More kids 17 and under have been shot in the city of Chicago by itself — 302 — than have died with covid in the entire country — 214. Kids aren’t in danger from covid. At all. pic.twitter.com/SZ9Mqe40Au
— Clay Travis (@ClayTravis) September 24, 2021
🔫ONE KILLED BY GUNMAN, 12 WOUNDED IN TENNESSEE SUPERMARKET: One person was killed and 12 others wounded, some of them seriously, when a gunman opened fire at a supermarket in Collierville, Tennessee, yesterday afternoon. The gunman was found dead of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound by a SWAT team that arrived within minutes. The identities of the gunman and the victims weren't immediately released. The shooter's vehicle was in the parking lot of the supermarket, which is located in a suburb about 30 miles east of Memphis.
They could have banned whips but that would require them to admit there are no whips and there was no whipping, so getting rid of a valuable tool for controlling the border all together because the media pushed a lie is the virtue signaling they prefer. https://t.co/JrZ0yfhih4
— Kate Hyde (@KateHydeNY) September 23, 2021
➤HAITIAN MIGRANT ENCAMPMENT IN TEXAS REDUCED BY MORE THAN TWO-THIRDS: The makeshift encampment of Haitian migrants under a bridge in the Texas border town of Del Rio had been reduced in size by nearly two-thirds as of yesterday, with Department of Homeland Security officials saying there were about 4,000 people left. Just days earlier, there'd been nearly 15,000 migrants there. The unnamed DHS officials told journalists says some 1,400 of those evacuated had been sent to Haiti, 3,200 were in U.S. custody and being processed, and seven thousand had returned to Mexico. Food, shelter and medical care were being provided for those who still remained at the encampment and need it.
Biden may owe up to $500k in back taxes, report says https://t.co/nBKlCo8oCS
— Fox News (@FoxNews) September 24, 2021
➤HOUSE JANUARY 6TH COMMITTEE SUBPOENAS TRUMP ADVISERS, ASSOCIATES: The House select committee investigating the January 6th attack on the U.S. Capitol issued its first subpoenas yesterday, for records and testimony from four advisers and associates of former President Donald Trump who were in contact with Trump before and during the attack. They are: former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows; former White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Communications Dan Scavino; former Defense Department official Kashyap Patel; and former Trump adviser Steve Bannon. The subpoenas ask the men to produce documents by October 7th and appear at depositions on October 14th and 15th.
➤FEDEX HAVING TO REROUTE 600K PACKAGES DAILY DUE TO LABOR SHORTAGE: FedEx is having to reroute some 600,000 packages a day because of a labor shortage, leading to longer delivery times, President and COO Raj Subramaniam told investors during an earnings call this week. Subramaniam stated that the labor shortage was, quote, "the biggest issue facing our business," and a big reason behind the company's seven percent profit decline in the quarter that ended at the end of August. He said the labor problem could last into the holiday season, as FedEx is looking to hire 90,000 employees for the holidays.
➤POLL...VOTERs WANTS BIG TECH REINED-IN BY GOV'T: Americans don't seem to agree on much these days, but a new poll found that U.S. voters overwhelmingly want Big Tech companies reined in by the federal government. The poll conducted for the Future of Tech Commission found that 80 percent of registered voters agreed the government, quote, "needs to do everything it can to curb the influence of big tech companies that have grown too powerful and now use our data to reach too far into our lives." That included 83 percent of Democrats and 78 percent of Republicans. The poll found that the two biggest policy priorities for voters related to Big Tech are strengthening privacy for users and accountability for the technology companies. There was widespread support for boosting antitrust laws to ensure more competition in tech, but the majority were opposed to breaking up Big Tech companies. Additionally, despite wanting more regulation of Big Tech, the respondents generally had positive opinions of the companies, with Google having an 81 percent favorability, Amazon 74 percent, Apple 67 percent and Facebook 53 percent.
Joe Rogan predicts Trump will run in 2024 and is 'probably gonna win' against Biden, Harris would also lose https://t.co/ZmxXtWTg6j
— Fox News (@FoxNews) September 24, 2021
🏫KIDS ARE ONTO SOMETHING: HOMEWORK MIGHT ACTUALLY BE BAD: Homework is no fun for kids. Many schools dole out ten minutes of homework for each grade level, as was once recommended by the National Education Association (NEA). So, first graders should get just ten minutes of work to do at home while high schoolers should be cracking the books for up to two hours each night. But multiple studies have found that kids are usually getting more homework than that each night. Also, one study found a correlation between homework and strengthened achievement among seventh graders, but another found that, “students who did more hours of homework experienced greater behavioral engagement in school but also more academic stress, physical health problems, and lack of balance in their lives.” Further complicating homework is who has access to high-speed internet and who doesn’t-- as millions of households still lack fast, reliable internet. So how can homework be made into a good thing? Some experts say homework should be decoupled from students’ overall grades to take the pressure off, while others say making homework more useful for kids may also come down to picking the right types of assignments, as research has shown that it’s easier to learn material revisited several times in short bursts rather than during long study sessions.
🏈PANTHERS TOP TEXANS 24-9, MCCAFFREY INJURED: The Carolina Panthers topped the Houston Texans 24-9 last night to go 3-0 on the season. But there was a shadow over the win for Carolina, with star running back Christian McCaffrey suffering a hamstring injury early in the second quarter. Panthers quarterback Sam Darnold threw for 304 yards and ran for two touchdowns, while the Texans' rookie quarterback Davis Mills was sacked four times and held to 168 yards passing in his first career start. Mills was filling in for an injured Tyrod Taylor.
Sam Darnold is now tied for the league lead in rushing TDs. pic.twitter.com/12Ub0t8fGO
— NFL (@NFL) September 24, 2021
🏀SKY, MERCURY ADVANCE IN WNBA PLAYOFFS WITH FIRST-ROUND SINGLE-ELIMINATION WINS: The WNBA's playoffs got underway last night with the Chicago Sky and the Phoenix Mercury advancing to the second round with wins in their single-elimination first-round games. The Sky beat the Dallas Wings 81-64, and the Mercury defeated the New York Liberty 83-82, getting the win on a free throw by Brianna Turner with less than second to play. As Chicago and Phoenix now move on, the Wings and Liberty are done for the season.
🏌THOMAS AND SPIETH TO OPEN RYDER CUP FOR U.S.: The duo of Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth will open the Ryder Cup for the U.S. this morning against the European team of Jon Rahm and Sergio Garcia, both of Spain, at Whistling Straits Golf Course in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. The other U.S. teams playing this morning will be: Dustin Johnson and Collin Morikawa against Paul Casey of England and Viktor Hovland of Norway; Brooks Koepka and Daniel Berger against Lee Westwood and Matt Fitzpatrick, both of England; and Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay against Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy and Ian Poulter of England. Europe has won four of the past five Ryder Cups
Ryan Borucki hits Kevin Kiermaier in the back with a pitch in the 8th inning pic.twitter.com/cd8yC056OQ
— Tim and Friends (@timandfriends) September 22, 2021
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