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Texas docs blow off RFK Jr's measles cure as kids who take it show 'signs of liver damage'

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been pushing doctors to treat measles-infected children with cod-liver oil despite the fact that medical experts believe that this is an unproven remedy that is not as effective at preventing the illness.

The Atlantic's Nicholas Florko reports that doctors in Texas, which is the center of the measles outbreak in the United States, have not been filing requests for vitamin A, budesonide, clarithromycin, or cod-liver oil, all of which have been recommended by Kennedy, who prior to becoming the nation's top public health official was an anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist.

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Latest Trump order seen as message to workers: 'Fall in line or else'

President Donald Trump's latest attack on the working class was delivered in the form of an executive order late Thursday that seeks to strip the collective bargaining rights from hundreds of thousands of federal government workers, a move that labor rights advocates said is not only unlawful but once again exposes Trump's deep antagonism toward working people and their families.

The executive order by Trump says its purpose is to "enhance the national security of the United States," but critics say its clear the president is hiding behind such a claim as a way to justify a broadside against collective bargaining by the public workforce and to intimidate workers more broadly.

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Trump attacked in deep-red Alabama over latest policy

U.S. House members in two of Alabama’s three districts with major automotive plants Thursday criticized President Donald Trump’s plans to impose 25% tariffs on automobiles and automobile parts.

The tariffs could hit Alabama’s car plants hard. Most of Alabama’s leading imports in 2023 — including oil, engines, transmissions and ignition sets – went toward building automobiles.

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The $20B question hanging over America’s struggling farmers

As Earth heats up, the growing frequency and intensity of disasters like catastrophic storms and heat waves are becoming a mounting problem for the people who grow the planet’s food. Warming is no longer solely eroding agricultural productivity and food security in distant nations or arid climates. It’s throttling production in the United States.

Farmers and ranchers across the country lost at least $20.3 billion in crops and rangeland to extreme weather last year, according to a new Farm Bureau report that crowned the 2024 hurricane season “one of the most destructive in U.S. history” and outlined a long list of other climate-fueled impacts.

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'Junk insurance': Patient shocked by $7k colonoscopy bill despite coverage

Tim Winard knew he needed to buy health insurance when he left his management job in manufacturing to launch his own business.

It was the first time he had shopped around for coverage, searching for a plan that would cover him and his wife, who was also between jobs at the time.

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'Charm offensive failed': Not one Greenlander was willing to publicly welcome Usha Vance

An advance team knocked on doors in Greenland’s capital Nuuk seeking someone who would welcome a visit from second lady Usha Vance, but every single person said no, according to a Danish TV report.

Vice president J.D. Vance joined his wife on the trip after she got a cold shoulder from prospective hosts, according to a report by Denmark's TV 2 that was flagged by The Hill, and the couple's plans shifted from a dogsled race in Sisimiut and meetings with Nuuk locals to a visit to a remote Space Force base.

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How Musk, Soros and other billionaires are shaping history's most expensive court race

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

Ten years ago, when Wisconsin lawmakers approved a bill to allow unlimited spending in state elections, only one Republican voted no.

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'Democrats smell blood' due to 'unspeakably bad' news for Trump: MSNBC panel

An MSNBC host claimed Friday that the Trump administration's failure to admit concern over including The Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg in a Signal chat where plans for an attack on Yemen were detailed is handing Democrats a major weapon.

Joe Scarborough said polling on the scandal shows a substantial amount of Republicans have major concerns — and that shrugging it off is not a good tactic.

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'Will backfire badly': Right-wing legal scholars warn Trump against defying courts

Politico's Ankush Khardori this week spoke with several right-wing legal scholars about the prospects of President Donald Trump defying court orders and he came away with the conclusion that doing so "will backfire badly" on the president and his allies.

While Vice President J.D. Vance and other Trump allies have made noises about defying the courts, Khardori believes that doing so would undermine a decades-long conservative project to remake the judicial branch as a bulwark of right-wing legal thought.

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'P.R. disaster': J.D. Vance expected to attack Denmark on scaled-back visit to Greenland

Vice president J.D. Vance is expected to launch an attack on a U.S. ally during an unsolicited visit to Greenland with his wife.

Second lady Usha Vance had been scheduled to visit the autonomous territory in the Kingdom of Denmark with one of the couple's young sons, but her husband decided to join her on a drastically scaled-back trip after watching outrage over her trip grow amid Donald Trump's threats to take control of the world's largest island, reported CNN.

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'A sign of weakness': DC insider claims Trump is spiraling into big trouble

Donald Trump's decision to pull the nomination of Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) to be his next ambassador to the United Nations, coming as it is at the same time he is fending off a firestorm over the security breach known as "Signalgate," is a sign that his administration is reeling.

That is the opinion of MSNBC's contributor and longtime Beltway insider Chris Matthews who claimed the president is coming close to following the same path as disgraced President Richard Nixon.

With "Morning Joe" host Joe Scarborough pointing to Trump's admission that Stefanik needs to remain in the House due to the GOP's thin margin, he made the point that Trump's claims of a mandate are falling apart.

ALSO READ: ‘I miss lynch mobs’: The secretary of retribution's followers are getting impatient

"The Republican agenda is extremely unpopular, they are crashing the economy in real-time and House Republicans are running scared. What happened to their so-called mandate? Well, Chris Matthews, they didn't have a mandate –– they won by like one and a half percentage points," the MSNBC host prompted his guest.

"You know, he's got a couple signs of weakness," Matthews replied. "Stefanik going back to the House is a big sign of weakness. He's worried about points, a couple seats in New York, especially where there's going to be some back and forth."

"But I also look at his performance," he continued. "Last night, Peter Alexander had one hell of a report last night, he pointed out in the evening news that Trump is very angry at [national security adviser] Mike Waltz, about Signal. And he has got to be angry. And the president has to be angry right now that somebody screwed up the worst week he's had."

"And why did that person do it?" he proposed. "l'd want to know who did it and why they did it. –– are they on somebody else's team? I wouldn't understand why he'd come up with a name, Jeffrey Goldberg, right in the middle of these other guys, right? Why would you do it?"

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'But Greenland has a government': CNN host confronts conservative about J.D. Vance visit

CNN's Audie Cornish redirected a conservative blogger after he justified vice president J.D. Vance's visit to Greenland.

The vice president will join his wife Usha Vance in a drastically scaled-back unsolicited visit as Greenland officials and citizens make clear they're not welcome amid president Donald Trump's threats to take control of the autonomous territory in the Kingdom of Denmark, but Vance tried to put a happy spin on the backlash.

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Lines of wounded at Myanmar hospital after powerful quake

by Joe STENSON with Chayanit ITTHIPONGMAETEE in Bangkok

A stream of casualties were rushed to the hospital in Naypyidaw -- some in cars, others in pickups, and others carried on stretchers, their bodies bloody and covered in dust after a huge quake

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