CNN anchor gives top Dem Senate candidate many chances to support abortion limits, but he refuses



Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan, who is battling Republican J.D. Vance in Ohio for a United States Senate seat, refused on Sunday to support restrictions on abortion.

What happened?

Speaking on CNN's "State of the Union," anchor Dana Bash noted that Ryan is fiercely critical of Vance for appearing not to support abortion exceptions.

"I want to ask about your position: What restrictions, if any, do you believe there should be on abortion?" Bash then asked.

What followed was a two-minute exchange in which Ryan repeatedly said the abortion decision ultimately rests with a mother and her physician. At no point, however, did Ryan endorse abortion restrictions, even as Bash pressed him on the issue.

"Ultimately, this needs to be a decision between the woman and her doctor," Ryan said.

"And, of course, we don't support abortion at the end of term, unless, of course, there is an extraordinary circumstance where, you know, you're eight months into a pregnancy and something very tragic is happening in that pregnancy, where, you know, you have a room, you have bought toys, you have clothing for the baby, everyone's excited, you know, and then something tragic happens," he continued. "That needs to be left up to the doctor, not to J.D. Vance or Ted Cruz or anybody else."

\u201c"Ultimately this needs to be a decision between a woman and her doctor."\nRep. @TimRyan (D-OH) speaks to anchor @DanaBashCNN about his position on abortion restrictions.\n@CNNSotu #CNNSOTU\u201d
— CNN (@CNN) 1661695626

"But, as a legislator, you have to have some idea of what you want to do when you're not a doctor. So should there be some restrictions when it comes to the law of the land?" Bash pressed.

"Well, ultimately, I think the decider has to be the woman and her doctor," Ryan said again. "We can't account for every single scenario."

Bash then pointed out the obvious. Ryan had dodged her attempts to explicitly state whether he supports placing limits on abortion.

"It sounds like you're saying no restrictions," she told Ryan.

Ryan, however, again declined to state that any legal restrictions should be enacted on abortions, only saying that no one supports abortion "towards the end."

"I think they're — no one's supporting abortion towards the end, absolutely. No one's for that. That rarely happens," Ryan hedged.

"But what we're saying is, are we going to preserve the woman's right to choose at the end to save her own life? I mean, come on," he added. "Like, should the government really be in there? That sounds very anti-American."

What does Vance say?

Vance indeed last year argued against abortion exceptions for cases of rape and incest, which compose a tiny percentage of abortions in America.

However, Vance told NBC News after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade that he supports individual states choosing which direction to take on the controversial issue.

"I think it makes sense right now to let the states decide this stuff," Vance said

Recession approaching? Clinton-era Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers says 'it's more likely than not that we'll have a recession within the next two years'



Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said last week that there is no indication that a recession is looming — but former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers disagrees.

"I think when inflation is as high as it is right now," while "unemployment is as low as it is right now, it's almost always been followed within two years ... by recession," Summers said during an interview on CNN's "State of the Union."

"I look at what's happening in the stock and bond markets. I look at where consumer sentiment is. I think there's certainly a risk of recession in the next year. And I think given where we've gotten to, it's more likely than not that we'll have a recession within the next two years," he said.

\u201c"It's more likely than not we'll have a recession within the next two years."\n\nFormer Treasury Secretary @LHSummers tells @DanaBashCNN why he disagrees with current Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen's projection that a recession is not on the horizon. @CNNSotu #CNNSOTU\u201d
— CNN (@CNN) 1655043328

Americans have been getting slammed by soaring inflation.

"Over the last 12 months, the all items index increased 8.6 percent before seasonal adjustment," the Bureau of Labor Statistics noted in a consumer price index report released on Friday. "The all items index increased 8.6 percent for the 12 months ending May, the largest 12-month increase since the period ending December 1981."

As of Monday, the AAA national average price for a gallon of regular gas has hit a whopping $5.014 per gallon.

President Joe Biden has been saying that combatting inflation is his number one "economic priority."

The stock market plunged on Monday, with the S&P 500 falling 3.88%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average declining 2.79%, and the Nasdaq Composite losing 4.68%.

"I think the banana Republicans who are saying that what happened on January 6th was nothing or OK, are undermining the basic credibility of our country's institutions, and that in turn feeds through, uh, for inflation, because if you can't trust the country's government, why should you trust, uh, its money?" Summers said.

Summers' tenure as Treasury secretary occurred during a portion of President Bill Clinton's time in office — Summers also spent time serving as the director of the National Economic Council during a portion of President Barack Obama's tenure.

\u201cFmr. Treasury Sec. @LHSummers: "I think the banana Republicans who are saying that what happened on Jan. 6 was nothing or OK are undermining the basic credibility of our country's institutions... if you can't trust the country's govt, why should you trust its money?" #CNNSOTU\u201d
— State of the Union (@State of the Union) 1655046242

Jake Tapper says national media hasn't talked about anti-Asian racism at all and gushes over Biden's 'empathy'



CNN's Jake Tapper gushed over the "empathy" of President Joe Biden in addressing anti-Asian racism and then claimed that it had not been discussed by the national media at all.

Tapper made the comments while reporting Friday on his show about a scheduled speech that Biden was to give addressing anti-Asian racism.

"At any moment we're expecting President Biden to speak," said Tapper, "after meeting with Asian-American leaders in Atlanta following the shootings that left eight people, including six women of Asian descent, dead."

Tapper was referring to a trio of shootings at massage parlors in Atlanta, Georgia, on Tuesday where the suspect claimed, according to police, that he had lashed out because of his frustration with a sex addiction.

"Biden is known for his empathy for being a good consoler in chief," Tapper continued, "this is obviously a big issue though, the pain in the Asian American community, not just from this incident, not just from the last year, but for racism that really hasn't been discussed much on national media at all!"

"That's exactly right," agreed Dana Bash. "Just by the fact that the president of the United States is going down and is shining a light on something that we've been talking a lot about, certainly this week, but as you said, Jake, has been going on to a lesser degree over the past year, is something."

Bash went on to blame anti-Asian racism on former President Donald Trump for using phrases in referring to the coronavirus that emphasized Wuhan, China, as its origin.

"And the fact that the other side of this, that culturally Asian Americans feel more emboldened to speak out about the horrible hate that they have been dealing with," said Bash, "particularly since people like President Trump have been using racial slurs to describe the COVID virus, and making people believe that people of Asian descent are somehow responsible for this, it's just, it's ridiculous."

Recent incidents of violence and hatred against Asian Americans have been frequently highlighted in the national media, especially by those trying to tie the attacks to rhetoric used by the former president.

Here's the video of Tapper's comments:

Add New Yorker’s report of Cuomo’s taxpayer-funded smear of accuser to growing list of scandals @DanaBashCNN… https://t.co/1G8PREyVD8
— The Lead CNN (@The Lead CNN)1616189559.0

Horowitz: Fauci flip: In 2014, Fauci opposed quarantine of Ebola health care workers



Of all Dr. Fauci's insidious flip-flops, this is likely the most revealing of all. Before infectious diseases became a political weapon to destroy civilization and individual liberty, Fauci opposed mandatory quarantines even for a rare and deadly virus that, unlike COVID, is very quarantinable.

In many ways, Ebola is the antithesis of coronavirus. Given that it's rare but deadly, it is the quintessential disease for which quarantine is both necessary and effective. The infection fatality rate is up to 50%, but it only transmits through bodily fluid, so during an initial outbreak, the case count will be measured in single digits, not in tens of thousands like a pandemic flu. The origin, scope, and duration of the quarantine are very limited but necessary. The exact opposite is true of coronavirus, which has a fatality rate of well under 1%, but is also bound to spread to the entire population until it reaches the herd immunity threshold.

Nonetheless, when America experienced an Ebola outbreak in 2014 from people traveling from West Africa, Fauci vehemently opposed state governors who were placing mandatory quarantines on the few and specific individuals who traveled directly from the source of the outbreak.

My former colleague, investigative journalist Jordan Schachtel, uncovered this gem from Dr. Fauci opposing policies by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie forcing health care workers who came in contact with Ebola patients to quarantine for 21 days.

"We appreciate the fears of the American people, but you don't want to have policy that would have negative unintended consequences. … The scientific evidence is what needs to drive us," Fauci said on ABC News in October 2014. "If you put everyone in one basket, even people who are clearly no threat, then we have the problem of the disincentive of people that we need," he added, while also referring to his colleagues who went overseas to treat Ebola patients as "heroes" who are "protecting America."

He added: "And we know that people who are without symptoms are not a threat to transmitting it. You don't get Ebola unless you come into direct contact with body fluid. So there are things that we have got to be careful."

Ebola is the exact sort of virus for which our laws allow quarantine. These were specific people who came directly into contact with a very deadly virus that, all things equal, was not destined to spread to the U.S. unless people brought it in from overseas. Yet Fauci spoke of the dignity of the human being and the need not to quarantine the individual without any evidence of symptoms.

Now, this same man is essentially telling us that for the rest of our lifetimes, we can lock down and forcibly mask all Americans within America who never traveled outside the country and who present no symptoms – all for a virus that is like a pandemic flu and is unavoidable. Even with roughly 35% of the country already having been infected, he still continues to forcibly mask every human being indefinitely, regardless of whether they have symptoms, already had the virus, or had a vaccine.

I often find myself using Ebola as the paradigm of what quarantine laws were designed for. Governors erroneously believe that the police power to quarantine applies to locking down the healthy with the sick. That is simply not true. It was designed for a very limited number of people, like those who have Ebola, which can be easily quarantined. Fauci didn't believe that those without symptoms, even if they directly traveled from a source country and actually treated a patient, should be quarantined. How can he now believe that quarantine should apply to the entire nation indefinitely for a flu-like virus whose transmission is unavoidable?

As Justice Alito said in a speech at the Federalist Society last November, the 1905 Jacobson v. Massachusetts opinion, which upheld the police powers of a state to combat an epidemic, was rooted in "a local measure that targeted a problem of limited scope." That was essentially what occurred in 2014 when a handful of people traveling back from West Africa landed at a few airports and there were no more than 11 cases in the United States.

What is happening now is not quarantine but a blockade on our rights until the end of time. As Alito said of the Jacobson decision, "It did not involve sweeping restrictions imposed across the country for an extended period. And it does not mean that whenever there is an emergency, executive officials have unlimited, unreviewable discretion."

Fauci opposed the effort to even temporarily suspend flights and travel from West Africa, noting that isolating those countries would cause "unrest." Remember, there is no right for foreigners or even Americans to travel back and forth from a particular country. Yet, to this very day, Fauci believes Americans can be placed under curfew, masks, and every restriction under the sun within their own communities.

Fauci's opinion in 2014 served the medical and "scientific" elite, just like his view today. In that sense, he is somewhat consistent, at least in his stubborn adherence to the two-tiered justice system of the elites.

Consider the physical, economic, emotional, psychological, and behavioral harms of lockdowns and mask-wearing in California for almost a full year. The governor did this to avoid the spread of a virus that the Los Angeles Times now admits is finally slowing down in L.A. because 35% of the people have likely gotten the virus.

While 12% of Americans have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, far more people — approximately 35%… https://t.co/btfMe7U50q
— Soumya (@Soumya)1613841836.0

Yet Fauci is still acting as if this is a quarantinable virus!

.@DanaBashCNN: "What does normal mean? Do you think Americans will still be wearing masks for example in 2022?"Dr… https://t.co/M5XuOAdTiE
— The Recount (@The Recount)1613917482.0

Even a broken clock is right twice a day. Fauci is never correct.

CNN's Dana Bash decries 'cancel culture B.S.' after social media melts down over her response to Trump video



CNN's Dana Bash faced an outpouring of outrage from the network's viewers on social media after she merely pointed out that the president appeared to have a different tone in a video statement he posted to Twitter.

Bash made the comments on Thursday a day after chaos erupted at the U.S. Capitol when supporters of the president attempted to forcefully stop Congress from verifying the election results. CNN anchor Erin Burnett asked Bash to respond to the video the president posted where he scolded the rioters.

"This is though very different from what he said yesterday," said Burnett. "So Dana, what's your reaction to this, as we hear it now?"

"Well," responded Bash, "it is obviously a very different tone."

"Yes," agreed Burnett.

Many viewers turned to social media to express their outrage at Bash for pointing out the different tone from the president.

"I don't f***ing believe it but @DanaBashCNN just said Trump is showing "a new tone" I'm not f***ing kidding," tweeted Matt Negrin, a producer for "The Daily Show."

He posted a short video of the comments to his Twitter account.

The day after Donald Trump incited a domestic terrorist attack on the U.S. Capitol @DanaBashCNN said he is showing… https://t.co/OK7IMQBBVl
— Matt Negrin, HOST OF HARDBALL AT 7PM ON MSNBC (@Matt Negrin, HOST OF HARDBALL AT 7PM ON MSNBC)1610066028.0

"In the most generous interpretation of this, Dana didn't have a good analysis and just had to say something to fill the air. @DanaBashCNN you should apologize this is absolutely f***ing nuts. Trump incited a mob that killed people," he added.

Others jumped in to attack Bash for her comment.

"Dana Bash said he struck a very different tone. F*** her," said one commenter.

"A different tone? What's this dumb a** Dana Bash talking about? His spray tan tone????? F*** outta here," said another Twitter user.

"Dana Bash went back to talking about Trump's new tone. I wish I was joking. I wish I was joking," tweeted Adam Parkhomenko, a Democratic strategist and consultant.

Bash tried to explain herself, which solicited even more online abuse.

"I almost never respond such things - but your attack on me tonight was totally out of bounds and out of context. What the president said was different. I didn't defend it. I explained it. With reporting. I also called out his lies in the video," Bash tweeted.

Hey @AdamParkhomenko - I almost never respond such things - but your attack on me tonight was totally out of bounds… https://t.co/IvSbmDvdDk
— Dana Bash (@Dana Bash)1610073997.0

"These times are hard enough," she added. "Engaging in cancel culture B.S. has got to stop - especially when it comes to journalists putting facts first. Enough."

Matt Doric, a CNN communications director, also defended Bash while criticizing Parkhomenko.

"This is such a cheap shot. And such willfully ignorant BS. It's even cheaper bc you didn't have the guts to tag her," he tweeted.