Monday, July 5, 2021

76 dead in pacific northwest heat wave July 5, 2021 | BPR Wire

 

76 dead in pacific northwest heat wave

Harry Wilmerding, DCNF

Over 76 people died this week in the Pacific Northwest after an extreme heat wave hit the region, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.

The majority of deaths came in Multnomah County, Oregon, where 45 of the 76 people were found dead, according to the Wall Street Journal.

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“This was a true health crisis that has underscored how deadly an extreme heat wave can be, especially to otherwise vulnerable people,’’ Multnomah County, Portland Health Officer Dr. Jennifer Vines said in a press release on Wednesday.

“I know many county residents were looking out for each other and am deeply saddened by this initial death toll. As our summers continue to get warmer, I suspect we will face this kind of event again,’’ Vines said in the press release.

Portland temperatures hit a record high of 115 on Monday, breaking the 112 degree record set on Sunday, according to the WSJ.

Seattle saw a record high of 108 degrees on Monday, passing its record of 104 degrees set on Saturday, the WSJ reported.

The victims who died were between the ages of 44 to 97, the press release said. Out of the 45 victims in Multnomah, 17 were women and 27 were men.

Most of the victims had underlying health conditions and were found dead alone without air conditioning, the Multnomah County press release said.

The heat wave was caused by an Omega Block Ridge, a band of overhead high pressure acting as a blocking pattern, Accuweather meteorologist Brett Rossio told the Daily Caller News Foundation on Friday.

The block ridge does not allow for weather progression, causing the heat to become trapped and baking the region, Rossio said.

“This will be a heat wave to remember,” Rossio said Friday.

“Not many people in the Pacific Northwest have experienced a heat wave like this,” Rossio said.

486 people were reported dead between Friday and Wednesday in Northwest Canada, according to the WSJ.

The peak of the heat wave has passed but temperatures are still expected to stay uncomfortably high, according to the WSJ.


The left started the culture wars, Tom Cotton says, ‘normal Americans expect us to stand up, fight back’ July 5, 2021 | BPR Wire |

 

The left started the culture wars, Tom Cotton says, ‘normal Americans expect us to stand up, fight back’

Mary Margaret Olohan, DCNF

SIOUX CENTER, Iowa — The GOP didn’t start the culture wars, Republican Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton told the Daily Caller News Foundation, but they owe it to “normal Americans” to “stand up” and “fight back.”

“The liberals have been waging a culture war on normal Americans for a very long time now, and it’s well past time now for all Republicans to join it, fight it and win it,” Cotton told the DCNF’s Mary Margaret Olohan during a Tuesday interview in Sioux Center, Iowa.

Republican Study Committee Chairman Jim Banks sent an internal memo June 24 urging his colleagues to fight back against the ideology of Critical Race Theory (CRT) and the “racial essentialism” that it teaches.

“Here’s the good news,” Banks told Republicans. “We are winning.”

“My encouragement to you is lean into it,” Banks added.

Cotton emphasized that though Republicans did not start the culture wars, noting that even during former President Barack Obama’s administration, Democrats were “persecuting Catholic nuns, trying to force them to pay for birth control.”

Cotton said “15-20 years before that, no Democrat would have supported something like that, but the party’s become so radical on some of these issues that they are far beyond asking for toleration for different ways of life, different viewpoints.”

Democrats don’t just want acceptance on political and religious matters, Cotton said, they “want to enforce celebration” and “use the punitive power of the law and of the federal government to enforce their far-left worldview.”

“It’s not even popular, not even with their own voters, certainly not with independents and Republicans,” the Arkansas senator said. “I think it’s important that Republicans realize normal Americans expect us to stand up and fight back, oftentimes in the name of common sense.”

Cotton mentioned several areas where conservatives should push back against progressive agendas on common sense grounds.

“Of course, you should not have boys competing in girls’ sports, how is it fair to those girls,” he said. “Of course, we should not teach our children the lie that America is fundamentally flawed or systematically racist, that you should be ashamed to live in America. We should teach them to be proud to live in the freest and greatest country in our history. We should teach them times we’ve failed to live up to our high ideals, but also teach them all the times we’ve made progress towards those ideals as well.”

These are basic concepts, Cotton said, but liberal elites in Washington caught in their own bubble “simply don’t see this.”

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Public universities contribute thousands to leftist WaPo ‘Made in History’ blog July 5, 2021 | BPR Wire

 

Public universities contribute thousands to leftist WaPo ‘Made in History’ blog

Katelynn Richardson, Campus Reform

  • One university reported spending up to $10,000, others confirmed they contribute financially in return for advertising.
  • Many scholars are activists who push Critical Race Theory, queer theory, and other leftist ideologies in the articles.

Universities from across the United States and United Kingdom are sponsoring The Washington Post’s “Made by History” blog, with multiple institutions putting thousands of dollars into the project.

Founded in 2017, “Made by History,” originally aimed to “shine a light on why so many Americans feel so aggrieved” in the era of President Trump and invite scholars to contribute articles, applying a historical perspective to modern times.

Of the nine universities listed as sponsors, three confirmed to Campus Reform that they provide monetary support.

Virginia Tech reported spending $10,000 a year, the University of North Carolina Press “a few thousand dollars spread out over the last few years,” and Chapman University “some financial support in return for advertising.”

“The Virginia Tech College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences is a sponsor of the Made by History website. Sponsorship is $10,000 per year,” Mark Owczarski, the Associate Vice President for University Relations at Virginia Tech University, told Campus Reform. “The Made by History website offers a venue for our faculty to present their original research that provides historical context for contemporary issues.”

The “Made by History” about page promises that contributing scholars “won’t distort or weaponize history” to advance an agenda, as so often happens at the “hands of politicians and commentators.” Yet many contributing authors are activists who push Critical Race Theory, queer theory, and other leftist ideas in their scholarship.

Nikita Shepard, who wrote the article “Anti-trans legislation has never been about protecting children,” studies and teaches “histories of LGBTQ communities, gender and sexuality, race and social movements in the United States” at Columbia University.

Shepard argues that rhetoric about protecting children from life-altering surgeries and hormone blocker drugs lies “in efforts to defend white supremacy.”

“Tracing the ugly history of conservative efforts to combat school desegregation, welfare, reproductive freedom and gay and lesbian rights by claiming threats to children helps us understand why politicians today think they can gain votes by brutalizing vulnerable children in the name of protecting them,” Shepard writes.

Similarly, Marie-Amélie George, a professor at Wake Forest Law, penned an article against religious liberty.

After the Supreme Court ruled in favor of a Catholic organization over the city of Philadelphia, because they were excluded from the city’s foster-care program, the “Made by History” series tweeted that “This ruling may harm the very children that the state is charged with protecting.”

Many universities are using the project as a way to maximize exposure to their research and increase their audience.

“This is a transaction to raise the profile of the UNC Press among our potential customers,” Peter L Perez, Director of Public Relations and Communications for the University of North Carolina Press, told Campus Reform.

The UNC Press operates as the publisher of the 17 campus UNC System.

Kyle Longley, Director of the War and Society program and professor of History at Chapman University, told Campus Reform that sponsors are invited to contribute their scholarship to the column.

“The association with The Washington Post is just one example of how our research and scholarship at Chapman are valuable beyond the boundaries of the classroom,” Longley said, adding this partnership was “one of many different efforts” used to raise awareness for the program across different audiences.

The Made by History blog’s Twitter account frequently promotes contributors’ books through the articles they contribute.

One book the blog promoted was “Byzantine Intersectionality: Sexuality, Gender, and Race in the Middle Ages,” by Roland Betancourt, a UC Irvine professor. In Bentancourt’s op-ed based on the book, he attempts to debunk the idea that we are living in a “post-racial present” by tracing the roots of “anti-blackness and transphobia” to the Byzantine empire.

According to Betancourt, the Byzantines “privileged Whiteness in their descriptions of feminine beauty and often contoured their own identity through a prism of anti-Blackness.”

He also writes that although Christianity posited itself as beyond ethnic categories, it “still retained the deep anti-Blackness rooted in ancient theories of racialized and gendered differences” in the Middle Ages.

“The Middle Ages offer crucial lessons to us today as we continue the struggle for trans rights, work against anti-Black police brutality and articulate the importance of teaching our history of racism in classrooms,” Betancourt concludes.

The series even misled readers about the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act passed by Republicans in 2017, stating that the bill’s final version contained provisions “benefitting home-schooling families,” which would be “a hidden threat to the foundation of American democracy.”

However, the provisions were stripped from the final version of the bill, and The Washington Post’s “Made by History” series was forced to write a correction.

Nonetheless, even after the correction, the article, written by professors at the University of Virginia and Western Washington University, still argued that “The new tax law poses a hidden threat to American democracy.”

Campus Reform reached out to Oregon State, Penn State, Villanova University, Cambridge University, Boston University, and the University of Pennsylvania, and The Washington Post, for comment; this article will be updated accordingly.

Follow the author of this article on Twitter @katesrichardson.

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