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A recent Gallup poll showed President Donald Trump as the most admired man, dethroning President Barack Obama. Republicans chose Trump, but this year, probably due to the pandemic, Democrats split their votes among public figures.

Last week, I noted that Texas bucked the guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The new instructions said that "essential workers" should have priority over the elderly after the inclusion of racial justice factors in the "expert" assessment when determining who receives the coronavirus vaccine during the next phase of distribution.

The left's efforts to tear down the past may have started with the toppling of historical statues, but it is now working its way into other areas such as literature and education. A teacher in Lawrence, Massachusetts, recently claimed on Twitter that Homer's Odyssey had been removed from the curriculum.

Of all the organizations issuing untrustworthy guidance and confusing recommendations, perhaps the World Health Organization has been the worst. As we end 2020, with the pandemic lockdowns destroying businesses and driving people to despair, WHO officials are ginning-up more fear.

In 2002, Anthony Washington attended Camp Farthest Out at the age of 12. Georgia Democrat Senate candidate Raphael Warnock oversaw the camp "as senior pastor of Maryland's Douglas Memorial Community church." Speaking to the Washington Free Beacon, Washington alleged several abuses took place at the camp, including being required to sleep outside after having an accident (he was a child) and an incident in which camp counselors threw urine at him.

Computer repairman John Paul Mac Isaac provided the explosive information in The New York Post's expose on Hunter Biden after he gave Hunter's hard drive to Rudy Giuliani. Twitter stopped users from sharing the Post's articles because it came from hacked material. Now Mac Isaac has sued Twitter for defamation and wants $500 million in damages along with a public retraction.