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One more news episode before us Yankees have a holiday. Note: Although we will not have a news roundup next week, we'll have other new content. This week: In Israel-Palestine, the ICC issues arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant (0:56) and the US vetoes another ceasefire resolution (6:11); US envoy Amos Hochstein is working on a ceasefire in Lebanon (8:50); in Sri Lanka, the leftist coalition wins a parliamentary majority (12:26); in Sudan, the RSF commits new atrocities (14:12) and Russia vetoes a ceasefire (16:33); in Russia-Ukraine, Biden gives Ukraine permission to use long-range US weapons in Russia (18:29), while Reuters reports that Putin is open to peace negotiations (23:19); the US recognizes opposition leader Edmundo Gonzalez as president of Venezuela (24:55); a new armed group wreaks violence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti (27:09); and we have a New Cold War update featuring the final Biden-Xi meeting (29:10) and Biden's last G20 summit (31:06). Subscribe now for more content and features! Watch the new documentary from Al-Jazeera's Fault Lines program, "All That Remains", which follows a 13-year-old amputee from Gaza named Leyan as she seeks treatment in the United States.
On this week's American prestige world news roundup: One more news episode before us Yankees have a holiday. Note: Although we will not have a news roundup next week, we'll have other new content.This week: In Israel-Palestine, the ICC issues arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant (0:56) and the US vetoes another ceasefire resolution (6:11); US envoy Amos Hochstein is working on a ceasefire in Lebanon (8:50); in Sri Lanka, the leftist coalition wins a parliamentary majority (12:26); in Sudan, the RSF commits new atrocities (14:12) and Russia vetoes a ceasefire (16:33); in Russia-Ukraine, Biden gives Ukraine permission to use long-range US weapons in Russia (18:29), while Reuters reports that Putin is open to peace negotiations (23:19); the US recognizes opposition leader Edmundo Gonzalez as president of Venezuela (24:55); a new armed group wreaks violence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti (27:09); and we have a New Cold War update featuring the final Biden-Xi meeting (29:10) and Biden's last G20 summit (31:06).Watch the new documentary from Al-Jazeera's Fault Lines program, "All That Remains", which follows a 13-year-old amputee from Gaza named Leyan as she seeks treatment in the United States.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
China Lays Out 4 'Red Lines' During Biden-Xi MeetingHow CCP Uses Global Summits to Advance Its AgendaCCP Supporters Harasses Human Rights ActivistsAlbanese Meets China's Xi at G20 SummitHouse Speaker: Trump Tariff Proposals a 'Balancing Act'Trump Taps China Critic Carr as FCC ChairStabbing Attack in China Leaves at Least 8 DeadPeru Port Could Face Trump's China TariffsCanada Raises Concerns Over Mexico's China TradeIndia to Curb Chinese Goods Via AseanU.S., Japanese, Australian Defense Chiefs Hold TalksU.S.-Philippines Sign Intelligence-Sharing Deal45 Hong Kong Democracy Activists Face SentencingHong Kong Publisher Jimmy Lai to Testify WednesdayEngineer Calls on Beijing to Release His Mother
Desglosamos lo más importante del presupuesto para el primer año de Gobierno de Sheinbaum y la viabilidad de las proyecciones. Además, qué sucedió en la APEC entre EE.UU. y China. Corrección: este episodio de ‘La Estrategia del Día' asegura que la Cumbre APEC de 2024 se llevó a cabo en Brasil cuando originalmente ocurrió en Lima, Perú.
Llegan a Lima los líderes mundiales que intervendrán hoy en la Cumbre de la APEC. La Casa Blanca confirma que los presidentes Biden y Xi se reunirán el sábado. El número de trabajadores incluidos en un ERTE por fuerza mayor tras la dana asciende roza las 13.000 personas y las empresas superan las 800. La vicepresidenta primera, María Jesús Montero, negocia contrarreloj para conseguir el apoyo de ERC, EH Bildu, Podemos y BNG a su paquete fiscal.
Mike Davis, Founder of the Article III Project, Former Law Clerk for Justice Neil Gorsuch, and Former Chief Counsel for Nominations for the U.S. Senate Committee on the JudiciaryTopic: Jack Smith Gordon Chang, Asia expert, columnist and author of "China is Going to War"Topic: Plans for a Biden-Xi farewell callSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan met Chinese regime leader Xi Jinping on Thursday as he wrapped up a three-day visit to China. Sullivan said it's likely that President Joe Biden and Xi will meet at both the APEC forum and the G20 summit later this year.Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, visited a high school in Georgia as part of their bus tour through the battleground state. Harris and Walz are set to end the 2-day bus tour with a rally in Savannah.Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin has launched its 8th tourist mission to space. The New Shepard rocket carried six people on an 11-minute journey above the Karman line, the recognized boundary between the earth's atmosphere and space.
Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, kicked off a two-day bus tour in Georgia on Wednesday that will snake through rural areas in the southern part of the state before culminating in a rally in the coastal city of Savannah. The Democratic ticket will meet with supporters, campaign staff, small business owners, and voters in the state.The Israel Defense Forces launched a large-scale operation in the West Bank early on Wednesday, killing ten Hamas terrorists. Israeli troops sealed off the city of Jenin, which they said has long been a terrorist stronghold, and also conducted airstrikes.The White House said the United States and China will hold a phone call in the coming weeks between President Joe Biden and Chinese regime leader Xi Jinping. This comes after National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan met Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Beijing.
On today's show Andrew and Bill are joined by Raja Krishnamoorthi, Democratic representative for the 8th District of Illinois, and the ranking member of the Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party. Topics include: The Select Committee's work to draft and pass legislation to force the divestiture of TikTok, investigations into American VC investments in PLA-linked PRC companies, how to tackle IP theft in tech, searching for fentanyl progress since the Biden-Xi visit in November, PRC behavior in the South China Sea, and more.
1/2: #StateThinking: #GAZA: #PRC: Netanyahu at odds with Biden; Xi at odds with Europe @MaryKissel Former Senior Adviser to the Secretary of State. Executive VP Stephens Inc. https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/israeli-forces-seize-key-gaza-crossing-ahead-of-planned-rafah-offensive-45c4d31b?mod=latest_headlines 1950 Beersheba
2/2: #StateThinking: #GAZA: #PRC: Netanyahu at odds with Biden; Xi at odds with Europe @MaryKissel Former Senior Adviser to the Secretary of State. Executive VP Stephens Inc. https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/israeli-forces-seize-key-gaza-crossing-ahead-of-planned-rafah-offensive-45c4d31b?mod=latest_headlines 1873 Jerusalem
Why didn't anyone talk about the fact that China was spying on us last year, and the fact that Biden "gave the order" to shoot it down? / Our takeaway from the Tucker-Putin interview. https://www.facebook.com/BrutHonestRadio https://brutallyhonestradio.libsyn.com/ https://www.instagram.com/BrutHonestRadio/ https://twitter.com/BrutHonestRadio https://www.tiktok.com/@bruthonestradio? https://rumble.com/c/c-628487
This week, the Trade Guys discuss the 2024 National Trade Estimate Report on Foreign Trade Barriers, President Biden and President Xi's meeting, and falling Chinese foreign direct investment.
Derek and Danny return with the news. This week: In Gaza, the IDF kills members of the World Central Kitchen organization (0:31), Biden follows up with Netanyahu (6:18), more reports on the IDF's AI targeting systems (10:35), and more; Israeli airstrikes hit Iranian IRGC officers in Syria (20:59); a drone strike in Myanmar's capital Naypyidaw (25:04); the DPRK/North Korea tests a hypersonic missile (26:51); the results of Senegal's election (29:01); Somalia expels the Ethiopian ambassador (31:02); a terrorist attack in Moscow (32:43); NATO discusses a Ukraine fund (35:27); a UN update on displacement in Haiti (38:42); and a New Cold War update featuring a Biden-Xi phone call (41:28).Look out for our special later today with Natalie Shure on Havana Syndrome. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.americanprestigepod.com/subscribe
On this week's news episode of American Prestige, Derek and Danny return with the news. This week: In Gaza, the IDF kills members of the World Central Kitchen organization (0:31), Biden follows up with Netanyahu (6:18), more reports on the IDF's AI targeting systems (10:35), and more; Israeli airstrikes hit Iranian IRGC officers in Syria (20:59); a drone strike in Myanmar's capital Naypyidaw (25:04); the DPRK/North Korea tests a hypersonic missile (26:51); the results of Senegal's election (29:01); Somalia expels the Ethiopian ambassador (31:02); a terrorist attack in Moscow (32:43); NATO discusses a Ukraine fund (35:27); a UN update on displacement in Haiti (38:42); and a New Cold War update featuring a Biden-Xi phone call (41:28).Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Facts & Spins for April 4, 2024 Top Stories: Presidents Biden and Xi hold their first talks since January, at least 9 are killed after a powerful earthquake rocks Taiwan, Ukraine lowers its conscription age to 25, Pres. Joe Biden expresses outrage over the Israeli airstrike that killed Gaza aid workers, Donald Trump sues Truth Social's co-founders, Jack Smith criticizes a judge's order in the Trump classified docs case, JK Rowling won't face criminal action under Scotland's hate crime law, Tesla's production reportedly decreased in Q1 of this year, Botswana threatens to ship 20K elephants to Germany and Tennessee passes a law banning geoengineering. Sources: https://www.verity.news/
Developing stories you need to know just in time for your drive home. Get the facts first on Morning Wire. Balance of Nature: "Get 35% off Your Order of Fruits & Veggies + $10 Off Every Additional Set. Use promo code WIRE at checkout: https://www.balanceofnature.com/"GDefy: Get $30 off your order of $150 or more! Use promo code: WIRE at http://www.GDefy.com
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken addressed the Israeli military strike that killed at least seven aid workers in Gaza. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping had their first conversation since meeting in November. Ukraine claims it struck a key oil refinery in Russia. Prescription fills for Adderall and similar ADHD treatments have dipped amid an ongoing shortage in the US. And, Tesla posted its first drop in sales since the first year of the pandemic. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
NTD News Today—4/2/20241. Trump to Focus on Crime, Illegal Immigration in MI, WI2. Trump Posts $175M Bond in Fraud Case3. Trump Gag Order Expanded in ‘Hush Money' Case4. Trump Pays $175M Bond, What's Next?5. Expensive Trump Bond, Push for His Assets6. More Coming if Questions Change7. Polls: RFK Jr. Shakes Up 2024 Trump, Biden Rematch8. Dismissal of Hunter Biden Tax Charges Denied9. Navarro Loses Legal Bid to Prevent Email Turnover10. Alternate Channel Opened at Baltimore Bridge11. Cargo Ship's Owner Seeks to Limit Legal Liability12. Maryland Gov. Gives Update on Bridge Cleanup13. Memorial Honors Workers Killed in Bridge Collapse14. 6-Week Florida Abortion Ban Will Soon Become Law15. Trump Media Stock Falls Over 20% After Announcement16. Google Wiping Your Browser Data to Settle Suit17. Republicans Bid for Black Voters in Milwaukee18. Israel Probing Killing of Aid Workers in Gaza19. World Leaders React to Death of Aid Workers20. Iranian Ambassador Says His Country Will Respond to Israel's Attack on Its Embassy in Damascus21. Qatari Media Al Jazeera's Impact on Israel-Hamas War22. Analyst: Al-Shifa Hospital Was Hamas HQ in Gaza23. Protests Against Netanyahu Not Significant: Analyst24. Finland: 12-Year-Old School Shooter Injures 3 Kids25. Putin: Will Find ‘Ultimate' Source of Moscow Attack26. Russia to Remove Taliban From List of Terror Orgs.27. Germany to Send $618M of Artillery Shells to Ukraine28. Norway Plans to Increase Conscripted Soldiers29. What to Expect During Total Solar Eclipse30. New Device Allows Blind to Listen to Total Solar Eclipse31. Dogs Can Associate Words With Objects: Study32. Polar Bear Laerke Gets Her Annual Exam33. Today's Primaries Could Provide Clues About Nov. Election34. Polls: RFK Jr. Shakes Up 2024 Trump, Biden Rematch35. Biden Under Fire Over ‘Trans Visibility Day' on Easter36. Trump Criticized for Selling Bibles With Us Constitution37. Where Does RFK Jr. Stand on Free Enterprise?38. RFK Jr.: Biden Bigger Threat to Democracy Than Trump39. What to Watch Out for in Today's Pres. Primaries40. Trump to Talk Immigration in Michigan This Afternoon41. Biden Campaign Hopes to Flip Florida42. Republicans Bid for Black Voters in Milwaukee43. Navarro Loses Legal Bid to Prevent Email Turnover44. Trump Jury Instructions Due in Classified Docs Case45. Judge Limits Instructions to Counts 1 Through 3246. Why Requesting Jury Instructions Is Unusual47. Fast Food Prices Outpace Inflation: Consultant48. Neonakis: Others Will Probably Follow CA's Wage Hike49. Alternate Channel Opened at Baltimore Bridge50. Maryland Gov. Gives Update on Bridge Cleanup51. Cargo Ship's Owner Seeks to Limit Legal Liability52. Memorial Honors Workers Killed in Bridge Collapse53. Martha's Vineyard Lawsuit: Judge Dismisses DeSantis54. RPT: DOD Failed on ‘Warm Handover' for 4K Veterans55. Last Survivor of Pearl Harbor's USS Arizona Dead at 10256. General Electric Completes Split Into 3 Companies57. United Airlines Asks Pilots to Take Unpaid Leave58. American Airlines Changes Pet, Carry On Policy59. Israel Probing Killing of Aid Workers in Gaza60. World Leaders React to Death of Aid Workers61. Tech Giants Rejecting China, Turning to Mexico62. Beijing Fuels Claim Taiwan's Pres. Would Flee War63. Biden, China's Xi Spoke by Phone64. Finland: 12-Year-Old School Shooter Injures 3 Kids65. Putin: Will Find ‘Ultimate' Source of Moscow Attack66. Russia to Remove Taliban From List of Terror Orgs.67. Blinken Visits Howitzer Factory Amid Ukraine Shortage68. Germany to Send $618M of...
Watch Joe and Kailey LIVE every day on YouTube: http://bit.ly/3vTiACF. Bloomberg Washington Correspondents Joe Mathieu and Kailey Leinz deliver insight and analysis on the latest headlines from the White House and Capitol Hill, including conversations with influential lawmakers and key figures in politics and policy. On this edition, Kailey speaks with: Bloomberg Senior Reporter Iain Marlow as US President Joe Biden and People's Republic of China President Xi Jinping hold a one-on-one phone call for the first time since their November 2023 meeting. Pangea Policy Founder Terry Haines about the odds of a Ukraine aid bill passing through Congress. The Washington Institute for Near East Policy Jill and Jay Bernstein Fellow Michael Knights about the risks of escalation in the Middle East following Israel strikes on Iranian targets in Syria. Bloomberg Senior National Political Correspondent Nancy Cook about primary contests Tuesday and former President Donald Trump's campaign stops in Wisconsin and Michigan. Former US Ambassador to Turkey and Iraq James Jeffrey following an Israeli military drone strike that killed seven aid workers from World Central Kitchen in Gaza. Bloomberg Politics Contributor Jeanne Sheehan Zaino and former RNC Communications Director Lisa Camooso Miller as the Florida Supreme Court approves a November ballot measure on abortion rights. Evercore ISI Senior Managing Director Sarah Bianchi about relations between the US and China. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xos0wbkPsLU Episode 102 of the PetroNerds podcast is a jam packed deep dive on the geopolitical landscape, China, and US shale. Trisha Curtis takes listeners on a tour around the world, covering the Biden Xi meetings, the escalating war in the Middle East, and the ongoing war in Ukraine. She puts this in context of oil and gas, and broader energy market. This talk and presentation was the keynote speech Trisha gave to the Rocky Mountain GPA conference in Denver, Colorado on November 16. 2023. The title of this talk is Navigating Risk in a Game of Geopolitical Chess. Buckle up folks! This is a good one! Listen on Itunes
Former Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani is now bankrupt. Find out what his lawyers are saying about the $148 million in damages a jury ordered him to pay. Former President Donald Trump is hitting back at President Joe Biden after Biden accused him of supporting an insurrection. We have the latest fallout of the Colorado ruling, and a new move by special counsel Jack Smith. House lawmakers are reportedly moving closer to impeaching Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. Meanwhile, some Republicans are talking about removing President Biden from the 2024 ballots. Chinese and U.S. top military officials are speaking Thursday for the first time in over one year, as reports surface that Chinese leader Xi Jinping asked for President Biden's public support to take over Taiwan. What is the White House saying about the private Biden-Xi talks? Ten Americans detained in Venezuela are arriving back home just in time for Christmas after the White House brokered a prisoner swap in exchange for a "close ally" of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro. ⭕️ Watch in-depth videos based on Truth & Tradition at Epoch TV
This is Garrison Hardie with your CrossPolitic Daily News Brief for Tuesday, November 21st, 2023. Download our new app!: You guys are aware that we have a new app right? If not you should download it right now! Head on over to your app store, and type in “CrossPolitic”, “Fight Laugh Feast”, or “PubTV”. Once you find the app, you may need to update your app, or if you have a droid phone, you may need to delete your current FLF app, and re-download it! Once downloaded you’ll be able to view or listen to our content right on your mobile device! As always, if you’d like to sign up for a pub membership, you can head on over to fightlaughfeast.com… that’s fightlaughfeast.com. https://nypost.com/2023/11/20/news/supreme-court-spurns-chauvin-appeal-of-george-floyd-verdict/ Supreme Court won’t hear Derek Chauvin’s appeal of George Floyd murder conviction The Supreme Court said Monday that it would not hear former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin’s appeal of his second-degree murder conviction in the May 2020 death of George Floyd. Chauvin was found guilty by a state court in April 2021 and sentenced to 22 1/2 years in prison in connection with Floyd’s May 25, 2020, death, which triggered riots across the country and a prolonged debate on race relations in America. The high court did not specify why it declined to take up the appeal and did not indicate whether any justices would have heard the case. Chauvin, 47, is also appealing his conviction and 21-year sentence on separate federal charges in connection with Floyd’s death. Those punishments were not considered by the high court. The ex-cop’s lawyers had argued their client was denied a fair trial due to the publicity surrounding the case and concerns about potential violence if he was acquitted. “Mr. Chauvin’s case shows the profound difficulties trial courts have to ensure a criminal defendant’s right to an impartial jury consistently when extreme cases arise,” Chauvin’s legal team told the Supreme Court. “This was particularly true here when the jurors themselves had a vested interest in finding Mr. Chauvin guilty in order to avoid further rioting in the community in which they lived and the possible threat of physical harm to them or their families.” Approximately nine minutes of harrowing cellphone footage showed Chauvin placing his knee on Floyd’s neck despite pleas from the 46-year-old black man that he couldn’t breathe. Floyd was being arrested for allegedly using a counterfeit $20 bill when Chauvin confronted him. A medical examiner concluded that recent methamphetamine and fentanyl use may have contributed to his death as well. Chauvin’s legal team had argued his case to the Minnesota Court of Appeals, but that court upheld his conviction back in April and declined to give him a new trial. Then in July, the highest court in Minnesota upheld the lower court rulings, which led to the request to the US Supreme Court. The nine-member Supreme Court receives somewhere around 7,000 case requests on average every year and typically only accepts between 90 and 150 of them. https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/policy/infrastructure/buttigieg-promises-less-chaos-travelers-2022-season-lurks-memories Buttigieg promises less chaos for travelers as 2022 nightmare season lurks in memories Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said this Thanksgiving travel season is expected to be one of the busiest in U.S. history, but travelers can anticipate fewer flight cancellations than they've seen in recent years. Speaking alongside Federal Aviation Administration Administrator Mike Whitaker at a Monday news conference, Buttigieg said, “We are seeing more people flying than ever with fewer cancellations.” The National Airspace System is reporting the lowest cancellation rates in five years. Flight cancellations are down to 1.3% so far in 2023, compared to 2.3% in 2022, according to preliminary data from the Aviation System Performance Metrics. Airlines have made some improvements from post-pandemic complications that were seen in Southwest’s 2022 holiday travel disaster. Canceled and delayed flights affected an estimated 2 million passengers, and the company lost around $220 million in the final three months of last year. The FAA is investigating multiple domestic airlines for unrealistic scheduling of flights, including Southwest’s December meltdown. “In the Southwest case, there was a huge volume of passengers impacted, which means there's been a huge volume of work for the team to go through,” Buttigieg said. “But I can tell you that it's underway and that we intend to send a continued signal that airlines need to only schedule the flights that they can serve.” “I want to remind the industry that unrealistic scheduling is prohibited under the law,” Buttigieg added. Whitaker said skies will remain extremely busy like last year, adding, "We will be working around the clock to make sure passengers get to their destination safely." In an earlier projection, the Transportation Security Administration said the Tuesday and Wednesday before Thanksgiving and the Sunday after are the busiest travel days. TSA is expecting to screen 2.6 million passengers on Tuesday, 2.7 million passengers on Wednesday, and 2.9 million passengers on Sunday, the busiest travel day. “We expect this holiday season to be our busiest ever. In 2023, we have already seen seven of the top 10 busiest travel days in TSA’s history,” TSA Administrator David Pekoske said in a press release last week. “We are ready for the anticipated volumes and are working closely with our airline and airport partners to make sure we are prepared for this busy holiday travel season." https://redstate.com/mike_miller/2023/11/19/michigan-township-declares-itself-a-second-amendment-sanctuary-promptly-forms-militia-n2166546 Michigan Township Declares Itself a 'Second Amendment Sanctuary,' Promptly Forms Militia As the Biden Border Crisis continues unchecked, Chicago and New York City recently made news with their efforts to push back against the shipping of illegal aliens to their respective "sanctuary cities." The Holton Township Board of Trustees in Michigan's Muskegon County last Tuesday adopted a resolution declaring the township a "Second Amendment Sanctuary" and also adopted an addendum establishing a township militia. Self-explanatory, on the surface: Whereas, the Holton Township Board declares and confirms to express its intent to stand as a Sanctuary Township for Second Amendment rights, and to oppose, within the limits of the Constitution of the United States and the Commonwealth of Michigan, any efforts to unconstitutionally restrict such rights. Holton Township officials made clear to the media that the resolution means the township will not enforce red flag laws restricting firearms or ammunition possession. [Have long been promoted by the left] as a way to prevent gun violence by allowing law enforcement to temporarily seize firearms from individuals deemed to be a danger to themselves or others. While this may sound like a good idea on the surface, there are several compelling reasons not to rely on this approach. First and foremost, red flag laws violate due process and the constitutional rights of gun owners. Under these laws, individuals can have their firearms confiscated based solely on the suspicion of a third party, without being given the opportunity to defend themselves or even be heard in court. This is a clear violation of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments, which protect against unreasonable searches and seizures, and guarantee due process of law. Moreover, red flag laws are inherently subjective and can be easily abused. The criteria for determining who is a “dangerous” individual are often vague and open to interpretation, leaving room for personal bias and political agendas to influence the decision-making process. In other words, in the case of the Holton County Township Board: "Not in our township. Not on our watch." The Militia Public Security Act addendum states the township is adopting “policies necessary for the security and rights of Holton Township residents,” including a militia compromised of everyday citizens. Legal residents of the township are eligible to join the militia and may make their intentions known by acknowledging their intent on social media or stating their intent by letter to the Township Militia. Restrictions include: https://www.newsmax.com/world/globaltalk/china-taiwan-airspace/2023/11/19/id/1142840/ Taiwan Reports Chinese Aircraft Threatening Airspace Taiwan reported renewed Chinese military activity around the island on Sunday, with nine aircraft crossing the sensitive median line of the Taiwan Strait and warships carrying out "combat readiness patrols." Democratically-governed Taiwan, which China claims as its own territory, has complained for the past four years of regular Chinese military patrols and drills near the island, as Beijing seeks to pressure Taipei over its sovereignty claims. With Chinese President Xi Jinping in San Francisco last week for the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit, where he met U.S. President Joe Biden, the scale of that military activity around Taiwan had scaled off. But Taiwan's defense ministry reported that starting onSunday morning it had detected nine Chinese aircraft crossing the Taiwan Strait's median line, which had previously served as an unofficial barrier between the two and which Chinese planes now regularly fly over. The aircraft involved included Su-30 and J-10 fighters, as well as early warning and electronic warfare aircraft, the ministry said. The aircraft were accompanying Chinese warships carrying out "joint combat readiness patrols" it added. Taiwan sent its own forces to monitor, the ministry said. China's defense ministry did not answer calls seeking comment. China says its activities near Taiwan are aimed at "collusion" between Taiwan separatists and the United States and to protect China's territorial integrity. Taiwan's government, which has repeatedly offered talks with China, rejects Beijing's sovereignty claims and says only the island's people can decide their future. Taiwan was a major focus of the Biden-Xi talks in San Francisco. Xi told Biden during their four-hour meeting on Wednesday that Taiwan was the biggest, most dangerous issue in U.S.-China ties, according to a senior U.S. official. Taiwan holds presidential and parliamentary elections on Jan. 13, with the island's fraught relations with China an important topic on the campaign trail. Over the past year and a half China has staged two large-scale war games around Taiwan, though China's air force has not flown over the island or into its territorial air space.
This week, Fareed talks with CNN correspondent Jeremy Diamond live from Tel Aviv about recent Israeli strikes, as well as an update on the ongoing hostage negotiations between Israel and Hamas. Then, Fareed talks to New York Times opinion columnist Nicholas Kristof about parsing out fact and fiction in the Israel-Hamas war and how dynamics between the two sides perpetuate violence. Next, Harvard University professor of democracy and governance Tarek Masoud joins the show to discuss Egypt's response to the Gaza humanitarian crisis and why the country is limiting entry to refugees. Then, Fareed speaks with Australian Ambassador to the US and China expert Kevin Rudd about what Biden and Xi's recent meeting in California means for US-China relations. Finally, Cindy Yu, assistant editor at The Spectator and the host of the "Chinese Whispers" podcast, joins the show to discuss how Chinese economic troubles have shifted policy towards the US. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
WSJ chief China correspondent Lingling Wei joins Misha to discuss what the stakes were of the Biden-Xi summit at APEC, what it achieved, and what to look for next in US-China relations.
On this episode of On The Tape Dan, Guy and Danny discuss what events this week (earnings, Biden-Xi meeting, econ data) are saying about the economy (3:00), expectations of rate cuts next year sparking panic buying (11:30), the promise of a soft landing (18:00), being a market pundit (20:30), the Starbucks walk out (25:00), IPO spinoff talk swirls around SpaceX's Starlink (27:00), and Danny's NFL picks (28:00). Later, CME Group CEO Terry Duffy joins the conversation for his take on risk management in a time of uncertainty (35:00), what investors should be focused on (37:30), innovation for new products/existing products (39:00), his philosophy in regards to risk management (40:00), FTX/regulation (43:50), the importance of rigor (49:00), the market structure (51:30), the retail trader (54:30), what keeps him going as a CEO (59:00), their Google Cloud relationship (1:02:00), his expectations for the stock market in 2024 (1:05:30), and the CME Group Tour Championship (1:08:00). Click here to donate to St. Jude Children's Research. If you do, send a screenshot of your donation to contact@riskreversal.com and we will send you a free “On The Tape” hat. — About the Show: On The Tape is a weekly podcast with CNBC Fast Money's Guy Adami, Dan Nathan and Danny Moses. They're offering takes on the biggest market-moving headlines of the week, trade ideas, in-depth analysis, tips and advice. Each episode, they are joined by prominent Wall Street participants to help viewers make smarter investment decisions. Bear market, bull market, recession, inflation or deflation… we're here to help guide your portfolio into the green. Risk Reversal brings you years of experience from former Wall Street insiders trading stocks to experts in the commodity market. — Check out our show notes here Learn more about Ro body: ro.co/tape See what adding futures can do for you at cmegroup.com/onthetape. — Shoot us an email at OnTheTape@riskreversal.com with any feedback, suggestions, or questions for us to answer on the pod and follow us @OnTheTapePod on Twitter or @riskreversalmedia on Threads — We're on social: Follow @GuyAdami on Twitter Follow Danny Moses @DMoses34 on Twitter Follow Liz Young @LizYoungStrat on Twitter Follow us on Instagram @RiskReversalMedia Subscribe to our YouTube page
Chinese President Xi Jinping visited the United States for the first time in six years this week, announcing with U.S. President Joe Biden a range of new collaborations between the world's two biggest economies. Host Ravi Agrawal convenes a panel to analyze takeaways from this week's Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in San Francisco and is joined by FP's James Palmer, the Spectator's Cindy Yu, and former Obama administration advisor Evan Medeiros. Suggested reading: Robbie Gramer: Biden and Xi Try the Personal Touch James Palmer: Can Xi and Biden Repair U.S.-China Ties? Agathe Demarais: Don't Expect Much From Biden and Xi Christina Lu: Beijing Tightens Its Grip on the Critical Minerals Sector Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Hour 2 of A&G features... The TikTok trend, Bin Laden's "Letter to America"... A 106-yr old grandmother's lecture of her 38-yr old granddaughter... The WaPo's outstanding Josh Rogin on the Biden/Xi Summit... Jack has details on the estate which hosted the Biden/Xi summit. Stupid Should Hurt: https://www.armstrongandgetty.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This is Garrison Hardie with your CrossPolitic Daily News Brief for Thursday, November 16th, 2023. Pub Membership Plug: Public Houses, or Pubs, are not just places to drink beer, wine, cider or even something a little stronger. It is also a unique social centre, very often the focus of community life in villages, towns and cities throughout the length and breadth of the world. We here at CrossPolitic hope to emulate that for you and yours. That’s why you should grab yourself a pub membership with CrossPolitic! We have a lot of big projects we’re working on behind the scenes here at CrossPoltiic. Projects like This America, our rowdy Christian Guides, our new and improved Fight Laugh Feast App, with more to come… and we need you on this ride with us. So pull up a chair, grab a pint, and join us on this ride at fightlaughfeast.com - that’s fightlaughfeast.com. https://ij.org/press-release/new-jersey-parents-file-federal-class-action-lawsuit-challenging-states-secret-retention-of-newborn-blood-for-23-years/ New Jersey Parents File Federal Class Action Lawsuit Challenging State’s Secret Retention of Newborn Blood for 23 Years A group of New Jersey parents teamed up with the Institute for Justice (IJ) to file a federal lawsuit challenging New Jersey’s practice of keeping blood samples taken from newborn babies for 23 years, all without parents’ knowledge or consent. Not only does New Jersey hold onto the blood, it can use the blood samples in any manner it chooses. When babies are born in New Jersey, state law requires that blood be taken from the newborns and tested for diseases such as cystic fibrosis, hormonal deficiencies, and other immunity issues. All states perform similar tests. But, after the testing is over, New Jersey’s Department of Health keeps the leftover blood for 23 years. The state does not ask parents for their consent to keep their babies’ blood, failing to even inform parents that it will hold on to the residual blood. The only way parents could learn about such retention is by proactively looking it up on one of the third-party websites listed on the bottom of the card they’re given after the blood draw. And, once the state has the blood, it can use it however it wishes, including selling it to third parties, giving it to police without a warrant, or even selling it to the Pentagon to create a registry—as previously happened in Texas. “Parents have a right to informed consent if the state wants to keep their children’s blood for decades and use it for purposes other than screening for diseases,” said IJ Senior Attorney Rob Frommer. “New Jersey’s policy of storing baby blood and DNA and using that genetic information however it wants is a clear violation of the Fourth Amendment rights of all New Jersey parents and their newborns.” The plaintiffs challenging this law are two Boonton parents, Erica and Jeremiah Jedynak, and Hannah Lovaglio, a Cranbury mother of two. “It’s not right that the state can enter an incredibly intimate moment, the tender days of childbirth, and take something from our children which is then held on to for 23 years,” said Hannah. “The lack of consent and transparency causes me to question the intent and makes me worried for my children’s future selves.” “As a mother, I deserve the right to decide whether or not the government takes blood from my son and holds onto it for decades past its claimed use.” Although all 50 states and the District of Columbia require blood screening for newborns, whether a state will destroy leftover newborn blood, return it, or keep it with a form of parental consent varies on a state-by-state basis. “What makes New Jersey’s program so uniquely disturbing is the complete lack of safeguards for future abuse and the lack of consent, which leave the program ripe for abuse,” said IJ Attorney Christie Hebert. “Parents should not have to worry if the state is going to use the blood it said it was taking from their baby to test for diseases for other, unrelated purposes.” New Jersey is not alone in facing legal issues for the lack of consent when obtaining blood and over what the state does with the blood. Texas, Minnesota, and Michigan have all faced lawsuits over their retention of blood samples without informed consent from the parents. The 2009 lawsuit in Texas resulted in the state destroying 5.3 million blood samples, and now, all blood samples obtained after 2012 must be destroyed after two years. A 2014 settlement in the Minnesota lawsuit resulted in 1.1 million blood samples being destroyed. In 2022, Michigan agreed to destroy 3 million blood spots, but that lawsuit continues to move forward. “It’s incredibly misleading for the state to tell parents they are simply drawing blood from their babies to test for diseases when it could be sold to third parties or used by other government agencies to build invasive databases or registries,” said IJ Attorney Brian Morris. “As Texas and other states have shown, these concerns aren’t hypothetical.” https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-xi-meeting-seal-deals-fentanyl-military-communications-white-house Biden-Xi meeting to seal deals on fentanyl, military communications, White House says Wednesday's meeting between President Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping will address hard issues such as fentanyl supplies coming in from Asia and a lack of military communication, the White House said. Fox News spoke with NSC Coordinator for the Indo-Pacific Kurt Campbell this week — Campbell was just recently nominated to become deputy secretary of state. "I can tell you that President Biden intends to make very clear to President Xi to get ready. He's going to be dealing with President Biden for the next five years," Campbell told Fox News Digital. "These are tough diplomatic encounters," he continued. "President Biden has a lot of experience. They've known each other a long time. This is an important meeting. It'll be intense." Biden and Xi shook hands in San Francisco Wednesday. One key talking point for the two world leaders is the ongoing fentanyl crisis in the United States. "The president tasked us several months ago to try to come up with some sort of progress on one of the most terrible things that is a blight on America, the fentanyl crisis," Campbell told Fox News Digital. "So we've worked over the course of several months with Chinese interlocutors demanding progress on cutting off support from precursors that are produced by Chinese companies and then shipped largely to Latin America. And then they make their way up into the United States." "We're going to have to see how it's implemented," Campbell continued. "But so far, we believe the Chinese are going to take consequential steps that will essentially help us get a handle on really one of the most terrible drug epidemics the United States has ever faced. There's a back and forth on this. If they, in fact, make these arrests and shut down these companies, then we will be lifting a few sanctions." Another major concern to be addressed between Biden and Xi is the trend of increasingly common incidents between the Chinese and U.S. military. Government officials have reported that communications between China and U.S. military commands has become difficult, with Chinese military leaders refusing to meaningfully converse with their U.S. counterparts. "We seek to establish responsible mechanisms that can deal with communications in a crisis to prevent escalation and inadvertence. And I believe that the Chinese will come around to see that some of this is also in their best interest as well," Campbell added. https://dailycaller.com/2023/11/14/national-education-association-teachers-union-strike/ Teacher’s Union That Encouraged Teacher Strikes Now Faces Its Own Employee Rebellion The National Education Association (NEA) has a labor strike on its hands as its 48 employees protest low wages, Axios reports. The NEA, which represents 3 million educators, has encouraged several massive teacher strikes in past. Now, its own employees have voted unanimously to strike, claiming that wages have not risen to meet surging inflation in recent years. Thousands of NEA-affiliated Portland teachers went on strike in October over low pay and large class sizes, among other issues. The strike is ongoing. Teachers in Massachusetts and Columbus enjoyed NEA support while they went on strike last year. “The NEA is going to have step up and honor the values of the organization,” the bargaining chair for the union representing the NEA’s staff, LaToya Johnson, said. Johnson said she hoped that the organization would give their employees the same benefits they fought for the teachers they represent to have. “NEA has engaged in negotiations in good faith,” an NEA spokesperson told Axios. “[A]nd continues to apply a solutions-based approach to resolve the outstanding issues in a manner that addresses articulated priorities of AFSE while also balancing the strategic priorities of NEA and its members.” The NEA, along with the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), collaborated with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to decide on when and how in-person education would be allows after the COVID-19 pandemic, according to emails obtained by Americans for Public Trust. https://www.breitbart.com/entertainment/2023/11/13/as-the-marvels-bombs-disney-doubles-down-on-pushing-lgbtq-streaming-shows/ As ‘The Marvels’ Bombs, Disney Doubles Down on Pushing LGBTQ Streaming Shows The Walt Disney Company is rolling out more LGBTQ content as its latest superhero movie The Marvels crashed and burned at the box office on its opening weekend. The Disney+ drama series Culprits focuses on a gay domestic relationship between two men played by Nathan Stewart-Jarrett and Kevin Vidal. The show focuses on Joe (Stewart-Jarrett), whose past criminal life threatens to re-emerge and disrupt the quiet suburban existence he has built with his male fiancé Jules (Vidal) The series — which is streaming on Disney+ in the U.K. and Hulu in the U.S. — also stars drag queen comedian Eddie Izzard, who now apparently goes by the name “Suzy Eddie Izzard.” In December, Hulu is set to debut the new documentary We Live Here in the Midwest — a look at gay, transgender, and “non-binary” families that live in small towns and cities throughout America’s heartland. Among the families profiled in the documentary are those with transgender parents. “What my dad was feeling and why she felt like she did, was more than just her. There are more people out there who are like this,” said one child whose father transitioned to become a “woman.” In another scene, a “non-binary” student discussed how she is treated in class. “The students believe that ‘non-binary’ do not exist,” she said. “I’m here right now so we do exist.” We Live Here in the Midwest is set to debut on December 6. Disney has embraced LGBTQ messaging in its entertainment aimed at children and families. As Breitbart News reported, Disney along with Netflix put out more LGBTQ content than any other studio in Hollywood in 2022, according to a GLAAD report. GLAAD said Disney released 59 films in 2022, and 24 of them were so-called “LGBT inclusive films.” In the past two years, Disney has fought Florida over its anti-grooming Parental Rights in Education law, created multiple transgender characters for its children’s shows, put gay characters at the center of its big-budget movies, and even launched an LGBTQ-themed apparel line. This year, Disney eliminated 7,000 jobs worldwide as its profitability cratered. CEO Bob Iger is planning on slashing an additional $2 billion in spending in the months ahead.
Veterans often develop a unique slate of skills when serving in the armed forces, but private-sector employers sometimes fail to recognize those abilities. At a time when many companies are still struggling to hire up, how can we more successfully match veterans’ talents with civilian opportunities? Also: tackling discrimination in internet access and recapping the Biden-Xi talks.
Veterans often develop a unique slate of skills when serving in the armed forces, but private-sector employers sometimes fail to recognize those abilities. At a time when many companies are still struggling to hire up, how can we more successfully match veterans’ talents with civilian opportunities? Also: tackling discrimination in internet access and recapping the Biden-Xi talks.
President Biden and President Xi met on Wednesday in San Francisco during the APEC summit at a time of highly strained relations between China and the U.S. Patricia Kim discussed some of the outcomes of their meeting and stressed the ongoing need for Beijing and Washington "to depoliticize diplomacy and functional channels of communication and make them a regular feature of the U.S.-China relationship." Show notes and transcript: https://www.brookings.edu/articles/will-positive-momentum-from-the-biden-xi-meeting-last Follow The Current and all Brookings podcasts on Apple or Google podcasts, or on Spotify. Send feedback email to podcasts@brookings.edu.
Plus: U.S. Senate approves a short-term spending bill, averting a looming government shutdown. And, President Biden is expected to face harsh criticism from a probe looking into his handling of classified documents. Kate Bullivant hosts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
GOP infighting has turned the halls of Congress into a fight club, the U.S. and China set low expectations for the Biden-Xi meeting, and the new House Speaker took heat from his own party after passing a government spending bill with help from Democrats. Emmy and Golden Globe-winning actor Paul Giamatti sends a personalized plea to the one and only Cher. Stick around for more with Paul Giamatti and check out his film, “The Holdovers,” in theaters now. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Carl Quintanilla, Jim Cramer and David Faber led off the show with retail earnings and the consumer: Walmart shares fell after the company raised full-year guidance that ended up short of analyst consensus, overshadowing a Q3 beat. The anchors explored the similarities and differences between Walmart and Target – and what they mean for investors. Carl, Jim and David also reacted to Cisco shares tumbling after the Dow component cut its full-year revenue outlook. Also in focus: The summit meeting between Presidents Biden and Xi, the Chinese president's message to American CEOs, earnings winners and losers including Palo Alto Networks, Alibaba and Macy's, Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman on inflation. Squawk on the Street Disclaimer
President Biden aims to restore communications with China's Xi Jinping. Tensions reach a breaking point as the House seeks to avert a government shutdown. And some State Department employees raise objections over U.S. support for Israel. Up First is produced by Julie Depenbrock, Ana Perez, Shelby Hawkins and Ziad Buchh. Our editors are Roberta Rampton, Kelsey Snell, and Larry Kaplow. We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott and Arthur Laurent. And our technical director is Zac Coleman.
P.M. Edition for Nov. 15. President Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping are meeting for a high-stakes summit in California. Senior news editor Charles Hutzler reports. Plus, U.S. retail sales declined in October for the first time since March. Economics reporter Austen Hufford has more. And the Federal Communications Commission adopts a new rule that will hold internet service providers liable for “digital discrimination.” Tech policy reporter Ryan Tracy explains. Annmarie Fertoli hosts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A.M. Edition for Nov. 15. President Biden and China's Xi Jinping are set to meet today for the first time in over a year. WSJ chief China correspondent Lingling Wei explains what could be accomplished given the tense state of bilateral relations. Plus, global markets bask in the glow of easing U.S. inflation. And Israel launches a military operation inside Gaza's Al-Shifa hospital. Luke Vargas hosts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Israeli military says it has uncovered “military equipment used by Hamas” in its raid at Gaza's largest hospital. A high-stakes summit between President Joe Biden and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping has begun. The UK's Supreme Court blocked a plan to send asylum-seekers to Rwanda. Some tech giants may soon have to face lawsuits on social media's adverse effects on teen's mental health. And, we'll tell you what scientists discovered about how microplastics could impact weather. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
US President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping are meeting face-to-face today – we'll break down what both leaders want to get out of the meeting. Israeli forces are raiding one of Gaza's biggest hospitals. We have new data that signals the economy may be slowing down like the central bank wants it to. The WHO set up a new commission to tackle loneliness. Plus, a new report urges parents to look beyond their kids' grades when it comes to academic success. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
#PRC: Expectations of the Biden-Xi summit. Charles Burton, senior fellow at the Centre for Advancing Canada's Interests Abroad at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute,@GordonGChang, Gatestone, Newsweek, The Hill https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202311/1301631.shtml 1950
#PRC: The Biden-Xi summit and the Ayatollah. Bill Gertz, national security correspondent for The Washington Times and author of Deceiving the Sky: Inside Communist China's Drive for Global Supremacy, @GordonGChang, Gatestone, Newsweek, The Hill : https://www.politico.com/news/2023/11/10/biden-xi-china-iran-apec-00126544 1940 WUHAN
Show is Sponsored by The Ayn Rand Institute https://www.aynrand.org/starthereandExpress VPN https://www.expressvpn.com/yaronJoin this channel to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/@YaronBrook/joinLike what you hear? Like, share, and subscribe to stay updated on new videos and help promote the Yaron Brook Show: https://bit.ly/3ztPxTxSupport the Show and become a sponsor: https://www.patreon.com/YaronBrookShowOr make a one-time donation: https://bit.ly/2RZOyJJOnline War; Continue the discussion by following Yaron on Twitter (https://bit.ly/3iMGl6z) and Facebook (https://bit.ly/3vvWDDC )Want to learn more about Ayn Rand and Objectivism? Visit the Ayn Rand Institute: https://bit.ly/35qoEC3#inflation #china #governmentshutdown #hamaswar #gazaisrael #capitalism #Economy #Objectivism #AynRand #politics #individualismThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/3276901/advertisement
President Biden is slated to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Wednesday in San Francisco. It's their first face-to-face meeting in a year, and comes amid ever-escalating tensions over tech issues like AI and microchips. On POLITICO Tech, host Steven Overly asks Xiaomeng Lu of the Eurasia Group to outline expectations for the meeting -- and whether major resolutions are likely.
Israeli troops advance on Gaza City's Al-Shifa Hospital, where Hamas militants allegedly maintain a command center. President Joe Biden prepares to speak to his Chinese counterpart for the first time in more than a year. Short-term funding for the federal government faces opposition from Democrats and Republicans.
The Chinese government is desperately trying to stop a recession, or at least slow it down so it doesn't result in societal collapse, but it's going about it in very shortsighted ways. In this just us episode of China Unscripted we discuss the economy, China's panda diplomacy, and the Biden-Xi meeting at APEC.
Show is Sponsored by The Ayn Rand Institute https://www.aynrand.org/starthereandExpress VPN https://www.expressvpn.com/yaronJoin this channel to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/@YaronBrook/joinLike what you hear? Like, share, and subscribe to stay updated on new videos and help promote the Yaron Brook Show: https://bit.ly/3ztPxTxSupport the Show and become a sponsor: https://www.patreon.com/YaronBrookShowOr make a one-time donation: https://bit.ly/2RZOyJJOnline War; Continue the discussion by following Yaron on Twitter (https://bit.ly/3iMGl6z) and Facebook (https://bit.ly/3vvWDDC )Want to learn more about Ayn Rand and Objectivism? Visit the Ayn Rand Institute: https://bit.ly/35qoEC3#election2024 #hamaswar #unitedkingdom #trump #gazaisrael #capitalism #Economy #Objectivism #AynRand #politics #individualismThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/3276901/advertisement
On this episode, Dan Nathan and Liz Young discuss the recent rally (3:00), what's at stake in the Biden-Xi meeting this week (9:00), Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley Diverge on Fed Rate-Cut Forecasts (15:00), consumer sentiment (19:00), and sectors Liz would be focused on if the rally continues (25:00). Later, Ali Meli of Monachil Capital Partners joins to chat about his background (32:30), the structure at Monachil (37:00), lessons from the banking crisis (39:30), unrealized losses on bank balance sheets (47:00), the potential for a soft landing (49:00), how to get balance in the economy (53:30), opportunities in the market (59:30), and why the most unstable balance sheet is Federal Reserves (27:30). If you would like to donate to Team Rubicon, please follow this link. Every listener who donates a minimum of $25 will receive a free On The Tape hat, just screenshot your donation confirmation and send it to contact@riskreversal.com with your mailing address. — About the Show: On The Tape is a weekly podcast with CNBC Fast Money's Guy Adami, Dan Nathan and Danny Moses. They're offering takes on the biggest market-moving headlines of the week, trade ideas, in-depth analysis, tips and advice. Each episode, they are joined by prominent Wall Street participants to help viewers make smarter investment decisions. Bear market, bull market, recession, inflation or deflation… we're here to help guide your portfolio into the green. Risk Reversal brings you years of experience from former Wall Street insiders trading stocks to experts in the commodity market. — Check out our show notes here Learn more about Ro body: ro.co/tape See what adding futures can do for you at cmegroup.com/onthetape. — Shoot us an email at OnTheTape@riskreversal.com with any feedback, suggestions, or questions for us to answer on the pod and follow us @OnTheTapePod on Twitter or @riskreversalmedia on Threads — We're on social: Follow @GuyAdami on Twitter Follow Danny Moses @DMoses34 on Twitter Follow Liz Young @LizYoungStrat on Twitter Follow us on Instagram @RiskReversalMedia Subscribe to our YouTube page
Israel says it is "closing in" on Hamas militants it claims are using hospitals and other civilian infrastructure in Gaza as cover. The American and Chinese presidents are due to talk for the first time in more than a year. It will be difficult for automakers to pass the cost of recent union wins to consumers.
In our news wrap Friday, Biden and China's President Xi prepare to meet next week, Biden formally entered the first 2024 Democratic primary, the FBI seized devices from New York Mayor Adams amid a campaign finance investigation, France and North Africa struggled with severe floods, Las Vegas hotel workers reached a tentative contract deal, and the Toy Hall of Fame announced its 2023 inductees. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders