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Poll shows Biden approval rating on COVID-19 dropping 10 points since late June

biden press conference leaves back turned
© Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Biden walks away from another round of tough questions
President Biden's approval rating for his handling of the coronavirus pandemic has dropped by 10 points since late June as the delta variant raises concerns and drives up cases nationwide.

In a new Washington Post/ABC News poll, 52 percent of respondents said they approve of the way Biden is handling the pandemic, which is down from the 62 percent of adults who gave him positive marks in late June.

The drop comes as the delta variant, which is more contagious than previous versions of COVID-19, is spreading rapidly throughout the U.S. and is now the dominant strain in the country.

Comment: But, but, 81 million votes!

Actually, the poll is remarkable given that: Trump senior adviser: Polls have 'massive oversampling of Democrats'

More Biden polling fun from the last year or so:


Dollars

The Biopharmaceutical industry provides 75% of the FDA's drug review Budget. Isn't this a Problem?

Caroline Chen of ProPublica has written a provocative article challenging the objectivity of the FDA in its approval of new drugs. Entitled: "FDA Repays Industry by Rushing Risky Drugs to Market", Chen contends that the agency is beholden to the biopharmaceutical industry which pays three quarters of the FDA's budget used for the drug review process. This is an astounding number. Is any other federal agency supported to this extent by the industry it regulates? Given this level of support, one might assume that the FDA would bend over backwards to meet the needs of its financial backers.
FDA office
© Al Drago/CQ Roll Call
How did we ever get to the point where private industry is providing so much support for a federal agency? Actually, this all began about 25 years ago, when the U.S. was facing a "drug lag". Because of a lack of resources at the FDA, drugs were being approved at a much slower rate here than in Europe. More than half of all drugs approved in the U.S. had been approved in Europe more than a year earlier. Patients, advocacy groups, pharmaceutical companies, and physicians were all concerned that important new medicines were being denied to Americans.

To solve this problem, Congress enacted the Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) of 1992-a mechanism whereby charges were levied on pharmaceutical companies for each new drug application (NDA) filed. The revenues, known as "user fees", were used to hire 600 new drug reviewers and support staff. These new medical officers, chemists, pharmacologists, and other experts were tasked with clearing the backlog of NDAs awaiting approval. In fact, one of the biggest years of NDA approvals occurred in 1996 when the FDA approved 56 new products, largely the result of working through this backlog.

Comment: See also:


Biohazard

Russia building network of labs working with dangerous viruses to understand pathogens, develop new vaccines & enable testing checkpoints along whole border

russia biohazard
© Sputnik / Grigory Sysoev
A mannequin, dressed in a Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), stands at the entrance to the laboratory of the Vector enterprise of the State Scientific Center of Virology and Biotechnology in Novosibirsk, Russia.
Work is now underway on building a "sanitary shield" around Russia, held together by a chain of high-tech biological research facilities designed to handle deadly pathogens and develop vaccines against them, Moscow has announced.

Speaking at the New Knowledge conference in the Russian capital on Friday, Deputy Prime Minister Tatyana Golikova praised the project as vital for the country to deliver. The order to establish it came from President Vladimir Putin himself, and officials are now "actively working" on plans for it, she said.

"Today we believe that this project is one of the most important, because this won't be the only pandemic that we will have to face in our lives," Golikova added. The first 15 "high security" laboratories will be up and running by 2024 and will deal with viruses that are "very, very contagious, and lead to fatal diseases," she said. At present, the country only has three such labs, but there are hopes to lift this number to 36 by 2030.

Comment: The threat of being attacked with bioweapons is likely one reason for this huge project, but what could be the other possible motivations? Considering current events in our world, one wonders whether some of those backing this initiative in Russia are also aware of the possibility of outbreaks of other kinds, that history shows have erupted during similarly tumultuous times: And check out SOTT radio's:


X

Why the Taliban still can't form a government

Yakoob/Akundzada
© AFP/KJN
Mullah Yakoob • Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada
It looked like everything was set for the Taliban to announce the new government of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan after this Friday's afternoon prayers. But then internal dissent prevailed.

That was compounded by the adverse optics of a ragtag "resistance" in the Panjshir Valley that is still not subdued. The "resistance" is de facto led by a CIA asset, former vice president Amrullah Saleh.

The Taliban maintain they have captured several districts and at least four checkpoints at the Panjshir, controlling 20% of its territory. Still, there's no endgame in sight.

Supreme Leader Haibatullah Akhundzada, a Kandahar religious scholar, is expected to be the new power of the Islamic Emirate when it's finally formed. Mullah Baradar will likely preside just below him as a presidential figure along with a 12-member governing council known as a "shura."

If that's the case, there would be certain similarities between the institutional role of Akhundzada and Ayatollah Khamenei in Iran, even though the theocratic frameworks, Sunni and Shiite, are completely different.

Comment: It will be interesting to observe the remake of Afghanistan by the tribal sectors if certain meddling influences keep hands off, allow it time to heal and implement its course.


Dollar

From the Notebook - The unintended consequences of COVID-9/11

one maskless
© Unknown
One of the fundamental problems of central planning of any kind is what we systemic thinkers call the 'Law of Unintended Consequences.' It's not really a law but it should be.

You know you're dealing with an 'unintended consequence' of a policy when the politicians, bankers, regulators and their apologists in the media say something like, 'well, you know, no one could have foreseen {fill in the blank}.'

Some of those blanks are:
  • The Housing Bubble of 2005-07 which caused the financial crisis of 2008.
  • The election of Donald Trump after decades of offering false choices to the American Electorate.
  • Most recently the collapse of the Afghan government to the Taliban and the U.S.'s ignominious retreat.
These are all events, and there are dozens more in your everyday life if you just begin looking for them, which nobody in charge would ever admit to having considered possible when they embarked on a particular policy but in hindsight were inevitable.

Policies of collective action under the rubric of the State, defined as that entity with the power to point guns at people to enforce their edicts, always result in these unintended consequences. But it's not because those outcomes weren't predictable but rather because they weren't important to the people who implemented them in the first place.

They weighed the benefits as absolute and ignored the costs as trivial things they could, like a bad movie producer, fix in post-production.

Folder

Classified 9/11 files to be reviewed under Biden's latest executive order after families 'disinvited' him from memorial

Model of WTC
© Reuters/Stringer
Model of the World Trade Center at a 9/11 commemoration in 2011• US embassy in Kabul
US President Joe Biden has ordered the Justice Department to release the remaining classified documents on the 9/11 terrorist attacks within six months, after families of victims told him he wasn't welcome to the commemorations.

In a statement on Friday, Biden said he had signed an executive order instructing Attorney General Merrick Garland to conduct a 'declassification review' of the remaining documents, concerning the FBI investigation into the attacks targeting New York City and Washington, DC on September 11, 2001.


Comment: What, if anything, will come of the review? This is one can of worms the US would rather keep closed.

See also:

Families of 9/11 victims tell Biden not to attend memorials until he honors pledge to declassify docs on 'possible Saudi role'


Attention

Is Zelensky the new Saakashvili? Western armchair revolutionaries are now making the same mistake in Ukraine they did in Georgia

Activists Ukraine
© Olena Kudiakova/Ukrinform/Bancroft Media/Getty Images
Activists of the National Corps and other organizations march in Kyiv
Media outlets are being shut down. Political opponents are being locked up. A semi-frozen war continues to simmer in the East. And yet, foreign talking heads are still applauding Ukraine's turn to the West as a great achievement.

In a recent article, 'Ukraine's Dangerous Success', veteran Moscow critic Edward Lucas argued that "Ukraine's almost unimaginable progress since 1991 is a nightmare for Russia." The crux of his argument is that the country's stance toward Ukraine is not dictated by Kiev's domestic anti-Kremlin posture. Russia, he says, is fearful that the success of Ukraine can undermine the country's legitimacy at home.

The argument is almost identical to that of an article written two months earlier by Arseniy Yatsenyuk, Ukraine's former prime minister. Yatsenyuk argues that NATO expansionism is not driving Russia away from the West, but that failure to expand the bloc will be a victory for President Vladimir Putin.
"In order not to lose Russia forever, the West must do everything possible and more to integrate Ukraine and other countries in our region into a United Europe, and therefore into NATO and the EU. This is exactly what Mr. Putin fears because Ukraine's freedom means something more than our national interests. It proves that Russia too can be free and that Putin is not indispensable."

Dollars

Soros dumps $1M into pro-Newsom PAC to fight recall effort

SoroNewsom
© PAC/Eric Risberg/AP/KJN
Billionaire George Soros • California Governor Gavin Newsom
Billionaire philanthropist and progressive, George Soros, who financially supports and drives leftist causes all over the world, has provided an additional $500,000 to a political action committee opposing the California recall of Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom.

Soros' donations to Newsom thus far have reached a total of $1,000,000.

According to the Associated Press, filings with the California Secretary of State's office show that George Soros contributed to a group called "Stop the Republican Recall of Governor Newsom."

The contribution was made on Monday, August 30, and was Soros' third donation to the PAC, following a pair of $250,000 donations.

George Soros has a history of supporting progressive district attorney candidates and criminal justice reform efforts in states like California, Texas, and other states.

Comment: Money can't buy you love...but it might influence a recall vote. Note: the media and publicity honkers win every time.


Target

Taliban, opposition vie to control Panjshir; Pakistan spy chief flies to Kabul

Resistance fighter
© AFP
Afghan resistance movement forces on hilltop patrol in Anaba district, Panjshir province
Taliban and opposition forces were fighting on Saturday for control of the Panjshir valley north of Kabul, the last province in Afghanistan holding out against the extremist group, according to reports.

Taliban sources had said on Friday the group had seized control of the valley, although the resistance denied it had fallen.

The Taliban have so far issued no public declaration that they had taken the valley, which resisted their rule when they were last in power in Kabul in 1996-2001.

A spokesman for the National Resistance Front of Afghanistan, which groups opposition forces loyal to local leader Ahmad Massoud, said Taliban forces reached the Darband heights on the border between Kapisa province and Panjshir but were pushed back.

"The defense of the stronghold of Afghanistan is unbreakable," Fahim Dashty said in a tweet.

Stop

'No further powers to Brussels': Hungary's foreign minister calls for more sovereignty within the EU

Szijjártó
© Reuters/Adriano Machado
Hungarian FM Péter Szijjártó
Hungary's Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Peter Szijjarto has called for limiting Brussels' dominance over nations on the continent. Speaking to Swiss media, he accused the EU of "extortion" and questioned its authority.

"The EU is strong when its member states are sovereign and strong themselves, and that means - no further powers to Brussels," Szijjarto said in an interview with Swiss daily Blick. Competitiveness among member states must also be increased, the minister said, suggesting European countries should not be restrained by the membership. "We definitely don't want the United States of Europe."

Hungary is "always the target of attacks" from Brussels, Szijjarto alleged, claiming such an attitude is the result of his country's policies oriented toward national interests.

Hungary's conservative government led by Prime Minister Viktor Orban is frequently criticized by the EU authorities. Its stance on the bloc's migration policies has been a sticking point. In May, Budapest angered Brussels when it vetoed a proposed revision to a longstanding EU trade and development agreement with African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) partnership countries, citing concerns over the draft's implications for increasing ACP migration to the EU.

The EU leadership has also been particularly condemnatory over Budapest's contentious law against LGBT propaganda, which resulted in withholding investment plans, containing grants and loans, earlier this year.

"This is extortion," the minister told Blick, saying that "the contributions are not humanitarian donations that are paid out of generosity, but part of a contract between the EU and Hungary."