Dramatic aerial images today revealed the massive destruction caused by 200 wildfires in California, Oregon and Washington which have killed at least seven people including a 12-year-old boy and his grandmother. 

The ‘explosive’ fires have burned more than 3.4million acres – the size of Connecticut – and are still spreading in high winds amid fears that the number of casualties will rise.  

Entire communities have been razed with five towns ‘substantially destroyed’ and widespread evacuations taking place under apocalyptic orange skies. 

Only ‘smoldering ruins’ remained of large parts of the town of Talent, Oregon, said local resident Sandra Spelliscy.  

Twelve-year-old Wyatt Tofte and his grandmother Peggy Mosso died in a blaze in the Santiam Valley community of Lyons, about 50 miles south of Portland. The boy’s mother is currently in hospital in critical condition after suffering serious burns.

The fire also was suspected of causing at least one death outside of Ashland, Oregon, while in Washington state a one-year-old boy was killed and his parents were severely burned fleeing a fire in Okanogan County, police said.

Another three were feared dead in the California Bear Fire that swept through Butte County on Tuesday night. Sheriff Tony Hawley said the trio was discovered on the bank of the Columbia River after they abandoned their car. 

‘This fire is just burning at an explosive rate,’ said Daniel Berlant, a spokesman for California’s state fire authority. ‘You add the winds, the dry conditions, the hot temperatures, it’s the perfect recipe.’ 

MEDFORD, OREGON: Northridge Terrace is seen left in September 2019 and right after it was razed by this week’s West Coast wildfires which have ravaged communities and brought apocalyptic orange skies 

TALENT, OREGON: Mountain View Estates in September 2019 (left) and September 2020 (right) after the massive wildfires. Only ‘smoldering ruins’ remained of large parts of the town of Talent, local resident Sandra Spelliscy said 

MEDFORD, OREGON: These satellite images show the destruction in western Oregon where officials fear more deaths

PHOENIX, OREGON: A close-up of the city of 4,500 people which has been devastated by the Alameda Fire 

TALENT, OREGON: The Rogue Valley Highway 99 in June 2018 (left) and on Wednesday this week (right) 

PHOENIX, OREGON: This infrared satellite image shows an overview of the destruction, with burned vegetation and property in black and grey, and healthy vegetation that has not been burned in red 

Dramatic: The San Francisco Bay Bridge and the city skyline are bathed in apocalyptic orange as smoke and haze blows over the city, as seen from the artificial Treasure Island 

Butte county firefighters watch as flames tower over their truck during the Bear fire in Oroville, California on September 9

Security officials survey the Bear Lakes Estates neighborhood which was left devastated by the Almeda fire in Phoenix, Oregon

Houses and vehicles in the Bear Lakes Estates neighborhood which were left devastated by the Almeda fire 

Interstate 5 is seen in the background in the aftermath of the Almeda fire in Phoenix, Oregon. The road appeared to serve as a divider as nothing on the opposite side of the road was harmed by the fire

Homes were essentially wiped from the map as the fire took hold and laid claim to everything in its path, blown by the wind

Interstate 5 is seen on the left as the Bear Lakes Estates neighborhood is left devastated

A satellite image shows wildfires near Colton, Oregon on Wednesday as the scores of wildfires continued to rage 

Wyatt Tofte, 12, (far left) and his grandmother Peggy Mosso (in the right-hand picture, left in dark blue) died in a wildfire burning near the Santiam Valley community of Lyons, about 50 miles south of Portland. The boy’s mother is currently in hospital in critical condition

Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea told the Sacramento Bee confirmed that three people have died. Their identities have not yet been released. 

The remains of three victims were found in two separate locations of the same fire, according Honea, bringing the total death toll from this summer’s devastating spate of California wildfires to at least 11. 

Also in Oregon, one victim was found near to where the Almeda Fire began near homes in Medford on Tuesday. 

Firefighters retreated from uncontrollable blazes in Oregon as officials gave residents ‘go now’ orders to evacuate, meaning they had only minutes to leave their homes.

‘It was like driving through hell,’ Jody Evans told local television station NewsChannel21 after a midnight evacuation from Detroit, about 50 miles west of Salem. 

Leanna Mikesler, from Clovis, California, said she had been forced to evacuate her home to escape wildfires before, but it was ’10 times harder’ during the coronavirus pandemic.

‘They call… the evacuation. And then you go from there to see if your house has been burned down,’ she said. 

Across the United States wildfires have burned nearly 4.7 million acres in 2020, the highest year-to-date area since 2018, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.

Most of the fires are in western states, where 17 new large blazes were reported on Wednesday, bringing the total to 96 that have burned more than 3.4 million acres – an area nearly the size of the U.S. state of Connecticut.

Over a century of efforts by federal and state agencies to suppress naturally occurring blazes have left forests replete with dry timber and brush that provides fuel for large wildfires.

An orange glow fills the sky above the Embarcadero as smoke from various wildfires burning across Northern California mixes with the marine layer, blanketing San Francisco in darkness, on September 9, 2020 in San Francisco, California

San Francisco skyline is seen from Dolores Park in San Francisco, California on September 9. More than 300,000 acres are burning across the northwestern state including 35 major wildfires, with at least five towns ‘substantially destroyed’ and mass evacuations taking place

The Bobcat fire rages above Rincon Fire Station on Highway 39 in the San Gabriel Mountains, California

A view of the San Francisco Bay Bridge under an orange sky in the afternoon in San Francisco, California. The blazes across the states have made major metropolitan areas look apocalyptic 

An orange sky filled with wildfire smoke hangs above hiking trails at the Limeridge Open Space in Concord, California

A singed ice machine sits over a burned store during the Bear fire, part of the North Lightning Complex fires, in unincorporated Butte County, California on Wednesday

San Diego Humane Society’s Emergency Response Team rescue two horses amid the Valley Fire in San Diego county

Brown smoke from wildfires blowing westward in the atmosphere from California’s Sierra Nevada to the Coast Ranges and from Oregon can be seen on Wednesday

Home construction has encroached on some forests in recent decades, and owners are watching their houses burn as firefighters are unable to save property.

‘You add the winds, the dry conditions, the hot temperatures, it’s the perfect recipe,’ said Daniel Berlant, a spokesman for California’s state fire authority of the Creek Fire that has torched over 360 homes and other structures.

‘This fire is just burning at an explosive rate.’

Winds of up to 50 miles per hour sent blazes racing tens of miles within hours, burning hundreds of homes as firefighters fought at least 35 major blazes across an area of Oregon nearly twice the size of New York City. 

Parts of Medford, Oregon, a popular retirement location with over 80,000 residents in the state’s scenic Rogue Valley, were under evacuation orders or warnings as a growing wildfire closed a section of Interstate 5, the primary north-south highway in the West.

The fire moved north to Medford from Ashland, where it started on Tuesday. The blaze did little damage to Ashland, home to the historic stages of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, which normally draws more than 350,000 theatergoers a year.

The Holiday Farm fire is seen burning in the mountains around McKenzie Bridge, Oregon on September 9, 2020

Three chairs are all that remain at the Gates Post office in Gates, Oregon on Wednesday. The post office was destroyed along with several other buildings in the Santiam Canyon community as a result of the Santiam Fire

Charred debris is seen after the Bear Fire burned through Berry Creek, California

A swing and a burned-out vehicle are seen after the Bear Fire tore through Berry Creek, California

A scorched car rests in a clearing following the Bear Fire in Butte County. The blaze, part of the lightning-sparked North Complex, expanded at a critical rate of spread as winds buffeted the region

Charred items are seen after the Bear Fire burned through Berry Creek, California

A plume rises from the Bear Fire as it burns along Lake Oroville in Butte County, California

Appliances are seen scattered over the ground after the Bear Fire burned through Berry Creek including an old metal oven

Hundreds of horses have been brought to the fairgrounds in Salem by people fleeing the fires, along with llamas, goats and other animals. The Red Cross is helping people at the fairgrounds, which has been turned into an evacuation center

But as the blaze moved northward, it heavily damaged the small town of Talent with about 6,000 residents and Phoenix, with around 5,000, according to local police..  

Medford, with over 80,000 residents, was under evacuation orders or warnings as a growing wildfire closed a section of Interstate 5, the primary north-south highway in the West. 

The fire is suspected so far to have caused one death north of Ashland, said Rich Tyler, spokesman for the Oregon State Fire Marshal.

Brown saw no respite to the hot, windy weather and requested a federal emergency declaration for the state.

‘Absolutely no area in the state is free from fire,’ said Doug Graf, chief of fire protection for the Oregon Department of Forestry. 

The Oregon town of Mill City, about 65 miles south of Portland with a population around 1,900, also had major damage, and Malden, with about 200 people in eastern Washington state, was destroyed on Monday.

In central California, the Creek Fire about 35 miles  north of Fresno tore through a forest killed by drought and bark beetles as U.S. military helicopters pulled campers, hikers and residents out of the area.

Robert Pylant, 65, locates his fire safe in the rubble of his mobile home, early Wednesday in Gates, Oregon. All the trailers in Oak Park Trailer Park were destroyed along with the majority of the homes along East Sorbin Avenue

A burned out house is seen after the passing of the Holiday Farm fire in McKenzie Bridge, Oregon on Wednesday

Hundreds of homes including entire communities were razed by wildfires in the western United States on September 9 as officials warned of potential mass deaths under apocalyptic orange skies

At least five towns were ‘substantially destroyed’ in Oregon as widespread evacuations took place across the northwestern state, governor Kate Brown said

A burned out house is seen after the passing of the Holiday Farm fire in McKenzie Bridge, Oregon on Wednesday

A a woman walks near the foundation of a burned out house after the passing of the Holiday Farm fire in McKenzie Bridge, Oregon

Oregon Governor Kate Brown called the extreme heat and wind a ‘once in a lifetime event,’ as climate scientists blamed human activities for higher average temperatures that have supercharged fires.

‘This is proving to be an unprecedented and significant fire event for our state,’ Brown told a press briefing.  

‘This could be the greatest loss in human lives and property due to wildfire in our state´s history,’ Brown said, without providing details. 

Officials said 64,000 people had been evacuated from their homes as 28 major fires raged across the most populated U.S. state. 

Evacuations were ordered for a broad area around a massive 200,000-acre wildfire burning north of Sacramento. Residents of more than a dozen towns including the city of Oroville were either told to evacuate immediately or be prepared to go. 

The fire raged perilously close to the town of Paradise, which was burned to the ground in 2018 by a wildfire, killing 85 people. 

Climate scientists blame global warming for extreme wet and dry seasons in the U.S. West that have caused grasses and scrub to flourish then dry out, leaving abundant fuel for fires.

In California, all 18 National Forests were closed due to ‘unprecedented and historic fire conditions.’

To the south, the Creek Fire, about 35 miles north of Fresno, tore through the Sierra National Forest, which was susceptible due to drought and bark beetle damage, destroying over 360 homes and structures. 

President Barack Obama tweeted his concern over the dangers of climate change and urged voters to vote 

view of the Painted Ladies, the iconic row of historical Victorian homes with a downtown backdrop, under orange overcast sky in the afternoon in San Francisco on Wednesday

People gather at Alamo Square under an orange and yellow overcast sky overlooking the The Painted Ladies

A view of Cupid’s Span, a sculpture by Claes Oldenburge and Coosje van Bruggen, in the foreground and the Ferry Building Clock Tower in the background under an orange overcast sky in the afternoon in San Francisco

Traffic lights and car lights illuminate California Street during an orange overcast sky over the financial district in the afternoon in San Francisco. California wildfire smoke high in the atmosphere over the San Francisco Bay Area blocked the sunlight and turned the sky a dark orange and yellow shade for most of the day

Under darkened skies from wildfire smoke, a sailboat makes its way past the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge and lights at Oracle Park Wednesday,

On Wednesday morning, people in San Francisco and elsewhere in California woke to a deep orange sky that triggered apocalyptic visions in a year already rife with disturbing events.

Skies so dark at times that it appeared more night than day were accompanied in some places with ash falling like snow, the cause being massive wild fires filling the air with smoke and cinders.

‘The orange skies this morning are a result of wildfire smoke in the air,’ San Francisco Bay air quality officials said in a tweet.

‘These smoke particles scatter blue light and only allow yellow-orange-red light to reach the surface, causing skies to look orange.’

As smoke gets thick in some areas, it blocks sunlight causing dark skies, the officials explained.

Photos of the eerie scene, particularly of a San Francisco skyline fit for a dystopian science fiction film, spread quickly on social media.

‘Is there a word for ‘the apocalypse is upon us burnt sienna?’ read one tweet fired off by someone who felt using the word ‘orange’ to describe the sky was being too kind.

Others likened the scenes to planets other than Earth.

People from San Francisco to Seattle woke Wednesday to hazy clouds of smoke lingering in the air, darkening the sky to an eerie orange glow that kept street lights illuminated into midday, all thanks to dozens of wildfires throughout the West

Looking down Lombard Street, Coit Tower on Telegraph Hill at right and the eastern span of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, are darkened by wildfire smoke

Under darkened skies from wildfire smoke, a waiter carries a tray of Irish Coffee to people having lunch at the Buena Vista Cafe Wednesday in San Francisco. The photo was taken just after midday 

Lunchtime on Wednesday in San Francisco has an otherworldly glow about it thanks to the smoke from the states wildfires 

The sky was turned orange as hazy clouds of smoke lingered in the air all day long which saw the street lights remain on

California wildfire smoke high in the atmosphere over the San Francisco Bay Area blocked the sunlight and turned the sky a dark orange and yellow shade for most of the day on Wednesday

‘If literal fire skies don’t wake us up to climate change, then nothing will,’ tweeted YouTube influencer and Zadiko tea startup chief Zack Kornfeld.

‘Enjoy joking about how crazy this year is because we made this mess and it’s only going to get worse.’

Dark skies blocking the sun chilled temperatures at what has historically been the warmest time year in San Francisco.

‘Geo-color imagery shows a very thick multilevel smoke deck over much of California,’ the US National Weather Service said in a tweet.

‘This smoke is filtering the incoming energy from the sun, causing much cooler temperatures and dark dreary red-shifted skies across many areas.’ 

An orange sky in the early afternoon as seen from King Street in San Francisco

People sit at Alamo Square under an orange and yellow overcast sky overlooking the The Painted Ladies, the iconic row of historical Victorian homes with a downtown backdrop

An orange sky at Alamo Square Park in the afternoon in San Francisco, California

An orange sky in the early afternoon with the San Francisco Bay Bridge in the background as seen from King Street in San Francisco

Traffic lights and car lights illuminate an intersection under an orange overcast sky in the afternoon in San Francisco

Smoke hangs over the San Francisco skyline on Wednesday as dozens of wildfires rage across California

A satellite image shows smoke from dozens of wildfires in California and Oregon billowing over the Pacific Ocean

Two of California’s largest wildfires are located just outside of San Francisco, which is seen covered in smoke on Wednesday

A frightening red haze has been cast over towns in Oregon as 35 wildfires rage around the state

Several Oregon residents shared photos of red-stained skies on social media. The photo above was taken in the middle of the day in Salem  

Similar red skies are seen in Northern California as the Creek Fire continues its path through Fresno County outside Yosemite

More than 14,000 firefighters are battling blazes across California and some are working 72-hour shifts 

Golfers warm up on the driving range during the preview day of the Safeway Open in Napa, California, on Wednesday

A man walks along the Redwood highway by the Pacific Ocean as smoke covers Orick, California, on Wednesday

A woman crosses a street as smoke from wildfires covers an area near Eureka, California, on Thursday

California Governor Gavin Newsom on Sunday night declared a state of emergency as his hard-hit state struggled to beat back the blazes.

The Labor Day weekend heat wave fueled new fires that pushed the state to set a new record for number of acres burned with 2,178,015 as of Tuesday night.  

The previous record was set just two years ago and included the deadliest fire in state history, the Camp Fire, which ripped through the town of Paradise and killed 85 people in November 2018.  

Cal Fire spokeswoman Lynne Tolmachoff said the new record was especially alarming because of how early in the year it was set. 

‘It’s a little unnerving because September and October are historically our worst months for fires,’ Tolmachoff told AP. ‘It’s usually hot, and the fuels really dry out. And we see more of our wind events.’ 

Compared to last year, California has seen over 2,650 more fires and a nearly 2000 percent increase in the acres burned year-to-date (January 1 – September 7), across all jurisdictions, Cal Fire said. 

The state has seen 900 wildfires since August 15, many of them started by an intense series of thousands of lightning strikes in mid-August. There have been eight fire deaths and nearly 4,000 structures destroyed. 

Randy Moore, regional forester for the Forest Service’s Pacific Southwest Region, warned that the blazes are expected to worsen in the coming days.  

‘The wildfire situation throughout California is dangerous and must be taken seriously,’ Moore told AP. ‘Existing fires are displaying extreme fire behavior, new fire starts are likely, weather conditions are worsening, and we simply do not have enough resources to fully fight and contain every fire.’   

Law enforcement officers watch flames into the air as the Bear Fire continues to spread in Oroville, California, on Wednesday

A Butte County firefighter douses flames at the Bear Fire in Oroville, California, early Wednesday morning

Butte County firefighters watch as flames tower over their truck at the Bear Fire in Oroville, California, on Wednesday 

An orange glow hangs over Yosemite as the Creek Fire draws near, threatening evacuations 

Oregon family runs out of gas while fleeing fast-spreading wildfires during camping trip 

An Oregon family’s camping trip took a terrifying turn when their car ran out of gas as they fled from a raging wildfire.  

Allison Hargett, her husband Tyler and their six-year-old daughter Lilly drove up to Detroit Lake State Park on Labor Day to go boating. 

Hours after they settled in for the night, the family was awoken by evacuation orders at about 1am on Tuesday as the Beachie Creek Fire encroached on their campgrounds. 

The Hargett family quickly hitched up their boat and packed up their car to drive to safety, following behind their friends, Tim and Adamma Dye.  

As they made the trek out of the evacuation zone, Allison filmed several videos from the car which showed the forest enveloped by an eerie orange glow as flames consumed dozens of trees and embers cascaded from the sky.   

The family made it about 20 miles before their car ran out of gas outside Mill City, trapping them in the Marion County evacuation zone. 

Thankfully, they weren’t alone on the road. 

‘[Our friends] were in front of us and saw that we pulled over and turned around, tossed their stuff in the back seat and told us to get in and let’s go,’ Allison told CNN on Tuesday.   

Despite being forced to leave behind their boat, car and much of their gear to fit into their friends’ vehicle, Allison said her family was grateful to have made it to safety.  

‘We completely ran out of gas and would’ve been stranded. They saved us,’ she said.  

On Tuesday night, Cal Fire said that the Creek Fire had worsened in the previous 24 hours owing to strong winds.

‘The fire continued to grow under extreme conditions,’ the agency said in an update. ‘The Red Flag Warning for strong winds will impact the fire in the early morning, with stronger winds to come. The fire made wind driven runs and increased spotting distance. 

‘Red Flag Warning in effect until 11 pm Tuesday for high temperatures, low humidity and high winds.’

The California National Guard (CNG) was called in over the weekend to rescue more than 400 hikers and campers who found themselves trapped in the mountains after roads were closed to the Creek Fire. 

More than 200 people were airlifted from Mammoth Lake over Saturday and Sunday – and another 148 were rescued from near Lake Edison and Chinese Peak early Tuesday morning, the CNG said.  

Officials said at least 65 more hikers could still be trapped in the Sierra National Forest as rescue efforts continue.    

One hiker had been confirmed dead from an apparent heart attack, and officials warned there may be multiple more casualties.   

In Southern California, fires burned in Los Angeles, San Bernardino and San Diego counties, and the forecast called for the arrival of the region’s notorious Santa Anas. The hot, dry winds could reach 50 mph at times, forecasters said.

People in a half-dozen foothill communities east of Los Angeles were being told to stay alert because of a fire in the Angeles National Forest.

‘The combination of gusty winds, very dry air, and dry vegetation will create critical fire danger,’ the National Weather Service warned.

The US Forest Service on Monday decided to close all eight national forests in the southern half of the state and shutter campgrounds statewide.

Firefighters have made headway with one blaze in the area – the El Dorado Fire – which was sparked on Saturday by a gender reveal photoshoot, when a pyrotechnical smoke device sent sparks into the bone-dry brush.

The El Dorado Fire has burned more than 11,259 acres as of Tuesday night and is 19 percent contained. 

Officials said the family behind the gender reveal debacle could face civil or criminal charges for the fire. 

The threat of winds tearing down power lines or hurling debris into them and sparking a wildfire prompted Pacific Gas & Electric, the state’s largest utility, to shut off power to 172,000 customers over the weekend. 

More outages were expected Wednesday, with power not expected to be completely restored until Wednesday night. 

In Washington state, the town of Malden was almost entirely destroyed.

Whitman County Sheriff Brett Myers said that 70-80 percent of homes in the town of 300 people have gone up in flames.

Local news network KREM showed pictured of the charred Malden post office, a fire still burning inside the gutted building.  

The fire station, city hall and other buildings were also consumed, Myers said.

‘The scale of this disaster really can’t be expressed in words,’ he said. ‘The fire will be extinguished, but a community has been changed for a lifetime. I just hope we don’t find the fire took more than homes and buildings. I pray everyone got out in time.’

Larry Frick, who lives in Malden, told KXLY that he spent three hours to save his house amid the flames.

‘It’s gone, brother,’ he texted his sibling after the fire swept through. ‘The entire town is gone. Everything from here to Pine City is gone. The scariest time of my life.’ 

KREM said that at least nine wildfires were burning throughout the Inland Northwest on Monday, amid dry and windy conditions.

Washington Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz tweeted on Monday evening that, ‘Today alone, almost 300,000 acres in Washington have burned.’

‘Thousands of homes are without power. Many families have had to evacuate their homes and many homes have been lost,’ Franz wrote. ‘We’re still seeing new fire starts in every corner of the state.’

Governor Jay Inslee noted that more acres burned on Monday than in 12 of the last fire seasons in the state.  

‘We think all of these are human-caused in some dimension,’ Inslee said.

Allison Hargett, her husband Tyler and their six-year-old daughter Lilly had driven up to the lake on Labor Day to go boating when they were suddenly awoken by an evacuation order at about 1am Tuesday as the Beachie Creek Fire encroached on their campsite.  

The Hargett family quickly hitched up their boat and packed up their car to drive to safety, following behind their friends, Tim and Adamma Dye.  

As they made the trek out of the evacuation zone, Allison filmed several videos from the car which showed the forest enveloped by an eerie orange glow as flames consumed dozens of trees and embers cascaded from the sky.  

Allison Hargett, her husband Tyler and their six-year-old daughter Lilly (pictured together) were camping at Detroit Lake State Park when wildfire forced them to evacuate on Tuesday

The family made it about 20 miles before their car ran out of gas outside Mill City, trapping them in the Marion County evacuation zone. Thankfully, they weren’t alone on the road. 

‘[Our friends] were in front of us and saw that we pulled over and turned around, tossed their stuff in the back seat and told us to get in and let’s go,’ Allison told CNN on Tuesday.   

Despite being forced to leave behind their boat, car and much of their gear to fit into their friends’ vehicle, Allison said her family was grateful to have made it to safety.  

‘We completely ran out of gas and would’ve been stranded. They saved us,’ she said.  

The Beachie Creek Fire ignited on August 16 and has since torched more than 130,000 acres, according to local officials. It remains zero percent contained and is traveling at a rate of three acres per hour. 

High winds, dry conditions and a heatwave in the drought-stricken region helped fuel the fire over the weekend, prompting evacuations for several cities in Marion County, which includes Detroit Lake State Park.   

The Marion County Sheriff’s Office released video of multiple structures on fire in Mill City on Wednesday night, hours after the Hargett family and their friends left the area. 

Neighboring Clackamas County declared a state of emergency on Tuesday as four active fires – including Beachie Creek – put several communities under threat. 

As her family fled from the Beachie Creek Fire early Tuesday, Allison Hargett filmed several videos from the car which showed the forest enveloped by an eerie orange glow as flames consumed dozens of trees and embers cascaded from the sky

Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8716563/Three-dead-California-bear-fire-two-Oregon-90-major-fires-continue-burn.html

President Donald Trump speaks at the White House on Wednesday.
Pool/Getty Images

Facing the prospect of defeat in November, President Donald Trump is casting about for lies that might save him. On Tuesday night, at a rally in North Carolina, he claimed that Mexico is paying for the border wall (still false), that Joe Biden is planning “a blanket shutdown” to control the coronavirus (false), and that Trump’s supporters, by pretending in polls that they aren’t voting for him, are concealing a “virtual landslide” in his favor. At one point, the president blurted out, “This stuff is not even really believable.” But on one subject, Trump’s lies are particularly reprehensible: his contempt for military service.

That subject has been in the news this week because of an Atlantic article that quotes several statements Trump has made, privately and publicly, about war and sacrifice. In a 2017 visit to the Arlington National Cemetery grave of Robert Kelly, a Marine who died in Afghanistan, Trump allegedly told his father, retired Gen. John Kelly—who was then Trump’s secretary of homeland security—“I don’t get it. What was in it for them?” In a 2018 meeting, Trump asked his aides to omit wounded veterans from a parade because “nobody wants to see that.” In a third incident, Trump said of Gen. Joseph Dunford, who was then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, “That guy is smart. Why did he join the military?” In a fourth incident, Trump canceled a 2018 visit to a French cemetery for American service members killed in World War I, saying, “Why should I go to that cemetery? It’s filled with losers.” Trump also called Marines who died in that war “suckers,” and on two other occasions, he called former President George H.W. Bush a “loser” for being shot down while fighting in World War II.

The article, written by editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg, attributes these quotes, depending on the incident, to “eyewitnesses,” “three sources with direct knowledge,” or “four people with firsthand knowledge of the discussion.” Since the sources aren’t named, Trump thinks he can attack them as fake. But in so doing, the president has further exposed his own dishonesty.

On Thursday, when the article was published, Trump dismissed it as a fabrication. He said the magazine “made it up,” and he speculated that its putative sources “don’t exist.” But that defense soon collapsed, as other news organizations—the Associated Press, the Washington Post, the New York Times, CNN, and even Fox News—reported that they, too, had spoken with sources whose accounts matched the article. They described their sources, variously, as “former senior Trump administration officials,” “a senior Defense Department official with firsthand knowledge of events,” and “a senior U.S. Marine Corps officer who was told about Trump’s comments.” In theory, all these sources could be wrong. But Trump’s defense—that the Atlantic had concocted the quotes—was bogus.

Next, Trump targeted one incident—the one about the French cemetery—and produced aides who claimed that they had been present at the alleged meeting and that the visit was canceled only because of bad weather. They said they had never heard Trump call the war dead “losers.” This mirrors Trump’s press strategy against allegations of sexual harassment: Find women who say you didn’t grope them. It’s possible that Trump’s loyalists are recalling one discussion, while the media’s sources are talking about another. Goldberg refers to at least two distinct conversations.

After the article was published, Trump claimed that when officials advised him not to go to the cemetery in France, he argued with them. “The Secret Service told me, ‘You can’t do it,’ ” he recalled. “I said, ‘I have to do it. I want to be there.’ They said, ‘You can’t do it.’ ” The next day, Trump said his former national security adviser, John Bolton, backed up his story. But Bolton, while agreeing that he hadn’t heard the quotes about “losers” or “suckers,” stipulated that they could have been said in a separate conversation. On Monday, in a Fox News interview, Bolton added that the Atlantic’s sources were right about Trump’s contempt for Sen. John McCain, a Vietnam POW, and that as to Trump’s “general attitude toward the military,” the president “ends up denigrating almost everybody that he comes in contact with whose last name is not Trump.” Bolton shot down Trump’s story about pleading to go to the cemetery: “We had this discussion. It was mostly John Kelly presenting the logistical reasons why the trip couldn’t take place. And the president assented to the recommendation that he not go. He didn’t protest that he really needed to go.”

Trump has also claimed that, contrary to the Atlantic’s reporting, he approved a ritual lowering of flags “without hesitation or complaint” to honor McCain when the senator died in 2018. But hours after Trump made that claim, Miles Taylor, who had been the DHS deputy chief of staff when McCain died, shredded Trump’s account. “Mr. President, this is not true,” Taylor wrote. “You were angry that DHS notified federal buildings to lower the flags for Sen. McCain. I would know because your staff called and told me.”

Trump and Vice President Mike Pence have been asked repeatedly whether Kelly, the witness at the center of these stories, backs up Trump’s denials. On Friday, CNBC’s Kayla Tausche asked Pence about the cemetery visit: “There were two generals who were reported to have been present, Gen. Dunford and Gen. Kelly. Would you support their speaking out, to set the record straight?” Pence ducked the question. “I wasn’t in Paris, but it never happened,” he insisted. When Tausche asked Pence whether he was confident that Kelly and Dunford would agree, he ducked again. On Monday, reporters pressed Trump twice as to whether he had “asked John Kelly to refute” the Atlantic article. Trump tried to ignore the question and then said he hadn’t. In an ABC News interview on Tuesday, Trump’s former press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders begged off when she was asked to explain Kelly’s silence.

Trump told reporters it was absurd, in general, “to think that I would make statements negative to our military and our fallen heroes.” His campaign spokesman, Hogan Gidley, said the president “would never even think such vile thoughts.” Specifically, Trump denied the Atlantic’s allegation that he had insulted McCain: “I never called John a loser.” It took reporters almost no time to find a 2015 tweet in which Trump not only had called McCain a loser but had bragged about it, along with a video clip in which Trump said of McCain’s five years as a POW, “I like people that weren’t captured.”

In the days since the Atlantic article appeared, Trump has vindicated it—and discredited his denials that he would ever say such things—by bashing Kelly and the military. On Friday, he alleged that as White House chief of staff, Kelly “didn’t do a good job, had no temperament,” and “wasn’t even able to function.” On Saturday, Trump blasted McCain for having facilitated the Russia investigation. On Monday, he claimed that McCain “liked wars,” and he retweeted an allegation that the Atlantic article was an “information op” run by “the military industrial complex.” Trump said “the top people in the Pentagon … want to do nothing but fight wars” in order to “spend money” on behalf of “companies that make the bombs and make the planes.”

Trump has a long and well-documented history of contempt for military service. There’s audio of him congratulating a man for faking a disability, as Trump did, to escape the Vietnam draft. There’s video of him challenging the heroism of being a POW in 1999, as well as in 2015. Videos, transcripts, witness testimony, and his own tweets show him ridiculing American generals in 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019, and 2020. His own family members say he criticized his brother for going into the military and threatened to disown his son if he enlisted.

Exposing Trump’s lies and contempt won’t stop loyalists from defending him. On Sunday, when CNN’s Dana Bash pointed out that he had “denigrated prisoners of war” in his 2015 dig at captured service members, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Robert Wilkie shrugged off Trump’s words. “I judge a man by his actions,” said Wilkie. When Bash asked about Trump’s attack on Kelly’s temperament and performance, Wilkie refused to disagree. “I’m not going to get into a ‘he said, she said’ with the president and the former chief of staff,” he replied.

There’s nothing Trump’s cronies won’t excuse. And in this election, tens of millions of people will vote for him, no matter how brazenly he lies and scorns the armed services. But that doesn’t make the truth less worth telling. The president of the United States despises those who sacrificed for our country. And he’s lying about that, just as he has lied about everything else.

Slate is covering the election issues that matter to you. Support our work with a Slate Plus membership. You’ll also get a suite of great benefits.

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Source Article from https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/09/trump-lying-military-contempt.html

Three people were killed and several others were injured in a wildfire that quickly spread through Butte County Tuesday night into Wednesday morning, officials said.

Two people were found in the same location and the third person was found in another location, Butte County Sheriff Kory L. Honea said Wednesday night. Investigators are working to identify the remains and notify relatives.

Several people were injured after being trapped by the Bear Fire during the overnight hours. Cal Fire Battalion Chief Sean Norman said firefighters were rescuing a lot of people.

“We were rescuing people most of the night. We had several critical burn injuries of civilians we were able to rescue and bring into the fire station and then get them off the hill,” Norman said.

Cal Fire said more than 100 people had to be rescued.

Honea said the sheriff’s office got 85 calls for welfare checks or attempt to locate. He said 73 people have been found safe, and investigators are working to locate the 12 others.

The Bear Fire, which is part of the North Complex Fire, flared up around 10 a.m. Tuesday due to strong northern winds, the U.S. Forest Service Plumas National Forest division said. The fire consumed more than 97,100 acres in the past 24 hours.

The North Complex Fire, which sparked mid-August from a lightning strike, has burned 252,163 acres and is 24% contained, as of Wednesday night. The wildfire ignited in Plumas County last month and then spread to Yuba and Butte counties after windy conditions Tuesday caused the blaze to flare up.

Cal Fire said about 200 structures have been destroyed or damaged. The fire is threatening more than 23,000 structures.

EVACUATIONS IN PLACE

The flare-up made the fire move in a southwestern direction, prompting evacuations in Plumas, Yuba and Butte counties, the Forest Service said.

Plumas County

  • La Porte
  • Little Grass Valley Reservoirs (including residents, campgrounds and recreational facilities off Little Grass Valley Road west of Quincy La Porte Road)
  • Bucks Lake from Bucks Lake Road at the Plumas/Butte county line to Bucks Lake at Big Creek Road

Butte County

  • You can use this map to show where active evacuation orders are for Butte County.

Yuba County (evacuees will not be able to travel north from Yuba County)

  • Clipper Mills
  • Along the northern Yuba County border from Strawberry Valley to Forbestown and south to Rackerby and Brownsville-Challenge all the way over the upper portion of Bullards Bar Reservoir

Evacuation Centers

  • Gridley Fairgrounds, located at 199 E. Hazel Street in Gridley
  • Dobbins Alcouffee Center, 9185 Marysville Road in Oregon House
  • Yuba Sutter Fairgrounds, 442 Franklin Ave., Yuba City

BATTLING THE BLAZE

The wildfire is expected to continue burning into Wednesday night due to poor relative humidity recovery, the U.S. Forest Service said.

“Where open line exists, expect active fire behavior to include uphill runs and short range spotting. The potential for very active to extreme fire behavior exists where slope and wind align,” USFS said in an incident update.

Overnight, crews were working hard to battle large flames.

“It was a long night. We battled in here all night. We had about a 15-mile wide firefront come down into all of these communities. We had, at times, 200-foot wall of fire come through here,” Norman said Wednesday. “[It] destroyed a lot of homes here, trapped a lot of people.”

Source Article from https://www.kcra.com/article/bear-fire-3-killed-several-injured-in-butte-county-wildfire/33973299

“You ask all of the ambassadors to help you, and everyone says, ‘no,’ ” she said, speaking by phone earlier in September from a bar in Zagreb, Croatia’s capital. “It feels like over here that there’s no virus.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2020/09/09/coronavirus-covid-live-updates-us/

As many as 3,000 firefighters battled 48 blazes across Oregon on Wednesday as Gov. Kate Brown said the state will likely experience the greatest loss of property and lives from wildfires in its history.

“Everyone must be on high alert,” she said. “The next several days are going to be extremely difficult.”

Brown said about 500 square miles across Oregon, a total footprint approximately the size of Hood River County, had gone up in flames since Monday night.

Brown declared a statewide emergency Tuesday, the first time she has done so for wildfires. The fires were affecting those living in or near all the state’s major population centers along Interstate 5, from Medford to Portland.

On Wednesday afternoon, a Marion County family reported the fires’ first fatalities: a boy and his grandmother. The Jackson County Sheriff’s Office reported that a third person had died, saying Ashland police are investigating a death related to the Almeda fire. The agency did not immediately provide more details.

Hundreds of thousands of acres were burning near Mount Hood, in southern Oregon, east of Salem, east of Eugene, on the border of Washington and Yamhill counties and on the Warm Springs Reservation.

Brown said the state as a whole is a tinderbox with the most extreme fire conditions in three decades.

The governor and state forestry officials said the combination of dry weather and high winds helped the blazes grow quickly.

Doug Grafe, chief of fire protection at the Oregon Department of Forestry, said winds blowing from the east into canyons and other low spots fed many of the fires.

Gusts were strongest Monday evening but slowed by Wednesday and, by Thursday, are expected to revert to their normal pattern of blowing in from the Pacific Ocean.

They’re cooler, Grafe said, making it easier for firefighters to set containment lines.

Although the state has plenty of helicopters and planes to battle fires from the air, it has not been able to safely fly them due to the winds gusting up to 50 mph and low visibility, Grafe said. And fires burning in Washington, Oregon and California have strained national firefighting capabilities.

Andrew Phelps, director of the Oregon Office of Emergency Management, urged people who are not under evacuation orders to stay home and off roads to make it easier for those fighting and fleeing forest fires to travel speedily.

He also cautioned Oregonians against calling 911 unless it was a genuine emergency.

“Don’t call 911 to report smoke. There is smoke everywhere,” Phelps said.

Here is how the week’s wildfires unfolded across the state as of Wednesday evening.

Marion County

Hundreds of people poured into the Oregon State Fairgrounds as wildfires in the foothills of the Cascade Mountains pushed ash into the sky and burned down entire communities. The Santiam and Lionshead fires, which tore through roughly 200,000 acres in 72 hours, are the state’s largest.

Residents of Gates, a city of 500 near the border of Marion and Linn counties, said their hometown was all but destroyed. The town’s school, as well as the mayor’s house, were leveled.

Barb Mahlum fled the flames as they destroyed her home.

“This is a nightmare. It was my dream house and it’s gone,” she said.

It’s unclear how many people escaped the fires but county commissioners said the fairgrounds served 350 breakfasts to people sheltering there Wednesday.

The Marion County Sheriff’s Office announced Oregon 22 east of Salem was closed at Milepost 13 in both directions as crews mounted search and rescue efforts in the Santiam Canyon area.

Sheriff Joe Kast said his deputies poured into the wooded region in the days leading up to the blaze, informing hikers, hunters and campers on the Pacific Crest Trail and in the Mount Jefferson Wilderness about chaotic conditions conducive to rapidly spreading fire.

Jackson County

Thousands have been told to evacuate in southern Oregon as strong winds fed the Almeda fire, which carved a path of destruction through the towns of Talent and Phoenix. The fire also edged into the southern part of Medford on Wednesday.

The fire destroyed hundreds of homes and wiped out businesses in a region home to more than 80,000.

The Medford Mail Tribune reported that Jackson County Sheriff Nate Sickler said the agency had found human remains in the area where the Almeda fire started, and that they were in the early stages of an active criminal investigation.

Jackson County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Mike Moran later confirmed to The Oregonian/OregonLive that deputies were assisting Ashland police with a death investigation tied to the fire. Moran said he did not have any other information about the case.

Phoenix Mayor Chris Luz said his town, with roughly 4,650 people just south of the Jackson County seat, was decimated.

“Many businesses have been burned down,” he said. “Certain neighborhoods, including my own, have been burned down. There are many, many, many homes that are gone.”

Sandra Spelliscy, city manager of Talent, with a population of about 6,465, said she saw breathtaking destruction as she toured the community.

She surveyed two senior communities of manufactured homes.

One had about 65 homes. They were all destroyed. A second had 160 homes, of which 21 survived.

The city was blocked off to keep residents from returning due to the fire danger.

Among the evacuees late Tuesday in Jackson County were about 950 residents at the sprawling Rogue Valley Manor retirement and care community on Medford’s southern end. The facility provides housing to 825 people who live independently, plus an additional 125 people in assisted, nursing or dementia care.

Medford Mayor Gary Wheeler urged local residents to conserve water so pressure remains strong enough for fire suppression efforts. He also urged calm.

“Water supplies are good. There are no power interruptions,” he said. “We are doing well overall at this point if people just carry on their business and be prepared like we are now.”

Clackamas County

Wildfires in Clackamas County destroyed at least 22 structures including some homes since Sunday and threatened at least 600 more as thousands were forced to evacuate their homes.

The entire county is under some level of evacuation warning with about half the county, including the communities of Estacada and Molalla, under a Level 3 “go now” evacuation order.

Firefighters focused on four major blazes, Clackamas Fire District No. 1 Chief Fred Charlton said: the Riverside, Dowty, Unger Road and Wilhoit fires.

The Riverside fire, which began near the Riverside campground along the Clackamas River, grew to more than 112,000 acres Wednesday after moving about 17 miles Tuesday.

The other three major fires burned through a combined 2,500 acres as of Wednesday morning, Charlton said. His agency wasn’t yet focused on figuring out how the fires began but said at least one blaze that destroyed two structures was caused by people.

A 10-acre brush fire off Oregon 213 and Spangler Road started Tuesday night after an RV pulling a Jeep emitted sparks and caught fire, according to the county sheriff’s office.

Nancy Bush, director of disaster management for the county, said Wednesday that officials had made contact with 16,000 households regarding evacuations, although some of them may be duplicates.

The county set up an evacuation check-in site at Clackamas Community College. Limited shelter space was also being provided there and at Oregon City High School.

The Oregon Conference Headquarters of Seventh-day Adventists, Clackamas Town Center and the Milwaukie-Portland Elks Lodge No. 142 were all allowing people in RVs to park on their properties.

The Clackamas County Fairgrounds announced Wednesday afternoon that the grounds were full and could no longer accept displaced livestock.

Lane County

A massive wildland fire outside one of Oregon’s largest cities consumed more than 100,000 acres in Lane County on Wednesday, tearing through small towns, forcing thousands to flee their homes and scorching a scenic wonderland beloved by outdoor enthusiasts.

The Holiday Farm fire pushed along Oregon 126 and came within a dozen miles of the Eugene-Springfield area. The blaze decimated the community of Blue River, home to some 800 people.

“There is just catastrophic damage, communities completely wiped out,” Lane County Commissioner Heather Buch said. “It’s devastating.”

The fire began Monday near Blue River, about 50 miles east of Eugene. The cause remained unknown and the fire was uncontained. About 190 firefighters had been mobilized against the blaze, far fewer than the 1,000 needed for a fire its size, according to state and county officials.

“They’re just spread so thin across the state,” Buch said. “Were just making do with what we have.”

Officials ordered evacuations in the Mohawk Valley north of the McKenzie River and east of Marcola Road.

County officials expect to hear about fatalities but none were reported as of early Wednesday evening. At least 3,000 people in Lane County were displaced by the blaze.

Lincoln County

Two large fires burning in the coastal county, the Echo Mountain fire and the Kinberling fire, together grew to about 1,000 acres Wednesday, officials said. The blazes were driven west by winds of 30 to 50 mph.

An ember ignited a grassfire at the Chinook Winds golf course in the north of Lincoln City as well. Samaritan North Lincoln Hospital, which was at Level 2 “be set to go” orders, was shut down. Officials closed the hospital at 9 a.m. and moved its patients to Newport.

County officials ordered anyone living north of Northwest 40th Street in the county seat — near the Chinook Winds Casino Resort — to leave immediately. That included anyone between the coast and East Devil’s Lake Road, plus residents with addresses on that street.

Fires closed Oregon 18 at Milepost 7, and U.S. 101 was closed from Gleneden Beach to Lincoln City.

Fires burned on both sides of Oregon 18 near Otis.

Washington and Yamhill counties

A five-alarm fire in rural Washington and Yamhill counties forced the evacuation of as many as 150 homes Tuesday night.

By late in the evening, firefighters established a fire line at Northeast Mountain Top Road. At least three barns caught fire but no homes had burned.

The fire created anxiety for residents of Newberg, the nearest city. It was also close enough to George Fox University that officials sought advice from local law enforcement officials whether they should gear up their evacuation plan.

Officials in Washington County said a separate fire torched as many as 2,000 acres and is so far 50% contained. A smaller fire near Henry Hagg Lake, estimated at about 50 acres, was also 50% contained.

The Yamhill Valley News-Register reported that the fairgrounds in McMinnville began boarding animals after facilities in Marion, Clackamas and Polk counties filled up.

“It’s like a Noah’s Ark out here,” County Fair Manager Gary Wertz told the newspaper.

Andrew Theen, Betsy Hammond, Brooke Herbert, Elliot Njus, Jamie Goldberg, Jamie Hale, Jayati Ramakrishnan, Jeff Manning, Kale Williams, Mike Rogoway, Noelle Crombie and Shane Dixon Kavanagh contributed to this report.

–Eder Campuzano and Hillary Borrud

Source Article from https://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/2020/09/oregon-wildfires-should-put-state-on-high-alert-as-48-blazes-burn-at-least-3-people-die-gov-kate-brown-says.html

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi questioned why Republicans and members of the first family have not intervened to prevent President Donald Trump from carrying out “bad policy,” particularly in the context of new revelations from investigative journalist Bob Woodward’s new book.

Woodward’s new book, entitled Rage, references audio recordings from interviews in which Trump admitted to the journalist that he knew the novel coronavirus was significantly more deadly than the flu but intentionally downplayed the risk to the public. “I wanted to always play it down,” the president told Woodward. The book features a series of other controversial revelations, citing current and former administration officials.

“You would think that the family, or Republicans, would have some kinds of intervention,” Pelosi, a California Democrat, said, responding to the president’s remarks in an interview with MSNBC. “Clearly the behavior of the president is not on the level.”

The Speaker argued that Republicans in Congress will have “doggie doo on their shoes” for the rest of their lives because they enabled the president. Republican lawmakers, as Pelsoi highlighted, have largely defended the president throughout his tenure in the White House.

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Pelosi said that Trump’s taped remarks showed his “weakness,” arguing that it represented that he didn’t know how to “cope with the challenge to our country.” She strongly criticized the president for having a “total disregard” for the American people.

When reached for comment, the White House referred Newsweek to the public response from Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany.

Newsweek subscription offers >

“The president never downplayed the virus,” McEnany insisted to reporters on Wednesday, despite the recordings of Trump saying he “always” downplays it. “The president has never lied to the American public on COVID,” she said.

Trump repeatedly compared the novel coronavirus pandemic to the common flu in public remarks over the past year, despite admitting to Woodward that he knew it was much more deadly. He also told supporters repeatedly that the pandemic would be over soon or would simply “disappear,” after telling the journalist that he liked to downplay the threat.

“I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic,” Trump said.

As of Wednesday afternoon, more than 6.3 million Americans have been confirmed infected by COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus. Of those infected, nearly 190,000 have died. The U.S. continues to have the highest number confirmed cases of any country in the world. It also continues to have the highest number of deaths of any nation.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden also condemned Trump’s downplaying of the pandemic in Wednesday comments.

“While this deadly disease ripped through our nation, he failed to do his job on purpose,” Biden told a small group at a Michigan campaign event. “It’s a life and death betrayal of the American people.”

p:last-of-type::after, .node-type-slideshow .article-body > p:last-of-type::after {
content: none
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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/nancy-pelosi-asks-why-republicans-havent-staged-intervention-over-trumps-actions-after-1530782

Trump loyalists running the Department of Homeland Security manipulated intelligence reports to play down the threat of Russian election interference and white supremacists and exaggerate the threat of antifa and anarchist groups, according to the department’s former top intelligence official.

The official, Brian Murphy, said he was demoted in August from his position running the department’s office of intelligence and analysis because of his refusal to go along with the fabrication of intelligence to match Donald Trump’s rhetoric, and for making formal complaints about the political pressure. He filed a whistleblower reprisal complaint on Tuesday.

Murphy was transferred to a DHS management position after his team was found to have collected information on reporters and protesters in Portland, Oregon. In his complaint, he claims the office “never knowingly or deliberately collected information on journalists, at least as far as Mr Murphy is aware or ever authorized”, and he described the reporting as “significantly flawed”.

He insists the real reason for his transfer was his refusal to manipulate vital intelligence on national security.

Murphy alleges that the efforts to falsify DHS intelligence date back to 2018, when the then homeland security secretary, Kirstjen Nielsen, asked his office to inflate the numbers of known or suspected terrorists crossing the border with Mexico, in support of Trump’s demand for a border wall.

Murphy says the intelligence identified three such terrorist cases. In December 2018, Nielsen told the House judiciary committee there were 3,755.

According to Murphy’s testimony, Nielsen and her successor, Chad Wolf, continued to exaggerate the terrorist threat at the border in 2019, while being aware of the real figures.

Murphy’s most serious allegations concern the effort to downplay Russian meddling in the election while it was under way. In May this year, Murphy says, Wolf told him “to cease providing intelligence assessments on the threat of Russian interference in the United States, and instead start reporting on interference activities by China and Iran”.

Wolf told Murphy the orders came from the national security adviser, Robert O’Brien.

“Mr Murphy informed Mr Wolf he would not comply with these instructions, as doing so would put the country in substantial and specific danger,” the whistleblower complaint says.

On 7 July, Murphy was told to stop circulating any information about Russian disinformation efforts until he met Wolf. The next day, according to the complaint, the acting homeland security secretary told Murphy the assessment of the Russian role “should be ‘held’ because it ‘made the president look bad’”.

When Murphy objected, he was excluded from meetings on the subject, and an alternative assessment was leaked to the press which put Russian interference on a par with China and Iran – an equivalence which Murphy, and most intelligence experts, say is not supported by the facts.

“This is a huge deal,” the former National Security Agency lawyer Susan Hennessey wrote on Twitter. “Is [national security adviser] O’Brien directing the [intelligence community] and others to lie about or distort the China election threat to hurt Biden and help Trump?”

Top administration officials, including the director of national intelligence, John Ratcliffe; the secretary of state, Mike Pompeo; and the attorney general, William Barr, have claimed that China is as big a threat, if not a much greater danger, to the integrity of the US elections than Russia, with the implication that China favours Trump’s Democratic challenger, Joe Biden. No substantial evidence has been presented to support that claim, which is contradicted by a vast amount of material, including reports by the special counsel Robert Mueller, and the Republican-led Senate intelligence committee, detailing Russian interference.

According to the whistleblower complaint, a homeland threat assessment (HTA) drawn up by Murphy’s intelligence analysts in March this year was also blocked by Wolf and other DHS political appointees because of its sections on Russian interference and the white supremacist threat.

Murphy was told by his superiors he “needed to specifically modify the section on white supremacy in a manner that made the threat appear less severe, as well as include information on the prominence of violent ‘leftwing’ groups”. When he refused, the HTA was taken out of his hands.

“It is Mr Murphy’s assessment that the final version of the HTA will more closely resemble a policy document with references to antifa and ‘anarchist’ groups than an intelligence document,” his complaint says.

Hennessey, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and the executive editor of the Lawfare blog, urged some scepticism over Murphy’s claims in view of his office’s involvement in the monitoring of journalists in Portland.

“Murphy’s account is especially weak on key allegation that he was reassigned as retaliation for whistleblowing, as opposed to astonishingly bad judgment. It could be that, in an effort to tell a self-serving story, he is also revealing very serious (and real) wrongdoing at DHS,” she wrote.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/sep/09/trump-whistleblower-russia-election-threat

The White House previously set a deadline of Sept. 20 for the Chinese-owned company to announce a plan to sell TikTok’s U.S. operations to a U.S. corporation, or face a shutdown in the United States by Sept. 29. Any such deal would have to be completed by Nov. 12.

The company had been negotiating to sell TikTok’s U.S. operations to Microsoft in partnership with Walmart, or Oracle. A deal was close to completion, prompting CEO Kevin Mayer to announce his resignation

However, the sale hit a snag after Chinese officials introduced new restrictions on technology exports that could require Chinese approval for TikTok to sell its algorithm, which is part of the core value of the app.

CNBC’s Julia Boorstin contributed to this report. 

Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/09/09/bytedance-us-government-talking-about-avoiding-full-sale-of-tiktok.html

Democrats are “playing politics with people’s lives” by “sowing doubt” about a coronavirus vaccine, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany told “Fox & Friends” on Tuesday.

McEnany made the comment reacting to statements made by Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden in Lancaster, Pa., on Monday.

A reporter asked Biden, “Would you take the COVID vaccine if the Trump administration offered it before the election?”

“I would want to see what the scientists said,” the former vice president said in response.

The reporter then asked, “Do you trust [Dr. Anthony] Fauci and the FDA (Food and Drug Administration)?”

“I want full transparency on a vaccine,” Biden said in response. “One of the problems is the way he’s [Trump is] playing with politics.”

“He’s said so many things that aren’t true I’m worried if we do have a really good vaccine people will be reluctant to take it and so he’s undermining public confidence, but pray to God we have it,” Biden continued.

“If I could get a vaccine tomorrow, I’d do it. If it cost me the election, I’d do it.”

“We need a vaccine and we need it now, as quick as we can get it,” he went on to say. “We have to listen to the scientists.”

On Monday, President Trump claimed that a coronavirus vaccine could be delivered by October, saying it would be “very safe and effective.”

During a Labor Day press conference at the White House, the president touted his administration’s “Operation Warp Speed” program, a public-private partnership that he announced in May, which would produce a vaccine against the novel coronavirus.

“Under my leadership, we’ll produce a vaccine in record time,” Trump said.

The president has repeatedly said that the vaccine would be available by the end of the year, but his comments Monday seemed to suggest a possible vaccine against COVID-19 could become available to the public before the election in November.

The president went on to slam Democrats, claiming they are “disparaging” the vaccine.

“It is so contrary to all of the lies. They are political lies,” Trump said. “And it is so dangerous for our country.”

TRUMP SAYS A BIDEN-HARRIS ADMINISTRATION WOULD ‘DESTROY’ COUNTRY, ECONOMY

McEnany stressed on Tuesday that President Trump will “depend on the scientists” as it pertains to a coronavirus vaccine, “which is what he’s done every single step of the way.”

She echoed Trump in saying that what Democrats are doing “is very, very dangerous.”

“They are literally playing politics with people’s lives here by sowing doubt about a vaccine,” McEnany said.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

She went on to note that “we have renowned experts over at ‘Operation Warp Speed’ that are working on this.”

“President Trump has tore through bureaucratic barriers so we can get a safe, effective, and timely vaccine,” McEnany said.

Fox News’ Brooke Singman contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/kayleigh-mcenany-dems-playing-politics-coronavirus-vaccine

Topline

President Trump told Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward as early as February that coronavirus was “deadly stuff” and later said he wanted to “play it down” to avoid creating a panic, according to audio files reported by CNN.

Key Facts

Woodward reports in his upcoming book “Rage” that National Security Advisor Robert O’Brien gave Trump a “jarring” top secret briefing on the virus on January 28th.

O’Brien told Trump that the virus would be the “biggest national security threat” of his administration and his deputy warned of asymptomatic spread, Woodward writes, reportedly causing Trump’s head to “pop up.”

Trump told Woodward in May that he didn’t remember the briefing, adding “I’m sure he said it,” and calling O’Brien a “nice guy.”

Trump also told Woodward in an interview in March of “startling facts” about the virus, such as that it’s “not just old people,” even though he claimed as recently as August that young people are “immune” to the virus.

The White House declined to comment on the record.

Crucial Quote

Trump made no secret of his efforts to purposefully suppress information about the true severity of the virus, admitting to Woodward in March, “I wanted to always play it down. I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic.”

Big Number

188,688. That’s how many Americans have died from coronavirus out of nearly 6.3 million cases, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control.

Chief Critic

Woodward’s book reportedly features a number of damning quotes from Trump’s subordinates, with former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis calling the president “dangerous” and “unfit.” Woodward also reports that former Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats “continued to harbor the secret belief… that Putin had something on Trump,” though he lacked intelligence to back it up.

Tangent

Woodward’s book also reportedly contains information potentially bolstering an anonymously sourced piece in The Atlantic suggesting Trump called U.S. service members killed in combat “suckers” and “losers,” which the White House has strenuously denied. According to Woodward, an aide to Mattis overheard Trump saying “my fucking generals are a bunch of pussies.” Trump also told Woodward of generals’ views on trade deals, “I wouldn’t say they were stupid, because I would never say that about our military people. But if they said that, they — whoever said that was stupid.”

What To Watch For

Woodward’s book, a followup to his 2018 bestseller “Fear,” about the frenetic dynamic in the early years of Trump’s White House, is slated to come out on Sept. 15.

Full coverage and live updates on the Coronavirus

Source Article from https://www.forbes.com/sites/andrewsolender/2020/09/09/audio-reveals-trump-knew-of-virus-severity-early-and-sought-to-play-it-down/

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s campaign said Wednesday that it had raised $210 million in August, far short of the $365 million haul by Democratic nominee Joe Biden’s campaign, as the president’s fundraising advantage over his opponent continues to evaporate.

The Trump campaign said the total raised by the re-election effort, the Republican National Committee and affiliated joint fundraising committees included $76 million raised during the Republican National Convention, compared with $70 million brought in by the Democrats during their convention. The Trump campaign said August was the largest online fundraising month for the re-election effort.

The campaign has been looking to conserve cash in recent weeks, going off the airwaves twice in key states to conserve cash and redirect ad dollars to early voting battlegrounds. The president told reporters ahead of his acceptance speech that one of the reasons he was leaning toward using the White House as the venue for that event was to save money.

“The Trump campaign will have all the resources we need to spread the message of President Trump’s incredible record of achievement, on the ground and on the air, and define Joe Biden as a tool of the radical left,” said Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien in an email to supporters announcing the fundraising total.

Biden’s presidential campaign announced last week that it had raised a record monthly haul of $365 million in August, a busy month that included the addition of Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., to the ticket as well as the Democratic National Convention.

There has been a shrinking appetite from some major GOP donors to give more, especially after many wrote large checks for a convention that never materialized; others may have already contributed the legal maximum. The rising reluctance has left the campaign more reliant on smaller donors who may also be feeling their own financial strain from the economic downturn, said Republican donors and strategists.

Trump said Tuesday he’d be willing to put his own money into the campaign if needed, repeating his 2016 pledge to do the same.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2020-election/trump-august-fundraising-haul-falls-far-short-biden-s-n1239677

The wildfires come after a record-shattering heat wave and amid human-caused climate change that is heightening fire risks, along with temperatures, in the West. These blazes are being driven by strong, dry, offshore winds that are causing extreme fire behavior, which can produce everything from mushroom cloud-like plumes of smoke that reach 40,000 feet in height, to vortexes that make it impossible for firefighters to contain an advancing fire.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2020/09/09/western-fires-live-updates/

President Trump arrives to speak about the environment during a Tuesday stop in Jupiter, Florida.

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President Trump arrives to speak about the environment during a Tuesday stop in Jupiter, Florida.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

President Trump has released an additional 20 names he would select from if any Supreme Court vacancies arise during his remaining time in office, including the president’s rival turned Senate ally, Ted Cruz. The list also includes Sens. Tom Cotton and Josh Hawley, as well as two former solicitors general.

The president’s running list, which he first compiled in 2016, already included more than a dozen conservative legal minds from across the country. With Wednesday’s additions, he adds bulk to the number of justices he would choose from to bolster the Court’s conservative majority.

“Over the next four years, the next president will choose hundreds of federal judges and one, two, three, four Supreme Court justices,” Trump said during a Wednesday press conference at the White House before laying out a bleak picture of possible realities if “radical left judges” were nominated under Democratic rival, Joe Biden.

Trump’s updated list, which includes several women and people of color, reflects the emphasis the Republican Party has to pay in its attempt to more broadly court voters outside of white, often older, reliably conservative circles.

The Wednesday list includes Daniel Cameron, the Black, conservative Kentucky attorney general who has faced widespread criticism this year for his handling of the police shooting death of Breonna Taylor, which sparked nationwide protests against police brutality.

Supreme Court nominations are among the most consequential and long-lasting decisions a president can make. Justices to the highest court in the land have a lifetime appointment and are the final say in controversial decisions such as abortion rights, gay marriage and civilian gun ownership.

In a tweet following Trump’s announcement, Josh Hawley, one of a handful of sitting U.S. senators the president said he would choose from if the time came, declined the president’s endorsement to the court.

“I appreciate the President’s confidence in listing me as a potential Supreme Court nominee. But as I told the President, Missourians elected me to fight for them in the Senate, and I have no interest in the high court. I look forward to confirming constitutional conservatives,” Hawley wrote.

The full list of Trump’s additional picks is as follows:

Bridget Bade of Arizona, judge of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
Daniel Cameron of Kentucky, attorney general of the commonwealth of Kentucky
Paul Clement of Virginia, former solicitor general
Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas
Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas
Stuart Kyle Duncan of Louisiana, judge on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals
Steven Engel of the District of Columbia, Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel at the Department of Justice
Noel Francisco, former solicitor general
Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri
James Oh of Texas, judge on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals
Gregory Katsas of Virginia, judge on the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals
Barbara Lagoa, a Florida judge on the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals
Christopher Landau of Maryland, United States Ambassador to Mexico
Carlos Muñiz of Florida, justice on the Supreme Court of Florida
Martha Pacold of Illinois, judge on the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois
Peter Phipps of Pennsylvania, judge on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals
Sarah Pitlyk of Missouri, judge on the District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri
Allison Jones Rushing of North Carolina, judge on the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals
Kate Todd of Virginia, deputy assistant to the president and deputy counsel to the president
Lawrence VanDyke of Nevada, judge on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/09/09/911194201/trump-adds-ted-cruz-tom-cotton-to-list-of-potential-scotus-picks

New York City is the only major city in the world that is yet to reopen indoor dining after closing for the coronavirus pandemic, despite having greater testing than anywhere else and an infection rate of less than one percent. 

The industry in the Big Apple is at its wits end with Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio who inexplicably won’t allow discussions for indoor dining to resume. 

They insist it is not safe and that other regions have seen a sudden uptick in cases when it begins but every other city in the state of New York is allowing it and most around America are too. 

Beyond the US, in cities including London, Paris, Milan and Beijing – all of which coronavirus spikes – indoor dining is happening safely. 

It has driven restaurateurs and bar owners in New York to sue the city and state for $2billion in damages. They are now seeking an injunction and are demanding Cuomo and de Blasio show the so-called scientific evidence they have that proves it cannot be done safely. 

New York City restaurants remain closed for indoor dining indefinitely until officials can decide on a plan to reopen them. It is destroying the entire industry and is growing increasingly difficult to understand when infection rates are low and other indoor activities like shopping, haircuts and nail salons are able to function 

The infection rate in New York City has now been below one percent since July and the number of deaths and hospitalizations continues to go down 

LONDON – JULY 4th REOPENING

Indoor dining in London resumed on July 4 and people were allowed to dine indoors immediately. 

There were rules – like the number of people permitted at one table and how far apart people had to sit – but the infection rate held somewhat steady afterwards. 

People were not only told they could go out again to bars and restaurants but they were encouraged to do it by the British government’s Eat Out to Help Out scheme which subsidized restaurants, allowing them to give diners 50 percent off their meals, to draw in more customers. 

The UK’s infection rate saw a slight uptick afterwards but the number of daily deaths remains lower than ever before. 

Diners in The Bluebird in London on July 4, when dining reopened across the UK after weeks of closures. Perspex glass separates the tables and staff had to wear extra safety equipment but it has proven safe 

Dining indoors in London and other parts of the UK resumed on July 4 but it did not cause a spike in COVID-19 deaths. There was a slight uptick in cases but deaths remain lower than in months 

PARIS – JUNE 15th REOPENING 

Restaurants in Paris were allowed to welcome diners again on June 15. Staff had to wear masks and some were tentative about reopening but the number of deaths remained low. 

It allowed residents, many of whom are elderly, to return to the cafe culture they adore with special, new safety precautions. 

Tourists from other parts of France were also allowed to revisit.  

The staff of Paris restaurant La Tour d’Argent is briefed before the lunch service in central Paris on September 2, 2020. France allowed people back into restaurants on June 15 and so far it has had no bearing on COVID-19 deaths 

Across France, there has been an uptick in the number of cases recently – due largely in part to summer travel – but the number of deaths are nowhere close to where they were at their worst

BERLIN – MAY 15th REOPENING 

All of Germany’s restaurants were allowed to reopen, bringing people back inside, on May 15th. The number was limited to fewer than six at a table and only if they were from two households or less. 

That was relaxed the following month. 

Before she made the decision, German Chancellor Angela Merkel noted the decrease in coronavirus cases and deaths. 

‘We can afford some audacity,’ she said at the time. 

All of Germany’s restaurants were allowed to reopen, bringing people back inside, on May 15th. The number was limited to fewer than six at a table and only if they were from two households or less

Before she made the decision, German Chancellor Angela Merkel noted the decrease in coronavirus cases and deaths. ‘We can afford some audacity,’ she said at the time.

ITALY – MAY 18TH REOPENING 

Italy, which once saw catastrophic coronavirus numbers like the rest of Italy, allowed diners back into restaurants, bars and shops on May 18, after the spike had passed. 

It allowed teaming metropolises like Rome, Florence, Naples and Milan to restart an essential part of their economy after the crippling months-long lockdown. 

Since then, cases have seen a slight uptick but deaths remain lower than they were in April. 

Restaurant staff wear face masks as they serve meals to customers at ‘La Favorita’ restaurant ahead of the 77th edition of the Venice Film Festival at the Venice Lido, Italy, Monday, Aug. 31, 2020

Since restaurants reopened in May, cases have seen a slight uptick but deaths remain lower than they were in April

SINGAPORE – JUNE 19TH REOPENING

On June 19, Singapore – which had some of the strictest lockdown rules in the world – reopened bars and restaurants.

Among the mandatory safety measures were temperature checks for diners and a limited number of seating. 

Digital check-ins were also implemented so that if there was an outbreak, restaurants could quickly trace who had been where and notify others of the risks.  

A staff member wearing a face mask as a prevention measure against the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus takes the temperature of a customer lining up outside a McDonald’s fast food restaurant on its first day of opening after three weeks closure due to the pandemic in Singapore 

CHINA – APRIL REOPENINGS 

China, where the virus originated, saw its peak towards the end of last year and at the start of his year. 

Restaurants began reopening tentatively in April and since then, there has only been one major spike in infections and deaths which the state says is down to a statistical anomaly and not down to them covering anything up or a second wave.  

People eat in a restaurant in Wuhan, China’s central Hubei province on September 4, 2020. Wuhan was where the virus began 

People eat at a newly-opened Taco Bell restaurant in Beijing on August 21, 2020. Restaurants began reopening tentatively in April and since then, there has only been one major spike in infections and deaths which the state says is down to a statistical anomaly and not down to them covering anything up or a second wave.

Restaurants began reopening tentatively in April and since then, there has only been one major spike in infections and deaths which the state says is down to a statistical anomaly and not down to them covering anything up or a second wave

Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8711235/NYC-major-city-WORLD-not-allowing-indoor-dining.html