5/01/2023

Man Arrested As Chinese Spy is Connected With Schumer, Adams, & Hochul

 


May 1. 2023

One of the two men accused by federal prosecutors of running a Chinese “police station” in New York City purportedly has been captured on video with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and New York City Mayor Eric Adams.

A recording on March 18 appears to show Lu Jianwang standing alongside Adams at an event where Schumer also spoke.  In April 2022, Lu met New York Democratic Rep. Grace Meng at a fundraising party. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York, Lu was arrested last week and charged with conspiring to act as an agent of China’s government,.

Records show that since 2006, Lu has contributed at least $32,625 to New York elected officials, including Adams and Gov. Kathy Hochul.  

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Will AI make humans EXTINCT?

 


May 1, 2023

What if there were a 10 percent chance humans would go extinct from AI? Would you at least want to push the "pause button" on AI and reassess before moving full-speed ahead with new AI tech?

This isn't just a scary hypothetical.

On radio today, Glenn pointed to a new, harrowing study finding that 50 percent of AI researchers believe there is a 10 percent or greater chance humans will go extinct because we cannot control AI. If you were about to board a plane, and half of its engineers said there was more than a 10 percent chance the plane would crash, would you still board the aircraft?

I sure wouldn't. I don't think most people would. So why aren't we raising the same level of concern with AI?

50 percent of AI researchers believe there is a 10 percent or greater chance humans will go extinct because we cannot control AI.

May Day, Holy Day

 


May 1, 2023

For centuries, May Day has been a chief holiday for the peoples of Europe. While numerous groups claim May 1st as their holy day, I highlight three: the communists, the Illuminati, and the pagans. It is about these controversial segments of society that I wish to speak, highlighting the significance and origins of their shared holiday.

Before delving into details, I present an overview of this holiday as it relates to our three groups.

Overview

1. The holiest day on the communist calendar is May 1st, known as May Day or International Workers’ Day. May Day was selected by the communists as a day to animate the proletariat, or working class, to labor for the world revolution. The impetus for this holiday was the violent Haymarket Riot in Chicago in 1886. May Day is still an incredibly influential holiday with unmistakable communist overtones.

2. May Day is also the day the Order of Illuminati was founded in Bavaria in 1776. Adam Weishaupt deliberately founded this secret society on this day because of its occult significance. The Illuminati, in conjunction with sects of Freemasonry and Jewish revolutionary groups, formed an amalgam of evil that eventually spawned the communist movement in 1848. Communists celebrate May Day as their founding day not by happenstance, but precisely because it was the day the Illuminati Order was founded.

3. Additionally, May Day, more properly known as Beltane, is an ancient pagan holiday celebrated throughout Europe for centuries and still commemorated to this day. To pagans, it was the day that marked the return of the spring after the winter season. As such, Beltane was perhaps the most significant of the eight pagan Sabbats.

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US Factory Activity Contracts for a Sixth Month, ISM Data Show

 


 

May 1, 2023

(Bloomberg) -- US factory activity contracted for a sixth-straight month in April, the longest such stretch since 2009 and a sign of lingering malaise in manufacturing.

The Institute for Supply Management’s gauge of factory activity rose to 47.1 from an almost three-year low of 46.3 a month earlier, according to data released Monday. A reading below 50 indicates shrinking activity.

A measure of prices paid for materials rebounded to the highest level since July. The increase coincided with a pickup in crude oil prices early in the month, though they have recently cooled on concerns about demand.

The step-up in input prices comes on the heels of data last week that showed the Federal Reserve’s key inflation gauges rose at a brisk pace in March. Central bankers are expected to raise interest rates by 25 basis points this week.

The purchasing managers group’s measures of orders and production improved slightly but remained in contraction territory. The good news is that the figures suggest the manufacturing sector is shrinking at a slower rate.

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‘By far the most dangerous situation I’ve ever been in’: Customer films entire restaurant standing for ‘Star-Spangled Banner’ in the middle of their meals

 







May 1, 2023

A TikToker’s video of a restaurant playing the national anthem is sparking debate on the popular social media platform.

Paulina (@paulinappa_0) took the video at Rainbow Oaks Country Market in Fallbrook, California, which shows several diners standing up out of respect for the song. She found the situation to be “dangerous” and several other TikTok users also shared similar experiences they had at other restaurants, which they too found to be unnerving.

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Senators Make New Demand Regarding FBI, Hunter Biden, Obama White House

 


May 1, 2023

Two GOP senators who have been investigating alleged Biden family corruption for years have stepped up their efforts. After Facebook and Twitter suppressed, to an extent, explosive revelations about Hunter Biden’s laptop in October 2020, Republican Sens. Chuck Grassley of Iowa and Ron Johnson of Wisconsin want more answers.

Grassley and Johnson have sent a letter to Zuckerberg noting that in October 2020, “when the New York Post published articles based on evidence from Hunter Biden’s laptop, many news and social media organizations inappropriately rushed to censor and discredit the initial reporting and falsely labeled it as ‘disinformation.’”

Mainstream media outlets have finally admitted that the information gleaned from the laptop was not Russian disinformation but was in fact real.

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Before Biden laptop letter, ex-CIA boss intervened on Russia collusion in 2016, Benghazi in 2012

 May 1, 2023

Just a week after then-CIA Director John Brennan warned President Barack Obama that Hillary Clinton's campaign was "stirring up" a Russia scandal to harm Donald Trump, the agency's former acting chief became one of the first high-profile intelligence community figures to claim that the 2016 Republican nominee was a possible agent of Vladimir Putin.

In an Aug. 5, 2016 op-ed in the New York Times, Michael Morell cited his CIA experience to make the Trump allegation and he also endorsed Clinton for president. "In the intelligence business, we would say that Mr. Putin had recruited Mr. Trump as an unwitting agent of the Russian Federation," Morell wrote.

The Clinton campaign was synced with the revelation, immediately putting out an attack ad the same day sounding similar themes that Trump was "unfit" to be president and then following with a letter from 50 experts claiming it.

Even months later, Morell's strike was still being peddled by Democrats like longtime Clinton-Obama strategist Jennifer Palmieri — she called it "jaw dropping" — to further a Russian collusion narrative that ultimately would be rejected by Special Counsel Robert Mueller and multiple congressional probes.

Morell's early effort to push the Trump Russia agent theory is now getting fresh scrutiny after revelations reported by Just the News last week that he organized an open letter in October 2020 falsely portraying the Hunter Biden laptop as suspected Russian disinformation after receiving a call from longtime Joe Biden adviser and current Secretary of State Anthony Blinken.

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New Evidence Exposes Ties Between Mexican Cartels and Chinese Communist Party

 May 1, 2023

Ben Bergquam from Real America’s Voice released a report on Monday on the ties between the Mexican cartels and the Chinese Communist Party. China and the cartels have together managed to murder 339,849 Americans from a drug overdose since 2018. We already knew this was taking place. The numbers are stark and terrible–339,849 Americans (mostly under 50 years old) died from a drug overdose since 2018. Here are the numbers according to the CDC:

The numbers are stark and terrible–339,849 Americans (mostly under 50 years old) died from a drug overdose since 2018. Here are the numbers according to the CDC:

Year and Number of Deaths:

2018 67,367

2019 72,151

2020 93,331

2021 107,000

Last year, for example, almost twice the number of Americans died from drug overdose–e.g., fentanyl and opiods–than were killed in the Vietnam War. When you add up the numbers from 2018 to 2021, we had 3 times the fatalities then from the deaths in Vietnam and Korea alone.

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GOP furious at VA claiming debt bill cuts veteran benefits: ‘Shamelessly lying’

 May 1, 2023

House Republicans are fuming over the Department of Veterans’ Affairs claiming that the GOP’s debt limit and spending cut bill would endanger services and benefits for veterans. 

“In my nine years as a member of Congress, I have never seen the use of an agency that is so vitally important to so many people be used as a political hammer, to deliver a message that is false, so that it would stir people up to cause our veterans to be used as pawns in a political game,” House Veterans Affairs’ Committee Chairman Mike Bost (R-Ill.) said in a press call on Sunday afternoon.

“They’re shamelessly lying about veterans benefits and politicizing the VA to do so,” House GOP Conference Chair Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) said.

More than a dozen members on the call, almost all of them veterans, aired their frustration while reiterating they will ensure no veteran benefits are cut. 

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US Lawmaker: 700,000 to 1 Million Illegals Gather at US Border with Mexico to Storm Country After Title 42 Ends

 May 1, 2023

On Friday’s War Room Steve Bannon reported on the 700,000 to one million illegals gathering at the US border with Mexico and ready to storm into the United States.

Steve Bannon: We had a Congressman, Andy Biggs, who sat here and said he just got off a conference call with certain executives in Big Counties on the border in Arizona, and they were telling him they had just had a briefing by Border Patrol who said along the Southern border of the United States, there’s 700,000 to a million illegal aliens prepared, when Title 42 comes off, they’re basically prepared, he said, to storm the gates. And the Border Patrol is not prepared for it. The Biden regime is not prepared for this. This Title 42 that comes off is going to be something. And of course, the mainstream media will not cover this.

Ben Berqguam: I’m over here in Matamoros, Steve. I’m right on the Mexico side of the border. Anthony is on the other side in Brownsville. We were reporting from there yesterday. I’m actually in that camp we were in about a month ago and it has grown probably doubled or tripled what it was then. It had over 1000 then. It has more than that now. And what’s happening is, as they come in, they’re just going across. We have 2000 people a day crossing here… It’s just an absolute joke. And this is before Title 42 goes away. They are lining up, they are mobilizing, and it’s going to be a mass invasion when that goes away.

The Biden regime is going to destroy this country beyond repair. The gates are open. And the media will not report on this.

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ALL Nine SCOTUS Justices Issue Rare Statement Rejecting Senate Democrats’ New “Ethics Oversight” Measures

 May 1, 2023

All 9 Supreme Court Justices Issue Rare Statement After Leftist Attacks On Conservative Justices

WASHINGTON, DC – OCTOBER 07: United States Supreme Court (front row L-R) Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts, Associate Justice Samuel Alito, and Associate Justice Elena Kagan, (back row L-R) Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett, Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch, Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh and Associate Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson pose for their official portrait at the East Conference Room of the Supreme Court building on October 7, 2022 in Washington, DC. The Supreme Court has begun a new term after Associate Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was officially added to the bench in September.

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Chelsea Clinton Accused of Pushing ‘Porn for Kids’ over Support for Sexually Explicit LGBTQ Books in Schools

 


May 1, 2023

Former first daughter Chelsea Clinton faced accusations of pushing “pornography” for schoolchildren after she came out against “bans” of sexually explicit pro-LGBTQ materials in schools nationwide.

Taking to Twitter on Thursday, Clinton declared “over 50% of the attempted book bans last year involved books with LGBTQ+ characters & themes,” though she made no note of the explicit nature of such publications.

Describing books as “a vital way that children, adolescents and adults learn about themselves and our world,” the former presidential daughter insisted that “bans such as these are nothing but harmful.”

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America First Legal demands National Archives docs on Obama Foundation, presidential transitions

 May 1, 2023

The America First Legal Foundation has filed a Freedom of Information Act request demanding the National Archives and Records Administration turn over documents related to the Obama Foundation and former President Donald Trump. 

The nonprofit group, whose board includes former top-ranking Trump administration officials, sent the FOIA request on Friday to the National Archives.

The group is also asking the NARA for any information about its offers to assist the Trump presidency with its outgoing transition and records "to determine the date on which NARA first provided assignees or detailees to the Executive Office" of George W. Bush, Barack Obama, then Trump.

Madeleine Hubbard is an international correspondent for Just the News. Follow her on Twitter or Instagram.

RNC Chairwoman: ‘China Is Running This White House’


May 1, 2023

RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said Sunday that China is running the Biden administration.

Appearing on “Fox News Sunday,” McDaniel talked about voters’ concerns heading into the 2024 election, saying they want the Republican Party to come together to oppose President Joe Biden’s agenda. Specifically, she pointed out that voters are worried that the Biden administration is indebted to the communist nation.

“The voters…feel that angst,” McDaniel said. “And they say that to me all the time. We need party unity. We need to bring everybody together because what they’re doing to our country is frightening. We’re not gonna have the America we know and love if this continues, if they stack the Supreme Court, if they get rid of the filibuster, if they abandon energy independence, if they’re so beholden to China.”

“China is running this White House in a lot of ways,” McDaniel continued. “China is the reason fentanyl is coming across our [southern] border. China is taking our kids’ data on TikTok. We sold our Strategic Petroleum Reserves to China. This is an administration that is more China First than America First, and the American people want a President who cares about them.”

Critics have recently accused the Biden administration of taking a soft approach to China. Last month, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm praised China’s energy and climate policies and said she hoped the U.S. could “learn” from them.

“China has done — has been very sensitive, and has actually invested a lot in their solutions, to achieve their goals,” she said. “We’re hopeful that, you know, we can all learn from what China is doing. The amount of money that they’re investing in clean energy is actually, you know, encouraging.”


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Price of 36-Pack of Bud Light at Costco Goes Viral - They Are Pretty Much Giving It Away at This Point

 May 1, 2023

One Costco location was seen over the weekend with slashed prices for Bud Light beer as Anheuser-Busch InBev continues to navigate the fallout of its decision to partner up with transgender social media influencer Dylan Mulvaney.

The partnership has cost the company many lifelong customers and a whole lot of revenue.

The brand’s reputation has been harmed so much that it might never fully rebound.

Bud Light is a punchline on social media, and cases of it are sitting on store shelves.

On Sunday, conservative commentator Ryan Fournier shared an image of cases of the brand being sold at a substantial discount at Costco.

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Why It’s So Hard to Get Kids Off Their Screens

 May 1, 2023

“How many of you have closed your email and then immediately reopened it because you might have just gotten an email?”

Laughter rippled through the audience — including me — as we listened to Emily Cherkin give a talk at The Brearley School in Manhattan about tech and kids and us: parents, kids, educators, email addicts.

Cherkin, aka The Screentime Consultant, was a seventh-grade teacher in Seattle from 2003 to 2013. In 2003 almost none of her students had phones. By 2013, 95% did. She’s spent the 10 years since leaving the classroom studying what happens to kids and families when tech changes everything.

“I still remember an analog childhood,” she told the audience. But today’s kids won’t — unless we make sure that some of that old-fashioned, engage-with-the-world time is deliberately preserved. But at the moment? Parents are overwhelmed, as are schools.

At home, parents are finding it extremely tough to pry their kids from screens. “There’s a myth that ‘My child should be able to get off-screen without a meltdown,'” said Cherkin. “But it’s not a fair fight.” Tech companies have studied what makes an activity sticky and applied those lessons with a vengeance.

The endless scroll? The fact that one video leads instantly to another? The pings and likes and emojis? All those are part of what is called “pervasive design,” or what Cherkin calls “manipulative tech” — a mashup of psychology and technology designed to keep you engaged.

And just as it’s hard to drag a gambler from the slot machines — next time could be a winner! — it’s hard to drag our kids from their screens. (And us from our emails.) There’s a reason drug dealers use the same term for their clients as tech companies do: “users.” Both are dedicated to creating addiction.

The upshot is a phenom dubbed “displacement” — activities online displacing activities in real life. That doesn’t mean all online time is meaningless or evil. But it does mean that other things are getting squeezed out. For kids, those things include playing in real life, exploring in real life and being with their families.

How can parents make sure tech doesn’t displace too much of those? Cherkin doesn’t say to pull the plug tomorrow and go live in a yurt. But she does have some suggestions that strike me as realistic.

First, if you haven’t given your child a smartphone yet, wait as long as you can. Your kids may fear they are missing out. But ironically, the FOMO that hits once kids do get a phone is even worse. Now they can see every event they weren’t at — as well as every other fun thing in the world that they’re not part of.

If your kids already do have phones, you can set limits, even if you haven’t to date. For instance, if you don’t want the phones at dinner anymore, you can simply say, “I forgot to teach you that…” and fill in the blank: “I forgot to teach you that phones have no place at the table.” Or: “Phones don’t belong in the bedroom at night.” Or whatever you now think makes sense.

Schools, too, can help keep kids focused and actually happier by not allowing phone use during the school day. Cherkin cited a study that found kids doing worse on a math test when phones were on their desks — or even in their backpacks. The distraction was too great. They have no place in the classroom.

Then, bring back what was displaced. Keep schools open for mixed-age, no-phones free play in the afternoon or even before school. (Here’s a free guide on how to do that.) What a simple way for kids to have fun — and arguments and everything else developmentally rich — in real life.

Displace some screentime and when our kids grow up, they’ll have some analog memories from back in the day.

Then they can worry about making sure their own kids have some, too.


Article

The Medlock Post Ep. 142: This is the U.S.A.


May 1, 2023

The Medlock Post Ep. 142: This is the U.S.A.

John F. Kennedy: January 19, 1961:

“Today we need a nation of minute men; citizens who are not only prepared to take up arms, but citizens who regard the preservation of freedom as a basic purpose of their daily life and who are willing to consciously work and sacrifice for that freedom. The cause of liberty, the cause of America, cannot succeed with any lesser effort.” 

Listen Now!


 

Media Attempt to Exonerate Anthony Fauci Foiled by His Own Hubris

 


May 1, 2023 

Those who helped spearhead the colossal overreach of the coronavirus pandemic social curb regime are now attempting to soft-pedal it as a mere stumble on a well-intentioned path. Yet even as this pivot campaign goes into effect, traces of the same hubris that made it all possible cannot help coming to the fore.

“It was, perhaps, an impossible job. Make one man the face of public health amid an unprecedented pandemic, in a country as fractious as the United States, and there were bound to be disappointments and frustrations, and they were bound to get personal.” That’s how The New York Times begins an extensive feature article based on a series of interviews with Dr. Anthony Fauci, the former chief White House advisor and federal point man of the strongarmed effort to get Americans masked and vaxxed – on pain of loss of job and personal freedoms.

This would be the same New York Times that pompously labeled Fauci “America’s Doctor” as it granted him a platform in December to pen a self-congratulatory goodbye letter as he called it a career.

But “America’s Doctor” is coming under fire these days, as the heavy-handed establishment narrative on the pandemic continues to crumble. “At least 30 state legislatures have passed laws limiting public-health powers in pandemics,” The Times uncomfortably notes in its April 25 spin reboot. “This January, the month after Anthony Fauci retired as the four-decade head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, barely half of Americans said they trusted the country’s public-health institutions to manage a future pandemic.”

Did Fauci go too far? The paper earnestly attempts to inform readers that that was never the intent.

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When Interracial Shootings Matter

 May 1, 2023

All racism is bad, but some racism is more racist than others.

The shooting of Ralph Yarl captured the attention of a media addicted to a false narrative.

The black teen was shot by a white homeowner in Kansas City, Missouri after Yarl, who was looking for the house at which his younger brothers were waiting to be picked up, accidentally knocked on the wrong door. The elderly white homeowner, Andrew Lester, opened the door and immediately fired, claiming that he believed the teen was trying to enter his house.

This case and several others that happened within days of it—including one in which a 20-year-old woman drove into a driveway in rural upstate New York with a group of friends and was shot dead by the homeowner while exiting the property—are covered extensively in mainstream media in light of “stand your ground” laws. The debate over when an individual should be legally justified to use a firearm in self-defense on his own property Is charged and complicated, though one would be hard-pressed to realize that from mainstream media discussion of it with respect to the Yarl case. Here, media attention has skewed heavily in the direction of criticism of such laws.

The case has been put forward as evidence of the rampant racism in American society and the unfathomable harm it produces for blacks in this country.

It should go without saying that if the Yarl shooting story holds up in the details that are currently being reported then the shooter should be held criminally responsible. As is always the case, we will have to wait until an investigation happens before we can know with any clarity what should be done in the way of response from the criminal justice system.

But we perhaps do well to spend a little time on a question the media will not present to us. What is the context within which reporting on the Yarl case is taking place?

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On Biden’s “Decline By Design”



May 1, 2023

Is Joe Biden’s Poor Performance a Feature of His Presidency?

According to National Pulse editor-in-chief Raheem Kassam, Joe Biden’s poor personal performance is not a bug, but a feature of his presidency. In a conversation with MAGA-world TV host Kimberly Guilfoyle, Kassam explained that this is one of the critical reasons why the current U.S. government can justly be described as a “regime,” rather than an “administration.”

Decline by Design

Kassam offered his analysis during a discussion of Biden’s increasingly “embarrassing” behavior, such as losing his way on stage and requiring cheat sheets with advance notice of the questions the press plan to put to him. Guilfoyle, despite being a Republican with close ties to the Trump family, confessed she took no pleasure in Biden’s shambolic conduct and even wanted him “to do well.” However, Kassam interjected, “This is by design. Decline by design.”

Who’s Really in Charge?

Kassam stressed that Biden is not in charge, and it’s the people behind the scenes who are making the decisions. “That’s why it’s a regime and not an administration,” he explained. Biden himself, in one of his recent appearances, publicly lamented the fact that “the one thing I thought when I got to be President, I’d get to give orders, but I take more orders than I ever did.”

Bad for the American People

 


 

Supreme Court to consider overruling Chevron Doctrine


May 1, 2023

The Supreme Court on Monday announced it will hear a case that could significantly scale back federal agencies’ authority, with major implications for the future of environmental and other regulations.

The justices next term will consider whether to overturn a decades-old precedent that grants agencies deference when Congress left ambiguity in a statute.

Named for the court’s decision in Chevron U.S.A. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, the Chevron deference has become one of the most frequently cited precedents in administrative law since the decision was first handed down in 1984.

It involves a two-step test: first, judges decide if Congress has in the statute directly spoken to the precise question at issue. If it is ambiguous, courts defer to agencies as long as their actions are based on a “permissible construction.”

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The Endgame With Ukraine And Russia

 May 1, 2023

The Endgame With Ukraine And Russia

Foreign Affairs

The key to the situation is to ask what any reasonable Russian government, tsarist, democratic, communist, or authoritarian would want.

Many of the usual suspects who upheld America’s unwise wars in Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan—and its ill-considered interventions in Yugoslavia, Syria, and Libya, with their destabilizing refugee flows—are predictably upholding Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s pre-Russian-invasion intransigence with regard to possible NATO membership for Ukraine. Blinken, as well as National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, are devoted Clintonistas who fully bought into the NATO expansion project opposed by George Kennan, William Perry, Jack Matlock and others.

This intransigence is set against what has long been apparent to me and many others: Post-Khrushchev Ukraine is an artificial construct. Its elections disclosed sharp fissures on regional, ethnic, and religious lines. Crimea, Russian until 1954, was a traditional seat of Russian culture and only 22 percent Ukrainian by 1959. The Donbas was Russia’s Rust Belt. Proceedings in the parliament of the united Ukraine resembled a rugby match more than normal parliamentary deliberations. The regime was at least as corrupt as Russia’s, and the country had a lower economic growth rate. The U.S. was wise not to make a serious issue of the Russian annexation of Crimea.

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From Oranges to Sugar, Global Food Inflation Persists

 May 1, 2023

Is there hope on aisle nine? Not really. The only thing in that part of the grocery store is persistent food inflation. The latest consumer price index (CPI) provided tepid relief for families who eat their dinners at home in front of the television instead of the neighborhood restaurant that plays loud and obnoxious music: Food at home rose 8.4%, and food away from home advanced 8.8%. Although this is the second consecutive month of US food prices touching single-digit territory, the pain at the checkout counter is still being felt by consumers nationwide. But the federal government anticipates that the growth rate in food prices will slow or even decline this year.

Food Inflation in America

The annual food inflation rate will be in the range of 4.9% and 8.2% this year, above the 20-year historical average of 2.8%, according to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA). Supermarket prices are expected to rise between 4.4% and 8.8% in 2023, which is also higher than the two-decade historical average of 2.5%, the USDA stated in its Food Price Outlook. Here is a breakdown of some of the key components of the monthly USDA report:

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On April 30, 1789, George Washington inaugurated as first US president

 

April 30, 2023

Event was celebrated with fireworks and an inaugural ball held a week later

President George Washington was inaugurated as the first president of the United States on this day in history, April 30, 1789. 

In his address, which he delivered at New York City's Federal Hall, Washington expressed his anxiety over the prospect of leading a new nation. 

At the time, New York City's Federal Hall served as the U.S. Capitol, according to the National Archives. 

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On this day in history, May 1, 1931, Empire State Building opens during Great Depression

 

May 1, 2023

Skyscraper of 102 stories completed in just 410 days, rising 'lonely and inexplicable as the sphinx'

The majestic Empire State Building, now the Grand Old Lady of the New York City skyline, opened amid great civic fanfare just 14 months after construction on it began on this day in history, May 1, 1931. 

The skyscraper "must long remain one of the outstanding glories of a great city," President Herbert Hoover said, flipping a ceremonial switch in Washington, D.C., as the 102-story tower in the heart of New York City was illuminated for the first time. 

She stood — and still stands — 1,250 feet tall, towering up to 1,454 feet as topped out by its gleaming antenna.

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