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Friday, June 14, 2024

'AG getting behind bid to reimplement NY law banning masks after anti-Israel incidents'

 New York Attorney General Letitia James is getting behind an effort to change state law that could ban face coverings at protests — following a surge in hateful attacks involving masked antisemites.

In an exclusive statement to The Post, a spokesperson for James said that the state’s top attorney is “in discussions” with Gov. Kathy Hochul and lawmakers over the push to bring back New York’s mask ban — which she supported scrapping during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, right before the George Floyd demonstrations began to rage.

“This is a complex legal matter and we are currently in discussions with lawmakers on this issue,” the statement from James’ office reads.

“In New York, no one should be able to hide behind a mask to spew hate.”

New York Attorney General Letitia James is getting behind an effort to change state law that could ban face coverings at protests — following a surge in hateful attacks involving masked antisemites.AP

While James’ role is purely advisory at this stage of the lawmaking process, her opinion carries significant weight given that she is the one who would ultimately be charged with defending such a law in court were it to be reimplemented and challenged.

Back in May 2020, James had penned a letter to state lawmakers expressing her full-throated support of repealing the more than two century-old ban on group mask-wearing, arguing it was a necessary step to enforce public health directives during the pandemic.

The Legislature voted to repeal the law three days after Floyd’s death at the hands of a Minneapolis cop, an incident that sparked nationwide protests.

Jewish leaders have recently called on lawmakers to bring the law back — arguing its allowing virulent anti-Jewish protesters to spew hate while escaping accountability.

“We will not tolerate individuals using masks who may be responsible for criminal or threatening behavior,” Hochul said Thursday, pointing out a shocking incident in which masked thugs took over a subway car in Manhattan earlier this week and ordered “Zionists” to “get out.”

In an exclusive statement to The Post, a spokesperson for James said that the state’s top attorney is “in discussions” with Gov. Kathy Hochul and lawmakers over the push to bring back New York’s mask ban.abbaleh/X

Hochul said she was working with lawmakers after Jewish leaders’ calls, first reported by The Post, to reinstate the anti-masking law, with the talks largely, but not entirely, focused on subways.

Mayor Eric Adams went a step further, saying, “I agree with those who are calling for removal of the ban, not only for the protesters who are using vile language, but also for criminal behavior” in an interview on 77 WABC’s “Cats & Cosby” Thursday evening.

“Cowards hide their faces. Dr. [Martin Luther] King did not hide his face,” Adams told hosts John Catsimatidis and Rita Cosby.

“Now is the time to go back to the way we were pre-COVID, where you should not be able to wear masks at protests.”

State pols, both Republican and Democrat, are starting to come around to the idea of bringing back the law, which banned gatherings of people covering their faces — and carried a penalty of 15 days in jail.

“This is a complex legal matter and we are currently in discussions with lawmakers on this issue,” the statement from James’ office reads.FreedomNewsTV

“I am pleased to see Democrats at every level begin to snap back to reality on public safety – even if it is just a result of low poll numbers,” said Assemblyman Mike Reilly, who sponsors a bill that would revive the ban and implement stiffer penalties for groups of assailants who threaten people or vandalize property while masked.

“Governor Hochul must call us back to Albany immediately to do this,” Reilly (R-Staten Island) told The Post on Friday, referring to the fact that the Legislature, whose session ended last week, would need to come back to Albany to take special action.

Though it’s unclear exactly how in-depth the talks are, James does sometimes get involved in crafting policy.

Earlier this year she played a major role in drawing landmark legislation to give parents more control over how their kids interact with addictive social media feeds.

One anti-Israel protester was caught on video while on the NYC subway telling “Zionists to get off the train.”X / @AvivaKlompas

That legislation is almost certain to be challenged in court where James would lead its defense.

Hochul made clear that any action on a mask ban would include “major exemptions” for health concerns as well as cultural and religious reasons.

“We are still fine tuning it to make sure everyone who is immunocompromised or has a religious reason can continue to wear masks but, otherwise, it should revert to the pre-pandemic law,” state Sen. Jim Skoufis (D-Orange) told The Post Friday about the bill he backs.

The piece of legislation Skoufis sponsors with Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz (D-Bronx) is similar to Reilly’s, but would mostly just reimplement the former law.

“Some of these antisemitic incidents I’m seeing is like what happened to Jews in Nazi Germany before the war,” Dinowitz said.

The Bronx pol, as well as Skoufis, say they think any masking ban should expand beyond just applying in the subways, which Hochul said was her “primary focus” on Thursday.

“I don’t see why subways would be any different than above ground,” Dinowitz noted.

Hochul — who called the antisemitic takeover of the subway car “vile and disgusting behavior” — didn’t delve into many specifics on how she planned to move forward on the issue.

Lawmakers have left open the possibility of coming back to Albany to take up measures to secure a revenue source for the MTA’s capital plan after Hochul suddenly scrapped the congestion pricing scheme that had been set to go into effect June 30.

But it’s unclear if and when they would do so and whether masking legislation could get tacked onto the agenda.

“We agree that no one should be able to hide behind a mask to spew hate, and we look forward to potential solutions,” Scott Richman, Regional Director for the Anti-Defamation League told The Post Friday.

A new group, the #UnMaskHateNY Campaign, announced Friday its formation to help push the initiative.

“Tactics of intimidation by those wearing masks date back to the racist atrocities of the Ku Klux Klan,” the group wrote in a statement.

“Today, we have watched in horror as individuals with hidden identities have terrorized New Yorkers with covered faces and no consequences.”

https://nypost.com/2024/06/14/us-news/ag-letitia-james-considering-reversing-course-on-protest-mask-ban/

How Trump cracked the code to penetrate the blue wall

For the last three decades, I have been imploring Republican presidential candidates to take their message directly to America’s inner cities. Directly to the epicenters of "blueness."

As someone who grew up in abject poverty in some of those inner cities, I knew that most of those residents strongly believe in the rule of law, are faith-based and do support the police. But, for the last number of decades, they have also felt disrespected and abandoned by the GOP and Republican presidential candidates.

Former President Trump not only just flipped the script on that perceived disrespect with his rally last month in the deep blue Bronx – which brought out approximately 25,000 people – but demonstrated that there are potentially hundreds of thousands of untapped New York City voters who do believe in the rule of law, who do support the police, and who will come out in large numbers if they are recognized and respected.

Trump supporters wait a line to attend outside Crotona Park in Bronx on May 23, 2024. (Jeenah Moon for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Trump supporters wait a line to attend outside Crotona Park in Bronx on May 23, 2024. (Jeenah Moon for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Not only was the rally historic, but the anti-conventional-wisdom Trump also exposed a hidden and often censored truth. The Democrats don’t have a lock on the votes in our inner cities or within the minority community.


All of which raises a critically important question: How many untapped votes are there in the deep blue cities of Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Chicago, Washington, D.C., Atlanta and elsewhere? Millions to be sure.   

In so many ways, minority and inner-city residents are the brightest and most aware of all voters. Because failing political policies often batter them every single day of their lives. They understand the harsh realities of life better than most. As such, they are open to solutions that might deliver them from such misery. More than that, they are desperate for such solutions. 

That said, it’s unfair to ask for their vote if you are not willing to present yourself to them and offer up your solutions to their many problems. Openness, respect and trust must be a two-way street.

To paraphrase the movie "Field of Dreams," if you offer up that in-person attendance and respect, "they will come." And potentially in historic numbers for a Republican candidate.

That exact same formula also applies to the "deep blue" high-tech community. Over the last two decades, I have interacted with dozens of high-tech entrepreneurs from Silicon Valley and other perceived blue bastions of liberalism and wokeism.  

And within these strongholds of far-left elitism and loyalty to failed Democratic policies are thousands of high-tech employees – and, indeed, CEOs – who recognize that the failed policies of the far-left are destroying society about them and putting their very lives in danger. These men and women will rally around commonsense, pragmatic solutions that reinforce the rule of law.   

What Trump clearly understands is that presidential elections are ultimately won by shaving off one-half of 1% in a district; one-quarter of 1% in a county, and one-eighth of 1% in a state. As we saw in 2020, less than 60,000 votes can flip a presidential election.

It can certainly be argued that Trump has the most impressive road show in America. A road show that brings out huge crowds while creating massive word of mouth and new voters. A road show that will play in blue states, blue cities and blue "high-tech," as proved in New Jersey, the Bronx, and of late, California.


Last week, billionaire entrepreneur David Sacks co-hosted a fundraiser for Trump in his San Francisco home with Democrat mega-donor and former Facebook executive Chamath Palihapitiya. The goal was to raise $5 million. The sold-out event brought in $12 million. Why?

As Sacks pointed out to Laura Ingraham in part last week:

"I know there's a lot of people out there who are already Trump supporters, and they're just afraid to stick their necks out. I mean, that's the reality of the situation because they're afraid of getting ostracized or afraid of cancel culture. They're afraid of punishment, and they're afraid because the Biden administration likes political prosecutions and political investigations… With each incremental person who sticks their neck out and endorses Trump, it makes the rest of them feel more comfortable doing it, and you're seeing, I think, a cascade starting to happen now, where more and more people are going to come out for Trump."


True. But a "cascade" can only flow if the wall is penetrated or even toppled.    

Since 2015, Trump has proved himself to be the "counterintuitive candidate." He marches to the beat of his own drum and his instincts often prove unerringly correct.

Be it our inner cities, our bluest of states or high-tech America, Trump knows he has an almost completely blank canvas to paint upon. He must take advantage of it.  


He must take his road show to those cities, to those states, and to those entrepreneurs; show respect to those ignored by the GOP for decades; and offer up his commonsense, pragmatic solutions.

If Trump "builds it," they will come, they will listen, they will donate, and they will… vote.


Goldman Sachs Boosts S&P 500 Target on Upbeat Profit Outlook

 

  • Firm lifts index’s year-end estimate to 5,600 by 2024’s close
  • The new forecast is in line with the highest on Wall Street

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. strategists have boosted their year-end target for the S&P 500 Index for a third time, reflecting Wall Street’s optimistic outlook for earnings growth and the US economy.

The bank’s equity strategists led by David Kostin now see the US stock benchmark index finishing the year at 5,600, up from a 5,200 level they predicted in February. The new target implies a roughly 3% advance in the gauge from its Friday close.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-06-14/goldman-sachs-boosts-s-p-500-target-on-upbeat-profit-outlook

Global Traders Flood American Markets in Search for Safety

 

  • Money flooding stocks and company notes shows faith in US
  • Diversification in doubt amid decade-long S&P 500 dominance

Stung at home by fraught politics and flat economies, international investors are squeezing themselves further into the crowded trade that is American markets.

Over the last month, about $30 billion of fresh money has flooded into stock funds, with 94% of the allocations lavishing US assets — tech shares in particular — according to EPFR Global data compiled by TD Securities.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-06-14/buy-america-is-rallying-cry-for-global-traders-seeking-safety