Notre Dame decries Lou Holtz's RNC speech saying Biden is 'Catholic in name only' for his abortion views. So Holtz doubles down.



Legendary former Notre Dame football coach Lou Holtz delivered a speech to the 2020 Republican Nation Convention on Wednesday in which he praised President Donald Trump, proclaimed the greatness of the United States, reminded viewers why they would should take pride in being Americans, and ripped Democratic nominee Joe Biden's campaign for its pro-abortion stance.

Holtz declared that pro-abortion Catholic politicians — which would include Biden — are "Catholic in name only."

On Thursday, Notre Dame attempted to distance the school from the coach's remarks about a fellow Catholic, and Biden called criticism of his faith "preposterous."

But Holtz was not deterred, the next day, he doubled down on his assertion during an interview on Fox News.

What did he say?

As Holtz delineated his reasons for supporting Trump, he noted that one of the reasons he, as a Catholic, backs Trump is because "nobody has been a stronger advocate for the unborn than President Trump."

And that stands in stark contrast to the pro-abortion political and policy stances of the Biden campaign, despite Biden's repeated reminders to voters that he's a practicing Catholic and has been one his whole life.

"The Biden-Harris ticket is the most radically pro-abortion campaign in history," Holtz said. "They and other politicians are Catholic in name only and abandoned innocent lives."

WATCH: Lou Holtz's full speech at the Republican National Convention | 2020 RNC Night 3www.youtube.com

What Notre Dame and Biden say?

The day after Holtz's speech, Norte Dame President Rev. John Jenkins put out a statement trying to put as much distance between the school and the pro-life, pro-Trump coach:

While Coach Lou Holtz is a former coach at Notre Dame, his use of the University's name at the Republican National Convention must not be taken to imply that the University endorses his views, any candidate or any political party. Moreover, we Catholics should remind ourselves that while we may judge the objective moral quality of another's actions, we must never question the sincerity of another's faith, which is due to the mysterious working of grace in that person's heart. In this fractious time, let us remember that our highest calling is to love.

MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell asked Biden, who has reportedly been denied communion over his pro-abortion views, about Holtz's and other's attacks on his faith, which the former vice president called "preposterous."

"Look, I'm not going to proselytize," Biden told Mitchell. "I'm a practicing Catholic. I've been a practicing Catholic my whole life. I practice all the elements of my faith."

Holtz doubles down

But Holtz was not to be deterred from his messaging.

On Friday, he appeared on Fox News' "Bill Hemmer Reports" to discuss his remarks and the school's response, and he made it clear that he stood beside every word.

"People have taught me that to murder an unborn child at nine months is illegal," Holtz told host Bill Hemmer. "That's not part of the Catholic faith. And Joe Biden — he may be a wonderful individual, I hear great things about him — I'm not casting aspersions on his character, his integrity, but I am casting aspersions on his decision."

"When he said that you can abort a baby at the nine month of pregnancy, and that's perfectly all right?" Holtz asked Hemmer. "No, by the way I was taught, the Catholic Church, that's not all right and I'm going to speak up about it.

"I'm not criticizing him. I'm not passing judgment. But that's wrong," he said.

Holtz said that though the school is welcome to say what they want, he disagreed with Jenkins' implication that Holtz questioned the sincerity of Biden's faith.

"I did not question his sincerity, Bill, but I do question the judgment he makes," Holtz said. "When you come out and say a baby can be aborted nine months into pregnancy, I can't agree with that.

"I feel strongly about it, but that's because of the way I was raised in the Catholic faith," he continued, noting the church's teaching that "when selecting a president ... you should first of all look at how they feel about abortion" and vote for the person who opposes abortion.

"If you want me to say killing babies is OK, no, I cannot say that," Holtz said, adding that he has a problem with people who would try to silence him.

"I'm not passing judgment on anybody's character, integrity ... what I'm saying is, 'If you're pro-abortion, I'm opposed to you. I'm allowed to have my opinion, and don't try to silence me," he concluded.

CNN's Jim Acosta and panelists ignore DC riots, say President Trump's White House convention speech could be the real danger: 'Possible super-spreader event'



As riots and protests raged outside the White House Thursday night during and after President Donald Trump's Republican National Convention speech, CNN reporter and longtime Trump foil Jim Acosta was worried — worried about the well-being of people who were at the event.

He lamented after the speech that many people's lives and health could be at risk.

But his focus was not on the chaos going on just feet from where he was reporting. He was not focused on the mayhem that saw lawmakers accosted and their lives threatened.

His concern was that people at the White House rally were not wearing masks or socially distancing and that the president's RNC speech could become a "super-spreader event."

On Friday morning, that appeared to be the main concern of CNN's "New Day" panel, where the guests focused not on the chaos in the streets but on the "alarming" scene of mask-less event attendees sitting close to each other outdoors.

What did they say?

Despite the fact that many (though certainly not all) rioters and protesters were mask-less and not socially distanced while screaming at and attacking people on the streets just outside the White House, Acosta was determined to explain to the country how dangerous the Trump speech was — both in rhetoric and in coronavirus terms.

"We not only heard a lot of gaslighting tonight, we possibly saw and witnessed some super spreading from this event," Acosta reported. "I talked to a senior White House official earlier this evening about all of these people — hundreds of people — sitting side by side in the audience not wearing masks."

Acosta then went on to claim that the official just figured everybody was going to get the virus one way or the other.

"The senior White House official brushed off these concerns about the lack of social distancing at the president's speech tonight," Acosta reported, "saying — and get this, this quote might blow you away — 'Everybody is going to catch this thing eventually.' Those are the words coming from a senior White House official about the concerns being raised about this being a possible super-spreader event tonight."

On the lack of social distancing or face masks at Trump’s #RNC2020 acceptance speech in the middle of the deadly co… https://t.co/hY4anmbpOk
— Josh Campbell (@Josh Campbell)1598589156.0

The next morning, his CNN colleagues on "New Day" also set the riots aside to share Acosta's worry that what was really dangerous Thursday night was the RNC event.

Asked what he was thinking about when he saw the crowd at the president's speech — though not asked what he thought when he saw crowd marching and rioting in the streets — and the lack of masks and social distancing, CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta, warned that the event may well cause the deaths of people who attended.

"The history books will be written about this chapter in our lives at some point, and it will show events like that say that in the middle of a pandemic — at a time when the country decided to shut down when there were 5,000, roughly, people who were infected — and at a time when there were more than 5 million infected, we started having events like that again," Gupta lamented. "It's really frustrating. It's mind-boggling.

"Chairs were six inches apart. People were not required to be masked. They did not have to be tested," he continued. "It was risky for them. It was a risk that they were posing to others."

Gupta predicted, "There will be people who became infected as a result of that event last night, and there'll be people who will spread it and possibly require hospitalization, may even die."

Fellow panelist New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman said, "The number of mask-less people last night was alarming."

"This is obviously not an issue the president thinks that he can win on. It's not an issue that the president's advisors think that they can win on," she said, blasting the administration's treatment of COVID-19. "They know that if they are talking about the coronavirus, they are probably not on a winning side. And that is their cold, political calculation."

“There will be people who became infected as a result of that event last night, and there’ll be people who will spr… https://t.co/wfyfCco5F1
— CNN (@CNN)1598618700.0

Horowitz: Trump should embrace the 1994 anti-crime agenda, not repudiate it



One of the most bizarre aspects of an otherwise successful GOP convention was the constant reference to Joe Biden supporting the 1994 crime bill as if it were a bad thing. Given where Joe Biden's allegiance lies today, it would have been better for Trump to propose an updated 1994 crime bill that fits today's situation in order to take repeat offenders off the streets. It's not too late to make the second term about making America safe again, just like it was when people like Joe Biden believed in law and order in the 1990s.

The message being sent to criminals with all the continued emphasis on "criminal justice reform" is that violence is the answer and crime pays. A new infographic posted by the Law Enforcement Legal Defense Fund shows the significant correlation between plummeting arrests and rising crime.

5 Facts About Police:Less Police, More Crime. More Police, Less Crime We’ll continue to share one of our 5 fac… https://t.co/j6jxsCHxzC
— Law Enf. Legal Defense Fund (@Law Enf. Legal Defense Fund)1598551008.0

Fewer arrests equal more crime. It's that simple. This chart shows the immediate spike in crime over a one-year period following anti-law-enforcement policies in given hot spots. Whether it's anti-police rioting in Baltimore and New York or the court order in Chicago ordering more passive policing, the results have been more homicides and crime, overwhelmingly affecting black neighborhoods. It's no wonder that, according to a recent Gallup poll, 81% of black respondents and 83% of Hispanic respondents want more or the same level of the policing in their neighborhoods.

So why do Republicans and even this administration continue to send mixed messages? The president spoke powerfully last night against the anarchy, but many other speakers – from Ivanka Trump to White House senior policy adviser Ja'Ron Smith – kept touting "criminal justice reform," which is code language for the very jailbreak policies that have fueled this anarchy. They continuously talk about "second chances" for "low-level" criminals, but many of them have already been given numerous chances, and thanks to those chances, they go on to commit worse crimes.

One of the most powerful moments of the convention was when Ann Dorn, wife of retired St. Louis police officer David Dorn, described the murder of her husband during the rioting and looting following the death of George Floyd. It was one of many sadly incongruous moments of the GOP convention, because the alleged murderer benefited from one of the many "second chance" programs promoted by some of the other speakers.

As I noted in June, Stephan Cannon, 24, one of the suspects in the murder, was sentenced to seven years in prison for a robbery and assault in 2014, but he never served a day because he was granted suspended execution of sentence (SES). Even though he violated his parole, the judge did not reinstate the sentence. Had our system been working properly, had we continued the system in place under the 1994 crime bill, Dorn would be alive because Cannon would have been behind bars. But so many of the people within the orbit of Jared Kushner in the White House continue to push these policies and even criticize Joe Biden's former position on crime rather than using it to point out the radicalism of his current position.

At the convention, Senator Tim Scott (R-SC) decried how the 1994 crime bill "put millions of black Americans behind bars." What he doesn't tell you is that black criminals are actually incarcerated at a lower rate relative to crime rates, or that incarceration policies saved thousands of potential black victims of homicide. The reversal of these policies in recent years, accelerating in recent months, has led to the loss of countless black lives. Those are the facts we needed to hear consistently at this week's convention, but instead, we were treated to equivocation and diffidence on the issue of crime, which only further blurs the distinction between the two parties.

According to research of NYPD crime data by the Daily Caller New Foundation, there were 194 reported shootings in America's largest city in June that involved members of the black community. That is a 177% increase over the same time period in June 2019. Since last year, the city has released many violent criminals because of coronavirus or because of "bail reform." Sure, those policies have ensured that more black arrestees, among other racial and ethnic groups, are out of jail. But those are black criminals. What about the effect on black victims of crime? The numbers speak for themselves.

One of the worst aspects of the "reform" agenda is the release of violent suspects without bail. Last week, Frank Main, a Pulitzer-prize winning journalist for the Chicago Sun-Times, reported that more than 1,000 people charged with murder, robbery, or illegal possession of guns were released by judges in Cook County this year on electric monitoring devices. Those devices are worthless, and local police believe these releases are responsible for soaring murders in the city, which mainly target black victims.

Where is the united GOP agenda on this issue?

The president himself had the right message during his acceptance speech. "Last year, over 1,000 African-Americans were murdered as a result of violent crime in just four Democrat-run cities," said the president last night in a long and powerful speech in front of the White House. "The top 10 most dangerous cities in the country are run by Democrats and have been for decades. Thousands more African-Americans are victims of violent crime in these communities. Joe Biden and the Left ignore these American victims. I never will."

One way to make that happen is by passing a new crime bill and using the budget bills to funnel federal funds only to localities that lock up criminals. Trump must recognize that, contrary to the premise of his advisers, we have an under-incarceration problem, not an over-incarceration problem. Remember that this entire collapse of deterrent against violence began when these same advisers pressured Trump to stand down from calling in the military after the first riots began in May.

It's time for Trump to restore deterrent against crime in America. But such an effort begins with a revamping of critical White House personnel to actually match the long-standing views of the president on crime, not the views of Joe Biden – the 2020 version.

Former GOP congressman says the message of the RNC to white people is that 'Black people are coming for you'



Former Republican congressman David Jolly said that President Trump's message to white people at the Republican National Convention is "Black people are coming for you."

Jolly was speaking to Joy Reid on MSNBC Thursday on the fourth and last night of the GOP convention when he made the derisive comments.

"We cannot extract the element of race from all of these narratives that the Republicans are putting out," said Jolly.

"Donald Trump is telling white people that Black people are coming for you. That is the message of the RNC," he added.

"It is damning he should be criticized and he should be damned for it but the heartbreaking part of all this, Joy, is while the issues around race, and the conversations around race can be complex and very hard, leadership in this moment is not," Jolly continued.

"All it takes for a leader is to listen, and to understand, and to show empathy, and to acknowledge these are tough complex issues," he concluded.

Reid focused on the inclusion into the RNC of the St. Louis couple who protected their property with guns from Black Lives Matter, and implied that this led to the shooting in Kenosha, Wisconsin, were two protesters were killed.

"This shooter in Kenosha walked around with a gun and police didn't even stop him," said Reid.

"He was arrested peacefully. And yet, Black people can't even be pulled over without being in terror of being shot for no reason. Can't get into a car. Can't stand up, can't sit down. You walk to the left, you get shot, you walk to the right, you get shot! No matter what you do!"

The president received the nomination for re-election from the Republican party on Thursday and ended the convention with a fiery speech from in front of the White House before a select audience.

Here's the video of Jolly's comments: