.

Personally, I wasn’t entertained at all by this debate. The nastiness does reflect national divisions, at least among those most invested in politics. However, it didn’t have to be so ugly. The Pence-Harris debate won’t be.

Voters who haven’t decided yet aren’t likely waiting for a nuanced policy debate. If they were, they’d have already made up their minds. Instead, undecideds haven’t yet focused as much on the issues as we political junkies have. Undecideds are looking for the big-picture on the candidates’ differences, and that is what they got.

I’m not sure what makes undecided voters tick. Stanley may be right that they are looking for big-picture differences, although these have been there throughout for all to see.

Alternatively, these voters might mostly be people who aren’t that interested in the issues and just want to see the candidates display their personalities under fire. If that’s the case, Trump probably built his edge among men, while Biden built his among women.

For my money, the law-and-order segment was the decisive exchange of the night. The differences between the candidates were stark. I think Trump was likely the big winner there, but that presumes the country is closer to his view than Biden’s. I guess we’ll have to wait and see. T

he section on climate change versus the economy was also clarifying. The most important and politically consequential controversy—Biden’s shifting position on fracking—was never properly addressed. Even so, the very different ways in which the candidates strike the balance on environment-versus-economy came through. I think that’s another winner for Trump.

I think this is a fair and plausible assessment.

I used to listen to debates like a policy wonk. That blinded me to much of what was happening in 2016.

Of course, this isn’t 2016. Four years later, the president’s abrasive ways have worn thin with many voters. During these exchanges, however, I saw a president who was sharp as a tack, well able to call up interactions he’d had with world leaders and his policy people in order to make his points. Trump was tough to the point of rudeness, as usual, but had an energy, acuity, and strength that Biden lacked.

When it comes to policy details, Trump can be frustratingly thin. But when it comes to the big-picture issues and options, the president comes through. He never explained in detail why Critical Race Theory is so pernicious, for example. But I’m betting that enough voters have knowledge of these insidious indoctrination sessions and the troubling culture they’ve spawned to take the president’s point. What other politician would have had the guts to tackle this issue? A lot of voters will appreciate that.

I still tend to listen to debates like a policy wonk, so Stanley has the advantage on me there. I hope he’s right that enough swing voters know how insidious “race sensitivity” sessions are. If they don’t know now, they will likely find out soon — the hard way.

Biden held up very well for about the first hour. He far surpassed the ridiculously low expectations Republicans had set for him, and that has undoubtedly helped him. That said, Biden seemed to me to visibly fade in the last half-hour. He never quite lost it, but his mumbling, semi-confused manner emerged. A couple of times it seemed as though the president’s interruptions actually saved Biden from what was beginning to devolve into word salad.

I agree with this. However, I wonder how many voters made it to the last half-hour.

Maybe voters are just tired of the president’s aggressiveness or wary of Biden’s age and acuity, or just sick and tired of the whole ugly mess that our politics has become. A lot of the commentary so far has suggested as much.

Perhaps. But I think this debate has reminded the relatively few voters who may have only recently tuned in to this election how profoundly the candidates differ on the direction our country should take. To me, that suggests the race will continue to tighten.

I think voters are tired of Trump’s style and wary of Biden’s age and acuity. Unfortunately, Trump’s performance likely reinforced the negative perception of him, whereas Biden’s may have assuaged concerns over his age and acuity to some degree.

Stanley is right that the debate highlighted the profound differences between the two candidates on policy. But Biden tried to downplay the differences to some extent by walking away from some of his party’s most extreme positions.

Whether the race tightens may depend on whether voters found Biden’s attempt convincing. I fear that disgust with Trump’s style and personality might make them want to believe Biden.

 

https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2020/09/the-not-so-presidential-debate-a-different-take.php 


 

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Media Gunning For Scott Atlas Because He Keeps Exposing Coronavirus Lies



“Dr. Scott Atlas is arming Trump with misleading data” about COVID-19, Centers for Disease Control Director Dr. Robert Redfield told a colleague Friday, according to a Monday report by NBC News political reporter Monica Alba.

Within hours, numerous outlets ideologically allied with NBC amplified the coverage. Here are some screenshots of the Google News results for the story just a short while later, but is Redfield’s assertion correct? The Federalist spoke to numerous epidemiologists to find out.






“Everything he says is false,” NBC News quoted Redfield as saying of Atlas’s coronavirus recommendations. That’s just not true, top epidemiologists told The Federalist.

“Dr. Redfield is a prominent and respected scientist, so I respect his opinion, but I don’t know what he’s thinking,” said Dr. Jayanta Bhattacharya, an epidemiologist and medical professor at Stanford University, in response to the NBC story. Bhattacharya has advised public officials including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on COVID-19 response. “I think the evidence is more strongly with Dr. Atlas,” he continued.

In an interview, Atlas said the constant media characterization of President Trump’s coronavirus response as detached from scientific expertise is “completely false.” He said the president’s policies are informed by infectious disease experts from the world’s top medical and research institutions, including Bhattacharya and John Ioannidis of Stanford University Medical Center, Martin Kulldorff and Katherine Yih of Harvard Medical School, and Sunetra Gupta and Carl Heneghan of Oxford University.

“The extreme comments that have been reported are an attempt to delegitimize me and undermine the president of the United States,” Atlas said, not a dispassionate, science-based position. “There can be different opinions about scientific evidence, but to say I’m citing false information is a lie,” he said later.

Scientific and public understanding of the disease has “changed dramatically” in the past nine months, Bhattacharya noted in an interview. Now we know COVID-19’s dangers are far lower than previously believed, such that if 1,000 people are infected with the virus, between 997 and 998 will survive, he said.

Atlas is known for pushing back on coronavirus panic with scientific evidence, including in his view that quarantines should target the vulnerable and infected rather than the healthy, the historic norm. He has been personally and professionally targeted as a result. Just two weeks ago, YouTube banned a video of Atlas talking about coronavirus, claiming it violated their terms of service.

“Dr. Atlas is not alone in his views,” Kulldorff told The Federalist in an email Monday. Numerous epidemiologists recommended the traditional quarantine over societal lockdowns for COVID “since March/April,” he said. “I find it curious that most journalists are uninterested in hearing from these experts.”

Bhattacharya and Kulldorff reviewed Atlas’s summary of the scientific evidence about COVID-19 and said it is accurate and scientifically defensible. That summary included these points:

1. Children and young adults are at an extremely low risk for serious illness or death from COVID-19.
2. Lockdowns are extremely harmful.
3. Children do not frequently spread this virus to adults.
4. Immunity to this virus is not just because of detected antibodies [i.e., the percent of people who are immune is larger than the percent of people testing positive for antibodies].
5. The safest, strongest strategy for our nation is to diligently protect the vulnerable and open society to end the lockdown.

“The president knows that expert opinion can vary and he knows there is no monopoly of expertise among public health officials — in fact, it’s the opposite,” Atlas said Monday. Atlas sees his job as to help Trump “save lives and … get past this pandemic.”

Atlas was an early and prominent public voice telling Americans COVID-19 should not keep children from school because the virus is a low risk to children and children transmit it less to adults.

“We are the only country not opening schools. This is absurd,” he said on Fox News in July. “Look at the science… Anyone who thinks schools should be closed is not talking about the children. It has nothing to do with the children’s risk. There’s no rational reason or science to say that children transmit the disease significantly.”

Just last week, Redfield told reporters, “We know the highest-risk group right now is 18 to 25.” Yet data collected by the Centers for Disease Control, which Redfield runs, shows that 0.2 percent of COVID-19 deaths have been among people younger than age 25. Other CDC-collected data shows that Americans ages 65-74 are 90 times more likely to die with COVID-19 than are those ages 18-29.




This summer, Redfield and White House coronavirus response coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx encouraged schools to go online, especially where 5 percent or more of the local population tested positive for coronavirus.

“While anyone can get infected, children have lower mortality risk from COVID19 than from the annual influenza. This is true even with open schools,” Kulldorff said. “Sweden was the only major western country keeping schools open during the height of the pandemic. Out of 1.8 million children ages 1-15 attending day-care and school, there were zero deaths from COVID19 and only a few ICU hospitalizations. Young adults have higher mortality risk than children, but it is still low.”

“I just did some research and found that more children have died from the flu this year than from COVID-19,” Bhattacharya said. “I’m baffled that some people find that controversial.”

Besides resentment at Atlas’s credible public disagreement with lockdown policies pushed by health agencies, attempts to silence him may stem from a power struggle within those agencies as their coronavirus response — lockdowns, masks, and general panic — becomes increasingly invalidated by accruing research and experience from locales that employed different approaches, such as Florida, South Dakota, and Sweden.

A Monday, Washington Post article spotlighted politicking at the CDC under Redfield’s leadership. The article reads like several bureaucrats ran to the Post to amplify various people’s career aspirations at the agency as it flounders, backstabbing Redfield and Atlas while praising deputy CDC director Anne Schuchat.

The article also may reveal what prompted Redfield’s phone call torching Atlas: “On Wednesday, Atlas stood at the White House press room podium and contradicted Redfield’s sworn testimony that about 90 percent of Americans remain vulnerable to the coronavirus. Pressed by reporters about whom Americans should believe — the CDC director or him — Atlas replied: ‘You’re supposed to believe the science and I’m telling you the science.'”

“Atlas’s public attack on Redfield was ‘absolutely unconscionable,'” an “administration official” anonymously told The Post in response to this incident. The article even suggested Trump might replace Redfield with Atlas, which hints at what might be really going on here: bureaucrats concerned more for their careers than public safety and scientific integrity.

It’s well-known within the field that public health is not only about “following the science.” It’s about managing the citizenry into what public health officials think are beneficial outcomes. The Post article even lets that cat out of the bag, quoting an anonymous CDC epidemiologist as saying, “Every big public health response has two components: the public health emergency and the political emergency. It’s something epidemiologists begrudgingly accept.'”

Neither factor seems to have been managed well during this disease outbreak. We’re just on the early side of that becoming apparent, and as they watch that wave roll in, the people who made these bad decisions are doubling down, because if they admit they were wrong, it means they are to blame for the several hundred thousand cancer patients who missed life-saving treatments, the significant uptick in suicideschildren’s forever lost life income from school shutdowns, the 85 percent drop in organ donations to desperately ill people — and much, much more.

All those checks we rushed to sign on credit are coming due. It will take years. And it won’t be pretty.

“There’s no question that [the CDC’s] credibility and effectiveness have been damaged by a combination of external threats, leadership that has been perceived to be ineffective and mistakes they have made internally,” the Post article quotes of Ross McKinney Jr., chief scientific officer at the Association of American Medical Colleges. The agency notably failed its initial rollout of Wuhan virus tests in January. That led “to critical delays in states’ ability to know where the virus was circulating,” the Post article says.

That’s not the only thing the CDC has failed at during this pandemic. A lot more of these cats are going to be streaking out of the bag in the months and years ahead as scientists, citizens, and officials reckon with the negative effects of lockdowns that public officials ignored.

“The lockdowns have been disastrous,” Bhattacharya said. “The UN, for instance, finds there will be an additional 130 million starving people worldwide” due to economies shut down. “The collapse of the world economy comes at the cost of health.” He also pointed to the shutdowns halting programs to address diseases such as tuberculosis, which is now increasing, likely as a result.

There have been “gross failures by the faces of public health who are on media all the time,” Atlas said. “They have not reported accurately” on coronavirus information as it became available.

Another effect we are only beginning to see unfold is how the lockdown response will further undermine science’s credibility and method of discovering information through open inquiry, Kulldorf and Bhattacharya pointed out.

“It was…surreal when a few epidemiologists led the media and vocal scientists in other fields to quickly determined that a suppression strategy was the correct approach, with a combination of lockdowns, testing and contact tracing, and then forcefully argue that we should ‘follow the science,'” Kulldorf wrote. “As the suppression/lockdown approach did not work as people were led to expect, why should the public trust the scientific consensus on other matters? When some scientific ideas were promoted while other views were silenced or derided, why should the public believe that there is an open and honest debate on other scientific issues?

“Science is about openly challenging and discussing different ideas, and it is critically important that we start doing that regarding this pandemic,” he continued. “No real scientist would disagree, and any confident scientists would welcome a debate with colleagues holding different views.”


Joe Biden Just Promised No Coal Power Plants Will Ever Be Built In America If He Wins



Democratic Presidential Nominee Joe Biden promised at the first presidential debate in Cleveland on Tuesday night that he will prohibit the creation of any new power plants that require fossil fuels if he is elected. 

“Nobody’s going to build another coal-fired plant in America. No one is going to build another oil-fired plant in America,” Biden said. “They’re going to move to renewable energy.”

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Biden instead suggested that a complete move to renewable energy would be the cheaper and more effective option, stumbling over his words and mixing up which number point he was on as he tried to explain himself.

“During our administration and the Recovery Act, I was able, I was in charge, I was able to bring down the cost of renewable energy to cheaper than, or as cheap as coal and gas and oil,” Biden said.

Biden expressed his desire to ban the use of coal and fracking from the Democratic primary debate stage a few months earlier.

“We would work it out. We would make sure it’s eliminated,” Biden said.



Biden also expressed mixed opinions about environmental policies such as the Green New Deal during the climate change segment of Tuesday’s debate.

“The Green New Deal is not my plan,” Biden emphasized, right before claiming that the same deal would “pay for itself” if ever passed.

“I don’t support the Green New Deal,” he reiterated.



Despite his insistence that he is not associated with the Green New Deal, Biden’s campaign website demonstrates his full support of the radical environmental policy.

“Biden believes the Green New Deal is a crucial framework for meeting the climate challenges we face,” it reads. “It powerfully captures two basic truths, which are at the core of his plan: (1) the United States urgently needs to embrace greater ambition on an epic scale to meet the scope of this challenge, and (2) our environment and our economy are completely and totally connected.


Joe Biden Falsely Claims Dr. Fauci Never Flip-Flopped On Masks



During the first presidential debate in Cleveland, Ohio Tuesday, Joe Biden falsely claimed that Dr. Anthony Fauci did not change his stance on the effectiveness of mask wearing.

“Masks make a big difference,” said Democrat presidential nominee Joe Biden. “His [Trump’s] own CDC said if we just wore masks between now- if everybody wore masks and social distanced between now and January, we’d probably save up to a hundred thousand lives. It matters.”

“And they’ve also said the opposite,” interjected Trump. “No serious person said the opposite,” Biden fired back.

“Dr. Fauci!” exclaimed Trump, “Dr. Fauci said the opposite.”

“He did not say the opposite,” insisted Biden.

Trump is right. Fauci did flip-flop his stance on the effectiveness of mask wearing. In a “60 Minutes” interview from March, Fauci said with confidence, “Right now, in the United States, people should not be walking around with masks.”

When the interviewer asked if Fauci was sure about this, Fauci reiterated, “There’s no reason people should be walking around with a mask. Wearing a mask might make people feel a little bit better, and it might even block a droplet, but it’s not proven to be the perfect protection that people think that it is.”

Fauci even suggested that wearing a mask was more dangerous than not wearing one. “Often there are unintended consequences people keep fiddling with the mask and keep touching their face.”



Fauci has since shifted his messaging. In a livestream interview last month, Fauci said, “What we need is to get the message across that we are all in this together. And it’s important because one of the purposes of the masks is that if you may be inadvertently walking around not knowing you’re infected, to protect others from getting infected,” he said. “We have to keep hammering home with that message.”

The debate over Fauci’s mask messaging started when moderator Chris Wallace asked Trump his opinion on masks. “You have begun to increasingly question the effectiveness of masks as a disease preventer, and in fact, recently, you have cited the issue of waiters touching their mask and then touching plates,” said Wallace. “Are you questioning the effectiveness of it?”

“No … I have a mask right here,” said Trump, pulling out his mask. Trump said he puts his mask on “when I think I need it.”

The president explained the reason he isn’t wearing a mask during the debate is because “everybody’s had a test and you’ve had social distancing, and all of the things that you have…”

Taking a jab at Biden, Trump added, “I don’t wear masks like him … Every time you see him, he’s got a mask. He could be speaking 20 feet away… He shows up with the biggest mask I’ve ever seen.”

“I’m okay with masks,” stated the president, “I’m not fighting masks.”


Yes, Joe Biden Called U.S. Troops “Stupid Bastards” — Here’s The Video




During the first presidential debate on Tuesday night, President Donald Trump pointed out that, despite the left’s attempts to taint his respect for the military using anonymous sources, Democratic Presidential Nominee Joe Biden was the one who actually insulted men and women in the service on tape.

“He called the military stupid. He said stupid bastards,” Trump said. “And he said it on tape.”

Biden denied the allegations that he ever said anything of the sort, shaking his head.


Trump, however, was correct about Biden’s comments and how they were all caught on tape.

In 2016, Biden visited troops stationed at Al Dhafra Air Base in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. In a video recording of his speech, Biden can be heard commanding the troops to clap after he mentioned he nominated one of the appointed one of the lieutenants to the academy. He also insults them for being a “dull bunch.”

“Clap for that you stupid bastards,” Biden said.

“Man, you are a dull bunch. Must be slow here, man,” he added.



According to Trump, Biden’s denial of his on-the-record comments was not only insulting to the military but also demonstrated the collaborated bias from the left and the media against his presidency.

“He said I said something about the military. He and his friends made it up, and then they went with it. I never said it,” Trump said, referring to the hit piece published by Atlantic Editor in Chief Jeffrey Goldberg.

In the piece, Goldberg, using only anonymous sources, alleged that Trump refused to visit a war cemetery in France “because he feared his hair would become disheveled in the rain, and because he did not believe it important to honor American war dead.” In a later on-air interview, however, Goldberg conceded that the “White House’s account that President Trump’s trip to a cemetery of fallen World War I soldiers in France in 2018 was modified due to bad weather is probably accurate.”


Joe Biden Denies Allegations Against His Son Hunter, Claims He ‘Did Nothing Wrong’



Joe Biden insisted his son Hunter “did nothing wrong” in Ukraine when pressed by President Donald Trump on the debate stage Tuesday night.

“My son did nothing wrong at Burisma,” Biden said after Trump brought up Hunter’s board position at the Ukrainian energy company, where he raked in upwards of $50,000 a month despite no prior experience in the industry.

Biden’s denial comes on the heels of a recent Senate committee report and data from the Treasury Department that confirmed Hunter’s conflicts of interest and “widespread concern within the Obama-Biden Administration about Hunter Biden’s role on the board of Burisma Holdings.”



Trump then turned to another recent allegation against the former vice president’s son, asking Biden, “Why did he deserve $3.5 million from Moscow?” referring to another discovery in the Senate report. As Tristan Justice reported last week, “According to the joint report released by the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee with the Senate Finance Committee, Rosemont Seneca, an investment firm co-founded by Hunter Biden, received a $3.5 million wire transfer from Elena Baturina in 2014 while his father, Joe Biden, was vice president.”

[READ: Hunter Biden Took $3.5 Million From Ex-Moscow Mayor’s Wife]

Later in the debate, Biden denied another previously reported fact about his son’s military service. “Hunter Biden was dishonorably discharged for cocaine use,” Trump said after Biden brought up his son’s service. “No, he wasn’t,” Biden responded.



In fact, it has been widely reported that Hunter failed a drug test for cocaine a month after beginning a commission in the Navy Reserve and was then discharged.



Joe Biden On Whether He’ll Pack The Supreme Court: ‘I’m Not Going To Answer The Question. Will You Shut Up?’



Joe Biden believes he shouldn’t have to answer whether or not he intends to pack the Supreme Court, as many Democrats have recently insisted, and thinks anyone who wants to know should “shut up.”

During the first presidential debate, the former Vice President and Democratic nominee was asked by moderator Chris Wallace whether he would either pack the Supreme Court or eliminate the filibuster should Republicans in the Senate confirm Judge Amy Coney Barrett, President Donald Trump’s nominee to fill Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s seat.




At first, Biden attempted to evade the question, attempting to pass off the court-packing fears as a distraction from the president. However, Wallace continued to press him, noting that it was actually Democrats who suggested adding two justices to the Court should the Senate confirm Barrett.

Rather than tell the American people whether he intended to either pack the Court or end the filibuster, he stated, “Whatever position I take on that, that will be the issue,” following up by incongruously stressing the importance of voting. 




Of course, the intentions of a presidential candidate surrounding court packing would and should be an issue. The Supreme Court holds an enormous amount of power, and adding two politically-friendly justices with lifetime appointments in order to push through your preferred interpretations would have immense implications for decades to come.

During Biden’s monologued ode to voting, Trump continually pestered him to answer the question, repeating “Are you going to pack the court?” Biden eventually attempted to deflect the pressure to answer, declaring again, “I’m not going to answer that question,” but Trump would not let up, noting the risk of Biden adding “radical leftist” judges.

Biden snapped, “Will you shut up, man?” But the president would not, turning his questions to asking “Who is on your list?”

Chris Wallace ultimately cut off the conversation, allowing Biden to get away with his refusal to state whether or not he intends to pack the court and end the filibuster should he be elected.

Biden’s running mate Kamala Harris likewise refused to respond to questions surrounding court packing during a CNN interview with Jake Tapper tonight. Harris answered in the same manner as Biden, ignoring the question in favor of discussing how “important” this election truly is and claiming that the next president. whoever he is, should be the one to select the Justice. After her statement, Tapper noted that she, like Biden, refused answer.



Trump To Biden At First Presidential Debate: ‘There’s Nothing Smart About You’



President Donald Trump mocked Democratic Presidential Nominee Joe Biden’s academic record Monday night during the first presidential debate in Cleveland, slipping in the comment, “There’s nothing smart about you, Joe.”

When debate moderator Chris Wallace of Fox News asked the candidates about COVID-19 and how each candidate plans to deal with it, Biden attempted to discredit Trump’s efforts to protect the American people.

Biden accused Trump of completely mishandling the pandemic and causing the deaths of many Americans.

“A lot of people died. And a lot more are going to die unless he gets a lot smarter a lot quicker,” Biden said, continuing to blame Trump for COVID-19 and its effect on the American people and the economy.

Trump responded by pointing out that Biden couldn’t even remember where he went to college.

“Did you use the word smart?” Trump asked. “So you said you went to Delaware State but you forgot the name of your college. You didn’t go to Delaware State. You graduated either the lowest or almost the lowest in your class.”

Trump continued his time by accusing Biden of wasting his almost 50 years as an elected official.

“Don’t ever use the word smart with me. Don’t ever use that word because you know what, there’s nothing smart about you, Joe. Forty-seven years you’ve done nothing. And if you would have had the charge of what I was put through, I had to close the greatest economy in the history of our country and by the way, it’s being built again,” Trump said.




“Oh give me a break,” Biden replied, rolling his eyes.