Now listen. Greg Gutfeld is a world-class tool. There's no denying that. I knew that as soon as I heard of him, which was about a day ago.
But TBogg, my friend, I do believe you've been thoroughly trolled.
Now listen. Greg Gutfeld is a world-class tool. There's no denying that. I knew that as soon as I heard of him, which was about a day ago.
But TBogg, my friend, I do believe you've been thoroughly trolled.
Democratic United States Representative Terri Sewell — Alabama's lone Black congressperson — lauded the Supreme Court's Thursday decision striking down her state's gerrymandered voting map that was drawn by Republicans during an appearance on CNN.
"What does this mean for Alabama and '24, Congresswoman?" anchor Kate Bouldan asked.
"I, I think it means that we'll have a more equitable map. I mean, the reality is that African Americans make up twenty-seven percent of Alabama's population, and yet we only had one seat. And so I think that, I mean, I really, I'm, I'm, I guess I'm reeling from this decision cuz it is such a surprise," Sewell said.
"I was so happy that the justices saw the, the truth in the fact that that represents voter dilution," Sewell continued. "And it's Black voter dilution. And I think this is a huge win, not just for Alabama, since everybody's looking at the Milligan case for map withdrawing in North Carolina and Ohio. I mean, everyone's looking at this decision, and I think that it will have a ripple effect, a positive ripple effect. It means that minority dilution is not, is not going to be tolerated by the Supreme Court or, or by any court in the land. And that is a huge victory."
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Sewell then channeled John Lewis — the late civil rights activist and congressman.
"I, I know that John Lewis must be smiling because we got into some good trouble, some necessary trouble, and at the end of the day, right won out," Sewell added. "And justice, while, while you know the law arc of the universe is long, it definitely does bend towards justice."
Republicans and Democrats alike have been blasting the planned mega-merger this week of the PGA Tour and Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf.
But one leading merger critic — Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) — wasn't so enthusiastic about discussing a recent campaign donation he received from the PGA's political action committee.
“I’m really focused on what can be done, what is appropriate to do about the merger, given the possibility, the goal of sports-washing by the PGA," Blumenthal said Thursday when asked by Raw Story whether he would return or otherwise dispose of the $1,000 the PGA Tour Inc. Political Action Committee contributed to his re-election campaign committee in October, according to Federal Election Commission records.
RELATED ARTICLE: 'PGA is gonna get what it deserves': Condemnation of Saudi LIV merger unites some House members
Blumenthal is one among several federal lawmakers to have received four- or five-figure contributions from the PGA's PAC in recent years, Federal Election Commission records indicate.
Others include Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), who received $10,000 in 2021, and Senate Minority Whip John Thune (R-SD), who got $10,000 in 2022. Schumer and Thune could not immediately be reached for comment.
Sen. Richard Blumenthal (C-SPAN)
While fairly uncommon, federal lawmakers may legally dispose of unwanted or surplus campaign cash by returning it, donating it to charity or disgorging it to the U.S. Treasury's general fund.
RELATED ARTICLE: 'Shocked and deeply offended': 9/11 families condemn PGA deal with Saudi-backed golf group
Blumenthal, who defined "sports-washing" as “the use of investment in a sport to give credibility or to redeem the reputation of a country or interest that is in disrepute," said Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund "seems to be buying control of an American sport.”
Given this, "I think there is a role and responsibility for Congress” to investigate the matter, Blumenthal told Raw Story.
Blumenthal easily won a third term in the U.S. Senate in November.
The Saudi kingdom has been widely panned for repressive policies and human rights abuses, with Amnesty International accusing the nation's government of a litany of wrongdoings.
American intelligence agencies concluded in a report that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman approved the 2018 assassination of Washington Post contributing columnist Jamal Khashoggi, a leading critic of Saudi Arabia's government.
A former tobacco lobbyist-turned-Fox News contributor bucked health experts by claiming on air that smoke billowing over the Northeast from Canadian wildfires will do people no harm.
Speaking on The Ingraham Angle Wednesday, Steve Milloy said that the warning about the smoked-filled air was "junk science."
"We have this kind of air in India and China all the time. No public health emergency," he said.
Canadian wildfires have sent clouds of smoke that have drifted over to New York City, blanketing the city in an orange haze and causing its air quality to be ranked in the world. Health officials in that city told residents to stay indoors.
"This (New York City's smoke-filled air) is like clean air in China. It's really that in the winter they never turn on their scrubbers for the air pollution because they don't care," he said.
"This doesn't kill anybody. This doesn't make anybody cough. This is not a health event. This has got nothing to do with climate...this is wildfire smoke. This is natural. This is not because of climate change, fossil fuel [or] internal combustion engines," he added.
"This is total junk science."
As Newsweek points out, Milloy was the executive director of The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition back in the 1990s -- a group that was launched by the tobacco giant Phillip Morris and was allegedly designed to disprove science that linked cigarette smoking to harmful health effects.
"Dear Fox News Staff and Guests: Please start smoking. By your logic and reasoning, the experts who claim this smoke is harmful are also probably wrong about cigarettes," tweeted humorist George Hahn in response to the Fox News segment.
"Fun fact: The Fox News fake expert who declares that there is no health risk from wildfire smoke has also long been paid by the tobacco industry to downplay the health effects of cigarette smoke," tweeted political commentator Nathan Robinson.
Watch the video below or at this link.
\u201cFox guest: There's just no health risk...We have this kind of air in India and\u00a0China all the time, no public\u00a0health emergency... this doesn't kill anybody, this doesn't make anybody cough, this is not a health event... particulate matter is just very fine soot, they're innocuous.\u201d— Matthew Gertz (@Matthew Gertz) 1686228472
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