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Showing posts with label VAX FOR KIDS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VAX FOR KIDS. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

1/6 panel pounces on new evidence against Trump

 

Pfizer seeks authorization for COVID-19 vax for kids younger than 5

Today's Top Stories:

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1/6 House committee investigating Trump’s plan to seize voting machines

At this point, there's no credible way to deny the reality that the former president was trying to carry out a coup.



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Tucker Carlson loses it over Supreme Court opening

President Biden hasn't even selected his nominee yet, but his vow to pick a Black woman already has right-wingers melting down.


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Top Arizona congressman on PRIMARYING Sinema

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: This could be huge.


Democratic Senator Ben Ray Luján suffers stroke, undergoes surgery
Luján, 49, underwent decompressive surgery to ease swelling after he was found to have suffered a stroke in his cerebellum that affected his balance. While he is expected to make a full recovery, Luján's health scare highlights the precariousness of advancing the Democratic Party's agenda in a 50-50 Senate.



Key Senate Democrat considering a scaled-back version of the child tax credit to appease Joe Manchin
Biden's Build Back Better bill might not be dead just yet...



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Trump throws Mike Pence under the bus with investigation demand

The disgraced ex-president raged that Pence should be actually investigated for refusing to help him overturn this 2020 election defeat.


Pentagon dismisses Republican governors' objections to National Guard vaccine mandate
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin asserted his authority to set military medical requirements for the entire armed forces, including guard units.


Rep. Madison Cawthorn sues North Carolina election board over candidacy challenge
The first-term congressman is suing members of the North Carolina State Board of Elections after voters alleged that he is ineligible for reelection because of his involvement at Trump's rally on Jan. 6, 2021, that "amounted to an insurrection."



Texas butterfly park to close indefinitely as conspiracy theorists intensify attacks
Trump-allied operatives have baselessly accused the National Butterfly Center of being involved with child trafficking.


ABC News suspends "The View" host Whoopi Goldberg
The prominent actress ignited a firestorm of controversy with her wildly off-base remarks about the Holocaust and race.


Trump attacks lackey Lindsey Graham over latest 1/6 remarks
The former president wasn't pleased with his toadie's observation that pardoning MAGA insurrectionists would be "inappropriate," calling the South Carolina senator a RINO (Republican in name only).


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This is America...

Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...




Friday, December 3, 2021

POLITICO NIGHTLY: The final vax frontier: toddlers and babies

 


 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY RENUKA RAYASAM

Presented by the Connected Commerce Council

A person receives a Covid-19 vaccination dose, while carrying a baby in tow in Los Angeles.

A person receives a Covid-19 vaccination dose, while carrying a baby in tow in Los Angeles. | Mario Tama/Getty Images

SPRING PRICKIN’ — When I showed my 3 year old my Covid booster-shot bandage a couple of weeks ago, he asked me, “Why is it on your arm?” He’s used to getting vaccinations in the thigh and then plied with treats afterward.

When it comes to getting a Covid shot to defend against the prospect of an Omicron surge, my two toddlers will have to wait until next spring for their chance at immunity and, perhaps as important, the accompanying Paw Patrol stickers. During our big family Thanksgiving feast, my kids were the only ones who had yet to receive a Covid shot. Everyone else was well above 5 years old.

Toddlers and babies are the biggest pool of unvaccinated people in the country, said Philip Landrigan, a pediatrician and epidemiologist at Boston College and a former CDC official. Because their risks are generally lower and the potential for side effects greater, younger kids have only just started participating in clinical trials for Covid vaccines. Companies aren’t expected to submit their trial data to the FDA until early next year. After an agency review, an approval could come next March or April.

Moderna and Pfizer are currently testing their mRNA vaccines in kids between 6 months and 4 years old. Infants generally have some level of protection from antibodies they receive in the womb of a vaccinated parent, but the age cutoffs are somewhat arbitrary, said C. Buddy Creech, director of the Vanderbilt Vaccine Research Program and a professor of pediatric infectious disease at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

Moderna is testing about a quarter of its adult dose, and Pfizer is testing about a tenth of its adult dose. Kids tend to produce a better immune response than adults do, meaning they should require a much smaller dose to get the same vaccine benefits, said Creech, who is conducting one of Moderna’s pediatric trials.

Initially, younger children are expected to be on the same dosing schedule as everyone else — two doses a few weeks apart — but that might change over timeCanada has recommended that children who are 5 to 11 get their doses eight weeks apart.

Covid shots are unlikely to be a part of a regular doctor’s visit alongside other routine childhood vaccines. Because researchers are trying to isolate side effects, they are testing Covid shots outside the normal vaccine schedule — at least two weeks before or after they get another shot.

Most of the side effects so far have been mild: fever, fussiness or soreness. Trials are watching closely for signs of myocarditis or heart inflammation, but that should be less of an issue in younger kids, Creech said.

Covid risks in the vast majority of young kids are very, very small, Creech said. It might be because they have low levels of an enzyme that helps the virus infect the body, but also in general they have fewer risk factors like obesity. Still, he added, the case for vaccinating kids without health risks is becoming more urgent with the potential for Omicron or another variant to plow through the U.S. in search of people to infect. Unvaccinated children can contribute to greater Covid spread.

Since the start of the pandemic, 224 kids between the ages of zero and 4 have died from Covid, according to the CDC. Among others, there are concerns about longer-term symptoms. And, as parents of preschoolers and school-age children know, a positive Covid test triggers a disruptive quarantine.

“We are in an arms race with this virus,” Creech said. “We need to provide as much immunity as possible so when the virus finds its way into a community, it cannot get a foothold.”

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at rrayasam@politico.com, or on Twitter at @RenuRayasam.

 

A message from the Connected Commerce Council:

An estimated 11 million small businesses (37%) would have closed without access to digital tools. Why is Congress proposing changes that would dismantle small businesses’ digital safety net? Learn more: https://connectedcouncil.org/

 
WHAT'D I MISS?

A flock of birds flies near the U.S. Capitol at dusk.

A flock of birds near the U.S. Capitol at dusk. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

— Congress on path to avert shutdown after chaotic scramble: The Senate appears likely to pass a bipartisan deal tonight to avert a government shutdown on Friday , granting conservatives a chance to oppose President Joe Biden’s vaccine mandate in exchange for speedy passage of the funding patch. While nothing is locked in, several Republican senators tonight said they expect to vote on the stopgap spending bill within a matter of hours. Greasing the wheels for passage is a vote on an amendment from Republican Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, aimed at defunding Biden’s vaccination requirements on U.S. businesses. Lee‘s amendment is expected to get a vote at a simple majority threshold, as he has demanded.

— Biden administration to restart ‘Remain in Mexico’ program under court order: The Department of Homeland Security is preparing to revive the Migrant Protection Protocols policy under a federal court order, the department announced today . MPP, more commonly known as the “Remain in Mexico” policy, requires many migrants seeking asylum to stay in Mexico while awaiting their immigration hearings. The Biden administration has tried multiple times to strike down the policy, but in August, a federal judge in Texas ordered the program restored.

 

BECOME A GLOBAL INSIDER: The world is more connected than ever. It has never been more essential to identify, unpack and analyze important news, trends and decisions shaping our future — and we’ve got you covered! Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, Global Insider author Ryan Heath navigates the global news maze and connects you to power players and events changing our world. Don’t miss out on this influential global community. Subscribe now.

 
 

— Senators propose ban on FTC ‘zombie votes’: Six GOP senators are introducing legislation that would bar the Federal Trade Commission from counting the votes of departed commissioners — a practice that has drawn new Republican criticism to agency Chair Lina Khan. The bill, spearheaded by Kansas Sen. Jerry Moran, would be retroactive to the beginning of 2021, invalidating dozens of votes left behind by Democrat Rohit Chopra when he departed the agency in October to take the helm of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. POLITICO reported on the issue a month later, noting that the agency’s rules could allow Chopra to serve as the deciding vote through at least December.

— Meadows’ book possible ‘waiver’ of executive privilege, Jan. 6 investigators say: Jan. 6 investigators have tried to pry information from Mark Meadows for months. Now, excerpts from his forthcoming book have piqued the select committee's interest. In interviews, members of the committee say Meadows may have damaged his case for maintaining the secrecy of his contacts with former President Donald Trump on Jan. 6 by divulging selected details in his book, due to publish Tuesday.

 

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IDEA OF THE DAY

These are the variables we must focus on to protect public health and stay ahead of variants:

1. Make testing routine, accessible. Find ways to directly distribute tests to Americans. Make it easy to test!

2. Get more immunity into population with focus on boosters and kids vax

We’re in markedly different position as #Omicron emerges. Unclear if it’s a U.S. threat but if it spreads we have deeper immunity, oral drugs, highly effective antibody therapeutics, widespread rapid testing. Massive sequencing! This isn’t spring 2020. We have very solid footing.

— FORMER FDA COMMISSIONER SCOTT GOTTLIEB, IN A TWITTER THREAD TODAY

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
AROUND THE WORLD

Secretary of State Antony Blinken and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov pose at the start of their meeting.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov pose at the start of their meeting. | Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP via Getty Images

NOT QUITE THE SWEDE SPOT — It was less a matter of differences than seemingly irreconcilable realities as the U.S. and Russia’s top diplomats clashed over Ukraine today, David M. Herszenhorn writes.

While Secretary of State Antony Blinken reiterated a demand that Russia withdraw troops from the Ukrainian border and resume peace talks, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov warned that his country regarded the eastward expansion of the NATO military alliance as a “fundamental security threat.”

“No one should strengthen their security at the expense of the security of others,” Lavrov told reporters, speaking in Stockholm ahead of a meeting with Blinken. “Further advance of NATO to the east will unambiguously affect the fundamental interests of our security.”

Blinken, sitting alongside Lavrov, repeated U.S. and NATO threats to punish Russia should its forces once again invade Ukraine, as they did in Crimea in 2014. “We have deep concerns about Russia’s plans for renewed aggression against Ukraine,” Blinken said, adding: “We have a strong, ironclad commitment to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine. The best way to avert a crisis is through diplomacy.”

NIGHTLY NUMBER

1 in 44

The rate at which autism is diagnosed in 8 year olds, according to an analysis of 2018 data from nearly a dozen states released by the CDC today. That rate compares with 1 in 54 identified in 2016.

PARTING WORDS

GOING STAG? NOT REALLY — Republicans are portraying Biden’s Democrats as the party of “stagflation,” in a bid to recall the grim era of slow economic growth and skyrocketing prices that doomed Jimmy Carter’s presidency in 1980.

Trouble is, the “stag” part of stagflation hasn’t shown up, Ben White writes. And it may not anytime soon.

Wall Street banks are busy jacking up their estimates for fourth-quarter economic growth to as much as 8 percent as pent-up demand following Covid lockdowns drives consumption and the economy steadily recovers more of the vast ground lost to the pandemic. Jobless claims are falling, employment growth is brisk and consumer demand remains hot. And while inflation is at a more than three-decade high, even prices at the fuel pump may ease as oil prices drop.

Morgan Stanley recently cranked up its growth estimate for the last three months of the year to an annualized rate of 8.7 percent from 3 percent because of strong consumer demand and declining jobless claims. Goldman Sachs sees growth of 6 percent and JPMorgan bumped its projection to 7 percent from 5 percent. The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, whose model incorporates most real time economic data, forecasts a 9.7 percent jump.

 

A message from the Connected Commerce Council:

Digitally enabled small businesses saw 50% more revenue during the pandemic than businesses that did not use digital tools. Now, Congress is considering legislation that could hurt the digital economy – and put small businesses at risk. Learn more: https://connectedcouncil.org/

 


 

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Thursday, November 18, 2021

POLITICO NIGHTLY: A two-shot regimen for vax skeptics

 



 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY JOANNE KENEN

Presented by eBay

With help from Renuka Rayasam and Tyler Weyant

Jill Biden, Ciara Wilson, her children and Hina Talib stand on a balcony at the White House.

First lady Jill Biden, singer Ciara Wilson, her children and pediatrician Hina Talib watch from the White House balcony as Biden leaves the White House. | Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP Photo

1, 2 STEP — A lot of parents are hesitant about getting their 5- to 11-year-olds vaccinated against the coronavirus. To overcome that apprehension — and avoid the racial and ethnic trust gaps that marred the early phase of adult vaccination — the White House needs sound policy, community allies, buy-in from the public health and medical communities.

And an influencer.

Someone like the singer Ciara, a millennial mom of three with a huge social media following who visited the White House this afternoon to chat with First Lady Jill Biden about childhood vaccination. Not all of Ciara’s kids are yet old enough for this shot, but the singer — who is married to Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson — said she’s a strong believer in immunization.

There’s a lot more to do. Since childhood vaccination began just a few weeks ago, there’s not a lot of data that breaks down which groups are most hesitant about the safety, wisdom and necessity of immunizing their kids. As the latest Kaiser Family Foundation update on vaccination trends noted, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is not publicly reporting race and ethnicity vaccination data broken down into age brackets, “limiting the ability to gain insight into vaccination patterns among children.” Only three states are currently tracking that in the 5 to 11 crowd.

The lack of data is worrisome, said Julie Morita, executive vice president of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and a former Chicago public health commissioner. “Data tells us where we’re doing a good job – and where the gaps are,” she said. “It guides us as we try to improve access and understand what the questions are” and which communities need to be engaged.

When vaccination of adults began nearly a year ago, the racial and ethnic trust gaps were enormous. Since then, they were largely closed, but it took significant effort. Yet the trust that was gained for adult shots across most sectors of the public (conservative white Republicans are now the most vaccine resistant) won’t automatically carry over to ones for children.

Parents don’t just worry about safety, said Kaiser’s polling expert Liz Hamel. They also worry about accessibility, about missing work to get their kids’ shots — and about cost, even though the vaccine is free.

Those two issues — not only the confidence that the vaccine is safe and beneficial, but also knowing where, when and how to get the free shot — need to be addressed pronto, before fears harden, said Lisa Cooper, a physician and leading expert on health equity at Johns Hopkins.

As the Ciara drop-by shows, the White House is not unaware. “Equity is the center of everything we do,” said a senior White House official who works on pandemic issues but who was only authorized to speak on background. “We’ve made substantial progress — and that reflects a tremendous amount of work.”

The Biden administration is partnering with community clinics, pediatricians, rural health clinics, community health clinics, mobile clinics, pharmacies, childrens hospitals and schools, the official said. Places that are trusted, accessible, part of the neighborhood. Places that don’t only operate Monday through Friday, 9 to 5. Or in the case of schools, places where kids can get the shot at on-site clinics during their school day — with written parental consent.

All in all, there are now about 30,000 sites that can vaccinate kids in this age bracket, the official said.

In and out of government, experts have learned that trust in vaccines builds over time.

Only about one-third of adults were ready to get a shot a year ago. Now, despite all the politicization of vaccination, 80 percent of adults have had at least one shot.

While some parents might want to “wait and see” before getting the shot in their children’s arms, some kids themselves may be more eager than mom or dad realizes, Cooper said.

“There’s a lot of positive energy that kids pick up from people around them,” she said, noting that her little cousin recently sent her a proud message about his injection. “They want to be able to go to sports. They want to be able to play with their friends. They want to be able to go to school and not have to stay home every time someone gets sick.”

So Ciara aside, maybe it will be the kids who turn out to be the influencers. Influencing their parents.

Joanne Kenen, a former POLITICO health care editor and a contributing POLITICO writer, is the Commonwealth Fund Journalist in Residence at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Welcome to POLITICO NightlyReach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author on Twitter at @JoanneKenen.

A message from eBay:

Americans casually selling things online are just trying to make ends meet and new tax regulations could make it even harder. Starting in 2022, a single transaction over $600 – the new reporting threshold – could land small-time sellers with a 1099-K tax form. eBay believes Americans shouldn’t receive unnecessary and confusing tax forms for selling used or pre-owned goods. Learn more about eBay's position on raising the 1099-K threshold and lifting the burden on Americans.

 
FROM THE HEALTH DESK

DON’T HAVE SECOND THOUGHTS ON A THIRD SHOT  Renuka Rayasam emails Nightly:

I scheduled my booster shot after hearing about my colleague Sarah Owermohle’s breakthrough Covid case. I had been putting it off. In Texas, I might be eligible but I never asked a doctor.

But my family is coming to visit for Thanksgiving next week so I decided to go ahead and make an appointment. By the time I get my dose, the FDA is expected to approve a third shot of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine for everyone in the U.S. About 10 states have already expanded booster eligibility to all adults.

That extra dose isn’t a “luxury,” Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said on Tuesday. A three-dose regimen may become the standard to be considered fully vaccinated against Covid, he said.

To be honest, the booster debate has me confused. Sure, Sarah’s case of Covid doesn’t sound fun. But a case of breakthrough Covid sounds actually less worse to me than hand, foot and mouth disease, which apparently I am destined to get as a parent of toddlers.

You still don’t want to get Covid, Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine and co-director of the Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development, told me today over the phone.

 

BECOME A GLOBAL INSIDER: The world is more connected than ever. It has never been more essential to identify, unpack and analyze important news, trends and decisions shaping our future — and we’ve got you covered! Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, Global Insider author Ryan Heath navigates the global news maze and connects you to power players and events changing our world. Don’t miss out on this influential global community. Subscribe now.

 
 

There was a moment, Hotez said, when we thought we could vaccinate our way out of the pandemic. But as immunity wanes, so does the effectiveness of the vaccine at preventing Covid transmission. “That function seemed to be the first to go,” said Hotez, who will be the grand marshall of Houston’s Thanksgiving parade.

Antibody levels are also quickly declining among those who have had two doses. Only a couple of months can make a big difference in the vaccine’s effectiveness. One Israeli study showed that by July, elderly individuals who had gotten their second dose in March were 1.7 times less likely to develop severe illness than those who received their second dose in January.

The result is what we are seeing all around us — more and more cases of breakthrough Covid. I am wrong to underestimate my risk, Hotez said. Though data is sparse, a breakthrough case could lead to long Covid — “who wants to get that?” Hotez said — or worse. Only about 20 percent of the patients hospitalized with Covid in Colorado are considered fully vaccinated.

The Biden administration has been too slow to authorize the third dose for every adult, Hotez said.

“They still cling to this idea that the first and only goal should be to prevent hospitalizations,” he said. “Also I don’t want to get Covid.”

There is good reason to believe that three doses could be the magic dosing number. That’s how other common childhood vaccines work, Hotez noted. And the third Covid vaccine seems to create a much stronger and faster immune response than the first two doses.

Graphic of immune response over time of mRNA vaccines

Courtesy of Peter Hotez

Normally vaccine doses are spaced six months to a year apart in order to give a person’s immune system time to mount a proper response. But because the pandemic flung the globe into crisis, Pfizer and Moderna tested a two-dose, closely spaced regimen.

We are learning about the effectiveness and durability of mRNA vaccines in real time — much of the data we are using to make our decisions is based on studies out of Israel and the U.K., which started vaccinating their populations earlier and keep more detailed data on outcomes.

“I am of the opinion that we won’t need another booster next year,” Hotez said. He thinks we may need a fourth shot, but not for several years. “But at this point, that is still just an opinion.”

WHAT'D I MISS?

— House votes to punish Gosar for video depicting killing of AOC: The House censured Rep. Paul Gosar today for a social media post and booted him from his committees , a rare rebuke of a colleagues that Speaker Nancy Pelosi deemed an “emergency.” Two Republicans — Reps. Adam Kinzinger and Liz Cheney — joined all Democrats in voting for the measure, which removed Gosar from his spots on the Natural Resources and Oversight committees. Rep. David Joyce (R-Ohio) voted present.

— China bill throws a wrench in Senate’s defense policy push: The Senate’s already-delayed annual defense policy bill faced yet another roadblock today, throwing the timing of the must-pass legislation into further doubt as lawmakers looked to include a China competitiveness bill. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer delayed an initial procedural vote on the National Defense Authorization Act this morning, amid disagreements over the New York Democrat’s push to add long-stalled China competition legislation to the defense bill.

 

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— ‘QAnon shaman’ Jacob Chansley is sentenced to 41 months in prison: Jacob Chansley, whose shirtless image on the Senate rostrum and menacing note to Vice President Mike Pence came to symbolize the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol, was sentenced today to almost three and a half years in prison, matching the harshest sentence handed down yet in the 10-month prosecution effort. “What you did here was horrific,” U.S. District Court Judge Royce Lamberth said as he issued the 41-month sentence, adding that he believed that Chansley — a self-described shaman and a follower of the QAnon conspiracy movement — had come to genuinely regret his actions.

— White House seeks to boost Covid vaccine manufacturing by 1B doses a year: The Biden administration is offering to partner with Covid-19 vaccine makers on expanding their U.S. manufacturing capacity as part of an emerging plan to produce an additional 1 billion doses per year, an administration official said today. The new initiative is aimed at ramping up the vaccine supply needed abroad and comes as officials have sought new ways to make good on Biden’s pledge to get 70 percent of the world’s population vaccinated by next September.

— Biden asks FTC to investigate oil and gas companies: Biden asked Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan today to examine oil and gas companies and their role in rising gasoline prices. Citing “potentially illegal conduct,” Biden said pump prices are rising even as industry costs are declining.

AROUND THE WORLD

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau meets with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell at the U.S. Capitol.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau meets with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell at the U.S. Capitol. | Win McNamee/Getty Images

INVITING THE NEIGHBORS OVER Biden has made a point to differentiate himself on the world stage from his predecessor, Donald Trump. With Mexico and Canada, that has meant lots of talk about diplomacy, dialogue and friendship after years of Trump’s attacks and threats against the two U.S. neighbors.

But Biden’s shift in approaches — less firebrand, more conciliatory — has not made him automatic friends with Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who had an unlikely alliance with Trump, Sabrina Rodríguez and Andy Blatchford write. Nor has his personal chemistry with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who often clashed with Trump, meant a seamless U.S.-Canada relationship. Under Biden, disagreements and challenges with each country and the broader North American relationship abound.

Biden will meet jointly in person Thursday with López Obrador and Trudeau for the first time since taking office — and he’ll have to do more than just not be Trump.

For Biden, the trilateral summit — the first since 2016 — will be an exercise in building back trust and making headway on some of the thorniest issues among the countries, including migration challenges, trade irritants and charting a path for regional economic recovery from the pandemic.

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
ASK THE AUDIENCE

Nightly asks you: Is there something you really want or need to buy, whether for the holiday season or just an everyday item, that you’ve noticed is far more expensive or seemingly impossible to get? Send us your responses using our form, and we’ll share some answers next week.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

222-8

The result of the vote of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops today to approve a doctrine about the importance of communion that highlights the “special responsibility” of Catholics in positions of power to model church teaching. The doctrine stopped short of mentioning Biden by name. The second Catholic president in U.S. history’s support for abortion rights has put him at odds with church doctrine. American bishops approved plans last June to draft a “teaching document” that some hoped would prevent Biden and other Catholic politicians who support abortion rights from receiving communion.

PARTING WORDS

CLIMATE GONE HOGWILD — Nightly’s Tyler Weyant writes:

A touch of a spoiler for Neal Stephenson’s newest novel, Termination Shock: In the first pages, you’ll be reintroduced to a meme that’s a couple of years old: 30 to 50 feral hogs.

If you don’t remember this Twitter debate over gun rights, don’t worry. What matters is that the writer who coined the term “metaverse” now takes the threat of wild boars seriously. And now, so do I.

The rise of the porcine menace is but one of the many tiny details Termination Shock examines as Stephenson weighs the pros and cons of large private-sector actions to fight climate change outside of government control. As the metaverse, a concept Stephenson introduced in 1992’s Snow Crash, rockets into the real world, readers like me are left to wonder how close this vision of the fight against climate change could be to our future reality.

The novel’s not-too-distant setting imagines a world where nations are still spouting platitudes about lowering carbon emissions, while adapting to the daily challenges climate change presents. People wear protective “earthsuits” to survive nearly unlivable heat.

So a rich Texan comes up with an outside of novel idea to cool the planet’s climate using sulfur shot out of “The Biggest Gun In The World.”

As the story moves along, the conflict aligns with our current debates over how to deal with rising seas and temperatures: Is prevention possible, or should we focus only on mitigation? How should we help people who are affected by climate disasters? And how do actions in one place affect those in far-flung corners of the globe.

Not unlike Mark Zuckerberg’s new Meta vision of Stephenson’s 1992 virtual-reality concept infiltrating every nook of human life, the novel paints a future a decade-ish away where climate issues are a part of everything from the fight over the Line of Actual Control in the Himalayas to the way you stop for gas on the interstate.

The realism of Stephenson’s writing does something that climate change activists often have a hard time accomplishing outside of natural disasters: Putting the lives of real people into the consequences of a warming earth and measuring the existential hardships they face.

A message from eBay:

Americans throughout the country turn to online marketplaces to sell used personal items to make ends meet and keep things out of landfills. A new law passed earlier this year will require millions of them to receive confusing and burdensome tax forms for their sales online, even when they don’t owe taxes because they’re selling used goods. eBay believes the new low reporting threshold will cause confusion and over-reporting of non-taxable income for millions of Americans already struggling as a result of the pandemic. Congress should protect consumers and increase the reporting threshold for platforms enabling consumer sales of goods. Learn more about eBay's position on raising the 1099-K threshold and lifting the burden on Americans.

 


 

Follow us on Twitter

Chris Suellentrop @suellentrop

Tyler Weyant @tweyant

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"Look Me In The Eye" | Lucas Kunce for Missouri

  Help Lucas Kunce defeat Josh Hawley in November: https://LucasKunce.com/chip-in/ Josh Hawley has been a proud leader in the fight to ...