lost in space

Wednesday, December 15th, 2021 

Scientists announce that NASA’s Parker Solar Probe became the first ever spacecraft to enter the stellar corona of the Sun during a flyby in April. (The Guardian) 

‘Time’ names Elon Musk its Person of the Year Time magazine announced Monday that it had chosen Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk as its Person of the Year. In 2021, Musk became the richest person in the world as enthusiasm for electric vehicles drove Tesla’s stock price to record levels, and SpaceX launched the first-ever mission to Earth’s orbit with only tourists on board, followed by a flight for professional astronauts. “He is reshaping life on Earth and possibly life off Earth, as well,” Edward Felsenthal, Time‘s editor-in-chief, said Monday on NBC’s Today show. Critics said Musk was an inappropriate choice for several reasons, including his early downplaying of the danger of COVID-19, his opposition to unions, and his rejection of a “billionaire’s tax” targeting the wealthiest Americans. NBC NEWS 

Ex-SpaceX interns say they faced sexual harassment A former SpaceX intern said in an online essay published on the website Lionness on Tuesday that the company is “rife with sexism.” Ashley Kosak, a former intern who later became a full-time SpaceX engineer, wrote in the essay that a male intern groped her in 2017 in company housing shared by interns, and another male colleague moved his hand up her torso during a 2018 company event. Kosak, who now works for Apple after leaving SpaceX in November, said she reported the incidents right after they happened and received no response. “Given my tenuous position at the company, I felt powerless,” she wrote. The New York Times reported that two other former SpaceX interns also said they faced sexual harassment and unwanted advances from other interns and more senior employees. SpaceX did not respond to requests for comment from CNBC or the Times, but has said recently it is auditing its human resources department. CNBC 

‘Return of the Jedi’ and ‘Fellowship of the Ring’ added to the Library of Congress It’s official: The Fellowship of the Ring is as culturally relevant as Shrek. The National Film Registry on Tuesday announced the latest 25 films that will be preserved in the Library of Congress because they’re “culturally, historically, or aesthetically” significant. Among the movies joining the list are Star Wars: Return of the JediThe Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, WALL-EWhat Ever Happened to Baby Jane?, and A Nightmare on Elm Street. This comes after last year’s list of inductees included The Dark KnightThe Hurt Locker, and yes, Shrek. The original Star Wars was already preserved by the Library of Congress years ago, though if only one of Return of the Jedi‘s Jabba’s Palace scenes had included “All Star,” perhaps it might have gotten in sooner.  ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY 

James Cameron wonders if his ‘Avatar’ sequels will ‘make any damn money’ James Cameron has spent the last decade of his life working on sequels to Avatar, though even he’s not fully confident we’ll all rush out to see them. Cameron chatted with Entertainment Weekly about the not one, but four sequels to Avatar he’s got on the way, the first of which is allegedly set to arrive next year. But given how much the theatrical landscape has changed since the 2009 movie became the top-grossing film ever, Cameron told EW, “The big issue is: Are we going to make any damn money?” That would be an issue, yes! Cameron continued, “Big, expensive films have got to make a lot of money. We’re in a new world post-COVID, post-streaming. Maybe those [box office] numbers will never be seen again. Who knows? It’s all a big roll of the dice.” When Spider-Man: No Way Home makes approximately one gazillion dollars this weekend, maybe he’ll feel better.  THE WRAP 

Leonardo DiCaprio ‘had a problem’ with Meryl Streep nude scene in ‘Don’t Look Up’ Meryl Streep was totally down for having her character appear nude in Don’t Look Up, though Leonardo DiCaprio wasn’t so sure about it. In an interview with The Guardian, director Adam McKay was asked about a moment in which Streep’s character is seen naked — though it’s actually a body double — and he revealed that DiCaprio “had a problem with it.” He ” just views Meryl as film royalty,” McKay explained, and he “didn’t like seeing her with the lower back tattoo, walking for a second naked.” So DiCaprio actually asked McKay, “Do you really need to show that?” McKay made the case for the scene, though, telling DiCaprio it’s Streep’s character who’s naked, not her. As for Streep, according to McKay, “She didn’t even blink. She didn’t even bring it up.”  THE GUARDIAN 

Britney Spears rips Diane Sawyer for ‘making me cry’ in 2003 interview Britney Spears has a message for Diane Sawyer: “Kiss my white a–.” The pop star on Instagram slammed Sawyer over a primetime interview she conducted with her in 2003, following Spears’ breakup with Justin Timberlake. Sawyer told Spears she “broke his heart,” also asking if she had an addiction to shopping. “What was with the ‘You’re in the wrong’ approach?? Geeze … and making me cry???” Spears wrote. Spears also claimed her manager “put that woman in my home and made me talk to her on national television.” She said she was “in shock” after her split with Timberlake and “never spoke to anyone for a very long time,” but she alleged she was “forced” to talk to Sawyer. In the interview, Sawyer also asked Spears if she’s a woman or a girl, and almost 20 years later, Spears offered a response: “‘Ma’am I’m a catholic slut!!!”  THE WRAP 

Kim Kardashian says there’s ‘no possibility of saving’ Kanye West marriage Sorry, Ye: it looks like Kim Kardashian won’t be running back to you anytime soon. Kardashian has filed new court documents in her divorce from Kanye West, which say that since she originally filed for divorce in February, she has “reached out to [West] and his counsel several times in an attempt to move this case forward to a speedy and amicable resolution,” but West “has been non-responsive.” The documents also say that the marriage has “irremediably broken down,” that “there is no possibility of saving the marriage through counseling or other means,” and that “no counseling or reconciliation effort will be of any value at this time.” Kardashian is seeking to be declared legally single, though West is still publicly asking her to take him back, singing at a recent concert, “I need you to run right back to me, baby!”  VANITY FAIR 

David Fuller, a double murderer who sexually abused the corpses of more than 100 deceased women, is sentenced to a whole life tariff. (BBC News) 

A court in Hanoi, Vietnam, sentences two Facebook users to lengthy jail sentences for “conducting propaganda against the state”. One man was sentenced to 10 years in prison and five of house arrest while another man was given a six-year imprisonment term and three of house arrest. (Reuters) 

A fire breaks out at the World Trade Centre Hong Kong, injuring 13 people and leaving 300 more trapped within the building. (Al Jazeera) 

South Korea reports a record 7,850 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 536,495. (Yonhap News Agency) 

The number of people fully vaccinated against COVID-19 in New Zealand surpasses 90%. (Stuff) 

Australia reopens its border to vaccinated skilled migrants and foreign students without an exemption after more than 18 month closure due to the pandemic despite the spread of the Omicron variant worldwide. (ABC News Australia) 

The United Kingdom reports a record 78,610 new cases of COVID-19 in the previous 24 hours, an increase of over 10,000 on the previous daily-record which occurred in January of this year. (BBC News) 

Siaosi Sovaleni becomes prime minister-designate of Tonga. (RNZ) 

Pfizer says its COVID pill effective in preventing severe illness Pfizer said Tuesday that a study had confirmed that its coronavirus pill helps prevent severe COVID-19. The drugmaker also said the antiviral pill proved effective in laboratory studies against the new Omicron variant, which is expected to overtake the Delta variant as the dominant strain in the United States within weeks. “We are confident that, if authorized or approved, this potential treatment could be a critical tool to help quell the pandemic,” Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said in a statement. Pfizer last month submitted preliminary data to the Food and Drug Administration, requesting authorization to distribute the pill, known as Paxlovid. The new results are expected to increase the likelihood that the pill will win approval. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Health officials warn fast-spreading Omicron could peak in January Federal health officials warned Tuesday that the fast-spreading Omicron coronavirus variant could peak with a “big wave” of infections that could overwhelm hospitals as soon as January. The dire predictions, based on new modeling analyzed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, came after Omicron’s prevalence increased sevenfold in a week, and the United States reached 800,000 coronavirus-related deaths since the pandemic began, a once-unimaginable milestone. Pharmaceutical companies aren’t in favor of creating an Omicron-specific vaccine, and believe that individuals with both vaccine doses and a booster shot are still well protected against severe illness and death, even with the new strain. THE WASHINGTON POSTNPR 

Producer prices to suppliers jump by a record 9.6 percent The Labor Department reported Tuesday that its producer-price index, which measures prices suppliers charge businesses, rose by 9.6 percent in November compared to a year earlier. The jump was the biggest since records began in 2010. The so-called core PPI, which excludes volatile food and fuel prices, rose by 7.7 percent, also a record. Sharply rising prices from producers show that costs remain unusually high throughout the supply chain, suggesting that consumers will face higher prices into 2022. “This is a testament to the fact that inflation continues to broaden out,” said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Amherst Pierpont. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

House approves compromise bill seeking to ban imports from China’s Xinjiang region The House on Tuesday passed a bill seeking to ban imports from China’s Xinjiang region over concerns about forced labor and other abuses against the Uyghur Muslim minority. The House passed a different version of the legislation last week, but that was rejected by the Senate. The new bill is a compromise that eliminates differences between the House and Senate versions, so it is expected to win Senate approval and head to President Biden’s desk for his signature. The compromise includes a provision justifying the ban with a “rebuttable presumption” that all Xinjiang goods are made with slave labor because China has Uyghur detention camps in the region. REUTERS 

 
House recommends contempt charge against Mark Meadows The House voted Tuesday night to recommend that the Department of Justice charge former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows with criminal contempt of Congress for refusing to comply with a subpoena from the select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol attack. Reps. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) and Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) were the only Republicans to join Democrats in the 222-208 vote. Meadows initially cooperated with the committee, handing over texts and other documents about the White House’s reaction to the insurrection by a mob of then-President Donald Trump supporters, who wanted to prevent Congress from certifying Trump’s election loss. The Justice Department has already charged another Trump ally, former White House strategist Steve Bannon, with contempt. CNN 

D.C. attorney general sues Proud Boys, Oath Keepers over insurrection D.C. Attorney General Karl A. Racine (D) on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers over their alleged roles in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. The lawsuit holds the far-right groups responsible for the violence by a mob of former President Donald Trump’s supporters trying to prevent lawmakers from certifying Trump’s election loss. The lawsuit invokes a modern version of the 1871 Ku Klux Klan Act to seek large financial penalties. House Homeland Security Committee Chair Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) and police officers who battled the rioters have filed similar lawsuits, but Racine’s complaint is the first such suit by a government agency. An attorney representing two of the defendants called the lawsuit “a fantasy” targeting the wrong people. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Senate votes to raise debt ceiling by $2.5 trillion The Senate voted Tuesday to take up a proposal to raise the debt ceiling by $2.5 trillion, a move necessary to avoid an unprecedented and potentially catastrophic default until at least early 2023. All Democrats in the evenly divided chamber backed the legislation; all Republicans opposed it. Party leaders agreed to a deal letting Democrats push through the measure with a simple majority thanks to a one-time exemption from the filibuster rule. The Treasury Department has warned that the government would be unable to borrow enough to avoid a default within days unless lawmakers raised the debt ceiling. “The American people can breathe easy and rest assured there will not be a default,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Judge rejects Trump effort to shield tax returns from House committee U.S. District Judge Trevor N. McFadden ruled Tuesday that the Treasury Department can release former President Donald Trump’s tax records to the House Ways and Means Committee. McFadden, a former Trump Justice Department official, put the ruling on hold, however, pending a likely appeal. Trump’s attorneys argued that the records were only requested by House Democrats as a way to expose Trump’s finances. McFadden said Trump’s lawyers were “wrong on the law. A long line of Supreme Court cases requires great deference to facially valid congressional inquiries. Even the special solicitude accorded former presidents does not alter the outcome.” The committee wants Trump’s tax records for an inquiry into the effectiveness of the Internal Revenue Service’s presidential audit program. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Far too few fraudulent votes to change 2020 election There were fewer than 475 potential cases of voter fraud in the six battleground states that former President Donald Trump disputed, far too few to change the results of the 2020 presidential election, The Associated Press reported Tuesday after a review of every flagged ballot. President Biden beat Trump in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin by a total of 311,257 votes. The allegedly fraudulent votes weren’t all for Biden, but most were spotted and never added to official vote counts. The AP also found that there was no collusion among the people who cast the fraudulent ballots. Trump responded to the AP report by repeating his baseless claim that the election was stolen from him through voter fraud. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

N.Y. ethics panel says Cuomo must return $5.1 million in book proceeds New York’s Joint Commission on Public Ethics on Tuesday ordered former Gov. Andrew Cuomo to return $5.1 million he received for his 2020 pandemic memoir after concluding that he had violated state ethics laws. The board previously determined that he got authorization for the book deal under false pretenses and was therefore not entitled to be paid for it. His lawyer had assured he would use “no state property, personnel, or other resources” to work on the book, but he wound up having administration employees help write it. Cuomo has vowed to fight the decision, which one of his lawyers, Jim McGuire, called “unconstitutional.” Cuomo has already given $500,000 of the money to charity and put $1 million into a trust for his daughters. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

House passes Omar’s anti-Islamophobia bill The House on Tuesday passed Rep. Ilhan Omar’s (D-Minn.) bill seeking to create an office at the State Department dedicated to tracking and fighting Islamophobia. The vote came as Democrats push back against Rep. Lauren Boebert’s (R-Colo.) anti-Muslim rhetoric against Omar. Boebert has referred to Omar and other progressives as a “Jihad Squad,” and joked that Omar posed a terror threat to the Capitol. Progressive Democrats have called for the House to strip Boebert of her committee assignments. The bill passed along party lines, with no Republicans joining Democrats in favor of it. That suggests the legislation faces an uphill battle in the evenly split Senate, where Democrats need 10 Republican votes to get past a likely GOP filibuster. AXIOS 

The Italian Council of Ministers approves the extension of the COVID-19 state of emergency until March 31 and also rules that travellers from other EU countries must present a negative swab test prior to departure due to the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. (Thomson Reuters Foundation) 

Caretaker Prime Minister Mark Rutte announces that primary schools will be closed on December 20 and that existing restrictions requiring bars, restaurants, and non-essential shops to close at 5 pm have been extended until January 14 due to concerns over the spread of the Omicron variant. (Barron’s) 

The United States surpasses 800,000 deaths from COVID-19, remaining the highest death toll in (NPR) 

A final results of trial of Paxlovid conducted by Pfizer shows 89% cut of risk of hospitalization and death in high-risk patients and is likely to work against the Omicron variant. (Financial Times) 

The House of Commons votes to approve “Plan B” measures that include the extension of the indoor mask mandate, vaccine passports, and mandating COVID-19 vaccines for NHS workers in England, despite large opposition from Boris Johnson’s own Conservative Party. (Euronews) 

Australian Deputy Prime Minister and National Party Leader Barnaby Joyce and a small group of Liberal Party backbenchers join the Labor Party in criticising the Liberal-National Coalition Morrison Government’s inaction on the United Kingdom’s imminent extradition of Australian publisher Julian Assange to the United States, arguing that Assange has not broken any Australian laws. (The Guardian) 

Tuesday,  December 14th, 2021 

South Africa study finds Omicron vaccine resistant but causes milder COVID A study released Tuesday by Discovery Health, South Africa’s largest private health insurer, found that the newly emerged Omicron coronavirus variant appears to cause less severe COVID-19 than other strains, but is more resistant to vaccines. The study found that the two-dose Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine widely used in South Africa provided just 33 percent protection against Omicron infection, down from 90 percent protection from the original variant. Pfizer’s shots provide 70 percent protection against severe disease, which the researchers said was “very good” even though it was down from 95 percent protection against severe disease from the Delta variant. Pfizer-BioNTech research suggests that a booster dose can restore, at least temporarily, original protection levels. USA TODAY 

Supreme Court rejects request to block NY vaccine mandate for health workers The Supreme Court on Monday refused to block New York’s vaccine mandate covering workers in hospitals, nursing homes, hospices, and other medical facilities. The unsigned order did not spell out the court’s reasoning. Justices Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, and Clarence Thomas dissented, with Gorsuch writing that the state was violating religious freedom by declining to offer a religious exception for abortion opponents who object to the current vaccines because they “depended upon abortion-derived fetal cell lines” in production or testing.  The high court now has rejected requests to block state mandates in Indiana, Maine, and New York, giving states considerable leeway in fighting COVID-19 during the Delta variant surge.CNN 

California renews statewide mask mandate California on Monday ordered a new statewide mask mandate for indoor public spaces due to rising coronavirus infections and concerns that the highly infectious new Omicron variant could fuel a new surge. The requirement takes effect Wednesday. New cases have been increasing in California since Thanksgiving, with COVID-19 hospitalizations up by nearly 15 percent. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has identified California as a state with a high level of coronavirus transmission, the most urgent ranking on the agency’s four-tier scale. Several big counties — including Los Angeles, Ventura, San Francisco, and Sacramento — already have local indoor mask mandates, so the new statewide policy affects about half of California’s population. LOS ANGELES TIMES 

Philadelphia imposes a vaccine mandate for indoor activities such as dining, cinemas, and at the Wells Fargo Center for a 76ers or Flyers game. (The Philadelphia Inquirer) 

Derek Chauvin expected to change plea on George Floyd civil rights charge Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin indicated in a Monday court filing that he plans to change his not-guilty plea on federal charges that he violated the civil rights of George Floyd, the unarmed Black man Chauvin was convicted of killing by kneeling on his neck for more than nine minutes. Chauvin was sentenced to more than 22 years in prison for the murder conviction. A grand jury earlier this year also indicted Chauvin and former officers J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane, and Tou Thao for allegedly abusing their power to deny Floyd of his constitutional rights to be free from unreasonable force. All four pleaded not guilty, but Chauvin is now scheduled to enter a new plea in a Wednesday hearing. Floyd’s death sparked nationwide protests against police mistreatment of Black Americans. MINNEAPOLIS STAR-TRIBUNE 

A court in Minsk, Belarus, sentences opposition activist Sergei Tikhanovsky to 18 years in prison for organising riots among other charges following what was widely described as a “sham trial”. Tikhanovsky’s wife, Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, fled Belarus amidst the protests that rocked the country in 2020. (BBC News) 

Hundreds of gymnasts reach $380 million settlement over Larry Nassar abuse More than 500 gymnasts sexually abused by former national team doctor Larry Nassar have agreed to a $380 million settlement with USA Gymnastics. The settlement was revealed Monday during a USA Gymnastics bankruptcy hearing. “No amount of money will ever repair the damage that has been done and what these women have been through,” former gymnast Rachael Denhollander told The New York Times. “But at some point, the negotiations have to end because these women need help — and they need it right now.” Olympic gold medalists Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney, and Aly Raisman are among the women who qualify for compensation under the settlement, which is among the largest ever for a sexual abuse case. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Two explosions at Cúcuta’s Camilo Daza International Airport kill two law enforcement officials and one of the perpetrators. (Yahoo News) 

The descendants of the late Chief Justice José Abad Santos, Brigadier General Vicente Lim and civic worker and suffragette Josefa Llanes Escoda considered as national heroes during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines condemn the proposal of the redesigned version of the Philippine one thousand-peso note slated for release in 2022. (Rappler) 

Bangko Sentral Governor Benjamin Diokno defends the controversial redesign of the Philippine one thousand-peso note slated for release in 2022 despite opposition from various sectors. (The Philippine Star) 

At least 60 people are killed when a fuel tanker explodes in Cap-Haïtien, Haiti. (BBC News) 

Australian Deputy Prime Minister and National Party Leader Barnaby Joyce voices opposition to ruling Coalition partner the Liberal Party’s lack of intervention in the extradition of Australian publisher Julian Assange from the United Kingdom to the United States, arguing Assange has not broken any Australian laws, a position also held by the opposition Labor Party. Liberal backbencher Bridget Archer also joins the criticism of the Liberal leadership. (ABC News Australia) 

Ugandan politician Bobi Wine is placed under house arrest. (The East African) 

House Jan. 6 panel votes to hold Mark Meadows in contempt  The special House committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol attack voted Monday to recommend holding former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows in criminal contempt of Congress for defying the panel’s subpoena. The unanimous vote by the committee’s seven Democrats and two Republicans referred the matter to the full House, which is expected to take it up as soon as Tuesday. The committee released evidence indicating that Meadows was deeply involved in Trump’s push to overturn President Biden’s election victory. Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) read texts from Fox News hosts and Donald Trump Jr. urging Meadows to get the then-president to speak out against the mob violence. “These text messages leave no doubt,” Cheney said. “The White House knew exactly what was happening here at the Capitol.” THE WASHINGTON POST 

No U.S. troops to be punished for botched Afghanistan drone strike No U.S. military personnel will be punished for an August drone strike in Kabul that killed 10 Afghan civilians, including seven children, the Pentagon said Monday. A Pentagon review found that U.S. intelligence struck the wrong vehicle thinking it was carrying ISIS-K-led suicide bombers targeting the Kabul airport. The review concluded that the incident “did not violate any laws of war,” and left the decision on punishment to two senior commanders, who found no grounds for disciplinary action. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin reportedly agreed with the two senior officials. The driver of the car, Zemari Ahmadi, was killed. He worked for a California-based aid organization. Steven Kwon, the founder of the organization, called the decision not to hold anyone accountable “shocking.” NBC NEWS 

Harris announces investments to ease Central America migration root causes  Vice President Kamala Harris on Monday announced that seven private companies have committed to investments in Central America to help address the root causes of a wave of migrants seeking to enter the United States over the southern border. Harris, who is overseeing the Biden administration’s response to immigration issues, said PepsiCo, Mastercard, and Cargill were among the companies that had pledged to invest $1.2 billion in the region, which is struggling with poverty and violence. The news came as Harris faces increasing pressure to show results as recent staff departures have fueled concerns that her office is being hampered by internal turmoil. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Toyota changes course with faster shift to EVs Toyota said Tuesday it would accelerate its commitment to electric vehicles by offering 30 EV models by 2030 and selling 3.5 million battery EVs globally by 2030. The Japanese automaker also said it would make all of its luxury Lexus brand vehicles fully electric by 2035, with battery EVs accounting for all its Lexus sales in Europe, North America, and China by 2030. Toyota said it would fuel the push by investing $17.6 billion in battery technology. The announcement came as well-funded startups such as Lucid, Fisker, Rivian, and Canoo rush out new EVs and trailblazer Tesla ramps up mass production. Toyota President Akio Toyoda, once a skeptic about the shift to EVs, said the company wanted to reduce carbon emissions as fast as it can. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

MGM Resorts to sell Mirage to Hard Rock International for $1.1 billion MGM Resorts International has agreed to sell the Mirage hotel on the Las Vegas Strip to Hard Rock International for nearly $1.1 billion in cash, MGM said in a Monday news release. MGM said it would net $815 million in cash from the sale. The deal, which is subject to regulatory approval, is expected to close in the second half of 2022. MGM has owned the Mirage, one of the Strip’s first mega-resorts, for 21 years. It put the property up for sale in November, saying it didn’t want to invest any more money in it. MGM still owns about a dozen Las Vegas properties, including the Bellagio, MGM Grand, and Mandalay Bay. Under the deal, it will give Hard Rock a royalty-free license for the Mirage name for up to three years while the new owner works on rebranding it.  CNN 

Golden Globes announce nominations as if everything is totally fine The Hollywood Foreign Press Association had some real “this is fine” dog energy on Monday while announcing the nominations for this year’s Golden Globe Awards, despite getting canceled in both senses of the word. NBC already announced it wouldn’t air the Golden Globes in January following revelations that the HFPA had literally zero Black members. But somehow, the Golden Globes will still be handed out next month. Monday’s nominations included BelfastCodaDuneKing Richard, and The Power of the Dog up for Best Motion Picture – Drama. Meanwhile, Cyrano, Don’t Look UpLicorice Pizzatick, tick … Boom!, and West Side Story were nominated for Best Motion Picture — Musical or Comedy. Perhaps the highlight of the morning, though, was Snoop Dogg reading the nominations while seeming like he wanted to be absolutely anywhere else, even managing to mispronounce Ben Affleck’s name at one point. “Sorry about that, Ben,” he said. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Kim Kardashian passes the baby bar exam after failing it 3 times The fourth time was the charm for Kim Kardashian. Kardashian revealed Monday on Instagram she has finally passed the “baby bar” exam after two years of attempts. “Looking in the mirror, I am really proud of the woman looking back today in the reflection,” she wrote. The reality star explained that “in California, the way I’m studying law you need to take 2 bar exams, this was just the first one but with the harder pass rate.” She previously failed the exam three times, although to be fair, she had a pretty good excuse for not passing the third time; she noted she “did have COVID” then. She wrote on Instagram that her father, the late attorney Robert Kardashian, “would be so proud” — even though “I am told he was notorious for making fun of people who didn’t pass on their first attempt like he did.”  NBC NEWS 

Billie Eilish believes she ‘would have died’ from COVID-19 if she was unvaccinated  August 2021 was no time to die for Billie Eilish, and she credits the COVID-19 vaccine. Eilish revealed Monday on The Howard Stern Show that she battled COVID-19 for nearly two months earlier this year. “It was bad,” she said. “I didn’t die, and I wasn’t gonna die, but that does not take away from how miserable it was. I mean, it was terrible. I still have side effects.” Eilish said she was vaccinated at the time, though she stressed that it was “because of the vaccine that I’m fine,” and “I think if I weren’t vaccinated, I would have died.” She praised the COVID-19 vaccines as “f—ing amazing,” and she did note that her case wasn’t terrible in the grand “scheme of COVID.” Eilish previously urged her fans to get vaccinated, saying in a Vanity Fair interview, “It’s not just for you, you selfish b—h!”  UPROXX 

Naomie Harris alleges a ‘huge star’ groped her in an audition James Bond star Naomie Harris told the Mail on Sunday that a major actor once groped her during an audition. Harris, who played Moneypenny in the James Bond series, didn’t name the person, but she alleged he put his hand up her skirt while she was reading. “What was so shocking about it was the casting director was there and the director, and of course no one said anything because he was — he is — such a huge star,” she said. Harris said this was the only “#MeToo incident” she has experienced in her career, which she said makes her “very lucky given how rife that behaviour was.” She did, though, also recall a project she was on where “there was a #MeToo incident and there was no hesitation … [the perpetrator] was immediately removed.” So, she suggested, “now things have definitely changed.”  DEADLINE 

Monday,  December 13th, 2021 

One hundred and six members of an Ukrainian “neo-Nazi” youth group are arrested in Russia, suspected of planning attacks, including mass murders. Russia has accused Ukrainian intelligence of financially funding the group. Ukraine alleges that the arrests and subsequent Russian media reporting are staged as part of Russian intelligence measures. (Reuters) 

Harnaaz Sandhu of India is crowned Miss Universe in Eilat, Israel. (CNN) 

Three policemen are killed and 11 others injured as Jaish-e-Mohammed gunmen open fire against a bus carrying Indian security forces in Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir. (BBC News) 

‘West Side Story’ ticket sales disappoint over debut weekend Director Steven Spielberg’s reboot of the 1961 classic musical West Side Story made a disappointing box office debut, bringing in just $10.5 million in its opening weekend in North America. Film industry analysts had projected about $15 million in domestic ticket sales in the film’s first weekend. The lackluster opening came despite great reviews, an “A” CinemaScore from viewers, and early Oscar buzz. Other recent film adaptations of Broadway musicals, including Lin-Manuel Miranda’s In The Heights, also have had trouble at the box office. The newly emerged Omicron coronavirus variant might have discouraged some moviegoers from venturing out to see West Side Story, although audiences still might appear as the holidays arrive and people have more free time to go to the movies. CNN 

Biden approval on economy, pandemic hit new lows Public approval of President Biden’s handling of the economy and the coronavirus pandemic have fallen to a new low, according to an ABC News/Ipsos poll released Sunday. Fifty-three percent of Americans still approve of Biden’s pandemic response, but 45 percent now disapprove, the most since Biden took office. In March, 72 percent approved of Biden’s COVID-19 response. The decline came as the Biden administration tightens mask requirements and travel restrictions, and pushes vaccine booster shots to fight the new Omicron variant. As inflation rose to the highest rate in decades, approval of Biden’s approach to combating rising consumer prices came in at just 28 percent. In October, 53 percent approved of his handling of the economy, compared to 41 percent in the new poll. ABC NEWS

A vehicle carrying migrants crashes while trying avoid a police check in Morahalom, Hungary, killing seven people and wounding four more. The Serbian driver has been arrested. (BBC) 

Cyprus announces the approval of the COVID-19 vaccine administered for children ages 5 to 11 years and also allowing adults to receive booster dose two weeks sooner than six months after their second dose in order to curb the rise of COVID-19 cases following the first case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. (AP) 

The Norwegian government announces that alcohol sales at bars and restaurants will be banned and stricter rules will be implemented at schools due to the spread of the Omicron variant. The government also announces that the COVID-19 vaccine booster dose interval has been reduced to 4.5 months and that the military will assist with the booster dose campaign. (The Local Norway) 

China reports its first confirmed case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a person who travelled to Tianjin from overseas on December 9. (NDTV) 

New York state reimposes a mandatory indoor mask mandate for businesses that haven’t implemented a vaccination requirement amid threats of the COVID-19 surge and the Omicron variant in winter. (The New York Times) 

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett enters the Presidential Palace of the United Arab Emirates on his first official visit to the country. (NBC News) 

South Africa cancels a plan to forcibly deport 200,000 Zimbabweans from the country amid an outcry and concerns over perceived xenophobia and human rights abuses. (Bloomberg) 

Eight people are injured as a teenager detonates an improvised explosive device, in an attempt to blow himself up, at a Russian Orthodox school near a convent in Serpukhov, Russia. The perpetrator is identified as a student at the school, and is currently hospitalised in critical condition. (BBC News) 

Congolese president Felix Tshisekedi assures his country that the presence of Ugandan troops in the Congo is only to prevent the ongoing insurgency by the Allied Democratic Forces. The president has assured that Uganda’s intervention will be temporary. (Reuters) 

Miley Cyrus and Pete Davidson got matching tattoos Miley Cyrus and Pete Davidson once got matching ink live from New York — though only one of them still has it. This would have been in 2017, when Cyrus and Davidson starred in a Saturday Night Live sketch where they rap while dressed as babies. “It was a very dark time, I think, in our lives,” Davidson joked on The Tonight Show. Cyrus proclaims in the sketch “we babies,” and she told Jimmy Fallon that “for some reason,” they “looked at each other and were like, ‘that’s a great tattoo!’” So Davidson actually had his “tattoo guy” come by 30 Rock, and they both got matching tattoos that just say “we babies.” Davidson later had his lasered off, but Cyrus still has hers on her foot. “I stopped smoking weed the next day,” Cyrus said. “For a couple of years. Well, at least with Pete.” THE TONIGHT SHOW 

Kanye West begs Kim Kardashian to ‘run right back’ to him Speaking of Davidson, in case you didn’t get the memo that Kanye West really wants Kim Kardashian to break up with the Saturday Night Live star, he openly begged at a concert on Thursday night. While performing with Drake in Los Angeles at a show that Kardashian attended, West repeatedly sang, “I need you to run right back to me, baby! I need you to run right back to me!” If there was any doubt about what he was talking about, West added, “more specifically, Kimberly.” Kardashian filed for divorce from West earlier this year and is currently dating Davidson, but West has previously said that “I want us to be together” and claimed “the media” doesn’t want this to happen. Meanwhile, People cites a source as saying Kardashian “has moved on” but “she knows it’s difficult for Kanye to deal with.” TMZ

Netflix’s ‘Cowboy Bebop’ has already been canceled Netflix’s Cowboy Bebop is over faster than you can say “three, two, one, let’s jam.” The live-action remake of the classic anime has been canceled, a decision that brutally came less than three weeks after the show’s debut. The series starring John Cho was slammed with some tough reviews, and critics generally recommended viewers just watch the original anime. It was the latest example of Netflix debuting an expensive new series with big hopes for its future, only for it to completely flop and get quickly axed, a fate also met by the superhero show Jupiter’s Legacy earlier this year. Even so, it’s not often you see a high-profile streaming series debut just before Thanksgiving and not even make it to Christmas. Oh well — see you, space cowboy.  THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 

Taylor Swift to face trial over claim she ripped off ‘Shake It Off’ lyrics Taylor Swift wasn’t able to shake off a claim she copied lyrics for one of her most popular songs — at least not before it heads to a trial. A judge has declined to dismiss a copyright case against Swift over her song “Shake It Off,” which songwriters Sean Hall and Nathan Butler claim copied lyrics from their 3LW song “Playas Gon’ Play.” Both songs feature versions of the phrase “players gonna play” and “haters gonna hate,” and … that’s pretty much it. District Judge Michael W. Fitzgerald previously said these lyrics are “too brief, unoriginal, and uncreative” for a copyright case. But an appeals court reversed this ruling, and the judge said Swift will have to face a trial since the court can’t “determine that no reasonable juror could find substantial similarity of lyrical phrasing, word arrangement, or poetic structure between the two works.” We’ll have to see whether a jury thinks she did something badBBC

Peloton hits back over portrayal in ‘Sex and the City’ reboot Peloton on Sunday released a parody commercial in response to a scene in HBO Max’s Sex and the City reboot that sent the at-home fitness equipment company’s already struggling shares tumbling to a 52-week low last week. One of the main Sex and the City characters in And Just Like That…, Mr. Big, dies of a heart attack after a Peloton class. In the parody, Mr. Big, played by actor Chris Noth, sits in front of a fire with the show’s Peloton instructor, Jess King, and says, “Shall we take another ride?” Then actor and director Ryan Reynolds then says in a voiceover: “And just like that, the world was reminded that regular cycling stimulates and improves your heart, lungs, and circulation. … He’s alive.” CNBC 

Reuters: U.S. coronavirus death toll reaches 800,000 The United States coronavirus-related death toll reached 800,000 on Sunday, according to Reuters‘ count. The nation hit the grim milestone as public health officials brace for a potential surge of new cases as winter hits and people spend more time indoors, increasing the risk of infection at the same time that the highly infectious Omicron variant continues to spread. More than 450,000 people have died after contracting COVID-19 this year, more than did in all of 2020, despite the widespread availability of vaccines and new treatments. The highly transmissible Delta variant drove a summertime surge and continues to account for nearly all COVID deaths. Most of those dying now are unvaccinated. The U.S. has the highest COVID death rate in the Group of Seven wealthiest nations.REUTERS 

Boris Johnson expands booster access as coronavirus ‘tidal wave’ looms  British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced Sunday that his government would offer everyone 18 and older a coronavirus booster shot by the end of December to confront a potential “tidal wave” of infections due to the fast-spreading new Omicron variant. The government previously had planned the booster expansion by the end of January, but accelerated it as Omicron cases doubled every two to three days in the United Kingdom. “I’m afraid it is now clear that two doses of vaccine are simply not enough to give the level of protection we all need,” Johnson said. “But the good news is that our scientists are confident that with a third dose – a booster dose – we can all bring our level of protection back up.” THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Haitian president was preparing to unmask drug traffickers when killed  Haitian President Jovenel Moïse was compiling a list of political and business leaders linked to drug traffickers when he was assassinated in July, The New York Times reported Sunday. Moïse had planned to hand over the information to the United States, the Times said, citing four senior Haitian advisers and officials assigned to work on the dossier. Moïse’s wife, Martine, was wounded in the attack, and survived by pretending to be dead. She told the Times in her first interview after the assassination that the gunmen who killed her husband searched their bedroom, going through his files until someone said, “That’s it.” Some members of the hit squad who were captured confessed that one of their tasks was to retrieve the list of drug suspects, one of several issues the late president had been clashing over with powerful rivals.  THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Austria ends coronavirus lockdown for vaccinated people Austria on Sunday lifted coronavirus lockdown restrictions for vaccinated people, clearing the way for theaters, museums, and other cultural sites to resume operations. Some regions also gave restaurants and hotels the green light to open their doors. Stores will be able to reopen starting Monday. The Austrian government imposed the strict rules three weeks ago as the country faced a new wave of coronavirus infections, as did some other European nations. Restaurants still face an 11 p.m. curfew, and people still must wear masks on public transportation, in stores, and in other public places. Chancellor Karl Nehammer last week called the decision to let the country’s nine regions relax restrictions depending on local infections “opening with a seatbelt.” THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Chris Wallace leaves Fox News to join CNN streaming service  Fox News Sunday anchor Chris Wallace announced on his show this weekend that he is resigning after 18 years at the conservative cable network. “After 18 years — this is my final Fox News Sunday,” Wallace said on his final airing. “It is the last time — and I say this with real sadness — we will meet like this.” Wallace said he was leaving to start a “new adventure.” CNN said he would be joining CNN+, a streaming service launching early in 2022. Wallace will have a weekday show in which he will interview newsmakers in business, sports, and culture, as well as politics, which was his bread and butter at Fox. “I look forward to the new freedom and flexibility streaming affords in interviewing major figures across the news landscape — and finding new ways to tell stories,” Wallace said. FOX NEWS

North and South Korea, U.S., China agree ‘in principle’ to officially end Korean War  North and South Korea, the U.S., and China have agreed “in principle” to formally end the Korean War, South Korean President Moon Jae-in said Monday during a visit to Australia. The fighting stopped with an armistice in 1953, but never officially was declared over. For now, Moon said, “we are not able to sit down for a discussion or negotiation on the declarations” due to demands made by North Korea, which wants the U.S. to drop what it calls its “hostile policy” toward the North. North Korea has long objected to the presence of U.S. forces in South Korea, joint U.S.-South Korean training exercises, and U.S. sanctions imposed over North Korea’s nuclear weapons buildup. The U.S. State Department told Axios that U.S. officials are “prepared to meet without preconditions.”AXIOS

Mexican musical icon Vicente Fernández dies at 81 Mexican mariachi legend Vicente Fernández died Sunday, four months after a fall at his ranch in Guadalajara in his home state of Jalisco. He was 81. His Guillain-Barré syndrome had prevented his recovery, and he had been placed on a ventilator in a hospital. The Grammy winner, who was known as the king of the rancheras, started his career as a street performer and went on to sell more than 65 million albums and make more than 35 movies. His hits included “El rey,” “Volver, volver,” “Por tu maldito amor,” and “Para siempre.” He won three Grammys and eight Latin Grammys, and, in 1998, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. This year, singer Lupita Castro accused him of sexual abuse, which he denied. NBC LOS ANGELES

The End

12.12.2021

Sunday, December 12th, 2021

Three Hamas members are killed and six more injured during a dispute with Fatah gunmen in Tyre, Lebanon, at the funeral of a Hamas member killed two days ago during an accidental explosion at the Burj al-Shemali camp. (Al Jazeera) 

The death toll from the tornado outbreak in Kentucky, United States, increases to 80, making it the deadliest tornado outbreak to occur in the state. Fourteen people are also killed in other U.S. states, with some towns being completely destroyed. (BBC News) 

The United Kingdom raises its COVID-19 Alert level to Level 3 due to the rapid spread of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant, which has resulted in 3,137 cases. (France 24) 

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, the Philippines’ central bank, issues a statement that it is currently monitoring an increase in complaints on social media regarding Banco de Oro clients losing money and having their accounts hacked. (Reuters) 

Citizens in New Caledonia vote against independence and choose to remain part of France. Pro-independence parties boycotted the referendum in order to protest the alleged lack of time to campaign. (RNZ) 

At the 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Max Verstappen wins the Driver’s Championship, while Mercedes wins the Constructors’ Championship. (The Guardian) 

Secret drone strike cell showed reckless disregard for civilian casualties, New York Times report claims A classified Delta Force cell that coordinated strikes against Islamic State targets showed reckless disregard for civilian casualties by regularly circumventing safeguard procedures and engaging in deceptive practices, according to a report published Sunday by The New York Times. The cell, known as Talon Anvil, worked out of nondescript offices in Iraq and Syria. Authority to order airstrikes was delegated to enlisted personnel. High-ranking intelligence officers became skeptical of the cell’s methods as civilian casualties mounted. Talon Anvil members reportedly misclassified almost all strikes as defensive in order to sidestep waiting periods imposed on offensive strikes and even took to averting the drones’ cameras after launch in order to hide evidence of civilian deaths.  THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Anne Rice, vampire novelist, dead at 80 Anne Rice, author of the best-selling Interview with a Vampire and other novels, died Saturday. Her son, author Christopher Rice, announced her death on Twitter and Facebook, expressing his hope that Anne “is now experiencing firsthand the glorious answers to many great spiritual and cosmic questions.” Anne Rice was the author of the 13-book Vampire Chronicles series, which starred the iconic vampire Lestat. She also wrote erotic fiction and, after returning to the Catholic Church 1998, two novels about the early life of Jesus Christ. By the end of her life, Rice had distanced herself from Catholicism and identified as a secular humanist. She will be laid to rest in New Orleans. BBC 

G7 to Russia: invading Ukraine would have ‘massive consequences’ “Russia should be in no doubt that further military aggression against Ukraine would have massive consequences and severe cost,” the G7 nations said in a draft statement released Sunday. Around 94,000 Russian troops have massed on the Ukrainian border, and intelligence estimates suggest that the invasion could come as early as January 2022 and involve 175,000 troops. CIA Director William Burns warned Monday that the build-up of military forces could allow Russia to act “in a very sweeping way.” The G7 comprises the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan. REUTERS 

Israeli PM makes groundbreaking visit to UAE Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett is scheduled to travel to the United Arab Emirates Sunday, marking the first ever visit to the UAE by an Israeli premier. This visit comes after the UAE signed the Abraham Accords last year, normalizing relations between the two nations. Bennett says he plans to discuss “economic and regional issues that will contribute to prosperity, welfare and strengthening stability between the countries” during his Monday meeting with Emirati Crown Prince Mohamed bin Zayed. Also on the agenda will be how best to respond to an increasingly hostile Iran that seems bent on acquiring nuclear weapons. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Trump blasts Netanyahu, praises Obama Former President Barack Obama is “smart and sharp,” but sowed “tremendous division” during his time in office, former President Donald Trump said at an event in Florida Saturday. Trump also said he “liked” Obama. This is a major shift in rhetoric for Trump, who spent years claiming his predecessor was born in Kenya and was “the most ignorant president in our history.” Even as he warms up to Obama, Trump appears to have soured on his longtime ally former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. An Israeli outlet released excerpts Friday from an interview in which Trump blasted “Bibi” for congratulating then-President-elect Biden on his victory before Trump had conceded. “F— him,” Trump said of Netanyahu. FOX NEWS

In SNL cold open, ‘Fauci’ presents COVID Christmas showcase Kate McKinnon played Dr. Anthony Fauci in the latest Saturday Night Live cold open, providing public service announcements for dealing with the Omicron variant with a little help — or hinderance — from Sen. Ted Cruz (Aidy Bryant), Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene (Cecily Strong) and Lauren Boebert (Chloe Fineman), and the Cuomo brothers (Pete Davidson as Andrew and Andrew Dismukes as Chris). “Do people still think I’m sexy, or are we done with that?” McKinnon-as-Fauci asked before explaining that the new Omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus is not as dangerous as was initially feared and that those who have been vaccinated and boosted can safely “unclench.” FOX NEWS

Saturday, December 11th, 2021 

Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz says he has instructed the Israel Defense Forces to prepare military options for potential use against Iran, that the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action yielded “no progress”, and that world powers “understand that the Iranians are playing games”. (Haaretz) 

At midnight, terrestrial transport between Argentina and Uruguay reopens as buses resume service to border crossings between the two countries. Both countries require a proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test in order to board the buses and enter both countries. (Misiones Cuatro) 

A court in Benin sentences opposition leader Reckya Madougou to 20 years in prison after finding her guilty of “financing terrorism”. The case has been highly controversial, with a judge in the case fleeing to France and denouncing the case as “entirely politically motivated”. (The Washington Post) 

U.K. foreign secretary threatens ‘severe consequences’ if Russia invades Ukraine  Invading Ukraine would be a “strategic mistake” that would lead to “severe consequences for Russia,” United Kingdom Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said Friday ahead of a weekend G7 meeting in Liverpool. Around 94,000 Russian troops have massed on the Ukrainian border, and intelligence estimates suggest that the invasion could come as early as January 2022 and involve 175,000 troops. Truss urged European leaders to reduce their dependence on Russian natural gas and suggested that the U.K. might take steps to lock Russian money out of British financial markets. When asked if she could rule out a military response, Truss said the U.K. is working to bolster Ukraine’s “defense and security capability.” BBC 

Omicron reaches Taiwan and is on track to surpass Delta in Europe Officials from Britain and Denmark said Friday that the new Omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus is expected to become the dominant strain in their countries within the next week. According to the U.K. Health Security Agency, Omicron spreads more rapidly than Delta, which currently accounts for the greatest number of cases. Taiwanese officials announced Saturday that a woman returning from the small southern African country of Eswatini — also known as Swaziland — tested positive for the Omicron variant. This is Taiwan’s first confirmed case of Omicron. ABC NEWS

Inflation rate hits 39-year high Consumer prices rose in November at an annual rate of 6.8 percent, the U.S. Labor Department reported Friday. This marks the most rapid rate of inflation since 1982. Wages rose only 4.3 percent last month. Inflation has been bad for the President Biden’s poll numbers, and observers suggest this latest report could prompt him to agree to further cuts to his massive spending bill in order to get it passed by Christmas.  THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Palestinians vote in municipal elections as support for Abbas slips  Palestinians voted Saturday in municipal elections in the West Bank as Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas grows increasingly unpopular. No elections were held for Palestine’s legislature or presidency, and the last legislative elections were held in 2006. Abbas was elected to a four-year term in 2005 and has not faced voters since. Over 400,000 Palestinians in 154 villages were able to cast votes, but municipal elections were canceled in major West Bank cities. Hamas, which is feuding with Abbas’ Fatah party, boycotted elections in Gaza. Hamas has seen a surge in support after fighting a brief war with Israel in May, and polling suggests that the Islamist faction is now more popular than Fatah. REUTERS 

Mexico announces crackdown on people smugglers after deadly crash Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebard announced the creation of a new working group to combat people smuggling after a truck crash on a Mexican highway killed more than 50 migrants Thursday. More than 150 people were packed into the tractor-trailer, which flipped when its driver attempted to take a turn too sharply. The migrants reportedly paid at least $2,500 each to be driven from southern to central Mexico, after which they would have had to hire other smugglers to complete their journey to the U.S. border.  The working group comprises Mexico, the U.S., Guatemala, the Dominican Republic, and Ecuador. Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has blamed the migrant crisis on poverty and a lack of jobs. BBC

Bosnian Serbs vote for greater autonomy, stoking fears of renewed conflict Lawmakers in the lower house of the Republika Srpska passed a non-binding resolution Friday that would decouple the semi-autonomous republic from Bosnia’s tax system, military, and judicial system. The Republika Srpska — also known as the Bosnian Serb Republic — was set up under international auspices following the cessation of bloody ethnic strife in 1995. Lawmakers who opposed the measure warned that it was a step back toward the dark days of the Bosnian War. Milorad Dodik, the Serb member of Bosnia’s three-person interethnic presidency, favors removing the framework established by the 1995 Dayton Accords. “I don’t believe [Bosnia] can survive because it does not have an internal capacity to survive,” he said. REUTERS 

Prosecution rests in Ghislaine Maxwell trial The prosecution rested Friday after two weeks of dramatic and emotional testimony in the sex-trafficking trial of former Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell. Four alleged victims, two of whom were underage at the time, took the stand to accuse Maxwell of grooming them for Epstein and pressuring them into unwanted sexual acts. The defense will begin to make its case Monday. So far, Maxwell’s lawyers have attempted to poke holes in the witnesses’ stories and suggested Maxwell is being made into a scapegoat for Epstein’s crimes. Epstein was awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges when he died in prison in 2019 under suspicious circumstances. His death was officially ruled a suicide. BBC 

Friday,  December 10th, 2021 

The Bundestag and Bundesrat approve a revised Infectious Disease Protection Act that would require healthcare workers and other health professionals to be vaccinated or to have recovered from COVID-19. The new legislation also requires the closure of bars, restaurants and theatres in high-risk areas, as well as the suspension of cultural and sporting events in those areas. (Deutsche Welle) 

The Czech government announces the compulsory COVID-19 vaccination for people aged above 60 years, as well as healthcare workers, police officers, firefighters and the military, beginning from March 1, as the country experiences the world’s highest infection rate. (The Times of India) 

Nicaragua severs diplomatic relations with Taiwan and establishes diplomatic relations with the People’s Republic of China. (The Hill) 

The London High Court accepts an appeal from the U.S. government to extradite WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to the United States. The judge cited that certain conditions have been met for his decision. However, the extradition will not take place immediately as Assange has a right to appeal the decision. Assange’s fiancée says that they will appeal the decision “at the earliest possible moment”. (CNBC) 

The End Monday 

Biden urges world leaders to ‘lock arms’ to defend democracy President Biden on Thursday called on fellow world leaders participating in the first White House Summit for Democracy to “lock arms” to show that democracies can deliver progress better than autocracies. Biden said global democratic institutions are under assault, and he called for leaders everywhere to step up efforts to strengthen democracies. “This is an urgent matter,” Biden said as he opened the two-day virtual summit. “The data we’re seeing is largely pointing in the wrong direction.” The video gathering came as the U.S. and key allies are warning Russia that it will face strong sanctions if it invades Ukraine. Russia and China, adversaries who were not invited to participate in the summit, accused the Biden administration of trying to “stoke up ideological confrontation and a rift in the world” with a “Cold-War mentality.” THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

At least 53 migrants die in tractor-trailer accident in Mexico tractor-trailer full of migrants crashed Thursday in southern Mexico, killing at least 53 people. Mexican authorities said at least 54 others were injured. The crash happened in Chiapas state near the Guatemalan border. “According to survivors, the majority appeared to be citizens of Guatemala,” Luis Manuel García Moreno, the state director of civil protection, said in an interview broadcast on Foro TV. He said a mechanical problem appeared to have triggered the crash. The Biden administration has called for Mexico to curb the flow of Central American migrants toward the U.S.-Mexico border, and smugglers have increasingly used tractor-trailers to avoid detection. Guatemala’s top human rights official, Jordán Rodas, said 200 migrants might have been packed into the truck that crashed. THE WASHINGTON POST 

N.Y. attorney general requests Trump deposition in civil fraud case New York State Attorney General Letitia James has asked to question former President Donald Trump under oath in an investigation into possible civil fraud at the Trump Organization, Trump’s property company. James’ office is looking into whether Trump’s company fraudulently reported property valuations, inflating them to get better loans and under-reporting them to lower tax bills. James could file a lawsuit against Trump if she finds evidence of fraud, but couldn’t bring criminal charges. But James’ office also is collaborating in a criminal investigation being led by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. that is seeking to determine whether Trump was involved in a pattern of criminal fraud by giving lenders false property values. James on Thursday ended her campaign for governor as the Trump investigations intensified. CNBC 

Senate passes bill clearing way for debt ceiling increase The Senate on Thursday passed a bill temporarily changing the chamber’s rules to prevent a filibuster so Democrats can raise the debt ceiling with a simple majority vote, preventing a potentially catastrophic default. Ten Republicans joined Democrats in the 59-35 vote. The House approved the measure Tuesday, so it now goes to President Biden for his signature. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned Congress earlier this month that the federal government could run out of money to pay its bills by Dec. 15. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said passing the one-time rule change was “crucial” to help avoid “the prospect of a catastrophic, calamitous default on our sovereign debt. This is the responsible path forward — no brinkmanship, no default on the debt, no risk of another recession.” ABC NEWS 

Appeals court rejects Trump attempt to block records from Jan. 6 committee The federal appeals court for the D.C. Circuit on Thursday rejected former President Donald Trump’s request to block the National Archives from giving his White House records to the special House committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol attack. The three-judge panel’s decision set up an emergency Supreme Court review. The judges said Trump had given them no reason to override President Biden’s decision not to invoke executive privilege to keep the documents secret. They said the White House and Congress agreed there was a legitimate need for the documents because the rioters, who sought to prevent lawmakers from certifying Trump’s loss to Biden, threatened the peaceful transfer of power, and there’s “a direct linkage between the former president and the events of the day.” THE WASHINGTON POST 

’19 Kids and Counting’ star Josh Duggar convicted on child pornography charges A federal jury in Arkansas on Thursday found former reality TV star Josh Duggar guilty of downloading and possessing child pornography. Duggar, 33, faces up to 20 years in prison and fines up to $250,000 for one count of receiving child pornography and one count of possession. Duggar, 33, will be sentenced next year. TLC canceled the Duggar family’s show, 19 Kids and Counting, in 2015 after revelations that Duggar had allegedly molested four of his sisters and a babysitter. Authorities investigated the case in 2006 after a tip from a family friend but concluded that no charges could be filed because the statute of limitations had expired. Duggar’s parents said he had confessed to fondling the girls, and apologized. He later confessed to a pornography addiction. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Jury finds ex-‘Empire’ star Jussie Smollett guilty of staging fake hate crime A jury on Thursday found actor Jussie Smollett guilty on five of six felony counts of disorderly conduct for falsely reporting to Chicago police that he was the victim of a hate crime three years ago. Prosecutors said the former Empire star arranged for two men to attack him, wrap a noose around his neck, and douse him with bleach while yelling racist and homophobic slurs, and lied when he reported the staged attack to police. Smollett took the stand and told jurors “there was no hoax.” Smollett could get up to three years in prison for the charge of a false crime report. Cook County Judge James Linn will have discretion to impose concurrent or consecutive sentences. Defense attorneys said they would appeal. CNN 

American cuts international flights, citing Boeing Dreamliner delays  American Airlines plans to cut back on international flights next summer due to delays in deliveries of new Boeing 787 Dreamliners. Production problems have hampered Boeing’s efforts to get the popular wide-body jets to airlines for more than a year, leaving the aircraft maker with more than $25 billion of jets in its inventory. “Without these wide-bodies, we simply won’t be able to fly as much internationally as we had planned,” Vasu Raja, American’s chief revenue officer, wrote in a memo American released after The Wall Street Journal reported on the cuts. American plans to halt flights to Edinburgh; Shannon, Ireland; and Hong Kong next summer, and reduce flights to Shanghai, Beijing, and Sydney, according to an internal airline memo the Journal viewed. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

N.Y. attorney general requests Trump deposition in civil fraud case New York State Attorney General Letitia James has asked to question former President Donald Trump under oath in an investigation into possible civil fraud at the Trump Organization, Trump’s property company. James’ office is looking into whether Trump’s company fraudulently reported property valuations, inflating them to get better loans and under-reporting them to lower tax bills. In the civil case, James could file a lawsuit against Trump if she finds evidence of fraud, but she couldn’t bring criminal charges. But James’ office also is collaborating in a criminal investigation being led by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. that is seeking to determine whether Trump was involved in a pattern of criminal fraud by giving lenders false property values. James on Thursday ended her campaign for governor as the Trump investigations intensified. CNBC 

Starbucks workers in Buffalo vote to become company’s 1st unionized store Starbucks workers at a Buffalo, New York, store voted to unionize on Thursday, a first in the coffee giant’s 50-year history. The National Labor Relations Board said that workers at one of Starbucks’ three stores in Buffalo voted 19-8 in favor of a union. A second store voted 12-8 against unionizing, although the union said it was considering contesting that vote. Both sides challenged the balloting in a third store. Starbucks and the union, Workers United, have five days to submit any objections. The company has aggressively tried to keep out unions, and it spent months urging baristas to vote against organized labor representation. The Buffalo vote marked the latest sign of renewed strength for organized labor after decades of waning influence. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Thursday, December 9th, 2021 

PKK fighters kill three Turkish soldiers in northern Iraq, before Turkish fighter jets reportedly kill six PKK fighters during airstrikes. (Al Jazeera) 

A tractor-trailer transporting more than 100 illegal migrants – mostly Guatemalans and Hondurans – crashes in Chiapas, Mexico, killing at least 53 people. (The Washington Post) 

Hong Kong mandates usage of its COVID-19 tracing app for all adults under the age of 65. The app logs a person’s presence at 18 types of premises, including bars and restaurants, and enables tracing of infections if an outbreak is reported. (CNA) 

Singapore reports its first locally transmitted case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a 24-year-old airport employee with no recent travel history. (South China Morning Post) 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that people as young as 16 years receive a booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. This comes after the FDA authorized the usage of the Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine as a booster dose for people in that age group. (CBS News) 

The Austrian government announces plans to make COVID-19 vaccination compulsory for the general population, setting a minimum age of 14 years and requiring unvaccinated persons to pay fines of up to 3,600 euros every three months. The rules will be in effect from February 1 until January 2024. (Reuters) 

The World Health Organization recommends that people who are immunocompromised or received an inactivated COVID-19 vaccine should get their COVID-19 booster dose due to reducement of vaccine effectiveness against virus variants. (The Hill) 

An mRNA vaccine candidate against the human immunodeficiency virus, developed by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Moderna and other institutes, shows a 79% efficacy rate and no major side effects in animal trials on rhesus macaques, according to a peer-reviewed paper published in Nature Medicine(France 24) 

The government announces that it will begin increasing the legal age for purchasing tobacco by one year every year beginning in 2025, effectively preventing future generations from legally purchasing tobacco products. The plan also involves decreasing the nicotine content of tobacco, limiting licenses for the sale of tobacco, and increasing funding for anti-addiction services. Electronic cigarettes, which are more popular among younger generations in New Zealand, will not be subject to the ban. (The Guardian) 

The Supreme Court of the Philippines partially upholds provisions of the contentious Anti-Terrorism Act of 2020 while declaring unconstitutional the designation of terrorists on the request of foreign jurisdictions as well as the qualifier on harmful dissent. (Rappler) 

American actor Jussie Smollett is convicted on five counts of disorderly conduct for lying to police after staging a racist and anti-gay hate crime on himself in 2019. (AP) 

The End Friday 

3 Northeast states tap National Guard to help fight COVID surge The governors of three Northeast states — Maine, New York, and New Hampshire — are calling on the National Guard to help address surging COVID-19 cases overwhelming hospitals. The New York National Guard announced Wednesday it deployed 120 medics and medical technicians to a dozen long-term care facilities across the state in response to a call issued by Gov. Kathy Hochul due to staffing shortages. Hochul said she might also deploy Guard members to hospitals that are running out of beds. Maine Gov. Janet Mills activated the National Guard after a spike in cases strained hospitals. New Hampshire Gov. Christopher Sununu called on the Guard and the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the National Guard for help “preparing for the winter surge.” CNN 

U.S. President Joe Biden rules out deploying American troops unilaterally to Ukraine in order to deter a potential Russian invasion, saying that the option “was not on the table”. (Reuters) 

Senate approves resolution against Biden vaccine mandate for big employers The Senate on Wednesday approved a resolution calling for the repeal of President Biden’s mandate on large businesses to require coronavirus vaccinations or regular testing for their employees. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) called the mandate “blatant overreach.” Two Democrats — Sens. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) and Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) — voted with all the Senate’s Republicans to pass the measure. It is unlikely to become law, because it faces an uphill battle to get a vote in the Democratic-controlled House, and Biden is certain to veto it if it reaches his desk. Biden said in September that he wanted the Labor Department to make businesses with 100 or more employees require vaccinations or weekly testing, and wear masks. A federal appeals court has temporarily blocked the rule, which was set to take effect Jan. 4. NEW YORK POST 

4.2 million people left their jobs in October About 4.2 million Americans quit their jobs in October as people continued to seek new opportunities in a changing pandemic-era economy, according to a report released Wednesday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The figure marked a slight decline from the record of 4.4 million in September, which broke the previous high of 4.3 million set in August. The survey found that there were 11 million job openings in the country, just under a record set in July. “This report once again shows strong demand from employers leading to a hot labor market,” Nick Bunker, an economist at Indeed, wrote Wednesday. “The bargaining table is tilted more toward workers than it has been in the past. … The question now is whether the Omicron variant cools down in the labor market.” THE WASHINGTON POST 

Biden calls for making federal government carbon neutral by 2050 President Biden signed an executive order Wednesday calling for making the United States government carbon neutral by 2050. The Biden administration said it planned to pursue the goal by spending billions to replace its 600,000 cars and trucks with an all-electric fleet, buy power to support cleaner energy, and make more efficient federal buildings. Biden’s order aims to use the government’s buying power to slash its carbon emissions by 65 percent by 2030. The government would stop buying gas-powered vehicles by 2035, and make most buildings owned or leased by the federal government carbon neutral a decade later. Left-leaning groups said Biden wasn’t going far enough, while conservatives like Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) said his plan would hurt states with big fossil-fuel reserves. NBC NEWS 

Cuba reports its first case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a person who had travelled from Mozambique. (The Straits Times) 

The government of New Zealand announces it will begin increasing the legal age for purchasing tobacco by one year every year starting in 2025, effectively preventing future generations from ever legally purchasing tobacco products. This plan also involves decreasing the nicotine content of tobacco, limiting licenses for its sale, and increasing funding to addiction services. Electronic cigarettes, which are more popular among younger generations in New Zealand, will not be subject to the ban. (The Guardian) 

The Supreme Court of the Philippines partially upholds provisions of the contentious Anti-Terrorism Act of 2020 while declaring unconstitutional on the designation of terrorists upon the request by foreign jurisdictions and a qualifier on harmful dissent. (Rappler) 

U.S. surpasses 200 million vaccinations as Omicron spreads The United States’ vaccination push has reached a major milestone, with more than 200 million Americans now fully vaccinated against the coronavirus. The total amounts to more than 60 percent of the population. Concerns about the spread of the newly discovered Omicron variant have increased demand for shots, although the current rate of 1.78 million doses per day is far below the April 13 peak of 3.38 million. Scientists and the public have expressed concerns that the fast-spreading new strain could be resistant to existing vaccines. Pfizer and BioNTech said Wednesday that laboratory tests showed that Omicron partially evaded their COVID-19 vaccine, but three doses — two initial shots and a booster — provided significant protection from the new strain. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Mark Meadows sues to block Jan. 6 committee subpoenas Former Trump White House chief of staff Mark Meadows filed a lawsuit Wednesday asking a federal court to block a subpoena for his cooperation from the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by a mob of former President Donald Trump’s supporters. Meadows also named House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) in the lawsuit. The filing came after the Jan. 6 committee indicated that it would pursue a vote to ask the Justice Department to determine whether to charge Meadows with criminal contempt for refusing to give a deposition about the riot. Meadows says the subpoenas are “overly broad and unduly burdensome.” He also claims the committee “lacks lawful authority to seek and to obtain” the information it’s demanding. CNN 

U.K. toughens COVID restrictions in response to new variant British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Wednesday tightened COVID-19 restrictions, ordering people in England to work from home, wear masks in public, and show proof of vaccination as part of an effort to fight the spread of the newly discovered Omicron coronavirus variant. Critics called Johnson’s “Plan B” a “hammer blow” to London restaurants and shops that were hoping Christmas sales would help them recover from the damage caused by the pandemic. As Johnson imposed the tougher rules, he faced criticism, even from lawmakers in his own party, over accusations that his staff attended a party at Downing Street during last year’s Christmas lockdown. In Finland, Prime Minister Sanna Marin apologized as she faced a backlash for going clubbing in Helsinki last weekend after being exposed to COVID-19, although she has tested negative. REUTERS 

California attorney general investigates Torrance officers’ racist, homophobic texts California Attorney General Rob Bonta on Wednesday launched a review of excessive force and discriminatory conduct allegations in the Torrance Police Department, after the surfacing of racist and homophobic text messages exchanged by more than a dozen current and former officers. In the texts, officers joked about lynching Black people, “gassing” Jewish people, assaulting gay people, and lying during the investigation into a police shooting, the Los Angeles Times reported. The comments have led to the dismissal of at least 85 criminal cases involving the officers. The department’s new chief of police, Jay Hart, requested the review after the texts were found during an investigation into two former Torrance officers accused of painting a swastika on an impounded vehicle. LOS ANGELES TIMES 

Court sentences Scott Peterson to life after death sentence overturned Superior Court Judge Anne-Christine Massullo of California resentenced Scott Peterson to life in prison on Wednesday, months after the state Supreme Court overturned his death sentence. The decision came nearly 17 years after Peterson was convicted of killing his wife, Laci Peterson, and their unborn child, and dumping them in San Francisco Bay. Peterson, who is not eligible for parole, also will serve a concurrent 15-year sentence for the death of the unborn child. Three of Laci Peterson’s relatives testified during the hearing that he was “evil” and a “coward.” Peterson didn’t say anything. His attorney said was innocent. SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE 

Kim Kardashian thanks Kanye West at the People’s Choice Awards Kim Kardashian accepted a Fashion Icon award at the People’s Choice Awards Tuesday night, giving a shout-out to her ex-husband, the artist formerly known as Kanye West. “To Kanye, even,” she said, “for really introducing me to the fashion world.” The comments came after Kardashian was confirmed to be dating Saturday Night Live star Pete Davidson. Meanwhile, West — who has legally changed his name to Ye — has claimed she is “still my wife” despite their divorce because he has “never even seen the papers.” In her speech, Kardashian thanked the designers who have “really believed in me,” or at least, she quipped, who were “talked into it by getting a call from Kanye.” Sadly, she ended her speech before ever using the phrase “thank Ye very much.”  PEOPLE 

Jessica Chastain defends Jeremy Strong against ‘incredibly one sided’ profile He’s still her number one boy. Jessica Chastain came to Succession star Jeremy Strong’s defense on Twitter in response to a recent profile of him from The New Yorker, which discussed his acting methods. “[He’s] a lovely person,” Chastain wrote of her Molly’s Game co-star. “Very inspiring & passionate about his work. The profile that came out on him was incredibly one sided. Don’t believe everything you read folks. Snark sells but maybe [it’s] time we move beyond it.” The New Yorker mentioned, among other things, the “unusual lengths” Strong sometimes goes to while acting, and it quoted his co-star Kieran Culkin as saying this doesn’t necessarily “help me.” Still, some were a bit confused by Chastain’s passionate slam of the profile, with Variety editor Kate Aurthur replying, “Wait, what? It was an incredibly nuanced portrait of him.”  THE WRAP 

Jennifer Aniston says she’s been ‘bullied’ over COVID-19 vaccines Give her a break, anti-vaxxers! Jennifer Aniston told The Hollywood Reporter she’s faced some pushback for being in favor of COVID-19 vaccination. After noting that she’s exclusively been going to restaurants that require patrons to be vaccinated, she shared, “You know, someone literally called me a ‘liberal Vax-hole’ the other day. I don’t understand the disconnect right now, being bullied for wanting people not to be sick? I mean, that’s what we’re talking about.” Aniston previously revealed to InStyle she “lost a few people in my weekly routine” who refused to get vaccinated or reveal their vaccine status. The Friends star told the Reporter she does “think we’re getting closer” to the end of the pandemic, though, adding she’s “excited to get on a plane again — and terrified as well.” Hey, if it’s too much to handle, you can always get off the plane.  THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 

Wednesday, December 8th, 2021 

The death toll from the eruption of the Semeru volcano in Indonesia increases to 39. (France 24) 

China’s National Medical Products Administration approves the use of the neutralizing antibody cocktail developed by BRII Biosciences to treat COVID-19 in adults and teenagers. (Financial Post) 

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announces new “Plan B” restrictions that include working from home for those who can beginning on December 13, and an extension of mandatory face mask wearing to more indoor venues beginning on December 10. The restrictions also include usage of the mandatory NHS COVID pass in order to enter nightclubs and other venues with large crowds, as well as daily tests for people who had contact with a person who tested positive for the Omicron variant. (Sky News) 

The Danish government announces that schoolchildren will be sent home early from December 15 and nightlife establishments will close on December 10 due to persistently high number of COVID-19 cases. (Daily Sabah) 

The South African Health Products Regulatory Authority approves the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine booster dose for people over the age of 18 that can be administered six months after their second dose, as well as immunocompromised people aged above 12 years that can be administered 28 days after their second dose. (BusinessTech) 

Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom join a U.S.-led diplomatic boycott of the upcoming Winter Olympic Games in Beijing citing China’s human rights abuses in the Xinjiang region and Beijing’s ongoing freeze on ministerial contact with Canberra.  (Politico)  

The End

12.08.2021

2021 Wednesday, December 8th, 2021 

The bones of over 100 Indigenous Australian Kaurna people are repatriated from the South Australian Museum and buried in a ceremony in Adelaide. (The Guardian) 

General Bipin Rawat and 12 other people are killed as their Indian Air Force Mi-17V-5 crashes near Coonoor, Tamil Nadu, while flying towards Wellington from Sulur Air Force Station. Another person is injured. (BBC News) 

India’s Serum Institute will halve the production of its COVID-19 vaccine because it has no fresh orders, says its top-ranking executive. (BBC News) 

Romania lifts its nighttime curfew and mandatory outdoor face masks, as well as allow shops and restaurants to close at 10 p.m. and making entry of non-essential venues allowed for those having negative COVID-19 test as the number of cases declines. (Reuters) 

The Court of Appeal of Malaysia upholds the conviction against former Prime Minister Najib Razak of all seven counts of abuse of power, money laundering and criminal breach of trust for his involvement in the 1MDB scandal. (CNA) 

The Bundestag elects Olaf Scholz as the new Chancellor of Germany, replacing Angela Merkel after 16 years in the office. (BBC News) 

Australia and Canada join a U.S.-led diplomatic boycott of the upcoming Winter Olympic Games in Beijing citing China’s human rights abuses in the Xinjiang region and Beijing’s ongoing freeze on ministerial contact with Canberra. (Yahoo! News)  

Biden meets virtually with Putin in showdown over Ukraine President Biden met with Russian President Vladimir Putin in a secure video call on Tuesday and warned him that the United States and its allies would impose harsh sanctions if Russia invades Ukraine. The call came as Russia gathers troops near its border with Ukraine, and fears mount that it plans to invade, which Moscow denies. White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said Biden told Putin the U.S. was prepared to hit Russia harder economically than it did in an unsuccessful 2014 attempt to stop Russia from annexing Crimea. The Kremlin described the talk as “candid and businesslike,” saying Putin told Biden that NATO was the one “making dangerous attempts to expand its presence on the Ukrainian territory” and near Russia’s borders. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

House passes debt-ceiling plan after Senate leaders reach deal The House on Tuesday passed a bill seeking to pave the way to prevent a damaging default after Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) reached a deal to create a one-time process to let Democrats raise the debt ceiling without Republican votes. The legislation needs 60 votes to pass in the evenly divided, 50-50 Senate, but McConnell reportedly is confident 10 Republicans will support it. If the measure is approved, the Senate will be able to pass an increase to the national borrowing limit with a simple majority, avoiding the threat of a GOP filibuster. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has warned that the government could face a catastrophic, unprecedented default on Dec. 15 if the debt limit isn’t raised. CNN 

Surgeon general warns of youth mental-health crisis Surgeon General Vivek Murthy on Tuesday issued a public health advisory calling for action to address a looming youth mental-health crisis made worse by the coronavirus outbreak. Since the pandemic hit in early 2020, symptoms of depression and anxiety have doubled. A quarter of young people now are experiencing symptoms of depression, and 20 percent show signs of anxiety, according to Murthy’s advisory. Early this year, emergency department visits for suspected suicide attempts were up by 51 percent for adolescent girls, and 4 percent higher for adolescent boys, compared to the same period two years earlier, according to research Murthy cited. “It would be a tragedy if we beat back one public health crisis only to allow another to grow in its place,” Murthy wrote. LOS ANGELES TIMES 

France says it arrested Jamal Khashoggi murder suspect France on Tuesday detained Khalid Aedh al-Otaibi, one of the Saudi men accused of participating in the killing of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist and Washington Post columnist killed in Turkey three years ago. Otaibi was arrested on a Turkish warrant as he prepared to depart for Saudi Arabia from Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris. He is one of 17 Saudis the United States sanctioned in 2018 on suspicion of being members of the team that killed and dismembered Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, where he went to get documents he needed ahead of his planned marriage. Otaibi’s detention is the first international arrest in the case. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Olaf Scholz replaces long-serving Angela Merkel as Germany’s chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany’s center-left Social Democratic Party took over as the country’s chancellor on Wednesday, ending 16 years of conservative rule under Angela Merkel. Scholz served as vice-chancellor and finance minister in Merkel’s government and has promised continuity and a steady hand as Europe’s largest economy faces challenges ranging from the climate crisis to a more confrontational Russia. Scholz was confirmed with a clear majority in the Bundestag lower house of parliament. He will lead a three-party coalition that includes the Greens and the business-friendly Free Democrats. The new government plans to aggressively fight climate change with such measures as phasing out coal early and focusing on renewable energy, although their first task is addressing a surge of coronavirus cases. REUTERS 

House passes delayed $768 billion defense authorization bill The House on Tuesday approved a finalized version of the National Defense Authorization Act, which will authorize $768 billion in defense spending. The annual, must-pass legislation received strong bipartisan support after delays caused by arguments over amendments and political infighting. The bill calls for an independent review of the Afghanistan war and changes how the military handles sexual assault and harassment. It also includes a 2.7 percent pay increase for military service members and Defense Department civilian employees. The bill goes next to the Senate, which is expected to pass it and send it to President Biden for his signature before the end of the year. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Biden bank-regulator nominee withdraws under fire from Republicans President Biden’s nominee for comptroller of the currency, Saule Omarova, withdrew from Senate consideration on Tuesday after facing forceful opposition from Republican senators over her writings as a legal scholar. Some Republicans also were disturbed that the Cornell University scholar was raised in the former Soviet Union. “I don’t know whether to call you professor or comrade,” Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) told her at the confirmation hearing. Biden condemned Republicans for what he described as “inappropriate personal attacks” that were unfair to Omarova and “far beyond the pale.” Biden said Saule would have “brought invaluable insight” to the position overseeing the U.S. banking system because she is “a strong advocate for consumers and a staunch defender of the safety and soundness of our financial system.” CNBC 

Publisher drops plan to release Chris Cuomo’s book Publisher HarperCollins announced Tuesday that it had dropped plans to publish ousted CNN host Chris Cuomo’s book, originally titled Deep Denial. The book had been scheduled for release next year. HarperCollins had described it as “a provocative analysis of the harsh truths that the pandemic and Trump years have exposed about America — about our strength and our character.” The move came days after CNN fired Cuomo over new revelations about the extent to which he helped his brother, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, counter sexual harassment allegations that ultimately forced him from office. CNN also received a sexual misconduct allegation against Chris Cuomo, which he has denied. On Monday, Cuomo said he was ending his daily SiriusXM radio talk show. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

S&P 500, Nasdaq futures rise after Tuesday’s big gains U.S. stock futures rose early Wednesday after Pfizer said early tests indicated that three doses of the coronavirus vaccine it developed with BioNTech provide significant protection against the new Omicron variant. Futures tied to the S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq were up by 0.5 percent at 7 a.m. ET. Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average reversed earlier losses and were up by 0.4 percent as Wall Street continued a strong rebound from the recent Omicron sell-off. All three of the main U.S. indexes jumped on Tuesday after preliminary reports suggested the new variant causes less severe COVID-19 than the still-widespread Delta variant. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq gained 2.1 percent and 3 percent, respectively, on Tuesday, their best days since March. The Dow rose by 1.4 percent. CNBC 

American Airlines says CEO Doug Parker is retiring American Airlines announced Tuesday that Doug Parker will retire as CEO in March. Robert Isom, the company’s president, will take over, and Parker will remain chairman of the airline’s board. Parker is the longest-serving U.S. airline chief executive, and one of the industry’s most influential leaders. He oversaw consolidation, including American’s 2013 merger with US Airways, which made airlines more profitable but limited options and raised fares for passengers. Isom will take charge as American tries to rebuild after huge losses caused by the pandemic. Parker is the latest in a series of airline leaders to retire this year. Southwest Airlines’ Gary Kelly said in June that he was stepping down and being replaced by longtime executive Robert Jordan, and Alaska Airlines CEO Brad Tilden was succeeded by Ben Minicucci in April. CNN 

Striking Kellogg workers reject proposed contract The Kellogg Company announced Tuesday that a majority of its U.S. workers rejected a proposed five-year contract that would have hiked wages by 3 percent for long-serving employees, with smaller increases for newer hires based on years of service. The company has been using temporary hires to keep its four Michigan, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee cereal plants running since workers went on strike more than two months ago. Kellogg North America president Chris Hood said in a statement that the company’s only option now is to start hiring permanent replacements for striking employees. The Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union, which represents the 1,400 striking employees, said it would continue providing “full support to our striking Kellogg’s members.”  NPR 

Publisher drops plan to release Chris Cuomo’s book Publisher HarperCollins announced Tuesday that it had dropped plans to publish ousted CNN host Chris Cuomo’s book, originally titled Deep Denial. The book had been scheduled for release next year. HarperCollins had described it as “a provocative analysis of the harsh truths that the pandemic and Trump years have exposed about America — about our strength and our character — and a road map of the work needed to make our ideals match reality.” The publisher’s move came days after CNN fired Cuomo after new revelations about the extent to which he helped his brother, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, counter sexual harassment allegations that ultimately forced him from office. CNN also received a sexual misconduct allegation against Chris Cuomo, which he has denied, dating to his time at another network. On Monday, Cuomo said he was ending his daily SiriusXM radio talk show. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Biden bank-regulator nominee withdraws under fire from Republicans President Biden’s nominee for comptroller of the currency, Saule Omarova, withdrew from Senate consideration on Tuesday after facing forceful opposition from Republican senators over her writings as a legal scholar. Some Republicans also were disturbed that the Cornell University scholar was raised in the former Soviet Union. “I don’t know whether to call you professor or comrade,” Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) said at her confirmation hearing. Biden condemned Republicans for what he described as “inappropriate personal attacks” that were unfair to Omarova and “far beyond the pale.” Biden said Saule would have “brought invaluable insight” to the position overseeing the U.S. banking system because she is “a strong advocate for consumers and a staunch defender of the safety and soundness of our financial system.” CNBC 

Tuesday,  December 7th, 2021 

Israeli Air Force warplanes bomb the Port of Latakia, Syria’s main seaport. At least five explosions are reported, with a Syrian military official stating that several missiles struck the container area of the port. It is the first Israeli attack on the civilian facility.  (Reuters) 

Four civilians are killed and four more are injured in an ISIL motorcycle bombing near a hospital in Basra, Iraq. (The New Arab) 

Bandits ambush and set fire to a passenger bus in Sokoto State, Nigeria, killing 30 people, including children. (Reuters) 

Chinese property developer Evergrande Group misses a deadline for the payment of debt for the first time at the end of a 30-day grace period, pushing the property developer closer to formal default. (Reuters) 

The United Arab Emirates says that weekends in the country will occur from Friday afternoon to Sunday, effective January 1. (CNBC) 

At least 38 people are killed and 69 more are injured during a fire at an overcrowded prison in Gitega, Burundi. (BBC News) 

Thirteen people are killed in a collision between a minibus and a truck in Chernihiv Oblast, Ukraine. (RFE/RL) 

Norway restricts the number of visitors in private homes to 10 people and reduces the hours that bars and restaurants can serve alcohol until midnight due to an increase in the number of COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations. (The Irish Times) 

The Spanish Public Health Commission approves the usage of the Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for children between the ages of 5 and 11 years. Vaccination rollout for this age group will begin on December 15. (El Pais) 

The EMA and the ECDC approves the mixing and matching of two different COVID-19 vaccines for both initial and booster doses. (France 24) 

Around 70% of adults in Missouri have received their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. (KTVI) 

A trial of a plant-based COVID-19 vaccine conducted by GSK and Medicago shows 71% efficacy against all variants of SARS-CoV-2 except Omicron and 75% efficacy against COVID-19. (The Hill) 

A bill to legalize same-sex marriage in Chile is approved by both chambers of the National Congress. (The New York Times) 

A policeman kills six people, including his wife, and injures two others during a killing spree in Kabete, Kenya, before committing suicide. (Al Jazeera English) 

A bill to criminalize the widely discredited practice of conversion therapy passes the Senate in Canada without opposition, one week after it passed the House of Commons without opposition; the bill now awaits royal assent to become law. (CTV News) 

U.S. announces diplomatic boycott of Beijing Olympics The Biden administration will not send diplomats or other official U.S. representatives to the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics in response to the Chinese government’s “ongoing genocide and crimes against humanity” targeting Uyghur Muslims and other minorities in the Xinjiang region, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Monday. “The athletes on Team USA have our full support. We will be behind them 100 percent as we cheer them on from home,” Psaki said. “We will not be contributing to the fanfare of the games.” China’s Foreign Ministry vowed to take “resolute countermeasures,” calling the U.S. move a “sinister” attempt to disrupt the Games. A ministry spokesperson called the boycott “pure grandstanding,” because U.S. politicians were not invited. NPR 

DOJ sues Texas over redistricting maps The Justice Department filed a lawsuit on Monday accusing Texas lawmakers of drawing new congressional and state House district maps designed to discriminate against Latino and Black voters by diluting their voting strength. The Biden administration joined individual voters and organizations that have already made claims that the legislative maps drawn by the Republican-controlled Texas legislature are unconstitutional and violate the Voting Rights Act, and were devised to help Republicans continue to dominate elections in the state despite a growing population of minority voters who favor Democrats. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton tweeted that the lawsuit was an “absurd” Biden administration “ploy to control Texas voters.” THE TEXAS TRIBUNE 

New York City announces vaccine mandate for private companies New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio on Monday announced a first-in-the-nation coronavirus vaccine mandate for all in-person employees at private companies in the city. De Blasio called the policy a “preemptive strike” against a potential new wave of COVID-19 cases fueled by the new Omicron coronavirus variant, and to help limit infections from holiday gatherings. “Omicron is here, and it looks like it’s very transmissible,” de Blasio told MSNBC. “The timing is horrible with the winter months.” New York City already requires vaccinations for city workers, and customers and employees at indoor restaurants, entertainment venues, and gyms. Starting Dec. 27, workers at private companies will have to have received at least their first dose. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Biden to warn Putin of sanctions if Russia invades Ukraine President Biden plans to tell Russian President Vladimir Putin in a Tuesday video conference that Russia will face harsh economic sanctions if it invades Ukraine, Reuters reported, citing U.S. officials. The sanctions reportedly could target Putin’s inner circle, Russian energy companies, and Russia’s biggest banks, potentially making it harder for Moscow to convert rubles into U.S. dollars and other currencies. The warning comes after Russia massed thousands of troops near the Ukrainian border. Russia has repeatedly denied it plans to invade, saying the troop movements were defensive, primarily to prevent Ukraine from forcefully retaking territory it lost to Russia-backed separatists. Biden on Monday consulted with European allies about potential sanctions and a joint effort to support Ukraine’s sovereignty. REUTERS 

Nunes leaving Congress to run Trump social media startup Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), a close ally of former President Donald Trump, announced Monday that he plans to resign from Congress this month to become chief executive of Trump’s new social media company. “I’m writing to let you know I’ve decided to pursue this opportunity,” the 10-term congressman wrote in a letter to constituents. Trump Media & Technology Group said Nunes would become its CEO in January. Nunes, who served as chair of the House Intelligence Committee when Republicans controlled the chamber, led GOP efforts to discredit investigations into Trump aides’ contacts with Russia during Moscow’s election meddling. Nunes would have faced a tougher path to re-election than usual in the midterms because California’s congressional map is being redrawn and is expected to tilt his district more toward Democrats. POLITICO 

DOJ closes Emmett Till lynching investigation with no new charges The Justice Department announced Monday it had closed its investigation into the 1955 murder of Emmett Till, a Black teen killed by two white men in Mississippi. Till’s abduction and murder helped start the civil rights movement. The Justice Department reopened the investigation after a historian wrote that key witness Carolyn Bryant Donham had recanted her claim that Till had grabbed her, whistled, and made vulgar comments to her. But federal officials, citing the statute of limitations and Donham’s insistence that she never altered her account, said there was not enough evidence to charge her with perjury. Duke University historian Timothy Tyson said in his 2017 book The Blood of Emmett Till that Donham had said her original story was “not true.” NPR 

3 more kidnapped missionaries released in Haiti Three more of the 17 missionaries kidnapped by Haiti’s notorious 400 Mawozo street gang have been released, Ohio-based Christian Aid Ministries said Monday. The newly released former hostages “are safe and seem to be in good spirits,” the organization said. Two others were freed in November, so 12 of the captives remain in the gang’s custody. The organization said it could not identify those released. The group, which included 16 Americans and a Canadian, was kidnapped while returning from a visit to an orphanage outside Port-au-Prince in October. 400 Mawozo has demanded $1 million in ransom for each of the captives, and the gang’s leader has threatened to “put a bullet” in them if he doesn’t get the money. It was not immediately clear whether anything has been paid so far. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Washington Post editorial page chief Fred Hiatt dies at 66 Longtime Washington Post opinion section editor Fred Hiatt died Monday at a New York City hospital. He was 66. Hiatt’s wife, Margaret Shapiro, said he had a sudden cardiac arrest on Nov. 24 while shopping for his family’s Thanksgiving dinner during a visit with their daughter in Brooklyn, and did not regain consciousness. Over two decades as the Post‘s editorial page editor, “Hiatt was one of Washington’s most authoritative and influential opinion-makers,” the Post reported. “He either wrote or edited nearly every unsigned editorial published by the Post — more than 1,000 a year — and edited the opinion columns published on the paper’s op-ed page and website.” Before Hiatt joined the editorial page in 1996, he and Shapiro served as the Post‘s co-bureau chiefs in Tokyo, then in Moscow. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit dies after workout This year’s Kentucky Derby winner, Medina Spirit, died Monday from a heart attack during a workout at Santa Anita in Southern California, trainer Bob Baffert confirmed to The Associated Press. “My entire barn is devastated by this news,” Baffert said. “Medina Spirit was a great champion.” The 3-year-old racehorse won the 2021 Kentucky Derby in May, but the colt tested positive for betamethasone, an anti-inflammatory drug, leading to Baffert’s suspension. An attorney for Baffert recently said that testing showed Medina Spirit tested positive due to “the horse being treated for a skin condition by way of a topical ointment.” According to AP, the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission has not yet held a hearing that could result in Medina Spirit’s disqualification. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

New York City announces vaccine mandate for private companies New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio on Monday announced a first-in-the-nation coronavirus vaccine mandate for all in-person employees at private companies in the city. De Blasio called the policy a “pre-emptive strike” against a potential new wave of COVID-19 cases fueled by the new Omicron coronavirus variant, and to help limit infections from holiday gatherings. “Omicron is here, and it looks like it’s very transmissible,” de Blasio told MSNBC. “The timing is horrible with the winter months.” New York City already requires vaccinations for city workers, as well as customers and employees at indoor restaurants, entertainment venues, and gyms. Starting Dec. 27, workers at private companies will have to have received at least their first dose. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

SEC investigates Trump social media deal  The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating a deal between former President Donald Trump’s latest social media venture and the special purpose acquisition company — or SPAC — that is taking it public, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday, citing a regulatory filing by the SPAC, Digital World Acquisition Corp. After news broke of the Trump-Digital World deal, the Journal and other news outlets reported that Trump met with Digital World CEO Patrick Orlando early this year, before the SPAC raised any money, which would be a violation of SEC rules if they had substantive deal talks. SPACs can’t have a target already identified when they start raising money. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Instagram features to let users know when it’s time to take a break Instagram on Tuesday is launching its “Take a Break” tool, which will urge users to do something else after they have spent a certain amount of time scrolling through the platform’s content. The social media platform, owned by Facebook-parent Meta, announced plans for the feature in September as part of an effort to discourage users, particularly teenagers, from damaging their mental health by getting sucked into spending too much time scrolling from post to post. Users will be able to turn on the feature in “Settings” and choose alerts every 10 minutes, 20 minutes, or 30 minutes. The release comes a day before the head of Instagram will answer questions from lawmakers about the platform’s efforts to bolster its child-safety policies. CNN 

Jonah Hill refuses to ditch his fart machine No one can get between a man and his fart machine — not even Netflix. Jonah Hill chatted on The Tonight Show about amusing himself during the press tour for Netflix’s Don’t Look Up by using a fart machine at inappropriate moments. “We did this big fancy press conference,” Hill explained, “and I did the fart machine when someone was talking about climate change.” Netflix wasn’t amused, and according to Hill, director Adam McKay approached him to say the streamer “formally asked me multiple times to ask you” to knock it off because “they don’t find it funny, and they don’t find it interesting.” But this has only emboldened Hill, who proclaimed, “No corporate entity will ever silence my digital farts, motherf—er!” The actor also revealed the one and only member of the cast who did find the fart machine funny: Meryl Streep — “which is why I ride for her anytime.” THE TONIGHT SHOW 

Ed Sheeran almost killed Elton John It almost wasn’t a very merry Christmas for Ed Sheeran. The singer revealed in an interview on Apple Music that when he recently shot a Christmas music video with Elton John, “I almost killed him with a bell.” The two musicians released the music video for their song “Merry Christmas,” and Sheeran noted there was a moment during shooting when he kicked a present. The present “had a big metal bell on top of it,” Sheeran explained, “and the bell flew past [John’s] head and would have cracked him in the head.” Footage of this incident apparently exists, and Sheeran said he just showed it to John recently. “The horror that went through my body when it was flying through the air,” Sheeran recalled. Thankfully, the bell missed him, and John is still standing.  PEOPLE 

Rebel Wilson received pushback from her own team for deciding to lose weight Rebel Wilson reflected on her weight loss in a new BBC interview, revealing she “got a lot of pushback” over it — from her own team. The Pitch Perfect star recalled deciding she would set out to “physically transform and change my life,” seeking to improve her health. But she says her team’s reaction was, “Why? Why would you want to do that?” At the time, Wilson explained, “I was earning millions of dollars being the funny fat girl.” But she decided to ignore her team’s comments, ultimately losing about 70 pounds. The actress reflected that prior to the weight loss, she was still “very confident,” but “I knew deep down inside some of the emotional eating behaviors I was doing [were] not healthy.” She questioned, though, why people were “so obsessed” with her appearance, asking, “Is that what a woman has to do in the world, is just lose weight to get attention?”  THE WRAP 

Monday,  December 6th, 2021 

The Ethiopian military says that they have recaptured the strategic Amharan towns of Dessie and Kombolcha from rebel forces. (Al Jazeera) 

Italy begins to implement the Super Green Pass, which allows a person to enter theatres, cinemas, music venues, sports events, restaurants and bars if they are vaccinated or have recovered from COVID-19 within the past six months. (BBC News) 

It is announced that over 50% of India’s eligible adult population is now fully vaccinated. India is targeting 100% COVID-19 adult vaccination by December 31. (Khaleej Times) 

Outgoing New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announces a COVID-19 vaccine mandate for all private-sector employees, which will take effect on December 27. (The New York Times) 

Argentina approves the usage of the single-dose Sputnik Light COVID-19 vaccine as a standalone vaccine and as a booster dose. (Reuters) 

Argentina reports its first case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a 38-year-old fully vaccinated person who traveled from South Africa on November 30. (Anadolu Agency) 

Belarus bans airlines and imports of certain goods from the European Union and United Kingdom in retaliation for sanctions imposed on the country by Western nations. (ABC News) 

In Madagascar, twenty people, including two French nationals, are charged with crimes including criminal conspiracy, criminal association, rebellion against the president and possession of illegal weapons, for allegedly plotting to kill president Andry Rajoelina. (Reuters) 

The United States announces a formal diplomatic boycott of the upcoming Winter Olympic Games in Beijing, China. The White House says that no official delegation will be sent to the Games due to concerns regarding China’s human rights record. (BBC) 

The End Wednesday 

Monday,  December 6th, 2021 

Italy begins to implement Super Green Pass that grants access to theatres, cinemas, music venues, sports events, restaurants and bars to those who are vaccinated or recovered from COVID-19 over the past six months. (BBC News) 

Outgoing New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announces a COVID-19 vaccine mandate for private-sector employees. The mandate will take effect on December 27. (The New York Times) 

Argentina approves a single-dose of Sputnik Light COVID-19 vaccine as a standalone vaccine and a booster dose. (Reuters) 

Argentina reports its first case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a 38-year-old fully vaccinated person who traveled from South Africa on November 30. (Anadolu Agency) 

In Madagascar, twenty people, including two French nationals, are charged with counts including criminal conspiracy, criminal association, rebellion against the president and possession of illegal weapons, for allegedly plotting to kill president Andry Rajoelina. (Reuters) 

Karl Nehammer is sworn in as the new Chancellor of Austria after the resignation of Alexander Schallenberg on 2 December. (ABC News) 

Jennifer Lawrence lost a tooth while shooting ‘Don’t Look Up’ Jennifer Lawrence gives a toothless performance in her new movie Don’t Look Up, but that’s more a statement of fact than a critique. At the premiere of the Adam McKay film on Sunday, when asked about some of the challenges she faced during the production, Lawrence revealed she lost a tooth “pretty early” into filming. “Remember when my veneer popped off?” she asked co-star Leonardo DiCaprio. “And I couldn’t go to the dentist until the end of the movie, so I had to film most of the movie toothless. That was my personal challenge.” Meanwhile, DiCaprio’s example of a challenge was “talking to people with masks and shields all day.” Hey, at least you had all your teeth, Leo!  VARIETY

Halle Berry set her Razzie for Worst Actress on fire It’s not an honor just to be nominated at the Golden Raspberry Awards, which brutally select the year’s worst films and performances. But Halle Berry famously showed up to actually accept her Worst Actress Razzie for Catwoman in person in 2005, and now she’s reminiscing to Vanity Fair. “If I can show up to collect an Oscar when you’re honoring me, I can certainly show up to collect a Razzie when you say, good try, but do better,” she said, adding she “went there and made fun of myself.” The Academy Award-winning actress also revealed what she did with the award: “I set that thing on fire.” Berry recently said she’d love to direct a new Catwoman after the previous version was almost universally panned. “I think I would redeem myself,” she said. And if not, hey, she could get some more firewood out of it.  INDIEWIRE

Gwyneth Paltrow has never heard of Marvel’s ‘Hawkeye’ Gwyneth Paltrow isn’t even really that familiar with the Marvel projects she’s personally been in, so did we expect her to know about the ones that don’t involve her? Paltrow, who plays Pepper Potts in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, took some fan questions on Instagram and was asked if she’s watched the latest MCU Disney+ show Hawkeye, starring Jeremy Renner. Not only hasn’t she seen it, but this was apparently the first time she’d even heard of the show, as Paltrow wrote back, “No, what is that?” Normally, we’d assume this rules out a Pepper Potts cameo in the series — though considering Paltrow learned she was in Spider-Man: Homecoming years after the movie came out, don’t be so certain.  VULTURE 

‘Succession’ star Brian Cox worries about what Jeremy Strong ‘puts himself through’ Brian Cox has some concerns about his number one boy. On Sunday, The New Yorker delved into how often Succession star Jeremy Strong goes to “unusual lengths” to get into character — like when he wanted to be sprayed with actual tear gas for The Trial of the Chicago 7. His co-stars, it seems, don’t necessarily love this. Strong himself admitted that “I don’t know how popular the way I work is amongst our troupe,” and Cox, who plays Logan Roy, said, “I just worry about what he does to himself. I worry about the crises he puts himself through in order to prepare.” Cox added that the “inability to separate yourself off while you’re doing the job” is a “particularly American disease.” Meanwhile, Roman Roy actor Kieran Culkin said the way Strong gets himself into character via self-isolation “might be something that helps him,” but “I can tell you that it doesn’t help me.” Culkin also revealed Strong once expressed concerns that people would think Succession is a comedy — even though Culkin feels “the show is a comedy” — and that Strong proclaimed he takes Kendall “as seriously as I take my own life.”  THE NEW YORKER 

Tom Holland confirms he’ll take on the role of Fred Astaire Shall he dance? Spider-Man actor Tom Holland confirmed Sunday that “I am playing Fred Astaire” in a new movie. “The script came in a week ago,” he said, adding he just had a “lovely” chat with producer Amy Pascal about it while he was “in the bath.” The confirmation came after Pascal casually mentioned in a GQ profile of Holland that she wanted him to play Astaire — which GQ suggested “might be a rare perfect casting” — though despite both of their comments, Deadline reports a deal for the movie hasn’t been finalized yet. It does make sense, though, given Holland’s background in dance. He starred in Billy Elliott the Musical and, perhaps even more notably, delivered a jaw-dropping Lip Sync Battle performance dancing to “Umbrella” in 2017. Is it too late to cancel this Fred Astaire movie and just make a feature length version of that?  DEADLINE

Cryptocurrencies have volatile weekend after stock selloff Bitcoin plunged by as much as 20 percent over the weekend before regaining some of the lost ground on Sunday. The price of Ether, the second-largest cryptocurrency, fell by more than 15 percent before climbing back Sunday close to where it started the weekend. The volatility came after last week’s stock-market selloff, as investors sought safer investments due to rising concerns about fallout from the spread of the new Omicron coronavirus variant. Other cryptocurrencies also struggled. Cryptocurrencies are notoriously volatile. In addition to uneasiness over Omicron, the Federal Reserve’s suggestion that it could unwind its economy-boosting asset purchases faster to fight high inflation also might have sparked some selling. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Health officials vow fast review of Omicron-specific vaccines The Biden administration plans to fast-track authorization of COVID-19 vaccines tweaked to fight the Omicron coronavirus variant, which federal regulators said Sunday had been detected in 16 states. Food and Drug Administration officials have met with vaccine makers to start hammering out guidelines for data that will be needed to expedite approval of changes to current vaccines that will be necessary to make them sufficiently effective against the new strain. “The FDA will move swiftly and CDC will move swiftly after,” Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky said on ABC’s This Week with George Stephanopoulos. “We’re every day hearing about more and more cases.” Public health officials say Omicron appears to cause less severe illness than the widespread Delta variant, but concerns about its impact have roiled markets. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Evergrande shares plunge as Chinese developer warns it can’t make payments Shares of Chinese developer Evergrande plunged by 20 percent on Monday, hitting a record low as the company again approached default. Evergrande warned Friday that it might not have enough money to make looming debt payments, as its 30-day grace period ended and it faced interest payments totaling $82.5 million. As business hours closed in Asia, two bondholders said they had yet to receive payments due from Evergrande. The company declined to comment. Evergrande, once China’s top-selling developer, has more than $300 billion in liabilities, and its potential collapse threatens to trigger further damage in China’s real estate industry. China’s central bank sought to reassure markets by cutting reserve requirements for banks as Beijing vowed to promote the property sector’s health. CNN

Bob Dole dies at 98 Former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole died Sunday after months of treatment for Stage IV lung cancer, the Elizabeth Dole Foundation announced. He was 98. Dole grew up in Kansas during the Dust Bowl and suffered severe wounds fighting as an Army lieutenant in Italy during World War II. He went on to become one of the Republican Party’s longest-serving leaders, spending a quarter-century in the Senate. He was the GOP’s vice-presidential candidate in 1976, and its presidential nominee 20 years later. President Biden called Dole “an American statesman like few in our history. A war hero and among the greatest of the Greatest Generation.” After retiring from politics, Dole focused on raising money for the World War II Memorial in Washington and welcomed veterans visiting the memorial on many weekends. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Myanmar court sentences Suu Kyi to four years in prison A Myanmar court on Monday sentenced ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi, 76, to four years in prison after finding her guilty of inciting unrest and other charges. The result of Suu Kyi’s closed-door trial indicated that the military, which held the pro-democracy champion and Nobel laureate under house arrest for nearly two decades, plans to remove her entirely as a force in politics. Since Suu Kyi’s trial wrapped up, the military government has filed a new corruption charge. The military is escalating its crackdown on people protesting the Feb. 1 coup against the civilian government. On Sunday, a military truck plowed into demonstrators in Yangon and soldiers fired on a small crowd, killing at least five people, according to local media. THE WASHINGTON POST 

U.S. health officials say Omicron appears less dangerous than Delta variant U.S. health officials said Sunday that they are still trying to determine the severity of the new Omicron coronavirus strain, but so far it appears to be less virulent than the Delta variant that is driving rising hospitalizations. “Thus far, it does not look like there’s a great degree of severity to it,” President Biden’s chief medical adviser, Dr. Anthony Fauci, told CNN’s State of the Union. “But we have really got to be careful before we make any determinations that it is less severe or it really doesn’t cause any severe illness, comparable to Delta.” The Biden administration plans to fast-track authorization of COVID-19 vaccines tweaked to fight Omicron, which federal regulators said Sunday had been detected in 16 states. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Belgian police clash with crowds protesting COVID restrictions Police in Brussels used tear gas and water cannons to disperse crowds protesting restrictions imposed by the Belgian government to curb coronavirus infections. Several thousand people marched peacefully through Belgium’s capital before the demonstration turned violent, with some protesters throwing cobblestones and fireworks at officers in the neighborhood where many European Union institutions have their headquarters. One protester, martial arts teacher Alain Sienaort, said he was against vaccine passes and restrictions on unvaccinated people. “That’s all discrimination, so we have to fight it,” he said. “We don’t want a dictatorship.” The government on Friday announced it was imposing new measures, including mandatory masks for most primary school students, to curb rising infections.  REUTERS 

Virginian governor announces removal of Robert E. Lee pedestal Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D) announced Sunday that the state would remove the 40-foot granite pedestal that once supported a memorial to Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee in Richmond. Work to take down the pedestal will start Monday, and be “substantially complete” by Dec. 31, Northam said. After the last part of the monument has been moved to an undisclosed location for storage, the land will be turned over to the city of Richmond. “This land is in the middle of Richmond, and Richmonders will determine the future of this space,” Northam said in a statement. The decision came a little more than a month before Northam leaves office and Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin, a Republican, takes office. The statue was removed in September following a legal battle. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Ex-senator announces primary challenge against Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp Former Sen. David Perdue plans to announce Monday that he will challenge Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp in the Republican gubernatorial primary, Politico reported Sunday. Perdue lost his seat to Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff last year. Former President Donald Trump, who has expressed anger toward Perdue and other Georgia Republicans for not helping him overturn his loss to President Biden in the state, reportedly recruited Perdue to run against Kemp. The winner will face Democrat Stacy Abrams, who last week she would challenge Kemp in a rematch after she narrowly lost to him in 2018. Abrams made voting rights her signature issue after that race, so Trump’s false claims that voter fraud cost him the election are expected to be a focus in the race. POLITICO 

NPR: COVID death rates higher in pro-Trump counties People living in counties that strongly backed former President Donald Trump in the 2020 election have been nearly three times as likely to die from COVID-19 than their counterparts in counties that voted heavily for President Biden, according to an analysis by NPR. Since May, as vaccines were becoming more widely available, people in counties where Trump got 60 percent of the vote or more had a COVID-19 death rate that was 2.7 times higher than in counties where Biden dominated. In the reddest counties, death rates were six times higher than in the bluest counties. About 59 percent of Republicans are vaccinated, compared to 91 percent of Democrats, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health policy think tank. NPR 

Woman accused Chris Cuomo of sexual misconduct before CNN fired him A woman told CNN of a “serious sexual misconduct” allegation against Chris Cuomo days before the cable news channel fired the anchor, attorney Debra Katz said Sunday. Katz said she contacted CNN about her client’s allegations Wednesday. CNN suspended Cuomo earlier this week after new details emerged about his efforts to help his brother, Andrew Cuomo, before sexual harassment allegations against him forced him to resign as New York’s governor as lawmakers threatened to impeach him. The moves came shortly after the New York attorney general’s office released evidence that Chris Cuomo had taken a more active role in his brother’s defense than previously known, including using his position and sources to help his brother in what CNN called “a breach of journalistic ethics.” THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

New COVID-testing rule for international travelers takes effect New travel restrictions take effect Monday for people entering the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has shortened the window for a pre-departure coronavirus test, with all passengers now required to show a negative result from a test conducted within 24 hours of their flight to the U.S. Previously, vaccinated travelers could get a test any time within three days of departure, although the 24-hour rule already applied to unvaccinated travelers. The narrower window, imposed in response to concerns about the new Omicron variant, “provide[s] less opportunity to develop an infection with the Omicron variant prior to arrival in the United States,” according to the updated CDC order. U.S. airlines also have been asked to collect contact-tracing information for arriving passengers. USA TODAY 

Alabama, Michigan, Georgia, and Cincinnati to compete in college football playoff The College Football Playoff selection committee announced Sunday that Alabama, Michigan, Georgia, and Cincinnati will compete for this season’s national title. On New Year’s Eve, No. 1 Alabama will play No. 4 Cincinnati in the Cotton Bowl, and No. 2 Michigan will face off against No. 3 Georgia in the Orange Bowl. The winners will play in the title game on Jan. 10. The Crimson Tide took the top ranking by beating Georgia 41-24 to win the SEC crown. Cincinnati went 13-0 and won the American Athletic Conference title to earn the right to face Alabama in the Cotton Bowl. Georgia won its spot in the final four with a 12-1 record. Michigan beat No. 13 Iowa 42-3 to claim their first conference title since 2004.  THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Sunday, December 5th, 2021 

Venezuelan intelligence officials announce the death of Hernán Darío Hernández, the leader of a FARC dissident group, after an ambush carried out by a commando of the Venezuelan Armed Forces. Hernández was responsible for the 2003 El Nogal Club bombing that killed 36 people and injured over 200 others. (El Tiempo) 

Hundreds of insurgents on motorcycles attack an international military base in Tillabéri. 79 of the rebels and 29 soldiers are killed during the battle. (Deutsche Welle) 

Indian soldiers of the Assam Rifles mistakenly open fire on a group of miners returning home from work in Nagaland, believing them to be militants. Thirteen miners and a soldier are killed, with the soldier and seven miners being killed in a subsequent confrontation with angry locals. (BBC News) 

Saudi Arabia grants the approval for people vaccinated with Russia’s Sputnik V COVID-19 vaccine to enter the country beginning from January 1, 2022 in a move that will enable Muslims to take part in religious pilgrimage(CNA) 

The End Monday