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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
2 yrs

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Top 10 Classic Rock Songs About The Open Road

Nothing is more fulfilling than rolling down the windows, feeling that summer breeze, and escaping down an open highway. In a world filled with traffic and chaos, it’s simply wonderful to find a roadway where you can put the pedal to the metal. What tops it all off are some great tunes that help you relax and feel alive. We all know how it feels to be driving down a beautiful stretch of road without any traffic and listening to Lynyrd Skynyrd on the radio. Remember the days when we made mixtapes to pop into that 8-track or cassette deck? The post Top 10 Classic Rock Songs About The Open Road appeared first on ClassicRockHistory.com.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
2 yrs

Bloomberg Gives Away Another $600 Million to Fund Medical Students–This Time, for HBC and Universities
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Bloomberg Gives Away Another $600 Million to Fund Medical Students–This Time, for HBC and Universities

American billionaire philanthropist Michael Bloomberg has announced that a series of grants worth $600 million will be presented to five historically Black colleges and universities. The donations are being channeled specifically to the universities’ medical colleges, and Mr. Bloomberg’s philanthropic organization said it hopes they will sprout greater representation in the medical sector, where Black […] The post Bloomberg Gives Away Another $600 Million to Fund Medical Students–This Time, for HBC and Universities appeared first on Good News Network.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
2 yrs

“No one hits my brother but me.” — Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom
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“No one hits my brother but me.” — Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom

Movies & TV Superhero Movie Rewatch “No one hits my brother but me.” — Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom Two uninteresting bad guys, a relentlessly boring sidekick, and a hackneyed plot help explain why this sequel tanked, leaving the fate of the franchise in doubt… By Keith R.A. DeCandido | Published on August 8, 2024 Credit: Warner Bros. Pictures Comment 0 Share New Share Credit: Warner Bros. Pictures From August 2017 – January 2020, Keith R.A. DeCandido took a weekly look at every live-action movie based on a superhero comic that had been made to date in the Superhero Movie Rewatch. He’s periodically revisited the feature to look back at new releases, as well as a few he missed the first time through. Aquaman was a massive hit in 2018, and it also had good reviews and word-of-mouth, which made it only the second of the DC Extended Universe to get both those things (the other being Wonder Woman the year before). So a sequel was pretty much inevitable. The starting point for it was a treatment that star Jason Momoa wrote during the filming of the 2018 movie. Momoa wanted the second picture to have a message about curtailing the negative impact of climate change. James Wan was signed on to also direct this sequel, for which he wrote the script alongside his collaborator on the prior film, David Leslie Johnson-McGoldrick. Wan’s desire was to expand on the worldbuilding of the first movie and to take a more serious tone. Post-production took much longer than planned, as the movie’s release date wound up being moved forward an entire year, at least in part due to schedule-shuffling following the apocalypse of 2020. This gave the production team more time to do the many and varied visual effects required for the undersea scenes. There were also reshoots that wound up significantly reducing the roles of both Amber Heard and Dolph Lundgren as, respectively, Mera and Nereus. While the official story is that Heard’s chemistry with Momoa was deemed poor, it’s likely that Heard’s very public legal troubles with her ex, Johnny Depp, contributed to her role being marginalized. In addition, the producers wanted to emphasize this as a buddy movie between Aquaman and Patrick Wilson’s Orm. Willem Dafoe was unavailable to reprise his role as Vulko, so the character was killed off-screen. Back from The Flash is Momoa as Arthur Curry/Aquaman. Back from Aquaman are Heard as Mera, Lundgren as Nereus, Wilson as Orm, Nicole Kidman as Atlanna, Temuera Morrison as Thomas Curry, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as David Kane/Black Manta, Randall Park as Dr. Stephen Shin, and John Rhys-Davies as the voice of the Brine King. New to this film are Martin Short as the voice of Kingfish, Vincent Regan as Atlan (the role played by Graham McTavish in Aquaman), Pilou Ashbæk as Kordax, Indya Moore as Karshon, and Jani Zhao as Stingray. Upon release, the movie was nowhere near the success its predecessor had been, and also got very poor reviews and worse word-of-mouth. Rumors are that Momoa may play Lobo in future DC productions under the new stewardship of James Gunn and Peter Safran, but that’s not definite, nor is it definite that Momoa won’t reprise the role of Aquaman (statements have been made in both directions on that). Time will tell… Credit: Warner Bros. Pictures “Promise me you will protect each other” Aquaman and the Lost KingdomWritten by Jason Momoa & Thomas Pa’a Sibbett and James Wan & David Leslie Johnson-McGoldrickDirected by James WanProduced by Peter Safran, James Wan, Rob CowanOriginal release date: December 22, 2023 It’s been four years since Aquaman, and Arthur Curry has married Mera, and they’ve had a kid, a son imaginatively named Arthur Jr. Aquaman is now King of Atlantis, though he finds the job frustrating, as it’s mostly politics and meetings, plus there’s a High Council of the Seven Kingdoms, who mostly won’t let him do what he wants. However, he’s also still working as a superhero, regularly stopping pirates and the like. Aquaman splits his time between Atlantis and the lighthouse in Maine, where Tom Curry and Atlanna help Aquaman and Mera raise Arthur Jr. Meantime, David Kane is still searching for Atlantis, aided by Dr. Stephen Shin. Kane wants revenge on Aquaman for killing his father, while Shin just wants to prove that Atlantis is real. (We find out in this film that Atlantis has continued to remain hidden from the rest of the world by the choice of the High Council, despite Aquaman’s desire to go public so they can actually participate in the world’s discourse.) Shin and one of his assistants fall into a crevasse in the Arctic, only to have the assistant snatched by a tentacle. Kane finds Shin, and then discovers a black trident. The voice of Kordax speaks in Kane’s head, promising him his desired revenge on Aquaman. When he grips the trident, his eyes turn green, which isn’t concerning at all… We cut five months ahead. Kane has been gifted a very old ship by the Kordax; Shin is amazed that it still works. They need a substance called Orichalcum to power the old tech, however, which they’ve been stealing from various vaults around the ocean. Meantime, the effects of climate change have accelerated over the past five months, and a brutal plague has spread through Atlantis—Vulko is among those who have died from it. Kane goes after an Orichalcum stash that’s very close to Atlantis’ border, which results in a response from Aquaman, Mera, and Atlantis’ army. In the ensuing battle, Mera is badly injured, and Kane gets away with the Orichalcum, mainly thanks to a vicious sonic weapon. Atlanna explains that Orichalcum was once used by Atlantis, but they stopped employing it for power when it turned out to release harmful greenhouse gases. It can’t be destroyed, so they hid it in vaults all over the ocean. Kane’s use of it explains both the plague and the accelerated climate change. Aquaman decides that he needs to free Orm. He worked with Kane, so he would know where to find him. Atlanna points out that the council will never go for that, so Aquaman doesn’t intend to consult the council. He’ll just put Orm back where he came from when he’s done. With the aid of a large genetically engineered squid named Topo, Aquaman is able to break Orm out from his prison. Orm takes him to a haven for pirates, and talks to Kingfish. Aquaman reluctantly pretends to be Orm’s prisoner, but when Kingfish isn’t forthcoming with the intelligence they require, Aquaman busts out of the restraints and kicks ass. Kingfish eventually tells them that Kane has set up on an island in the south Pacific. Shin is more and more concerned about Kane’s growing psychopathy, but he’s also trapped. Aquaman and Orm head to the island, where the local flora and fauna has been mutated by the Orichalcum. They barely survive getting through to the control center, where Shin immediately surrenders to them. However, Kane and his other hench-thugs are able to take on Aquaman and Orm, mostly through the new technology they’ve acquired from Kordax. At one point, Orm gets his hands on the black trident. Then he sees everything Kane saw. Orm tells Aquaman that the black trident belongs to Kordax, who was the king of Necrus, the lost kingdom of Atlantis. When Kordax tried to usurp the throne from Atlan, the latter imprisoned the former via blood magic. The only way to free him is with the blood of someone from the royal line. Orm figures that they’re okay, as Aquaman and Orm are the last of the royal line. Except they aren’t. They head to Maine, but by the time they get there, Kane has kidnapped Arthur Jr., leaving Tom badly injured. Atlanna stays with Tom while he recovers (Atlantean science is able to save him), while Aquaman, Orm, Nereus, the recovered Mera, and the Brine King all go after Kane. When they arrive, fisticuffs ensue, though Aquaman and Mera are able to save their kid. However, at one point, Kane throws the black trident toward Mera. Orm catches it before it strikes her, and Kordax transfers himself from Kane to Orm, latching onto Orm’s hatred for Aquaman, which is as great as Kane’s. While Orm is able to make Aquaman bleed, thus starting the process of freeing Kordax, Aquaman is able to convince Orm to let go of his hatred, which gets Kordax out of his head. Without Kordax to hold it together, Necrus starts to collapse. Kane falls down a chasm, and Aquaman—in a reversal of his actions with Kane’s father, when Aquaman left him to die—offers his hand to rescue him. However, Kane refuses, and chooses death over being rescued by his greatest enemy. Aquaman tells Orm to escape to the surface world—he’ll tell Atlantis that he died in battle. Orm thanks him and gives him advice on how to rule properly. Aquaman returns home and insists that Atlantis reveal itself to the surface world, with Aquaman giving a speech to the UN on Ellis Island announcing Atlantis’ intention to join that organization. Credit: Warner Bros. Pictures “Aquaman, shame on you!” Jason Momoa’s original pitch was a movie that had something to say about climate change. James Wan’s desire was to do a more serious movie than Aquaman that expanded the worldbuilding. On top of that, the tag of Aquaman promised a team-up between Kane and Shin, which did not sound promising, given how uninteresting they both were in the first movie. One of the many reasons why Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom just does not work on any level is that the third of those three expectations was the only one that was met. Okay, technically, the movie has something to say about climate change, but it’s mostly that it exists and it’s bad, and it’s mealy-mouthed about it given that the cause of the nasty changes in this movie are from Kane’s use of Orichalcum, so it avoids the issue of actual climate change. Aside from positing the existence of the titular lost kingdom, there is absolutely no worldbuilding going on here, as we see less of the undersea world than we did in 2018. And the notion of a lost kingdom is so old it has whiskers on it, and this particular version of it is your standard stuff, with the lost city being found, and the big bad guy promising to fulfill all the wishes of the smaller bad guy, plus some Cthulhu-esque plant creatures for good measure. Besides giving us two uninteresting main bad guys in Kane and Shin, we also get Patrick Wilson’s spectacularly boring Orm back. Whoopee. Credit where it’s due, though: Randall Park actually does much better with Shin here, mostly because the script writes him as tormented and trying to be ethical, instead of the one-note conspiracy nut he was last time. But Yahya Abdul-Mateen II—who has been superb in pretty much every other role he’s ever played—is once again dreadful as Kane; Wilson remains boring as all hell as Orm; and Kordax is just another demon on the shoulder being a tempter. Snore. To make matters worse, the focus on the buddy movie is so great that all the other characters are shunted aside. Amber Heard’s Mera, Dolph Lundgren’s Nereus, and especially Nicole Kidman’s Atlanna are pathetically marginalized, even though all three are significantly more interesting than Wilson’s unrelentingly dull Orm. (John Rhys-Davies is, at least, entertaining as the Brine King’s voice.) Finally, there’s the title character, who spends way too much time playing Jason Momoa (or at least Momoa’s persona) instead of playing Aquaman. In Justice League and Aquaman, there was a balance between those two extremes, but in Lost Kingdom, it’s all the former, with only occasional bits of the latter. Wan’s alleged desire to make this film more serious is swimming upstream against Momoa’s determination to be a big ol’ goofball no matter what, an act that works best in at least some moderation. But it’s completely unmoderated here, and it’s too much. You know the movie’s overdoing the goofy humor when one of the first jokes we see is that Arthur Jr. regularly pisses in his Dad’s face. Hyur, hyur, that’s funny! Next week, we close out this batch of movies with the only 2024 release in the first half of the year, Madame Web.[end-mark] The post “No one hits my brother but me.” — <i>Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom</i> appeared first on Reactor.
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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
2 yrs

Biden 'Not Confident' There Will Be a Peaceful Transfer of Power
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Biden 'Not Confident' There Will Be a Peaceful Transfer of Power

Biden 'Not Confident' There Will Be a Peaceful Transfer of Power
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Hot Air Feed
2 yrs

Did Harris Agree to Consider an Arms Embargo on Israel?
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Did Harris Agree to Consider an Arms Embargo on Israel?

Did Harris Agree to Consider an Arms Embargo on Israel?
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
2 yrs

Getting Water And Fuel Out Of The Moon Is A Step Closer Thanks To These Projects
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Getting Water And Fuel Out Of The Moon Is A Step Closer Thanks To These Projects

The return of humans to the Moon is hopefully just a few years away, and the goal this time is to establish a continuous presence on our natural satellite. Crucial to that is the human ability to use resources found on the Moon – and the big one is water. There is water on the Moon, but extracting it and purifying it is a big task. Luckily, there are people who are up for the challenge.It is a challenge indeed: the AquaLunar Challenge. This is an international project done in collaboration between the UK Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency. The total prize is £1.2 million, split between a UK track and a Canadian track. The funding is not envisioned to build and deploy the technology, but to put forward intriguing prototypes. The UK has announced its 10 finalists, with a winner and two runner-ups being selected next year. Of course everything we do for space, we want it to help us here on Earth as wellDr Meganne Christian“We’ve had a first-round where a number of teams submitted their ideas for [the Challenge]. Then we had a judging panel and we have chosen 10 which will go ahead. They've got £30,000 each to create a prototype or whatever they can in the next few months and then we'll choose a winner and two runners up and they'll share in £300,000,” Dr Meganne Christian, UK Space Agency reserve astronaut and chair of the Aqualunar Challenge judging panel, told IFLScience.The finalists have various ideas on where they get the water from: the dirty ice buried in craters that have never seen sunlight or from the lunar soil itself, the regolith. They have multiple ways to purify the water, such as centrifuges, plasma, sound waves, and intense heat. The ideas are bold for sure.Even with the winnings, the prototype won’t be immediately ready to ship to the Moon. However, it might be an important next step for the future habitation of the Moon. Before it gets to the Moon, it might be deployed to purify water and make it drinkable here on Earth.“Absolutely that is one of the goals,” Dr Christian told IFLScience. “That is a big part of the challenge as well because of course everything we do for space, we want it to help us here on Earth as well. Anywhere you need light, compact water-purifying devices, this will also have a good impact there. That might be in remote communities, or for industrial runoff, or many different types of possible applications.”There have been some fascinating proposals lately on how to best use what we find on the Moon. From creating roads using lasers and lenses to having flexible rail tracks that can be used by robots, to 3D printing bricks using regolith… well, at least in LEGO form for now.  “All these really creative things are quite exciting things to see for the future of when we are going to have humans living and working on the Moon again. And that's just a small part of what's going to be a whole entire ecosystem. The first thing that we that we are doing is building a communication navigation system in orbit around the Moon.”Such a program, called Moonlight Initiative, is being developed by the European Space Agency, in collaboration with other organizations such as the Italian Space Agency, the UK Space Agency, and NASA.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
2 yrs

The World's Highest Bridge Stands A Dizzying 565 Meters Over A River Valley
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The World's Highest Bridge Stands A Dizzying 565 Meters Over A River Valley

The Beipanjiang Bridge has been described as “China's Impossible Engineering Feat.” Evidently, though, the stunningly high crossing is very much in the realm of possibility.Elevated a dizzying 565 meters (1,854 feet) above a river valley, the Beipanjiang Bridge is the highest bridge in the world – at least for now. Also known as the Duge Bridge, its construction was completed in 2016, becoming the first bridge in the world to ever surpass the 500-meter (1,640 feet) height barrier. It stretches for 720 meters (2,362 feet) over the mighty Beipan River at a location in Dugexiang, close to the border between the provinces of Guizhou and Yunnan in a mountain-ridden region of southwestern China. Completed in 2016, the Duge Bridge is part of the G56 Hangrui Expressway, which links vast parts of southern China.Image credit: ShakyIsles via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)It’s what’s known as a cable-stayed bridge, a crossing where the deck is directly supported by cables connected to towers, distributing the load evenly and allowing for longer spans with fewer supports."The trick is to try and not put too much or too little tension in each cable," Simon Pitchers, a Fellow of the Institution of Structural Engineers, told BBC Newshour while speaking about the construction of the Beipanjiang Bridge."If you get it wrong on a bridge like this, you'll have a wavy deck. And of course they haven't, it's been completed brilliantly,” he explained.Dominated by vertical limestone cliffs and mountainous topography, the surrounding region is home to a collection of immense road and railway bridges that are spaced across the landscape every 50 kilometers (31 miles) or so.                     China has become something of a bridge-building behemoth in the past few decades. Its four western Provinces – Guizhou, Hubei, Yunnan, and Chongqing – have 10 of the world’s 12 highest bridges, and the wider region has more than 50 other crossings that exceed 152 meters (500 feet) in height. This achievement is even more remarkable when you consider that China only had one bridge over 122 meters (400 feet) in 1994. More bridges are currently in the works – and the Beipanjiang Bridge will not have the title of the world’s highest for much longer. China is currently building an even higher bridge in Guizhou Province called the Huajiang Grand Canyon Bridge, with a designed height of 625 meters (feet). The project is expected to be completed in 2025, according to Chinese media.Engineers are also working on plans for the Yongchang Lancangjiang Bridge in Yunnan with a height of 610 meters (2,001 feet), which won’t be completed until 2027.  And lastly, if these lofty feats aren't impressing you, China holds the record for the longest bridge on Earth too: the Danyang-Kunshan Grand Bridge, a 164.8-kilometer (102.4-mile) long viaduct that shuttles high speed rail between Beijing and Shanghai.
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2 yrs

Rumble CEO Rips Anti-Free Speech Advertising Giant: ‘That’s Illegal’
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Rumble CEO Rips Anti-Free Speech Advertising Giant: ‘That’s Illegal’

Rumble CEO Chris Pavloski broke down how biased tyrant advertising monopolies are killing businesses.  Pavlovski went on Fox Business’s Big Money to discuss why he and X owner Elon Musk are suing the World Federation of Advertisers (WFA) which, according to the Foundation of Freedom Online, controls 90 percent of all ad spending worldwide.  WFA uses its massive market control and its peer pressure campaign, the Global Alliance for Responsible Media (GARM), to steer advertisers away from sites and audiences that express certain speech — oftentimes conservative speech. Pavlovski and Musk argue that this is a flagrant violation of antitrust laws.  “[W]hen you have a monopoly, and you create you create a monopoly by assembling all this power and control to dictate a certain standard of how you're going to spend that money, that's not a free market. The Sherman Act does not allow that, so that's illegal,” Pavlovski alleged. “There's different rules and standards when you're a monopoly.”. Earlier in the interview, Pavloski addressed why this is potentially a legal issue and not merely an advertising choice that happens to hurt Rumble. “If you're an advertiser and you don't want to advertise on Rumble or X, that's totally fine. You have the option to do that.”  Pavlovski explained that the problem is that WFA and GARM can “basically instruct these companies on whether or not and how they want to deploy brand safety standards” when choosing ad placements.  Such standards can completely exclude certain businesses, platforms and influencers from gaining advertising revenue by branding them unsafe. “[O]nce you have a huge consortium that creates a monopoly across all of the big ad budgets that dictate the brand safety standard, they then can now discriminate against certain voices on other platforms that they don't like,” Pavlovski said.  The Rumble CEO noted that these practices harm a multiple levels. He explained that WFA and GARM’s standards limit a business’s access to the market which results in ad agencies raising their fees, the price of ads increasing and ultimately higher costs for customers and shareholders. As Pavlovski put it, “that's not a free market.” Conservatives are under attack! Conservatives are under attack! Contact your representatives and demand Big Tech be held to account to mirror the First Amendment while providing transparency on WEF partnerships, clarity on so-called hate speech and equal footing for conservatives. If you have been censored, contact us at the Media Research Center contact form, and help us hold Big Tech accountable.
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2 yrs

Abbott Educates Tapper About Walz's Abortion Radicalism
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Abbott Educates Tapper About Walz's Abortion Radicalism

The only things certain in life are death, taxes, and the media trying to fact-check Republican claims that Democrats are the real radicals on abortion. Unfortunately for CNN’s Jake Tapper, Vice President Kamala Harris picked Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to be her running mate, and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott was there on Wednesday’s edition of The Lead to educate him on just how radical Walz is on the issue. Tapper naturally sought to paint Abbott as the radical, “And in that same time period, infant mortality rates rose 8.3 percent in Texas compared with an increase of 2.2 percent in the rest of the nation. Are you concerned at all about a possible link between your state’s abortion ban and these disastrous increases?”     Abbott claimed he was unfamiliar with the study, but it should be noted that Texas’s pro-life laws gave those babies a shot at life. Unfortunately, many didn’t make it, but if pro-abortion types had their way, they would not have even been given a chance. As for Abbott, he promoted the other side of the story, “For another, obviously, it leaves out the math of all the babies who survived and are alive. We have a record number of babies who are born now who did not lose their life to abortion.” He then turned his attention to Harris and Walz, “And this is an issue that you need to know Kamala Harris is going to have to deal with, just like Democrats had to deal with in the state of Texas. Kamala Harris supports abortion to the very last second before a fully developed child in the mother’s womb is born. That’s late term abortion. The baby can definitely feel the pain that definitely the baby who, if it survives one more minute, will be born, but instead, will lose his life.” A displeased Tapper responded, “Where – are there – these abortions being carried out up until the moment of birth? I keep hearing Republican politicians talking about that. And I mean, that’s infanticide. I don’t know where this is going on.” Abbott then informed him that, “it is in many states. It is the law of the states. The law in California, where Kamala Harris is from, is the law in Minnesota, where Governor Walz is from. And Governor Walz, from reports I`ve seen, was even against a law that they had that would have required medical care for any baby who actually survives an abortion. That’ something that needs to be looked into if he’s against that, because that would be another horrific policy by the Democrats and their zeal to try to kill young babies.” Indeed, Walz repealed provisions of Minnesota law mandating that babies who survived abortions be given life-saving treatment. Walz also repealed laws against coercing women to obtain abortions and once bragged that former Speaker Nancy Pelosi told him to tone it down. Abbott is also correct to point out Walz’s Minnesota has no limits on abortion. It is not Republicans’ fault that Walz sounds like someone Republicans created in a lab to paint Democrats as radicals, and if CNN bothered to do their own research, they wouldn’t have to leave it to Republicans to inform their audience of such radicalism. Here is a transcript for the August 7 show: CNN The Lead with Jake Tapper 8/7/2024 5:12 PM ET JAKE TAPPER: And in that same time period, infant mortality rates rose 8.3 percent in Texas compared with an increase of 2.2 percent in the rest of the nation. Are you concerned at all about a possible link between your state’s abortion ban and these disastrous increases? GREG ABBOTT: So Jake, for one, I’m unfamiliar with that study, and I don’t know if, for a fact, it does tie a cause and effect relationship. For another, obviously, it leaves out the math of all the babies who survived and are alive. We have a record number of babies who are born now who did not lose their life to abortion. And this is an issue that you need to know Kamala Harris is going to have to deal with, just like Democrats had to deal with in the state of Texas. Kamala Harris supports abortion to the very last second before a fully developed child in the mother’s womb is born. That’s late term abortion. The baby can definitely feel the pain that definitely the baby who, if it survives one more minute – TAPPER: Where – are there abortions being – ABBOTT: – will be born, but instead, will lose his life. TAPPER: Where – are there – these abortions being carried out up until the moment of birth? I keep hearing Republican politicians talking about that. And I mean, that’s infanticide. I don’t know where this is going on. ABBOTT: It is in many states. It is the law of the states. The law in California, where Kamala Harris is from, is the law in Minnesota, where Governor Walz is from. And Governor Walz, from reports I`ve seen, was even against a law that they had that would have required medical care for any baby who actually survives an abortion. That’ something that needs to be looked into if he’s against that, because that would be another horrific policy by the Democrats and their zeal to try to kill young babies.
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2 yrs

CNN Commentator: Walz Meant 'Training' When Claiming He Carried Weapon 'In War'
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CNN Commentator: Walz Meant 'Training' When Claiming He Carried Weapon 'In War'

If this is the best that Dem MSM hacks can come up with to defend Tim Walz's claim that he carried weapons "in war," Kamala Harris's VP pick could be in some real trouble. On CNN This Morning, host Kasie Hunt put it to former Hillary spokesperson Karen Finney, now a CNN commentator: "So, Karen, Walz did say that I carried in war. And we do know that doesn't seem to be the case. But he did, would have trained extensively in preparation for it, with these types of weapons." Finney latched like a drowning woman onto Hunt's mention of training: "Exactly. And so, my reading of it is, you know, he was, I think, talking about the training." Riight. This, from the people who urged each other to use the L-word -- "lie" -- when Donald Trump exaggerates his life story. If Walz had been an astronaut, and had trained for a lunar mission but never went on one, would Finney be okay with him saying: "When I carried an American flag on the Moon?" Finney promptly tried to switch the subject to Trump evading military service in Vietnam -- no shame from the Clinton backers there -- and his criticism of veterans and POWs like John McCain. Somewhere, you could hear Carville the Ragin' Cajun cackling: "Look over he-ah: a squirrel!" Fellow CNN commentator Doug Heye, a former aide to Republican House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, gave Walz a "welcome to the major leagues." Heye also noted the reverential, criticism-free treatment that the MSM has accorded Kamala Harris, and the fact that she has not sat down for an interview to field tough questions. But Heye ended with a more CNN-friendly tone by saying, "We're in a political campaign here. We know that Donald Trump fights dirty. If you want to say this is a dirty fight, fine: bring it." Is it fighting dirty to call out Walz's inflating his military record by stating that he was "in war," whereas he was never in a combat zone? CNN This Morning 8/8/24 6:06 am EDT KAREN FINNEY: The other thing that J.D. Vance has taken issue with is a comment that Tim Walz made -- it was actually about gun safety -- and he was talking about carrying weapons of war in war. He didn't say he was in combat. He was talking, you know, and he actually was a munitions expert, if I'm not mistaken. KASIE HUNT:  Let me, let me play those comments that he made, and then we'll play what Vance said just so that we can read our viewers in here. Let's start with Walz here, talking about weapons of war and gun control. Watch. TIM WALZ: I'll take my kick in the butt for the NRA. I spent 25 years in the Army and I hunt, and I gave the money back. And I'll tell you what I have been doing. I've been voting for commonsense legislation that protects the Second Amendment, but we can do background checks, we can do CDC research, we can make sure we don't have reciprocal carry among states, and we can make sure that those weapons of war that I carried in war is the only place where those weapons are at. HUNT: And then this is how Vance  characterized what we heard there from Tim Walz. Watch. JD VANCE: He was making a point about gun control. He said we shouldn't allow weapons that I used in war to be on America's streets.  Well, I wonder, Tim Walz, when were you ever "in war?" When was this, what was this weapon that you carried into war, given that you abandoned your unit right before they went to Iraq. And he has not spent a day in a combat zone. What bothers me about Tim Waltz is the stolen valor garbage. HUNT: So Karen, I mean, Walz did say that I carried in war, and we do know that that doesn't seem to be the case. But he did, would have trained extensively in preparation for it with these types of weapons. FINNEY: Exactly. And so, my read of it is, you know, he was, I think, talking about the training. Now he did deploy in support of, I suppose, my understanding is they could have been deployed further the into the war zone.  But more importantly I think, again, two things. Number one, the top of the Republican ticket not only didn't get out of, got himself out of Vietnam, got himself out of any kind of service, never wore the uniform of the United States, called John McCain a loser. Has a pretty wretched record when it comes to treatment of veterans and our men and women in uniform, particularly those who've been captured or injured. . . .  DOUG HEYE: Tim Walz, welcome to the major leagues. You know, you're no longer a governor of Minnesota who nobody's really ever heard of. You are in the spotlight right now. And after three weeks of nothing but the most positive coverage of, oh my God, Kamala Harris is the greatest person ever to walk the Earth, has never done anything wrong, and should be celebrated and honored, and won't get one word of critical, any critic, criticism. And by the way, won't sit down for an interview to get tough questions.  We're now in the major leagues. And what's JD Vance's role here on this campaign? Is to throw sand in the campaign's eyes. And that's what he's done. And they're reacting to this. We'll find out exactly what's true, what's not. I don't love questioning people's service. I want to honor those who've served. I think we want to encourage people for military service, for any kind of public service.  But we're in a political campaign right here. We know that Donald Trump fights dirty. If you want to say this is a dirty fight, fine, bring it. Here's where we are.
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