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Eric Holder To Speak At The 2020 MLK Breakfast – WCCO | CBS Minnesota

12 P.M. Weather ReportA substantial warm up is in store for much of the state, Lisa Meadows reports (4:11).WCCO 4 News At Noon January 21, 2020

Prince Wrongful Death Case Dismissed; Estate Case ContinuesA wrongful death lawsuit filed by Princes family members has been quietly dismissed in recent months, suggesting family members have reached settlements with defendants. Katie Johnston reports.

Hennepin Co. Attorney Announces Felony Charges Against Former Owners Of Drywall CompanyAfter the announcement, Christiane Cordero spoke with one of the defendants (1:49).WCCO 4 News At Noon January 21, 2020

Eagan Mayor Mike Maguire Charged With Drunken DrivingThe mayor of Eagan is accused of driving drunk and crashing into a snowbank with a blood-alcohol level more than twice the legal limit. Katie Johnston reports.

5 Minnesota Vikings Players Added To 2020 Pro BowlFive Minnesota Vikings players have been added to the 2020 Pro Bowl as replacements. Katie Johnston reports.

2 Killed In Separate Crashes On Snowy Roads In South-Central MinnesotaA teenage girl and a 35-year-old woman died Monday in two separate crashes involving semis on snowy roads south-central Minnesota. Katie Johnston reports.

Salad Kits Can Be A Teaching Tool For KidsCoborn's dietitian Emily Parent demonstrates (3:16). WCCO Mid-Morning - January 21, 2020

Galleria Unveils 'Wintertainment' ProgramRachel Oelke, from the Edina shopping center, explains some of the indoor programs being offered (3:19). WCCO Mid-Morning - January 21, 2020

Roseville Seeks Artists To Help Town 'Bloom'The public art project seeks to create 20 7-foot-tall rose statues, as Visit Roseville CEO Julie Wearn and artist Adam Turman explain (3:47). WCCO Mid-Morning - January 21, 2020

How Much You Should Give Your Kids In AllowanceA new survey that says the average allowance for kids between the ages of 4 and 14 is now just over $9.50 a week (3:18). WCCO Mid-Morning - January 21, 2020

How To Know When You Should (Or Can) RetireDon't retire your emergency fund. While you will be living off your savings, you still want to keep a separate fund for unexpected events, Bruce Helmer explains (3:29). WCCO Mid-Morning - January 21, 2020

9 A.M. Weather ReportWe're about to get a fairly long stretch of above-average days, temperature-wise, Riley O'Connor reports (2:54). WCCO Mid-Morning - January 21, 2020

Should The Super Bowl Be On A Saturday?A new petition circulating social media wants that change (3:26). WCCO Mid-Morning - January 21, 2020

Delta Splitting $1.6 Billion In Bonuses To WorkersThat ends up breaking down to about two months of pay per worker (3:45). WCCO This Morning - January 21, 2020

Senate Trial Begins In Trump ImpeachmentThe White House would like to see the trial end before the State of the Union, which is two weeks from today, Jason DeRusha and Heather Brown report (1:54). WCCO This Morning - January 21, 2020

'The 7:34': How Much Do You Give Your Kid In Allowance?Christiane Cordero wants to know if about $10 a week is fair (7:22). WCCO This Morning -- Jan. 21, 2020

#MyMorning: Jan. 21, 2020We want to know how much you pay your kids in allowance (2:38). WCCO This Morning -- Jan. 21, 2020

Morning Headlines: Jan. 21, 2020Jason DeRusha reads about the surge in nature TV shows and workers getting busted for using THC on the job 3:26). WCCO This Morning Jan. 21, 2020

China Working To Contain CoronavirusChristiane Cordero reports on how officials in China are working to combat the spread of the virus ahead of the lunar new year celebration (1:32). WCCO This Morning Jan. 21, 2020

Should The Minimum Wage Be Raised At MSP?A public hearing Tuesday will take up the question of whether or not employees at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport should be paid a minimum of $15 an hour (0:26). WCCO This Morning Jan. 21, 2020

5 A.M. Weather ReportRiley O'Connor says a warm-up is on the way (2:36). WCCO This Morning -- Jan. 21, 2020

WCCO Digital Update: Morning Of Jan. 21, 2020Kim Johnson reports on the latest Minnesota headlines (1:15). WCCO 4 News -- Jan. 21, 2020

10 P.M. Weather ReportWe'll get another break from precipitation Tuesday, reports Chris Shaffer (2:58).WCCO 4 News At 10 January 20, 2020

Good Question: How Much Do We Volunteer?For many, Martin Luther King Jr. Day is a day off but for many it's a day to give back to others, reports Heather Brown (2:20).WCCO 4 News At 10 January 20, 2020

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Eric Holder To Speak At The 2020 MLK Breakfast - WCCO | CBS Minnesota

What Did African Americans Have to Lose With a Trump Presidency? – Washington Monthly

During the 2016 campaign, Donald Trumps attempt to appeal to African-American voters was to simply ask them, What have you got to lose? It was meant to suggest that previous administrationsparticularly his predecessorhad done nothing for them. We see the same claims made in the endless stream of articles from right-wing media suggesting that Trump is going to win over a large share of African American voters in the 2020 election. Of course, to believe that is to live in an epistemic bubble where facts dont intrude.

More than 8 in 10 black Americans say they believe Trump is a racist and that he has made racism a bigger problem in the country. Nine in 10 disapprove of his job performance overall.

Similarly, there are people on the left who, when confronted with the overwhelming support for Biden among African Americans, claim that the Obama-Biden administration did nothing for black people. Since that claim has surfaced on Twitter several times, perhaps it is time to remind everyone of some facts.

The first place to start would be to acknowledge that every item on the list of Obamas top 50 accomplishments that was compiled by Paul Glastris and myself applied to African Americans. That would include things like saving the automobile industry and avoiding war with Iran by negotiating an end to their nuclear weapons program.

But many of the things that directly affected African Americans were accomplished via work done by Eric Holder at the Justice Departmentparticularly with regards to the Civil Rights Division, which was initially led by Tom Perez and later by Vanita Gupta. Many of those efforts went to the heart of the issues that are a major concern in the African-American community, such as investigating police abuse and negotiating consent agreements. Perez and Holder were able to defend disparate impact as the standard for investigating discrimination in a case that went before the Supreme Court.

Other federal departments worked with the Justice Department to accomplish things like:

Those are just a few of the things that the Obama-Biden administration accomplished to address the concerns of African Americans. But this week we learned about another item we can add to the list. Here are some of the highlights of a study done by the Commonwealth Fund on the impact of Obamacare.

* The ACAs coverage expansions have led to historic reductions in racial disparities in access to health care since 2013

* The gap between black and white adult uninsured rates dropped by 4.1 percentage points

* Five years after the ACAs implementation, black adults living in states that expanded Medicaid report coverage rates and access to care measures as good as or better than what white adults in nonexpansion states report.

It is important to note that this study also found that, when it comes to the reduction in racial disparities, progress has stalled and, in some cases, eroded since 2016. As with everything else the previous administration accomplished, the gains are being reversed by this president. So obviously, African Americans had a lot to lose when it came to a Trump presidency.

One could make the case that the Obama-Biden administration should have done more to address the issues faced by African Americans. But the claim that they did nothing is simply preposterous.

If you enjoyed this article, consider making a donation to help us produce more like it. The Washington Monthly was founded in 1969 to tell the stories of how government really worksand how to make it work better. Fifty years later, the need for incisive analysis and new, progressive policy ideas is clearer than ever. As a nonprofit, we rely on support from readers like you.

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What Did African Americans Have to Lose With a Trump Presidency? - Washington Monthly

MLK Holiday Breakfast sold out for 30th year of event – KARE11.com

This year's breakfast includes speech from former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder.

The Armory in downtown Minneapolis will be packed on Monday for the annual MLK Holiday Breakfast. The event is in its 30th year, and draws a huge crowd, and well-known speaker to the event.

This year's sold-out event has the theme, "Rise Up: Standing Together for Positive Change" which is meant to encourage turning your inspiration into action.

The keynote speech will be made by former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, who was the first African-American to serve in that position.

If you weren't able to get tickets to the breakfast, you can watch the event online through alive stream here.

After the breakfast, volunteer activities will be happening at U.S. Bank Stadium, where groups will pack snack packs and school supply kits for local students and create cards for local teachers.

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MLK Holiday Breakfast sold out for 30th year of event - KARE11.com

Government in the Shadows – National Review

(Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)Goodbye to the peaceful transfer of power.

The frenetic opposition to Donald Trump by the Washington establishment, the new progressive, hard-left Democratic party, and in particular the veterans of the Obama administration has led to the ruination of a number of hallowed protocols and customs.

Impeachment has been redefined as a mere vote of no confidence and will become a rank political ploy for years to come once an opposition party gains a majority in the House. It is taking on the flavor of a preemptory device, a vaccination, rather than a medicine, as if to prevent future hypothetical crimes in the absence of current impeachable offenses.

Whistleblowers are now mere political operatives, who work with the opposition party to disseminate second- and third-hand rumor to prompt impeachment frenzies.

The FISA court has been disgraced. It was revealed to be either incompetent or actively partisan in its failure to question the Steele dossiers legitimacy, in ignoring the warnings of Devin Nuness memo, and in the courts selection of hard-core anti-Trump partisan David Kris to monitor FBI compliance with the recommendations of the Horowitz report. At this point, the existing FISA courts should probably be dismissed and the laws authorizing their creation rewritten.

In addition, the anti-Trump mob has now ended any idea that prior administrations should step aside, mostly stay quiet, and allow successors to fail or succeed on their merits.

During the Reagan years, a frustrated emeritus president Jimmy Carter more or less kept still. True, a sometimes-exasperating Carter chose to travel abroad and dabble publicly in foreign policy. But for the most part, he did not offer play-by-play, negative criticism of Ronald Reagan or his successors.

Reagans team kept a low profile during the presidency of George H. W. Bush, as is usually the case when a president is succeeded by his own vice president or a member of his own party.

In turn, a reticent elder Bush was especially magnanimous during the Clinton years despite occasional nastiness directed at him from Clintonites.

Clinton himself was not vocal during George W. Bushs first term, especially in the aftermath of 9/11. When Bushs polls tanked and the Iraq War was at its most unpopular moment in 2006 and 2007, Clinton opportunistically began to attack Bush. Nonetheless, he was not an active Bush hater.

Bush himself was idealistically silent during the Obama years, despite the Obama administrations turns to the hard left on immigration, health care, the Iran Deal, and foreign policy and Obamas constant negative references to Bush himself.

All those Marquess of Queensberry Rules of post-presidential decorum abruptly ended in 2017. What superseded them was, at best, a kind of British-style, European shadow government, in which mostly ex-Obama officials became nonstop activist critics of almost everything Trump has done.

At worst, the endless opposition turned into a slow-motion sort of coup in which progressive, life-tenured bureaucrats leaked, obstructed, and connived to stop the daily operations of the administration as they often proudly admitted to the media. The subtext was that the Obama-progressive-media complex would create enough momentum to abort Trumps first term. Or was it that Trump represented such an existential danger to the administrative-state way of doing business that any means necessary were justified to end his presidency?

The locus classicus was Ben Rhodes, the former deputy national-security adviser, and Jack Sullivan, who had been Obamas White House deputy assistant. Together, they formed the National Security Action organization in early 2018. The two promised that they would offer an effective, strategic, relentless, and national response to this administrations dangerous approach to national security. Translated, that meant that Rhodes and Sullivan would aggregate former Obama officials and progressive analysts to launch nonstop attacks on all of Trumps foreign-policy efforts. And they have.

More ironic was Hillary Clintons announcement in May 2017 that she had officially joined the Resistance by forming Onward Together to stand up to Trump.

Resistance was not meant to denote principled and traditional opposition to the incumbent party. Instead, the noun was intended to invoke the guerrilla-warfare campaigns of the French Maquis who fought as rural bands against the Nazi occupation of France. The metaphor was clear: Trump administration = a fascist foreign military occupation; Trump = Hitler; Democrats = courageous anti-Nazi guerrillas.

Since her defeat in November 2016, Clinton has become a tedious bore in her frequent insistence that the Russians stole the election in cahoots with Donald Trump, despite the fact that neither the Mueller nor Horowitz investigations found any evidence for her conspiracies. The culpable incompetence of her campaign is a matter of record.

The irony, of course, is that Clinton herself hired foreign national Christopher Steele to find (or create) dirt on opponent Trump, hid her payments through three firewalls, and unleashed Steele to coax and cajole mostly lying Russian sources to slander her opponent. Those facts prompt the question: Did Russian collusion begin as an elaborate hoax to disguise the wrongdoing of the Obama administration, the FBI, the CIA, the DOJ, and the Clinton campaign in the face of the unexpected Trump victory?

Former Obama officials were sometimes even more active in their ongoing efforts to derail Trumps foreign policy. Former CIA head John Brennan kept his security clearance, went to work for MSNBC, and, with a wink-and-nod smugness, relentlessly told his viewers that he knew really important but undisclosed things about Trumps supposed crimes. Brennan reached a nadir when he began to exonerate his own behavior that was increasingly revealed to be central to a number of ongoing scandals, and when he predicted, based on his sources, that Muellers team would indict Trump and company for collusion a prediction that proved spectacularly wrong.

James Clapper, Obamas director of National Intelligence, xeroxed Brennans career on CNN to the tee: He too began analyzing scandals in which he himself had been knee-deep while accusing the president of being a virtual traitor in service to Vladimir Putin. Previously the emeritus heads of these agencies had not been considered overtly political. It was almost unheard-of for former CIA and NSA officials to wade into politics and issue on-air attacks on the current president.

The FBI soon followed suit. Little more need now be said of former and now disgraced FBI director James Comey, who still has a rendezvous with an accounting for his past behavior. He was the most political and least successful director in FBI history. He soon found himself, in passive-aggressive fashion, trying to run investigations of the Trump campaign, transition, and presidency that included everything from lying to the president, leaking confidential meetings of White House meetings to the press, and deluding a FISA court into granting writs to surveil an American citizen. The past three years of Comeys life have been devoted to destroying Donald Trump as a way of dealing with his own self-ruination.

Obama himself, in contrast to George W. Bush, did not retire to his home. Instead, he stayed on in his principle residence in Washington in a fashion that no ex-president had done since Woodrow Wilson. Obamas chief lieutenants have unleashed nonstop invective against their successors, whether its Eric Holder attacking Attorney General Bill Barr, or Susan Rice going after the Trump national-security team.

The most egregious shadow official has been former secretary of state John Kerry. During the controversies over Trumps cancellation of the Iran Deal, private citizen Kerry met with his former counterpart, the foreign minister of Iran, Javad Zarif, and he lobbied EU officials to oppose the cancellation and tried to line up congressional opposition to Trump. After the recent killing of Qasem Soleimani, Kerry hit the airwaves blasting U.S. policy; at times he bordered on offering lamentations for the loss of the terrorist Soleimani. Kerry often seemed bewildered that anyone would dare ask him whether his sponsorship of huge cash transfers to Iran, well aside from the windfalls that followed from lifting the sanctions, had fed Iranian-directed terrorist operations in Syria and Yemen.

The direct participation of former Obama officials of course is in addition to the so-called deep-state opposition, which has manifested itself in a variety of disturbing ways: leaking Trump private phone calls with foreign officials; seeding the Steele dossier among government agencies and cabinets; leaking confidential presidential memos to the press; bragging publicly about resistance efforts to impede the implementation of the Trump policy; warping the whistleblower statutes; and redefining impeachment as a partisan no-confidence vote, a preemptory check on future presidential behavior, and an election-year effort to unseat a first-term opposition president.

The parlance of the embittered Obama team is revealing. Eric Holder accused Attorney General Barr of being unfit for office. Clapper said Trump was a Russian asset, Brennan trumped that with all roads with Trump lead to Putin. Susan Rice said that America was under attack by the Trump team.

What is behind this radical departure from past practice? One factor is that Trump is a most un-McCain, un-Romney Republican who believes in dont-tread-on-me, disproportionate retaliation. The result is that Trump answers with megatonnage to any insult to his person in a manner that the establishment believes does not befit a president but which certainly frightens and enrages it. And one of the symptoms of the ensuing derangement syndrome is a 24/7 addiction to opposing Trump in any way possible, often to the ruination of all past custom, tradition, and practice, with the subtextual justification that Trump did it first.

Fear also explains a lot.

For all the various protestations from John Kerry, Joe Biden, and Barry Obama that the Obama administration was scandal-free, it most certainly was not. By the current standards of impeachment, once Obama lost the House in 2011, he would have been impeached for Obstruction of Congress and Abuse of Power for the Fast and Furious scandal and for invoking executive privilege to justify administration officials refusal to testify to Congress. Also impeachable by the new standard: political corruption at the IRS that was sicced on conservative groups during the Obama reelection bid; the lies and obstruction about the Benghazi disaster; the hot-mic quid pro quo promise Obama made to the Russians that resulted in the dismantlement of Eastern Europe missile defense in exchange for Putins good behavior to the benefit of Obamas reelection campaign; the abuse of executive orders to nullify federal immigration law; the failure to consult Congress on the prisoner swap with the Taliban; the lying under oath to Congress by both the CIA director and the director of national intelligence; the secret monitoring of the communications of Associated Press reporters and Foxs James Rosen, along with former CBS reporter Sharyl Attkisson; the deliberate nullification of the constitutional treaty-making prerogative of the Senate during the Iran deal, whose secrete accords were never disclosed to the American people; and the warping of the CIA, DOJ, FBI, and National Security Council respectively, in their unethical and often illegal efforts to mislead the FISA courts, surveil the Trump campaign, unmask and leak the names of U.S. citizens whose communications were tapped, and disrupt a presidential transition. Before 2019, none of these offenses would have been impeachable; all now, and things like them, will be in the future.

One way of keeping all that quiet was for Obama-era officials to preemptively go on the offense, screaming of collusion, and then obstruction, and finally quid pro quo all while supposedly impeachable statutes, people, and countries came and went, whether Russia, Ukraine, Stormy, the 25th Amendment, the Logan Act and the emoluments clause, and dozens more distractions from the Obama administrations systematic constitutional violations and the trampling of the civil rights of American citizens.

The most baleful legacy of the current Trump hatred is a new model of out-of-power administrations that never quite leave. Instead, apparently from now on, the retired, the fired, the voted out, the emeriti, and the transitioned will become opposition activists who seek to destroy their successors whose record they cannot abide and whose agendas they deathly fear.

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Government in the Shadows - National Review

Taboo Obvious Fact: Racism Didnt Cause the New Problems of Today – Townhall

Editor's note:The following is an excerpt from TABOO: 10 Facts You Can't Talk About(Regnery; January 28, 2020).

Cultural differences between groups (1) exist and (2) predict success. A corollary to these points is that, when all cultural differences are adjustedfor, contemporary racism has almost nothing to do with the major problems faced by minority Americans today. This is, of course, a wildly provocative statement. The idea that the United States today is an institutionally or structurally prejudiced society is a cornerstone of modern liberal thought. The Black Lives Matter movement alone has staged 2,406 major marches against racism during the past few years. However, any serious claim that contemporary or recent bigotry is the cause of phenomena such as the 75 percent Black illegitimacy rate founders on three rocks. First, these problems did not exist among Blacks (or anyone else) when racism was much worse, (2) these problems do not exist for successful, dark-skinned African and Asian immigrants to the U.S.A., and (3) many or most such problems do exist among poor whitesperhaps the most genuinely neglected group in Americato roughly the same extent that they do among Blacks.

The idea that prejudice is the cause of virtually all poor group performances, at least among minorities, remains the foundation of the contemporary activist movement. That movement is as vigorous today as it has ever been. Rather remarkably, civil rights activism against perceived oppressionnot counting the gay rights movementseems to be more widespread today than it was in the 1960s. Leanna Garfields recent list of the largest protest marches in U.S. history opens with the 2017 protest of Donald Trumps inauguration and goes on to include Louis Farrakhans Million Man March (1995), a 1993 march on Washington targeted at eliminating racism and (primarily) at achieving civil rights for gay Americans, the Million Woman pro Black march (1997), the 2003 protests against the Bush administration, and the feminist March for Womens Lives (2004). Astonishingly, Martin Luther Kings March on Washington was more poorly attended than any of the later marches on the list, drawing only 250,000 attendees as opposed to anywhere from 500,000 to two million people for the Million Woman March 34 years later. A cynic might suggest that Kings followers, Black and white, were more likely to have jobs they could not leave at will than the Antifa fighters and BLM radicals who came after them.

Garfields list would probably have been swelled by at least a few additional rallies if compiled at this point in the Trump presidency. The seven-page Wikipedia article headlined Protests against Donald Trump, which is an actual thing that exists, lists (as of July 25, 2018) 32 major American or international anti-Trump protests, including: the Womens March, the Day Without Immigrants, Not My Presidents Day, the Charlottesville rally, and the recurring and no doubt delightful Resist Trump Tuesdays. Quite a few of these attracted at least a few hundred thousand participants; Wikipedia provides a figure of 100,000 plus for the inaugural protest and lists the Womens March attendance at 24 million participants in the U.S.A. and 45 million worldwide. At least a few were more lively than the organizers probably expected; the casualty toll across anti-Trump events so far is four dead, 81 injured, and 1,040 persons arrested.

With perhaps two or three exceptions, almost every march listed so far included opposition to racism or prejudice among its core principles. In recent years, mass mobilization events like these have been supplemented by specifically pro-Black protests organized by the Black Lives Matter movement. Almost 3,000 of these have taken place in the past 5 years. A report from Elephrame, a data archive website, lists 2,406 major BLM rallies (protests and other . . . demonstrations) over a period of 1,467 days. The list of these includes the various Trayvon Martin demonstrations and riots, the Ferguson Freedom Ride, the Ferguson riots, and the massive protests following the deaths of (among others) Walter Scott, Tamir Rice, Sandra Bland, and Philando Castile. This is to some extent speculation, but the hard numbers indicate that there are probably more civil rights marches per year today than there were in 1960!

Not a few of todays major marches are literally held at the locations where historic rallies took place during the original civil rights movement, either to commemorate the old leaders or to commiserate about how nothing has changed. On March 8, 2015, a memorial of the Bloody Sunday marches and police attacks in Selma, Alabama, made national news, with the Washington Postreporting that tens of thousands of marchers, government officials, and other public figures gathered Sundayfor the second or third day in a rowto commemorate the 50th anniversary of a brutal police assault on civil rights demonstrators. By mid-afternoon, area police reported, apparently with some trepidation, that at least 15,000 to 20,000 people had joined the crush on and around the bridge.

Eric Holder, then-President Barack Obamas attorney general, showed up and gave a speech denouncing . . . youll never guess it . . . racism. Holder argued that the U.S.A. has perhaps improved since the 1960s, but that conservatives on the Supreme Court were attempting to use profoundly flawed decisions to weaken the federal governments voting rights enforcement powers. He closed by saying that, as in the days of one-hundred-dollar-poll taxes, Fair and free access to the franchise is still, in some areas, under siege. Holder also compared todays scuffles between BLM fighters and city cops to the civil rights movement, drawing applause when he noted that murdered civil rights workers such as Jimmie Lee Jackson were unarmed Black men.

The problem with the idea that racism has declined (gone underground) little, if at all, and that the minority problems of today are caused by racismjust as those of the past may have beenis threefold. First, most contemporary Black problems were less serious when racism was much worse. Few Black teenagers had babies out of wedlock in 1960, and almost no middle-class Black men went to jail, although the Black crime rate was still frankly a bit higher than the white crime rate. Second, most of these contemporary problems do not exist today for visibly nonwhite immigrants from Africa, South Asia, and the West Indies, who often outperform both American whites and Blacks. Finally, most of these issues, along with other terrible problems like opiate addiction, do exist for the working-class whiteswho live alongside poor Blacks. All of this indicates that internal American cultural collapse is the root cause of the problems we as a society face today.

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Taboo Obvious Fact: Racism Didnt Cause the New Problems of Today - Townhall