Aug. 19, 2020
Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.
Does Joe Biden think he can win the election from his basement? DNC ratings disappoint as Democratic voters appear disengaged.
The first-night
Democratic National Convention ratings were down almost 28 percent from their
levels in 2016 in what can only be called a massive disappointment for former
Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) in their bid to oust
the incumbent Republican President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence. The
ratings for CBS, NBC and ABC were down a combined 42 percent to 6.7 million
from the 11.6 million who watched four years ago, according to the Hollywood
Reporter. On cable news channels MSNBC, CNN and Fox News, the numbers were similarly
down 16 percent to about 11.98 million viewers from the 14 million viewers of
four years ago. That’s a combined 18.7 million this year, compared to 25.7
million four years ago. In a June 21-July 16 YouGov survey, 68 percent of
supporters of President Trump said they were enthusiastic about voting for him,
compared to just 40 percent of Biden supporters who say the same thing. Now
that could be beginning to manifest itself in terms of raw numbers, and it
raises a question for Democrats and Biden — who continues to run his campaign
virtually from his home in Wilmington, Del.: Does Biden think he can win the
election from his basement?
Video: The Dems have a virtual convention, a former U.S. Marine reacts
Luke Donat served
his country in the 1990s and 2000s. He is proud of what he served. His ideas
counter what the Democrats are saying in a convention that looks more like an
internet awards show. Hear what he is saying about the current administration.
Video: USPS warns states mail-in ballot deadlines won't work with normal delivery times, Pelosi declares conspiracy
The Postal Service
is warning states that voters should request ballots at least 15 days before
Election Day, or Oct.19, that election officials should use first-class mail
and not third-class mail to send blank ballots and allow one week for delivery
to voters, and that voters should mail in their ballots no later than Oct. 27,
a week before the election on Nov. 3, in order to be counted in time. And that
it first class mail takes 2-5 days to deliver and receives higher priority than
third-class or marketing mail, which can take 3-10 days to deliver. Sounds
reasonable. But to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, that means President Donald
Trump is attempting “sabotage the election”.
Oops! Did Michelle O just make the case against Joe Biden?
Michelle Obama
kicked off the first day of the Democratic National Convention with what she
hoped would be a rousing anti-Trump speech, but instead, she made the case for
why Trump is the more qualified candidate. The former First Lady emphasized the
“hard job” of the presidency, and then listed important traits a president
needs in order to succeed. “[T]he job [of president] is hard,” Michelle said.
“It requires clear-headed judgment, a mastery of complex and competing issues,
a devotion to facts and history, a moral compass.” Yes, the job of the president
is hard, requiring a mental acuity that is markedly absent in Joe Biden.
Everything about him - from his words to his policies - is muddled, confused,
and incoherent. He shows a lack of basic
understanding of politics and world events and lashes out when he is
questioned. Handing the reins over to Joe Biden this November will absolutely
have a massive impact on the nation’s financial recovery, not to mention
national security and sovereignty. In attempting to persuade Americans to
support Joe Biden, Michelle Obama’s DNC speech, emphasizing the characteristics
required to effectively govern a nation, demonstrated exactly why Joe Biden is
the wrong choice.
Gordon Chang: Wall Street wants more frauds from China
“Investors dumped
the shares of Nasdaq-listed iQiyi late last week after the Chinese company
announced that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had initiated an
investigation into it for fraud. In April, short-seller Wolfpack Research
accused iQiyi of inflating revenue and user numbers by double-digit margins.
The "fraud," as Wolfpack termed it, dated back before iQiyi's initial
public offering in March 2018. iQiyi, known as the "Netflix of
China," is no fly-by-night operation. It is owned by blue-chip Baidu,
"China's Google."The iQiyi scandal follows a series of Chinese
frauds, most notably Luckin Coffee, which admitted fabricating sales and was
delisted from Nasdaq at the end of June… China prohibits PCAOB, as the American
watchdog is known, from inspecting Chinese audits, and therefore it has
consistently complained about the lack of cooperation from Beijing. Americans
have squawked about Chinese noncompliance with the 2013 memorandum but have
done nothing effective about it. Unfortunately, China is rapidly moving in the
wrong direction. In March, it took a big step backward by amending its
securities law to further impede the sharing of audit information with overseas
regulators. The frustrated Trump administration has now shown a pulse. It plans
to terminate the 2013 memorandum deal.”
Does Joe Biden think he can win the election from his basement? DNC ratings disappoint as Democratic voters appear disengaged.
By Robert Romano
The first-night Democratic National Convention ratings were down almost 28 percent from their levels in 2016 in what can only be called a massive disappointment for former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) in their bid to oust the incumbent Republican President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence.
The ratings for CBS, NBC and ABC were down a combined 42 percent to 6.7 million from the 11.6 million who watched four years ago, according to the Hollywood Reporter. On cable news channels MSNBC, CNN and Fox News, the numbers were similarly down 16 percent to about 11.98 million viewers from the 14 million viewers of four years ago.
That’s a combined 18.7 million this year, compared to 25.7 million four years ago.
While one should expect improved numbers for Biden’s acceptance speech on Aug. 20, and we’ll see how President Trump and Republicans do next week, this could be a giant red flag for Democrats that there is a major enthusiasm gap in 2020.
In a June 21-July 16 YouGov survey, 68 percent of supporters of President Trump said they were enthusiastic about voting for him, compared to just 40 percent of Biden supporters who say the same thing.
Trump gives speeches and press conferences almost every day. In contrast, we barely see Biden. Is that a winning strategy? We’re about to find out.
Now that could be beginning to manifest itself in terms of raw numbers, and it raises a question for Democrats and Biden — who continues to run his campaign virtually from his home in Wilmington, Del.: Does Biden think he can win the election from his basement?
Yes, there is a pandemic, and yes, many voters will not feel comfortable attending rallies and listening to speeches. Yet, if everyone is inside without much to do, shouldn’t ratings be higher?
The reality of modern politics are effective grassroots networks, voter identification and activation and ultimately, get-out-the-vote efforts.
You can rest assured that President Trump, his campaign and the Republican National Committee will have a robust get-out-the-vote operation that plays to Trump’s strengths as a charismatic leader for his followers.
Conversely, Democrats’ message at the moment appears to be that the virus is so deadly that it is not safe to do much of anything. Democrats are saying that schools are not safe and must remain closed. Large gatherings are not safe. In some cases going to work is not safe. Their own nominee is afraid to go outside.
Biden is the virtual candidate.
And so, the message translates to their supporters that neither is it safe for Democrats to go and vote in-person, hence their emphasis on mail-in and absentee voting. Their success or failure may come in the number of individuals they can get to request absentee ballots, especially in swing states.
Have Democrats scared their own base away from the polls? If so, this built-in, self-inflicted voter suppression could prove fatal in November.
Watch for a switch in Democrats’ messaging on get-out-the-vote later this month or next month as early voting begins to come into play, as it could be a tell of how effective they believe their virtual, mail-it-in operation is working. If they start emphasizing early voting as the safe “alternative” to absentee voting, it could be a strong signal that their efforts at activating voters from a distance are failing.
The ratings at the convention could already be telling the tale, which is that Democrats may have placed their voters into in a Covid cocoon. At the moment when Biden and Harris need their base to be activated the most, Democrats appear to be disengaged from the political process. If that spills over into voter turnout numbers, all bets could be off in November for Biden.
Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
Video: The Dems have a virtual convention, a former U.S. Marine reacts
To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MAOTa5WnBsQ
Video: USPS warns states mail-in ballot deadlines won't work with normal delivery times, Pelosi declares conspiracy
To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVbWpx-QPkQ
Oops! Did Michelle O just make the case against Joe Biden?
By Catherine Mortensen
Michelle Obama kicked off the first day of the Democratic National Convention with what she hoped would be a rousing anti-Trump speech, but instead, she made the case for why Trump is the more qualified candidate. The former First Lady emphasized the “hard job” of the presidency, and then listed important traits a president needs in order to succeed.
“[T]he job [of president] is hard,” Michelle said. “It requires clear-headed judgment, a mastery of complex and competing issues, a devotion to facts and history, a moral compass.”
Yes, the job of the president is hard, requiring a mental acuity that is markedly absent in Joe Biden. Everything about him - from his words to his policies - is muddled, confused, and incoherent. He shows a lack of basic understanding of politics and world events and lashes out when he is questioned.
Let’s take a look back at some of Biden’s Greatest Hits from 1970-2020:
“Fire the Shotgun Through the Door”
“I've Done Some Dumb Things, and I'll do Dumb Things Again.”
“Ladies and Gentlemen, I've Been Dumb.”
“I Have a Much Higher IQ Than You Do.”
“You’re A Lying, Dog-Faced Pony Soldier”
“You Ain’t Black!”
“Are You A Junkie?”
“Corn Pop Was a Bad Dude”
“No Racial Jungle For My Children”
“Obama’s Articulate And Bright And Clean”
“They’re Going To Put Y’all Back In Chains!”
“The Segregationist Democrat Senator Called Me ‘Son’”
“Slight Indian Accent Required At 7-11”
“Stand Up, Chuck!”
“Nurses Would Breathe in My Nostrils to Make Me Move”
“Obama Has A Big Stick. I Promise”
“I Don’t Work for You!”
“I’m Taking Your AR-14s”
“I’m Going to Slap You In The Face.”
And the hits keep coming!
Biden’s gaffes, though comical, are indicative of a deeper issue: a lack of the sort of “clear-headed judgment” and “mastery of complex issues” that is required to lead. Michelle later warned voters that things could get much worse than they are, saying, “if you think things cannot possibly get worse, trust me, they can.”
And under a Biden presidency they would get worse. Much worse.
With the economy finally recovering from the devastating impact of COVID-19 under President Trump, the private sector added nearly 1.5 million jobs, and the United States is experiencing a rapid recovery, with new jobless claims dropping below 1 million for the first time since March.
As Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning recently pointed out, Trump’s leadership on trade has greatly skewed international policy in favor of the United States for the first time in decades.
“Thanks to President Donald Trump’s leadership on trade, the 12-nation Obama-Biden Trans-Pacific Partnership was ended, NAFTA which Biden voted for was finally replaced with the renegotiated USMCA trade deal and the U.S. has gotten tough with China for the first time since Beijing entered the WTO in 2001,” Manning wrote in an August 6 press release. “Trump is the first president in a generation to put America first on trade, while Biden wants to go back to bowing President Xi.”
Handing the reins over to Joe Biden this November will absolutely have a massive impact on the nation’s financial recovery, not to mention national security and sovereignty.
In attempting to persuade Americans to support Joe Biden, Michelle Obama’s DNC speech, emphasizing the characteristics required to effectively govern a nation, demonstrated exactly why Joe Biden is the wrong choice.
Catherine Mortensen is the Vice President of Communications at Americans for Limited Government.
ALG Editor’s Note: In the following featured column from the Gatestone Institute, senior fellow Gordon Chang makes the case for the U.S. divesting from China:
Wall Street wants more frauds from China
By Gordon G. Chang
Investors dumped the shares of Nasdaq-listed iQiyi late last week after the Chinese company announced that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had initiated an investigation into it for fraud.
In April, short-seller Wolfpack Research accused iQiyi of inflating revenue and user numbers by double-digit margins. The "fraud," as Wolfpack termed it, dated back before iQiyi's initial public offering in March 2018.
iQiyi, known as the "Netflix of China," is no fly-by-night operation. It is owned by blue-chip Baidu, "China's Google."
The iQiyi scandal follows a series of Chinese frauds, most notably Luckin Coffee, which admitted fabricating sales and was delisted from Nasdaq at the end of June.
Want someone to blame? Of course, you should be angry at dishonest Chinese company execs, but rapacious Wall Street dealmakers and complicit American regulators deserve the tar and feather too.
Why do Chinese companies pillage American investors? Because American rules — more precisely, exceptions to them — essentially invite them to do so.
American officials boast that their laws ensure well-regulated markets, and the U.S. does indeed have strict disclosure rules and tough enforcers.
Unfortunately, Chinese companies have what looks like a free pass to steal. In 2013, the U.S. and Chinese auditing authorities — the U.S.'s Public Company Accounting Oversight Board and China's Ministry of Finance and Chinese Securities Regulatory Commission — signed the non-binding Memorandum of Understanding on Enforcement Cooperation.
Pursuant to the deal, each side can obtain, in enforcement cases involving publicly listed companies, documents from auditors. Yet the arrangement has not prompted Beijing's cooperation: it allows the withholding of documents if compliance would violate domestic law. Chinese companies use that provision as a shield, effectively giving them an exemption from U.S. disclosure rules.
As Beijing tells it, the 2013 deal is working well. "The Chinese Securities Regulatory Commission said on Saturday that the Chinese government has not restricted accounting firms from providing audits to overseas regulators," China Daily, an official newspaper, reported on August 12.
The statement from China's securities regulator could not be more false. China has not held up its side of the 2013 arrangement, stiffing the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, created by the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act, at almost every turn.
China prohibits PCAOB, as the American watchdog is known, from inspecting Chinese audits, and therefore it has consistently complained about the lack of cooperation from Beijing.
Americans have squawked about Chinese noncompliance with the 2013 memorandum but have done nothing effective about it.
Unfortunately, China is rapidly moving in the wrong direction. In March, it took a big step backward by amending its securities law to further impede the sharing of audit information with overseas regulators.
The frustrated Trump administration has now shown a pulse. It plans to terminate the 2013 memorandum deal.
Moreover, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on August 10 that Chinese and other stocks would be delisted at the end of 2021 if they did not comply with U.S. accounting standards.
The administration's course of action seems unassailable. As Kyle Bass, the legendary hedge fund manager, told Reuters, "It's unconscionable that the United States continues to allow Chinese companies raising trillions of dollars from U.S. investors to avoid complying with basic U.S. securities and audit standards."
He is right, but there are many elements in the United States opposed to enforcing those standards.
The argument of the U.S. financial community is that, because capital can easily flow from one market to the next, the U.S. should not require information about Chinese companies. If the U.S. tightens rules, we are told, those issuers will just list shares elsewhere. "The political instinct to crack down on Chinese companies is understandable," the Wall Street Journal stated in an editorial on August 10, "but booting them from U.S. exchanges will drive them to Hong Kong or Shanghai where there are fewer investor protections."
"The issue is not whether this will drive Chinese companies away but whether it will actually be implemented," Anne Stevenson-Yang of New York-based J Capital Research tells Gatestone. "The U.S. has had the ability to force audits or delist since 2001 and has never used the power."
"The fact is, the Chinese have no interest in transparency and the U.S. has no interest in pushing listings to London, Frankfurt, and Hong Kong," she says.
Roger Robinson, former chairman of the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, told Gatestone that he is also concerned about whether the new rules will be enforced. "Although historic progress is being made vis-à-vis China's abuse of the U.S. capital markets, there is still a fervent effort underway by Treasury and Wall Street to minimize any disruption to the status quo."
The concern is that a lot could happen between now and the end of next year, Mnuchin's deadline, to further delay implementation.
In the meantime, Chinese companies are flocking to the United States. Refinitiv data shows that so far this year, Chinese companies have raised $5.23 billion on American markets, versus $2.46 billion at this time last year.
Many more deals are in the pipeline. As Reuters reports, there is for Chinese companies "the allure of a valuation on the world's deepest stock market."
American exchanges are alluring and deep because people want to invest in well-administered markets. U.S. markets are well-administered in part because of strict disclosure rules that are rigorously enforced. Chinese companies come to America because their own markets, including the one in Hong Kong, are polluted and, despite their size, still considered backwaters and cesspools.
Of course, current Wall Street dealmakers want to keep standards low so they can cash in, but just about every other American has an interest in making sure the country's markets do not descend to cesspool status. Good regulation has always had a cost in the short-term, but it preserves integrity of markets. Integrity, of course, is priceless.
The issue, as Stevenson-Yang notes, is whether American regulators have the "guts" to maintain regulated markets. Chinese companies, many of them with fake books, are betting they do not.
China's issuers, however, are still coming in droves to America. To steal.
To view online: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/16352/wall-street-china-fraud