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Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Mississippi Mom Murks Escaped Monkey After Feds Fail To Find

 by Jill McLaughlin via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

One of three virus-infected monkeys that escaped on a highway in Mississippi this past week was shot and killed by a homeowner who said she feared for her children’s safety.

People wearing protective clothing search along a highway in Heidelberg, Miss., near the site of an overturned truck that was carrying research monkeys, on Oct. 29, 2025. Sophie Bates/AP Photo

Jessica Bond Ferguson told authorities that her 16-year-old son walked into their home and told her he thought he spotted one of the primates.

“I did what any other mother would do to protect her children,” Bond Ferguson said.

The mom, who lives near Heidelberg, Mississippi, with five children aged 4 to 16, first called the police, who told her to keep an eye on the monkey. But she said she worried that if it got away, it would threaten children at another house.

If it attacked somebody’s kid, and I could have stopped it, that would be a lot on me,” Bond Ferguson said.

She said she grabbed her gun and cellphone and went outside, and found the monkey about 60 feet away in the yard.

I shot at it and it just stood there, and I shot again, and he backed up and that’s when he fell,” she said.

The Jasper County Sheriff’s Department confirmed that a homeowner near Heidelberg found one of the monkeys on her property Sunday morning. The state’s Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks responded and took the animal away, the sheriff’s department said on Facebook.

Bond Ferguson, a 35-year-old professional chef, was being hailed locally as a hero.

“Ya don’t mess with a Mississippi momma’s young’uns,” Doug Jernigan, of Meridian, Mississippi, commented on Facebook on Nov. 3.

The local community had been on alert since last Tuesday, when a semi-truck carrying 21 monkeys overturned while transporting them from Tulane University to an out-of-state testing facility.

Initial reports said that only one of the monkeys, which were infected with COVID, herpes, and hepatitis C, escaped capture, but that number was increased to three.

Sheriff's deputies were able to round up all but three monkeys that escaped when a truck overturned near Heidelberg, Miss., on Oct. 28, 2025. Jasper County Sheriff's Department

The accident happened at about 2 p.m. local time on Interstate 59, about 86 miles east of Jackson, Mississippi, near Heidelberg.

The truck had picked up the Rhesus monkeys from the university’s biomedical research center in New Orleans, Louisiana, which provides primates to scientific research organizations, according to the university’s statement this past week.

Authorities said the truck driver warned them about the “dangerous and aggressive” primates. The monkeys were not infectious, however, according to the university.

Eight of the monkeys were ejected from their cases, of which five were killed and three escaped. Thirteen monkeys from the shipment were taken from the accident scene and arrived at their original destination in Florida this past week.

Two escaped monkeys remain unaccounted for, according to the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Parks. Department officers in the area are continuing to search for the monkeys and are asking for the public’s help to find them, a department official told The Epoch Times on Monday.

The monkeys are known to be aggressive, and the public was advised to avoid contact, according to the department.

The Mississippi Highway Patrol said it was investigating the cause of the crash.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/mississippi-mom-murks-escaped-monkey-after-feds-fail-find

The New Conspiracy Theorists

 by Jeffrey Tucker via The Epoch Times,

For the first time in my career, I’ve been fielding many questions from mainstream reporters. This is because I’ve been tagged as a “person of interest”—as law enforcement would say—in the staffing of federal public health agencies and committees. Sometimes I pick up the phone and sometimes not. The high dudgeon over my supposed role strikes me as wildly overwrought.

The issue is the upheaval going on in public-health bureaucracies. The FDA is changing. The CDC staff and mandate has been winnowed back dramatically. The food pyramid is being overhauled. Priorities are changing as regards NIH science funding. And the vaccine schedule for children is being pared back and changed.

As a result, industries and their media backers are agitated and angry. They simply cannot understand why this is happening. As a result, several major stories have appeared in the press that seem to blame me personally and the institution I head (Brownstone). Reading their stories, I’m truly in a state of disbelief that this is a prevailing outlook, as if I’m some kind of behind-the-scenes puppet master.

In other words, these reporters assume there is some kind of conspiracy. Seriously. They are asking detailed questions about my phone contacts, conversations I might be having with this or that person, my personal relationships with administration employees, funding sources, payment systems, with whom I am socializing, and so on.

At some point, I flat-out said it’s no one’s business. No, I won’t hand over my cellphone and bank records.

It’s all quite absurd. As I’m talking with these reporters, and trying to help them understand the broader context and the organic nature of these reforms—they had to happen in light of the last five years—it’s like talking to a brick wall. They begin their reporting with the presumption that there is some plot afoot. Their job is to find the malefactor. I’m just a convenient target.

It’s as if these people haven’t considered that what is happening is a reflection not of a scheme but of a population-wide blowback against terrible policies that were shockingly imposed upon the whole population that turned out to be enormously destructive. It would be more surprising if the status quo remained in place.

If anything, the reforms are going too slowly to satisfy public demands. The loss of trust in the CDC is an example. About one-third of the staff has been fired. Is that really so shocking? This agency is the one that imposed six feet of distance, one-way grocery aisles, sanitizer baths, the rental moratorium reversed by the Supreme Court, small-business closures, school closures, and even mail-in ballots.

Did they really think that once this was over, it would be business as usual? That seems to be what many ideologues on the left want. But it is not to be. What happened instead is exactly what one would expect in a democracy: the systems of government are responding to the grassroots. The bureaucracies are being rolled back. The mandates are being restricted. Protocols are being changed.

What’s at issue here comes down to a kind of worldview. I was explaining this strange problem to a friend who said plainly that these reporters on the left are simply assuming that we are operating as they have always operated. They plot, scheme, and trade quid pro quos, so they naturally assume we do too. Their operations are driven by the cash nexus so they assume that ours are too.

That could be the whole explanation. And yet I sense there is more going on.

Think about the term Progressive. Its root is progress. Real progress can take many forms but in the minds of the Progressives, there was only one way forward. That way involved the march of the state in league with corporate elites and academics. The most intelligent and credentialed people in society would take possession of society’s resources and organize them more intelligently than they otherwise would be.

That was and is the essence of the Progressive agenda.

And what were the Progressives against? They were opposed to a society that turned over the forces of social evolution to the people themselves in their communities and lives as individuals. To them, this was the essence of the old world they wanted to leave. It meant free markets, organically emerging community structures, decentralized government, families of any size including very large ones, and businesses that came and went based on the wiles of the market.

Every Progressive was against this sort of system on grounds that it all seemed too chaotic, unpredictable, and random. It seemed unintelligent. Thus was born the binary of Progressive vs. Reactionary. To them, history would, should, and could only move one direction: toward social and economic planning. Everything and anything else was considered reactionary or revanchist.

And from where did this strange view of history arrive? It traces back to the usual suspect: G.F.W. Hegel writing in the early decades of the 19th century. He was a German nationalist who was trying to bring a form of philosophical therapy to the German people following the loss of territory at the end of the Napoleonic Wars.

Hegel’s solution was a new model of history that removed personal forces and replaced them with a meta-narrative. Impersonal forces were in charge that were ultimately driving the narrative of history toward a single end, that of the triumph of the German state against all its enemies.

Hegel’s views became hugely influential in German academia, particularly among those people who favored empire and a unity of nation, corporation, church, and state. In the second half of the century, communists like Karl Marx picked up the Hegelian view of history and wedded it to socialist utopianism. Marx called his views scientific precisely because they were rooted in this strange Hegelian view of history. The triumph of communism was inevitable, he said, and therefore everyone who resists it is a reactionary holding back the “tides of history.”

These Marxian views became so influential that the Fabians in the UK and the left-socialists in the United States picked them up. That’s how movements for higher taxation, public school, the banning of youth labor, and so many other causes—not all of them bad—came to be called Progressive. Progress toward state control by administrative elites was inevitable.

This entire paradigm of progress/regress has dominated the public mind for a century.

Even low-end reporters for mainstream media outlets have picked it up. This is why Trump’s efforts to drain the swamp and gut the deep state have been greeted with such hostility. It is why RFK Jr.’s efforts on health are considered reactionary even though his views have not changed from decades ago when they were aligned with crunchy liberalism.

As a result of this worldview—people learn their Hegel not from books but from the streets of academia—people who accept it simply cannot imagine that any rollback of their plans is due to anything other than a scheme or plot or conspiracy designed to thwart the forward march of “progress” toward ever more control by the administrative state. This mindset rules out the existence of organic shifts in public life that do not go their way.

I can assure these reporters all day that I’m a mild-mannered guy with a newspaper column and a research institute but it doesn’t matter. They still believe that I’m some kind of string-puller with hidden billions and a mysterious control over the levers of power. They would rather believe this than come to terms with how horrible the COVID response was and how fed up people are with the bureaucrats in Washington, D.C.

They say the same about Donald Trump. He surely did not win fairly either in 2016 or 2024. He must have cheated or had Russian help. He is not legitimate precisely because he wants to take the country in a different direction than the one of which they approve. He is seen as “reactionary” whereas they are “progressive” and therefore he is wrong and they are correct.

In other words, the real conspiracy theorists are on the mainstream left these days, simply because they refuse to believe what is in front of their eyes. They cannot see their own failure for what it is and therefore cannot see the efforts to unravel the messes they made as a just and necessary correction.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/new-conspiracy-theorists

Solar panels wreak havoc in the UK, lighting a fire (literally) every other day

 


As if we needed a new reason to just say “no” to solar panels, here it is: According to new findings presented by a global insurance group, solar panels are responsible for a substantial surge in rooftop fires. From a report at The Telegraph on the matter:

UK fire services faced a blaze involving a solar panel once every two days in 2024, according to data gathered by insurance company QBE, marking a 60pc increase in the past two years.

A 60% increase?! A house fire literally every other day? That is actual insanity. But there’s more to the story, and that is that the fires are actually outpacing new installations:

Adrian Simmonds, a senior QBE risk manager, said: ‘Solar is essential to the UK’s clean energy transition but the rapid pace of deployment is raising risk concerns.

‘Our analysis shows fires involving solar panels have risen at twice the rate of new installations over the past two years.’

There’s two considerations when looking at the “why” behind the massive increase in infernos: First, the leftist government’s “rapid pace of deployment” under Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero Ed Miliband includes skipping over “safety regulations”:

Mr Miliband’s recent Solar Roadmap … proposes minimising planning requirements, which can incorporate safety regulations.

Obviously, a major issue, but there’s also this: The government subsidizes the installation, but does not subsidize their upkeep, which is quite expensive for the average person. (Consider that many of the subsidized solar panels are going onto low-income housing—people who already don’t have a lot of money.) A quick internet search yielded that typical annual maintenance cost in the states can run anywhere between $300 and $850. And, from the QBE risk manager: “Safe solar panel installation and maintenance are essential to reducing fires.” Per the Telegraph article, the most common “source of faults” were the inverters, which require proper ventilation—this is where the maintenance comes in. All that being said, it just goes back to the “right-wing” gripe that solar panels are not affordable (a fact which should be obvious as soon as you see they’re subsidized), and therefore, are not ready for mass adoption, or the market.

The article also reports two other reasons: “Poorly trained installers” and the lithium-ion batteries used to store the energy. Do those “poorly trained installers” happen to be third world, low-IQ foreigners who lack the capacity to function in the first world? I’d wager so, because as Google’s AI reports: “Foreign-born workers made up an increasing share of ‘green’ employment growth….” And this, from the Center for European Reform:

Between 2011 and 2019, foreign-born workers made up about a third of total new green employment. There were higher shares of employment growth in construction, energy, and occupations in which over one-third of working time is spent on green tasks. After the pandemic and Brexit, foreign-born workers took an even greater share of green employment growth overall.

When considering public policy, our electeds should be running ideas and proposals through a cost-benefit analysis, or at the very least, once the idea has been implemented, taking a look at the net gain or loss. Why is that so much to ask?

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2025/11/solar_panels_wreak_havoc_in_the_uk_lighting_a_fire_literally_every_other_day.html

Ultragenyx Sells Part of Future North American Royalties on Crysvita (burosumab) for $400 M

 Bolsters balance sheet with non-dilutive capital at an attractive cost

Beginning in January 2028 OMERS will receive an additional 25% of the North American Crysvita® royalty interest capped at 1.55 times the purchase price

Proceeds to fund four expected launches, setting the company up for the next stage of growth

https://finviz.com/news/217453/ultragenyx-announces-sale-of-a-portion-of-future-north-american-royalties-on-crysvita-burosumab-for-400-million-to-omers-life-sciences

Burry’s New ‘Big Short’ on AI

 by Adam Sharp

The Big Short is one of my favorite movies (and books).

It’s a powerful story of investors who bet against the housing bubble, persevered through adversity, and won big.

The story focuses on Michael J. Burry, a small but successful hedge fund manager in California. In the movie, Burry is played by actor Christian Bale. There are others featured in The Big Short who bet against the housing market, but today we’re going to focus on Burry and his new AI short.

First, however, some background is in order.

Back around 2004-2005, Burry discovered that lenders were giving huge loans to borrowers with bad credit, and as a topper, many of these mortgages were teasers with adjustable rates. The first few years were artificially cheap, then payments would balloon.

Burry dissected the data, and discovered a great way to bet against housing using credit default swaps (CDS) on mortgage bonds.

Many of Burry’s hedge fund clients thought he was insane. Betting so much of the fund’s capital against housing seemed ludicrous. Burry was forced to restrict fund redemptions, so his investors had no choice but to ride along with him.

When the bubble finally burst, Burry’s fund made a killing. After fees, his big short returned almost 500% to investors.

Burry had beat the big banks at their own game.

But be warned. This story has inspired countless traders to attempt their own big shorts, with mixed results. At best…

Burry is Back with a Big AI Short

Michael J. Burry is a reclusive fellow. He keeps a low profile, but occasionally resurfaces on X (Twitter).

On X, Burry goes by the handle “Cassandra”. Cassandra was an ancient Trojan priestess dedicated to the god Apollo. She was cursed with the ability to predict the future, but never be believed.

The last time Burry reappeared was in January of 2023, when he posted a simple message: Sell.

image 1

Via ZeroHedge

Since then, the market has soared 69% higher. Burry got burnt on that big short.

Shortly after, Burry deleted all his X posts and deactivated his account.

But now Cassandra has finally returned to X. Just as 13F SEC filings disclosed his hedge fund, Scion Capital, took big short positions on Palantir (PLTR) and NVIDIA (NVDA).

image 2

As of September 30th (these filings have a delay), Burry’s hedge fund held puts worth $912 million in Palantir and $186 million in NVIDIA (notional).

Burry has seemingly initiated a new ‘Big Short’ on AI.

It isn’t surprising to me that Burry is betting big against Palantir. It might be the most overvalued large-cap stock I’ve ever seen.

image 3

The chart shows just how unusual Palantir’s valuation is.

To be clear, Palantir is growing fast and appears to have tech which nobody else does. But it still looks way overpriced. Its current price-to-sales ratio is an incredible 126x. The company is valued at $491 billion and only produced $3.9 billion of revenue over the past year.

Even during the dotcom bubble, no large company ever reached such lofty heights.

Burry followed up his big AI short disclosure with some charts showing how AI bubble spending is similar to the dotcom era:

image 4

Timing: The Hard Part

We should remember that these filings have a delay, so these were Scion’s positions as of September 30th. Since then both NVDA and PLTR have risen, which means that thus far, Burry’s bet is down. He could have sold out of these positions, or added to them. We don’t know.

Attempting to nail the top on red-hot stocks like these is extremely difficult. Even when he made the housing bubble bet, Burry had to wait years for it to pay off. In the meantime, he had to pay significant premiums on the CDS (his short instrument). For a while, it looked like his housing bet might fail.

But eventually the housing bubble did pop, and Burry came out way ahead.

We’ll have to wait and see whether he’ll be proven correct with this latest AI short. It’s easy to see that certain AI stocks are overvalued. Timing the short, however, is the tricky part.

Today Palantir is down almost 7% today after reporting earnings yesterday.

Palantir CEO and co-founder Alex Karp isn’t happy about Burry’s short position, calling it “market manipulation”. He told CNBC the following this morning:

“The two companies he’s shorting are the ones making all the money, which is super weird. The idea that chips and ontology is what you want to short is bats**t crazy.

… I do think this behavior is egregious and I’m going to be dancing around when it’s proven wrong.”

Is this the beginning of the crash? Or just a correction after a parabolic move, and there’s more upside ahead? I’m not taking a bet either way, for now.

My advice: don’t bet the house on an AI collapse. As Keynes famously said, the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.

We’ll be keeping a close eye on this story.

https://dailyreckoning.com/burrys-new-big-short-on-ai/

Gavin Newsom's Divisive Racial Pandering

 by Kenin M. Spivak via RealClearPolitics,

Leaders should seek to unify people. Instead, California governor and likely 2028 presidential candidate Gavin Newsom is mired in identity politics, dividing his constituents into those entitled to privileges and subventions by reason of their melanin, sex, or sexual orientation – and those who are required to fund the largesse.

He opposed race neutral admissions to the California state university system (overruled by the people of California – twice), imposed gender and racial requirements on corporate boards (held unconstitutional – twice), required ethnic studies and ethnically dumbed-down math in K-12 curricula, and is carefully advancing a potentially multi-trillion dollar reparations plan for California’s black residents.

Newsom’s unconstitutional quest to curry favor with, undermine the confidence of, and potentially spend trillions of dollars on, California’s 2.5 million black residents began in 2020 when he signed AB3121 into law. That act required the state to study and develop reparation proposals for black Californians, with “special consideration” for descendants of slaves.

Then, in 2022, Newsom created a commission to develop policies that impact racial equity and disparities. The following year, it recommended payments exceeding $1 million for each descendant of slaves, as well as housing assistance, guaranteed wages, racially segregated education, and overturning California’s ban on affirmative action in college admissions, among hundreds of other racially abhorrent policies.

Now, Newsom has established a new bureau nominally to develop programs to implement the commission’s report, but with legislative authority to “expand” its mission to address remedies for the “lasting harms” of disenfranchisement, segregation, discrimination, exclusion, neglect, and violence impacting black Californians. The bureau is also authorized to collect nonpublic personal and genetic information to identify those who should obtain preferential treatment.

Newsom vetoed legislation to give admissions preferences to descendants of slaves, which he said colleges can already do; investigate racist property taxes, which is already within the new bureau’s mandate; and allocate 10% of state loans to slave descendants, which is clearly unconstitutional. An appearance of balance is important for a nascent presidential campaign.

Nonetheless, whether borne of intense self-loathing or kowtowing to the radical left, the arc of Newsom’s support for reparations is racist political pandering at its worst.

Reparations are particularly inappropriate in California. The state was admitted to the Union in 1850 as a free state, in which slavery was prohibited. Its population today is about 37% non-Hispanic white, 39% Hispanic, 16% Asian, and 6% black. Over a quarter are foreign-born.

There is no doctrine in the United States that holds children liable for the crimes of their parents, much less their distant ancestors; nor do children inherit their ancestors’ debts. In 1860, there were 395,216 slave-owners in the 15 states that permitted slavery, and none in the other 18 states. In total, about 5-6% of all U.S. households owned slaves.

Today, most blacks are at least middle class, live in diverse suburbs, and pursue the same careers as do whites. They are doctors, lawyers, and chief executives. With about 12.5% of the population, blacks account for a somewhat larger share of House members and about one-third of the mayors in America’s 100 largest cities. Blacks have held the highest offices in government, from president and vice president to numerous cabinet positions and 22% of current Supreme Court justices.

In a 2002 Gallup poll14% of Americans favored the payment of cash reparations to descendants of black slaves. A 2019 Associated Press-NORC poll found 29% approval. In 2024, a Princeton University-Liberations poll found that 36% of Americans supported at least some form of reparations, with 15% strongly supporting cash payments. A 2022 Rasmussen poll and a 2025 YouGov poll and had similar results. About a quarter of blacks oppose reparations.

At least 23 cities and states are considering paying reparations, including New York City, San Francisco, and Boston. Under most reparation proposals, the national cost would range from about $12 trillion to $20 trillion.

While polls usually ask about reparations for descendants of slaves, most commissions also consider payments to other black Americans. A Brookings Institution report justifies giving reparations to wealthy blacks and recent immigrants by the wealth gap between black and white families.

Polls and partisan commissions aside, the 14th Amendment prohibits governments from allocating benefits based on race. The Supreme Court has been clear that our detour into justifying affirmative action and other race-based programs was a “pernicious aberration.”

There have been trillions of dollars of transfer payments to black Americans through welfare, food stamps, loan payments, enterprise zones, minority contracting, and affirmative action. These giveaways deprive blacks of agency and create dependency, not a path toward self-actualization.

Chief Justice John Roberts said it well in the Supreme Court’s decision ending affirmative action in college admissions: “Eliminating racial discrimination means eliminating all of it. … [T]he guarantee of equal protection cannot mean one thing when applied to one individual and something else when applied to a person of another color.”

Gavin Newsom knows all this. He just doesn’t care.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/gavin-newsoms-divisive-racial-pandering

KUDLOW: Schumer’s shutdown folly is burying the Democratic Party

 Today was the 14th vote to keep the government shut down. That means we’ll hit day 36 tomorrow, which is a new world-record for shutdowns. Congratulations, democrats. You are now the proud owners of a ridiculous and pointless waste of time. Not to speak of the hardships caused for many. 

Air traffic controllers working without pay. Traditionally democratic unions are blaming you. Not enough money to cover food stamps for women, infants, and children. Military people in harm’s way not getting paid. And frankly, the country’s blaming you. Nice going democrats, brilliant strategy. And you know full well that the House CR was the Democratic baseline for discretionary programs. No more, no less. In other words, a clean bill that should have been routinely passed.  So, I’m going to predict that one of these days there are going to be more Democratic defections. 

So far, there are three led by Senator Fetterman, but I think shutdown fatigue for such a massive political loser is settling in. Plus, the House CR extends funding only up to November 21, which is really just a fortnight away.

And therefore, a new CR will have to be written. Senator Majority Leader Thune earlier today said, "we've lost five weeks. So, the November 21 deadline no longer makes a lot of sense. So clearly it would have to be extended. And there is a conversation around what that next deadline would be." So that means a new CR is going to be written. You can’t just change the November 21 deadline by using the eraser at the end of your pencil. You must vote in the Senate and then the House. You can vote for a new CR that lasts until year-end, which is Christmas time. I don't think anybody really wants that. Or you can extend it into January, which will probably be more popular. 

But I’m going to predict that a bunch of democrats in the Senate will vote to pass a new CR. Because not every single Senate Democrat can be so stupid as to continue this ridiculous spectacle that is doing even more damage to the party than even a New York City mayoral victory from socialist-communist Mamdani, or whatever he is. Because if that guy wins, he’ll be the republican poster boy for the Democratic Party. 

And that would add insult to injury to Senator Schumer and his brilliantly executed shutdown charade. Which has already completely disgraced the Democratic Party. 

https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/larry-kudlow-schumers-shutdown-folly-burying-democratic-party