| | | First time here? I'm Ari, and this is Upward News. Every day, we scour 100s of sources to bring you need-to-know news and insights you won't see in the MSM. Sign up here β |
| |
| | | WHAT WE'RE WATCHING | | π¨ Trump's Secret Service detail has massive internal problems. The 60 agents and staff responsible for Trump's safety have reportedly been plagued with internal division, improper sexual relationships, mental health issues, improper promotions, and more. Some agents reportedly fell asleep while guarding the former president at Mar-a-Lago, with these issues remaining unaddressed as it led to their failure to prevent his near-assassination. | π¦π« The Taliban celebrated their victory over America. The Taliban yesterday celebrated their takeover of Afghanistan after the US disastrously withdrew from the country three years ago, costing the lives of 13 service members. China and Iran sent diplomats to celebrate alongside the Taliban as they paraded over $7 billion worth of American military equipment that was left behind. | πΈ Army analyst pleaded guilty to selling secrets to China. An intelligence analyst for the US Army pleaded guilty to a "conspiracy to obtain and disclose national defense information," as well as bribery, for selling sensitive information to the Chinese for $42,000. The analyst sent documents and other data relating to "missile defense and mobile artillery systems" and faces a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. | βοΈ Columbia University's president resigned. After battling her own students for nearly a year, President Minouche Shafik finally stepped down as the fall semester approaches, with pro-Palestine protests and encampments likely to pick up right where they left off. In her resignation letter, Shafik remarked that the past year has been "distressing" for her as she had been subjected to "threats and abuse." |
| |
| | WHAT WE'RE HEARING | Legal expert Andy McCarthy believes Judge Merchan will sentence Donald Trump to prison next month. Rep. Pete Stauber (R-MN) claimed, "hundreds of millions of private investment are leaving Minnesota under [Gov. Tim Walz's] watch." A federal judge called it "unimaginable and abhorrent" that UCLA permitted pro-Palestine activists to block Jewish students from accessing parts of campus.
|
| |
| | IN THE LOOP | Tim Walz agreed to debate JD Vance on October 1 on CBS. An Antifa "ringleader" was convicted on multiple charges by an Oregon jury. New York City has spent over $5 billion accommodating illegal migrants. Texas is suing General Motors for unlawfully collecting and selling drivers' data. Learn how a 38-year-old Republican congressional candidate is fighting for Judeo-Christian values. The most clicked link in our last newsletter was our member-only article, "Politics Is Driving Young Men and Women Apart."
|
| |
| | MY THOUGHTS | Law and order | Good morning. Despite the media hype, the lack of interviews, and the absence of a cohesive policy proposal, Kamala's biggest weakness is her connection to her administration's record on the economy, the border, global conflicts, and the surge in crime tied to the migrant crisis. | Rather than focusing on Trump's weaknesses, her campaign is trying to spin these issues into strengths and distance her from her own administration's record. The media will back her, but by choosing Walzβa governor who eagerly supported the BLM riots that devastated innocent Americans in his stateβshe has set herself up for a serious faux pas. | |
| |
| | Do you struggle with hearing loss? You don't have to suffer in silence. | | Want to experience a world where missed conversations are a thing of the past? | With hear.com, you can! | They're delivering you the best new innovation in the hearing care industry β the revolutionary IX. Packed with new features to ensure you never miss another important conversation, the IX also seamlessly integrates into your daily routine. With user-friendly features and the promise of speech clarity, it's no wonder that people everywhere are excited about it. | Don't just hear - thrive, without skipping a beat! | |
| |
| | WASHINGTON | Tim Walz's fatal pro-crime record | | Governor Walz oversaw a violent crime spike during his term in office He deliberately prevented police from intervening in violent riots, allowing rioters to burn Minneapolis He clamped down on innocent civilians using oppressive COVID-era policies
| The story | Amid Democrats' current honeymoon with Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN), his track record on controlling crime in Minnesota does little to bolster Democrats' reputation as a party committed to law and order. On the contrary, Walz failed across the board to protect innocent Minnesotans, yet excelled at cracking down on them. | Walz recently proclaimed that Donald Trump presided over a rise in violent crime while in office. However, During Trump's presidency, violent crime rates declined during his first three years. Only in 2020 did violent crime spike nationally β in no small part because of mass riots that erupted in cities like Minneapolis, which Walz presided over and encouraged. | Since Tim Walz became governor in 2019, Minnesota has seen a dramatic rise in murders. During his first year in office, instead of reducing homicides, the numbers increased under his watch. By 2020, the situation took a dramatic turn for the worse; the state witnessed 185 murders during a summer marked by the George Floyd riots. The trend continued with 201 murders in 2021, followed by 182 in 2022, and 172 last year. | To add some perspective, from 2015 to 2018 β before Walz took office β Minnesota averaged 113 murders annually. Since Walz became governor, that average surged 50 percent. The numbers paint a stark picture of a state failing to control a striking rise in violent crime under Walz's watch. | But the situation takes an even darker turn. Not only did Walz fail to reduce overall crime rates, but he deliberately stopped police from intervening during the 2020 riots and allowed Minneapolis to burn. | Encouraging rioting and terror | After George Floyd was killed in Minneapolis in 2020, mass protests quickly formed, which exploded into riots. Governor Walz dragged his feet, waiting three full days to dispatch Minnesota's National Guard β which was reportedly further hampered by confusion at the bureaucratic level. | By the time the Guard finally arrived, a police precinct was in ashes, and countless businesses were destroyed. As riots raged, police were not permitted to wear protective tactical gear despite officers being injured by cement chunks and bottles hurled at them. Walz declined help from President Trump, who offered to send troops to help quell the disorder. | After the riots, Minneapolis looked more like bombed-out Baghdad than a first-world city. Damages totaled over $500 million, and nearly two dozen shootings occurred amid the disorder. | In the aftermath of the chaos, Minneapolis police sergeant Anna Hedberg testified before the Minnesota state Senate, lambasting Walz for abandoning the police. Hedberg recalled a phone conversation between Walz and the city's third police precinct: "I heard the Governor say, 'Give it up.'" | Sgt. Hedberg's bombshell testimony sheds light on how Governor Walz chose to allow Minneapolis to burn down, rather than sending police trained to handle these situations to do their jobs and contain the riots. | Officer Rich Walker, Sr. also testified about how demoralized police were after Walz's abandonment. "I believe I speak for every Minneapolis cop when I tell you that I've never been more publicly humiliated." | After Gov. Walz abandoned Minneapolis police officers, they threatened to leave the force or retire en masse. City payroll records reveal that between 2020 and 2022, 273 officers left the Minneapolis Police Department. Because of Walz's failed leadership, the largest police force in Minnesota began bleeding staff. | Cracking down on local businesses, not rioters | After the riots, Walz instituted an 8 p.m. curfew which involved roaming groups of police officers shooting families with paintball guns for standing on their porches. Ordinary families with small children were patrolled to keep them inside their homes, while violent rioters were welcomed to terrorize Minneapolis and burn down an estimated 1,500 buildings. | Further, his actions during the COVID-19 pandemic expose a leader determined to crack down on ordinary citizens. While Big Box retailers, liquor stores, and strip clubs remained open, he imposed strict lockdowns on mom-and-pop stores. According to Gov. Walz, strip clubs are essential services, but small businesses are not. | One small business owner, Lisa Hanson, defied the governor's lockdown order and reopened her coffee and wine bistro, which she had owned for eight years. Hanson, a mother of eight and a grandmother to 18, was sentenced to 90 days in jail for the crime of opening her business. | Tim Walz's COVID hotline incentivized neighbors to snitch on each other for walking the dog or going to church. His administration enforced strict limits on private indoor gatherings, capping them at 10 people, while outdoor gatherings were arbitrarily restricted to 25. | In July 2020, Walz implemented even stricter measures, declaring a statewide mask mandate which extended to most indoor spaces and some outdoor areas. Meanwhile, the governor retained the authority to fine and jail dissidents. | Why it matters | Much of the media attention is rightly focused on Gov. Tim Walz's failures during the George Floyd riots, but his scandals stretch far beyond waiting too long to send National Guard troops. | Time and again, Walz used his extraordinary executive power to punish average Minnesotans while giving criminals the green light to riot, loot, and commit arson. At a time when the Democrat Party is trying to rebrand itself as "tough on crime," Walz's record paints the exact opposite picture. | Despite Gov. Walz's disastrous record on crime, he remains a coin flip away from being elevated to the second highest office in the land. | |
| |
| | OUR QUESTION TO YOU | π Who do you think is more radical?Poll results will be in Monday's newsletter. | | | POLL RESULTS FROM YESTERDAY | π Do you think free speech crackdowns will reach America? | π©π©π©π©π©π© π Yes (912) | β¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈ π No (114) | β¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈ π€ Unsure (76) | π Yes: "They are already here!" β Mike π No: "We have a Bill of Rights." β Sandy π No: "This country belongs to we the people and we are keeping it that way." β Tom π€ Unsure: "Depends on the outcome of the November election." β Mary | | 1,102 votes |
|
|
| |
|  | See you tomorrow. |
| Today's newsletter was written by Brandon Goldman and Ari David. | |
|
No comments:
Post a Comment