Puppet Masters
The foreign secretary said action was needed in the areas most affected by Covid-19 to avoid a national lockdown, and he urged Burnham to relent.
"We can't have a situation where Andy Burnham is effectively saying unless you give us what we want, we're not going to do the right thing in terms of following the new rules, which will protect the very people of Manchester he's elected to represent," Raab said in an interview with BBC Breakfast.
Government talks with leaders in Lancashire continued on Friday morning about moving the region into the highest measures of lockdown.
NBC News correspondent Kristen Welker will moderate the debate in Nashville, Tenn. The selected six topics for the event are: fighting COVID-19, American families, race in America, climate change, national security and leadership.
The two candidates will meet on stage next Thursday for just the second time, but it will mark the last debate before Election Day. The two were slated to have a town hall-style debate this week, but the event was canceled after Trump balked at having it take place virtually following his COVID-19 diagnosis.
Instead, Biden and Trump held competing town halls at the same time on Thursday night broadcast by ABC and NBC, respectively.
The upcoming debate will include some overlap with the first one between Trump and Biden. That debate, moderated by Chris Wallace of Fox News, also covered the pandemic and the issues of race and recent violence in American cities.
Climate change was briefly discussed at the vice presidential debate last week, and it came up for a short exchange during the first Trump-Biden debate.
Comment: What happened to debating issues Americans really care about?
It's no surprise then, that a recent poll revealed "just 15% of Americans confident in US democracy":
The poll also revealed a perceived sorry state of US democracy, with only 15 percent of the respondents saying it still worked "extremely or very well." Another 36 percent said it still is keeping afloat while a total of 49 percent admitted it either does not look particularly good to them or is no good at all. Supporters of President Donald Trump appeared to be much more confident in US democracy than those of his Democratic opponent in the November 3 election, Joe Biden.
The partisan divide was also clearly showing in predictions of the future, with 76 percent of Trump supporters believing a Biden election victory would only worsen the existing divisions and 91 percent of Biden backers saying the same of a Trump win. Neither candidate is seen by the majority of respondents as capable of uniting the nation or strengthening its democratic principles.
A significant number of respondents were also concerned about potential violations at the upcoming elections. More than a half of Biden's supporters are more or less confident that the vote count would be accurate. This figure, however, falls down to just 28 percent when it comes to Trump's backers.
The pro-Biden respondents also appear to be more concerned over potential voter suppression, while those supporting Trump cite voter fraud and an ability of supposedly non-eligible people to vote as the major problem. A Pew Research poll held back in early 2020 showed that almost 60 percent of Americans were dissatisfied with the way US democracy was working at that time.
Asked who would be first to receive a vaccine in an interview on Fox Business on Thursday, Trump said "essential workers" and "older people" would take priority, but made a brief detour to assure that he would not make vaccination compulsory.
"I don't believe I'd ever do a mandated vaccine," the president told Fox's Stuart Varney. "I just don't think I would do that, where you have to have it, because there are some people who feel very strong about that whole situation."
Recent polling shows that around 50 percent of Americans surveyed would decline to take one of the coronavirus vaccines under development, many citing concerns that the approval process is being rushed. Though Trump has repeatedly stated a jab would be available by election day, a recent shift in federal guidelines - as well as delays in at least two ongoing trials over safety concerns - could push FDA approval into December, with a mass roll-out coming in the following weeks and months.

FILE PHOTO: A new S-400 "Triumph" surface-to-air missile system is shown after its stationing at a military base outside the town of Gvardeysk near Kaliningrad, Russia, March 11, 2019.
The video, taken in the coastal city of Sinop, showed a narrow column of smoke headed high into the blue sky. In recent days Turkey had issued notices restricting air space and waters off the coastal area to allow firing tests.
Tests of the S-400s, if verified, could stoke tensions between Turkey and the United States, which sharply opposed Ankara's purchase of the weapons from Moscow on grounds they compromise shared NATO defence systems.
Sources
Putin also instructed Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov at a meeting with permanent members of Russia's Security Council on October 16 to work out Russia's position on the accord, the New START arms control treaty, and inform the United States of developments.
"In this regard, I propose...extending the current treaty without any conditions for at least a year so that meaningful negotiations can be conducted on all the parameters of the problems..." Putin said, adding it would be "extremely sad" if the treaty expired.
Putin's proposal comes just two days after Lavrov said that Moscow doesn't see any prospects for extending the treaty with the United States, stressing however that Moscow plans to carry on with negotiations on the subject.
Comment: What will it take to get A Deal?
Washington has refused President Vladimir Putin's offer. "President Putin's response today to extend New START... is a non-starter," the US National Security Advisor Robert O'Brien said in response to Moscow's offer, adding that Washington hopes Russia "will reevaluate its position before a costly arms race ensues."See also:
Incidentally, a potential arms race was what Putin was warning against as he extended his offer to the US. A failure to prolong the key arms reduction agreement, officially known as Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, would leave the world "without any instruments to curb an arms race," the Russian president told the nation's security council earlier on Friday.
- Lavrov: Russia sees no prospect of prolonging New START treaty with US, but not closing the door on negotiations
- US ignores Russia's offer to extend New START arms control treaty without conditions
- Lavrov: US has 'no more excuses' to avoid new START Treaty
"Starting next week, when people attempt to Retweet a Tweet with a misleading information label, they will see a prompt directing them to credible information about the topic before they can amplify it,"With "credible information" of course meaning information from the same mass media outlets who've lied to us about every American war throughout their entire existence.
"We're taking more steps to encourage thoughtful amplification by preventing Tweets that have been 'followed by' and 'liked by' accounts you don't follow from showing up in your timeline," adds Twitter, as though the social media echo chamber that is turning us all into idiots wasn't bad enough.
Between October 9 and October 11, YouGov conducted a survey of 1,525 registered voters. They concluded that 43% of voters feel that Pelosi is more to blame for the failure to pass a coronavirus stimulus package, while 40% placed the blame on President Donald Trump. The other 17% of those surveyed were unsure on who to blame.
The poll found that when it comes to party affiliation, an overwhelming majority of Democrats blame Trump while an overwhelming majority of Republicans blame Pelosi. However, 45% of those who identified as Independents said that Pelosi is more at fault, compared to just 30% who said Trump was to blame.
Comment:
See also:
- House Dems' stimulus bill includes checks for illegal immigrants and protections from deportations and UPDATE
- Trump hints he'll sign another $1,200 stimulus check bill, vows to halt lockdown relief talks with Democrats until after election
- Pelosi says Democrats are looking at the 25th Amendment to remove Trump
"We are deeply concerned by the decision taken by the Israeli authorities to advance more than 4,900 settlement building units in the occupied West Bank. The expansion of settlements violates international law and further imperils the viability of a two-state solution to bring about a just and lasting peace to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict."The European foreign ministries called Israel's decision "counterproductive" in light of normalisation agreements reached between Israel, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.
"We, therefore, call for an immediate halt to settlement construction, as well as to evictions and demolitions of Palestinian structures in East-Jerusalem and the West Bank."The construction plans made public earlier in the week, have already been criticised as illegal by the United Nations' Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Nickolay Mladenov and Europe's top diplomat Josep Borrell.

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden sits on stage beside host George Stephanopoulos, ahead of an ABC Town Hall event at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., October 15, 2020.
Biden's comments came during an ABC News Town Hall, during which host George Stephanopoulos pressed the former vice president on his increasingly elusive stance on the topic.
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Comment: A similar situation played out in Madrid, where the local government rejected the destructive and provably ineffective lockdown measures, it even won its case in course, but then central government simply smacked Madrid into 'state of emergency', thus wrenching any control the local leaders had.
Local leaders throughout Europe have rejected the lockdown measures and yet, for some inexplicable reason, central governments, claiming to be acting independently meanwhile imposing exactly the same restrictions as each other, within days of each other, disregard their pleas and railroad over any ideas of democracy, and logic.
Here's what another local leader from the north of England had to say about the local lockdown:
See also:
- Firearms officers descend on gym for staying open despite lockdown orders in Merseyside, UK
- Police swarm on London wedding for having 100+ guests, venue faces £10,000 fine
- Everything You Think You Know About Coronavirus...
- Compelling Evidence That SARS-CoV-2 Was Man-Made
And check out SOTT radio's: