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Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Biden says ‘outraged’ by US activist West Bank death after pushback on earlier remarks

 President Biden on Wednesday said he is “outraged and deeply saddened” by Israel’s “totally unacceptable” killing of an American activist in the West Bank, adding that there must be “full accountability” one day after suggesting her death was an accident.

Biden in a statement condemned the shooting of Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi, a 26-year-old from Seattle who was participating in a demonstration in the West Bank when an Israeli soldier shot and killed her.

“Israel has acknowledged its responsibility for Aysenur’s death, and a preliminary investigation has indicated that it was the result of a tragic error resulting from an unnecessary escalation,” Biden said. “The U.S. government has had full access to Israel’s preliminary investigation, and expects continued access as the investigation continues, so that we can have confidence in the result.”

Biden said his administration would remain in contact with Israeli and Palestinian officials regarding the investigation.

“There must be full accountability,” he said. “And Israel must do more to ensure that incidents like this never happen again. 

“The violence in the West Bank has been going on for too long. Violent extremist Israeli settlers are uprooting Palestinians from their homes,” Biden continued. “Palestinian terrorists are sending car bombs to kill civilians. I will continue to support policies that hold all extremists — Israelis and Palestinians alike – accountable for stoking violence and serving as obstacles to peace.”

Biden told reporters as he departed the White House on Tuesday that he was finding out more details about Eygi’s death, but “apparently it was an accident, ricocheted off the ground and got hit by accident. I’m working that out now.”

The Associated Press reported that the doctors who treated Eygi, who also had Turkish citizenship, said she was shot in the head.

Hamid Ali, the partner of Eygi, said in a Tuesday statement that they had not heard from Biden or his White House in the days since the incident.

“This was no accident, and her killers must be held accountable,” Ali said.

Biden has faced intense criticism from Republicans and some Democrats over his handling of Israel’s war with Hamas, which has left tens of thousands of Palestinians in Gaza dead. The war started after attacks on Oct. 7 by Hamas killed more than 1,100 Israelis.

The president has repeatedly said Israel has a right to defend itself against Hamas, but has also indicated Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is not being helpful in efforts to end the war.

https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/4873682-joe-biden-activist-aysenur-ezgi-eygi/

'Some schools pushing back start dates due to extreme temperatures'

  Temperatures have been soaring due to climate change, leading more and more schools to push back start dates to avoid extreme summer heat for students. 

Schools across the country — including in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Billings, Montana; and Philadelphia — have delayed the beginning of school past August and into September, reported Stateline

“We see examples all over the country,” Karen White, deputy executive director of the National Education Association, the largest teachers union in the country, told the outlet. 

“I think it’s only gotten worse,” she said. 

Many districts have moved up their start date in recent years, but now, with extreme heat, that is no longer safe, some teachers say.

According to White, climate change and the extreme temperatures it’s caused have forced some teachers, including in Ohio, to demand air conditioning in collective bargaining, the outlet reported. 

Schools in Illinois, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin all closed or dismissed students early because of excessive heat last month, according to Stateline. 

Last year, schools in at least nine states had to shut down or dismiss students early during the first week of September due to scorching and unsafe temperatures, according to a CBS News survey. 

This includes schools in Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio and Pennsylvania, among others. 

A Philadelphia school district said pushing the date back this year to after Labor Day will minimize the number of heat-related school closures. 

This will also “exacerbate inequities between schools that have air conditioning and those that do not,” district spokesperson Christina Clark told Stateline. 

Climate change will “probably hasten a push back to a September start in places that have somewhat temperate Junes,” Joshua Graff Zivin, an economist and director of the Cowhey Center on Global Transformation at the University of California San Diego, told the outlet. 

While Zivin advises that  more schools should invest in air conditioning, that will still not alleviate all the other issues heat brings. 

Students who have a hot commute to school or home temperatures too high to get a good night’s sleep see affected performance and might lead to calls for later school start dates, he told the outlet. 

https://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/4872487-school-start-dates-extreme-temperatures/

'Murthy: Parents ‘so stressed they cannot function’'

 Stress levels among modern-day parents appear to be growing at an alarming rate — so much so that U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy recently issued an advisory calling parental stress an urgent public health issue.   

Parents in 2024 are handling the traditional challenges of child care while dealing with stressors “previous generations didn’t have to consider,” Murthy, who is a father himself, said in the advisory.  

As a result, 41 percent of the country’s 63 million parents with kids younger than 18 feel “so stressed they cannot function,” and another 48 percent say their stress is “completely overwhelming,” according to the advisory.   

Murthy noted in the advisory that parents now grapple with the “complexity of managing social media … concerns about the youth mental health crisis, and an epidemic of loneliness that disproportionately affects young people.”  

Psychologists and parenting experts who spoke with The Hill said many other societal factors are also contributing to parents’ emotional exhaustion — including decreasing access to child care and changing expectations of what it means to be a good parent.   

Experts who spoke with The Hill said the surgeon general was right in naming social media as one of the biggest parental stressors of the modern era.  

Many parents struggle to control just how much time their kids spend on apps like Instagram, TikTok and Snapchat, where they could be exposed to dangerous content.    

In 2022, 97 percent of teens admitted to using social media, with more than half admitting that it would be hard to give it up, according to data from The Pew Research Center

Most kids are almost constantly checking social media, with the typical teen spending about five hours a day using platforms like TikTok, Instagram and YouTube, according to a 2023 Gallup poll. On average, older teen girls are spending the most time on social media, the poll shows.   

Research shows all that screen time can hinder cognitive, linguistic and social development in kids and pose risks to their mental health. One 2019 study found that young people who use social media for more than three hours a day are at a higher risk of developing mental health problems.   

It’s not just time spent on social media that is detrimental to kids’ well-being, but also the content they are exposed to that parents may struggle to monitor, according to Mia Smith-Bynum, a professor of family science at the University of Maryland School of Public Health.   

“Because kids are so engaged online, they are exposed to all kinds of harmful content,” said Smith-Bynum.  

“Children of color are likely to see abuse by the police, when those videos get circulated,” she added. “We know that that stuff has harmful effects.”  

On top of this, social media gives kids essentially unlimited access to one another outside of school, which makes children vulnerable to being bullied all day every day. Nearly 60 percent of teenagers in the U.S. have experienced cyberbullying in their lives, and 63 percent admit that it is a major problem for kids, according to Pew research

One of the biggest things that has changed for parents over the past century is society’s understanding of just how much of an impact parents have on well-being and success, according to Christopher Mehus, a research associate professor of family social science at the University of Minnesota.   

The knowledge that parenting is important has led to positive things, Mehus said, like parents spending more time actively engaged with their children than previous generations.  

But he said it has also “significantly” increased pressure on parents to be perfect — which is impossible.   

“No matter what you do as a parent, somebody will tell you that you’re doing it wrong,” Mehus said. “There seems to be a misguided expectation that we should all know what we’re doing as parents.”   

This is where the harm social media causes to children overlaps with the harm it poses to parents. Platforms like Facebook, Instagram and TikTok allow never-before-seen access into people’s lives, giving others more insight into what parents are doing with their children than in previous generations, according to Rosanna Breaux, assistant professor in the department of psychology at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.  

The content posted to social media is typically positive, making everyone’s lives seem much more perfect than they are, according to Tovah Klein, an associate professor of psychology at Barnard College and author of the book “Raising Resilience: How to Help our Children Thrive in Times of Uncertainty.” This “curated” perfection can make many parents feel like they are doing a substandard job of raising their children — adding to the already monumental pressures of parenting.   

“Life is messy, and we miss out on the messiness [with social media],” she said. “It makes people feel terrible about everything that they are doing.”  

The number of Americans who are not sure where their next meal is coming from or where they are going to live is growing, putting major stress on parents struggling to provide food and housing for their families.  

After a years-long decline, food insecurity rates have skyrocketed in the U.S. since 2021, according to the Department of Agriculture. This is partially thanks to inflation, which has caused the cost of food to rise over the past few years.   

A record number of Americans — 653,100 — experienced homelessness last year, according to a recently released report from Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies.   

The report explains that homelessness in the U.S. is likely rising because of a recent surge in rental prices, which have been increasing, in general, faster than salaries.   

This financial strain is especially stressful for parents also dealing with a steep rise in child care costs, which has far outpaced the growth of other family expenses like housing and groceries, according to a report from the First Five Years Fund.   

Since 1990, the cost of child care in the U.S. has increased by 214 percent, and the cost of housing has gone up by about 120 percent, according to the report, which analyzed Bureau of Labor Statistics data.   

Meanwhile, the average family income has increased by 143 percent in the same time frame.   

A recent report from the nonprofit child care advocacy group Child Care Aware of America found that parents with two children in 11 states and in the District of Columbia on average paid at least twice as much for child care as they did for rent. 

The report also found that the average child care costs in 2023 were more than $11,500 a year. 

Those high child care costs are one financial burden causing parents stress. Decreasing access to child care, meanwhile, is also driving financial stress.

More than half of working parents with infants or toddlers reported having been late to work or needing to leave early from work at least once in the prior three months due to child care problems, according to a 2023 report from the Annie E. Casey Foundation.  

Almost a quarter of parents with babies or toddlers have been fired from their jobs because of child care issues, the report adds.

Financial challenges like these can carry particular weight for U.S. parents because of the country’s economic policies.

“Part of why parenting matters so much, in the U.S. in particular, is that we put so much on individual people and individual families to take care of themselves,” said Jessica Calarco, a sociology professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who specializes in inequality in families.   

“Other countries invest in policies that provide a base level of support and dignity and care for people regardless of their own means.” 

https://thehill.com/policy/4872063-parental-stress-modern-era/

Supernus cut to Neutral from Overweight by Piper

 Target to $36 from $41

https://finviz.com/quote.ashx?t=SUPN&p=d

WATCH: Melania Trump Speaks On Assassination Attempt against Her Husband

 by Ken Silva via Headline USA,

Former First Lady Melania Trump released a video Tuesday addressing the assassination attempt against Donald Trump for the first time publicly.

In her video, Melania urges the public to get to the bottom of what happened on July 13 in Butler, Pennsylvania.

The attempt to end my husband’s life was a horrible, stressful experience. Now, the silence around it feels heavy. I can’t help but wonder: Why didn’t law enforcement officials arrest the shooter before the speech?” she asked.

“There is definitely more to this story, and we need to uncover the truth.”

Melania’s video linked to her website, which is promoting her forthcoming memoirs.

According to Trump, his First Lady was watching the Butler rally live when the shooting happened.

She couldn’t believe it. She was actually watching it live, can you imagine? And then I get up, and I let people know I was okay,” Trump said in an interview last month with Fox News host Mark Levin.

“She couldn’t believe it. She was actually watching it live, can you imagine? And then I get up, and I let people know I was OK,” he said.

Trump also said his youngest son, Barron, learned of the assassination attempt against his father during a tennis lesson.

“Barron was outside having a tennis lesson,” Trump, 78, told Levin. “He’s a good tennis player. And somebody ran up and said, ‘Barron! Barron! Your father’s been shot!’ … “He loves his father. He’s a good kid, good student, good athlete actually — and he ran, ‘Mom! What’s going on? What’s going on?’”

Trump also said Melania doesn’t like thinking about the attack.

“When I could talk to people I said, ‘So what was your feeling?’, and she said she can’t even talk about it, which is okay because that means she likes me,” he said.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/watch-melania-trump-speaks-assassination-attempt-against-her-husband

Crude Tumbles As Biden Energy Dept Makes Mockery of Private Data; Cushing Draws 9 Of Past 10 Weeks

 If ever in doubt whether the Biden admin will rig and manipulate "data" to suit its goals and policies, don't be: moments ago the Biden Dept of Energy published its weekly EIA oil storage report, which was a shocking mirror image of everything the private API reported yesterday.

As a reminder, this is what API said happened to various energy stocks over the past week:

  • Crude -2.8MM (9th weekly draw in the past 10 weeks), and well below estimates of a +1.0MM build
  • Gasoline -0.5MM
  • Distillates +0.2MM
  • Cushing -2.6MM (also 9th weekly draw in the past 10 weeks)

The last one was especially notable as it represented the biggest weekly drain in Cushing stocks since August 18, 2023 and sent the oil inventory in Cushing storage low enough to reach the dreaded "tank bottoms."

That's when Kamala's/Biden's department of goalseeking data stepped in, and moments ago reported what can only be described as a laughable mirror image of everything the API indicated yesterday. Here are the details:

  • Crude +833K, Exp. +1.05MM
  • Gasoline +2.31MM
  • Distillates +2.308MM
  • Cushing -1.704MM
  • Production 13.3MMb/d, unch

That's right: instead of 3 sets of draws, the EIA somehow found builds pretty much across the board, with Crude rising 833K, barely missing the estimate of 1.05MM (and a far cry from the 2.6MM draw per API) except for Cushing, which has emerged as the great source of all the liquidation magic we have observed in the past three months, and as shown below, Cushing has now drawn 9 out of the past 10 weeks!

One possible reason for the build is that in the past week, the Biden admin added just 279K to the SPR, the lowest weekly addition this year, and a huge swing from last week's 1.8mm increase to the SPR,, which was the largest increase since June 2020.

The increase in stocks meant that after hitting a one  year low, total crude inventory (ex SPR) posted a small gain.

And even though the drop in Cushing was lower according to the EIA vs the API's huge 2.8MM draw, 1-2 more weeks of this drain means that Cushing is still facing tank bottoms.

But there is still some time before we hit the bottom of Cushing: until then the CTAs and shorts are in control, and after staging a modest rebound, oil was slammed by over a buck to session lows, and just shy of the lowest level since 2021 (which in turn preceded a doubling in the price of oil in the next 3 months).


J&J data from Phase II NSCLC treatment trial

 Johnson & Johnson has announced results from the Phase II SKIPPirr study of intravenous (IV) RYBREVANT(amivantamab-vmjw) in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

The open-label study enrolled 40 advanced NSCLC patients with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) exon 19 deletions (ex19del) or L858R substitution mutations, following disease progression on osimertinib and platinum-based chemotherapy.

All subjects in the trial received oral LAZCLUZE and IV RYBREVANT.

According to the findings, the trial met the primary endpoint of the incidence of infusion-related reactions (IRRs).

Data revealed that a prophylaxis regimen of 8mg dexamethasone taken for two days before the first infusion significantly reduced the IRR rate to 22.5% at Cycle 1 Day 1, compared to a historical incidence rate of 67.4% with standard management.

Patients in the study followed an at-home regimen of oral dexamethasone, taking an 8mg dose twice daily on the two days before and one hour prior to receiving intravenous RYBREVANT.

The treatment, combined with LAZCLUZE, resulted in all IRRs being Grade 1 or 2, with no hospitalisations required.

In addition, no Grade 3 or higher IRR events were reported in the trial.

The safety profile of RYBREVANT and LAZCLUZE, with prophylactic dexamethasone at treatment initiation, was in line with previous studies. No significant rise in adverse events was reported.

Nausea, dyspnea, and hypotension were reported to be the symptoms related to IRRs in the trial.

A fully human bispecific antibody targeting EGFR and MET with immune cell-directing activity, RYBREVANT monotherapy is approved in various markets for the treatment of adult patients with locally advanced or metastatic NSCLC with EGFR exon 20 insertion mutations, whose disease has progressed on or after platinum-based chemotherapy.

Johnson & Johnson innovative medicine oncology global medical affairs vice-president Mark Wildgust said: “Reducing the risk of IRRs is a critical aspect of improving the overall treatment experience for patients receiving intravenous RYBREVANT and oral LAZCLUZE.

“Incorporating oral dexamethasone into the treatment regimen suggests we can help mitigate this risk, with the goal of allowing patients to continue their therapy with fewer interruptions.”

Johnson & Johnson recently selected Onco360 as its pharmacy partner for the distribution of LAZCLUZE.

https://finance.yahoo.com/m/4d76711c-436d-3a3b-be92-6ac6c3f88e26/johnson-%26-johnson-reports.html