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Monday, August 11, 2025

'Sanders rips 2024 Harris campaign for being ‘heavily influenced by wealthy people’'

 Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., called out former Vice President Kamala Harris and her campaign on Sunday for being influenced by wealthy people in 2024 and failing to speak to working families.

CNN’s “State of the Union” host Dana Bash pressed Sanders on a statement he made on one of his “Fighting Oligarchy” tour stops about the former vice president.

Bash played a clip of Sanders telling the crowd, “One of the reasons, in my view, that Kamala Harris lost this election is she had too many billionaires telling her not to speak up for the working-class of this country.”

The CNN host reacted to the clip and said, “ouch.”

“I like her, she’s a friend of mine, but her core consultants, you know, were heavily influenced by very wealthy people. How do you run for president and not develop a strong agenda which speaks to the economic crises facing working families?” Sanders asked.

“You know, more income and wealth inequality today than we’ve ever had. You have 60% of our people living paycheck to paycheck. You’ve got a healthcare system which is broken and dysfunctional — and despite spending so much — we’re the only major country not to guarantee health care to all people. How do you not talk about these issues?” Sanders continued.

Sanders said that the Harris campaign was “heavily influenced by wealthy people.”CNN
US Vice President Kamala Harris arrives for a campaign event in Flint, Michigan, US, on Friday, Oct. 4, 2024.Bloomberg via Getty Images

Bash pushed back and said Harris talked about affordability.

Sanders argued that Harris talked about it vaguely, but said he didn’t want to rehash the 2024 campaign.

“I think the clue to Democratic victories is to understand that you’ve got to stand unequivocally with the working class of this country. You need an agenda that speaks to the needs of working people,” Sanders said.

Senator Bernie Sanders, an Independent from Vermont, exits after speaking during the Democratic National Convention (DNC) at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois, US, on Tuesday, Aug. 20, 2024.Bloomberg via Getty Images

He went on to call for guaranteed healthcare for all Americans and an increased minimum wage.

“Is it [a] radical idea to say that in the midst of a competitive global economy, we need to make sure we have the best educated workforce that all of our kids, regardless of income, should be able to get a higher education?

“These ideas exist all over the world. They don’t exist in America, and they don’t exist because of the power of the oligarchs, economically and politically,” he said.

Democratic presidential nominee, U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris pauses while speaking on stage as she concedes the election, at Howard University on November 06, 2024 in Washington, DC.Getty Images

The senator called America’s political system “broken and corrupt.”

Sanders was also asked if he planned to run for president again in 2028.

“Oh, god. Let‘s not worry about that. I am going to be 84 years of age next month, as a matter of fact. So I think that speaks for itself. But right now, what is more important in my view — and I want to see, obviously, the most progressive candidate that we can have — is to rally the grassroots of America,” he said.

https://nypost.com/2025/08/11/media/bernie-sanders-rips-2024-harris-campaign-for-being-heavily-influenced-by-wealthy-people/

Trump federalizing DC police, deploying National Guard in capital crime crackdown

  President Trump announced a historic escalation of law enforcement in DC on Monday, deploying both the National Guard to patrol the streets and placing the city’s police department under federal control.

“We’re going to clean it up real quick,” Trump told reporters at the White House, noting the high crime rate in the city and the recent attack on a former Department of Government Efficiency staffer by 10 teens Aug. 3.

The president has direct control over DC’s National Guard, unlike every other unit, which is under the authority of state governors.

Trump speaks with reporters from the White House on Monday, August 11, 2025.AP
FBI agents in Washington, DC, on Sunday, August 10, 2025.Kyle Mazza/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

Under the District of Columbia Home Rule Act of 1973, Trump has the authority to use the DC Metropolitan Police Department for federal purposes for 30 days.

Two National Guard members stand by a military vehicle in Washington, DC.Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images

“It’s becoming a situation of complete and total lawlessness, and we get rid of the slums too,” Trump went on.

National Guard soldiers block a street in Washington, DC, on January 19, 2025.AFP via Getty Images

“We have slums here. We get rid of them. I know it’s not politically correct. You’ll say, ‘Oh, so terrible.’ No. We get rid of the slums where they live, caravans of mass youth rampage through city streets at all times of the day.”

https://nypost.com/2025/08/11/us-news/trump-federalizing-dc-police-deploying-national-guard-in-capital-crime-crackdown/

Republicans Must Continue to Rein in Bad Healthcare Actors

 Republicans demonstrated a commitment to reforming government healthcare programs in their major policy win this year – the One Big Beautiful Bill. But they shouldn’t rest on their laurels while others continue to take advantage of the government’s generosity with taxpayer dollars.

Consolidated hospital organizations have continually exploited patients and the government alike by marking up the price of treatments for patients on Medicare.

Currently, hospitals are permitted to charge Medicare patients more for the same treatment offered for less at an independent doctor’s office. Closing this loophole, known as “site-neutral” payments, would save $150 billion over the next decade. It also means patients would know they are getting a fair rate at hospitals and independent doctor’s offices alike.

Patients, doctors, and the government agree that healthcare pricing should be transparent. The only dissidents are the hospitals–nearly two-thirds are not fully compliant with a Trump price transparency executive order that has been in effect since January 2021. .

The price differences for treatments at hospitals compared to doctors' offices aren't chump change. On average, the government reimburses hospitals up to 125% more for the same treatment compared to independent doctors' offices

Pricing for treatments and tests for potentially debilitating conditions like cancer, heart disease, and genetic conditions can range in the hundreds of dollars between hospital and independent practices. You’d think that $150 billion in savings would stimulate chants of “why pay more?” for a Medicare program that continually faces insolvency. 

But an important distinction here is that not all hospital-owned facilities are by definition “hospitals.” A new report from the National Bureau of Economic Research details larger hospital networks that bought nearly half of all private doctor's offices in the country. HCA Healthcare, the largest hospital network in the country, owns approximately 2,500 care facilities across the United States – including a slew of formerly-independent practices.

These doctors offices owned by hospitals – designated Hospital Outpatient Departments (HOPDs) – charge the same 125% price markup

It makes financial sense why hospitals continue to acquire smaller practices in large numbers. More patients on government health insurance means a larger check from Uncle Sam, even if the procedure could be done for cheaper elsewhere.

The biggest losers are the patients under these organizations' care. Studies claim that hospital care does not have measurably higher quality than the same care at an independent practice. Zooming out, this constant consolidation of hospitals also removes competition from the healthcare system in the long run, reducing quality of care and increasing costs.

It’s time for lawmakers, specifically Republicans, to step in and correct this oversight.

With the OBBB, Congressional Republicans opened the door to preserve government programs for the most needy by cleaning up some of the more fraudulent portions of healthcare policy . Republicans have also led in interrogating executives at drug middlemen like CVS that siphon drug discounts away from patients and found aisle-crossing agreement.

Republicans are taking a stand for access to quality and cost-effective care, and they should not tolerate bad actors exploiting any part of the system for financial gain.

Hospitals should be the next target of scrutiny, as they have had an outsized effect on federal healthcare policy for far too long. The American Hospital Association was the fourth-highest spender on federal lobbying last year, totalling nearly $30 million between both Democrats and Republicans. They’re putting pressure on lawmakers because they know that reforms like site-neutral are popular. A Republican bill and a bipartisan policy framework in the Senate serve as proof that this policy has staying power.

These conglomerates will try to do anything to derail these popular reforms – including invoking rural hospital closures as a defense. But the savings from site-neutral reforms will go a long way to keep rural hospitals afloat. Additionally, there are alternative ways to support rural hospitals without penalizing those who reside in higher-cost areas.

Site-neutral payments can become a reality, but the leading party in Congress needs to step up to the plate. That is, if they truly care to keep Medicare solvent. 

 

Marion Mass, M.D. is a Bucks County pediatrician and the co-founder of the Practicing Physicians of America.

https://www.realclearhealth.com/articles/2025/08/11/republicans_must_continue_to_rein_in_bad_healthcare_actors_1128054.html

Fake Papers, Political Agendas: The Eroding Credibility of Research

 We admire scientists as the stewards of truth, exploring the unknown with curiosity, discipline, and integrity. However, when the pursuit of knowledge becomes a competitive sport for reward, a more human story of ambition, incentives, and the temptation to cheat emerges. To understand why scientists sometimes lie, we must first understand the system that rewards them for being first, rather than necessarily being right.

“It’s natural to think of scientists as truth seekers, people driven by an intense curiosity to understand the natural world. Yet this picture of scientists and scientific inquiry sits uncomfortably with the reality and prevalence of scientific fraud. If one wants to get at the truth about nature, why lie?” 

- Liam Kofi Bright

Bright’s question points to the internal temptations within science. Still, it applies equally when political administrations, corporate boards, and advocacy groups become influential players in the credit race, deciding which findings are amplified, suppressed, or rewarded, and sometimes bending science toward their preferred narratives.

The Perils of the Race to Be First

Most of the time, the scientific enterprise works remarkably well, with prestige and its accoutrements motivating researchers to test, publish, and share their ideas. But when the golden ring of credit seems just out of reach, scientists may try a shortcut, scientific fraud. Scientific fraud results in:

  • Derailing scientific progress as falsehoods lead others down dead ends
  • Wastes time and resources as researchers follow those falsehoods or attempt to disprove them.
  • Undermines trust and accountability, easily seen in what is frequently described as the “Big Tobacco Playbook” and other forms of conflicts of interest. Moreover, a lack of accountability persists for all of these players. “Culprits,” individuals or organizations retain professional credit even after exposure. 

Because of these harms, it is crucial not only to identify fraud but also to discover and mitigate its underlying causes. Before jumping in, a shoutout to Liam Kofi Bright of the London School of Economics for providing the broad outlines of my thinking.

Stereotypes and Incentives

Consider your stereotypical scientist: a blend of brilliance, focus, and eccentricity, prone to absent-mindedness, yet relentlessly curious. Most importantly, driven by the “scientific method’s” search for the truth. 

“An uncompromising adherence to the truth is essential for scientific progress, and it is also an admirable spiritual practice, but it is not a winning political strategy.” – Nexus, Yuval Harari

This is as true in the realm of politics as it is in academia. A scientist whose findings run counter to the priorities of those in power, whether they’re corporate boards, government agencies, or journal editors, may find themselves under subtle or not-so-subtle pressure to frame results in a more favorable light.

If the core of the scientific method is seeking the truth, why sabotage a quest you cherish? Few scientists chase salary; according to Zip Recruiter, the average salary for a Ph.D is $122,000 after seven or more years of college. Many could make more as “quants” on Wall Street or working for industry. For scientists, the quest for credit and recognition, rather than personal wealth, is a core motivation – prestige is the true coin of the realm. The pursuit of Harari’s “political strategy” involves the strategic navigation of people and institutions.

Bright, both economist and philosopher, goes on to “quote” Plato’s categorization of the types of citizens: those seeking material comforts, the many; those concerned with finding the truth and creating harmony, the philosopher rulers; and those concerned with honor and esteem, the guardians. Modern science harnesses the hunger of the guardians. When channeled well, it speeds discoveries, forces scientists to publish rather than hoard, and encourages intellectual trail-blazing. Success in science, from securing grants and jobs to mentoring students, largely depends on how “impressive” one’s work appears to peers, creating a race for “credit” as both a personal ambition and an institutional requirement. 

Unfortunately, the very same force can push people over ethical cliffs. To win the accolades, one must be first; speed matters. One need look no further than the continuing controversy over who “discovered” CRISPR. [1] In scientific research, when there are dozens of methodological “forks in the road,” the dishonest can make murky results look crystal-clear. Indeed, to the sufficiently bold, why wait for messy reality to cooperate when you can type numbers straight into a spreadsheet? Coupled with a system that does not reward replication, fewer watchdogs mean a lower risk of getting caught. And when the watchdogs are political actors, the incentive shifts again; more to do with keeping results palatable to those who hold the purse strings or public platforms than passing peer review.

It would seem that we only need to transform our scientist guardians into truth-seeking philosophers and rulers, and the misincentives of our current system would fall away. 

Can the Race be Reformed?

Current reformers experiment with gentle steering: rewarding replication, pre-registering studies, making data public, and reshaping hiring and grant criteria, allowing integrity to count as much as being first. Bright questions whether we can retain the benefits of the race to credit while mitigating its darker misincentives. He points out that credit, the fuel driving science, is not so easily tamed. 

  • Charles Darwin famously delayed publishing his theory of evolution, concerned about its potential to offend religious sensibilities. But when Alfred Russel Wallace independently arrived at a similar idea, Darwin moved quickly to publish—not purely to share, but to secure credit. That same tension between sharing and staking a claim still shapes science today, as seen in the rise of preprints, which let researchers both announce discoveries and circulate data before formal publication.
  • Credit can also open new frontiers. When big names and well-funded labs dominate the most obvious research paths, ambitious scientists often seek alternative routes—pursuing untested methods or unconventional ideas. This is the same dynamic that contributed to the diversity of approaches in developing COVID-19 vaccines. Unlike those well-resourced vaccine programs, however, unconventional research often struggles to find funding.
  • At its best, credit fosters collaboration. The desire for recognition can drive scientists to release findings quickly, making them available for others to build upon. This is an oddly “communal” outcome for a competitive incentive, illustrating how the same hunger for prestige that fuels rivalries can also accelerate collective progress.

Science, despite its objective trappings, is an all-too-human behavior, part ego, part altruism, wholly unique. Competition fuels science despite some competitors cheating. 

The neat fix, “abolish glory, install pure curiosity, ”fails not because it is morally unattractive but because credit is a double-edged tool. As Bright sagely writes, 

“We do not have a sufficiently general and well-confirmed theory of science as a social phenomenon that we can confidently predict and assess the overall effects of modifying our culture or institutional structure so as to decrease the significance of scientific [credit]. Without that, it is very hard to say with any measure of confidence what we ought do.”

The Perils of “External” Interference

While Bright focuses on how credit structures within science can tempt dishonesty, external interference, especially from funders, governmental or private, can be just as corrosive. If scientific integrity depends on a self-correcting system of peers, politicizing that system by changing who the 'peers' are, or what findings may be published, reshapes the incentives entirely. The game stops being about truth and starts being about alignment with whoever holds the keys.

External interference is not new—past administrations of both parties have sought to tilt scientific findings toward preferred narratives. Recent changes provide a clear example of how political priorities can reshape the scientific credit race itself.

During the current administration, science is undergoing a not-so-quiet upheaval, marked by budget cuts and, more critically, the redirection of its purpose, oversight, and independence. Federal advisory panels have been reshuffled, stripped of academic and industry experts, and repopulated with “contrarians.” Key environmental and public health agencies, such as the EPA and CDC, see their independent authority challenged, their scientists muzzled, and their findings filtered through a different political lens. Entire areas of research have been defunded, de-emphasized, or actively discredited. Just as they accuse the previous administration of pressuring public health agencies and private enterprises to adhere to a preferred narrative, the current administration is attempting to control the CDC and vaccine messaging to fit their preferred narrative, both administrations ignoring messy scientific realities. 

On the surface, these moves might be defended as efforts to "rebalance" or “depoliticize” science, to remove supposed bias. But when held up against Bright’s analysis, it becomes clear these changes fundamentally misunderstand what actually drives both the integrity and the dysfunctions of science.

If scientific fraud arises when the race for credit goes unchecked, then further politicizing the gatekeepers and weakening oversight only opens the door wider. Whether that politicization comes from left, right, or center, the result is the same: scientists start optimizing for political approval rather than empirical accuracy. Science needs more innovative structures from within, ones that channel ambition toward the pursuit of truth, not ideology. Bright’s vision for reform is subtle, emphasizing the preservation of science as a self-correcting, cooperative endeavor, while acknowledging its competitive drive. Rather than inject a different, more American-centric ideology into science, strengthen the institutional cultures that uphold truth as the core value. 

 

[1] Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier’s group published the landmark 2012 paper showing how CRISPR-Cas9 could be programmed to cut DNA at specific sites in vitro. Feng Zhang’s team at the Broad Institute quickly demonstrated CRISPR’s gene-editing capability inside living eukaryotic cells. Both sides claimed to have made the critical leap that turned CRISPR into a powerful gene-editing tool. The Broad Institute obtained the patent, while Doudna and Charpentier received the Nobel Prize.

 

Source: Why Do Scientists Lie?

Dr. Charles Dinerstein, M.D., MBA, FACS is Director of Medicine at the American Council on Science and Health. He has over 25 years of experience as a vascular surgeon.

https://www.acsh.org/news/2025/08/11/fake-papers-political-agendas-eroding-credibility-research-49667

CVS Among 14 Firms to Storm High-Grade Market Before CPI Report

 


CVS Health Corp. and a unit of Chevron Corp. are among 14 firms offering US investment-grade bonds Monday, the most in three months, a day before heavily anticipated consumer-price data is due for release.

The deals follow $40.4 billion of high-grade issuance last week, also the highest since May, as average yields for investment-grade corporates reached their lowest level of 2025 and premiums are near their tightest in a quarter-century. Selling debt now avoids potential interest-rate volatility following Tuesday’s consumer-price report.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-08-11/cvs-among-14-firms-to-storm-high-grade-market-before-cpi-report