Monday, December 6, 2021

🎯Axios AM: Right builds bunker

Plus: Bowl season begins | Monday, December 06, 2021
 
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Axios AM
By Mike Allen ·Dec 06, 2021

Good Monday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,195 words ... 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.

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1 big thing: Right builds media bunker
Data: Apptopia. Table: Axios Visuals

Conservatives are building their own apps, phones, cryptocurrencies and publishing houses to circumvent the mainstream tech and media ecosystem, Axios' Sara Fischer and Dan Primack report.

  • Why it matters: Many of these efforts couldn't exist without the backing of major corporate figures and billionaires who are eager to push back against "censorship" and "cancel culture."

It's unclear whether demand will match supply:

  • Rumble, a conservative alternative to YouTube, agreed to go public at an implied $2.1 billion valuation via a SPAC merger. The SPAC is sponsored by Cantor Fitzgerald, a financial services firm led by billionaire and Trump fundraiser Howard Lutnick.
  • Donald Trump's fledgling social media company, Truth Social, also plans to go public via SPAC, and said Saturday it has secured $1 billion in financing. The SPAC is trading at a market value of $1.6 billion, down from its $4.5 billion peak in late October.
  • Gettr, a social app launched by ex-Trump aide Jason Miller, hasn't disclosed all of its investors. But Miller has said one of the app's funders is the family foundation of Chinese billionaire Guo Wengui.

Aside from social networks, conservatives are pushing to create alternatives to other tech tools and communication platforms:

  • Book publishing: Trump allies launched a book publishing house called Winning Team Publishing, run by Don Jr. and former Trump campaign aide Sergio Gor. The imprint will publish the ex-president's first book, a coffee table photo book.
  • Cloud storage: Trump's social media company will be hosted online by RightForge, an internet infrastructure company that courts conservatives. As Axios' Margaret Harding McGill notes, relying on a conservative web hosting service could head off issues Parler faced when its web services were yanked following the Capitol siege.
  • Crypto: A new cryptocurrency called "Magacoin" has already caught the attention of high-profile conservatives, per The Guardian.
  • Phones: A young Bitcoin entrepreneur is marketing an "uncensored" Freedom Phone to conservatives.

Reality check: While politicians seem eager to find new, unregulated outlets, download data from Apptopia (graphic above) shows consumers aren't sprinting to the alternatives.

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2. Bob Dole, American giant
Sen. Bob Dole salutes the Republican National Convention in Philadelphia on Aug. 1, 2000. Photo: Ron Edmonds/AP

President Biden saluted Bob Dole as "an American statesman like few in our history. A war hero and among the greatest of the Greatest Generation":

  • "May God bless him, and may our nation draw upon his legacy of decency, dignity, good humor, and patriotism for all time."

"It is with heavy hearts we announce that Senator Robert Joseph Dole died early this morning in his sleep," his wife, former Sen. Elizabeth Dole, announced. "At his death, at age 98, he had served the United States of America faithfully for 79 years."

Why he mattered: Leader Dole — a revered warrior synonymous with valor, resilience and and decency — was the Republican presidential nominee in 1996.

  • He was one of the last of the World War II generation political greats.

The pride of Russell, Kansas, was a senator for 27 years, including 11 years as GOP leader.

  • In February, Dole revealed he'd been diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer.

McClatchy White House correspondent Bryan Lowry tweeted that multiple generations of Kansas City Star reporters had honed this obit:

Bob Dole, a Kansan, World War II veteran, lawyer, state representative, U.S. Senator and presidential nominee for the Republican party died Sunday at 98.

Keep reading.

Photo: AP

Above: Bob Dole 50 years ago — on Jan. 5, 1971, during his first term as a U.S. senator quick with the zingers.

📺 David Letterman to Bob Dole on Nov. 8, 1996 — three days after Dole lost the presidential election: "Bob, what have you been doing lately?"

  • Dole: "Apparently not enough." YouTube.

Go deeper: Bipartisan tributes flood in for "giant of the Senate" Bob Dole.

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3. Axios investigates: Drug-pricing secrecy
Chart: Sara Wise and Will Chase/Axios. Illustrations: Maura Losch and Shoshana Gordon/Axios

American businesses spend hundreds of billions of dollars a year on prescription drugs, and the bills keep rising. But some of the companies promising to help rein in those costs prevent employers from looking under the hood, Axios health care business reporter Bob Herman writes.

  • Why it matters: Documents provided to Axios reveal a new layer of secrecy within the maze of American drug pricing — one in which firms that manage drug coverage for hundreds of employers, representing millions of workers, obscure the details of their work.

How it works: Employers hire pharmacy benefit managers to handle the drug coverage in their workers' health insurance plans. PBMs negotiate prices with drug manufacturers.

  • But secretive contracts are blocking employers from understanding whether they are paying reasonable drug prices.

Keep reading.

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Why Facebook supports updated internet regulations, including Section 230
 
 

Aaron is one of 40,000 people working on safety and security issues at Facebook.

Hear more from Aaron on why Facebook supports updating regulations on the internet's most pressing challenges, including reforming Section 230 to set clear guidelines for all large tech companies.

 
 
4. Pics du jour
Photo: Tom Brenner/Reuters

The Kennedy Center Honors returned to normal last night with a real-life gala and the presence of the president for the first time since 2016.

Photo: Samuel Corum/AFP via Getty Images

Above: Vice President Kamala Harris and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff arrive.

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5. 🇲🇲 Aung San Suu Kyi sentenced to prison
A protester makes a three-finger, pro-democracy salute in Yangon, Myanmar, in February. Photo: Getty Images

A court in military-ruled Myanmar jailed leader Aung San Suu Kyi for four years today on charges of incitement and breaching COVID restrictions, a source told Reuters.

  • Critics call the case "farcical."

Context: Nobel Peace Prize winner Suu Kyi, 76, has been detained since a coup against her democratically elected government in February.

  • Suu Kyi faces a dozen cases, with combined maximum sentences of more than a century.
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6. 🇨🇳 U.S. markets stand to lose $2 trillion from China

The SEC laid out rules last week requiring Chinese companies listed in the U.S. to face audits or risk delisting within three years, Hope King writes in Axios Markets.

  • Why it matters: "Absent a political solution," all 248 Chinese companies listed on the three largest U.S. exchanges could be delisted within three years, says Brendan Ahern, chief investment officer of Krane Funds Advisors.

The total market capitalization of these firms exceeded $2 trillion in 2020.

  • Ride-hailing giant Didi — which has a market cap of $37 billion — is preparing to delist from the New York Stock Exchange and to relist in Hong Kong following pressure from Chinese regulators.

Keep reading.

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7. 🎺 R.I.P. last "Band of Brothers" officer
Edward Shames (red shirt) hugs Ed McClung, another member of his World War II company, along with veterans Jack Foley (left), Joe Lesniewski (bolo tie) and Shifty Powers (cigarette) at the Library of Congress in 2003. Photo: Gerald Herbert/AP

Edward Shames, 99 — the last surviving officer of World War II's "Easy Company," which inspired the HBO miniseries and book "Band of Brothers" — died peacefully Friday at his home in Norfolk, AP reports.

  • The renowned Easy Company was part of the Army's 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division.
  • Easy Company was the subject of Stephen Ambrose's 1992 book, "Band of Brothers." The 2001 miniseries, created by Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg, followed the brothers from training in Georgia in 1942 to the war's end in 1945. Shames was portrayed by British actor Joseph May.

"When Germany surrendered," Shames' obit says, "Ed and his men ... entered Hitler's Eagle's Nest where Ed managed to acquire a few bottles of cognac, a label indicating they were 'for the Fuhrer's use only.' Later, he would use the cognac to toast his oldest son's Bar Mitzvah."

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8. 🏈 1 for the road: Bowl season begins
Data: ESPN. Table: Axios Visuals

College Football Playoff Selection Committee's Final Top 25 of '21.

  • Go deeper ... Historic playoff: Alabama-Cincinnati, Michigan-Georgia.
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