In an ABC News exclusive, former President Obama comes out strongly in favor of his former VP’s $3.5 trillion social safety net budget plan.
— The Recount (@therecount) September 28, 2021
“I think President Biden is handling it exactly right,” Obama adds. pic.twitter.com/fRyk9COYe7
➤NORTH KOREA SAYS SUCCESSFUL TEST FLIGHT WAS OF HYPERSONIC MISSILE: North Korea said Wednesday that its missile test early the day before was a successful test flight of a new hypersonic missile that it implied was being developed as nuclear capable. South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff assessed the missile to be at an early stage of development and said the North Korea would need "considerable time" to be able to deploy it operationally. Tuesday's test was the third missile testing by the North this month. Kim Jong Un's government has so far rejected the U.S. offer to resume nuclear talks that have been stalled since 2019, saying the U.S. must first end what it calls America's "hostile policy," by which it mainly means sanctions and joint U.S.-South Korea military drills.
➤AP..COVID VACCINE FOR UNDER-12 KIDS MAY NOT BE APPROVED UNTIL NOVEMBER: Pfizer said Tuesday that it has submitted its research information on the safety and effectiveness of its Covid-19 vaccine for children ages five to 11 to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Federal regulators and public health officials will now have to review the evidence and consult with their advisory committees before they could recommend the vaccines' use. When that potential approval could come may not be until November, AP reported, citing a person familiar with the process. Pfizer said they expect to request emergency use authorization of the vaccine in children, quote, "in the coming weeks."
➤JOINT CHIEFS CHAIR MILLEY CALLS AFGHAN WAR 'STRATEGIC FAILURE': General Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, called the 20-year war in Afghanistan a "strategic failure" during testimony yesterday before the Senate Armed Services Committee. He said, "Outcomes in a war like this, an outcome that is a strategic failure . . . that is a cumulative effect of 20 years," adding that lessons need to be learned. Similarly, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said, "We helped build a state, but we could not forge a nation. The fact that the Afghan army we and our partners trained simply melted away . . . took us all by surprise." Milley said about staying past the August 31st withdrawal deadline that it would have endangered troops and other Americans, saying, "On the 1st of September we were going to go back to war again with the Taliban." Milley acknowledged that he'd favored keeping several thousand troops in Afghanistan to prevent a collapse of the government, while refusing to say what advice he gave Biden. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki denied yesterday that Biden had misled the public when he said in an August 18th interview that no senior military commander had recommended against a full troop withdrawal. She said he'd been referring to have gotten a full range of advice and that he'd told ABC his advisers were, quote, "split" on the issue. She added, "Regardless of the advice, it’s his decision, he’s the commander in chief."2 college profs notice conservatives aren't enamored with woke generals, say therefore conservatives no longer like Armed Forces in general. Obviously untrue, but elites getting nervous about what woke generals have done to military's public reputation. https://t.co/ZRl9XuKMXv
— Mollie (@MZHemingway) September 28, 2021
The Dept. of Homeland Security has denied U.S. landing rights for a charter plane carrying more than 100 Americans and U.S. green card holders evacuated from Afghanistan, organizers of the flight say. https://t.co/Ps3cLY1aGA
— NBC News (@NBCNews) September 29, 2021
➤FIVE LIFE TERMS-PLUS FOR MAN WHO KILLED FIVE AT MARYLAND NEWSPAPER: Jarrod Ramos, who shot and killed five people in the newsroom of the Capital Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Maryland, in June 2018, was sentenced to five consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole yesterday. The judge added another life sentence for the attempted murder of a photographer who testified that Ramos barely missed him with a shotgun blast. The 41-year-old Ramos was convicted in July, with a jury rejecting his attorneys' argument that he wasn't criminally responsible due to mental illness. Prosecutors said Ramos acted out of revenge after the newspaper published a story about his guilty plea to a misdemeanor charge of harassing a former high school classmate in 2011.
The case of Gabby Petito has renewed calls for people and the media to pay greater attention to missing Indigenous women and other people of color. The family of the slain 22-year-old, who vanished on a cross-country trip, is echoing those calls. https://t.co/sf2WwEYc37
— The Associated Press (@AP) September 28, 2021
🏡U-S HOME PRICES ROSE BY RECORD OF NEARLY 20 PERCENT IN JULY: Amid the soaring home prices that have been seen across the country during the pandemic, they rose in July by a record 19.9 percent compared to a year earlier, according to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-city home price index. The records date back to 2000. The data also showed that home prices reached all-time highs in 19 of the 20 cities. Prices have spiked as the supply of homes hasn't been able to keep up with the pace of demand from people who want to buy. Factors driving sales include low mortgage rates and wanting more living space during the pandemic. Sales of existing homes are up 16 percent in the first eight months of 2021 compared to last year, and up 12 percent from the same period in 2019.
U.S. home prices soared in July by a record amount from a year earlier as buyers desperate for homes bid up prices amid a limited supply. https://t.co/mHTbl2oyXD
— ABC News (@ABC) September 28, 2021
➤POSTAL SERVICE TO GET SLOWER, MORE EXPENSIVE: If you've been affected by the slower mail delivery many have seen across the country during the pandemic, it's about to get even worse for some mail, and temporarily more expensive during the holiday season. The U.S. Postal Service said yesterday that starting this Friday, October 1st, first-class mail and periodicals traveling long distances in the U.S., such as from New York to California, will take longer to arrive. Mail within the same region will still have a two-day delivery time. First-class packages will also no longer have the same delivery standards as first-class mail. Additionally, prices will be temporarily increased for the holiday season, from October 3rd through December 26th, on all commercial and retail domestic packages. The changes are being made as part of a 10-year plan announced by Postmaster General Louis DeJoy in March which has been heavily criticized by some elected officials.
➤OBAMAS BREAK GROUND ON PRESIDENTIAL CENTER IN CHICAGO: Former President and First Lady Barack and Michelle Obama held a ceremonial groundbreaking yesterday for the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago's Jackson Park. Construction officially began last month. The site is near the Obama family home, in the city where the former first lady was born and raised and where the former president began his political career on the South Side. Barack Obama said he hoped the center would bring an economic boost to the area and inspire a future generation of leaders. It will include Obama's presidential papers in digital form, as well as a museum, public library branch, athletic center, test kitchen and children's play area. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker were among those on hand for the event.
Went all the way down and SCOOPED over the left field seats into the Toronto bullpen! Gio Urshela! The most happy fella!
— John Sterling Calls (@JSterlingCalls) September 29, 2021
Ohhhhh he's the most happy fella! pic.twitter.com/EHBP5acxa4
🏀NBA GIVES TEAMS COVID SAFETY PROTOCOLS FOR SEASON: The NBA gave tentative Covid-19 health and safety protocols for the upcoming season to teams yesterday. Under them, unvaccinated players will face frequent Covid testing and many other restrictions that vaccinated players won't. Among them: unvaccinated players won't be able to eat in the same room with vaccinated teammates or staff; must stay masked and at least six feet away from others in team meetings; must have lockers as far away from vaccinated players as possible; and must stay at their home when the team is in their home market. On the road, they'll have to stay on team hotel properties. Unvaccinated players also won't be able to go to places like restaurants, bars, clubs, entertainment venues, and large indoor gatherings. About 90 percent of players are fully vaccinated.
⚾DODGERS' HALL OF FAME SPANISH BROADCASTER TO RETIRE AFTER 64 YEARS: The L.A. Dodgers' Hall of Fame Spanish-language broadcaster Jaime Jarrín announced Tuesday that he'll retire after the 2022 season, ending an amazing 64 years with the team. The 85-year-old began calling Dodgers games in 1959 and in 1998 received the Hall of Fame’s Ford C. Frick Award for major contributions to baseball broadcasting.
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