Just 1% of US Counties Have Had Nearly Half of All COVID-19 Deaths

 
 
September 24 2020
 

Good morning from Washington, where President Trump says COVID-19 is on the wane as a vaccine draws closer. Only 1% of counties are home to half the deaths, two Heritage Foundation experts write. As the president warns about a storm of unsolicited mail-in ballots, House Republicans describe a looming crisis. On the podcast, a friend introduces a top Supreme Court candidate. Plus: a mightier military; another NYT revision of history; and, on "Problematic Women," remembering Ruth Bader Ginsburg. On this date in 1789, Congress passes legislation creating a six-member Supreme Court; that same day, President George Washington signs it and nominates a chief justice and five associates, all confirmed by the Senate two days later. 

 
 
 
COMMENTARY
Just 1% of US Counties Have Had Nearly Half of All COVID-19 Deaths
By Drew Gonshorowski

The spread of COVID-19 in the U.S. has been heavily concentrated in a small number of states—and among a small number of counties within those states.
NEWS
How 'Weaponizing' Mail-In Ballots Could Create Constitutional Crisis
By Fred Lucas

"This expansive and late shift to all-mail voting will create conditions ripe for election crime, errors, inaccuracy, and delay," states a new report from House Republicans.
ANALYSIS
This Lawyer Has Known Supreme Court Finalist Barbara Lagoa for 20 Years. Here's What He Has to Say.
By Rachel del Guidice

"Her parents fled a communist dictatorship in Cuba and came to the United States," says Justin Sayfie of Barbara Lagoa.
COMMENTARY
Strengthening America's Armed Forces
By Dakota Wood

The current U.S. military remains near historically low levels of capacity, and this is especially worrisome because numbers really do matter in war.
ANALYSIS
Problematic Women: Ginsburg's Legacy and the Supreme Court's Future
By Virginia Allen

"She weathered a tough confirmation battle already. She exhibited extreme grace under fire," says Elizabeth Slattery of Amy Coney Barrett.
COMMENTARY
History Comes to Call: The 1619 Project Cannot Deny Its Own Past
By Jonathan Butcher

The project's editors originally wrote that they understand 1619 to be "our true founding" because it was the year slaves arrived in the Virginia colony. Now that statement is gone.
NEWS
ICYMI: 7 Things to Know About Possible Supreme Court Nominee Barbara Lagoa
By Nathalie Voit

"For lower court judges, all Supreme Court precedent, including Roe v. Wade … is settled law," Lagoa wrote while being vetted for her current judgeship.
 
     
 
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