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Biden warns of a ‘nightmare’ future for the country if Trump should win again, and lists reasons why

Biden warns of a ‘nightmare’ future for the country if Trump should win again, and lists reasons why 2560 1706 NewsExpress

LAS VEGAS (AP) — President Joe Biden on Sunday ticked through a list of reasons he says a second Donald Trump presidency would be a “nightmare” for the country as he urged Nevada Democrats to vote for him in the state’s presidential primary this week and for his party at large in November.

Biden opened a campaign swing with a fundraiser where he focused on Trump’s ample history of provocative statements — his description of Jan. 6 rioters as “hostages,” his musing about a former top military officer deserving execution, his branding of fallen soldiers as “suckers” and “losers,” his wish to be a Day One “dictator,” his vow to supporters that “I am your retribution,” and more.

Then it was on to a community center in a predominantly Black section of Las Vegas, where he told his crowd of several hundred that “you’re the reason we’ll make Donald Trump a loser again.”

Biden said the stakes were huge when he took on Trump in 2020 — “what made America America, I thought, was at risk’ — and they are even larger now as a likely rematch looms.

He told donors at the private home in Henderson, Nevada, that if they came to Washington, he’d show them the White House dining room table where Trump, according to ex-aides, sat transfixed for hours in front of the TV as the rioters he’d fired up with his rhetoric stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

“We have to keep the White House,” he said., “We must keep the Senate” and win back the House.

Accomplish that, he said, and “we can say we saved American democracy.”

He was equally blunt in talking up his record at his subsequent rally where he implored voters to “imagine the nightmare of Donald Trump.”

Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung responded in kind, saying Biden “has been a nightmare for this country in just three short years in the White House, and no amount of gaslighting will make Americans forget about all the misery and destruction he has brought.”

In Tuesday’s Nevada Democratic presidential primary, Biden faces only token opposition from author Marianne Williamson and a few relatively unknown challengers. He won Nevada in November 2020 by fewer than 3 percentage points. But he came to Nevada to rouse voters for the fall campaign as well.

The state known largely for its casino and hospitality industries is synonymous with split-ticket, hard-to-predict results. It has a transient, working-class population and large Latino, Filipino and Chinese American and Black communities . Nevada has a stark rural-urban divide, with more than 88% of active registered voters — and much of its political power — in the two most populous counties, which include the Las Vegas and Reno metro areas.

In 2022, Democrats successfully defended their Senate seat and lost the governor’s office. The six constitutional officers elected statewide are split evenly among Democrats and Republicans.

The narrow victory of Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto helped Democrats party keep control of the Senate for the remainder of Biden’s current term.

Working in Biden’s favor this year is the vast Democratic operation built by the late Sen. Harry Reid. The “Reid Machine” has for years trained operatives and retained organizers and is partially why, despite Nevada’s status as a purple state, Democrats have won every presidential election here since 2008.

But early signs show Biden could have more ground to make up than in past races. Voters are largely dissatisfied with the likely Biden-Trump rematch. A New York Times/Siena poll from November put Biden’s approval rating at 36% in Nevada.

“I know from my reelection, the issues that matter to Nevadans are still those kitchen table issues,” Cortez Masto said in an interview.

Biden has built his reelection campaign around the theme that Trump presents a dire threat to U.S. democracy and its founding values. The president also has championed the defense of abortion rights, recently holding his first big campaign rally, in Virginia, where the issue energized Democrats who won control of the state’s House of Delegates.

Biden also promotes his handling of the economy, arguing that his policies have created millions of jobs, combated climate change and improved American competitiveness overseas. But polls suggest many voters aren’t giving his administration credit.

The Democratic National Committee recently announced a six-figure ad buy in Nevada and South Carolina, where Biden won the leadoff primary Saturday. The ads are meant to boost enthusiasm among Black, Asian American and Latino voters statewide, including radio, television and digital ads in Spanish, Chinese and Tagalog, and a billboard in Las Vegas’ Chinatown.

As early voting began a week ago in Nevada, Trump asserted without evidence during a campaign rally in Las Vegas that he was the victim of the Biden administration’s weaponizing law enforcement against him. Trump has been indicted four times and faces 91 felonies.

Dan Lee, an associate professor of political science at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said that for Biden, “the map says he has to hold on to Nevada.”

The Republican presidential primary is also Tuesday but the state GOP is holding caucuses on Thursday to allocate delegates. Trump is competing in the caucuses; rival Nikki Haley opted to stay on the nonbinding primary ballot.

___

Stern reported from Reno, Nevada. Associated Press writer Will Weissert in Washington contributed to this report.

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Stern is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Stern on X: @gabestern326

Powell: ‘The US is on an unsustainable fiscal path’

Powell: ‘The US is on an unsustainable fiscal path’ 900 505 NewsExpress

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said “the U.S. is on an unsustainable fiscal path” in a “60 Minutes” interview with Scott Pelley released Sunday.

“The U.S. federal government’s on an unsustainable fiscal path. And that just means that the debt is growing faster than the economy. So, it is unsustainable. I don’t think that’s at all controversial,” Powell said when asked if the national debt is a danger to the economy.

The U.S. national debt topped $34 trillion for the first time ever in early January, just over three months after surpassing the $33 trillion mark, according to data released by the U.S. Treasury.

Congress has punted on spending deadlines three times since the end of September as it grapples with how to fund the government amid tensions about the ballooning national debt.

Under the latest stopgap measure passed in January, funding for four federal agencies will expire on March 1. Funding for the rest of the government is set to run out on March 8.

President Biden and House Republicans faced off on the borrowing limit last spring, ultimately averting disaster days before the U.S. was set to default. But Fitch Ratings downgraded the U.S. credit rating from “AAA” to “AA+” in August, citing the increasing burden of the national debt and repeated partisan standoffs over the debt limit.

Despite the Fed chair’s long-term worries about the national debt, he said members of the central bank’s rate-setting panel believe “the economy’s in a good place.”

The economy has been growing quickly, clocking in at an annual rate of 3.3 percent during the fourth quarter of 2023, according to the latest data released by the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Inflation has also fallen drastically from its 9 percent peak in summer 2022 to 3.4 percent in December, according to the latest consumer price index (CPI). The Fed hiked interest rates from near zero in March 2022 to a range of 5.25 to 5.5 percent in June 2023, and they have held rates steady at subsequent meetings.

Top Fed officials have signaled rate cuts on the horizon in 2024 but declined to cut rates following the January meeting last Wednesday, as expected. What was less expected was Powell’s suggestion that March rate cuts were off the table at a press conference following the announcement, a position he doubled down on during his “60 Minutes” interview.

“I would say, and I did say yesterday, that I think it’s not likely that this committee will reach that level of confidence in time for the March meeting, which is in seven weeks,” Powell said.

“The kinds of things that would make us want to move sooner would be if we saw weakness in the labor market or if we saw inflation really persuasively coming down,” he added.

Powell and the Fed have taken heat from both sides of the political spectrum for their decision to keep interest rates at their highest level in more than two decades.

Former President Trump accused Powell of being “political” and suggested the Republican appointee would cut rates to help Democrats during the upcoming election during a Fox Business interview on “Mornings with Maria” that aired Sunday.

Some Senate Democrats also urged the Fed chair to cut rates ahead of last Wednesday’s meeting.

“As the Fed weighs its next steps in the new year, we urge you to consider the effects of your interest rate decisions on the housing market and to reverse the troubling rate hikes that have put affordable housing out of reach for too many,” Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.), Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.) and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) wrote in a letter to Powell last Sunday.

But Powell pushed back on any implication that politics would play a role in the Fed’s decision to cut interest rates in the coming months.

“We do not consider politics in our decisions. We never do. And we never will,” Powell said. “Integrity is priceless. And at the end, that’s all you have.”

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Nose picking likely ‘partially’ to blame for Alzheimer’s disease: scientists

Nose picking likely ‘partially’ to blame for Alzheimer’s disease: scientists 2000 1333 NewsExpress

You can pick your nose, but you can’t pick your pathogens.

A review of dozens of published studies into the mechanisms behind neurological diseases has collected strong evidence that people who frequently pick their noses are at a higher risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease.

The new report, compiled and written by researchers at Western Sydney University, was published in the journal Biomolecules late last year.

“Neuroinflammation in Alzheimer’s disease might be partially caused by viral, bacterial and fungal pathogens entering the brain through the nose and the olfactory system,” they wrote in the report.

Chronic nose-picking, medically known as rhinotillexomania, introduces germs into the sensitive nasal cavity that cause inflammation in the brain, which has been linked to the onset of Alzheimer’s disease.

Over 6 million people are living with the neurodegenerative disease, predominantly affecting those age 65 and older.

Scientists still aren’t precisely sure what causes Alzheimer’s disease, but in the brains of patients they have observed a buildup of a protein called tau, which is associated with the body’s immune response.

When immune cells are triggered by invasions too frequently, researchers believe that stress on the body, in the form of inflammation, can lead to various diseases.

In the brains of Alzheimer’s patients, doctors have observed a buildup of a protein called tau, which is associated with the body’s immune response. Getty Images

In the brains of Alzheimer’s patients, doctors have observed a buildup of a protein called tau, which is associated with the body’s immune response. Getty Images

Authors of the latest report showed support for this theory, suggesting that shifts in the nasal environment caused by an overgrowth of germs could be the source of chronic, mild brain infections.

Such infections can exist seemingly without symptoms on the outside but may cause inflammation below the surface, leaving behind harmful plaques of protein that contribute to the development of neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s.

A variety of common pathogens have been found in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s, such as the bacteria that cause pneumonia, the herpes virus, the coronavirus and the cat-derived parasite Toxoplasma gondii.

Researchers of the new report urged readers to refrain from putting their fingers in their noses — and, if they must, to wash their hands thoroughly before they do. Getty Images/iStockphoto

Researchers of the new report urged readers to refrain from putting their fingers in their noses — and, if they must, to wash their hands thoroughly before they do. Getty Images/iStockphoto

With prevention in mind, researchers urged for regular hand-washing.

They wrote, “One of the lessons learned from COVID-19 is the value of hand hygiene through frequent hand washing and the use of hand sanitizers, and we suggest these routine hygienic procedures be mandatory routine procedures for the incurable nose-picker.”

I’m a Self-Made Millionaire: 4 Things To Stop Buying That Are a Waste of Money

I’m a Self-Made Millionaire: 4 Things To Stop Buying That Are a Waste of Money 1920 1080 NewsExpress
Rawpixel / iStock.com

Rawpixel / iStock.com

Part of the reason so many lottery winners and heirs blow their windfalls shortly after getting rich is that they never learned the skills to manage, guard and grow that kind of money. The other reason is that they never had to sweat, sacrifice and risk to grow the fortunes that fell in their laps.

Grant Cardone: Passive Income Is the Key To Building Wealth — Here’s My No. 1 Tip
Find Out: How To Get Cash Back on Your Everyday Purchases

But self-made millionaires know just how hard it is to build riches worth seven figures — and they’re in no rush to return to where they started. Toiling your way to wealth tends to breed financial discipline, which means passing on things that you might want and can afford. That’s how you turn a small fortune into a large one.

Sponsored: Owe the IRS $10K or more? Schedule a FREE consultation to see if you qualify for tax relief.

A Millionaire Guards His Wealth After Almost Losing It All

Brian Crane is the founder and CEO of Spread Great Ideas, a multi-million dollar fund that invests capital “and sweat equity” into digital businesses and e-commerce brands. He’s helped launch four multi-million-dollar companies, including Archives.com, which Ancestry.com acquired for $100 million three years after its launch.

His hard work paid off, and he’s now a self-made millionaire — but you wouldn’t know it by looking at his lifestyle.

“I learned the hard way very early in my entrepreneurship journey that splurging without the correct checks and balances can make one a pauper,” said Crane. “When I sold my first company in my late 20s, I made some foolish investment decisions that brought me close to bankruptcy. I am lucky that I learned fast.”

Here are the things he doesn’t splurge on to ensure he doesn’t repeat his early career mistakes and risk all that he’s worked so hard to build.

Check Out: 7 Things the Middle Class Spends Money on That Hurts Their Chances of Being Rich

Designer Luxury Brands

Movie, music and sports stars are infamous for squandering their fortunes on shiny things and status symbols that social media influencers peddle without mentioning that they’re depreciating assets.

Crane wants nothing to do with any of it. His favorite status symbol is one you can’t wear, drive or fly — a bulging bank account.

“With truckloads of money, you may be enticed to buy the flashiest, trendiest stuff, whether apparel or cars,” he said. “Know and understand the importance of quality and cost. Remember that when you put depreciation costs into effect, the luxury brands can punch a hole in your pocket, which you could have used to buy quality apparel from a cheaper store. Extravagance may look good to the eyes, but you can do better by putting the same money into more appropriate investments.”

Mansions

The ultimate status symbol is an opulent house tricked out with premium décor and pricey tech. But giant houses come with giant bills — and they can be very hard to sell once the nouveau riche realize they’re in over their heads.

“Most millionaires invest in luxury houses, only to find a way to flip them at a higher cost or rent it away and make some side money from the asset,” said Crane. “There is no point in splurging on huge houses if you are never going to use the eleventh bedroom or bathroom. The truly rich people become rich not by splurging but by investing in profitable, money-making assets that give them favorable returns over time.”

Ultra-Luxe Leisure and Entertainment

The recklessly rich all share a proclivity for two things that advertise their wealth. The first is stuff — high-end designer bags, apparel and accessories, fast cars, fancy houses and the rest, like the kind that Crane described.

The second is the good life, which you can watch influencers living and faking all day long on social media.

“Eating from gold-plated cutlery may look good on Instagram, but splurging to maintain your appearance and leisurely activities can waste resources,” said Crane. “High-end entertainment, like going on costly offshore vacations, eating from the choicest restaurants or splurging on private jet travel, may look good in magazines, but the rags-to-riches millionaire always keeps a check on what he puts money on.”

He concluded, “In today’s world, where you can have the same experiences for a lot less, wasting money on these fleeting moments must be avoided.”

Another Avoids Little Luxuries That Add Up Over Time

Jared Bauman has nearly 20 years of experience in business management and digital marketing. His company, 201 Creative, counts corporations like Disney and Universal among its clients, and Bauman — who has started and sold several businesses — is an in-demand speaker.

He’s also a millionaire, and, like Crane, he shuns flashy advertisements of personal wealth. “Luxury cars and watches are fleeting status symbols I avoid,” he said.

But saying no to the obvious, big-ticket extravagance is the easy part. The true test of his financial discipline is in day-to-day life, when it comes time to say no to the affordable splurges that bleed you slowly over time.

“Overpriced coffee shops are an indulgence I skip,” said Bauman. “At the end of the day, I steer clear of anything that depletes my savings without providing real, lasting personal value. The habits that got me here keep me grounded while still enjoying the important things.”

More From GOBankingRates

This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: I’m a Self-Made Millionaire: 4 Things To Stop Buying That Are a Waste of Money

Hamas hounds Israeli forces in main Gaza cities

Hamas hounds Israeli forces in main Gaza cities 800 533 NewsExpress

By Nidal al-Mughrabi, Bassam Masoud and Dan Williams

DOHA/GAZA/JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Palestinian gunmen kept up attacks against Israeli forces on Sunday in the Gaza Strip’s two main cities, weeks after they were overrun by troops and tanks, in a sign Hamas still maintains some control ahead of any potential truce.

Nearly four months into the war triggered by the Palestinian Islamist group’s deadly cross-border rampage in Israel, there was persistent fighting in Gaza City in the north of the densely populated enclave, and in Khan Younis to the south.

At the weekly Israeli cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said 17 of Hamas’ 24 combat battalions had been dismantled. The rest, he said, were mostly in the southern Gaza Strip – including Rafah, on the enclave’s Egyptian border.

“We’ll take care of them, too,” he said, according to a statement from his office. Hamas does not publish its losses.

The prospect of a push into Rafah has piled pressure on the hundreds of thousands of Palestinian civilians who have fled their homes elsewhere and are sheltering there. It also worries Cairo, which has said it will not admit any influx of Palestinian refugees in what it describes a bid to prevent any permanent dispossession.

An Israeli official told Reuters, however, that the military would coordinate with Egypt, and seek ways of evacuating most of the displaced people northward, ahead of any Rafah ground sweep.

Palestinians reported Israeli tank shelling and air strikes there, including one that killed two girls in a house.

As mourners bade farewell to the dead children, a relative, Mohammed Kaloub, said the air strike hit a room full of women and children in Rafah’s al-Salam neighborhood.

“There is no safe place in Gaza, from the wire fence to the wire fence (borders from north to south), there is no safe place,” he told Reuters.

Palestinian health officials said eight people were killed in separate Israeli air strikes on Deir Al-Balah areas in the central Gaza Strip. Deir Al-Balah is the second city in the enclave where Israel has not yet deployed tanks.

After conducting partial pullouts from Gaza City in the past few weeks that enabled some residents to return and pick through the rubble, Israeli forces have been mounting incursions. Netanyahu described these on Sunday as “mopping-up operations”.

Before dawn on Sunday, air strikes destroyed several multi-storey buildings, including an Egyptian-funded housing project, residents said. The military said it killed seven Hamas gunmen in northern Gaza and seized weaponry. Israel’s Army Radio said troops in the area were trying to penetrate two Hamas bunkers, a mission it said could take two weeks amid clashes at the sites.

“Gaza City is being wiped out,” one resident who asked not to be named told Reuters. “The (Israeli) pull-out was a ruse.”

‘NEUTRALISING’ TUNNELS

In Khan Younis, overnight Israeli shelling killed three Palestinians, medics said. Residents reported street fighting raging in western and southern areas of the city, where Israel said a soldier was killed in a Palestinian attack on Saturday.

Troops in Khan Younis seized a Hamas compound and killed several gunmen, the military said. Netanyahu said Israeli forces in the city were “neutralising” Hamas tunnels that run throughout Gaza, enabling gunmen to hole up and launch ambushes.

“This demands more time yet,” he told his ministers.

Gaza health authorities, who do not differentiate between militants and civilians in their tallies, said on Sunday more than 27,300 Palestinians have been confirmed killed since the war began. They say that 70% of those killed have been women and children. Thousands more are feared lost amid the ruins.

Israel says it has killed some 10,000 gunmen in its campaign to annihilate Hamas after the Oct. 7 attack by the group, which is sworn to Israel’s destruction. In the rampage, 1,200 people were killed and 253 taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies.

More than 130 hostages are still in Gaza, and their possible release by Hamas is among issues under discussion in Egyptian- and Qatari-mediated negotiations, that are backed by the United States, to secure a truce.

Hamas has demanded an end to the war. Israel rules that out but is open to a temporary truce.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi hosted French Foreign Minister Stephane Sejourne in a meeting on Sunday that Sisi’s office said emphasized Egypt’s collaborative efforts to establish a ceasefire and deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza.

(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Doha and Dan Williams in Jerusalem, Tala Ramadan in DubaiEditing by Frances Kerry)

19 Signs From This Past Week That’ll Make You Laugh Wayyyyyy Harder Than Any Joke Your Ex Ever Made

19 Signs From This Past Week That’ll Make You Laugh Wayyyyyy Harder Than Any Joke Your Ex Ever Made 1250 830 NewsExpress

February is here, and the funny signs just keep on rolling in. So let’s take a moment and enjoy the best of the week, courtesy of r/funnysigns:

1.“Is anyone curious about what ‘more’ is?”

—u/KCousins4President

2.“Brilliant!”

—u/MemorableKidsMoments

3.“I’ll have the soup and salad, please.”

—u/little_angel56

4.“Everything happens for a reason…”

—u/MistyLuHu

5.“I really like this sign.”

—u/dishonoredboi

6.“You are the solution to my problems.”

—u/ScarlettPrincess_

7.“That car is a beast!”

—u/CalepinDiatoms50

8.“The most useful sign.”

—u/phenoxider

9.“Words (pics) to live by.”

—u/beachvbguy

10.“Take care of the beer like a baby.”

—u/Broad-Fault

11.“Great advice.”

—u/Danielsows

12.“Is that a sign or a philosophical statement?”

—u/TeachMeImWilling69

13.“Funny bar sign.”

—u/TeachMeImWilling69

14.“Always use the stairs.”

—u/Sillysam28

15.“His bark is bigger than his bite.”

—u/Proper-Connection-32

16.“Don’t wet the dry.”

—u/SensurroundSlapdash

17.“You really should.”

—u/Bodaciousdrake

18.“Obvious sign?”

—u/Broad-Fault

19.“This sign is so right.”

—u/Broad-Fault

Don’t miss last week’s funniest signs:

18 Funny Signs This Week That Made Me Laugh More Than Any Male Comedian I’ve Ever Paid To See

New York City to hand out $53 million in pre-paid credit cards to migrant families: report

New York City to hand out $53 million in pre-paid credit cards to migrant families: report 1280 720 NewsExpress

New York City will soon launch a $53 million pilot program to hand out pre-paid credit cards to migrant families housed in hotels, according to a report.

The New York Post, citing city records, reported that 500 migrant families at the Roosevelt Hotel will receive pre-paid cards to help them buy food. The program is intended to replace the current food service provided there, the Post reported.

“Not only will this provide families with the ability to purchase fresh food for their culturally relevant diets and the baby supplies of their choosing, but the pilot program is expected to save New York City more than $600,000 per month, or more than $7.2 million annually,” a spokesperson for New York City Mayor Eric Adams told the paper in a statement.

City Hall did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

ILLEGAL MIGRANT FLIPS MIDDLE FINGERS AFTER BEING CHARGED WITH ATTACKING NYPD IN TIMES SQUARE

Adams sitting

NYC Mayor Eric Adams’ administration is launching a $53 million pilot program to provide migrants housed in city hotels with pre-paid credit cards for food.

The pre-paid cards may only be used at bodegas, grocery stores, supermarkets and convenience stores. Migrants eligible for the program must sign an affidavit stating they will only spend the funds on food and baby supplies, or else they would lose access to the funds, the report said.

READ ON THE FOX NEWS APP

The amount available to each migrant family depends on their size and how much income they are receiving, according to the contract reviewed by the Post. A family of four might be provided nearly $1,000 each month, or $35 per day for food, the Post reported. The cards are replenished every 28 days.

New Jersey company Mobility Capital Finance has partnered with the city to run the program.

NEW YORK REPUBLICAN CALLS ON HOCHUL, ADAMS TO DENOUNCE BIDEN’S BORDER POLICY AMID MIGRANT CRISIS IN BIG APPLE

Migrants in NYC

Asylum seekers line up in front of the historic Roosevelt Hotel, converted into a city-run shelter for newly arrived migrant families in New York City, United States on September 27, 2023.

“MoCaFi looks forward to partnering with New York City to disburse funds for asylum seekers to purchase fresh, hot food,” MoCaFi CEO and founder Wole Coaxum told the Post. “MoCaFi’s goal is to expand access to financial resources for individuals excluded from banking, such as asylum seekers, while helping the local economy.”

City officials said that if the pilot program is a success with the initial 500 migrant families, it will be expanded to all migrant families staying in hotels, which is 15,000 currently.

More than 150,000 migrants have arrived in New York City since 2022, overwhelming city resources as officials have struggled to find housing for them. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has bused asylum-seekers to New York and other cities in an effort to assist them in traveling to sanctuary jurisdictions and also highlight the crisis that border communities face on a daily basis.

NYPD IMPOUNDS 80 UNLICENSED MIGRANT MOPEDS FROM OUTSIDE ROOSEVELT AND WATSON HOTEL SHELTERS

Mayor Adams has decried the arrivals as a humanitarian crisis and said that providing food and housing for the migrants will cost the city about $12 billion over three years.

In October, the mayor traveled to Latin America on a tour to dissuade potential migrants in Mexico, Colombia and Ecuador from attempting to come to the city, saying the city is “at capacity.”

CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Critics, however, have said that New York City’s sanctuary policies and handouts to migrants will only encourage more immigration.

“If I were promoting an event and wanted to attract the biggest possible crowd without worrying about losing money, I’d make admission free and give everyone complimentary pizza and beer,” Knox County Mayor Glenn Jacobs, a Tennessee Republican and former WWE wrestler, posted on X, commenting on the New York Post report. “That’s kinda immigration policy right now.”

Original article source: New York City to hand out $53 million in pre-paid credit cards to migrant families: report

People Are Claiming Eating Day-Old Rice Can Be Dangerous, And Rage Has Ensued — Here’s The Unfortunate Confirmation From An Expert

People Are Claiming Eating Day-Old Rice Can Be Dangerous, And Rage Has Ensued — Here’s The Unfortunate Confirmation From An Expert 1250 830 NewsExpress

A few months ago, we learned that if you eat food that’s been sitting out too long, it could lead to serious health complications. And, in rare cases, it could cause death. It is a phenomenon that some medical experts refer to as “Fried Rice Syndrome”:

Now people across the internet are pointing out another important aspect to keep in mind: Even if you don’t leave your rice out at room temperature for very long, simply keeping it in your fridge for more than a day can be harmful.

Prepped meals in a fridge

Johner Images / Getty Images/Johner RF

Some people are even sharing how reheated, leftover rice has landed them in the hospital with food poisoning.

a person gripping their stomach

Catherine Mcqueen / Getty Images

BuzzFeed found one expert who experienced this firsthand — and her story went viral. Dr. Lauren DeDecker is a resident physician in internal medicine who got so ill from rice she had to be transported to a hospital via helicopter.

Closeup of Lauren DeDecker

Lauren DeDecker

She told BuzzFeed that while visiting the Himalayas, she ordered a “traditional sweet rice dish from Nepal.” However, after a few hours, she became violently ill. “The following day I was too dehydrated and weak to leave. I had to be helicoptered to the nearest bigger town to get IV fluids,” she shared.

a person serving rice into a bowl

Miniseries / Getty Images

Luckily, Dr. DeDecker was fine after she received medical care. “Before I left, I asked how had they prepared my dinner. They told me openly that the rice dish had been made in a large pot that morning, had been out at room temperature all day, then reheated and served that night for dinner. So, it hadn’t been refrigerated. While I can’t know for certain that it was the B. Cereus food poisoning — or Fried Rice Syndrome — based on what I ate and that history, it’s very likely that that’s what it was,” she explained. You can listen to her story about it on TikTok here.

closeup of a bowl of rice

Takanori Ogawa / Getty Images

Dr. DeDecker said the safest recommendation is to put any rice that you’re not going to consume immediately in the fridge within one to two hours of cooking (but one hour is safer). The most important thing to note, however, is that you should only reheat rice ONCE. “Let’s say you have leftovers. You would not want to take some of that rice, reheat it, not finish it, put it back in the fridge, and then reheat that same portion of rice again.”

Rice in a to-go box

Kool99 / Getty Images/iStockphoto

Reheating rice more than once, according to Dr. DeDecker, increases the risk that you could get B. Cereus because you’re increasing the time that it’s not properly cooled or heated. “Bacteria is ubiquitous in the environment, it’s not rare, but it’s not going to be in all rice and green products. You’re not going to know if it is in the rice or not because it’s microscopic. And this goes for white, fried rice, any rice,” she explained.

a person with their hand on the microwave door

Cris Cantón / Getty Images

However, many people on TikTok are saying this phenomenon isn’t real because they’ve reheated rice a million times and it has never happened to them…but Dr. DeDecker said it is very real. “The bacteria is not going to be in every single vat or package of rice. It also takes a certain amount of bacteria to make you sick. When cooked rice is out at room temperature for too long, the bacteria and the spores can multiply and increase in number and so the load can get high enough to make you ill,” she added.

closeup of a man eating white rice with chopsticks

Hill Street Studios / Getty Images

So, let’s go over Dr. DeDecker’s safest practices so that we can do our best to prevent this illness from happening in our own lives: “To prevent getting sick, serve rice as soon as it has been cooked. Then, put the leftover rice in the fridge within one hour of cooking it. Keep the rice in the fridge no longer than one day. Do not reheat the same portion of rice more than once. Rice should be stored below 40 degrees Fahrenheit.”

You can read more about how to prevent Bacillus cereus here.

‘Out of touch’: Dave Ramsey slams Philadelphia couple for paying $80K/year on child care — and some parents on TikTok now think Ramsey owes them an apology. Are they right?

‘Out of touch’: Dave Ramsey slams Philadelphia couple for paying $80K/year on child care — and some parents on TikTok now think Ramsey owes them an apology. Are they right? 728 400 NewsExpress
‘Out of touch’: Dave Ramsey slams Philadelphia couple for paying $80K/year on child care — and some parents on TikTok now think Ramsey owes them an apology. Are they right?

‘Out of touch’: Dave Ramsey slams Philadelphia couple for paying $80K/year on child care — and some parents on TikTok now think Ramsey owes them an apology. Are they right?

Outspoken finance personality Dave Ramsey kicked up a fiery debate on TikTok recently when he described a caller to his show as “dumber than crap” for paying too much in child care.

“Are they going to Harvard?” he asked, aghast at the astronomical costs. “They’re not even in school and you’re already paying $25,000 a head?”

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Altogether, the caller, Dave from Philadelphia, pays a total of $80,000 a year for his kids’ daycare and to hire a nanny in the summer, admitting, “it is a pretty fancy daycare.”

“There’s cheaper routes,” said co-host Jade Warshaw. “You can downgrade.”

However, viewers watching a short clip of the original interview from last year, posted on TikTok in January, were unconvinced, calling Ramsey “out of touch.”

Here’s why younger parents believe older generations are likely unaware of the rapidly escalating costs of child care.

Child-care payments have surged

Child-care payments have surged 32% since pre-pandemic levels, reports the Bank of America Institute.

As of September 2023, the average household spent over $700 a month on child care, but this figure can vary widely depending on where the family lives. In New York City, for instance, sending an infant to daycare full-time could cost as much as $2,854, according to child-care platform Care.com.

To keep up with the rising costs, some parents are taking up additional jobs and side hustles, while others have left the workforce entirely. A 2023 report by ReadyNation even says the country’s child care “crisis” costs the economy $122 billion in lost earnings, productivity and revenue every year.

In this context, Ramsey’s caller doesn’t seem unreasonable. “Dave owes this guy an apology,” says one commenter.

Parenting and career influencer Paige Turner reacted to Ramsey’s video in her own TikTok video.

“It never ceases to amaze me how out of touch some people are with the lived experiences of parents here in the United States,” Turner says.“Dave is supposed to be an expert in his field so you would think he would know that child care is the number one rising cost for families here in our country.”

Turner goes as far as saying Ramsey shouldn’t be giving financial advice if he doesn’t recognize this key piece of the current financial reality for many Americans. She believes the government needs to step in and help subsidize the cost.

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Subsidized child care could be the answer

American child care costs are substantially higher than the rest of the developed world.

Net child care costs are about 32% of the average wage in the U.S., while countries that belong to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) average out closer to 11%, according to the latest data.

Canada is working toward lowering child-care costs to CA$10 ($7.44) a day, while in some parts of Europe early child care is free.

The 2021 American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) directed nearly $40 billion to child care centers across the U.S., but that program ended in September 2023. Experts warned the country was headed for a “child care cliff” and recommended another subsidy program to ease the burden on parents and the economy.

There may be other options

While many Americans must make the difficult choice between expensive daycare centers or unpaid labor at home, there may be a few other options that parents can look into as well.

Some employers may include child care subsidies as part of their benefits package, or offer discounted on-site daycare centers. They could also offer a flexible spending account (FSA) to help cover services like preschool, daycare and before or after school programs.

Depending on your income, you could be eligible for certain tax credits as well. The child and dependent care tax credit helps parents cover care for children under 13 while they work, or look for work. You could also qualify for the child tax credit even if you haven’t paid for care services.

Or, consider reaching out to people in your community. You can talk to other parents about sharing a nanny or starting a child care co-op, in which parents take turns watching each other’s children.

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This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.

Trump reveals criteria for running mate; name-drops 2 top Republicans

Trump reveals criteria for running mate; name-drops 2 top Republicans 1280 720 NewsExpress

Former President Trump revealed his criteria for a running mate on Sunday, but he told Fox News host Maria Bartiromo that he won’t announce a vice presidential pick “for a little while.”

Trump made the comments in an interview with Bartiromo that aired on “Sunday Morning Futures.” He said the most important factor is to ensure his running mate would be able to step up and handle the presidency in the case of an emergency.

“What criteria are you using to identify who your running mate is?” Bartiromo asked.

“Always, it’s got to be who is going to be a good president. Obviously, you always have to think that because in case of emergency. Things happen, right? No matter who you are, things happen. That’s got to be No. 1,” Trump said.

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Former President Donald Trump in New Hampshire

Former President Trump told Fox News host Maria Bartiromo he won’t announce a vice presidential pick “for a little while.”

“Who is your running mate?” Bartiromo said.

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“Well, I have a lot of good people. I have a lot of good ideas,” he added, saying he “talks to everybody.”

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“You know, I called [South Carolina Sen.] Tim Scott and people like Tim Scott, and I said you’re a much better candidate for me than you are for yourself,” Trump said. “When I watched him, he was fine. He was good, but he was very low-key.”

Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina in New Hampshire

Trump says Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., is a better advocate for the Trump campaign than he was even for his own presidential campaign.

“I watched him in the last week, defending me and sticking up for me and fighting for me. I said, ‘Man, you’re a much better person for me than you are for yourself,'” he continued.

Trump went on to praise South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem as well, noting that she said publicly that she would never run against him “because I could never beat him.”

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Former President Donald Trump

Former President Trump

Trump denied reports that his campaign reached out to independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to explore a potential ticket with him early on in the campaign season. Trump said the interaction “never happened.”

Original article source: Trump reveals criteria for running mate; name-drops 2 top Republicans