From Sarah (Crooked) <[email protected]>
Subject What A Day: Muddying the Waters
Date April 20, 2021 12:39 AM
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One giant leap for helicopterkind.

Monday, April 19, 2021
BY SARAH LAZARUS & CROOKED MEDIA


** -MyPillow Guy Mike Lindell ([link removed]) , getting prank-called on live TV
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The signs of a return to normal American life are all around us: Businesses are reopening, air travel has picked up, and there was so much gun violence in a single weekend that we all need a Monday roundup just to keep track.

* In Kenosha, WI, a gunman fatally shot three people ([link removed]) and injured at least three others at a bar early on Sunday morning, after he was asked to leave. Authorities said later on Sunday that a “person of interest” had been located and charged with first-degree homicide.

* In Austin, TX, police have arrested a former sheriff’s office detective ([link removed]) suspected of shooting and killing three people on Sunday, in what police said appeared to be “a domestic situation.” Meanwhile, the Texas House just passed a bill to eliminate handgun permits ([link removed]) , which would allow Texans over 21 to carry open or concealed handguns without passing a safety course.

* There were two mass shootings in Louisiana alone. On Saturday night in LaPlace, a shooter injured six people ([link removed]) during a 12-year-old’s birthday party. A neighbor said that all of the victims were children, and that he thought the shooter was a child, too. On Sunday night, a gunman shot and injured five people ([link removed]) in Shreveport.

* In a gun violence ouroboros, one or more people in an SUV started shooting into a vigil for a shooting victim in Columbus, OH, on Saturday night, killing a woman who was driving past and wounding five others, including a 12-year-old. In Chicago, IL, a gunman opened fire at a car ([link removed]) in a McDonald’s drive-thru lane on Sunday afternoon, killing a 7-year-old girl and injuring her 29-year-old father. The list goes on ([link removed]) , and on ([link removed]) , and on ([link removed]) .

That devastating weekend followed a mass shooting at a FedEx facility in Indianapolis, IN, which now appears to be the result of a red-flag law gone unused.

* The gunman who shot and killed eight people last week was able to legally purchase the two semiautomatic rifles he used in the attack, just months after his mother alerted law enforcement to his instability and authorities confiscated his shotgun. That’s because prosecutors decided not to petition for a red-flag determination ([link removed]) , which would have barred the shooter from buying or possessing guns for at least six months. Authorities claimed they thought they had fixed the situation by permanently seizing the shotgun, and weren’t confident they could build a red-flag case within the allotted two-week window.

* Indianapolis authorities have released the names ([link removed]) of the FedEx shooting victims. Four of the eight people killed were Sikhs, prompting calls ([link removed]) for police to investigate the shooting as a possible hate crime. Police said on Friday that roughly 90 percent of the workers at the warehouse were members of the local Sikh community.



Red-flag laws only work when they’re enforced, and the last few days and weeks should disabuse anyone of the notion that they’re a replacement for more aggressive gun control. As Anthony Fauci said between mass shootings ([link removed]) on Sunday, “How can you say that's not a public-health issue?” More pressingly: How do you get a political party that’s increasingly defined by its opposition to public-health measures to care?

In case you missed it, Pod Save the People co-host Kaya Henderson sat down with Oscar-nominated director Shaka King to talk about his film, Judas and the Black Messiah ahead of this year's award season.

To listen, check out the episode “Pat Yourself on the Back” in the Pod Save the People feed on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your pods ([link removed]) →
[link removed]

Progressives have introduced the Green New Deal for Public Housing Act ([link removed]) , legislation that would provide more than $100 billion for retrofitting public housing, as part of a push to expand the commitments in President Biden’s infrastructure package. The (new) Green New Deal would also allocate $1 trillion in federal spending directly to cities, towns, and tribes ([link removed]) working to slash carbon emissions, which would help counteract state-level efforts to slow the transition away from fossil fuels. Over on the other end of the spectrum, Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) said on Sunday that he and other Republicans would support an $800 billion infrastructure bill ([link removed]) , stripped of the provisions that Republicans have
arbitrarily decided don’t count as infrastructure. Biden held his second infrastructure meeting ([link removed]) with a bipartisan group of lawmakers on Monday, and again said that he's prepared to compromise.
* During closing arguments in the Derek Chauvin trial ([link removed]) , the prosecution instructed jurors to “believe your eyes. What you saw happened, happened.” The defense focused on how “a reasonable police officer” would have handled the situation, and offered up ([link removed]) an impossibly weird chocolate-chip cookie analogy. The jury has begun deliberation, and President Biden is expected to deliver remarks ([link removed]) after it renders a verdict.

* Republicans have gone Bad Faith Mode on Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) ([link removed]) over her comments encouraging Minnesota protesters over the weekend, claiming that she was “inciting violence.” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy announced he will introduce a censure resolution ([link removed]) , and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) said she will introduce a resolution to expel Waters from Congress, bless her heart.

* In other doomed initiatives, Greene has scrubbed the launch of her wildly racist America First Caucus ([link removed]) , after GOP leaders disapproved.

* DC’s chief medical examiner ruled that Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick suffered two strokes and died of natural causes ([link removed]) the day after he was assaulted by rioters, which will make it harder for prosecutors to pursue homicide charges.

* Rep. Steve Stivers (R-OH) said he will leave Congress next month ([link removed]) to lead Ohio’s Chamber of Commerce, opening a sixth (not terribly competitive) House vacancy.

* Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) announced his support for the PRO Act ([link removed]) (hooray!) and looks forward to passing it the good old fashioned way, with 10 Republican votes (oh no).

* The country’s largest coal-miners union indicated it would accept a transition away from fossil fuels ([link removed]) in exchange for new jobs in renewable energy. Many of the proposals mine workers are demanding are already included in Biden’s jobs plan.

* Disparities in vaccination rates between states and counties already break down along political lines ([link removed]) , in spite of Vaccine Influencer Ivanka Trump’s tireless work ([link removed]) .

* Former Attorney General Bill Barr and Justice Amy Coney Barrett have both scored book deals ([link removed]) —in Barrett’s case, for a whopping $2 million.

* NASA successfully flew a little helicopter around on Mars ([link removed]) , marking the first powered flight on another planet. One small step for helicopter, one giant leap for helicopterkind.

* Twelve of Europe’s top football (“football”) teams have announced plans to break away and form a European Super League ([link removed]) —a tradition-defying cash grab—to the outrage of fans all over the world. More like European Blooper League, amirite? #BlooperLeague #SportsNewsletter

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny has been transferred to a prison infirmary ([link removed]) for “vitamin therapy,” after his personal physician warned that he could die “at any minute.” Navalny has been on a hunger strike for nearly three weeks to protest his lack of access to medical care, and over the weekend, his team said that his blood tests showed a risk of imminent heart or kidney failure. Dr. Anastasia Vasilyeva, Navalny’s physician, said the transfer to a prison hospital wouldn’t help him, since it’s a site that specializes in treating tuberculosis. The Biden administration has warned ([link removed]) that the Russian government will face consequences if Navalny dies, and his allies have planned nationwide protests
([link removed]) on Wednesday to call for his release.
http:// sakara.com/hysteria

Not-so-fun fact: researchers have found that eating sugar, specifically fructose – the kind that's in lots of processed foods and drinks – may actually make you crave more sugar. On the flip side, you tend to be satisfied with fewer sweet things when you eat less sugar.

Break your sugar habit for good with Sakara's best-selling Metabolism Super Powder (http:// sakara.com/hysteria) , a cacao-flavored nutritional powder designed to regulate blood sugar levels, control inflammation, and curb cravings. It contains Gymnema Sylvestre, an herb that can help regulate blood sugar and lower cortisol, making it a great addition to your daily routine if you're trying to kick a sugar habit.

Add to coffee or a morning smoothie as part of a ritual, and look forward to experiencing humming digestion, even-keel blood sugar levels, and significantly reduced bloat. What A Day readers can try it for 20 percent off ([link removed]) !

Half of the adult U.S. population ([link removed]) has now received at least one vaccine dose, and as of today, every American over age 16 is eligible.

New Yorkers ([link removed]) can now get vaccinated under the Big Whale.

Maryland ([link removed]) may be about to become the first state to provide access to counsel to renters facing eviction.

The Biden administration ([link removed]) has freed up $8 billion in disaster relief funding for Puerto Rico, and eased Trump-era restrictions on the aid.
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