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Saturday, November 2, 2024

Tlaib refuses to endorse Kamala Harris at Michigan rally

 Democratic Rep. Rashida Tlaib publicly refused to endorse Vice President Harris during a rally in Detroit — a critical decision that could tip the scales against Democrats in Michigan.

The move carries significant electoral implications, with Michigan part of the Democrats “blue wall” of must-win states in the 2024 presidential election.

A Trump triumph there would hamper Harris’ chances of winning the White House.

Democratic Rep. Rashida Tlaib is refusing to support Vice President Harris in her race for the Whitehouse.ZUMAPRESS.com
Tlaib steered clear of Harris-Walz during a United Auto Workers union rally in Detroit.Fox2Detroit
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Tlaib, a member of the House’s far-left “Squad,” is upset with the Biden-Harris administration’s support for Israel.

The only Palestinian-American in Congress, she has been openly supportive of Hamas during her time in office and has been censured by her colleagues for defending Hamas and calling for the destruction of Israel.

Tlaib, one of the last major Democrats who has withheld her endorsement from the top of the ticket, steered clear of Harris-Walz during a United Auto Workers union rally on Friday and instead offered a general plea to get out the vote, the Detroit News reported.

“Don’t underestimate the power you all have,” she said. “More than those ads, those lawn signs, those billboards, you all have more power to turn out people that understand we’ve got to fight back against corporate greed in our country . . . We’ve got to make sure that the nonpartisan part of the ballot gets filled in.”

Tlaib was joined on stage by fellow squad member, New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, along with UAW boss Shawn Fain, both of whom endorsed Harris and sang her praise.

In September Tlaib told far-left journalist Mehdi Hasan that when constituents came to her saying they could not support Harris she told them “there’s other people on this ballot that support a ceasefire. There’s other people on this ballot that can protect our community.”

Harris is fighting a crucial race against Trump for the state of Michigan.AFP via Getty Images

Tlaib has not made any endorsement in the 2024 race so far, but far-left anti-war candidates like Jill Stein and Cornel West will appear on Michigan’s presidential ballot.

Michigan, which has a large and influential Muslim community, has been at the center of an uncommitted movement of voters who are refusing to back Harris because of Israel’s war in Gaza and their belief that she has been too supportive of the Jewish state while vice president.

About 57% of American Muslims said they believed Hamas “was justified in attacking Israel as part of their struggle for a Palestinian state,” according to a survey from Cygnal

https://nypost.com/2024/11/02/us-news/rashida-tlaib-refuses-to-endorse-kamala-harris-at-michigan-rally/

Hilarious: Leftist media scared of RFK Jr. on health care

 By Jack Hellner

The complicit media and Kamala Harris are trying to scare the public, saying it would be dangerous to have Robert Kennedy involved with health care, essentially, because he has disagreed with the government pronouncements and rules on health care.  Heaven forbid that we have independent thinking versus dictatorial control of our health care, as advocated by Kamala and the Democrats. 

If we had independent media that cared about the truth instead of campaigning for Kamala, they would point out all of the misinformation and lies spread by Dr. Fauci and many politicians, including Biden.  The damage caused by the misinformation is long-lasting.  Kids and businesses were permanently harmed.  Many people committed suicide due to the dictatorial edicts. 

First, Fauci said COVID would not cause much trouble in the U.S.  Fauci, Biden, and others falsely called Trump a xenophobe for sensibly blocking travel from China. 

Then Fauci said a mask wasn’t necessary before he falsely said it was a cure. 

Businesses and schools were closed based on the lie that six-foot social distancing was necessary.  They said it was based on science, but it was just made up. 

The CDC lied when they said the virus would easily transfer off surfaces. 

We were falsely told that taking the vaccine would prevent the virus and that if you didn’t take the vaccine, you were intentionally killing people. 

People were fired for refusing to take the vaccine.  Kamala likes to say that women can do whatever they want with their bodies, but she supported firing women who didn’t obey.  She clearly doesn’t believe in freedom of choice. 

So I will gladly take Kennedy and Trump over people like Kamala and Fauci. 

Then we were told that Plexiglas would prevent the virus.  That was also made up. 

The CDC took the words of teachers’ unions to keep schools closed and falsely said it was based on science. 

When Trump and others wanted the Wuhan lab to be investigated as the origin for the virus, the media, Dr. Fauci, and others falsely said it was a disproven conspiracy.  Dr. Fauci was covering his rear.

And please remember the lies that the media and other Democrats told to get Obamacare passed.  We were told you could keep your plan, that you could keep your doctor, and that prices would go down.  They lied.  Prices have skyrocketed for fourteen years because of Obamacare rules.

Yet Kamala and others continue to intentionally lie about health care.

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2024/11/hilarious_leftist_media_scared_of_rfk_jr_on_health_care.html

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says lack of compute capacity delaying company’s products

 In a Reddit AMA, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman admitted that a lack of compute capacity is one major factor preventing the company from shipping products as often as it’d like.

“All of these models have gotten quite complex,” he wrote in response to a question about why OpenAI’s next AI models were taking so long. “We also face a lot of limitations and hard decisions about [how] we allocated our compute towards many great ideas.”

Many reports suggest that OpenAI has struggled to secure enough compute infrastructure to run and train its generative models. Just this week, Reuters, citing sources, said that OpenAI has for months been working with Broadcom to create an AI chip for running models, which could arrive as soon as 2026.

Partly as a result of strained capacity, Altman said, OpenAI’s realistic-sounding conversational feature for ChatGPTAdvanced Voice Mode, won’t be getting the vision capabilities first teased in April anytime soon. At its April press event, OpenAI showed the ChatGPT app running on a smartphone and responding to visual cues, such as the clothes someone was wearing, within view of the phone’s camera.

Reporting from Fortune later revealed the demo was rushed to steal attention away from Google’s I/O developer conference, which was taking place the same week. Many within OpenAI didn’t think GPT-4o was ready to be revealed. Tellingly, the voice-only version of Advanced Voice Mode was delayed for months.

In the AMA, Altman indicated that the next major release of OpenAI’s image generator, DALL-E, has no launch timeline. (“We don’t have a release plan yet,” he said.) Meanwhile, Sora, OpenAI’s video-generating tool, has been held back by the “need to perfect the model, get safety/impersonation/other things right, and scale compute,” wrote Kevin Weil, OpenAI’s chief product officer, who also participated in the AMA.

Sora has reportedly suffered from technical setbacks that position it poorly against rival systems from Luma, Runway, and others. Per The Information, the original system, revealed in February, took more than 10 minutes of processing time to make a 1-minute video clip.

In October, one of the co-leads on Sora, Tim Brooks, left for Google.

Later in the AMA, Altman said that OpenAI’s still considering allowing “NSFW” content in ChatGPT “someday” (“we totally believe in treating adult users like adults,” he wrote), and that the company’s top priority is improving its o1 series of “reasoning” models and their successors. OpenAI previewed a number of features coming to o1 at its DevDay conference in London this week, including image understanding.

“We have some very good releases coming later this year,” Altman wrote. “Nothing that we are going to call GPT-5, though.”

https://techcrunch.com/2024/10/31/openai-ceo-sam-altman-says-lack-of-compute-is-delaying-the-companys-products/

'2 blue state ballot box fires stoke fears of election violence'

 Two ballot drop box fires in the Pacific Northwest this week have stoked concerns about election security and the risk of violence in the 2024 election days before voting concludes.

Arson burned hundreds of ballots in what one official called “a direct attack on democracy” in Vancouver, Wash., and harmed a small handful in nearby Portland, Ore. The pair of incidents mark rare disruptions to election administration, experts stressed, but they raise worries about whether more threats or attacks are to come amid a tense, polarized race — and whether the incidents could sow voter distrust in the systems. 

“There’s this larger environment of distrust in our elections that has generated a set of security and safety concerns that ballot drop boxes are just one part of,” said Mindy Romero, director of the Center for Inclusive Democracy at the University of Southern California. “These sorts of actions, like bombing these drop boxes, I think … are ultimately about increasing fear, increasing distrust and potentially discouraging people from voting.”

Officials in Oregon and Washington have said the evidence suggests the two incidents this week, plus a third possible arson incident in the Evergreen State last month, are connected. A suspect description and vehicle have been identified, and the Portland Police Bureau said Wednesday that investigators believe “it is possible that the suspect intends to continue these targeted attacks.”

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has been on alert in the run-up to Election Day that drop boxes could be targeted by “domestic violent extremists” this cycle, according to internal bulletins, and experts are now concerned about continued or copycat attacks after the Pacific Northwest fires. 

“Some social media users are discussing and encouraging various methods of sabotaging ballot drop boxes and avoiding detection, likely heightening the potential for targeting of this election infrastructure through the 2024 election cycle,” the DHS concluded in a September memo.

The Vancouver drop box was notably in Washington’s 3rd Congressional District, where incumbent Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (D) faces a rematch against Republican Joe Kent in one of the cycle’s most competitive races. The Cook Political Report’s Dave Wasserman noted on social platform X, replying to the arson reports, that the Democrat beat Kent by just 2,629 votes in the midterms. 

The incidents also risk shaking voter confidence in an already fraught election cycle. 

Though a new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Research Center found most voters have confidence their local and state officials will accurately count ballots, more than half of Republican voters in a YouGov survey last month said they’re worried poll workers could tamper with their ballots. Roughly three-quarters of voters in the AP polling also said that they’re at least somewhat concerned about violence over the election outcome.

“Sometimes the fear, the concern around it is enough to impact people’s sense of security. … People will see the headlines and wonder ‘Could this happen to my local drop box?’” Romero said. 

That’s why experts, who have been working overtime to debunk rumors and break through misinformation online ahead of Election Day, are pointing to how this week’s ballot drop box fires were handled as a positive sign of voting security for 2024.

An incendiary device was placed inside the Portland ballot box, officials said, but fire suppressant inside protected “virtually all” the ballots. Just three ballots were identified as damaged, and the affected voters were contacted for replacements. 

Hundreds of ballots were damaged at the Vancouver location, where a suspected incendiary device was found next to the drop box. It’s possible some ballots were completely burned, and a half-dozen were unidentifiable. But elections staff were able to identify 488 damaged ballots, according to the county. 

As of Tuesday evening, 345 of those voters had already contacted the Clark County office to request a replacement, and new ballots were mailed to the remaining identified voters on Thursday. 

“This is certainly a threat that election officials have anticipated could happen in any given election from the moment we started installing drop boxes. So officials in Oregon and Washington really tried to make plans to respond to this, and prevent it from happening,” said Kim Wyman, a senior fellow with Bipartisan Policy Center’s Elections Project and former Republican secretary of state in Washington. 

“The good news is that election officials have really been preparing for this week for the last four years, and they’ve tried to build in as many security measures that they can for voters at polling places and early voting centers, [and] around mail-in ballots,” Wyman said, though she noted experts are bracing for “a spike in activity” as Election Day nears. 

Oregon and Washington are both vote-by-mail states and have long used drop boxes to collect ballots. More states began embracing the tools last cycle to grapple with administration difficulties during the COVID-19 pandemic. The boxes served as a way to avoid large crowds at polling places and have been seen as a more reliable delivery method than the U.S. Postal Service, due in part to confusion with postmarks and deadlines.

The boxes have nevertheless drawn controversy amid an ongoing swirl of election conspiracies in recent years. Former President Trump, for one, has previously cast doubt on mail-in voting and argued the boxes opened ballots up to be tampered with. An Associated Press investigation in 2022 debunked those claims, finding that the expanded use of drop boxes in 2020 did not lead to fraud, theft or other issues that could have swayed the results. 

“There’s almost no method of voting that’s invulnerable from somebody going to do something unexpected,” said Paul Gronke, director of the Elections & Voting Information Center at Reed College in Portland. But for the individual voter, he said, drop boxes are one of the safest methods of ensuring their votes are delivered on time.

Still, other election security-related concerns loom over the 2024 homestretch. Threats and scrutiny often linked to false claims of voter fraud have contributed to a mass exodus of local election officials in recent years, raising alarms about understaffed and inexperienced teams left to handle the process — and to face potential new threats. 

Experts are also worried about misinformation, artificial intelligence and foreign influence on elections. And, as Trump and others continue to tout disproven claims about widespread fraud in the 2020 results, experts are on high alert for protests and violence postelection, nearly four years after the Jan. 6, 2021, riots at the U.S. Capitol. 

The presidential race is on a razor’s edge as Election Day nears, and the latest polling averages from Decision Desk HQ and The Hill put Harris up by 0.3 points nationally, with similarly tight margins in key battlegrounds. 

Jim Messina, who served as a White House adviser to former President Obama, said last month that Trump “is going to try to steal this.”

Trump’s former White House aide Alyssa Farah Griffin has said the Biden administration “needs to be ready to secure the Capitol and state capitols.” 

“When you tell the population repeatedly, over and over again for years, that the election has been stolen and that election officials can’t be trusted— that’s inevitably going to lead to distrust of our election system and the risk of violence,” Ben Berwick, counsel at the nonpartisan nonprofit Protect Democracy, told The Hill in an interview last week. 

But even in the face of “all this gloom and doom” around threats, conspiracies and potential violence, Wyman urged voters to remember that election officials have been readying to take on 2024 since 2020. 

“A lot of planning has gone into this election by election officials across the country. They’ve been trying to think about those threats and have plans in place if something does materialize. They’ve been working with law enforcement and their federal partners to really vet those plans and be ready,” she said. “People should feel safe going to their polling places on Election Day and participating in the election.” 

https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/4966751-ballot-drop-box-fires-election-security/

'Buffett Calls Top, Dumps 100 M Apple Shares As Unprecedented Selling Ups Cash To Record Quarter T'

 Back in August, when discussing Buffett's ongoing liquidation of his Bank of America stake, we said that "Berkshire's rising cash stockpiles merely reflect the firm's inability to find deals in today's overvalued and weak economic environment", little did we know just how accurate that would be, because just one day later we and the rest of the market were stunned to learn that far from only dumping Bank of America, the 94-year-old Omaha billionaire had been busy quietly liquidating his most iconic holding in an unprecedented selling spree that sent Berkshire's cash pile soaring by a record $88 billion to an all time high $277 billion at the end of Q2.

That was just the beginning, however, and this morning we subsequently learned that through the end of Q3, Berkshire's unprecedented cash build continued, and the world's largest conglomerate added another $48 billion to its cash - through both "harvesting" (i.e., selling of existing holdings) and cash from operations, taking it to a record $325.2 billion, or nearly a quarter trillion in cash. As shown for context in the chart below, Berkshire has nearly doubled its cash holdings from $168 billion at the start of the year to a staggering $325 billion 9 months later, up 94%!

The bulk of the new cash came from sales: in the third quarter, Berkshire sold a net $34.6 billion worth of stock, following the record $75.5 billion in Q2 liquidations, the bulk of which we now know came from Buffett's sale of half his Apple shares. In other words, the third quarter was the 8th consecutive quarter in which Berkshire has been a net seller of stocks.

And the selling continued: while there was no 13F filed yet to go with the Berkshire's 10Q, the company provided a snapshot of its top holdings, revealing that as of Sept 30 it held only $69.9 billion in Apple stock, down a quarter from the $84.2 billion as of June 30, down 62% from $135.4 billion as of March 31 and down 70% from the $174.3 billion as of Dec 31, 2023. This translates into just 300 million shares of AAPL held as of Sept 30, less than a third of what Berkshire owned at the end of 2023, and 30% of Buffett's peak AAPL holdings of 1 billion shares as of 2018. 

Buffett said in May that Apple would likely remain Berkshire’s top holding, indicating that tax issues had motivated the sale. “I don’t mind at all, under current conditions, building the cash position,” he said at the annual shareholder meeting. It was unclear if BRK shareholders understood that to mean a sale of 70% (and rising) of the AAPL holdings.

Going down the list, with the exception of Bank of America (where Buffett is the single largest shareholder) which we already knew was also being aggressively sold and in Q3 Buffett confirmed that he took down his BAC holdings by 23%, from 1033 million shares to 799 million which in turn made the BAC stake his 3rd largest after American Express -  the rest of Berkshire's top 5 holdings (American Express, Coca Cola and Chevron) was largely untouched in Q3, meaning that Buffett clearly decided that it was time for Apple and Bank of America to go (we have since learned that subsequent to the end of Q2, Buffett also started to dump a large portion of his Bank of America shares where he is the single largest shareholder).

While Berkshire's cash balance rose by a record $35 billion - where proceeds from the sale of Apple and Bank of America were the bulk of the new cash - the company also generated substantial cash from its own operations, and in Q3 Berkshire reported operating earnings of $10.09 billion, down from the $11.6 billion in Q2 and down 6% from a year ago, as insurance underwriting earnings slumped. The company also recorded a $1.1 billion foreign-currency-exchange loss during the quarter.

Berkshire has for years struggled to find ways to deploy its mountain of cash in a sluggish deal environment, lamenting the lack of cheap opportunities. At the firm’s annual shareholder meeting in May, Buffett said he wasn’t in a rush to spend “unless we think we’re doing something that has very little risk and can make us a lot of money.” It now appears that not only was Buffett not in a rush to spend, but taking advantage of the AI bubble, he has been aggressively liquidating his biggest holding.

Finally, it's not just AAPL that Buffett believes is overvalued and is aggressively dumping: the billionaire clearly believes the entire market is way expensive, and in the third quarter, Berkshire refused to repurchase any of its own shares, the first time it has done that since the company changed its buyback policy in 2018.

It's hardly a surprise why:  as we noted in "Berkshire's Growing Cash Pile Has A Hidden Message On Stocks" the Buffett Indicator has rarely signaled a more expensive market.

Bottom line: unlike October 2008, when Buffett led the clarion call to "Buy American", this time he is selling American at a never before seen pace.

Are you?

One thing we know, Buffett is fearful.