Sunday, November 24

Author: Grace Thompson

Will fluoride go away when Trump takes office?
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Will fluoride go away when Trump takes office?

Fluoride — long heralded as one of the greatest public health achievements of the 20th century — could be removed from public water systems under the influence of one of President-elect Donald Trump’s advisers, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Kennedy — who has no training in either medicine or dentistry — called fluoride “an industrial waste associated with arthritis, bone fractures, bone cancer, IQ loss” and other problems on the social media platform X . “I think fluoride is on the way out,” Kennedy said Wednesday on MSNBC . “The faster that it goes out, the better.” Whether to add fluoride to water supplies is decided and funded by local jurisdictions, not the federal government. Still, Kennedy said that if tapped, he would advise communities on fluoridated water. Dentis...
N.Y. State Police launch criminal probe into trooper who said he had been shot on duty
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N.Y. State Police launch criminal probe into trooper who said he had been shot on duty

Days after the New York State Police lauded one of its troopers as a hero, they have launched a criminal probe into his claim that he was shot and wounded during a traffic stop on a Long Island highway. “Based on our investigation so far, we have reason to believe that the incident did not occur the way it was reported,” Maj. Stephen Udice said Wednesday, nearly a week after Trooper Thomas Mascia claimed he had been shot. State Police previously said that at around 11:45 p.m. on Oct. 30 Mascia was shot on a shoulder of the Southern State Parkway in West Hempstead in Nassau County, about 30 miles east of Manhattan, as he approached what he believed to be a stranded motorist. Mascia had been patrolling westbound, State Police Superintendent Steven James said a week ago. Masci...
Dairy workers may have bird flu without feeling sick, CDC reports
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Dairy workers may have bird flu without feeling sick, CDC reports

Dairy workers who’ve been exposed to bird flu should be tested for the virus even if they don’t have symptoms and be offered Tamiflu to cut their risk of getting sick, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday. The recommendation coincides with a new report finding asymptomatic bird flu infection in some workers. Those cases were discovered using blood, or serology, testing and seem to have been transmitted from sick animals, not people. “There is nothing that we’ve seen in the new serology data that gives us any concern about person-to-person transmission,” Dr. Nirav Shah, the CDC’s principal deputy director, said during a media briefing. To date, 46 people have been diagnosed with bird flu, also known as H5N1, in the United States this year. ...
3 people arrested and charged in connection with Liam Payne’s death, Argentine authorities say
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3 people arrested and charged in connection with Liam Payne’s death, Argentine authorities say

Three people were charged in relation with the death of singer Liam Payne , Argentina's public prosecutor said Thursday. The prosecutor's statement said that during the investigation, "illicit conduct was discovered from which three people were charged with the crimes of abandonment of a person followed by death, supply and facilitation of narcotics." Payne, a former member of One Direction, fell from the balcony of a Buenos Aires hotel on Oct. 16. Someone who was with Payne daily while he was in Buenos Aires is charged with abandoning a person following death, prosecutor Andrés Madrea's statement said. A hotel employee is accused of supplying Payne with cocaine twice while he stayed at the hotel, the statement said, and a third person is accused of supplying drug...
Social media influencer known for racing dies in crash while speeding, NYPD says
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Social media influencer known for racing dies in crash while speeding, NYPD says

A social media influencer known for drag-racing videos died in a car crash early Wednesday on a New York City expressway. Andre Beadle, 25, of the Bronx, was speeding as he was driving a 2023 BMW shortly before 1:15 a.m. on the Nassau Expressway in Jamaica, Queens, New York police said. “The driver lost control and veered to the right, causing the vehicle to travel off the right side of the roadway into the right shoulder, striking a metal pole,” police said in a statement. “This caused the vehicle to veer back across the eastbound lanes to the left shoulder, ejecting the operator from the vehicle.” Beadle was declared dead at a hospital, police said. The investigation, police said, is ongoing. Beadle, who amassed 246,000 Instagram followers and nearly 60,000 Yo...
Wall Street expects Trump presidency will unlock deal-making
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Wall Street expects Trump presidency will unlock deal-making

Wall Street dealmakers and corporate leaders expect the flood gates to open on merger and acquisition activity after President-elect Donald Trump takes office in January. And he’ll likely have congressional help. Trump defeated Democratic candidate Vice President Kamala Harris , and Republicans claimed a majority of the Senate in elections this week. That red wave is expected to spell loosening regulations on deal-making, with plenty of pent-up demand. “We know kind of where the world is headed in a Trump environment because we’ve seen it before,” said Jeffrey Solomon, president of TD Cowen, on CNBC’s “Money Movers” Wednesday . “I think the regulatory environment will be much more conducive to economic growth. There will be lighter and targeted regulation.” So...
Fed cuts key interest rate a quarter-point but signals ongoing concerns about inflation
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Fed cuts key interest rate a quarter-point but signals ongoing concerns about inflation

The Federal Reserve announced Thursday it was lowering its key interest rate by a quarter-point — a widely expected move that coincides with inflation approaching the central bank's 2% goal. In their statement , Fed officials noted that inflation remains "somewhat elevated" while unemployment has "moved up but remains low." They did note that conditions in the labor market have "generally eased" — perhaps a nod to signs of growing softness in hiring. Some market participants noted the officials removed key language that had indicated it was still confident it would hit the 2% inflation target. In a note to clients, Omair Sharif, president of Inflation Insights, said that may signal a new willingness by the Fed to forgo a widely expected additional quarter-poin...
Fed Chair says he won’t resign if Trump asks him to
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Fed Chair says he won’t resign if Trump asks him to

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Thursday that he would not resign if president-elect Donald Trump asked him to. Asked whether he would step down amid chatter that Trump's advisers had suggested he do so, Powell replied, "No." Trump nominated Powell as Fed chairman in 2017 in his first administration. Powell also said that he was not legally required to leave if asked to do so, and that his staff had determined that the president lacked the capacity under the law to demote, at will, him or any other Fed governors. Powell's term is scheduled to end in May 2026. Powell made the comments during his regularly scheduled remarks following the release of the Federal Open Market Committee's latest statement on interest rate policy. The committee announced a quarter-p...
South Asian Americans feel both grief and pride after ramping up for a Harris win
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South Asian Americans feel both grief and pride after ramping up for a Harris win

After feeling like they were on the precipice of history, many South Asian Americans say they’re heartbroken following Vice President Kamala Harris’ loss in the 2024 presidential race, but are looking back on her ascent in politics with pride for their community. Harris would have been the first Black woman and South Asian person to hold the nation’s highest office, and with her defeat by President-elect Donald Trump called Wednesday morning, they’re reflecting on the spotlight her unprecedented candidacy put on their community. “I was speechless,” said Anjali Bhatt, 27, who saw the results online when she woke up Wednesday morning. “The fact that there could have been a South Asian woman in the White House … we’re not there yet, but it would have been very nice. For the South Asian ...
How Trump broke both parties — and where Democrats go from here: From the Politics Desk
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How Trump broke both parties — and where Democrats go from here: From the Politics Desk

Welcome to the online version of From the Politics Desk , an evening newsletter that brings you the NBC News Politics team’s latest reporting and analysis from the campaign trail, the White House and Capitol Hill. In today’s edition, senior national political reporter Jonathan Allen explains why Democrats need to retool their economic message during Donald Trump's second term. Plus, senior national politics reporter Matt Dixon writes that the battle to succeed Trump in four years is already underway. And "Meet the Press" moderator Kristen Welker asks Trump about his mass deportation plans in an interview. Sign up to receive this newsletter in your inbox every weekday here. How Trump broke both parties — and where Democrats go from here By Jonathan Al...