Sunday, July 31, 2022

Sunday, July 31, 2022

And another day of long Covid, Covid-related cognitive impairment, appalling videos from Ukraine, monkeypox stigma, forest fires out West and in France and Portugal, UPS drivers battling heat, and the loss of two legends comes to a close:


“Forget the theatrics. Republicans used Trump, the culture & race rage, resentment and Kremlin-aiding divisiveness he gleefully stoked to get the two things they wanted: a 6-3 corporate-serving SCOTUS (with a Christian fanatical right payoff) and tax cuts for billionaires. Period.” — Joy-Ann Reid


“Every time a Republican shows you who they are, you should believe them.” — Tea Pain


Deaths

US: 1,055,059

World: 6,419,833


Cases

US: 93,082,195

World: 582,173,485


Millions of Americans have long COVID. Many of them are no longer working. Now, millions of people may be sidelined from their jobs due to long COVID. Katie Bach, a senior fellow with the Brookings Institution, drew on survey data from the Census Bureau, the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis and the Lancet to come up with what she says is a conservative estimate: 4 million full-time equivalent workers out of work because of long COVID. "That is just a shocking number," says Bach. "That's 2.4% of the U.S. working population." The Biden administration has already taken some steps to try to protect workers and keep them on the job, issuing guidance that makes clear that long COVID can be a disability and relevant laws would apply. Under the Americans with Disabilities Act, for example, employers must offer accommodations to workers with disabilities unless doing so presents an undue burden.


New findings suggest there might be a connection between Covid-related loss of smell and cognitive impairment, but experts say more research is needed. Previous research has found that some Covid patients go on to develop cognitive impairment after their infection. In the new study — which has not been published in a peer-reviewed journal —  researchers in Argentina found that loss of smell during Covid may be a stronger predictor of cognitive decline, regardless of severity of disease. “Our data strongly suggest that adults over 60 years of age are more vulnerable to cognitive impairment post-Covid if they had a smell dysfunction, regardless of the severity of the Covid,” said study co-author Gabriela Gonzalez-Aleman, a professor at Pontificia Universidad Catolica Argentina in Buenos Aires, adding that it’s too soon to tell if the cognitive impairment is permanent.


Appalling' videos alleged to show Russian soldiers castrating a Ukrainian soldier. The video that appears to come first shows the victim being gagged surrounded by at least four men, one of whom is wearing what looks like a Russian uniform with the "Z" insignia associated with Russia's invasion of Ukraine. A second video shows the same man writhing on the ground as a man wearing blue surgical gloves and what appears to be a Russian uniform cuts off the victim's underwear with a box cutter. The man uses the same box cutter to castrate him, then holds the mutilated genitals up for the camera. In the video, the perpetrators can be heard saying "hold him, hold him" in Russian. The third video shows the bound and mutilated man being shot in the head and dragged away.


Indiana Senate narrowly passes near-total abortion ban. Indiana state senators narrowly passed a near-total abortion ban Saturday during a rare weekend session, sending the bill to the House after a contentious week of arguments over whether to allow exceptions for rape and incest. The Republican-controlled Senate voted 26-20 after about three hours of debate, passing the bill with the minimum 26 votes needed to send it on to the House, which Republicans also control.


New York City declares monkeypox a public health emergency. Officials in New York City declared a public health emergency due to the spread of the monkeypox virus Saturday, calling the city “the epicenter” of the outbreak.


Spain reports second death related to monkeypox. According to a World Health Organization report from 22 July, only five deaths had been reported, all in Africa. The WHO last Saturday declared the rapidly spreading outbreak a global health emergency, its highest level of alert.


Health officials fight monkeypox stigma as virus spreads. "Whenever anybody gets sick -- even if it's COVID -- half the time, people don't want to tell because sometimes it feels like a moral failure," Hall told ABC News in an interview. "We've stigmatized these things in so many ways that if you get sick, that you somehow have failed morally. I think people are scared to admit that." "It's a system problem rather than an individual problem," Hall added.


Wildfires in West explode in size amid hot, windy conditions. Wildfires in California and Montana exploded in size overnight amid windy, hot conditions and were quickly encroaching on neighborhoods, forcing evacuation orders for over 100 homes Saturday, while an Idaho blaze was spreading.


Western flames spread, California sees its largest 2022 fire. Crews battling the largest wildfire so far this year in California braced for thunderstorms and hot, windy conditions that created the potential for additional fire growth Sunday as they sought to protect remote communities.


Portugal, France battle big forest fires as mercury soars. Experts blame climate change for the soaring temperatures -- and warn that worse is yet to come.


Smoking, vaping increases risk of death from COVID, study finds. People who reported use of tobacco products prior to their hospitalization were 39% more likely to be put on mechanical ventilation than non-smokers. What's more, they were 45% more likely to die.


‘Sending drivers out to die’: UPS workers demand heat safety amid record temps. Union representatives around the country say they’re worried about the number of UPS workers who have needed medical treatment for heat illness this summer.


Call to raise school start age in Scotland to six. The move would bring Scotland into line with countries such as Finland, where formal education starts at seven.


RIP Nichelle Nichols. She was 89.


RIP Bill Russell. He was 88.


Life’s short. Live, love, create, and help others.


Until next time, my friends. Stay safe and stay sane. Good night.


Friday, July 29, 2022

Friday, July 29, 2022

And another day bragging, semi-automatic gun bans, gun manufacturer’s immunity, the omicron vaccine, monkeypox deaths outside Africa, inflation on everything, DeSantis, oil company profits, KY floods, ‘biological sex affidavits,’ and the odds comes to a close:


“It’s important to fight for specific social justice issues but we also need to remember that so many of these problems are caused by Christian Nationalism which is a vehicle that white supremacy uses to try to be untouchable. We can’t forget the role that religion plays in this.” — Rebekah Kohlhepp


Deaths

US: 1,055,020 (+598)

World: 6,417,643 (+3390)


Cases

US: 93,054,184 (+136,526)

World: 580,836,202 (+1,396,516)


A Texas activist argued for 30 years against separation of church and state. Now his ideas are in the conservative mainstream. The growing popularity of these kinds of declarations is striking given the place the separation of church and state has occupied in American politics going back to the Founding Fathers. Though the phrase “separation of church and state” does not appear in the U.S. Constitution, the notion is deeply rooted in American jurisprudence and popular culture. More immediately, the rhetoric has alarmed some Americans who associate the constitutional debate over the church-state split with extreme versions of Christian nationalism. Yet, antipathy toward the separation of church and state among conservatives is not new but, rather, is a decades-old argument popularized primarily by a controversial Texas activist in the early ’90s, when the religious right was ascendant. — History has an abundance of examples of what happens to a nation when religion is the basis for governing.


Of Course Samuel Alito Is Bragging About It. As astounding as it may be to watch a Supreme Court justice give such an overtly political speech, in many ways, this is perfectly fitting for Alito. Alito’s jokes abroad—dripping in condescension and equal parts cruel and awkward—should therefore come as no surprise. Nor should the chilling ease with which he dispenses such public mockery of his critics. It comes as people around the country scramble to access proper health care in the wake of last month’s decision. Pregnancy loss has warped into legitimate medical nightmares. Hospitals, confused amid the chaos and fear of abortion bans, refuse care. And some have altogether stopped trying to conceive anymore. “We don’t feel like it’s safe in Texas to continue to try after what we went through,” one woman recently told the New York Times in a devastating post-Roe account. One has to wonder what she, and the countless others suffering right now, think of Alito’s comedy tour.


House passes semi-automatic gun ban after 18-year lapse. The House passed legislation Friday to revive a ban on semi-automatic guns, the first vote of its kind in years and a direct response to the firearms often used in the crush of mass shootings ripping through communities nationwide. Once banned in the U.S., the high-powered firearms are now widely blamed as the weapon of choice among young men responsible for many of the most devastating mass shootings. But Congress allowed the restrictions first put in place in 1994 on the manufacture and sales of the weapons to expire a decade later, unable to muster the political support to counter the powerful gun lobby and reinstate the weapons ban.


Gun Manufacturers Are Protected From Civil Liability — That Has to Change. The gun industry’s business model is predicated on its ability to sell as many lethal weapons to as many Americans as possible. Yet unlike every other industry, it enjoys immunity from civil liability when it acts negligently or without regard for public safety. Imagine if car companies couldn’t be sued for faulty airbags or tobacco companies for marketing cigarettes to minors. The gun industry’s unique immunity isn’t an accident. It’s the direct result of a little-known law that has a big impact on the way we deal — or don’t deal — with this crisis. The Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA) was signed into law by President George W. Bush in 2005. At the time, the National Rifle Association heralded it as its top legislative priority…Let’s not fool ourselves: There is no tragedy big enough to move the manufacturers and dealers who fuel this crisis. The bottom line is they don’t care about anything except their bottom line. That’s why repealing PLCAA would change the game. Right now, the gun industry has no incentive to adopt responsible practices because they’ve faced so little accountability — until recently.


Climate experts experience an odd sensation after the Manchin budget deal: optimism. The nearly $370 billion energy and climate spending deal struck between Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and conservative Democrat Joe Manchin would be the single largest federal clean energy investment in U.S. history. While it falls short of the $555 billion package Democrats proposed last year, preliminary assessments of the legislation by climate change modeling experts indicate that it would put the United States in a much stronger position to meet its pledges.


US reaches deal with Moderna for omicron COVID-19 vaccine. The Biden administration said Friday it has reached an agreement with Moderna to buy 66 million doses of the company’s next generation of COVID-19 vaccine that targets the highly transmissible omicron variant, enough supply this winter for all who want the upgraded booster.


US rules out summer COVID boosters to focus on fall campaign. U.S. regulators said Friday they are no longer considering authorizing a second COVID-19 booster shot for all adults under 50 this summer, focusing instead on revamped vaccines for the fall that will target the newest viral subvariants. Pfizer and Moderna expect to have updated versions of their shots available as early as September, the Food and Drug Administration said in a statement. That would set the stage for a fall booster campaign to strengthen protection against the latest versions of omicron.


Spain reports first monkeypox-related death in Europe. Spain reported its first monkeypox-related death on Friday, in what is thought to be Europe's first fatality from the disease and only the second outside Africa in the current outbreak. Brazil reported earlier on Friday the first monkeypox-related death outside the African continent in the current wave of the disease.


Public health is missing the message on monkeypox. The US response to monkeypox is falling down badly on nearly every one of those fronts. First, testing: Too often people showing symptoms of monkeypox are being told by doctors that they shouldn’t get a test, or tests are delayed so long as to be nearly useless by rules that the sample for a test has to be taken from a lesion, which may develop late in the course of illness…Finally, as Jerusalem Demsas wrote for the Atlantic, our public health officials have been replicating the Covid failures in another crucial way: being too concerned with managing public opinion to provide the public with accurate information about the situation.


The Senate passed a bill to help sick veterans. Then 25 Republicans reversed course. Veterans and their loved ones gathered in Washington, D.C., on Thursday for what was supposed to be a long-awaited celebration. The Senate finally was poised to pass a bill that would provide health care and benefits for millions of veterans injured by exposure to toxins, from Agent Orange in Vietnam to burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan. Instead, in a surprise move, 25 Republican senators blocked the measure on Wednesday — even though they had voted in favor of it just one month earlier.


Johnson County sheriff claimed he got 200 tips of election fraud. A records request yielded only one. The Johnson County Sheriff’s Office has said that since last fall it has received more than 200 tips from people claiming they were victims of or witnesses to fraudulent activity in local elections. Yet the office has produced only one offense report related to any alleged violations of Kansas election laws since 2020. — The Big Lie.


It's not just food and fuel: Inflation is impacting the cost of almost everything. From new tires to a dental visit or a new piece of sports gear, nearly every spending category tracked in the Consumer Price Index shows a price increase from not only last year but also from before the pandemic. The hikes, spurred in part by high crude oil prices, supply chain disruptions and global economic pressures, highlight just how pervasive inflation has become in America. — Inflation is a worldwide problem at the moment. It’s not just happening in America


Inflation hits record 8.9% in euro area, but economy grows. Inflation in the European countries using the euro currency shot up to another record in July, pushed by higher energy prices fueled by Russia’s war in Ukraine, but the economy managed better-than-expected, if meager, growth in the second quarter. Annual inflation in the eurozone’s 19 countries rose to 8.9% in July, an increase from 8.6% in June, according to numbers published Friday by the European Union statistics agency.


While the rest of us are trying to make ends meet, oil companies are doing just fine. The three largest Western oil companies—Chevron, Exxon, and Shell—made a record $46 billion in total profits last quarter, the Wall Street Journal reports. Exxon alone recorded an all-time high of $17.9 billion in profits during the second quarter, which was more than four times as much as it made during the same period last year.


Republican AGs Sue for Schools' Right to Deny Free Lunches to Gay and Trans Kids. Twenty-two Republican state attorneys general are suing the Biden administration for requiring schools that accept federal funds for free lunch programs to comply with gender and sex non-discrimination rules. To put it plainly: These 22 state attorneys generals seem to think schools should be allowed to discriminate against LGBTQ kids who use the Department of Agriculture’s free lunch programs. — Republicans look for any excuse to discriminate against marginal groups. It’s in their fucking DNA.


Oklahoma schools now require 'biological sex affidavit' for student athletes. "This has nothing to do with encouraging girls to be athletes," Matson wrote. "This is totalitarianism. It is the white nationalist agenda. The anti-LGBTQ agenda. The anti-abortion agenda. It is all the same agenda."...Oklahoma is the only state so far to require an affidavit to prove a student's assigned sex. If a student is under 18, the affidavit can be completed by a legal guardian or parent. Once a student reaches 18, they have to sign the affidavit themselves. The law requires that a new affidavit be completed ahead of every school year.


DeSantis files complaint against Miami restaurant after kids attend drag show, citing 1947 ruling on ‘men impersonating women’. DeSantis in the complaint filed Tuesday against R House, which hosts drag brunch events, alleges the restaurant violated state law and cites a 1947 state Supreme Court ruling that “men impersonating women” in a “suggestive and indecent” fashion constitutes a public nuisance. In hosting drag performances in the presence of young children, the restaurant has also violated a state disorderly conduct statute and a separate statute prohibiting the operation of a business “for the purpose of lewdness,” according to the complaint, a copy of which was obtained by Changing America.


Canada: Supreme Court rules sex without a condom requires separate consent from sex with a condom. The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled in a 5–4 decision that condom use is legally a part of sexual activity, and that sex without a condom requires separate consent from sex with a condom. They've unanimously ordered a new trial for the appellant, a B.C. man who did not use a condom during sexual intercourse with a woman who insisted beforehand that he wear one. The case could set an important legal precedent on consent and sexual assault.


At least 16 people are dead after Kentucky's catastrophic flooding and the death toll is expected to rise. At least 16 people are dead, including children, and the toll is "going to get a lot higher" following catastrophic flooding in Kentucky, Gov. Andy Beshear said Friday.


Governor: Search for Kentucky flood victims could take weeks. Kentucky’s governor said it could take weeks to find all the victims of flash flooding that killed at least 16 people when heavy rains turned streams into torrents that swamped towns across Appalachia. More rainstorms were forecast to roll through in coming days, keeping the region on edge as rescue crews struggled to get into hard-hit areas that include some of the poorest places in America.


Conspiracy website InfoWars parent files for bankruptcy. The parent of far-right conspiracy website InfoWars filed for U.S. bankruptcy protection on Friday as the company and its founder Alex Jones face up to $150 million in damages in a trial over longstanding falsehoods he perpetuated about the Sandy Hook elementary school massacre.


Mega Millions: Here’s what’s more likely than you winning. While we can all ponder what we would do with that kind of money, we may all be getting a reality check instead of a money check. After all, the odds of winning the jackpot are 1 in 302,575,350 or 0.00000033 percent. Here are some things that are more likely to happen:


Life’s short. Live, love, create, and help others.


Until next time, my friends. Stay safe and stay sane. Good night.


Thursday, July 28, 2022

Thursday, July 28, 2022

And another day of legal immunity, preparing for battle, semiconductor chips, Alito on “religious liberty,” R’s block helping military vets, a new political party called “Forward,” monkeypox an imminent threat, flooding in KY, and more book banning comes to a close:


“If this is America first, then America is fucked!” -- Jon Stewart


Deaths

US: 1,054,422 (+453)

World: 6,414,253 (+3705)


Cases

US: 92,917,658 (+755,793)

World: 579,439,686 (+1,088,113)


Trump presses his claim of legal immunity from Jan. 6 lawsuits. The former president’s lawyers are claiming he has legal immunity from civil lawsuits filed by Democratic members of Congress and U.S. Capitol police officers who said were injured during the siege. -- We can’t continue letting Trump believe he is above the law. No one is. Not even a president or a former president. This immunity claim is bullshit. No one should have immunity from breaking the law.


Prosecutors prepare for court battle to force former White House officials to testify about Trump's January 6 conversations. At issue are claims of executive privilege that prosecutors expect the former president to make in order to shield some information from the federal grand jury as the criminal investigation moves deeper into the ranks of White House officials who directly interacted with Trump.


Inflation and climate change tackled in new Senate deal that Biden calls 'historic'. President Joe Biden hailed as "historic" the Senate Democrats' agreement on a bill to fight the climate crisis and decrease the cost of prescription drugs – key pieces of his domestic agenda.


The House passes a bill boosting the production of semiconductor chips. The measure now goes to President Biden to be signed into law. The legislation is aimed at addressing a semiconductor chip shortage and making the US less reliant on other countries such as China for manufacturing. Supporters say the measure is important not only for US technological innovation, but for national security as well.


West Virginia House passes abortion ban in special legislative session. HB 302 would prohibit abortion at any stage of pregnancy with exceptions for a nonmedically viable fetus, a medical emergency or an ectopic pregnancy, a rare event in which the fertilized egg implants outside the uterus and cannot survive. The bill, as introduced, did not provide exceptions for abortions in cases of rape and incest. Under the bill, an abortion provider who violates the law would be subject to a felony and could face between three to 10 years imprisonment. — Republicans are so fucking loathsome.


Samuel Alito mocks foreign critics of repealing Roe v. Wade in Rome speech on religious liberty. “Religious liberty is under attack in many places because it is dangerous to those who want to hold complete power,” Alito said. “It also probably grows out of something dark and deep in the human DNA – a tendency to distrust and dislike people who are not like ourselves,” he added. -- Alito is dangerous. His talk of ‘religious liberty’ is not truly about religious liberty. For ‘religious liberty’ means freedom for all religions, as well as freedom from religion. He wants Christianity govern this nation.


Anger as Republicans block bill to help military veterans exposed to toxins. The comedian Jon Stewart ripped into Republican senators on Wednesday, after they abruptly halted a bipartisan bill that would expand healthcare access for military veterans exposed to toxic burn pits. The former host of the Daily Show, who now hosts The Problem with Jon Stewart on Apple TV+, has lobbied for the bill. He called those who switched their votes “stab-vets-in-the-back senators”. He added: “PS: fuck the Republican caucus and their empty promise to our veterans.”…A version of the bill passed the Senate 84-14 earlier this year but was sent back to the House for some technical corrections. It easily passed there. But on Wednesday, 25 Republican senators who previously supported the measure declined to move it forward. — Republicans only talk about supporting military vets. Their actions rarely show that they actually do.


Pelosi’s husband sells off up to $5 million worth of chipmaker stock ahead of semiconductor bill vote. The latest regulatory filing came one day before the Senate passed legislation in a 64-33 vote to provide $280 billion to bolster the American semiconductor industry as the nation grappled with a chip shortage, which was impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. — Nothing to see here, folks. Move along.


“Anyone who says members of Congress and their spouses should own stocks is saying Americans don’t deserve lawmakers without conflicts of interest.” — Walter Shaub


Group of Republicans and Democrats form new political party to appeal to moderates

A group of former Republican and Democratic officials are forming a new political party called Forward, in an attempt to appeal to what they call the “moderate, common-sense majority.”


New York state declares monkeypox an imminent threat; San Francisco issues state of emergency over virus. The declarations in New York and San Francisco come after the World Health Organization designated the disease a public health emergency of international concern over the weekend.


28 female inmates in Indiana jail claim they were sexually abused by mob of male inmates: lawsuits. Twenty-eight female prisoners at an Indiana jail claim in two federal lawsuits that they were subjected to a “night of terror” after they were attacked and sexually assaulted by male inmates who had allegedly bought a key to the women’s wing from one of the jailers for $1,000.


Miami considering plan to move homeless people to camp on island in Biscayne Bay. Miami is studying the possibility of taking people experiencing homelessness off the streets and moving them to a city-sponsored encampment on Virginia Key, an idea that has sparked opposition from some community advocates and could imperil federal funding for countywide homeless initiatives.


Flooding in central Appalachia kills at least 8 in Kentucky. Torrential rains unleashed devastating floods in Appalachia on Thursday, as fast-rising water killed at least eight people in Kentucky and sent people scurrying to rooftops to be rescued. Water gushed from hillsides and flooded out of streambeds, inundating homes, businesses and roads throughout eastern Kentucky. Parts of western Virginia and southern West Virginia also saw extensive flooding. Rescue crews used helicopters and boats to pick up people trapped by floodwaters.


All women should enjoy summer, Spain says on launch of beach body positivity campaign. There is no such thing as a body which is not beach-ready, according to a new campaign in Spain. “Summer is ours too,” the country’s equality ministry tweeted Wednesday alongside an image of five women of different ages and body types, including one who appeared to have a mastectomy scar.


Pennsylvania school district adopts policy to remove "sexualized content" in libraries. A selection committee appointed by the district’s superintendent will be tasked with selecting books for school libraries that do not contain “implied” or explicit written descriptions or visual depictions of sexual acts or nudity. Parents under the new policy are also given greater authority to challenge library books “on the basis of appropriateness,” which is not clearly defined in the policy. The document does, however, specify that materials may be challenged and removed based on a lack of educational suitability or prevalence of “sexualized content” or “pervasive profanity or vulgarity.”…The school district’s policy – considered one of the most restrictive in the state by the Pennsylvania Library Association, according to the Inquirer – is reflective of a national trend aiming to limit talk of sexual orientation and gender identity in schools. — Any book that a group of people are trying to ban, is a book that needs to be read


Chick-fil-A Is Asking for 'Volunteers' to Work for 5 Chicken Sandwiches Per Hour. North Carolina Chick-fil-A so hard up for people to work the lunch rush that it’s asking for volunteers from the community. “We get people all the time that want to be a part of what we’re doing. This is designed to be an opportunity for that.”


Rice University engineers have figured out a way to manipulate dead spiders to pick up small delicate electronic components.


RIP Bernard Cribbins. He was 93.

Life’s short. Live, love, create, and help others.


Until next time, my friends. Stay safe and stay sane. Good night.

Wednesday, July 27, 2022

Wednesday, July 27, 2022

And another day of making more than $1B, warrants to search phones, Uvalde Principal suspended, Manchin and Schumer agreeing, a Neo-Nazi Marine, a ‘promising’ step toward single Covid/cold vaccine, interest rate hikes, and FL cops and loud music comes to a close:


“To be clear, no lawmakers on the ‘far left’ have called to ‘confiscate all guns,’ however, Republicans at-large -- not just the far right -- are trying to eliminate gun laws. This is so disingenuous and a pitiful device to ‘both sides’ an issue that is so clearly one-sided.” -- Shannon Watts


Deaths

US: 1,053,969 (+1034)

World: 6,410,548 (+3339)


Cases

US: 92,761,865 (+267,847)

World: 578,351,573 (+1,328,468)


Gun manufacturers have made more than $1 billion from selling assault-style weapons to civilians in the last decade, with some companies seeing their earnings triple as gun deaths soared, a House panel said Wednesday. -- This is literally blood money. -- The committee said leading gun manufacturers used “disturbing sales tactics,” including targeting the weapons to young men to prove their manliness, while failing to take basic steps to monitor the “violence and destruction their products have unleashed.” Later this week, the House plans to vote on a ban on assault weapons for the first time since 1994, Maloney said. More people died from gunfire in the United States in 2020, the most recent year for which complete data is available, than at any other time on record, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. There were more than 45,000 firearm deaths that year...In addition, active shooter incidents in 2021 surged by more than 50 percent from 2020 and nearly 97 percent from 2017, the FBI said in May.


Federal prosecutors obtain warrant to search lawyer John Eastman’s cell phone in January 6 criminal probe. The warrant includes a so-called filter protocol, according to court records, to ensure that investigators do not accidentally obtain privileged information from Eastman’s device.


Former Trump White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson cooperating with DOJ probe. The extent of her cooperation was not immediately clear.


Justice Thomas no longer listed as GWU faculty after Roe backlash. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas is not listed as an instructor for any courses on the website for George Washington University’s law school, where he’s taught since 2011, a removal that follows the high court’s controversial decision undoing decades of precedent protecting a nationwide right to abortion access.


Texas school principal suspended after Uvalde shooting. The report said Gutierrez and other staff knew that the lock on the door of Room 111 - where the shootings took place - was not working properly, but did not place a work order to get it fixed. That broken lock enabled the gunman to easily enter the classroom, it said. — I kinda feel she’s being made a scapegoat


In fighting gun crime, Canada has an American problem. The case of the 31-year-old, indicted last month on charges that could see him jailed for years, illustrates the leading role the Lone Star State now plays in the smuggling of guns used for violence in Canada, and how firearms tracing can help combat that trade. Canadian police chiefs say such cases also show the limits of their government's domestically focused policies to fight gun violence, such as a freeze on handgun purchases, when it has the world's largest civilian gun market on its doorstep…Exclusive data obtained by Reuters for Ontario, Canada's most populous province, shows that when handguns involved in crimes were traced in 2021, they were overwhelmingly - 85% of the time - found to have come from the United States. — America exports violence.


Neo-Nazi Marine Plotted Mass Murder, Rape Campaigns with Group, Feds Say. While tasked with protecting the nation, Matthew Belanger was plotting a killing spree against minorities and to rape “white women to increase the production of white children,” according to federal prosecutors. — Seems like the whole raping “white women to increase the production of white children” thing could, you know, actually become a thing now that women in many states are being forced to give birth.


Manchin, Schumer report abrupt deal on health, energy, taxes. In a startling turnabout, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Joe Manchin announced Wednesday they had reached an expansive agreement that had eluded them for months on health care, energy and climate issues, taxes on higher earners and corporations and federal debt reduction. The two Democrats said the Senate would vote on the wide-ranging measure next week, setting up President Joe Biden and Democrats for an unexpected victory in the runup to November congressional elections in which their control of Congress is in peril. A House vote would come afterward, perhaps later in August. Unanimous Republican opposition in both chambers seems certain. -- Because Republicans have zero interest in helping the common American.


UK scientists take ‘promising’ step towards single Covid and cold vaccine. Researchers at the Francis Crick Institute in London have discovered that a specific area of the spike protein of Sars-CoV-2 – the virus that causes Covid-19 – is a good target for a pan-coronavirus jab that could offer protection against all the Covid-19 variants and common colds.


Matt Gaetz, under investigation for possible sex trafficking, was among 20 Republicans to vote against reauthorizing a sex-trafficking law. The Frederick Douglass Trafficking Victims Prevention and Protection Reauthorization Act of 2022 was approved in the House for reauthorization with a massive majority of 401 votes to 20. The act combats human trafficking — particularly sex trafficking — through severe penalties for perpetrators and support services for victims. It first came into law as the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000, when it passed the House and Senate with almost no opposition, and has been reauthorized multiple times without significant challenge. Gaetz has been under federal investigation since 2020 over the question of whether he had sex with a minor, and whether he paid for her to cross state lines, as The New York Times first reported. Paying for a minor to travel interstate for sex would count as sex-trafficking.


Hulu to begin accepting political issue ads. Disney on Wednesday confirmed to Axios that it would allow political issue ads — in addition to candidate ads — on Hulu's streaming service, effective immediately, bringing Hulu's ad policies to parity with Disney's cable networks. The change comes amid a controversy over Hulu's decision to reject political issue ads around guns and abortions from Democratic groups.


Fed unleashes another big rate hike in bid to curb inflation. The Federal Reserve on Wednesday raised its benchmark interest rate by a hefty three-quarters of a point for a second straight time in its most aggressive drive in more than three decades to tame high inflation. The Fed’s move will raise its key rate, which affects many consumer and business loans, to a range of 2.25% to 2.5%, its highest level since 2018.


Florida, however, seems to be sprinting in the opposite direction of progress. On July 1, a new law took effect statewide, giving police new powers to pull people over just for driving a car that an officer thinks is too loud. Under the law, HB 1435, police officers can stop and ticket any car that can be heard past 25 feet, or that is deemed “louder than necessary” when driving past churches, hospitals, schools, or any residential homes. (Separately, HB 1435 also includes language letting police crack down on public gatherings larger than 50 people.) — Florida continuing to embrace fascism. I’m sure police won’t abuse this at all.


In rare contact, US offers Russia deal for Griner, Whelan. The U.S. has offered a deal to Russia aimed at bringing home WNBA star Brittney Griner and another jailed American, Paul Whelan, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Wednesday. In a sharp reversal of previous policy, Blinken also said he expects to speak with his Kremlin counterpart for the first time since before Russia invaded Ukraine to discuss the deal and other matters.


Outrage in Brazil as Jair Bolsonaro avoids five charges related to Covid response. Brazilian senators are calling for an investigation into one of the country’s top prosecutors after she shelved several charges against the president, Jair Bolsonaro, over his mishandling of the Covid-19 pandemic. A damning congressional inquiry had recommended that Bolsonaro be charged with nine offences, including crimes against humanity and charlatanism, for promoting false treatments such as hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin. The far-right president constantly downplayed the severity of the pandemic, initially calling it “a little flu” and telling Brazilians to man up because “we are all going to die anyway”. Bolsonaro ignored early emails from Pfizer offering to sell Brazil vaccines and was slow to accept a Brazilian alternative, losing time that cost tens of thousands of lives. He also urged Brazilians not to stay at home and not to use masks and his government launched a campaign titled ‘Brazil cannot stop’. More people have died from Covid-19 in Brazil than in any other country except the US. The current death toll in the South American nation stands at 676,964, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).


Forecast: Scorching heat wave extended in US Northwest. Climate change is fueling longer heat waves in the Pacific Northwest, a region where weeklong heat spells were historically rare, according to climate experts.


A 5th person is likely cured of HIV, and another is in long-term remission. One case involved a man with cancer who underwent a specialized stem cell transplant; the other involved a woman who received immune-boosting therapies as part of a clinical trial.


Parents speak out on lawsuit accusing Instagram of fueling daughter's eating disorder, depression. Instagram is accused in two new lawsuits of spurring eating disorders and mental health problems ranging from anxiety and depression to addiction and suicide attempts in teenage girls. The lawsuits -- filed against Meta, the parent company of both Facebook and Instagram, allege the company needs to be held responsible for “causing and contributing to burgeoning mental health crisis perpetrated upon the children and teenagers of the United States."


No one wins U.S. Mega Millions, jackpot now over $1B. A giant Mega Millions lottery jackpot ballooned to $1.02 billion after no one matched all six numbers Tuesday night and won the top prize. The new estimated jackpot will be the nation’s fourth-largest lottery prize…The odds of winning the jackpot are 1 in 302.5 million. — The next drawing is Friday night.


RIP Tony Dow. He was 77.


Life’s short. Live, love, create, and help others.


Until next time, my friends. Stay safe and stay sane. Good night.