01.05.2022

Wednesday, January 5th, 2022 

Chris Evans will reportedly play Gene Kelly in a movie He can do this all day — and by this, we mean tap dance. Captain America star Chris Evans is reportedly in talks to play Gene Kelly in an upcoming film. The project is reportedly based on Evans’ original idea, following a 12-year-old boy who develops an imagined friendship with the classic film star while working on the MGM lot in the 1950s. Knives Out director Rian Johnson is reuniting with Evans to produce the film, while Skyfall co-writer John Logan will write it. Weirdly enough, this will make Evans the second Avenger to line up a movie in recent weeks about a famous actor and dancer, as Spider-Man star Tom Holland is set to play Fred Astaire in a separate movie at Sony. Could a Tap Dancing Avengers spin-off be far behind?  VARIETY

Nicolas Cage regretfully retired from karaoke Someone out there ruined Nicolas Cage performing karaoke for the rest of us. The National Treasure star said he used to love karaoke, but he gave it up after a video of him singing “Purple Rain” went viral a few years ago. “For me, karaoke was like therapy until someone videotaped my punk-rock version of Prince’s ‘Purple Rain’ and it went everywhere and I said, ‘I’m not going to karaoke anymore,’” Cage said.  The video can be seen on YouTube under the brutal title of “Nicolas Cage Ruins Prince’s ‘Purple Rain’ During Bizarre Karaoke Session,” and when it went viral in 2019, TMZ suggested “the performance was fueled by his desire to annul his recent marriage of four days.” Cage reflected that “singing is therapy,” adding, “Karaoke’s supposed to be private. It’s like a prayer.” But Andrew Garfield tried to convince Cage to come out of karaoke retirement, telling him, “Don’t steal the gift from the world. You need to keep giving.”  THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 

Jessica Chastain’s grandmother sat on Bradley Cooper’s lap Really, can you blame her? On The Ellen DeGeneres Show, Jessica Chastain described her efforts to set up her grandmother on dates, which include putting pictures of her up on Match.com. But it sounds like she might not need that much help, as Chastain recalled having a party at her house where her grandmother, who is “at the age where she just really doesn’t care,” just straight up walked over to Bradley Cooper and “sat on his lap.” They had never even met prior to this, and Cooper, who didn’t know who she was, was “horrified,” Chastain explained. “I saw it kind of happening in slow motion, where it was like, ‘No!‘” she said. “And I just started going, ‘It’s my grandma, it’s my grandma, it’s my grandma, it’s my grandma!’ And then he was like, ‘Okay, okay, hi grandma!’”  E! ONLINE 

David Arquette is in a ‘clown period’ of his life David Arquette is in his clown era. The Scream star told Live with Kelly and Ryan he’s currently studying to be a clown, noting, “I love clowns. I’ve sort of been in a clown period of my life.” Arquette explained he’s been working with an organization called Healthy Humor, which travels to hospitals to “bring some joy and love and laughter” to patients. Kelly Ripa praised Arquette for his efforts, suggesting that even though “a lot of people have very strong opinions about clowns,” it’s “one of those unsung art forms that’s a lot more work than people realize.” After the interview aired, though, Arquette took to Twitter to offer a correction, saying he accidentally plugged the wrong website for Healthy Humor. “Sorry,” he tweeted, “I’m a clown.” PEOPLE 

A nationwide state of emergency is declared in Kazakhstan(Sky News) 

Eight police officers are killed and 317 others injured in clashes between protesters and security forces. No figures on civilian casualties have been released. (Reuters) 

The presidential residence and offices of Äkim of Almaty Bakhytzhan Sagintayev are set on fire by protesters. (AP) 

The government of Kazakhstan resigns following the protests, with Alihan Smaiylov becoming acting Prime MinisterPresident Kassym-Jomart Tokayev also announces the reintroduction of the price cap on liquefied petroleum gas(Deutsche Welle) 

A nationwide state of emergency is declared in Kazakhstan(Sky News) 

President Tokayev dismisses former president and Security Council of Kazakhstan Chairman Nursultan Nazarbayev. Protesters also seize control of Almaty International Airport with all flights to and from the airport being cancelled. (Reuters) 

President Tokayev requests military assistance from the Collective Security Treaty Organization, saying that “terrorist gangs are overrunning strategic facilities across the country.” (Trend) 

It is announced that the upcoming Golden Globe Awards will be held without a live audience or celebrities due to COVID-19 concerns. (Vanity Fair) 

The Grammy Awards is postponed amidst concerns of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant(CNBC) 

Twelve people are killed and two others are injured in a fire at a row house converted into apartments in the Fairmount neighborhood of PhiladelphiaPennsylvaniaUnited States(ABC News) 

Fourteen people are killed and three others are injured by a landslide at a construction site in BijieGuizhouChina(Al Jazeera) 

Israeli President Isaac Herzog and his First Lady Michal Herzog receive their fourth dose of the COVID-19 vaccine as Israel launched the second booster dose vaccination campaign. (I24 News) 

Israel reports a record 11,978 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 1,423,289. (Al-Arabiya English) 

South Korea signs an agreement to buy an additional 400,000 doses of Pfizer‘s Paxlovid COVID-19 drug. (CNA) 

Italy reports a record for the second consecutive day of 189,109 new cases of COVID-19, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 6,566,947. (ANSA) 

The Draghi Cabinet signs a decree that makes COVID-19 vaccination mandatory for people over the age of 50 years and also mandates that public and private sector workers of this age group need to show proof of vaccination or recovery or face fines of between €600 and €1,500 beginning on February 15. (The Guardian) 

Argentina confirms their first locally transmitted cases of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. In response, the government implements self-testing in order to avoid queues at testing centers. (Página/12) 

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) endorses the use of booster shots of the Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for children as young as 12. (CNN) 

Chicago Public Schools announces that public schools in ChicagoIllinois, will cancel in-person classes amidst a rise in cases of COVID-19(ABC News) 

The Lithuanian government announces that it will not extend the state of emergency at the border with Belarus(Reuters) 

The End Saturday 

President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev fires former president and Security Council of Kazakhstan Chairman Nursultan Nazarbayev as the worst civil disorder in decades continues to hit the country. Protesters seize control of Almaty International Airport with all flights to and from the airport being cancelled. (Reuters) 

Fourteen people are killed and three more injured by a landslide at a construction site in GuizhouChina(Al Jazeera) 

Thirteen people are killed and several others injured in a fire in a row house converted into apartments in FairmountPennsylvania, United States. (ABC News) 

Israel reports a records 11,978 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, surpassing the previous record of 11,344 cases in September last year. It brings the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 1,423,289. (Al-Arabiya English) 

South Korea signs an agreement to buy additional COVID-19 pill Paxlovid made by Pfizer to cover 400,000 people. (CNA) 

The Netherlands reports a record 24,590 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, surpassing the previous record set on November 24. (NL Times) 

The Lithuania government announces that it will not extend the state of emergency at the border with Belarus(Reuters) 

Toyota surpasses GM as top-selling automaker in U.S. Toyota said Tuesday it sold 2.3 million vehicles in the United States in 2021, surpassing General Motors by about 114,000 and becoming the top-selling automaker in the U.S. for the first time, measured by annual sales. Toyota’s total for the year marked a 10 percent increase over 2020, despite a computer-chip shortage that has disrupted production for car makers around the world. The Japanese company benefited from a decision to stockpile chips needed to power its vehicle electronics. GM’s total for the year fell by nearly 13 percent to 2.2 million. GM had led U.S. auto sales since 1931. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Record 4.5 million workers quit jobs in November A record number of U.S. workers quit their jobs in November, according to federal data released Tuesday. More than 4.5 million people voluntarily walked away from their positions in the month, up from 4.2 million in October, the Labor Department said. November’s figure was the highest since the government started tracking the figure two decades ago. Hiring edged down in December, according to data tracked by business payroll managers Homebase and UKG, suggesting that the COVID-19 surge driven by the fast spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant was squeezing the labor supply. Both firms recorded larger seasonal dips than last year. Homebase found a 15 percent drop at small businesses in the last days of 2021, up from a 10 percent drop in 2020. REUTERS 

Cal Fire says PG&E power lines started huge Dixie Fire The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said Tuesday that last year’s Dixie Fire, the second-largest wildfire ever recorded in the state, started when PG&E power lines came into contact with a tree. Cal Fire has investigated the Dixie Fire, which started on July 13 in Butte County, for months. The fire burned 963,309 acres and destroyed 1,329 structures in Butte, Plumas, Lassen, Shasta, and Tehama counties. PG&E acknowledged last year that its equipment might have been involved in starting the Dixie Fire. On Tuesday, the power company noted that it had said in July that “a large tree struck one of our normally operating lines.” PG&E plans to bury 10,000 miles of power lines over 10 years in areas at high risk for wildfires. SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE 

Walmart expands InHome delivery service in bet on convenience Walmart announced Wednesday that it was expanding availability of its InHome delivery service from six million to 30 million households. The service involves Walmart employees wearing cameras who enter customers’ homes using a smart lock, then drop off groceries or other purchases, and pick up returns. Delivery workers put items into the refrigerator or onto a counter, according to customer requests. If the customers are not home, they can view the delivery live or recorded through the Walmart App. The expansion of the $19.95-a-month service in cities such as Los Angeles and Chicago marks the latest corporate bet on consumers’ desire for convenience as the coronavirus pandemic continues. CNBC 

Biden repeats plea for vaccinations, boosters as COVID cases soar President Biden on Tuesday repeated his call for more Americans to get vaccinated and boosted, and to wear masks to increase protection against COVID-19, as the fast-spreading Omicron variant drives soaring coronavirus infections. “We have the tools to protect people from severe illness due to Omicron — if people choose to use the tools,” Biden said before meeting with the White House COVID-19 response team. “There’s a lot of reason to be hopeful in [2022], but for God’s sake, please take advantage of what’s available.” The comments came after the U.S. reported a million new cases in a single day, a figure probably inflated by holiday backlogs but still far beyond the previous record of 591,000 set on Thursday. The surge is overwhelming many hospitals. USA TODAY 

Chicago schools close after teachers force return to remote instruction Chicago Public Schools canceled Wednesday classes after the Chicago Teachers Union voted late Tuesday not to show up for in-person work out of concerns that COVID-19 protections against the fast-spreading Omicron coronavirus variant were insufficient. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot (D), CPS CEO Pedro Martinez, and public health commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady said at a news conference that children need to be back in the classroom, and they insisted that schools were safe with proper mitigation. Seventy-three percent of the teachers union’s members supported the proposal to force instruction online just two days after the return from holiday break. The union set a Jan. 18 target date for reopening schools. CHICAGO TRIBUNE 

Trump cancels Jan. 6 press conference Former President Donald Trump announced Tuesday that he was canceling a press conference he had scheduled for Thursday, the anniversary of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by a mob of his supporters aiming to prevent lawmakers from certifying President Biden’s election victory. Trump had planned to deliver a speech about the election and his false claims of voter fraud, allegations that fueled the Capitol attack. Trump said in a statement he will instead talk about the matter during a Jan. 15 rally in Arizona. Four rioters died during the assault on the Capitol, and the next day, a police officer who was at the scene also died. Four other law enforcement officers who responded to the Capitol riot later died by suicide. REUTERS 

Poll: Majority in U.S. believe democracy in peril Most Americans believe U.S. democracy is in danger ahead of the one-year anniversary of the deadly attack on the Capitol by a mob of former President Donald Trump’s supporters, according to a USA Today/Suffolk University poll released Tuesday. More than 80 percent of Republicans, Democrats, and independents said they feared for the future of America’s democracy. Eighty-five percent of Democrats said the rioters were “criminals”; two-thirds of Republicans said the mob “went too far, but they had a point.” Fifty-eight percent of Republicans said President Biden wasn’t legitimately elected, despite numerous investigations disproving Trump’s allegations of voter fraud. Only about 4 in 10 Republicans remember the attack as very or extremely violent, according to a new Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll. USA TODAY 

D.A. says Cuomo won’t be prosecuted over groping allegation The Albany County, New York, District Attorney’s Office announced Tuesday that former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo won’t be prosecuted on criminal charges over allegations that he groped former aide Brittany Commisso in the Executive Mansion two years ago. David Soares, the Albany County district attorney, said that despite the decision, he was “deeply troubled by allegations” like those in this case. “While we found the complainant in this case cooperative and credible,” Soares said, “after review of all the available evidence we have concluded that we cannot meet our burden at trial.” Prosecutors in Westchester and Nassau counties also recently said they wouldn’t pursue charges over separate sexual misconduct allegations against Cuomo, who resigned in August. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

I-95 reopens after snowstorm leaves motorists stranded for 24 hours Interstate 95 reopened in Northern Virginia late Tuesday after hundreds of motorists were stranded south of Washington, D.C. — many of them for more than 24 hours — after heavy snow, ice, and accidents, including jackknifed tractor-trailers, paralyzed traffic on the highway. Motorists stayed in their cars overnight Monday and much of Tuesday in sub-freezing temperatures, many without food or water. Some posted messages on social media describing their plight as they ran low on fuel to run their heaters. Many lashed out at state officials for what they saw as a weak effort to help stranded motorists. “Not one police [officer] came in the 16 hours we were stuck,” said Meera Rao, who got stuck with her husband, Raghavendra, returning from visiting their daughter in North Carolina. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Prince Andrew’s attorney calls for dropping lawsuit against him by Epstein accuser Prince Andrew’s lawyer on Tuesday asked a court to dismiss a lawsuit filed against him by Virginia Roberts Giuffre because of her newly unsealed 2009 deal with the late sex offender and financier Jeffrey Epstein. Andrew’s attorney, Andrew Brettler, argued that Giuffre’s settlement with Epstein shielded the prince from lawsuits over any sexual abuse connected to Epstein. Giuffre has said Epstein forced her to have sex with Prince Andrew when she was underaged. The Duke of York was not mentioned in the settlement, but Brettler said the prince was protected as an “Other Potential Defendant.” Prince Andrew has repeatedly denied molesting Giuffre. CNN 

Toyota surpasses GM as top-selling automaker in U.S. Toyota said Tuesday it sold 2.3 million vehicles in the United States in 2021, surpassing General Motors by about 114,000 and becoming the top-selling automaker in the U.S. for the first time, measured by annual sales. Toyota’s total for the year marked a 10 percent increase over 2020, despite a computer-chip shortage that has disrupted production for car makers around the world. The Japanese company benefited from a decision to stockpile chips needed to power its vehicle electronics. GM’s total for the year fell by nearly 13 percent to 2.2 million. GM had led U.S. auto sales since 1931. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Record 4.5 million workers quit jobs in November A record number of U.S. workers quit their jobs in November, according to federal data released Tuesday. More than 4.5 million people voluntarily walked away from their positions in the month, up from 4.2 million in October, the Labor Department said. November’s figure was the highest since the government started tracking the figure two decades ago. Hiring edged down in December, according to data tracked by business payroll managers Homebase and UKG, suggesting that the COVID-19 surge driven by the fast spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant was squeezing the labor supply. Both firms recorded larger seasonal dips than last year. Homebase found a 15 percent drop at small businesses in the last days of 2021, up from a 10 percent drop in 2020. REUTERS 

Tristan Thompson apologizes to Khloé Kardashian after having a baby with another woman Yep, Tristan, you are the father. NBA star Tristan Thompson has apologized to Khloé Kardashian after he said a paternity test confirmed he fathered a baby with another woman, Maralee Nichols. “I take full responsibility for my actions,” Thompson wrote on Instagram. Thompson and Kardashian have a 3-year-old daughter together, and they broke up again in June after allegations he cheated on her with model Sydney Chase. Nichols alleged she and Thompson had an affair over five months but that she didn’t realize he was in a relationship with Kardashian at the time, and she filed a lawsuit against him seeking child support. Thompson, who previously denied he was the father, apologized “to everyone I’ve hurt or disappointed throughout this ordeal.” He also told Kardashian, whom he previously cheated on while she was pregnant, “You don’t deserve the heartache and humiliation I have caused you.”  

PAGE SIX 

Gal Gadot admits her star-studded ‘Imagine’ video ‘was in poor taste’ Imagine thinking a bunch of celebrities singing John Lennon is what the world wanted to see as the COVID-19 pandemic began. Yet Gal Gadot released such a video in March 2020 to widespread mockery, and she reflected on the backlash in a new conversation with InStyle. “[The video] was premature,” Gadot said. “It wasn’t the right timing, and it wasn’t the right thing. It was in poor taste.” The Wonder Woman star began her infamous Instagram video by saying “we’re all in this together” amid the pandemic before a cavalcade of celebrities sang “Imagine,” though it was almost universally panned as being completely out of touch and cringe-worthy. “All pure intentions,” Gadot told InStyle, “but sometimes you don’t hit the bull’s-eye, right?” Well yeah, anyone who watched Wonder Woman 1984 could tell you that.  PEOPLE 

‘Morbius’ has been delayed for the umpteenth time Does Morbius actually exist? We’ll have to wait even longer to find out now, as Sony has delayed the film yet again, this time from the end of January until April 1. Starring Jared Leto as the titular vampire from the Marvel comics, Morbius is the latest in Sony’s series of Spider-Man films without Spider-Man, and it has faced repeated delays from its original summer 2020 release date. The trailer for Morbius came out in January 2020 — and to put that in perspective, ComicBook.com‘s Adam Barnhardt pointed out Spider-Man: No Way Home was filmed and released in the time since that footage came out. This latest delay was seemingly related to surging Omicron cases, though that hasn’t stopped No Way Home from becoming one of the biggest movies of all time. Don’t be surprised if Tom Holland squeezes in one or two more Spider-Man movies before Morbius actually comes out.  VARIETY 

CNN isn’t booting Andy Cohen for his drunk New Year’s Eve slams Who among us hasn’t gotten wasted on New Year’s Eve and ranted about Bill de Blasio and Ryan Seacrest? While hosting CNN’s New Year’s Eve broadcast, Watch What Happens Live‘s Andy Cohen ranted against outgoing New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio (D), calling him a “horrible mayor.” He also disparaged the competing ABC broadcast by mocking Ryan Seacrest’s “group of losers that are performing behind us.” This led Radar Online to claim Cohen wouldn’t be invited back next year, but CNN is now denying that. Cohen “said something he shouldn’t have on live TV,” CNN said, but “we’ve addressed it with him and look forward to having him back again next year.” Cohen expressed regret for the Seacrest comment, saying he “felt bad about” it and was just being “stupid and drunk,” though he didn’t take back his de Blasio slams. How long before Cohen’s New Year’s Eve show just evolves into a Ricky Gervais-style roast?  LOS ANGELES TIMES 

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Tuesday,  January 4th, 2022 

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A blast hit a vehicle for the Sodicars Racing team as it left a hotel in JeddahSaudi Arabia, two days prior to the Dakar Rally, critically wounding French driver Philippe Boutron, who is in a medically-induced coma(BBC News) 

Rio de Janeiro cancels the 2022 edition of its world-famous carnival street parade, which was scheduled to be held from February 25 to March 1, amid the surging COVID-19 cases and the emergence of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant(Radio France Internationale) 

The Cyberspace Administration of China announces that, beginning on February 15, all companies with at least one million users will be required to undergo cybersecurity reviews before they can be listed on foreign stock exchanges. Companies that are deemed to have an impact on national security will be barred from being listed. (Al Jazeera) 

China orders 1.1 million people in YuzhouHenan to stay at home after three asymptomatic COVID-19 cases were reported. (BBC News) 

Chief Executive Carrie Lam announces that the “vaccine bubble” will be expanded to restaurants, leisure venues and schools beginning on February 24, which will require people over the age of 12 years to show proof of COVID-19 vaccination of at least one dose in order to enter those venues. (Reuters) 

The South Korea Joint Chiefs of Staff says that North Korea has launched an unidentified projectile ballistic missile. No confirmation has been given. (BBC News) 

Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev imposes a two-week state of emergency in Almaty, the country’s largest city, and in Mangystau District due to violent protests that have been occurring in the region over an increase in the price of gasoline. (The Guardian) 

The End Wednesday 

Australia reports a record for the second consecutive day of 47,738 new cases of COVID-19 surpassing 500,000 cases. (9 News) (SBS News) 

Greece reports a record 50,126 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 1,344,923. (Ekathimerini) 

Sweden reports a record 11,507 new cases of COVID-19 on December 30 due to delayed records of additional cases in the previous days, surpassing the previous of 11,376 new cases set in December 2020. (The Local Sweden) 

The United Kingdom reports a record 218,724 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, which including backlog data from Northern Ireland for four days and Wales for two days. (The Independent) 

A series of small roadblocks and fires are set up by protesters in the municipality of Sainte-Rose, Guadeloupe(France info) 

Elizabeth Holmes convicted on 4 fraud chargesA California jury on Monday found Elizabeth Holmes, the founder of the failed blood-testing start-up Theranos, guilty of defrauding investors by lying about the success of the company’s devices. The jury found Holmes guilty of three counts of wire fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, with each count punishable by up to 20 years in prison. Jurors found Holmes not guilty on four other counts related to duping patients who received inaccurate results. The jurors couldn’t reach a verdict on three other investor fraud counts. Holmes, once a rising Silicon Valley superstar, had testified that Theranos experts had assured her the tests worked, and she accused her ex-boyfriend and former deputy at Theranos, Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani, of sexually abusing and manipulating her. NPRTHE NEW YORK TIMES 

Apple becomes 1st company worth $3 trillion  Apple shares edged up on Monday, lifting the iPhone maker’s value to briefly reach $3 trillion, making it the first publicly traded company in history to reach the milestone. Apple is now worth more than Walmart, Disney, Netflix, Nike, Exxon Mobil, Coca-Cola, Comcast, Morgan Stanley, McDonald’s, AT&T, Goldman Sachs, Boeing, IBM, and Ford, combined. Apple was launched out of a California garage in 1976. The computer and electronic gadget maker became the first U.S. company ever to be worth $1 trillion in August 2018. It hit the $2 trillion mark two years later. “When we started, we thought it would be a successful company that would go forever. But you don’t really envision this,” said engineer Steve Wozniak, who founded Apple with Steve Jobs in 1976. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

White House pledges $1 billion boost for independent meat producers The White House announced Monday that it plans to devote $1 billion to help small, independent meat producers compete with the four dominant meat suppliers the Biden administration has accused of driving up prices. The White House has noted that an analysis found that large meatpackers’ profits have increased by 300 percent during the pandemic, while meat prices have spiked. Beef was up by 21 percent in November over a year earlier. The moves announced Monday include $375 million in grants to help independent meat producers, along with $275 million in capital and $100 million for the training of meat and poultry workers. “Capitalism without competition isn’t capitalism. It’s exploitation,” President Biden said at a White House event to discuss meat and poultry supply chain problems. CNNTHE WASHINGTON POST 

AT&T, Verizon agree to 2-week 5G rollout delay AT&T and Verizon on Monday said they would delay rolling out new 5G wireless service for two weeks after Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg asked them to slow down because the new technology could interfere with cockpit safety systems on planes. Both wireless carriers had said a day earlier they would not postpone the new 5G service. AT&T on Monday night repeated a promise to lower its networks’ power around airports, saying, “We know aviation safety and 5G can co-exist.” Airlines last week filed an emergency petition with the Federal Communications Commission to stop 5G deployment near 135 airports, warning the technology could cause widespread disruption of passenger and cargo flights, including delays and cancellations. NBC NEWSTHE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

U.S. new COVID cases hit single-day record of over 1 million New coronavirus infections jumped to a record of 1,082,549 on Monday, according to Johns Hopkins University data. The surge has come as the highly infectious Omicron coronavirus variant continues to tear across the country. More than 103,000 people were hospitalized with COVID-19 on Monday, the most since the late summer surge, according to The Washington Post. Hospitalizations for COVID-19 have risen by 27 percent in the past week as the daily average of new cases more than doubled, but deaths declined by 8 percent. The total number of coronavirus cases in the U.S. has now reached 56,189,547, with 827,748 U.S. deaths. President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris are scheduled to meet with the White House coronavirus response team on Tuesday to discuss steps to counter the Omicron spike. USA TODAYTHE WASHINGTON POST 

N.Y. attorney general subpoenas Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump New York State Attorney General Letitia James’ office has subpoenaed Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump under an investigation into the business practices of their father, former President Donald Trump, according to a court document filed Monday. The inquiry focuses on whether Trump inflated the value of his properties to get better loans, and underestimated them to lower tax bills. Lawyers for the Trump Organization and Trump’s children are trying to block lawyers in James’ office from questioning Trump or his children. The subpoenas for Trump, Trump Jr., and Ivanka Trump were issued on Dec. 1. James’ office questioned Eric Trump, another son of the former president, in October 2020. Donald Jr., Ivanka, and Eric Trump became involved in the family business shortly after college. ABC NEWS 

Schumer: Senate will vote on filibuster change if GOP blocks voting rights bill Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said Monday that the Senate would vote by Jan. 17 on changing the chamber’s filibuster rule if Republicans continue to use it to block voting rights legislation. Democrats have been pushing federal legislation to protect voting rights as Republicans in GOP-led state legislatures enact new voting restrictions. Republicans say the laws are necessary to prevent vote fraud, and they accuse Democrats in Washington of trying to overstep their authority. But Schumer said passing federal measures to protect voting rights is necessary to “protect the foundation of our democracy: free and fair elections.” THE HILL 

FDA authorizes Pfizer booster for children ages 12 to 15 The Food and Drug Administration on Monday signed off on giving Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 booster shots to children ages 12 to 15. The agency also said people would be eligible for the third Pfizer dose five months after getting the second shot, shortening the minimum wait time for a booster by one month. The moves came as part of an accelerating effort to increase protection for Americans as the new Omicron coronavirus variant spreads fast and pushes daily infections to the highest levels since the pandemic began just as students return to schools after the holiday break. Making more people eligible for boosters “is critical to help us ultimately defeat this pandemic,” said Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla in a statement. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will consider approving the change this week. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Schools face ‘chaos’ as classes resume during Omicron surge Many school systems around the country reopened on schedule Monday after the holiday break despite the COVID-19 surge driven by the quick spread of the new Omicron coronavirus variant. Leaders in many of those districts stressed the importance of in-person classes and the need to avoid the learning deficits and emotional problems students experienced last year during remote learning. Some districts — including Newark, Atlanta, Milwaukee, and Cleveland — temporarily shifted to remote learning despite those concerns, affecting more than 450,000 students. Many schools also struggled with staff shortages made worse by a record spike in COVID-19 cases nationwide. Some districts delayed reopening to allow for students and staff to get coronavirus tests. “It’s chaos,” said Keri Rodrigues, president of the National Parents Union. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Epstein settlement unsealed in lawsuit against Prince Andrew  The 2009 settlement between Jeffrey Epstein and Virginia Roberts Giuffre was unsealed Monday as part of Giuffre’s lawsuit against Prince Andrew. The settlement stipulated that Giuffre, who accused Epstein of trafficking her and forcing her to have sex with Prince Andrew and others while she was still a minor, agreed to drop her case against Epstein and any other “potential defendant[s]” in exchange for $500,000. A Florida court convicted Epstein of sex crimes in 2008, and he died in prison in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges. On Dec. 29, Epstein’s longtime associate Ghislaine Maxwell was found guilty of procuring underage girls for Epstein to sexually abuse. The document was unsealed as part of Giuffre’s lawsuit against the U.K.’s Prince Andrew, who was not mentioned in the settlement deal. CNN 

Flight cancellations continue due to snowstorms and staff crunch Airlines canceled another 3,000-plus flights within, to, and from the United States on Monday, as snowstorms and staff shortages blamed on the Omicron coronavirus variant surge continued to disrupt travel. More than 15,000 flights were canceled between Christmas Eve and the start of the first work week of 2022. Washington, D.C., was hit by a severe snowstorm that started early Monday, and forced the Federal Aviation Administration to order a ground stop for Reagan National and Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall airports. More than half of the flights that had been scheduled to leave National were canceled by mid-day. Nearly a third of BWI’s flights were scrapped, as were about 19 percent of those that had been scheduled to depart Dulles International Airport. LOS ANGELES TIMES 

Apple becomes 1st company worth $3 trillion  Apple shares edged up on Monday, lifting the iPhone maker’s value to touch $3 trillion, making it the first publicly traded company in history to reach the milestone. Apple is now worth more than Walmart, Disney, Netflix, Nike, Exxon Mobil, Coca-Cola, Comcast, Morgan Stanley, McDonald’s, AT&T, Goldman Sachs, Boeing, IBM, and Ford, combined. Apple was launched out of a California garage in 1976. The computer and electronic gadget maker became the first U.S. company ever to be worth $1 trillion in August 2018. It hit the $2 trillion mark two years later. “When we started, we thought it would be a successful company that would go forever. But you don’t really envision this,” said engineer Steve Wozniak, who founded Apple with Steve Jobs in 1976. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Elizabeth Holmes convicted on 4 fraud charges A California jury on Monday found Elizabeth Holmes, the founder of the failed blood-testing start-up Theranos, guilty of defrauding investors by lying about the success of the company’s devices. The jury found Holmes guilty of three counts of wire fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, with each count punishable by up to 20 years in prison. Jurors found Holmes not guilty on four other counts related to duping patients who received inaccurate results. The jurors couldn’t reach a verdict on three other investor fraud counts. Holmes, once a rising Silicon Valley superstar, had testified that Theranos experts had assured her the tests worked, and she accused her ex-boyfriend and former deputy at Theranos, Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani, of sexually abusing and manipulating her. NPR 

Judge blocks Navy from punishing SEALS for declining vaccine A federal judge in Texas on Monday ruled that the Defense Department can’t punish Navy SEALs who refuse to get vaccinated against the coronavirus. U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor issued a preliminary order blocking the Navy from taking any action against 35 members of the Navy special forces teams over their attempts to get a religious exemption from the vaccine requirement. Under the Navy’s vaccine policy, religious objectors can be considered non-deployable or disqualified from Special Operations. “The Navy servicemembers in this case seek to vindicate the very freedoms they have sacrificed so much to protect,” O’Connor wrote in his order. “The COVID-19 pandemic provides the government no license to abrogate those freedoms. There is no COVID-19 exception to the First Amendment.” CNN 

Monday,  January 3rd, 2022 

Clashes between the revolutionary far-left armed groups ELN and FARC dissidents in Arauca Department leave 23 people dead near Colombia’s border with Venezuela(Al Jazeera) 

Five soldiers are killed and 20 more are injured during an Islamic State rocket attack on a military transport bus in the Syrian Desert(Al Jazeera) 

Houthi forces capture a United Arab Emirates-flagged cargo ship, the Rwabee, off Al HudaydahYemen. The UAE government says that the vessel was carrying equipment from a closed coalition field hospital on Socotra while the Houthis say that the vessel was carrying military equipment(MSN) 

Chinese property developer Evergrande Group suspends trading of its shares on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange ahead of a planned restructuring of the firm. (BBC News) 

South Korea reports its first confirmed deaths related to the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in two people in their 90s who died last week at a senior care hospital in Gwangju(Yonhap News Agency) 

The Belgian government finalizes an agreement to buy 20,000 courses of Pfizer‘s Paxlovid COVID-19 drug and Merck & Co.‘s Molnupiravir COVID-19 drug. (The Brussels Times) 

France begins to require children over the age of 6 years to wear masks while indoors and also reduces the self-isolation period for fully vaccinated people to seven days and five days if a person has received a negative PCR or antigen test due to a record number of COVID-19 cases driven by the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant(The Hill) (Politico.eu) 

The Food and Drug Administration authorizes the use of the Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine as a booster dose for children between the ages of 12 and 15 years, becoming the world’s first vaccine to be authorized as a booster shot for this age group. (ABC News) 

The website of Israel‘s Jerusalem Post newspaper is hacked by suspected Iranian hackers. The website’s content was replaced with a threat targeting the Shimon Peres Negev Nuclear Research Center and an apparent reference to Qasem Soleimani, who was assassinated exactly two years earlier in BaghdadIraq(Reuters) 

Twitter permanently suspends Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s account Twitter said Sunday it had permanently suspended Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s personal account for violations of its policies against spreading misinformation about COVID-19. The ban came after Greene made her latest false tweet about the pandemic on Saturday, saying there had been “extremely high amounts of COVID vaccine deaths.” Twitter called the post Greene’s fifth “strike,” meaning that under its rules her account now can’t be restored. She got her fourth strike in August for falsely claiming on the site that vaccines were “failing.” Less than a month earlier, she received her third strike for tweeting that COVID-19 was not dangerous. Greene posted on the conservative social media platform Telegram that Twitter “is an enemy of America and can’t handle the truth.” THE NEW YORK TIMESREUTERS 

Tesla says deliveries rose by 87 percent in 2021 Tesla delivered 87 percent more cars in 2021 than it did the year before, reaching a total of 936,000 cars with a boost from a single-quarter record of 308,600 electric vehicles in the fourth quarter. Industry analysts had expected the company to ship out just 855,000 vehicles for the year. Most of the deliveries were Tesla Model 3 sedans and Model Y hatchbacks. Tesla CEO Elon Musk said in July that the electric-car maker was working to get around a global computer-chip shortage that was hampering production for other auto manufacturers by switching to more readily available types of chips. “The numbers are hard to poke holes in,” Daniel Ives, an analyst at Wedbush Securities, wrote in a note to investors. “Tesla continues to dominate market share.” CNBCTHE NEW YORK TIMES 

Airlines have canceled more than 15,000 flights since Christmas Eve Airlines canceled more than 2,100 flights into, out of, or within the United States on Sunday, bringing the total number of canceled U.S. flights since Christmas Eve to more than 15,000USA Today reported Sunday. Staffing shortages have plagued airlines as the Omicron coronavirus strain infects some employees and leaves others afraid to go to work. According to BBC, even the offer of increased pay has been ineffective at luring flight crews back. On New Year’s Day, almost 4,400 flights were canceled worldwide, The Washington Post reports. More than 2,600 of those were flights for which the U.S. was either the origin, the destination, or both. USA TODAY 

 
Jan. 6 panel members say they know what Trump was doing during riot Members of the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol attack said Sunday that they had received testimony and documents providing an increasingly clear picture of what then-President Donald Trump said and did in the White House during the insurrection by a mob of his supporters. Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), the panel’s Republican vice chair, told ABC News that according to “firsthand testimony,” Trump’s daughter and then-senior adviser Ivanka Trump went to see her father as he watched television coverage of the riot in the dining room next to the Oval Office “at least twice to ask him to ‘please stop this violence.’” Committee Chair Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) told CNN that “it’s highly unusual for anyone in charge of anything to watch what’s going on and do nothing.” CNN 

Twitter permanently suspends Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s account Twitter said Sunday it had permanently suspended Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s personal account for violations of its policies against spreading misinformation on COVID-19. The ban came after Greene made her latest false tweet about the pandemic on Saturday, saying there had been “extremely high amounts of COVID vaccine deaths.” Twitter called the post Greene’s fifth “strike,” meaning that under its rules her account now can’t be restored. She got her fourth strike in August for falsely claiming on the site that vaccines were “failing.” Less than a month earlier, she received her third strike for tweeting that COVID-19 was not dangerous. Greene posted on the social media platform Telegram that Twitter “is an enemy of America and can’t handle the truth.” THE NEW YORK TIMESREUTERS 

Schools return after holidays as Omicron fuels coronavirus surge U.S. K-12 schools begin reopening after the holiday break on Monday as COVID-19 cases soar, driven by the fast-spreading Omicron coronavirus variant. Many school districts are scrambling to acquire enough COVID-19 tests so they will be able to impose “test-to-stay” strategies that will allow them to keep open rather than returning to remote classes, which can result in learning deficits. “The science is clear. Schools need to be open,” then-New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said last week. Some school districts, including Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, are extending winter break by two days to allow time to test staff and students. Chicago is urging parents to give their children rapid tests before sending them back. Some universities are starting the year with remote classes. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

CDC considers testing after isolation for asymptomatic COVID cases  Biden administration health officials are considering adding a negative COVID-19 test to the recommended five-day isolation restrictions for asymptomatic people who test positive for the coronavirus, Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Biden’s top medical adviser, said Sunday. Fauci said the potential change came after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention got significant “pushback” for announcing last week that it was shortening its recommended isolation time from 10 days to five, provided the patient has no symptoms. The new recommendations include five subsequent days of mask-wearing after the isolation ends. Many health professionals objected to the change, saying that a negative antigen test should be a requirement for ending quarantine after an infection. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

South Africa police arrest suspect in Parliament fire Police in South Africa’s capital, Cape Town, said Sunday that they had arrested a suspect believed responsible for a fire that damaged the Houses of Parliament. The man is expected to appear in court Tuesday to face charges of arson, housebreaking, and theft, a police spokesperson said. Investigators believe the fire started in offices on the third floor of the complex, and spread quickly to the lower house, the National Assembly. The fire occurred a day after Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s state funeral at nearby St. George’s Cathedral. President Cyril Ramaphosa said the “terrible and devastating” blaze marked a “terrible setback to what we were basking in yesterday” when the nation focused on remembering and honoring Tutu. BBC NEWS 

Airlines have canceled more than 15,000 flights since Christmas Eve Airlines canceled more than 2,100 flights into, out of, or within the United States on Sunday, bringing the total number of canceled U.S. flights since Christmas Eve to more than 15,000USA Today reported Sunday. Staffing shortages have plagued airlines as the Omicron coronavirus strain infects some employees and leaves others afraid to go to work. According to BBC, even the offer of increased pay has been ineffective at luring flight crews back. On New Year’s Day, almost 4,400 flights were canceled worldwide, The Washington Post reports. More than 2,600 of those were flights for which the U.S. was either the origin, the destination, or both. USA TODAY 

Sudan prime minister resigns after power-sharing talks go nowhere Sudan’s Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who was deposed by the military in an October coup then reinstated in November under international pressure, resigned in a televised statement Sunday. The Oct. 25 coup derailed a tenuous power-sharing agreement between the military and pro-democracy civilian groups that helped unseat longtime ruler Omar al-Bashar in 2019. In his resignation announcement, Hamdok said he had been unable to bridge the divides between the ruling military council and the pro-democracy movement in weeks of negotiations on forming a new government. “I tried as much as I possibly could to prevent our country from sliding into a disaster,” he said. “Now, our nation is going through a dangerous turning point that could threaten its survival unless it is urgently rectified.” THE WASHINGTON POST 

Defense secretary tests positive for COVID-19 Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Sunday that he had tested positive for a breakthrough case of COVID-19. Austin said he was fully vaccinated and received a booster shot in October, which he said was probably why he was only experiencing mild symptoms. Austin said he would “retain all authorities,” but isolate himself by attending all necessary meetings virtually for at least five days under new guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Austin got tested after he began experiencing symptoms while at home on holiday leave. He said his last meeting with President Biden was on Dec. 21, more than a week before he started feeling sick, suggesting he would not have exposed Biden to possible infection. NBC NEWS 

Sunday, January 2nd, 2022 

The rebel-held city of Idlib loses its supply of water after Russian Air Force jets bombed a nearby water station. Airstrikes have increased in the past 24 hours with attacks also reported on farms near the Bab al-Hawa Border Crossing, and on IDP camps near Jisr al-Shughur which killed three people. (Reuters) 

Swiss newspaper Neue Zürcher Zeitung reports that the Mossad was responsible for three bombings of German and Swiss firms in 1981 in order to try to halt Iranian and Pakistani development of nuclear weapons(Jerusalem Post) 

A magnitude 5.4 earthquake strikes on the border between Yunnan and SichuanChina, injuring 22 people. (Al Jazeera) 

A fire breaks out in the South African parliament building in Cape Town, destroying its roof and the wing housing the National Council of Provinces. A man has been arrested in connection with the incident. (France 24) 

U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin announces that he has tested positive for COVID-19(Politico) 

South Korean citizen crosses the heavily fortified Korean Demilitarized Zone in a rare case of defection to North Korea from the South. (BBC News) 

An Azerbaijani State Border Service guard kills three fellow servicemen at his post and escapes. A manhunt is underway. (Trend) 

Interim Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok resigns in response to security forces killing three anti-coup protestors in Omdurman earlier that day. (CNN) 

Twitter announces that they have permanently suspended U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene for allegedly violating the company’s policies about COVID-19 misinformation. (The New York Times) 

End Saturday The 8th 

01.02.2022

Sunday, January 2nd, 2022 

Germany decommissions 3 of its 6 remaining nuke plants Germany powered down 3 of its 6 remaining nuclear power plants Saturday, making good on a government pledge to denuclearize after the 2011 meltdown of Japan’s Fukushima reactor. The other three plants will be deactivated by the end of 2022. Supporters of the shutdown see it is a necessary step in Germany’s planned transition to renewable energy. Critics argue that, without nuclear, the country will burn more fossil fuels, have a less reliable power grid, and become increasingly dependent on Russian natural gas. REUTERS 

Airlines cancel almost 4,400 flights on New Year’s Day Ongoing staffing shortages driven by the rapid spread of Omicron led to the cancellation of over 4,400 flights worldwide on New Year’s Day. More than 2,600 of those were flights into, out of, or within the United States. Thousands of travelers were stranded. Chicago, which saw over 1,000 flights into or out of its two major airports scrubbed, had to deal with winter storms in addition to the virus. Further disruptions were expected for Sunday. BBC 

‘Bioengineered’ replaces ‘GMO’ on food labels Starting Saturday, food with altered DNA sold in the U.S. that was previously labeled as “genetically engineered” (GE) or “genetically modified organisms” (GMO), will now be labeled as “bioengineered.” This new directive from the U.S. Department of Agriculture aims to provide uniform language to replace the variety of state labeling policies. Packaging will also include a phone number or QR code consumers can use to access more detailed information. According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, eating bioengineered foods poses no health risks. THE WASHINGTON POST 

A magnitude 5.4 earthquake strikes on the border between Yunnan and Sichuan, China, injuring 22 people. (Al Jazeera) 

A fire breaks out in the South African parliament building in Cape Town. The cause is unknown, though initial reports said it started in an office space. Public Works Minister Patricia De Lille says the fire has been contained to the National Assembly chamber. (France 24) 

Bulgaria reports its first 12 cases of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in five vaccinated people and seven unvaccinated people, of whom only one had travelled abroad.(BNR Radio Bulgaria) 

A South Korean citizen crosses the heavily fortified Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) in a rare case of defection to North Korea from the South. (Reuters) 

Kim Jong-un touts domestic agenda at party conference North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, marking his 10th year in power, delivered a speech at a Workers’ Party of Korea conference in which, according to state media summaries released Saturday, he avoided bellicose rhetoric and focused instead on domestic, pocketbook issues. Kim broke with precedent by making only vague allusions to ongoing tensions with South Korea and the United States. He did, however, pledge to make “progress in solving the food, clothing and housing problem.” North Korea, always insular, has suffered severe shortages after closing its borders entirely in January 2020 to prevent the spread of COVID-19. State media claims North Korea has had zero cases of the virus. Most external observes doubt this assertion. REUTERS 

At least 7 injured and 3 still missing after Colorado fire destroys almost 1,000 homes No deaths have been confirmed, but authorities announced Saturday that 3 people are still missing after a fire that broke out Thursday destroyed almost 1,000 homes in the Denver suburbs and damaged hundreds more. At least 7 people were injured. The blaze burned more than 9 square miles in the cities of Louisville and Superior, and many homes that escaped direct fire damage were left without power or heat. National Guard troops have arrived to aid in the recovery effort. The Red Cross and Salvation Army are on the ground distributing space heaters, bottled water, and blankets. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

U.K. announces mask mandate for English secondary school students Students at secondary schools in England will be required to wear face coverings when they return from Christmas holiday, United Kingdom Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi announced Sunday. Teachers will not be required to wear masks. England allowed students to go unmasked from the beginning of the school year in September. The other three U.K. nations — Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland — enforced mask mandates, which will continue to remain in effect. BBC 

Saturday, January 1st, 2022 

At least three people are confirmed missing, and at least 991 homes are confirmed destroyed, after an ongoing wildfire that struck Boulder County, Colorado, U.S, starting two days ago. (CNN) 

Finland rejects Russian demands that Finland never join NATO, with President Sauli Niinistö saying that it is his country’s right to join the military alliance if it wants to. (The Telegraph) 

The End Sunday

Twelve people are killed and 13 more injured during a stampede at the Vaishno Devi Hindu Temple in Indian-administered Kashmir, triggered by a heavy rush of people coming to celebrate the New Year. (Al Jazeera English) (The Times of India) 

Argentina imposes a mandatory COVID-19 vaccination certificate, effective immediately, nationwide and for all those 13 or older for all kind of activities, both indoors and outdoors. (Argentina.gob.ar) 

France begins to introduce free birth control to women aged 18 to 25 years old that seeks to prevent unwanted pregnancies, benefited up to 3 million women from enhanced access to the pill, IUDs, contraceptive patches and jabs. (Deutsche Welle) 

France officially bans the use of plastic packaging for large vegetables and fruits, such as cucumbers, carrots, and bananas. Chopped or processed fruits, and packages larger than 1.5 kilograms (3.31 lb) are exempt. Spain plans to introduce a similar law in 2023. (The Guardian) 

Finland rejects Russian demands that Finland never join NATO, with President Sauli Niinistö saying it was his country’s right to join the military alliance if it wants to. (The Telegraph) 

Assisted suicide for people aged over 18 who are terminally ill or suffer from a permanent, debilitating condition becomes legal in Austria. (BBC News) 

Protesters in Baghdad, Iraq hold a rally to mark the anniversary of the assassination of Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps general Qasem Soleimani. (AP) 

Friday,  December 31st, 2021 

South Africa ‘may have passed the peak’ of Omicron wave Authorities in South Africa say the peak of the country’s fourth wave of COVID-19 cases driven by the Omicron variant appears to have passed. “All indicators suggest the country may have passed the peak of the fourth wave at a national level,” a statement said following a cabinet meeting. “While the Omicron variant is highly transmissible, there has been lower rates of hospitalisation than in previous waves.” The cabinet said the “marginal increase” in fatalities was low compared to prior COVID-19 waves, and the country is now easing some COVID-19 restrictions. The news comes as the United States on Thursday again shattered its record for daily COVID-19 cases with more than 580,000, up from 488,000 the day prior.  THE GUARDIAN 

Four soldiers and two militants are killed during gunfights between the Pakistan Army and the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan in Mir Ali, North Waziristan. (Al Jazeera) 

Six soldiers from Niger and Nigeria are killed and 16 others are wounded during a fight with ISWAP militants in the Lake Chad region of Borno State, Nigeria. Twenty-two militants are also killed and 17 more are captured. (Reuters) 

Israel extends its fourth dose (second booster shot) of COVID-19 vaccine to elderly people in care facilities and begins administering those shot for most vulnerable people, citing the high-risk toward infections for those age groups. (Reuters) 

The Israeli Health ministry approves fourth doses of the COVID-19 vaccine for immunocompromised people, becoming the first country to do so. (AP) 

Hong Kong reports its first potential community cluster of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant, which is the first locally transmitted case reported by the city since June. (Bloomberg) 

France reports a record 232,200 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, which is also the highest daily total recorded in any European nation since the beginning of the pandemic. (Arab News) 

Paris begins to implement mandatory outdoor mask wearing for people aged above 11 years except those inside vehicles, cyclists, users of two-wheeled transport and those doing sport. It comes as France battles the surge of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant nationwide. (France 24) 

Greece reports a record for the fourth consecutive day of 40,560 new cases of COVID-19, bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 1,170,293. (Greek Reporter) 

The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency approves the use of Pfizer‘s anti-viral oral drug Paxlovid for high-risk patients. (The Independent) 

 

New Zealand moves COVID-19 traffic light settings for Auckland from red to orange, allowing bars, restaurants and cafes that enforce the vaccine pass requirement to remove crowd size limits and requirements to sit down, despite fears of community transmission of the Omicron variant. (The Guardian) 

The end saturday 

Tesla recalls nearly half a million vehicles due to safety issues Tesla is recalling nearly 500,000 cars due to safety issues involving the camera and trunk that could increase the risk of an accident. The company will recall over 350,000 Model 3 vehicles, as well as almost 120,000 Model S cars, in the United States. According to National Highway Traffic Safety Administration documents, in the Model 3 vehicles, wear to a coaxial cable could result in the rearview camera display becoming unavailable, while on the Model S vehicles, the hood could “open without warning and obstruct the driver’s visibility” due to a latch assembly issue. The recalls come as the NHTSA investigates a Tesla feature allowing video games to be played while a vehicle is moving.   THE VERGE 

A sharp rise in COVID-19 cases in India over the past week has sparked fears that a third wave, driven by Omicron, is around the corner. (BBC News) 

Thousands evacuate as Colorado wildfires burn hundreds of homes Tens of thousands of Colorado residents were told to evacuate on Thursday as two wildfires burned hundreds of homes. Evacuation orders were issued in Louisville and Superior, and the fires were fed by winds of between 80 and 100 miles per hour with gusts up to 115, according to CNN. At least six injuries have been reported, and officials said the fires burned at least 580 homes, as well as a shopping center and a hotel. “I’d like to emphasize that due to the magnitude of this fire, the intensity of this fire and its presence in such a heavily populated area, we would not be surprised if there are injuries or fatalities,” Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle said.  CNN 

Biden holds call with Putin amid Ukraine tensions President Biden held another call with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday, during which the White House said he “urged Russia to de-escalate tensions with Ukraine” and warned the U.S. and its allies “will respond decisively if Russia further invades Ukraine.” The second call between Biden and Putin this month came after Russia amassed troops on the Ukraine border, and it was held at Putin’s request. Putin during the 50-minute call warned Biden that any economic sanctions being placed on Russia in response to military action against Ukraine may result in a “complete rupture” of relations between the countries, according to The New York Times. Diplomats from the U.S. and Russia will meet in Geneva next month. CNN

New York City’s New Year’s Eve celebration in Times Square going forward New York City is moving forward with its famed Times Square New Year’s Eve celebration Friday as the state grapples with a record number of COVID-19 cases. The outdoor celebration will be scaled back, with crowds limited to 15,000 people, and proof of vaccination and masks will be required. Outgoing New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) told NBC’s Today he chose not to cancel the event because “I don’t believe in shutdowns” and “we have to fight our way through COVID.” Times Square was previously closed to the public for New Year’s Eve in 2020. Earlier this week, LL Cool J canceled his Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve Times Square performance after testing positive for COVID-19.  THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Prosecutors to dismiss charges against Jeffrey Epstein jail guardsFederal prosecutors are reportedly dropping charges against two prison guards who admitted they falsified records the night of disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein’s death by suicide. The Metropolitan Correctional Center guards, Tova Noel and Michael Thomas, previously entered into deferred prosecution agreements and were required to complete 100 hours of community service. They also agreed to provide “truthful information related to their employment by the Bureau of Prisons” and cooperate with an inspector general review, and prosecutors say they fulfilled the agreement. An indictment previously said the guards failed to complete their rounds as required on the night of Epstein’s suicide and instead slept and browsed the internet at their desks, and they allegedly then signed false certifications. CNN

CDC says avoid cruise travel ‘regardless of vaccination status’ The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is urging everyone to avoid cruise ships, including those who have been vaccinated against COVID-19. On Thursday, the CDC said that travelers should “avoid cruise travel, regardless of vaccination status.” The agency at the same time said it was upgrading its travel health notice to the highest level of level 4, citing “increases in cases onboard cruise ships since identification of the Omicron variant.” The move comes as the CDC is investigating or observing dozens of cruise ships with COVID-19 outbreaks. The agency warned that COVID-19 “spreads easily between people in close quarters on board ships” and that even for vaccinated people, “the chance of getting COVID-19 on cruise ships is very high.”   AXIOS

FDA to reportedly approve vaccine boosters for 12-to-15-year-olds The Food and Drug Administration is set to authorize COVID-19 booster doses for those between the ages of 12 and 15. The agency will expand Pfizer booster eligibility to this age group on Monday, The New York Times reported, citing sources familiar with the planning. This would be followed by a meeting of a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advisory committee in the middle of the week to decide whether to recommend the authorization. The FDA and CDC expanded Pfizer booster eligibility to 16-year-olds and 17-year-olds earlier in December. Additionally, the Times reports regulators will allow adolescents and adults to receive a third dose of the Pfizer vaccine five months after their second dose, up from six months.   THE NEW YORK TIMES

Unemployment claims fall below 200,000 The number of Americans filing unemployment claims declined to 198,000 last week, the Labor Department said. Additionally, the four-week moving average declined to 199,250, the lowest since October 1969. According to CNBC, the average was 225,000 in December 2019, prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, though the most recent number of weekly claims was higher than the pandemic-era low, CNN notes. The number of continuing claims for the week ending on Dec. 18 reached the lowest level since March 2020 with 1.7 million. As COVID-19 cases climb due to the spread of the Omicron variant, though, PNC chief economist Gus Faucher told CNN that “if consumers change their behavior … job growth could slow dramatically in early 2022.”  CNN 

BBC to ‘look into’ its Alan Dershowitz interview on Ghislaine Maxwell verdictThe BBC says an interview it conducted Wednesday with lawyer Alan Dershowitz about British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell’s conviction on sex-trafficking charges fell short of its editorial standardsThe BBC drew criticism for speaking with Dershowitz about the Jeffrey Epstein associate’s conviction without first mentioning that he has been accused of abuse by an Epstein accuser, Virginia Giuffre, and previously defended Epstein. Dershowitz has denied Giuffre’s allegations. “Mr. Dershowitz was not a suitable person to interview as an impartial analyst, and we did not make the relevant background clear to our audience,” the BBC said. “We will look into how this happened.” Dershowitz said it’s “entirely appropriate” to “interview victims of Guiffre’s false accusations as long as there is full disclosure.” MEDIAITE 

Thursday, December 30th, 2021 

CDC director addresses criticism over new COVID-19 recommendations  The director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Rochelle Walensky, appeared on several morning shows Wednesday to explain why the agency earlier this week reduced the recommended isolation time for people who test positive for COVID-19 from 10 days to five days if they’re asymptomatic. Critics have argued the CDC should recommend obtaining a negative test result prior to leaving isolation. Walensky told CNN the agency decided not to recommend a rapid test to leave isolation because “we actually don’t know” how well rapid tests “predict whether you’re transmissible during the end of disease” and that the new guidelines were made based on the fact that “about 85 to 90 percent of viral transmission happens in those first five days.”  CNN

New single-day COVID case record nearly double that of previous worst day  The United States obliterated its record for most daily new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, topping 488,000. That represents a caseload “nearly twice that of the worst days last winter,” The New York Times writes. The Times notes that while technically the total number of reported cases was higher on Monday this week, “that number should not be considered a record because it included data from the long holiday weekend.” Wednesday also set a new record for the seven-day average of new daily cases, 301,000, up from 267,000 the day before. “Over the next three to four weeks, we are going to see the number of cases in this country rise so dramatically that we’re gonna have a hard time keeping everyday life operating,” Dr. Michael Osterholm, the director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, told Morning Joe on ThursdayCNN 

New York City buckles under record-breaking COVID-19 wave  Emergency responders in New York City are being inundated with 911 calls for fevers and coughs amid one of the worst COVID-19 outbreaks in the country. A spokesperson for the city’s fire department told Gothamist that daily calls for COVID-like symptoms have doubled since the start of December, even as some 30 percent of the city’s 4,400 emergency workers called out sick on Wednesday. More than 110,000 New Yorkers have tested positive since Christmas Day — Wednesday set a new city record of 39,591 new cases — and at least one local hospital is deferring elective surgeries due to the crush of patients. The New York City subway also suspended the service of two lines on Thursday due to COVID-related train crew shortages.  GOTHAMIST

 

Greece bans music on New Year’s Eve celebrations and orders entertainment venues to close at midnight with exception of New Year’s Eve, which can be operated until 2 a.m. It comes due to rising number of COVID-19 cases caused by the Omicron variant. (The Hill) 

Tesla orders a recall of over 475,000 Model 3 and Model S cars due to safety defects found in their backup cameras and hoods, respectively. (NPR) 

Grass fires in Colorado, U.S, prompt the evacuation of the town of Superior and the cities of Louisville and Broomfield. (CNN) 

Turkey begins to roll-out its domestically-developed Turkovac inactive vaccine as part of its COVID-19 vaccination program. This comes after the health ministry issued an emergency use authorization for the vaccine. (Daily Sabah) 

South Africa lifts its midnight curfew, allowing alcohol sales to return to normal hours in certain premises, and also allowing gatherings of up to 1,000 people indoors and 2,000 people outdoors, due to a decrease in the number of new COVID-19 cases. (Business Insider South Africa) 

A 16-year-old boy is stabbed to death in Hillingdon, west London, making him the 30th teenage homicide in the British capital in 2021. It is now the deadliest year on record for teenage killings, surpassing a previous peak of 29 homicides in 2008. (BBC) 

The End Friday 

Champagne in short supply ahead of New Year’s Eve  New Year’s Eve might not be quite as bubbly this year — and not just because fears of the Omicron variant are bringing the mood down. Alison Napjus, the senior editor of Wine Spectator, warned Fox Business that “it could be tough to find some of your favorite labels [of Champagne] this year” as the industry is impacted by ongoing supply chain issues. “The market has fluctuated over the last 18 months, too,” Beverage Industry Enthusiast adds. “In 2020, the demand for Champagne dropped 18 percent by volume, according to Comité Interprofessionnel du Vin de Champagne (CIVC), the trade organization for the Champagne region.” Then, as demand climbed again in 2021, heat and frost hurt the Champagne region’s production.  Experts say the shortage is expected “to last several years.”  BEVERAGE INDUSTRY ENTHUSIAST 

Experts say HBO Max had the ‘best 2021’ of any streamer  Which streaming service had the best 2021? According to experts who spoke with Bloomberg‘s Lucas Shaw for his “Screentime” newsletter, the easy answer was HBO Max. “With roughly 70 million global subs, the service grew its user base substantially and has emerged as a viable challenger to Netflix and Disney,” Variety‘s Brent Lang told Shaw. “It also fielded a number of buzzy hits like HacksMare of Eastown, and The Flight Attendant that, for my money (and I subscribe to all of them), were far more accomplished than anything I watched on Disney Plus, Netflix, Amazon, Paramount Plus.” The Ringer‘s Alison Herman agreed, explaining that HBO’s “day-and-date bet for movies paid off in subscribers.” Netflix came in second in the expert’s informal poll, being credited for its indispensability.  SCREENTIME 

Don’t forget to include ‘income from illegal activities’ on your tax forms, says IRS  The IRS would like to remind taxpayers to include any “income from illegal activities, such as money from dealing illegal drugs,” on their forms, noting that “if you steal property, you must report its fair market value” but only if you don’t “return it to its rightful owner in the same year.” The amusing requests went viral this week on social media, although “the statutes are law and have been on the books for years,” NBC News reports. As Gary Schroeder, a Maryland-based tax preparer, explained, “All income, from whatever source, is taxable income, unless excluded by an act of Congress. If you receive $500 to kill your neighbor’s annoying rooster, or find $1 on the street, or embezzle from your employer, that’s all taxable income, as well as your paycheck from flipping burgers at McDonald’s.”  NBC NEWS 

British socialite and associate of Jeffrey Epstein Ghislaine Maxwell is found guilty of sex trafficking by a court in New York City. (ABC News) 

Ghislaine Maxwell guilty in sex-trafficking case  British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell was convicted Wednesday on sex-trafficking charges, being found guilty on five of six counts. Each charge carries a prison term of between five and 40 years in prison. Maxwell, 60, had been accused of recruiting girls, some as young as 14, to come to the homes of millionaire financier Jeffrey Epstein, where he then sexually abused them. The incidents took place in the 1990s and early 2000s, at Epstein’s properties in New York, Florida, and New Mexico. Epstein died by suicide more than two years ago while in jail awaiting trial, and Maxwell’s attorneys argued that their client was taking the fall because Epstein was dead.  It took a New York jury five days of deliberation before reaching the verdict.  THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Putin requests Thursday call with Biden amid ongoing Ukraine tensions  President Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin will speak on a call Thursday afternoon amid tensions over Russia’s military buildup on Ukraine’s border. Putin reportedly requested the call, with National Security Council spokesperson Emily Horne telling CNN the leaders plan to “discuss a range of topics, including upcoming diplomatic engagements with Russia.” Biden reportedly plans to emphasize to Putin that in order to make “real progress,” talks must be held in “a context of de-escalation rather than escalation.” Putin seeks a legally binding agreement that Ukraine will not join NATO, which the U.S. and its allies have so far refused. American and Russian officials plan to hold talks in Geneva on Jan. 10.  CNN 

Biden seeks Supreme Court ruling on ‘Remain in Mexico’ policy enforcement  The Biden administration is asking the Supreme Court to rule on whether the Department of Homeland Security is required to implement the Trump administration’s controversial “Remain in Mexico” policy. The program requires asylum seekers to wait in Mexico for a decision on their cases; Biden suspended the policy on his first day of office, with the administration officially terminating it in June. Texas and Missouri subsequently sued, but Matthew Kacsmaryk, a judge on the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas and an appointee of former President Donald Trump, determined that Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas did not convincingly explain the termination of the policy. A Biden administration appeal, citing the policy’s “unjustifiable human costs,” was rejected by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals earlier this month.  NBC NEWS

Jet stream causing more issues for airlines  U.S. airlines are already understaffed because of COVID-19, and the weather isn’t helping matters. The jet stream winds have been unusually strong for several days, affecting transcontinental flights. Those going eastbound on Wednesday were arriving up to an hour earlier than scheduled, while westbound flights were slowed down, some delayed by as much as 45 minutes. Earlier this week, the headwinds were so strong that a Phoenix-bound American Airlines flight from Boston had to stop in Oklahoma City to refuel, The Wall Street Journal reports. Thousands of flights have been canceled in the last few days, due to snow in the Pacific Northwest and Midwest combined with staffing shortages caused by pilots, flight attendants, and other airline crew members testing positive for COVID-19; as of Wednesday night, more than 500 flights were already canceled for Thursday.  THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

LeBron James defends himself after accusations of ‘uninformed’ COVID-19 post  Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James says he’s “trying to figure this pandemic out” after sharing a COVID-19 meme that Kareem Abdul-Jabbar slammed as “uninformed.” James recently posted a meme on Instagram that shows three versions of Spider-Man pointing at each other, with one labeled “COVID,” another labeled “flu,” and the third labeled “cold.” He seemed to be implying he’s unsure of the difference between the three, and he captioned the image, “Help me out folks.” Former Lakers player Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in a Substack post slammed James over this, claiming “LeBron has encouraged vaccine hesitancy which puts lives and livelihoods at risk.” Said James in his defense, “[I’m] literally honestly asking, ‘help me out.’ Help me kind of figure it all out, like we’re all trying to figure this pandemic out.” SB NATION

Wednesday, December 29th, 2021 

Despite the number of new cases caused by the Omicron variant reaching a record 98,030 cases, Italy completely lifts the mandatory quarantine for those who received COVID-19 vaccine booster shot and reduces it to five days for the vaccinated people whose most recent dose was more than 120 days before exposure. (Bloomberg) 

Despite the number of cases caused by the Omicron variant reaching a record high, Spain reduces the isolation period for people who test positive for COVID-19 and the mandatory quarantine for people who had close contact with someone who tested positive to seven days due to staffing shortages and disruptions in some industries. (Thomson Reuters Foundation) 

The United Kingdom reports a record for the second consecutive day of 183,037 new cases of COVID-19. (The Independent) 

France reports a record for the second consecutive day of 208,099 new cases of COVID-19, which is also the highest daily total recorded in any European nation since the beginning of the pandemic. (Le Parisien) 

Troops loyal to Prime Minister Mohamed Hussein Roble gather outside the presidential palace in the capital Mogadishu after President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed tried to suspend the Prime Minister in what has been described as an attempted self-coup. (The National) 

A night curfew is imposed in North Darfur, Sudan, after armed groups looted and burned a United Nations World Food Programme warehouse and UNAMID facilities in Al-Fashir, stealing around 1,900 tonnes of food. (Reuters) 

The Mexican health regulatory authority COFEPRIS approves the emergency use of the Cuban-made Abdala COVID-19 vaccine. (Le Jornada) 

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko announce that Belarus and Russia will hold war games early next year. (The Washington Post) 

A Russian law requiring foreign travellers and migrant workers to undergo mandatory medical checks, including blood tests and X-rays, and submit fingerprints and biometric data enters into force. (DW) 

Pro-democracy digital media website Stand News shuts down in Hong Kong as police raids its offices and arrest senior executives. The senior executives are later charged with sedition in the latest crackdown related to the national security law. The Hong Kong government says that the news site’s assets have been frozen and that more arrests could occur. (Forbes) 

The End

kardashians for justice

Wednesday, December 29th, 2021 

CDC revises estimate of Omicron’s prevalence The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Tuesday estimated the Omicron variant was responsible for about 59 percent of COVID cases nationwide in the week ending Dec. 25. The agency also substantially revised its figure for the prior week’s estimate. Originally, the agency said Omicron accounted for approximately 73 percent of cases for the week ending Dec. 18, but has now adjusted that down to 23 percent. Also on Tuesday, the FDA announced preliminary study findings which suggest rapid antigen tests “do detect the Omicron variant but may have reduced sensitivity.” POLITICO 

U.S. breaks daily record for COVID cases The U.S. broke the record for daily coronavirus cases on Tuesday, when the seven-day average topped 267,000. The previous record was set on Jan. 11, 2021, when the seven-day average was 251,232. The daily COVID-19 death rate, however, has not risen to match, as in the time since, vaccines have become available to almost all Americans and the apparently milder Omicron variant has spread. Daily COVID-19 deaths averaged around 3,300 in mid-January but are now around 1,500. Some states have seen particularly high caseloads this week: Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Virginia all reported their highest number of COVID-19 cases of the pandemic on Monday.  THE NEW YORK TIMES 

China issues stay-at home orders for hundreds of thousands of people in Yan’an due to the spread of COVID-19 cases, which also resulted in a lockdown in Xi’an, the country’s largest lockdown since last year. (France 24) 

Kodiak, Alaska sets the highest temperature ever recorded in December in the state of Alaska, reaching 19.4 °C (66.9 °F). The Aleutian Islands and island communities in West Alaska have seen abnormally high temperatures since mid-December, including eight straight days of over 10 °C (50 °F) in Unalaska, including 13.3 °C (55.9 °F) on Christmas Day – the warmest Christmas temperature on record for the state. Temperature anomalies for late December reach 10–15 °C (18–27 °F) in some areas. The state also lately experiences unusually wet spells of weather. (Reuters via The Guardian)

Pro-democracy digital media Stand News shuts down in Hong Kong as police raids its offices and arrest senior executives. They are later charged with sedition in the latest crackdown related to the national security law. The Hong Kong government says that assets have been frozen and that more arrests could take place. (Forbes) 

A team of Greek divers led by Kostas Thoctarides announce the discovery of the wreck of Italian submarine Jantina south of Mykonos in the Aegean Sea. The submarine was sunk on July 5, 1941, after being torpedoed by the British submarine HMS Torbay. The finding has been verified by the Italian Navy’s Naval History Office. (Reuters) 

Former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid dies at 82 Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat who became one of the longest-serving Senate majority leaders, died on Tuesday, his former chief of staff confirmed. He was 82. Reid grew up in a small mining town, joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints after marriage, graduated from Utah State University, and attended law school at George Washington University. Before winning his Senate seat in 1986, he was a trial lawyer, chair of the Nevada Gaming Commission, lieutenant governor, and House member. Reid served as Senate majority leader from 2007 through 2014, retired in 2016, and was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2018. “I wouldn’t have been president had it not been for [Reid’s] encouragement and support,” former President Barack Obama wrote in a tribute. THE WASHINGTON POSTTHE WEEK 

Biden ends Omicron travel ban on 8 African countries President Biden on Tuesday revoked last month’s restrictions on travel from eight countries in southern Africa, including South Africa, where the Omicron variant of COVID-19 was first detected. “The travel restrictions imposed by that proclamation are no longer necessary to protect the public health,” Biden said. “Moreover, the Omicron variant has now spread to more than 100 countries, and it is prevalent in the United States.”  CNN 

Jan. 6 committee agrees to shield some documents At the request of the Biden White House, the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot has agreed to shield some Trump administration papers. These documents “do not appear to bear on the White House’s preparations for or response to the events of Jan. 6, or on efforts to overturn the election or otherwise obstruct the peaceful transfer of power,” said a letter from White House Deputy Counsel Jonathan Su obtained by The Associated Press on Tuesday. Former President Donald Trump is bringing a case to the Supreme Court to block the committee from his administration’s records. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Pro-democracy website closes after police raid in Hong Kong Stand News, a pro-democracy website in Hong Kong, shut down Wednesday after its offices were raided by police. Six current and former staff and board members of the site were arrested, facing up to two years in prison, and Stand News subsequently announced it had closed and dismissed all employees. The last pro-democracy paper with physical distribution in Hong Kong closed in June under similar pressure from the semi-autonomous city’s government, which is increasingly under the control of Beijing. A Hong Kong police official said Stand News was raided because it had published multiple “seditious” articles in 2020 and 2021. CNN 

Gunman who killed 5 in Denver identified Law enforcement has identified the gunman who killed five people and injured several more in the Denver and Lakewood, Colorado, areas on Monday as a 47-year-old man named Lyndon McLeod. “This individual was on the radar of law enforcement,” Denver police chief Paul Pazen said at a news conference Tuesday. McLeod, who died in a shootout with police after opening fire in eight locations around the area, did not have a previous criminal record but has been linked to apparently self-published novels that feature a murderous character named “Lyndon MacLeod.” THE DENVER POST 

Prosecutor declines to charge former Gov. Andrew Cuomo Westchester County District Attorney Mimi Rocah said on Tuesday that two “credible” allegations of misconduct were made against former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), but she is unable to file criminal charges “due to the statutory requirements of the criminal laws of New York.” Two women had accused Cuomo of kissing them without consent. Another investigation this year by the New York Attorney General’s office found that Cuomo sexually harassed several women during his time in office. Cuomo resigned following that report and faces a criminal misdemeanor charge for forcible touching. CBS NEWS 

Elizabeth Holmes jurors continue deliberations Jurors in the fraud trial of former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes completed a fifth day of deliberation Tuesday without reaching a verdict. The jurors, who sat through 14 weeks of testimony, will continue their deliberation Wednesday. Other high-profile white-collar cases in recent years have seen deliberations of two weeks or longer. Holmes faces 11 criminal charges and could be sentenced to as much as 20 years in prison. She is accused of defrauding investors in her medical startup as well as patients who used its blood testing services. AL JAZEERA 

NFL coach and broadcaster John Madden dies at 85 John Madden, the NFL Hall of Fame coach and broadcaster whose name graces one of the most popular sports video games of all time, died unexpectedly on Tuesday, the NFL announced. He was 85. “Nobody loved football more than Coach,” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement. “He was football.” Madden was born in Minnesota and played football at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo before being drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles in 1958. He coached the Oakland Raiders from 1969 to 1978, leading the team to eight playoffs and a Super Bowl victory, then spent three decades as an NFL broadcaster. ESPN 

Musk sells another $1 billion in Tesla shares  Tesla CEO Elon Musk has sold another 934,090 shares in the company, valued around $1 billion, per filings published Tuesday. Musk has said on Twitter he intends to reduce his Tesla holdings by about 10 percent and has nearly reached that goal. Following this sale, he still owns an estimated 15.6 Tesla million shares, together valued around $16.4 billion, and has just purchased “1.6 million Tesla shares at a strike price of $6.24 per share, granted to him via a 2012 compensation package,” CNBC reports. Musk, who is also CEO of SpaceX, is the world’s wealthiest person, with an estimated worth of about $275 billion. CNBC 

Forecast predicts surge, then drop in gas prices A new forecast from price tracking app GasBuddy, reported Tuesday, predicts the national average gas price will rise from its present rate of $3.29 to peak in May at $3.79 before dropping to $3.01 by this time next year. “We could see a national average that flirts with, or in a worst-case scenario, potentially exceeds $4 a gallon,” Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy, told CNN. “The economy is hot. Demand has come roaring back. But supply is still catching up after getting cut greatly in 2020.” CNN 

LastPass denies claims of a breach Password management service LastPass on Tuesday denied claims it had been hacked, saying compromises of its users’ passwords likely stemmed from “third-party breaches related to other unaffiliated services.” “It’s important to note that, at this time, we do not have any indication that accounts were successfully accessed or that the LastPass service was otherwise compromised by an unauthorized party,” the company said. Speculation about a LastPass breach began Monday, with users reporting illegitimate login attempts from multiple locations with a correct master password. GIZMODO 

Tuesday,  December 28th, 2021 

At least 38 people are killed in the collapse of a private gold mine in En Nahud, Sudan. (Al Jazeera) 

Delhi enters Level 1 “Yellow alert” which closes cinemas, schools, colleges, and gyms, imposes a nighttime curfew from 10 pm to 5 am, and restricts the capacity of public transport, restaurants, funerals and weddings, due to an increase in the number of Omicron variant cases. (The Times of India) 

France reports a record 179,807 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours. (RFI) 

Greece reports a record for the second consecutive day of 21,657 new cases of COVID-19, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 1,105,885. (Ekathimerini) 

Italy reports a record 78,313 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours. (La Repubblica) 

The United Kingdom reports a record 138,831 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours. (The Guardian) 

California becomes the first U.S. state and the world’s first subnational entity to surpass five million cases of COVID-19. (ABC News) 

The United States reports a record 512,553 new COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours. (Deadline) 

South Africa postpones a plan to end COVID-19 contact tracing and suspend some quarantine measures in order to consider additional comments about the policy after the government received many inquiries about the plan. (Bloomberg) 

The End Wednesday 

Tuesday,  December 28th, 2021 

https://www.cnn.com/2021/12/27/us/colorado-i-70-crash-driver-sentence-trnd/index.html

Judge sets hearing to reconsider truck-driver’s 110-year sentence A Colorado judge on Monday scheduled a Jan. 13 hearing to reconsider a 110-year sentence imposed on truck driver Rogel Aguilera-Mederos for an explosive crash that killed four people in suburban Denver. The severity of the sentence provoked outrage. District Attorney Alexis King said last week she would seek a sentence of 20 to 30 years for the fiery, 2019 wreck on Interstate 70. About five million people have signed an online petition calling for clemency from Colorado Gov. Jared Polis (D). Judge Bruce Jones said he wanted to explore whether he could legally reduce the sentence to whatever he deemed appropriate. He said victims of the crash would be allowed to speak at the hearing. Aguilera-Mederos was hauling lumber when his brakes failed and he plowed into stopped traffic after failing to use a runaway truck ramp. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

News audiences shrink in 2021 without 2020’s hot stories   Viewership plunged at cable news networks and other outlets in 2021 as major issues that fueled intense interest in 2020 faded, The Associated Press reported Monday, citing Nielsen data. Weekday prime-time ratings fell by 38 percent at CNN, 34 percent at Fox News Channel, and 25 percent at MSNBC without audience-grabbing issues such as the presidential election and frequent racial justice protests. Broadcast television evening newscasts also saw their audiences shrink. ABC’s World News Tonight and the CBS Evening News saw their viewership fall by 12 percent. NBC’s Nightly News dropped by 14 percent. Comscore reported that unique visitors to the websites of The Washington Post and The New York Times were down by 44 percent and 34 percent, respectively, in November, compared to November 2020. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Virginia workers find 2nd time capsule at Lee statue site Virginia officials said Monday that they had found what appeared to be an 1887 time capsule at the former site of a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee in Richmond. Crews previously unearthed a box they thought was the collection of artifacts 19th-century officials were rumored to have placed under the monument, but it turned out to contain just mementos of men who designed the statue. This time, Gov. Ralph Northam tweeted, “They found it!” The time capsule the crews were searching for is believed to contain about 60 objects buried in a copper box by a group of residents, organizations, and businesses, according to an 1887 Richmond Dispatch article. The artifacts included Confederate memorabilia. NPR 

A massive Roman castrum dated to the reign of Caligula is discovered in Velsen, Netherlands. The site is the most northern fort found by archaeologists, and believed to be a stationing port of Caligula’s failed invasion of Britain. (The Guardian) 

The Supreme Court of Russia orders the liquidation of prominent and oldest human rights group Memorial for breaking the Russian foreign agent law. (BBC News) 

Russian police arrest two allies of opposition politician and activist Alexei Navalny, Kseniya Fadeyeva and Zakhar Sarapulov, under extremism charges. According to another of Navalny’s allies, Leonid Volkov, he had tried to persuade Fedeyeva and Sarapulov to leave Russia as he and others have done, but they refused. (Reuters) 

Biden admits supply of at-home COVID tests ‘clearly not enough’ President Biden conceded Monday that although his administration has been working to increase the availability of over-the-counter at-home COVID-19 rapid tests, the efforts are “clearly not enough.” During a virtual meeting with the National Governor’s Association on the spike in cases fueled by the Omicron coronavirus variant, Biden told 25 governors that when he took office there were no such tests available. He said there were almost 200 million kits available in December, but it’s still insufficient to meet demand as the Omicron coronavirus variant spreads rapidly. Biden said his recently announced plan for the government to purchase 500 million at-home test kits and distribute them free to Americans who request them should help. BUSINESS INSIDER 

CDC reduces isolation time for asymptomatic coronavirus infections The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday cut the recommended isolation time for asymptomatic Americans infected with the coronavirus from 10 days to five. The decision was based on research showing that those first five days are when people are the most infectious, the CDC said. The agency also reduced the recommended quarantine time for people who are vaccinated but not boosted to five days after any coronavirus exposure. They also should wear masks for five days after their isolation is over. People who have received booster shots should wear masks for 10 days but don’t need to isolate. “These updates ensure people can safely continue their daily lives” even as the Omicron variant spreads, CDC director Rochelle Walensky said. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Airlines cancel more flights as COVID limits crews Airlines canceled more than 1,000 flights on Monday due to winter storms and a coronavirus surge fueled by the fast-spreading Omicron variant. The latest cancellations brought the total number of flights to, from, or within the United States to more than 4,000 since Christmas Eve on Friday, according to FlightAware, which tracks flight cancellations. Delta, United, JetBlue, and American have said in recent days that they’ve had to trim their schedules due to staff shortages caused by the COVID-19 surge. Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Biden’s top medical adviser, said that the United States should consider requiring vaccinations for air travel to encourage more people to get vaccinated and help curb infections. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

New York vaccine mandate on businesses takes effect New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio on Monday launched the nation’s broadest vaccine mandate on private businesses. Under the policy, all employers in the city must verify that in-person workers have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine. If in-person workers got the two-dose Pfizer or Moderna vaccines, they must provide proof they got the second dose within 45 days. De Blasio, who is in his last week as mayor, said he was “100 percent convinced this was the right thing to do.” It was not immediately clear what his successor, Mayor-elect Eric Adams, would do about the mandate. Some business leaders have said the city should give workers the option of taking regular COVID-19 tests instead of getting the shots. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

U.S. skiing star Mikaela Shiffrin tests positive for COVID-19 U.S. alpine skiing star Mikaela Shiffrin announced via Twitter on Monday that she has tested positive for COVID-19. Shiffrin, a 26-year-old three-time Olympic medalist, is the first high-profile American athlete to be infected with the coronavirus in the run-up to the Beijing Winter Olympics, which start on Feb. 4. Her illness served as a reminder that between now and the opening ceremony, anyone can be knocked out of competition at any time as many countries see record numbers of new infections due to the highly infectious new Omicron coronavirus variant. Shiffrin said she was in isolation and would miss this week’s World Cup races in Lienz, Austria. A spokesperson for U.S. Ski and Snowboard said Shiffrin hoped to return for a World Cup tour event in Zagreb, Croatia, next week. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Israeli hospital tests 4th vaccine dose for health-care workers Israel’s Sheba Medical Center on Monday started giving a fourth coronavirus vaccine dose to a test group of health-care workers as the country considers giving an extra shot to people at risk of severe COVID-19 as the Omicron variant drives a spike in infections. The trial involves 150 medical workers who got their first booster before Aug. 20, and have antibody counts below 700, meaning they have low protection, the hospital said in a statement. “It’s one jab in the shoulder, but one giant leap for mankind,” said Jacob Levee, director of the hospital’s heart transplant unit and the first recipient of the fourth vaccine at Sheba. On Tuesday, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett announced that the country would be the first to offer a fourth Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine dose to health workers, citizens over age 60, and people with compromised immune systems. THE WASHINGTON POST 

The Sheba Medical Center near Tel Aviv, Israel, begins the world’s first clinical trial of fourth doses of the COVID-19 vaccine, involving 150 medical personnel, in order to determine if a fourth dose can provide extra immunity against COVID-19. (Voice of America) 

The health ministry reduces the interval between the second dose and booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine to three months, citing concerns about the spread of the Omicron variant. (The Times of Israel) 

A bird flu outbreak in northern Israel kills at least 5,200 migratory cranes and forces farmers to slaughter hundreds of thousands of chickens in what authorities say is the deadliest wildlife disaster in the nation’s history. (The Washington Post) 

Syrian state media reports that Israel has bombed the Port of Latakia in Latakia, Syria. The IDF has not confirmed it. If confirmed, this is the second airstrike on the facility this month. Secondary explosions are believed to be from Iranian munitions stored at the facility. (Times of Israel) 

Massive damage at the port is reported from the air raid with most of the port on fire, though there are no immediate reports of casualties from the attack. Videos on social media show multiple large explosions and anti-aircraft fire over the city. A hospital, some residential buildings and shops were also badly damaged. (Al Jazeera) 

Swissmedic approves the use of the monoclonal antibody cocktail Ronapreve developed by Roche and Regeneron to treat severe COVID-19 patients. (Swissinfo) 

Swissmedic approves the use of the Janssen COVID-19 vaccine as a booster dose for people over the age of 18 years, which can be administered two months after the first dose, or six months after a person receives mixed vaccinations with mRNA-based vaccines. (UrduPoint) 

French prime minister Jean Castex announces that, for the next three weeks, all public gatherings will be limited to 2,000 people indoors and 5,000 people outdoors. Work from home will be mandated where possible, and outdoor mask wearing will be mandatory in city centres. The interval between the second dose and the booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine will also be reduced to three months in response to the rapid spread of the Omicron variant. (The Guardian) 

The Greek government announces new restrictions that will be in effect from January 3 until at least January 16, which include mandatory high-protection or double mask wearing in supermarkets and on public transport, closure of entertainment and hospitality venues at midnight, reinstating work from home policies for up to 50% of employees, and reducing the capacity of sports stadiums to 10%. This comes after the country reported a record 9,284 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours. (Ekathimerini) 

Iceland reports a record 672 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours. (RÚV) 

South Australia reports a record 842 new cases in the past 24 hours. The state also reports their first death from COVID-19 since April 2020 in a 92-year-old woman. (ABC News Australia) 

LAPD release video after police stray bullet killed girl, 14  Los Angeles police released body-camera video showing officers responding to a Dec. 23 report of an assault suspect in a clothing store before they opened fire, killing a 14-year-old girl with a stray bullet as she hid in a dressing room. The scene was chaotic, with several officers approaching the suspect with guns drawn. The girl apparently was hit by one of three rifle shots a police officer fired at the suspect, Daniel Elena-Lopez, who was killed, police said. Other officers can be heard telling the officer who fired to “slow down.” Local media have identified the girl as Valentina Orellana-Peralta. She reportedly came to the United States from Chile six months ago, and was shopping with her mother for a dress for her quinceañera, a 15th birthday celebration in Hispanic traditions. REUTERS 

Riot Games agrees to $100 million gender discrimination settlement Video-game maker Riot Games announced Monday that it had agreed to pay $100 million to settle a class-action gender discrimination lawsuit filed in 2018 that covers more than 2,000 current and former female employees. The settlement initially was set for $10 million, but two California employment agencies last year blocked it, saying the women should get far more. The state separately was investigating claims of sexual harassment, discrimination, unequal pay, and retaliation against women at Riot, which is behind League of LegendsValorant, and other popular titles. Under the agreement, more than 1,000 full-time employees and 1,300 contractors would split $80 million. The rest would cover costs, including lawyers’ fees. Riot also would fund a diversity and inclusion program. MARKETWATCH 

Monday,  December 27th, 2021 

Putin threatens military action if NATO rejects ultimatum Russian President Vladimir Putin said Sunday that he will be forced to consider numerous options, including a military response, if NATO does not guarantee to bar Ukraine from membership in the alliance. Putin also called for reducing Western military deployments in Eastern Europe. His demands were contained in a pair of draft treaties Russia submitted to NATO earlier this month. Putin, whose remarks aired on Russian state TV Sunday, expressed concerns that missiles could be deployed in Ukraine if the former Soviet satellite joins NATO. “We have nowhere to retreat,” Putin said. “They have pushed us to a line that we can’t cross.” NATO is unlikely to agree to Putin’s terms. “NATO member countries decide who is a member of NATO, not Russia,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told reporters. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Fauci warns Omicron surge will continue pushing cases higher COVID-19 cases, already at record levels in some areas, will probably continue to climb as the “extraordinarily contagious” Omicron variant spreads rapidly across the U.S., Dr. Anthony Fauci said Sunday on ABC’s This Week. “Every day it goes up and up. The last weekly average was about 150,000 and it likely will go much higher.” Fauci, President Biden’s chief medical adviser, warned that although Omicron appears to cause less severe symptoms and fewer hospitalizations than other strains, Americans shouldn’t be complacent because the sheer number of infections “might override a real diminution in severity.” He said “we’re particularly worried” about unvaccinated people, who are “the most vulnerable ones.” The surge has spurred a rush for at-home COVID-19 tests, causing many pharmacies to run out. ABC NEWS 

Airlines continue to cancel flights due to COVID surge U.S. airlines continued to cancel flights on Sunday due to surging coronavirus infections among crews, as well as severe winter weather in some places. Commercial airlines canceled 1,001 flights, both domestic and international departures and arrivals. It was the third straight day of a wave of cancellations that disrupted travel for thousands of Christmas travelers. There were 997 flights called off on Christmas and nearly 700 on Christmas Eve. Thousands of other departures were delayed over the holiday weekend. A White House official noted that only a “small percentage” of flights were affected, putting the nation “in a better place than last Christmas,” which also came during a coronavirus surge.  REUTERS 

France surpasses 100,000 daily coronavirus infections for 1st time France reported Sunday that it has confirmed more than 100,000 new coronavirus infections in a single day for the first time. The high mark was the latest sign that the highly transmissible new Omicron variant is fueling an explosive surge across Europe, where many countries have imposed new lockdowns and other restrictions in hopes of curbing new infections. More than 1 in 100 people in Paris and surrounding areas have tested positive in the last week, the regional health service confirmed. While most of the new cases were linked to Omicron, which is believed to cause less severe COVID-19, a stubborn surge of infections with the Delta variant is keeping hospital admissions high. President Emmanuel Macron’s government has scheduled a Monday meeting to discuss new measures to address the crisis. BLOOMBERG 

Hand-drawn sketch of half full combined needle and syringe. Medical tools. First aid. Medicine syringe. Syringe with injection

Swissmedic approves the use of the monoclonal antibody cocktail Ronapreve developed by Roche and Regeneron to treat severe COVID-19 patients. (Swissinfo) 

South Korea authorizes the emergency use of the anti-viral oral drug Paxlovid manufactured by Pfizer for high-risk patients aged above 12 years, becoming the first drug to be approved in the country. (Yonhap News Agency) 

China reports 206 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, which is the highest single-day total of new cases in 21 months, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 101,077. (The Straits Times) 

China scraps ban on foreign ownership of passenger car manufacturers A Chinese planning authority said Monday that Beijing would start allowing full foreign ownership of passenger car manufacturing starting Jan. 1, 2022. China’s Ministry of Commerce and the National Development and Reform Commission released the latest list of industries excluded from foreign investment, and passenger car manufacturing wasn’t on it. The change marked the latest in a series of moves China has made to ease rules on foreign ownership in its auto industry. Monday’s release named 31 areas in which foreign investment remains banned or restricted. Those included rare earths, film production, and tobacco products. In some industries, including medical institutions, foreign firms have to establish joint ventures with local partners that typically hold the majority stake. CNBC 

Iran bans all travellers from the United Kingdom, France, Denmark and Norway for 15 days and indefinitely suspends all land travel to Turkey due to the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. (Arab News) 

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps releases a video on social media threatening to destroy the Israeli city of Dimona and a nearby nuclear facility in the Negev desert. (The Jerusalem Post) 

2 Save the Children workers missing after Myanmar massacre kills 38 Save the Children said over the weekend that 38 people were killed by the Burmese military in eastern Myanmar on Christmas Eve, and that two of the humanitarian organization’s staff members went missing in the attack. Members of Myanmar’s military reportedly attacked three vehicles, including one the Save the Children staffers were using to drive home for the holidays, and burned them. “We have confirmation that their private vehicle was attacked and burned out. The military reportedly forced people from their cars, arrested some, killed others and burned their bodies,” said the organization. The military said the vehicles had failed to stop for inspection and soldiers returned fire when “terrorists” started shooting. Save the Children said it would suspend operations in parts of Myanmar. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Holiday spending rose at fastest pace in 17 years Holiday sales jumped by 8.5 percent this year compared to the same period in 2020, Mastercard SpendingPulse reported Sunday. The results marked the fastest growth in 17 years but fell slightly short of the 8.8 percent gain forecast in September, before consumers were hit with rising prices, product shortages, and a surge of coronavirus cases caused by the highly infectious new Omicron variant. The results covered Nov. 1 through Dec. 24. Clothing saw the biggest jump, 47 percent, followed by jewelry and electronics at 32 percent and 16 percent, respectively. Sales remained strong after Omicron hit just after Thanksgiving, although many shoppers shifted purchases online.  THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ box office haul surpasses $1 billion Spider-Man: No Way Home continued its strong run at the box office over the weekend, becoming the first film in the pandemic era to top $1 billion in global ticket sales. The feat by the co-production between Sony and Disney was all the more impressive because it came as the Omicron coronavirus variant is making many people more cautious about going to theaters instead of streaming movies at home. “Spider-Man: No Way Home‘s sprint to $1 billion within the context of this still pandemically challenged marketplace is nothing short of astonishing,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Comscore. “It demonstrates the power of a great movie to draw fans around the world to enjoy the shared and communal experience that only the movie theater can provide.” CNBC 

The Taliban regime dissolves Afghanistan’s Independent Election Commission, saying that “there is no need for these commissions to exist and operate”. (Al Jazeera) 

https://theweek.com/coronavirus/1008417/trump-takes-on-the-fringe

The End