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In wake of killing, UnitedHealth CEO admits that 'no one would design a system like' ours

UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty wrote in a New York Times op-ed Friday that the for-profit U.S. healthcare system "does not work as well as it should" and that "no one would design a system like the one we have," admissions that came as his industry faced a torrent of public anger following the murder of UnitedHealthcare's chief executive.

Witty declared that his firm, the parent company of UnitedHealthcare and the nation's largest private insurer, is "willing to partner with anyone, as we always have—healthcare providers, employers, patients, pharmaceutical companies, governments, and others—to find ways to deliver high-quality care and lower costs."

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NY Times' Maggie Haberman highlights two things she says will keep Trump under control

Maggie Haberman, the New York Times reporter widely known as the "Trump Whisperer," identified two things that she said will always control the actions of President-elect Donald Trump: television and the stock market.

In a Times piece she co-authored with Jonathan Swan, Trump was painted as being in his element when ringing the bell at the New York Stock Exchange Thursday after being named the TIME "Person of the Year."

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RFK Jr. brings JFK conspiracies to heart of Trump team

Conspiracy theories about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy have floated around the fringes of US politics for decades. Now his nephew Robert F. Kennedy Jr. could bring them into the heart of the White House.

Kennedy -- the vaccine skeptic tapped by President-elect Donald Trump as his health secretary -- has been pushing for his daughter-in-law to be the deputy director of the CIA, US media reports say.

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Nancy Pelosi hospitalized following injury in Europe

Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) was hospitalized while traveling abroad with other lawmakers, her office said.

The 84-year-old former House speaker was part of bipartisan congressional delegation in Luxembourg to mark the 80th anniversary of the Battle of the Bulge when she sustained an unspecified injury during an official engagement and was admitted to a nearby hospital for evaluation, reported ABC News.

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'Stay vigilant': Ex-FBI profiler warns to expect CEO shooting copycats

A former FBI profiler warned that copycat killers may be motivated to act after the reaction to the assassination of a health care executive.

United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was gunned down last week in Midtown Manhattan, and many social media users justified — or even lauded — the killing. Suspect Luigi Mangione has been celebrated as something like a folk hero, and a pair of experts appeared on CNN to analyze the public reaction.

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Trump Commerce pick’s firm to pay millions for federal law violations

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has charged a top financial services firm led by President-elect Donald Trump's nominee to become Secretary of Commerce with violating federal law, according to multiple reports.

Cantor Fitzgerald, led by its CEO and chairman Howard Lutnick, was charged by the SEC with "violating laws related to disclosures by so-called blank-check companies before they raise money from the public," CNBC reports. "The SEC said that Cantor agreed to settle the case by saying the firm would not violate the relevant securities laws again and pay a $6.75 million civil penalty."

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U.S. Congress races to avert Christmas government shutdown

by Frankie TAGGART

U.S. lawmakers scrambled Friday to reach an agreement on funding federal agencies through the New Year to avert a damaging government shutdown due to begin in just seven days.

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Dogs may be taught to communicate by pressing buttons: study

A new study suggests dogs can learn to express themselves by pressing buttons to create two or more word combinations.

Researchers have been following several thousand dogs since 2022 whose button presses are logged through an app designed by Fluent Pet, which makes soundboards, and they then selected 152 dogs who were pressing two or more buttons in a sequence and found they frequently selected their own name, followed by "want" and then topics like "food" or "outside," reported the Washington Post.

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'Ontario is not having it': Trump reportedly set stage for Canada to cut off U.S. energy

With MSNBC host Jonathan Lemire pointing out that Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been surprisingly sanguine about Donald Trump's insults and tariff threats, CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin claimed the president-elect's taunts are not going unnoticed north of the U.S. border.

With Trump wielding tariff threats against Canada, Mexico and China before he even takes office, the "Squawk Box" host reported that there is the danger that some Americans could end up scrambling to keep the lights on if Canada's leaders choose to cut off power supplies to the U.S. provided by their country.

"Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau, at least to this point, has not really fought back against Trump's taunting, whether about tariffs or the suggestion he would annex Canada and be our 51st state, calling him Governor Trudeau in a social media post," Lemire prompted his guest. "But all eyes turns to the province of Ontario and Doug Ford which is floating the idea they're going to hit back, they may bar American-made alcohol and other restrictions if Trump follows through on these tariffs threats."

ALSO READ: The reckoning: Plenty of hurts coming for the people who didn't care about their country

"Ontario is not having it," Ross Sorkin bluntly replied. "And they're throwing down the gauntlet on the alcohol front because it would make the export of alcohol from the U.S. complicated and much more expensive.":

"But more importantly there's this electricity piece," he continued. "Ontario delivers electricity to about 1.5 million homes in the United States and suggesting maybe they would consider cutting that off."

"You know, this is when people talk about the tariffs and the uncertainty the tariffs could create, it's –– it wasn't just the cost of the tariffs, it's the retaliation," he elaborated, "and this is an example of the kind of thing that could happen and, therefore, a kind of different leverage points you think either the U.S. has or, in this case, Canada, may have."

You can watch below or at the link here.

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Colleges warning international students about life under Trump: report

As the fall semester closes for colleges and universities around the country, those institutions are warning international students that life might become more complicated after Jan. 20, 2025.

National Public Radio affiliate GBH reported that USC, the University of Pennsylvania, Cornell and others have contacted students before the holiday break, warning of barriers they may experience trying to return to school.

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'Neither a billionaire nor attorney': How Trump 'apparently inflated' aide's resumé

President-elect Donald Trump has picked Lebanon-born businessman Massad Boulos — whose son Michael Boulos is married to his daughter Tiffany Trump — as a senior adviser on Middle Eastern affairs.

The older Boulos has been described as a "billionaire attorney" in articles. But a New York Times article Thursday reported the billionaire claim was dubious.

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Trump being sent signals it's 'going to be ugly' if some nominees don't drop out: NBC

According to Ryan Nobles of NBC News, Donald Trump is getting dire warnings from Republican lawmakers that some of his more problematic nominees for his Cabinet are in for rough sledding if they don't drop out before their nationally televised confirmation hearings.

Appearing on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," and speaking with host Willie Geist, Nobles explained that there are fears about what will come out if nominees like Fox News personality Pete Hegseth and ex-Rep. Tulsi Gabbard are forced to explain their views under hostile questioning.

"These Republicans want him to win and when they go through the advise and consent role here it's not because they want to trip him up, not because they want to make his life difficult," Nobles reported. "It's because they want him to have the best people around him in these Cabinet posts when he takes office on January 20th and beyond."

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"So what they would like to see happen is, behind the scenes there is a conversation, they talk to the administration, they talk to these sherpas that are working with these candidates and they say, 'Do you know what? It's just not going to happen. If you go through this confirmation process it's going to be ugly, we're going to have a hearing where, remember, Democrats get to ask questions, they're going to expose a lot of these issues that have come up in media reports. Your nominees are going to have to deal with all of this and it's ultimately going to look bad for you, and then, at the end of all of it, after this brutal situation, we may have to vote against you and make it look like we are in opposition to you," he added.

"The other path is behind the scenes we quietly talk about how this isn't necessarily the right person for this job for a whole range of reasons, why don't you find someone else and let that person bow out on their own," he elaborated. "That's how it worked with [failed attorney general nominee] Matt Gaetz because it was clear that under any circumstance Matt Gaetz was not going to get the votes," he elaborated before remarking, "Trump got that message. '

Watch below or at the link here.

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'Worst-case scenarios are really bad': Trump reportedly on track to 'betray' his base

Donald Trump is on the verge of betraying some of his strongest supporters in rural America, a report suggests.

The president-elect has threatened to impose sweeping tariffs that could wreck agricultural producers, who also depend labor from the undocumented migrants that he intends to deport by the millions. That combined with a purported intention to slash spending on Medicaid and education could devastate small-town communities, reported The Atlantic.

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