Author: J.P. Knowles

  • Dartmouth Forced To Cancel Conservative Event After Threats From Know Violent Group

    Dartmouth Forced To Cancel Conservative Event After Threats From Know Violent Group

    A conservative group at an Ivy League college was forced to change a planned live event to a virtual event following threats tied to a left-wing protest group.

    The Dartmouth College chapter of Turning Point USA (TPUSA) was hosting Ngo and Gabriel Nadales, a former member of the left-wing group, to discuss Antifa at a Thursday night event before the college had to cancel due to security concerns.

    “In light of concerning information from Hanover police regarding safety issues shared late in the afternoon, similar concerns expressed by the College Republican leadership, and challenges with the student organization’s ability to staff a large public event and communicate effectively (including dissemination of the visitor policy and a prohibition on bags in the building), the College requested that the Extremism in America panel be moved online,” Diana Lawrence, a spokeswoman for Dartmouth said.

    “I remain hopeful that they will be able to protect them, but last night they sent a message that they are willing to be swayed by extremists,” Samuel Lee of TPUSA said. Lee added that the student group learned of the change at the last minute from the local police.

    The presentation by Ngo and Nadales was hosted on Dartmouth’s Zoom page.

    “Prior to the event, Antifa groups and accounts threatened armed violence,” Ngo posted on Twitter. He also posted screenshots of posts from what he described as “Antifa accounts” detailing the calls for action.

    “Anti-fascists from Mass, NH, VT, Maine; anti-fascists from all over New England will be mobilizing January 20th, 2022 at Dartmouth College to disrupt & prevent fascist propagandists like Andy Ngo from normalizing their reactionary beliefs on college campuses in the Northeast,” a post in a Twitter thread from Northeast FASHWATCH said. The group’s post included a photo taken of Ngo after a 2019 attack that resulted in an overnight hospital stay.

    In another post, the group claimed the cancellation as a victory.

    There had been other efforts to disrupt the event, which was advertised on Eventbrite. Nearly 24,000 registrations, many of them “spam,” were made for the event, a field representative for TPUSA said.

    A number of emails from media outlets were among those used for fake registrations.

    “This is the first time the New England territory has seen something of this magnitude,” Lee said. He added that the group tried to address the fake registrations when the spamming started and had contacted Eventbrite but when they received no response they were forced to change how they handled reservations for the event.

    “Eventbrite works hard to protect its community of ticket buyers and event organizers, and is taking immediate steps to investigate and address the situation,” a spokeswoman for the online event company said.

    Antifa has a history of using violence against conservatives or those opposing left-wing causes. In 2021, incidents included an attack on Ngo, an assault against protestors outside a Los Angeles spa, an attack on a prayer meeting in Portland, Oregon, and a mob outside the D.C.-area home of Republican Sen. Josh Hawley on Jan. 4 of that year.

  • Gov. Newsom Compares LA To Third World Country Because Of This Growing Issue

    Gov. Newsom Compares LA To Third World Country Because Of This Growing Issue

    Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom visited the Union Pacific railroad in Los Angeles on Thursday to help clean up the site following a string of railcar thefts.

    “I’m asking myself, what the hell is going on? We look like a third-world country,” Newsom said.

    Newsom was visiting the site following a rash of organized train robberies. There has been a surge in railroad crime, that led Union Pacific to write an urgent letter to Los Angeles District Attorney George Gascon criticizing the prosecutor for his no-cash bail policy which the company said contributed to the rise in crime.

    The Democratic governor told reporters that his office had outlined a plan to stop the “organized gangs” of criminals but quickly apologized for using the term “gangs.” “This is not one-off. This is organized theft,” Newsom said. “These are organized gangs of people that are coming out, and forgive me for saying gangs, that’s not a pejorative.”

    Newsom also announced a state-level initiative to stop the threat of rail theft and aid Union Pacific in cleaning up the area.

    “Caltrans crews will assist Union Pacific in their efforts over the next few days to clean up the impacted area,” his office announced in a press release. “Additionally, the California Highway Patrol will continue its efforts to coordinate with local law enforcement to help prevent theft on railways in Los Angeles.”

    More than 90 train containers are broken into daily, according to Union Pacific, and rail theft increased 160% from December 2020 to December 2021 and 365% from October 2020 to October 2021.

    “What has happened on this stretch of the Union Pacific railroad is unacceptable,” Newsom said. “We are committed to an all-of-government approach to prevent thefts, prosecute the criminals involved, and clean up local communities.”

  • CDC Says This Secret Factor Could Give Some Protection Against Delta Variant

    CDC Says This Secret Factor Could Give Some Protection Against Delta Variant

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said in a study released Wednesday that natural immunity from a previous infection granted stronger levels of protection against the Delta variant of COVID-19 than vaccination alone.

    Before Delta became the dominant strain of the coronavirus, individuals who had natural immunity were experiencing higher case rates than individuals who were only vaccinated, the study found, but since Delta took hold, those with natural immunity caught COVID-19 less frequently than those who were only vaccinated.

    The study examined four categories of people — unvaccinated and vaccinated who had survived a previous COVID-19 infection, and unvaccinated and vaccinated who had never been infected — in California and New York between May and November 2021. The highest case rates were among those who had neither been vaccinated nor previously infected. The most protection against infection and hospitalization was in those who had both been vaccinated and survived a previous infection of the virus.

    The agency cautioned that the data only measured results against the Delta variant and that Omicron may present new challenges that alter the calculus of natural immunity versus vaccination.

    Biden administration officials and some public health experts have repeatedly downplayed the effectiveness of natural immunity against COVID-19, but this study is only the latest of many to indicate recovery from prior infection can equal, if not surpass, that offered from vaccination alone. Most research has shown that for maximum protection against reinfection or severe illness, those who were previously infected should still get vaccinated.

    Many legacy media outlets covered the study by downplaying the finding that natural immunity outperformed vaccines and emphasizing that a combination of both provided the best protection. Headlines from the New York Times, Associated Press, CNN, and others claimed that vaccination offers the “best” or “safest” protection according to the study.

    In a press call Wednesday, the CDC’s Dr. Benjamin Silk, an epidemiologist that co-authored the study, did not elaborate on the increased protection natural immunity provides but repeated the administration’s verbiage that every American should get vaccinated.

  • Police Make A Tragic Discovery Inside Missing Mom’s Home

    Police Make A Tragic Discovery Inside Missing Mom’s Home

    A Detroit mother of four who had been missing since December was found dismembered inside her home, according to investigators.

    Warren’s grandmother said the remains of Latima Warren, 32, were found inside numerous different bags scattered around the home on the 8000 block of Vaughn. Searchers discovered several bags of Warren’s clothes in the backyard on Sunday and contacted the police, who located her dismembered body the next day.

    “She was a sweet, bubbly person she would just give you the shirt off her back,” Gwen Parks, the mother of Warren’s ex-boyfriend and grandmother to Warren’s older children, said.

    Warren has been missing since Dec. 28, and investigators say she had been fatally shot.

    Police said Warren’s boyfriend was arrested after having been named a suspect. The couple has children together.

    “I’m going to have to tell these kids that their mother was killed,” Parks said.

  • This CDC Director Just Shattered The Truth About COVID Vaccines

    This CDC Director Just Shattered The Truth About COVID Vaccines

    Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) C said that the coronavirus vaccine cannot stop the transmission of the virus “anymore.”

    CNN host Wolfe Blitzer asked whether fully vaccinated individuals with breakthrough infections could pass the virus to other individuals, especially those with underlying health conditions.

    “Yes, they can with the delta variant and that was the reason we changed our guidance last Tuesday,” Walensky said. “Our vaccines are working exceptionally well, they continue to work well for delta with regard to severe illness and death, they prevent it, but what they can’t do anymore is prevent transmission.”

    “So if you’re going home to somebody who has not been vaccinated, to somebody who can’t get vaccinated, somebody who might be immunosuppressed or a little bit frail, somebody who has comorbidities that put them at high risk, I would suggest you wear a mask.”

    “If there is a breakthrough case, you get COVID, you’re fully vaccinated, but you’re totally asymptomatic, you could still pass on the virus to someone else, is that right?” Blitzer asked.

    “That’s exactly right and that’s where a masking recommendation came from,” Walensky said.

    Walensky has insisted that vaccinated individuals wear a mask to prevent transmission but a recent health panel argues that common cloth masks are not protective.

    “Cloth masks are not appropriate for this pandemic,” Dr. Leana Wen, the former Baltimore Health Commissioner, said. “It’s not appropriate for Omicron, it was not appropriate for Delta, Alpha, or any of the previous variants either because we’re dealing with something that’s airborne.”

    The CDC has regularly changed its mask guidance, saying in late July vaccinated individuals should wear face masks in indoor settings after data from several studies showed the vaccine doesn’t stop the transmission of the virus.

    The organization recently announced that individuals who have not received their booster shots but are infected with or exposed to COVID-19 must quarantine for five days and then mask up for five days after. Those who have received a booster shot, however, need not quarantine at all if exposed and can instead just mask up. Walensky said the new guidance was determined based on “what we thought people would be able to tolerate.”

    Pfizer announced in early December individuals would need three, not two, doses of the vaccine in order to get maximum protection against the Omicron variant of the virus.

  • Biden’s Comments On Russian Invasion Receives A Harsh Response

    Biden’s Comments On Russian Invasion Receives A Harsh Response

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reminded President Joe Biden on Thursday that “there are no minor incursions and small nations” after Biden botched a response about the U.S. responding to a Russian invasion of Ukraine.

    Biden, during a press conference at the White House on Wednesday, vowed to hold Russia “accountable if it invades” Ukraine – but also said that “it depends on what [Russia] does.”

    “It’s one thing if it’s a minor incursion and we end up having to fight about what to do and not do, et cetera, but if they do what they are capable of doing with the forces massed on the border, it will be a disaster for Russia if they invade Ukraine,” Biden said.

    The response prompted an angry reply from officials in Kyiv. Zelensky himself replied to Biden’s comments Thursday morning, though he didn’t call Biden specifically by name.

    “We want to remind the great powers that there are no minor incursions and small nations,” Zelensky tweeted, reminding of what Biden’s earlier comments were concerning a minor incursion. “Just as there are no minor casualties and little grief from the loss of loved ones. I say this as the President of a great power.”

    The White House was forced to do damage control after Biden’s press conference comments. National Security Council spokeswoman Emily Horne quickly issued a statement Wednesday evening on Twitter, saying the president “clarified this” and “was referring to the difference between military and non-military/para-military/cyber action by the Russians.”

    “Such actions would be met by a reciprocal response, in coordination with Allies and partners,” Horne promised.

    White House press secretary Jen Psaki also commented on the matter, issuing a statement after the press conference saying that Biden has been clear on where he stands.

    “President Biden has been clear with the Russian President: If any Russian military forces move across the Ukrainian border, that’s a renewed invasion, and it will be met with a swift, severe, and united response from the United States and our Allies,” Psaki said. “President Biden also knows from long experience that the Russians have an extensive playbook of aggression short of military action, including cyber-attacks and paramilitary tactics.”

  • DOL Reports A Troubling Amount Of Unemployment Cases

    DOL Reports A Troubling Amount Of Unemployment Cases

    The number of Americans filing new unemployment claims rose sharply to 286,000 in the week ending Jan. 15, as the labor market continues to recover from surging COVID-19 cases.

    The Labor Department figure shows a 55,000 jump in claims over the week ending Jan. 8 when claims increased to 231,000. According to Market Watch, economists had expected claims to decrease to 225,000.

    COVID-19 cases have continued to surge across the country causing weaker growth forecasts, and some experts think the Omicron coronavirus variant will further disrupt the demand for workers.

    “Someone who’s dependable, who’s been on the job for a year and doesn’t need to learn the ropes—you don’t want to lay that person off when you’re expecting a spring thaw” in economic activity, Automatic Data Processing (ADP) economist Nela Richardson said.

    The U.S. economy added only 199,000 in December 2021, but unemployment fell to 3.9% from November’s 4.2% figure. Meanwhile, roughly 6.5 million Americans were still unemployed at the end of 2021 as the economy was still 3.5 million jobs short of pre-pandemic levels.

  • Marine Faces Charges After Deadly Tactical Vehicle Accident

    Marine Faces Charges After Deadly Tactical Vehicle Accident

    A U.S. Marine was charged after flipping a tactical vehicle in North Carolina on Wednesday, killing two service members and injuring over a dozen others, local officials said.

    Louis Barrera, 19, was attempting to turn right at an intersection on US 17 when the vehicle flipped into the median throwing 17 passengers onto the street. The accident took place around 1 p.m Wednesday near Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, according to the North Carolina State Highway Patrol.

    Barrera was charged with one count of Exceeding a Safe Speed and two counts of Misdemeanor Death by Motor Vehicle.

    “A second military vehicle being operated behind the initial vehicle was unable to come to a stop and struck one of the ejected passengers,” the North Carolina State Highway Patrol said in the statement.

    “The drivers and occupants of the vehicles are members of the United States Marine Corps operating out of Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune,” officials said. “A total of 15 marines were transported to area hospitals by ground, two were airlifted to Vidant Greenville, and two were confirmed deceased at the scene.”

    Everyone involved in the accident was active duty service members based out of Camp Lejeune, according to a statement from the 2nd Marine Logistics Group.

    The tactical vehicle involved in the crash was “a medium tactical vehicle replacement (MTVR) … often referred to as a ‘7-ton’” used for troop and transportation purposes.

    Two individuals were taken to a local hospital where they were pronounced dead. The 15 injured were taken to a Navy hospital and remain stable.

    The identities of the deceased have not yet been released, and the investigation into the incident is ongoing.

    “I send our deepest condolences to the family and friends of the U.S. Marines who lost their lives in a tragic accident today in Onslow County,” Democratic North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said on Twitter. “We are so proud of our military heroes at Camp Lejeune and across North Carolina. Our prayers go out to them.”

  • Senate Rejects Democrats’ Attempts At Changing Filibuster

    Senate Rejects Democrats’ Attempts At Changing Filibuster

    The Senate late Wednesday rejected a Democratic effort to alter the filibuster in order to pass their voting bills over unanimous Republican opposition, ending one of the most consequential days in the history of the chamber.

    The vote failed 48-52 after Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema voted as they had vowed for months, joining a unanimous Republican caucus in opposition and denying their party the necessary support for the change to take effect. If the change had been adopted, it would have established a “talking filibuster” pertaining to the voting bills only, allowing any senator to speak for or against them for as long as they wanted but lowering the 60-vote threshold for passage to a simple majority.

    “What we have now … is not a filibuster,” Maine Sen. Angus King, and independent who caucuses with Democrats said ahead of the vote. “It doesn’t require any effort. It doesn’t require any speeches. It doesn’t require to hold the floor.”

    “Strom Thurmond would have loved this filibuster,” King added, invoking the late segregationist senator who set the record for the longest filibuster speech ever while speaking against the 1957 Civil Rights Act.

    Democrats’ attempt to change Senate rules ended a long day of debating that saw nearly half of the body speak either for the John Lewis Voting Rights Reauthorization Act or the Freedom to Vote Act.

    The voting bills failed to garner 60 Senate votes earlier Wednesday night even though Manchin and Sinema voted in favor, prompting Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s motion to change Senate rules to allow them to pass without GOP support.

    “For those who believe bipartisanship is possible, we have proven them wrong,” Manchin said ahead of the vote. “Ending the filibuster would be the easy way out. I cannot support such a perilous course for this nation when elected leaders are sent to Washington to unite our country by putting politics and party aside.”

    Democrats have said the bills are necessary to counter election reform laws that Republican state legislatures across the country have passed in the wake of the 2020 election that allegedly suppresses people’s ability to vote. Nearly all have endorsed altering the filibuster to ensure their passage even if done on a partisan basis.

    “I share with many of you … a vision of the Senate that collaborates and negotiates the most important issue of our time,” Georgia Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock said. “I believe in bipartisanship. But at what cost? Who is being asked to foot the bill for this bipartisanship and is liberty itself the cost?

    Republicans, however, have countered, saying that the federal legislation, which sets uniform voting standards and outlaws partisan gerrymandering, will entertain voter fraud and infringe on states’ rights to oversee their own elections.

    “The president and his party will try to use fear and panic to smash the Senate, silence millions of Americans, and size control of our democracy,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Wednesday.

    McConnell said later that while the day was one of the most consequential in the history of the Senate, it really boiled down to a simple question: “Will it take 60 votes to pass massive changes or a simple majority to ram them through? That’s what’s at stake here.”

    Though senators engaged in genuine debate throughout the day, most expressed disrespect for how deliberation seemed to have faded from the world’s greatest deliberative body. Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, the only Republican who backed the John Lewis voting bill, said Wednesday that the rhetoric surrounding voting has become troubling.

    “I was part of a very troubling conversation last evening,” she said. “It was shared depending on which side you’re on in this body today on this issue, you’re either a racist or a hypocrite. Really, is that where we are?”

    Manchin echoed her hours later in his speech, criticizing the lack of bipartisanship as he has time and time again throughout his filibuster defenses.

    “I don’t know what happened to the good old days,” he said, “but I can’t tell you they aren’t here now.”

  • Court Documents Spill The Beans On The Truth At The Border

    Court Documents Spill The Beans On The Truth At The Border

    There was an increase in the number of migrant encounters at the southern border in December up from November, according to data provided to a federal court by the Biden administration — the latest indication that the crisis at the border is likely to continue into 2022.

    According to the Customs and Border Protection (CBP) data provided in the Jan 14 filing, there were 178,840 migrant encounters in December, up from 173,620 in November which was an increase from the 164,753 apprehensions in October.

    Those numbers are shocking in comparison to the previous year when there were 72,113 encounters in November and 73,994 in December.

    CBP has not officially released its monthly operational update and said that it does not provide preliminary data or comment before the update posts, though a spokesperson did say that the official data should be published in the coming days.

    Of the 178,840 apprehensions, 78,589 were expelled via Title 42 — the Trump era public health order that has been kept in a limited capacity and can be used to expel migrants quickly at the southern border.

    The documents also show that 55,626 migrants were released into the U.S. Of those, 36,652 were released with a Notice to Appear at a future court hearing. Nearly 19,000 were given humanitarian parole which is determined on a “case by case basis” for urgent humanitarian or public benefit reasons.

    The Biden administration has been struggling with the ongoing crisis at the southern border, which saw a tremendous increase in apprehensions following President Biden’s inauguration. The number surged to over 213,000 encounters in July, and has dropped slightly since then but has stayed above the 150,000 mark.

    The administration also ended the Migrant Protection Protocols — a key policy of the Trump administration which called for migrants to return to Mexico until their hearing. It was seen as key to ending the practice of “catch and release.”

    However, the Supreme Court upheld a federal court ruling that the Biden administration ended the program unlawfully, and ordered it restored.

    While the administration has complied with the order, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas has indicated that the agency will end the policy — which critics have said is cruel– in a manner that complies with the court ruling.