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Sunday, December 8, 2024

‘SNL’ slammed for ‘classless’ UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson murder segment

 “Saturday Night Live” swung at and missed with some of their audience this weekend. 

The sketch comedy show came under fire after spending nearly a minute and a half of its “Weekend Update” segment discussing the recent murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, including America’s fascination with the alleged gunman’s appearance.

“The manhunt continues for the assassin who gunned down the CEO of United Healthcare on Wednesday, and it really says something about America that a guy was murdered in cold blood and the two main reactions were, ‘Yeah, well health care stinks!’ And also, ‘Girl, that shooter hot,'” co-host Colin Jost quipped.

Users on several social media platforms voiced their disdain of the commentary, condemning it for a lack of consideration of Thompson’s family. The businessman, 50, and his wife had two sons together.

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“Disgusting. I couldn’t watch this segment. The victim’s family and friends are very much grieving right now,” one person wrote beneath a YouTube clip of the segment. “Agreed. I don’t usually watch SNL, and I can see by the segment and comments supporting it, that I will no longer be watching it. Joking about someone’s murder like that is absolutely disgusting… a family is grieving right now,” a person responded.

“I mean is the shooter single??” another user commented, affirming Jost’s narrative. A day after the brutal Wednesday shooting, the NYPD released their first image of the suspected gunman without a mask, seen smiling.

“A guy was murdered in cold blood and the two main reactions were, ‘Yeah, well health care stinks!’ And also, ‘Girl, that shooter hot,'” co-host Colin Jost quipped.NBC / SNL
The sketch comedy show came under fire after spending nearly a minute and a half of its “Weekend Update” segment discussing the recent murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.NBC / SNL

“New York City police say that they were able to get the smiling picture of the suspect after the man apparently was caught on camera at a local hostel, flirting with a female employee, whose name has been reported as, ‘Lucky S. Bechalive,'” co-host Michael Che joked.

“Classless,” a user on X wrote. “Long time viewer of SNL. I don’t consider myself particularly [sensitive] to any topic, but in today’s Weekend Update edition they made jokes about the United Health CEO gunned down in NYC. That was really distasteful and disrespectful. SNL, you need to do better,” another spewed.

Jost also took aim at officials, in particular, the NYPD.

New surveillance images released of the shooting perp inside the HI Hostel on the Upper West Side.DCPI
The New York Post cover for Thursday, December 5, 2024.scalle

“This week, New York City officials sent a tough message on crime: ‘If you shoot somebody in the middle of the street, you better get on your bike, hop on a bus, and get the heck out of here, mister,’” he began. 

“It’s also so crazy that the shooting happened three blocks from here in broad daylight, and the guy just bicycled away. Probably because they have every cop in the city guarding our Christmas tree,” Jost said, referencing the Christmas Tree Lighting at Rockefeller Plaza, which occurred on the same day.

“The NYPD now believes the suspect left the city on a bus from Port Authority. Thanks, but a Port Authority passenger who looks like a murderer actually widens the search,” Jost said as his final joke on the topic. Additional viewers found the segment to be amusing, with several enjoying the Port Authority joke.

Representatives for “Saturday Night Live” did not immediately return Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

https://nypost.com/2024/12/08/entertainment/snl-slammed-for-classless-unitedhealthcare-ceo-brian-thompson-murder-segment-on-weekend-update/

Trump aides contact Google, Meta, Snap over online drug sales, The Information reports

 President-elect Donald Trump's transition team has invited five major tech companies, including Google, Microsoft and Meta Platforms to a meeting in mid-December about dealing with online drug sales, The Information reported on Sunday.

A representative for Jim Carroll, the drug czar during Trump's first term, and Trump's transition team emailed staffers from the three tech giants on Thursday, as well as those from Snap and TikTok, to invite them to a call, the report added, citing a person with direct knowledge of the correspondence

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/ALPHABET-INC-24203373/news/Trump-aides-contact-Google-Meta-Snap-over-online-drug-sales-The-Information-reports-48547056/

US Bombs 75 ISIS Targets Across Syria After Assad Overthrown

 US Central Command (CENTCOM) announced Sunday that US forces have conducted multiple dozens of major airstrikes targeting ISIS camps and their terror camps across central Syria. 

CENTCOM stated on X, "The strikes against the ISIS leaders, operatives, and camps were conducted as part of the ongoing mission to disrupt, degrade, and defeat ISIS, in order to prevent the terrorist group from conducting external operations and to ensure that ISIS does not seek to take advantage of the current situation to reconstitute in central Syria."

B-52 Stratofortress, file image

"The operation struck over 75 targets using multiple U.S. Air Force assets, including B-52s, F-15s, and A-10s."

"Battle damage assessments are underway, and there are no indications of civilian casualties," CENTCOM continued.

Especially given the presence of B-52s in the operation, this was clearly a large-scale op. But it begs an important question: Washington chooses now to very belatedly go after ISIS?

One wonders why they weren't targeted in the past, whether months ago or years ago. There hasn't been a US operation of this scale going back perhaps a half-decade at least.

A theory? Perhaps now that it's 'mission accomplished' with the Assad government overthrown, and with Damascus in the hands of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham jihadists, ISIS is no longer needed to 'pressure' Assad and Russian forces. The Pentagon is now much belatedly dealing with the Daesh terrorists.

Recall the Obama era in Syria and the West-Gulf allies fueling the rise of ISIS with tons and tons of weaponry passed around to the Islamist insurgents which made up the mainstay of anti-Assad 'opposition'...

On Sunday President Joe Biden finally addressed the rapidly moving events in Syria, and with Assad having fled to Moscow, where he was given asylum. "At long last, the Assad regime has fallen," Biden said. "This regime brutalized, tortured and killed literally hundreds of thousands of innocent Syrians." And more:

At the same time, it's "also a moment of risk and uncertainty," Biden added, saying that the U.S. would "support Syria's neighbors, including Jordan, Lebanon, Iraq, and Israel, should any threat arise."

"This is a moment of considerable risk and uncertainty," Biden said. "But I also believe this is the best opportunity in generations for Syrians to forge their own future free of opposition."

The day prior, a White House national security statement sought to emphasize that the United States "has nothing to do with this offensive, which is led by Hay’at Tahir al-Sham (HTS), a designated terrorist organization."

Biden in the Sunday address at one point alluded to the obvious on the minds of many, and as Syrian Christians flee toward the coast:

Meanwhile, over in Turkey...

Currently, reports of looting have emerged from the Syrian capital, but there is a certain 'fog of war' along with many uncertainties. It's also anything but certain what Syria will look like a week from now, months from now, or years from now.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/us-bombs-75-isis-targets-across-syria-after-assad-overthrown

Former Secret Service Agent Warns Trump Likely To Be Attacked Before Inauguration

 by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Former Secret Service agent Richard Staropoli warned Thursday that Donald Trump could be targeted in an attack before he is inaugurated as president, and that the Secret Service may not be able to prevent it.

During a FOX News interview, Staropoli suggested Trump could face a threat “of a much bigger magnitude” than the two assassination attempts earlier in the year.

Staropoli said that he is “not highly confident at all,” that Trump can be kept safe, noting “The Secret Service that you see out there today is not the Secret Service of yesteryear.”

“Somewhere along the line they’ve completely dropped the ball,” he continued, adding “That testimony that you saw today was purely a smokescreen to cover up the shortcomings of a politically compromised agency.”

Staropoli was referring to testimony in the House by Acting Director Ronald Rowe and other Secret Service officials before the task force investigating the first assassination attempt on Trump in July.

“It should never have gotten to that point,” Starapoli urged, adding “This whole talk about all these drones and these UAVs, hey, that’s all great, but you need to get back to the basics. What made the Secret Service great was its ability to put human intelligence, manpower on the streets and effectively secure the environment to make it safe for the president of the United States. I don’t see that here.”

“As a matter of fact, I don’t think I’d be alone in saying that I certainly can see something happening between now and inauguration day,” Staropoli warned.

He added, “it’s not going to be some 20-year-old kid on the roof of a building that’s allowed to get within 100 yards. It’s going to be something of a much bigger magnitude and I don’t think the Secret Service is anywhere equipped to handle that situation.”

Watch:

During the House testimony, Rowe got into an extremely heated exchange with Republican Rep. Pat Fallon of Texas over Rowe’s attendance at a 9/11 memorial event.

The full exchange, before the screaming began, is here:

Back in July, Fallon tore into then Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle, telling her that “it is a miracle president Trump wasn’t killed,” and that she should be immediately fired and sent “back to guarding Doritos.”

*  *  *

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/former-secret-service-agent-warns-trump-likely-be-attacked-inauguration

Trump says he will act ‘very quickly’ to pardon Jan. 6 participants upon taking office

 President-elect Trump, in a new interview, said he intends to act on his first day to pardon individuals involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, storming of the Capitol, including those who have pleaded guilty.

“I’m going to be acting very quickly. First day,” Trump told Kristen Welker on “Meet the Press” in his first major sit-down interview since winning a second term.

When asked about those who had admitted to assaulting police officers, Trump claimed “they had no choice” and suggested hundreds of others who pleaded guilty to other offenses were victims of a “very corrupt system.”

“I know the system. The system’s a very corrupt system,” Trump said. “They say to a guy, ‘You’re going to go to jail for two years or for 30 years.’ And these guys are looking, their whole lives have been destroyed. For two years, they’ve been destroyed. But the system is a very nasty system.”

More than 1,500 individuals have been charged for their involvement in the Jan. 6 attack, when pro-Trump rioters stormed the Capitol to try and halt the certification of President Biden’s victory in the 2020 election. More than 1,200 individuals have been convicted or pleaded guilty in connection to the events of Jan. 6, with more than 200 currently in custody.

Trump, who was charged in two separate federal cases that have been dropped since he won November’s election, has sparked fears among critics that he will use the Justice Department to go after his critics and political rivals.

The president-elect said on NBC that members of the House panel that investigated the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol “should go to jail,” though he said he would not direct his administration to arrest them.

He said he would leave it up to his nominee for attorney general, Pam Bondi, to determine whether to pursue figures like special counsel Jack Smith, who led the investigations into Trump in recent years.

“I’m really looking to make our country successful. I’m not looking to go back into the past,” Trump said. “I’m looking to make our country successful. Retribution will be through success.”

https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5028872-trump-pardon-jan-6-rioters/

Pardon envy: Democrats vie to make the Biden pardon list

 Liberal pundits and press in Washington are facing a growing nightmare in Washington. No, it is not the victory of President-elect Donald Trump or the Democrats’ loss of both houses of Congress and the popular vote in this election. It is the possibility that democracy may not collapse as predicted, and Trump might not even round up his opponents en masse.

For months, liberals have been telling voters that this will likely be their last election and that democracy is about to end in the U.S. ABC host Whoopi Goldberg declared on “The View” that Trump will immediately become a dictator who will “put you people away … take all the journalists … take all the gay folks … move you all around and disappear you.”

Many predicted they would be on the top of the enemies list and the first to be rounded up.

Now, the moment is nearly here, and pundits are dreading that the public may notice there is no line of democracy champions being frog-marched down Pennsylvania Avenue. Faced with such a scenario and a further loss of credibility, many are coming up with the next best thing — pretending they stopped the roundup by having Biden pardon everyone. The spin will be that Trump would have gone after rivals but was prevented from doing so by Biden.

The idea is to portray yourself as a white knight, riding down to protect the vulnerable and timid from the coming hoard.

Even if democracy inconveniently survives, Biden can preserve the narrative with sweeping pardons.

The White House is reportedly exploring giving preemptive pardons to figures ranging from Dr. Anthony Fauci, Sen.-elect Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.).

Cheney previously declared that this “may well be the last real vote you ever get to cast.” A pardon would preserve her persona as a modern-day Joan of Arc who avoided being burnt at the stake only by the grace of a Biden pardon.

Others seem to be panicking that there may be a list of pardoned people, but they will be left off. Call it “Pardon Envy.” The only thing worse than not being on a Trump enemies list is not being on a Biden pardon list.

Before the election, MSNBC host Al Sharpton and regular Donny Deutsch warned viewers that they would likely be added to an “enemies list.” MSNBC host Rachel Maddow ominously told her viewers that, “Yes, I’m worried about me — but only as much as I’m worried about all of us.”

Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin seemed apoplectic that she and others might be omitted from both lists. One has to be somewhat sympathetic to Rubin. To be left both unpardoned and unarrested is to lose all standing among the “save democracy” social set.

Rubin, once dubbed the Post’s Republican columnist, has called for the Republican Party to be burned down and recently advised people how to keep panic alive despite the election: “You can’t talk broad themes. You have to boil it down to nuts and bolts, and you have to be pithy. What do I mean by pithy? How about this: Republicans want to kill your kids. It’s true.”

In a podcast, Rubin explained that Biden should pardon “thousands” to blunt Trump’s “initial round of revenge” from journalists to the “little guy and gal” counting votes. She advised that he should pardon whole “categories” of people to pardon anyone Trump may have “identified by name or type” to offer “protection from a maniac.”

In her most recent column, Rubin repeated the call for Biden to pardon “scores of Americans” due to a “reasonable fear that a weaponized FBI directed by a vengeful president will carry out threats to pursue his enemies.”

The key is to issue broad pardons to suggest that, absent such extraordinary action, “this maniac” would have purged whole areas of blue states. It is like telling everyone that you are wearing a tin-foil hat to prevent aliens from snatching you. When someone points out that they have not seen any aliens, you can respond, “See, it worked!”

The Biden White House is considering the use of such white-knight pardons to claim that the president did not protect just his son (and himself) with the pardon power but many others.

Biden wants to remove the stain of his abuse of the pardon power to benefit his own family by turning it into a literal party favor for other Democrats and Trump critics. Even though Trump has denied any interest in retribution, saying that “my revenge will be a success,” preemptive pardons leave the impression that they did in fact preempt something that would have occurred.

A white-knight pardon can also work when you are protecting someone who does not want to be saved. That is the case with a Trump pardon. Such a pardon is absolutely not needed and would constitute the most hostile pardon in history. The federal cases against Trump are effectively dead. Even though they were dismissed without prejudice, it is extremely unlikely they would be resumed. Moreover, the cases brought by Special Counsel Jack Smith were riddled with constitutional problems and unlikely to be sustained even with a conviction.

The only ongoing legal threat to Trump is from Democratic prosecutors on the state level, such as Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis. A pardon would not apply to such cases anyway.

Yet, to pardon Trump for nonexistent federal cases would be to suggest that Biden saved him from prosecution. This is the same president who did nothing for years until the cases collapsed. He would now claim that he worked to bring the nation together after calling Trump a virtual Nazi and his supporters “garbage.”

Trump may be the only one who is not interested in a trophy pardon. What is the value of being part of the resistance if you are not being pursued, persecuted or pardoned?

It seems like some of the same people who had hoped to be on the list for the Biden Inaugural balls are now making calls to make the Biden pardon list. If Biden were to yield to calls for hundreds or even thousands of pardons, the loss of political standing for those not making the list could become intolerable. For any self-respecting armchair resistance fighter in 2025, a Biden pardon could become the latest status symbol.

Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro professor of public interest law at George Washington University and the author of “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage.”

https://thehill.com/opinion/white-house/5027455-pardon-envy-democrats-vie-to-make-the-biden-pardon-list/

Biden’s lame-duck Ukraine request faces slim chances in Congress

 Lawmakers see a slim chance of passing President Biden’s request for $24 billion in funding related to Ukraine, as House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has called for any new funding to be pushed back until President-elect Trump takes office. 

Pro-Ukraine lawmakers are counting on strong bipartisan support in Congress to help push through the request alongside a stop-gap government funding bill because even some Trump allies are looking to leverage American assistance to Ukraine to force talks with Russia to negotiate an end to the war. 

“Speaker Johnson doesn’t know what he’s doing,” Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), the incoming ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said when asked about the Republican leader’s opposition to Biden’s $24 billion Ukraine aid request. 

“There’s still strong bipartisan support for it,” she added, noting that Former Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky), Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) all are in favor of it.

Johnson on Wednesday rejected Biden’s request, saying “we have a newly elected president, and we’re going to wait and take the new commander in chief’s direction on all that, so I don’t expect any Ukraine funding to come up now.”  

Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.), the outgoing chair of the Foreign Relations Committee, said more funding related to Ukraine is “not likely” in this Congress. 

“I strongly support whatever we can do to help Ukraine. So I would certainly be supportive of an effort to provide predictable funding in [fiscal 2025], so I’m fine with that, I would just — I don’t think it’s likely,” he told The Hill.

Likewise, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), Trump’s nominee for Secretary of State, spoke to the increasing opposition among Trump’s Republican allies in Congress toward committing more U.S. money towards Ukraine.

“There’s growing skepticism about it from a dollar standpoint,” he told The Hill. “So, it was close the last time. It’ll be, probably, even harder this time. But I can’t predict what a vote would be. I don’t know.”

In April, Rubio was one of 18 Senators to vote “no” on a $95 billion supplemental aid package that included aid for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan — saying he wanted Biden to address his “demands that the president secure our border.” The supplemental passed Congress, but the majority of House Republicans voted against a stand-alone bill on aid for Ukraine. 

The White House said the April vote addressed critical security assistance through 2024, and the latest request is meant to address funds needed through 2025, with the majority of funding expected to be spent on manufacturing in the U.S.

This includes $16 billion to replenish U.S. weapons stockpiles that were sent to Ukraine and $8 billion toward new U.S. military production contracts for future weapons shipments to Ukraine. 

“This not only supports Ukraine and degrades Russian military capability but also strengthens our own military and improves our own military readiness through direct investments in the U.S. defense industrial base and modernizing our weapons,” a U.S. official told The Hill. 

“It also supports the American economy and creates American jobs.”

And top military officials are warning that more needs to be done to refill U.S. stockpiles drawn down over support for Ukraine, while also provided to Israel in its more than yearlong war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip, Hezbollah in Lebanon and defense against Iran and other Iranian-backed groups. 

Admiral Samuel Paparo, commander of all U.S. Naval Forces in the Indo-Pacific, said last month that U.S. delivery of Patriot air defense interceptors and air-to-air missiles to Ukraine and Israel have started “eating into stocks.” 

“We should replenish those stocks and then some,” he said on a panel at the Brookings Institution. “I was already dissatisfied with the magazine depth. I’m a little more dissatisfied with the magazine depth. It’s a time for straight talk.” 

But Trump is outspoken in his criticisms of U.S. money spent on helping Ukraine and promised while campaigning to end Russia’s war in Ukraine before, or shortly after taking office. 

Retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg, Trump’s pick to lead negotiations between Kyiv and Moscow, has said the U.S. could hold back military assistance for Kyiv to force Ukraine’s participation in any peace talks. 

The most likely path for more Ukraine aid is to be attached to a continuing resolution that Congress needs to pass by Dec. 20 to avoid a government shutdown. 

Lawmakers on both sides are confident about Congress’s chances of averting a funding lapse, but negotiators say another Biden request, funding to support nationwide disaster relief efforts, is taking center stage in spending discussions.

As for the administration’s ask for Ukraine funding, House Appropriations Chair Tom Cole (R-Okla.) withheld comment in remarks earlier this week.

“I have not seen that proposal yet,” he told The Hill on Tuesday, though he added he’s “always been supportive of Ukraine.” But he also said Congress is “not going to do something like that without talking to the incoming administration.”

The U.S. has provided about $100 billion in aid for Ukraine over the course of nearly three years of war, alongside European support of about $150 billion. Asian allies, like Japan and South Korea, have also contributed aid for Ukraine, and Taiwan has provided humanitarian assistance. 

But American provisions of military support to Kyiv are viewed as indispensable in supplying Ukraine’s armed forces with the material needed to stand up against Russia’s power.

The most critical present need is air defense to block Russian attacks against Ukraine’s electrical grid, aimed at beating down Ukrainian resolve heading into winter. 

“Ukrainians are facing a very cold and likely dark winter,” said Doug Klain, non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center.

The Biden administration is winding down about $6 billion in funding from the April supplemental that allows for the U.S. to draw directly from American weapons stockpiles to give to the Ukrainians. 

But the Pentagon is cautious on sending over supplies without the guarantee that they can be backfilled in the near future, raising the likelihood that Trump will inherit billions of direct assistance to Ukraine that he can hold up. 

“Ukraine needs way more air defense. This has been a consistent need for the last three years but especially going into this winter,” Klain said. “The Russians, by many reports, have been stockpiling missiles and drones to try and conduct even more of these nationwide air assaults – attacking and battering Ukraine’s energy infrastructure and other critical infrastructure.” 

Klain was critical of the Biden administration’s messaging about the $24 billion package, saying it did not do enough to explain that the funding replenishes U.S. stocks and invests in American manufacturing and jobs. 

“I think the way that this supplemental request was messaged, really from the beginning, has been quite misleading and made it even less likely that it would pass,” he said.

https://thehill.com/homenews/5026869-biden-request-ukraine-funding/