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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:07:01 GMT -8
My boss is going to fire the employee with the worst posture. I have a hunch, it might be me.
What Are the Two Most Overused Words and Phrases in Broadcast News?
My answers are at the end. Any other nominatins?
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:07:17 GMT -8
This is Tragic, But How Is a Two-Year-Old Left Unattended in a Pool Long Enough to Drowned?
The two-year-old daughter of a Tampa Bay Buccaneers NFL player drowned in a swimming pool at the family's home on Sunday, authorities said.
Police officers responded to a call that Arrayah, the youngest daughter of Shaquil Barrett, fell into the pool around 09:30 local time (14:30 BST).
She was taken to a hospital in Tampa, Florida, and pronounced dead.
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:10:03 GMT -8
Was the Student's Action Performance Art?A South Korean art student ate a banana that was part of an installation by artist Maurizio Cattelan, saying he was "hungry" after skipping breakfast. The artwork called "Comedian", part of Cattelan's exhibition "WE", consisted of a ripe banana duct-taped to a wall at Seoul's Leeum Musuem of Art. After eating the banana, the student, Noh Huyn-soo, taped the peel to the wall. The museum later placed a new banana at the same spot, reported local media. The incident, which lasted more than a minute, was recorded by Mr Noh's friend. The Leeum Musuem of Art did not respond to an email inquiry by the BBC. However, it told media that it will not claim damages against the student. The banana on display is reportedly replaced every two or three days. Or Is a Lot of Stuff that Is Called Art, Just Dumb?If I Duct Taped a Banana to Our Wall, My Wife Would Not Admire It. She Would Make Me Seek Professional Halp.
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:13:50 GMT -8
We’re gonna lose so much, you may even get tired of losing. And you’ll say, “Please, please. It’s too much losing. We can’t take it anymore. Mr. President, it’s too much.” And I’ll say, “No, it isn’t! We have to keep losing We have to lose more! We’re gonna lose more. We’re gonna lose so much."
The United States judge overseeing the rape case against Donald Trump has denied a request for a mistrial, after a lawyer for the former president accused Judge Lewis Kaplan of ruling in a biased manner against Trump.
In an 18-page letter filed early on Monday in Manhattan federal court, lawyer Joe Tacopina accused Kaplan of being biased against Trump, including in the jury’s presence, during the civil proceedings that began last week.
Tacopina said the effect of Kaplan’s rulings “manifests a deeper leaning towards one party over another”, including in comments where the judge “openly expresses favoritism”.
The judge denied the motion for a mistrial before testimony resumed on Monday. He did not explain his decision, ABC News reported.
Mistrial requests are rarely granted, but they can serve as the basis for eventual appeals. Tacopina was also more likely hoping the judge would grant a version of his alternative requests, The Associated Press news agency reported.
In those, Tacopina asked that Kaplan correct the record for any rulings that mischaracterised the evidence or permit Tacopina more latitude in questioning E Jean Carroll, a columnist who has accused Trump of rape.
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:16:15 GMT -8
They Are Messing With the Most Litigious Place on Earth.
The local governing board that oversees much of Walt Disney World voted on Monday to sue the company as part of an ongoing political feud fueled by Gov. Ron DeSantis.
The five-person Central Florida Tourism Oversight Board voted unanimously to sue Walt Disney World in state court less than a week after the company filed its own lawsuit against both DeSantis and the board, among a handful of other officials.
The company sued after the board voted to invalidate an agreement the previous board passed allowing the company to keep control of much of its operations just as DeSantis and his Republican allies were preparing to pass legislation allowing the governor to appoint a new board.
Disney Likes to Sue People As Much as Mitt Romney Likes to Fire People
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:22:18 GMT -8
Russia Has a Hell of a Lot of Troops Around Bahkmut. Could This Happen?This attack would look like this, engulfing the bulk of Russian forces in one sweeping pincer maneuver. The full thread
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:24:54 GMT -8
Who's Afraid of Betty White?
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:29:10 GMT -8
Previous Guy is Dangerous
A pair of speeches by Donald Trump outlined his ideas for what he would do if given another chance. Those speeches focused on how our cities have become “unlivable, unsanitary nightmares.” Trump plans to arrest and confine the homeless to camps on vacant land outside the cities. Trump wants to build new cities on 3.2 million acres of public land.
Trump also wants to build flying cars and pay people to have babies. Since America “is going to hell very fast,” there would be executions based on “a very quick trial” for those involved in drug crimes. He also called for combining the Department of Justice and Department of Homeland Security to create a new policing force that would include hiring the largest number of police in history. “It sounds horrible, doesn’t it,” said Trump, before explaining again how necessary it is to have more racist “stop and frisk” and more executions.
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:30:42 GMT -8
How Would You Like to Be Running a Hospital in a Red State?
Two hospitals that refused to provide an emergency abortion to a pregnant woman who was experiencing premature labor put her life in jeopardy and violated federal law, a first-of-its-kind investigation by the federal government has found.
The findings, revealed in documents obtained by The Associated Press, are a warning to hospitals around the country as they struggle to reconcile dozens of new state laws that ban or severely restrict abortion with a federal mandate for doctors to provide abortions when a woman's health is at risk. The competing edicts have been rolled out since the Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to an abortion last year.
But federal law, which requires doctors to treat patients in emergency situations, trumps those state laws, the nation's top health official said in a statement.
“Fortunately, this patient survived. But she never should have gone through the terrifying ordeal she experienced in the first place," Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said. “We want her, and every patient out there like her, to know that we will do everything we can to protect their lives and health, and to investigate and enforce the law to the fullest extent of our legal authority, in accordance with orders from the courts.”
The federal agency's investigation centers on two hospitals — Freeman Health System in Joplin, Missouri, and University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City, Kansas — that in August refused to provide an abortion to a Missouri woman whose water broke early at 17 weeks of pregnancy. Doctors at both hospitals told Mylissa Farmer that her fetus would not survive, that her amniotic fluid had emptied and that she was at risk for serious infection or losing her uterus, but they would not terminate the pregnancy because a fetal heartbeat was still detectable.
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:31:58 GMT -8
Did You Miss the White House Correspondants Dinner?
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:35:18 GMT -8
There Is No Banking Crisis Serious Enough to Not Help the Biggest Banks
Regulators seized First Republic Bank and struck a deal to sell the bulk of its operations to JPMorgan Chase & Co., heading off a chaotic collapse that threatened to reignite the recent banking crisis.
JPMorgan said it will assume all of First Republic’s $92 billion in deposits—insured and uninsured. It is also buying most of the bank’s assets, including about $173 billion in loans and $30 billion in securities.
As part of the agreement, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. will share losses with JPMorgan on First Republic’s loans. The agency estimated that its insurance fund would take a hit of $13 billion in the deal. JPMorgan also said it would receive $50 billion in financing from the FDIC.
San Francisco-based First Republic, the second-largest bank to fail in U.S. history, lost $100 billion in deposits in a March run following the collapse of fellow Bay Area lender Silicon Valley Bank. It limped along for weeks after a group of America’s biggest banks came to its rescue with a $30 billion deposit. Those deposits will be repaid after the deal closes, JPMorgan said.
Three of the four largest-ever U.S. bank failures have occurred in the past two months. First Republic, with some $233 billion in assets at the end of the first quarter, ranks just behind the 2008 collapse of Washington Mutual Inc. Rounding out the top four are Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, a New York-based lender that also failed in March.
The deal means JPMorgan, the largest bank in the U.S., is poised to emerge from the current crisis even bigger. The lender has said it got about $50 billion in new deposits from panicky customers looking to move their money to a too-big-to-fail bank following March’s failures. JPMorgan had $2.4 trillion in deposits at the end of the first quarter.
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:37:12 GMT -8
The Other Way to Get Bad Credit
First came the good news. After taking classes at a community college, Ricki Korba was admitted to California State University, Bakersfield, as a transfer student. But when she logged on to her student account, she got a gut punch: Most of her previous classes wouldn’t count.
The university rejected most of her science classes, she was told, because they were deemed less rigorous than those at Bakersfield — even though some used the same textbooks. Several other courses were rejected because Korba exceeded a cap on how many credits can be transferred.
Now Korba, a chemistry and music major, is retaking classes she already passed once. It will add a year to her studies, plus at least $20,000 in tuition and fees.
“It just feels like a waste of time,” said Korba, 23, of Sonora, California. “I thought I was supposed to be going to a CSU and starting hard classes and doing a bunch of cool labs.”
Every year, hundreds of thousands of students start at community colleges hoping to transfer to a university later. It’s advertised as a cheaper path to a bachelor’s degree, an education hack in a world of ever-rising tuition costs.
Yet the reality is rarely that simple. For some students, the transfer process becomes a maze so confusing it derails their college plans.
Among nearly 1 million students who started at a community college in 2016, just one in seven earned a bachelor’s degree within six years, according to data from the National Student Clearinghouse.
One of the biggest obstacles is known as credit loss: when students take classes that never end up counting toward a degree.
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:38:57 GMT -8
Cheer Up. There' Only a 10%-20% Chance of Global Financial Disater in 6 Weeks
Debt ceiling watchers have had June 15 circled on their calendars for weeks now as an important date. The crucial question: Will the government has enough in the bank to stay afloat until then?
A host of new analyses over the last week finds increasing chances that the answer will be yes.
Experts are now projecting that the U.S. economy is more likely to get over that hump and bank a few extra weeks of breathing room before a default is all but assured later this summer without bipartisan compromise.
The news - while far from certain - has eased some fears in the financial world of an immediate default crisis and the economic turmoil that it likely to follow.
One of the updated projections comes from Wrightson ICAP, one of the closest outside observers of the billions that flow in and out of the Treasury department every day.
The research group is now most focused at this point on late July as the "peak danger zone" for default, according to a new outlook released Monday. Wrightson ICAP still projects a 10-20% chance of default ahead of that June 15 date.
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:40:09 GMT -8
The QOP Isn't the Only One Who Can Hold Hearings
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is ready to put House Republicans' debt ceiling legislation on blast.
In a dear colleague letter, Schumer said that Senate committees will start holding hearings this week "to expose the true impact of this reckless legislation on everyday Americans." That includes a Senate Budget Committee hearing on Thursday.
Schumer also made explicit that the bill is essentially dead on arrival. Schumer, like House Democrats, is referring to the legislation as the "Default on America Act."
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Post by mhbruin on May 1, 2023 8:41:51 GMT -8
What Are the Two Most Overused Words and Phrases in Broadcast News?
"Breaking News" and "historic".
This morning I head both used within 10 seconds of each other about something that wasn't breaking news or historic.
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