A new study released by demographer Lyman Stone and sociologist Brad Wilcox reveals that a significant number of families left Minnesota in 2021 and 2022. The exodus occurred under the tenure of Kamala Harris’s 2024 running mate, Tim Walz, who has served as the state’s governor since 2019. Stone and Wilcox’s research challenges claims by some left-leaning commentators that Walz’s policies have been beneficial for families and children.
The report, published by the Institute for Family Studies, concludes that Minnesota experienced a net loss of families with children during the two years. Stone and Wilcox’s analysis of the American Community Survey data shows that the state ranked among the worst third in the nation for family migration, one of 18 states where more families left than moved in.
According to the research, Minnesota saw a net loss of 4,000 families from 2021 to 2022, a 0.3 percent decline, placing it 13th among states with the highest percentage of family migration losses. Among the top 12 states with the most significant declines, 10 had supported President Joe Biden in the 2020 election.
In their report, Stone and Wilcox note that parents are increasingly moving away from states with far-left family, as well as diversity, equity, and inclusion policies. States like New York, California, Massachusetts, and Oregon, all known for their leftist political agendas, saw substantial family outflows. For instance, New York lost 71,000 families, a 1.9 percent decrease, while California saw a net loss of 92,000 families, a 1.2 percent decline.
In contrast, states that voted for former President Donald J. Trump in both 2016 and 2020 saw gains in family migration. The study points out that deeply Republican states, such as Idaho, reported the most significant percentage increase in family population, with a 2.3 percent rise from 2021 to 2022. Texas and Florida also saw considerable gains, with 53,000 and 38,000 families, respectively.
Stone and Wilcox suggest that COVID-19 partly drives this movement as families sought suburban and rural areas offering more space. Additionally, states with quicker school reopenings, new school choice laws, lower taxes, and strong job growth have become more attractive to parents. Cultural factors, such as resistance to far-left gender theory in schools, also contribute to the red state appeal.
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A new study released by demographer Lyman Stone and sociologist Brad Wilcox reveals that a significant number of families left Minnesota in 2021 and 2022. The exodus occurred under the tenure of Kamala Harris's 2024 running mate, Tim Walz, who has served as the state's governor since 2019. Stone and Wilcox's research challenges claims by some left-leaning commentators that Walz’s policies have been beneficial for families and children.
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The Biden-Harris government’s Department of Homeland Security (DHS) declined a request for further investigation of Ryan Routh—the second would-be assassin of former President Donald J. Trump—after he was flagged by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) when reentering the country from Ukraine in June 2023. Border agents interviewed Routh as a person of interest at the Honolulu airport last year, according to agency documents.
A memo filed by the CBP indicates border agents were aware that Routh had traveled to Poland in 2022 and to Turkey in 2023 and was suspected of having continued on to Ukraine. During his interview with CBP, the future would-be assassin claimed his travels were part of an effort to recruit over 100 foreign fighters from Afghanistan and other nations to fight against the Russian invasion.
“Subject is a USC who had traveled to Kiev, Ukraine for 3 months to help recruit Soldiers from Afghanistan, Moldova, and Taiwan to fight in the Ukrainian war against Russia,” the border patrol agents’ interview notes read. They add: “Subject stated that he does not get paid for his recruiting efforts and all his work for the Ukrainian government is strictly volunteer work. Subject provided his recruiting business card (cards have been uploaded into the event) which lists his recruiting partners that he speaks with to recruit soldiers from Afghanistan, Romanian, Pakistan, Syria, and Israel.”
The CBP memo also states that Routh was subsequently referred to the Biden-Harris DHS’s Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) unit for further investigation. However, HSI declined the case.
In 2019, Routh—a convicted felon—was flagged by federal law enforcement over suspicions he illegally possessed a firearm. Meanwhile, in June 2022, a nurse who had encountered Routh in Ukraine notified CBP agents that he was potentially dangerous and exhibited bizarre and predatory behavior.
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The Biden-Harris government's Department of Homeland Security (DHS) declined a request for further investigation of Ryan Routh—the second would-be assassin of former President Donald J. Trump—after he was flagged by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) when reentering the country from Ukraine in June 2023. Border agents interviewed Routh as a person of interest at the Honolulu airport last year, according to agency documents.
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Vice President Kamala Harris has won the endorsement of Scientific American magazine, which broke with its long tradition of avoiding political endorsements in 2020 when it first backed now-ousted President Joe Biden. Scientific American, as The National Pulse revealed in 2020, is owned by the controversial Holtzbrinck Publishing Group, or Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck, based in Stuttgart, Germany.
The multi-billion-euro conglomerate simply describes its early history as “track[ing] back to the book-club business,” adding: “In the 1930s, the company founder Georg von Holtzbrinck began with the sale of subscriptions to books and periodicals.”
But decades-old research revealed a much darker side to Holtzbrinck, the man and his company, who were eventually found to be willing fellow travelers of Adolf Hitler’s National Socialist (Nazi) Party, which Georg von Holtzbrinck first joined in 1931, two years before Hitler came to power.
NAZI COLLABORATOR.
Holtzbrinck, born in Schöplenberg in 1909, was just 22 years old when he joined the Bund Deutscher Arbeiterjugend, or Nazi-Jungarbeiter known interchangeably as the “Nazi Young Workers” or “League of German Worker Youth” in English. His joining of a college student group which appeared to have had run-ins with Jewish students and academics has led researchers to conclude his commitment to the groups was not “youth sins,” but rather, signified a willingness to collaborate with the Nazi Party and return receive millions for his propaganda work.
By 24, he was a fully-fledged member of Hitler’s movement and remained so for all 12 years of its existence, being formally subjected to denazification proceedings in the aftermath of the war.
The company enjoyed prosperity under the Nazi regime, per research conducted after Georg von Holtzbrinck’s death in 1983 and upon the firm’s rapid expansion into the United States. They published books for the army as well as a plethora of Nazi-approved magazines, including Freude der Arbeit (The Joy of Labor), Schonheit der Arbeit (The Beauty of Labor), Kolonie und Heimat (Colony and Homeland), and Berlin-Rom-Tokio, which was formally approved by Nazi Party’s Foreign Ministry.
COMING TO TERMS WITH HOLTZBRINCK.
In articles written in the late 1990s and early 2000s, outlets such as Vanity Fair, the New York Times, the Observer, and Forbes wrote scathingly about Holtzbrinck’s history and influence on U.S. publishing.
The Times itself has a murky history with Hitler, as revealed by The National Pulse in 2020.
German media, as well as an independent investigation into Holtzbrinck’s Nazi past, portrays the original publisher of the firm now responsible for Kamala Harris’s endorsement as someone who “cleverly took advantage of a favorable economic situation” of Nazi Germany, earning around one million dollars a year by 1942, in today’s money. The firm is now worth billions.
The “denazification” prosecutor accused Holtzbrinck of being “a convinced follower of the National Socialist authoritarian dictatorship,” and the publisher himself admitted he originally joined because “the people there made a lot of big promises that appealed to me.”
“As far as I can judge, von Holtzbrinck was a good Nazi and above all a profiteer who made a lot of money through sole management of various Nazi periodicals,” one witness testified during the proceedings.
And while Holtzbrinck himself appeared to have no direct line to Nazi leadership, the man he placed in charge of a postwar magazine was an infamous SS stormtrooper who had worked for Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi Chancellor and Propaganda Minister.
But the history of the firm, which now has a footprint in over 100 countries, has been largely ignored for the past several decades, despite its ownership of some of the most revered publications and journals in the world, including Die Zeit (Germany), Palgrave Macmillan books (US), St. Martin’s Press (US), Nature (UK), Scientific American (US), and dozens more.
DAMAGE TO SCIENCE.
A more 21st-century critique of Scientific American actually emerged right before the millennium, when Commentary magazine writer Jeremy Bernstein lamented its sharp turn away from science and intellectual rigor at the hands of Holtzbrinck leadership.
“Now we have a magazine that disguises itself as Scientific American, just as the New Yorker disguises itself as the New Yorker,” Bernstein wrote, adding: “They wear some of the same clothes and hats, featuring the old typefaces and even a few of the old contributors. But in an almost desperate attempt to ‘sell,’ they have been dumbed down to the point where more and more they are becoming less and less. And to compound the folly, the strategy seems to be failing even on its own terms.”
A 2023 study into the politicization of magazines such as Scientific American, Nature, and the Lancet – all of which endorsed Joe Biden in 2020 – revealed a predictable decline in trust amongst Trump supporters, with researcher Floyd Jiuyun Zhang of Stanford University concluding: “The endorsement message caused large reductions in stated trust in Nature among Trump supporters. This distrust lowered the demand for COVID-related information provided by Nature, as evidenced by substantially reduced requests for Nature articles on vaccine efficacy when offered.
“The endorsement also reduced Trump supporters’ trust in scientists in general. The estimated effects on Biden supporters’ trust in Nature and scientists were positive, small and mostly statistically insignificant. I found little evidence that the endorsement changed views about Biden and Trump. These results suggest that political endorsement by scientific journals can undermine and polarize public confidence in the endorsing journals and the scientific community.”
The National Pulse reached out to the Holtzbrinck Publishing Group for more information about the company’s background and the lack of transparency on its website. At the time of publication, we had not heard back.
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Vice President Kamala Harris has won the endorsement of Scientific American magazine, which broke with its long tradition of avoiding political endorsements in 2020 when it first backed now-ousted President Joe Biden. Scientific American, as The National Pulse revealed in 2020, is owned by the controversial Holtzbrinck Publishing Group, or Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck, based in Stuttgart, Germany.
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The Mexican government has begun transporting migrants to the U.S. border. The “Emerging Safe Mobility Corridor” scheme, initiated by Mexico last month, is designed to help migrants gain parole into the U.S. under the Biden-Harris government.
The Mexican National Institute of Migration shared a video on social media showing the first bus transporting migrants from Tapachula, near Guatemala, to Reynosa, close to the U.S. border. The migrants are scheduled to attend appointments made via the CBP Oneapp.
#Video 🎥| Salida del primer autobús que trasladó de Tapachula, Chiapas a Reynosa, Tamaulipas a personas extranjeras que acudirán a su cita CBP One y que forma parte de la habilitación del Corredor Emergente de Movilidad Segura, que puso en marcha el gobierno mexicano a través de… pic.twitter.com/j1dBQSEGQo
Expanded under Biden-Harris, the CBP One app allows the government to process and parole up to 1,450 migrants per day at U.S. ports of entry. The app is also used to import up to 30,000 nationals a month from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela.
Humanitarian parole is supposed to be limited in scope. Some conservative lawmakers and law officers believe Joe Biden and Kamala Harris are abusing them to facilitate mass migration. Statistics suggest that over 95 percent of migrants who schedule appointments through CBP One are granted entry.
A recent report from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Inspector General criticized the app’s vetting processes. Migrant flights were briefly paused due to endemic sponsor fraud but have since resumed.
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The Mexican government has begun transporting migrants to the U.S. border. The "Emerging Safe Mobility Corridor" scheme, initiated by Mexico last month, is designed to help migrants gain parole into the U.S. under the Biden-Harris government.
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New data suggests confidence in U.S. elections in waiting in six critical battleground states, with likely voters only expressing some degree of confidence their states adequately protect against fraud. In Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, nearly a third of voters say they lack confidence in state election results. Meanwhile, just two-thirds of voters express some degree of confidence in the process.
In Wisconsin, just over half of likely voters say they have confidence in the results reported by state officials. Meanwhile, in Michigan, the number drops to just 46 percent. Those who say they’re very confident fall to just four in ten in the other states surveyed. Notably, voters’ confidence in their state election process is highly correlated with their partisan affiliation—with Democrats being more likely to say elections are accurate.
Among Kamala Harris’s supporters in the surveyed states, 71 percent are very confident in voting accuracy, compared to just 15 percent of former President Donald J. Trump’s supporters. A significant portion of Trump supporters display minimal faith in the system. In Georgia, 61 percent of pro-Trump respondents are at least somewhat confident in election accuracy, whereas the figures drop to 50 percent in Nevada and are even lower in Pennsylvania (47 percent), Arizona (46 percent), and Michigan (44 percent).
The National Pulse reported in August that Georgia is implementing new rules to improve the security and accuracy of its vote-counting process. Additionally, Republicans on Capitol Hill are attempting to advance legislation that would ensure noncitizens cannot illegally vote in federal elections.
Democrat lawmakers almost universally oppose the measure.
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New data suggests confidence in U.S. elections in waiting in six critical battleground states, with likely voters only expressing some degree of confidence their states adequately protect against fraud. In Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, nearly a third of voters say they lack confidence in state election results. Meanwhile, just two-thirds of voters express some degree of confidence in the process.
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Taylor Swift’s recent endorsement of Kamala Harris and Governor Tim Walz (D-MN) appears to have had a mixed impact on voter preferences, according to new election data. A survey reveals just 8 percent of voters say they are “somewhat” or “much more likely” to support Harris due to Swift’s endorsement. Conversely, 20 percent of respondents are “somewhat” or “much less likely” to vote for Harris following the pop star’s declaration of support.
The majority of participants, accounting for 66 percent of responses, indicate that Swift’s endorsement does not alter their voting intentions. Following the September 10 presidential debate hosted by ABC News, Swift posted on Instagram to her 283 million followers that she is endorsing the 2024 Democratic Party’s presidential ticket of Harris and Walz.
Among the poll’s respondents, 32 percent believe Swift’s endorsement will positively impact Harris’s campaign, whereas 27 percent think it will have no effect. The survey noted that 41 percent of nearly 460 people surveyed feel Swift should refrain from making public political endorsements, against 38 percent who support her making endorsements.
Regarding fan demographics, 66 percent of the poll’s participants reported they are not Swifties, 28 percent identified as fans, and 6 percent described themselves as big fans. The majority of the last group are women and registered Democrats. Swift’s endorsement reportedly caused a spike in traffic to the voter registration site vote.gov, with 337,826 visitors clicking a link she shared on Instagram.
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Taylor Swift's recent endorsement of Kamala Harris and Governor Tim Walz (D-MN) appears to have had a mixed impact on voter preferences, according to new election data. A survey reveals just 8 percent of voters say they are "somewhat" or "much more likely" to support Harris due to Swift's endorsement. Conversely, 20 percent of respondents are "somewhat" or "much less likely" to vote for Harris following the pop star's declaration of support.
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Former President Donald J. Trump says the latest man to try to assassinate him “believed the rhetoric of Biden and Harris, and he acted on it.” Ryan Routh, suspected of lying in wait for the America First leader with an AK-47-style rifle at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Sunday, is a Democrat donor and regurgitated Biden and Harris’s rhetoric about the former president being a threat to democracy on social media. Pictures also show a truck at his address sported a ‘Biden-Harris’ sticker.
“Their rhetoric is causing me to be shot at, when I am the one who is going to save the country, and they are the ones that are destroying the country, both from the inside and out,” Trump said of the Democratic president and his deputy.
He highlighted comments from the pair casting him as a “threat to democracy” and themselves as “unity” leaders.
“They are the opposite. These are people that want to destroy our country,” Trump said, explaining: “It is called the enemy from within. They are the real threat.”
During the debate between Trump and Harris, the Vice President claimed there would be no “guardrails” restraining Trump if he is reelected and that “It’s up to the American people to stop him.”
“These are the things that dangerous fools like the shooter listen to. That is the rhetoric they listen to, and the same with the first one,” Trump said, referring to Thomas Crooks, who shot him through the ear in Butler, Pennsylvania.
“They use highly inflammatory language,” he added.
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Former President Donald J. Trump says the latest man to try to assassinate him "believed the rhetoric of Biden and Harris, and he acted on it." Ryan Routh, suspected of lying in wait for the America First leader with an AK-47-style rifle at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Sunday, is a Democrat donor and regurgitated Biden and Harris's rhetoric about the former president being a threat to democracy on social media. Pictures also show a truck at his address sported a 'Biden-Harris' sticker.
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Ryan Routh, the suspect in the latest attempted assassination of former President Donald J. Trump at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, has donated to Democratic Party funding platform ActBlue at least 19 times, per Federal Election Commission (FEC) records. The string of small donations, starting in 2019, total over $140.
Reports suggest Routh made it within around 300 yards of the America First leader with a scoped AK-47-style rifle—and a GoPro video camera—before U.S. Secret Service (USSS) agents spotted him taking aim from some bushes. The AK-47’s effective range is around 380 yards, meaning that the USSS may have once again put the former president in a situation where only the incompetence of his attempted killer saved his life.
USSS agents opened fire on Routh but did not hit him, and he was able to flee the scene, getting into a blackcar and making his escape. It was the Martin County Sheriff’s Office that eventually took Routh into custody after receiving a picture of the getaway vehicle taken by an eyewitness.
Comments on social media attributed to Routh contain rhetoric identical to that of Kamala Harris and Joe Biden, suggesting Trump will put an end to democracy if he returns to the White House, raising questions about the extent to which Democrat rhetoric inspired the attack.
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Ryan Routh, the suspect in the latest attempted assassination of former President Donald J. Trump at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, has donated to Democratic Party funding platform ActBlue at least 19 times, per Federal Election Commission (FEC) records. The string of small donations, starting in 2019, total over $140.
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The man named by law enforcement sources as Donald Trump’s latest would-be assassin repeated rhetoric from Kamala Harris and Joe Biden claiming the America First leader is an existential threat to democracy, raising questions about the extent to which they inspired him. An X (formerly Twitter account) linked to suspect Ryan Routh, 58, posted in April: “DEMOCRACY is on the ballot, and we cannot lose. We cannot afford to fail.”
Both Biden and his vice president have been suggesting that Trump will end democracy if reelected for months. Harris posted that “Democracy is on the ballot” on July 2, alongside a picture of Trump with a misleading caption about him vowing to “be a dictator on day one.”
She made similar or identical claims on July 11, July 6, and June 21, adding, “[Democracy] is only as strong as our willingness to fight for it.”
In their recent debate, Harris escalated her anti-Trump rhetoric to a fever pitch, saying: “[U]nderstand the context in which this election in 2024 is taking place. The United States Supreme Court recently ruled that the former president would essentially be immune from any misconduct if he were to enter the White House again… Understand what it would mean if Donald Trump were back in the White House with no guardrails. Because certainly, we know now the court won’t stop him. We know J.D. Vance is not going to stop him. It’s up to the American people to stop him.”
Trump responded, “I probably took a bullet to the head because of the things that they say about me,” referring to the previous attempt on his life in Butler, Pennsylvania.
“They talk about democracy; I’m a ‘threat to democracy.’ They’re the threat to democracy,” he said.
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The man named by law enforcement sources as Donald Trump's latest would-be assassin repeated rhetoric from Kamala Harris and Joe Biden claiming the America First leader is an existential threat to democracy, raising questions about the extent to which they inspired him. An X (formerly Twitter account) linked to suspect Ryan Routh, 58, posted in April: "DEMOCRACY is on the ballot, and we cannot lose. We cannot afford to fail."
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Data guru Harry Enten is questioning whether Taylor Swift’s endorsement of Kamala Harris will provide a much-needed boost among the youth vote for the 2024 Democratic Party’s presidential nominee. According to the CNN analyst, Harris has lagged far behind the margins by which the 81-year-old incumbent Joe Biden won young voters in the 2020 election.
“Why does Kamala Harris welcome Taylor Swift’s support, why does she need the help?” Enten said during a Thursday segment reviewing pollingdata. “Let’s just point out something that I have been noting all along during this campaign, and that is the underperformance that both Joe Biden—and now even Kamala Harris—has among young voters.”
The data, reviewed by Enten, shows Biden with a 28-point polling margin over Trump among voters aged 18 to 29 in September of 2020. However, by July this year, Biden’s margin had collapsed to just seven points. Meanwhile, his data for Harris shows her with only a weak improvement over Biden’s 2024 numbers, clocking a 15-point margin this month.
Despite the Swift endorsement, Enten remains skeptical that Harris’s margin among young voters will significantly improve or match Biden’s margins in 2020. “The bottom line is Kamala Harris is—in fact—not doing as well among young voters as you might expect a Democrat to necessarily be doing based upon history.”
In addition to the youth vote being less enthusiastic about Harris than perceived, Enten notes that in several crucial swing states—namely Pennsylvania and North Carolina—Republicans have reversed the Democratic registration advantage. In both states, Democrats held around a 500,000 voter advantage in 2020. That lead has been erased, with Republicans now holding around a 150,000 vote advantage in both states.
WATCH:
CNN’s Harry Enten Breaks Down Kamala Harris’ ‘Underperformance’ With Young Voters pic.twitter.com/oE5iujMlfQ
Data guru Harry Enten is questioning whether Taylor Swift's endorsement of Kamala Harris will provide a much-needed boost among the youth vote for the 2024 Democratic Party's presidential nominee. According to the CNN analyst, Harris has lagged far behind the margins by which the 81-year-old incumbent Joe Biden won young voters in the 2020 election.
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