Abundant Life Christian School shooting latest: Local schools report 'false threats'
Map Shows North Korean Advance as Casualties in Ukraine Surpass 200 Troops
The figures mark the first significant U.S. assessment of North Korean losses since their deployment to aid Russia's war effort.
newsweek.com
Classified Mystery Drone Briefing: What We Know
More than 5,000 drone sightings have been reported in recent weeks, according to intelligence agencies, causing much speculation.
newsweek.com
How Cody Bellinger fits into the Yankees’ roster makeover
It's not enough to replace Juan Soto's production, but Bellinger's bat can be one piece of the puzzle.
nypost.com
Satellite Photo Captures Chinese Aircraft Carrier Near Neighbor's Shores
The South China Sea drill came after the Chinese military held a large exercise near Taiwan last week.
newsweek.com
Mystery Drones Looking for Missing 'Radioactive Material': New Jersey Mayor
Belleville mayor Michael Melhamsaid information the federal government has provided to mayors was "not credible."
newsweek.com
Guinness Shortage: Beer Maker Provides Update for US Customers
"It has been an exceptional spike in our peak season, even by Guinness' standards," the company behind the iconic stout said.
newsweek.com
FBI's warning as reported drone sightings plague the East Coast and more top headlines
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foxnews.com
Elon Musk and SpaceX Face Federal Review for Security Reporting Violation
The reviews were initiated by the Defense Department's Office of Inspector General, the Air Force and the Pentagon.
newsweek.com
Complete mastodon jaw found in New York homeowner's backyard: 'Remarkable discovery'
A complete mastodon jaw found by a New York homeowner will undergo "extensive scientific analysis" before being put on display to the public.
foxnews.com
2 parents, 3 young children found dead in Utah home; teen hospitalized
The dead were two adults, an 11-year-old boy, and two girls ages 9 and 2, according to police.
cbsnews.com
The Sports Report: UCLA men pass prelim before bigger test Saturday
The No. 18 Bruins’ rout of Prairie View A&M was so comfortable that coach Mick Cronin used a sprinkling of his trademark quick hooks.
latimes.com
No. 1 pick Sarah Fillier already ‘leading charge’ for Sirens heading into home opener
Sarah Fillier was almost in disbelief when Billie Jean King announced that the New York Sirens would be taking Fillier with the No. 1 pick at the June draft.
nypost.com
Megan Thee Stallion seeks restraining order against rapper who’s in prison for shooting her: ‘No signs of stopping’
“Even now, while behind bars, Mr. Peterson shows no signs of stopping,” the petition claimed.
nypost.com
Natalie Rupnow's Home Raided, Video Appears to Suggest
The home of Natalie Rupnow's father appears to have been raided by Wisconsin investigators, as footage shows the front door off its hinges.
newsweek.com
Ultra-Processed Foods Damaging Immune System's Ability to Fight Cancer
Chronic inflammation, which scientists believe can be fueled by poor dietary choices, has now likely been found to play a vital role in colorectal cancer.
newsweek.com
Rory McIlroy teases Charles Barkley about his weight during match vs LIV Golf stars
PGA Tour star Rory McIlroy had a fun back-and-forth with Basketball Hall of Famer Charles Barkley during "The Showdown" in Nevada on Tuesday.
foxnews.com
An Ode to Big Families
In the video, my siblings and I stand with our mother on the large porch of a house somewhere in Virginia, before a small crowd gathered across the street. We’re dressed plainly, except for my mother, who wears a festive sweater and headband. And we are singing—“The 12 Days of Christmas,” “Carol of the Bells,” my grandpa’s arrangement of “Hey Ho, Anybody Home” with “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen.” For most of the performance, my mother conducts us from a music stand, pitch pipe in hand. Only during “Hodie Apparuit,” a somewhat intricate three-part Latin carol by Orlando di Lasso, does she leave her post, to sing “firsts” with me. I was not the youngest child in the family. But in choral matters, I always needed the most help.I am not a musical person. I do not play any instruments. I can’t read music or write songs, the way some of my siblings do in their spare time. And I have never described myself as a singer. (Although here, my mother would interject to reassure readers that I have a “lovely voice.”) I don’t generally sing at all unless I feel well assured that, shrouded in protective layers of other voices, no one can hear me, or at least not me in particular. The second those voices fall away, my voice breaks. I may be able to sing a tune, but I can’t carry one.Nevertheless, I sing a lot—even now, because that is what my family does when we get together. I often find this dynamic, in which music remains an enormous part of my life despite my ineptitude, tricky to explain to people. But it also encapsulates what I consider one of the undersung advantages of being raised in a big family: It can draw the best out of you by drawing you out of yourself.[Read: The longest relationships of our lives]I am the middle of five children, all of us born within the span of seven years. Growing up, I rarely stopped to consider whether I liked being in a large family, perhaps because in the Catholic circles in which my family ran, we were hardly the biggest. I would not describe us as any chummier than your average lot of sisters and brothers. We played together and have about a million inside jokes. We also fought a lot. Over the years, our relationships with one another have at times been deeply strained. But I am and always have been fiercely defensive of my siblings, which is why I find it difficult to know what to make of the research indicating that I’m worse off for having them.A significant body of evidence suggests, for instance, that kids with more siblings do worse in school than their counterparts from smaller families, across a variety of educational outcomes: math and reading scores, high-school graduation rates, college enrollment and graduation, and overall educational attainment. The relationship between number of siblings and achievement shrinks after researchers correct for factors such as parental education and income, Douglas Downey, a sociology professor at Ohio State University, told me, but it doesn’t disappear. A 2015 study found that as family size increases, children score worse on cognitive tests and exhibit more behavioral challenges; it suggested, too, that kids from bigger families are at greater risk of experiencing criminal conviction and teen pregnancy, and are more likely to earn less as adults.Yet research also indicates that coming from a big family can offer benefits. Some studies have found that, on average, the more siblings you have as a child, the less likely you are to divorce as an adult. “That’s suggestive that maybe you learn some interaction skills growing up that then translate into building long-lasting relationships later in adulthood,” Downey told me. Other research has found that quality sibling relationships can be a meaningful buffer against loneliness in adulthood.[Read: The longest relationships of our lives]Still, kids in big families do tend to struggle in a variety of ways. The prevailing explanation for this, initially put forward by the sociologist Judith Blake in the 1980s, is commonly referred to as “resource dilution.”The resource-dilution model notes that parents have finite means; the more children they have, the thinner those means are spread. And although reasons exist to question this theory—it’s possible, for instance, that the relationship between family size and educational outcomes isn’t actually causal, Downey said—I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s something to it. To be honest, I’d be shocked if there wasn’t. Particularly in the United States, where so much of a child’s welfare is determined by their parents, the notion that those parents’ time and income would go further on two kids than five doesn’t seem far-fetched.In fact, I don’t think resource dilution quite captures how having siblings alters the divvying up of family resources. The term makes it sound as if each kid just gets a smaller cut of the family funds. But in my experience, it isn’t so simple. My parents weren’t poor, but even with help from my grandparents, they didn’t have enough money to send five kids to college, for example. Minimizing the amount of debt each of us had to take on meant we all had to compromise. I doubt I could have gotten into a really prestigious school, but it didn’t occur to me to try, because in my family you didn’t go to the best school you could get into, or even the best you could afford with one-fifth of the family college fund. You went to the school that gave you the most money, to maximize what was left over for your siblings. It was the opposite of meritocracy: The person with the highest SAT scores got the smallest slice of the pie.The scarcest resource was our parents’ attention. I saw my parents plenty, but my individual needs often got lost in the shuffle. I was constantly showing up to school without whatever form or costume or special hairdo kids were supposed to have that day. My brother—not my parents—dropped me off at college.[Read: Are siblings more important than parents?]I’d be lying if I said I haven’t occasionally wrestled with resentment for the inevitably unfair way my parents’ resources have shaken out. If I can overlook such grievances now, it’s because—I know I’m lucky to say—my most basic needs were never in jeopardy. I also can’t exactly blame my parents: I’m under no illusion that having a bunch of kids is a breeze. I myself became so overwhelmed with just two children that I felt the need to hit pause on having more until I could come up for air.Nevertheless, I think that in many ways my life is richer than it might have been had all my family’s resources been poured into me. And coexisting with all those people pushed me to try things that I likely wouldn’t have if I’d been an only child or one of just two. Which brings me back to all that singing, and the deep joy I’ve experienced as the only unmusical member of a sibling choir—descendants of a family with a long musical history.My great-grandfather was a violinist in the Cleveland Philharmonic Orchestra. His daughter, my grandmother, earned a scholarship to the Metropolitan Opera. Her husband, my grandfather, was not only a composer who wrote liturgical music, motets, symphonies, and string quartets but also a beloved music teacher who believed that music was as crucial to the development of the mind as math. An attempt to live out this belief drove my mother to teach me and my siblings to sing together from an early age. She started with simple rounds, such as “Oh, How Lovely Is the Evening.” Then she taught us to sight-read using solfège (the do-re-mi system memorably rendered in The Sound of Music), so we could tackle (or, in my case, stumble through) more challenging polyphonic tunes.My siblings took to music with ease. Today, if you hand any one of them the sheet music of an unfamiliar song, they’ll be singing it within the hour. If they mess up, you probably won’t know. They’ll wander from a given tune while maintaining harmony with it, then meander back without drawing notice. Then there’s me, the one whose lack of innate ability seems to have defied both nature and nurture. To perform a song halfway confidently, I have to drill it into my neural pathways through rote memorization, as if I’m hammering down a railroad. If I get knocked off track, forget correcting course. I’m a train wreck.And yet, at every opportunity, I’ve kept singing with my family. We sing when someone graduates, marries, or welcomes a new child. We still carol for neighbors, fellow churchgoers, and perfect strangers at every chance we get. My parents eventually divorced, but when my dad died a few years ago, my siblings and I gathered with our aunts, uncles, and cousins, and, with my mother conducting us as usual, sang as his coffin was lowered into the grave.By one view, this part of my life—the 10,000 hours I’ve spent honing a craft I do not have the talent or passion to master—is a missed opportunity. Perhaps, had I grown up in a smaller family, I would have devoted that time and energy to some other skill to which I was better suited. Yet that prospect only saddens me, because singing with my family is among my most cherished pastimes. It’s what I’m homesick for when homesickness strikes.Life in a big family is all about making do—with the hand-me-down winter coat that only sort of fits, with the sport that you only sort of like, with the fact that you will always be the worst singer in the group. You could see this as indignity. But I see it as a reason to be grateful. I get to sing because my family chooses, over and over, to make do with me.
theatlantic.com
Watch Mariah Carey autograph Rihanna’s breast at final Christmas concert: ‘F–king epic’
The "Pon De Replay" singer's hilarious interaction with Carey has gone viral on social media, with many labeling it the "perfect moment."
nypost.com
Gap showcases hottest products and collabs in its revamped Flatiron store
Gap is testing cool merch in a new retail lab.
nypost.com
Gen X Man Speechless at What He's Asked While Staying at 'Posh' Hotel
A woman and her husband were in shock at a fancy hotel when a fellow guest mistook the man for a cage fighter.
newsweek.com
Coal use hitting record in 2024, which is likely hottest year yet, report says
World coal use is set to reach an all-time high in 2024, the International Energy Agency says, in a year all but certain to be the hottest in recorded history.
cbsnews.com
Tulsi Gabbard's Chances of Getting Confirmed in Jeopardy: Report
Gabbard reportedly struggled to sway Republican senators, with some questioning her qualifications for the top intelligence role.
newsweek.com
Key Trump ally comes out against massive emergency spending plan: 'This bill should not pass'
Billionaire Elon Musk says he opposes the current draft of House Speaker Mike Johnson's 1,547-page spending bill.
foxnews.com
What is Logan Paul's Net Worth? Influencer's Earnings as Conor McGregor Fight Confirmed
Logan Paul has built a substantial net worth through diverse ventures in entertainment, sports and business.
newsweek.com
Chinese Ship May Have Tried to Sabotage Undersea Cables Before: Report
Analysis shows that the "Yi Peng 3" performed a suspicious maneuver 10 days before undersea cables were damaged.
newsweek.com
Aaron Rodgers calls on critics to share 'vax status' before scrutinizing him amid bubbling feud with ESPN star
New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers issued a "PSA" on Tuesday afternoon during his weekly appearance on "The Pat McAfee Show" on ESPN.
foxnews.com
Can Trump force Hamas to free the hostages they're holding?
The Iranian hostage crisis and President Ronald Reagan's election in 1980 could provide a preview for what could happen with the hostages being held by Hamas.
foxnews.com
Former Obama aides mock Biden 'disappearing' in final months of presidency: 'Trump isn't president yet'
Former Barack Obama aides mocked President Biden disappearing from the public eye behind President-elect Donald Trump in the final months of his presidency.
foxnews.com
First Look at Wakanda and More Details Revealed for Marvel 1943: Rise of Hydra
Skydance New Media has revealed more details about Marvel 1943: Rise of Hydra.
newsweek.com
Philanthropy Can Help Protect and Elevate Communities Facing Atrocity Crimes | Opinion
When philanthropic capital goes into researching real-time evidence, the data speak for itself, can be credibly verified, and is blatantly too dangerous to ignore.
newsweek.com
Why Top Brands Are Encouraging Customers to Buy Second-Hand
Companies are turning to resale, repair, and rental models to extend the life of garments, reduce waste, and lower their carbon footprint.
time.com
The Rise of Carbon-Neutral Neighborhoods
So far 22 cities have joined the global carbon-neutral cities alliance.
time.com
Why conservatives condemn Luigi Mangione and celebrate Daniel Penny
Daniel Penny arrives at the Manhattan Criminal Courthouse on December 9, 2024, in New York City. The American right has spent the past week performing an interesting tap dance: condemning the left for cheering on one alleged killer while turning another into a right-wing celebrity. In the first case, health care CEO shooting suspect Luigi Mangione, the right is appalled by (the admittedly appalling) celebrations in a certain corner of the left. “It’s really terrible that some people seem to admire him,” President-elect Donald Trump said in a Monday press conference. The second killer — Daniel Penny, who choked homeless man Jordan Neely on the New York subway — has become the subject of much right-wing admiration. After his acquittal on manslaughter charges last week, Vice President-elect JD Vance invited him to attend the Army-Navy football game with Trump. This contrast was everywhere, among both Republican electeds and right-leaning pundits (much as a mirror image discourse played out among the left’s Mangione supporters). Incoming House GOP member Brandon Gill, who had broadcast criticisms of liberals on Twitter for lionizing Mangione, said in a Sunday speech that “we need a lot more Daniel Pennys in this country because we have far too many Jordan Neelys.” Bari Weiss, whose Free Press publication had published an editorial calling the very idea of prosecuting Penny unjust, went on Fox News to declare that “you cannot have a functioning liberal democracy like the one we have and accept that certain people are allowed to be murdered in the streets of Manhattan.” Nothing captures the divergence in reactions to the two killings than a viral clip of Fox News host Laura Ingraham, in which she says: People celebrating [Mangione]? This is a sickness — honestly, so disappointing, but I guess we shouldn’t be surprised. Gentlemen, thank you so much. Up next, the other big news out of New York: Daniel Penny. A lot of people think he’s a hero. To many on the left, this might seem like pure hypocrisy. But I think that’s too simple. Not only does it skate over some obvious differences between the two situations, it also fails to grapple with the deeper ideological differences between right and left-wing approaches to these issues. The notion of “order” plays a central role in conservative thought, in a way that liberals and leftists often have trouble reckoning with. Once you understand the nature of the right’s philosophical commitment to order, it’s easier to see why they find no hypocrisy in their treatment of Mangione and Penny — even if one can fairly question if the right is letting itself off too easily. Order and violence While reporting this piece, I watched the available footage of the two incidents in question. And it’s clear that they are very, very different situations. The killing of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was a cold-blooded killing; multiple shots to the back with no prior altercation and no hint that Thompson posed an immediate physical threat to anyone. This was a straightforward, intentional, and premeditated killing. Neely’s situation is different: Some passengers on the train said he was threatening to hurt someone, though he hadn’t actually done so. Penny claims that he restrained Neely to protect the other passengers. In reality, it’s highly questionable whether putting Neely into a chokehold for six straight minutes is a justifiable response to mere verbal aggression. Even Penny’s defense team implicitly conceded death was not an appropriate punishment, with his attorneys arguing both that Penny didn’t intend to kill Neely and technically may not have. But conservatives aren’t just arguing that Penny should be found not guilty. They’re celebrating him as ahero. In this, they are mirroring those on the left who see the extinction of a human life on the streets of New York as a political victory. So why? How can they condemn the left’s choice to lionize an (alleged) killer on the one hand while doing the same with one that they like? In National Review, cultural critic Christian Schneider took this challenge head-on. His argument proceeds by comic book analogy, comparing Mangione to the Joker and Penny to Batman. Mangione “likely killed a man in cold blood as an act of showmanship, of toying with law enforcement. It’s straight out of the Joker’s antihero playbook, in which he earns the respect of like-minded citizens as he unleashes chaos,” Schneider writes. Penny, by “committing a random act of public safety” and being condemned for it, has in contrast begun “the most basic superhero origin narrative: An individual looks around, sees the justice system can’t handle the criminality infesting the streets, and takes action on his own.” Schneider’s language may be simplistic, but he is putting his finger on the pulse of the conservative approach to these issues. Conservatism is, above all else, a philosophy of order. In fact, the insistence on order’s value is one of the things that binds together the entire conservative coalition — from Trump to the GOP’s centrist squishes. When Russell Kirk, a defining voice in 20th-century conservatism, made a list of 10 conservative principles, he made this the very first: “The conservative believes that there exists an enduring moral order. That order is made for man, and man is made for it: human nature is a constant, and moral truths are permanent.” Much of his list consists of an elaboration on this principle: an accounting of what “the enduring moral order” is, how it shapes the health of a political community, and how it may be prudently adjusted over time. The moral order, for Kirk, is a social code developed collectively by a society over centuries — more akin to common sense than abstractly reasoned-out principles. It is enforced both by law and custom; without it, we risk wholesale societal collapse. “If the old institutional and moral safeguards of a nation are neglected, then the anarchic impulse in humankind breaks loose,” he writes. On this conservative understanding, the killing of the United Health Care CEO is an exemplar of “the anarchic impulse”: someone violating a time-honored principle of addressing political concerns through the ballot box rather than the bullet. It represents a man attacking the system that we, collectively, have decided on The killing of Jordan Neely, by contrast, represents a defense of the moral order in the conservative mind. By acting belligerently and threatening passengers on the train, Neely had become a force of chaos and disruption. If the state wasn’t going to intervene to protect the moral order against someone like Penny, then citizens would eventually be forced to act. “When liberals destroy [the] rule of law, heroes like Daniel Penny are what stop violent thugs from terrorizing innocent citizens. He should be celebrated,” Gill, the incoming Texas congressman, writes on X/Twitter. For leftists and liberals, this logic sounds a lot like a justification for hierarchy — a fancy way of saying that the people at the top of the social system deserve more rights and protections, no matter how much harm they do. It amounts to a vindication of Frank Wilhoit’s quip that “conservatism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.” Moreover, the alleged defense of order can become a justification for its own kind of disorder. Daniel Penny is not just a one-off: there is a long and troubling history of conservatives endorsing vigilante killings of the “right kind” of people, with fairly recent examples including Kyle Rittenhouse and George Zimmerman. Conservative fetishization of individuals defending order, of a “good guy with a gun,” is part of why America has such a severe violent crime problem in the first place. Ultimately, though, I find the very need to have this conversation troubling. It’s not good for democracy to have competing factions — left, right, or otherwise — celebrating alleged killers, attempting to score political points with pamphlets written in blood. And the more we as a society normalize this gladiatorial ethos, the greater the risk becomes of these horrors repeating themselves.
vox.com
In Syria, First Domestic Flight Since Assad’s Overthrow Lands in Aleppo
A Syrian Air flight from Damascus landed in Aleppo on Wednesday, as the transitional government tries to demonstrate its ability to run the war-shattered country.
nytimes.com
Christmas trees in Germany were decorated with apples instead of ornaments in the 1600s for 'Adam and Eve Day'
Germany is credited with starting the Christmas tree tradition. Back in the 1600s, trees displayed in homes were not decorated with glass ornaments, but rather fruit.
foxnews.com
Map Shows US Military Bases Swarmed by Mystery Drones
Unidentified drone sightings have been reported at bases both at home and abroad.
newsweek.com
DA accused of firing at fugitive, hitting home with family inside
Chris Stanford is facing a reckless endangerment charge after shooting at a fugitive several times and hitting a home that had a family inside.
cbsnews.com
Pope Francis Reveals How Assassination Plot Was Foiled
According to Pope Francis, a bid to kill him during a 2021 visit to Iraq was foiled following a tip from British intelligence.
newsweek.com
‘Fat positivity’ expert hired by San Francisco Dept. of Health to consult on ‘weight stigma’
Virgie Tovar claimed her collaboration with the San Francisco Department of Public Health is an “absolute dream come true.”
nypost.com
Donald Trump Gets Boost on Social Security
A new poll shows strong support for ending taxes on Social Security income, one of Trump's key election pledges.
newsweek.com
Helldivers 2 x Killzone Crossover Adds Helghast Skins, Banners and Weapons
Helldivers 2 is crossing over with PlayStation's Killzone franchise, bringing new Helghast-inspired outfits, banners, weapons, and more.
newsweek.com
The Photos that Defined 2024
The year was made up of extraordinary moments — and Times photographers captured them in extraordinary images.
nytimes.com
Luigi Mangione Prosecutors Have a Jury Problem: 'So Much Sympathy'
A former prosecutor has said he has never seen so much sympathy for a person accused of murder.
newsweek.com
Tensions between Israel and Turkey escalate over Syria: 'It’s time to pay attention'
Ankara's growing military presence in Syria has led to a diplomatic clash between former allies Israel and Turkey. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has supported Hamas, even hinting at some sort of armed intervention.
foxnews.com
David Hogg says he received 'an enormous amount of vitriol' for asking about Dem outreach to young men
Progressive activist and DNC vice chair candidate David Hogg said on MSNBC that he was attacked for suggesting that Democrats reach out to young men.
foxnews.com
Putin's Shadow Fleet Dealt New Blow in Disaster-Riddled Week
The vessel Mercury broke down in the Pacific Ocean amid concerns about the seaworthiness of Russian vessels.
newsweek.com
You’ve never heard of the Covid booster with the fewest side effects
The first time I got a Novavax Covid vaccine, it felt almost subversive. Over the previous few years, every mRNA-based booster I’d gotten — the ones made by Moderna and Pfizer — had felt like a two-day bout of the flu. I’d gamely booked sick days into my calendar and sucked it up through fevers, headaches, and exhaustion, comforting myself with ibuprofen and the knowledge that at least I was keeping my elderly parents safe. Two and a half years into the pandemic, the Food and Drug Administration approved a Covid vaccine made by biotech company Novavax using older vaccine production technology. Licensed for people 12 and over, it was nearly as effective at Covid prevention as Pfizer and Moderna’s mRNA vaccines — and, as I noted with great interest, it had fewer side effects. In 2023, I got one. The difference was staggering: Although I felt a little weak and shaky for a few hours on the night of my injection, I woke up the next morning feeling blissfully normal, with only a mild soreness in my arm and a smug pep in my step. This year, there was no question what I’d do — it would be easy, breezy Novavax for me. More than half of all people who get mRNA boosters have similar unpleasant short-term side effects to mine. But strangely, few of them seem to see Novavax as an alternative: As of August, Americans had received650 million mRNA vaccine doses, compared with only 83,000 Novavax doses. Experts told me Novavax has suffered both from its timing and from an unearned reputation as a dark horse. “There’s this perception that this is some kind of second-line vaccine that people take if they don’t want to get the mRNA vaccines,” says Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease doctor and senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, “but it should not be.” “They’re equivalent, and there may be some advantages to getting it,” he told me. Although the worst of the pandemic is long over, there are still plenty of good reasons to get a Covid-19 booster. The virus caused more than 76,000 deaths in 2023 and nearly 41,000 hospitalizations between October 2023 and last April. There’s still a risk of developing long Covid after infection, even if it is lower than during the earliest days of the pandemic. Still, more than half of Americans don’t plan to get a Covid booster this year, according to a recent Pew Research Center survey, and the discomfort they cause is a big reason why. Sixty percent of people not lining up for a shot said side effects were a major reason for their disinterest. Maybe more people would get Covid boosters if they knew what I know about Novavax: Making the smart choice for your and your community’s health doesn’t have to feel like crap. Why nobody thinks of Novavax first Novavax is built differently from other Covid vaccines, which is part of why it didn’t enter our vaccine vocabularies until later in the pandemic. The Moderna and Pfizer vaccines — the first Covid immunizations the FDA approved in December 2020 — were created using technology that had previously only been used in clinical trial settings. The technology involves encoding genetic blueprints for the novel coronavirus’s spike protein onto fragile mRNA molecules and delivering them to the body’s muscle cells to produce an immune response. Like the mRNA vaccines produced by Moderna and Pfizer, Novavax was created to combat Covid-19. Unlike them, it’s based on older technology that mirrors methods used to produce many other conventional vaccines that have been around for decades. It takes a lot longer to create a vaccine that uses conventional technology. That explains why the first version of Novavax wasn’t approved until August 2022, almost two years after mRNA vaccines came on the market. It is also only approved for older children (age 12 and up) and adults. “In general, the first to the market tends to have a lot of advantage in terms of uptake,” Adalja says. Novavax’s later release means many people may simply not think about it when they think of Covid vaccines. Novavax has less severe side effects than either of the mRNA vaccines Before mRNA vaccines were even approved by the FDA, it was clear their short-term effects were more severe than those of other vaccinations that had come before. In early reports, participants in vaccine trials reported severe fatigue, headache, and muscle and joint pains that simply didn’t happen with other vaccines. With time, more data emerged. The vaccines had been split into two doses given a number of weeks apart. In vaccine trials, many adults had short-term side effects beyond sore arms, especially after the second dose. Their symptoms included fatigue (60 percent to 65 percent), headache (50 percent to 60 percent), and fever (11 percent to 15 percent) lasting for one to two days. For both the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines, post-vaccination symptoms were more common in children and adolescents, and less common in adults 65 and older. (Notably, anywhere from a quarter to half of people who received a saline placebo instead of either Pfizer or Moderna vaccine also reported these symptoms, except fever — so it’s not entirely clear how much of the vaccine group’s discomfort was due to the vaccine.) Once the general public started getting the vaccines, the full extent of these side effects became clearer. Fatigue, headache, or muscle aches occurred after the second injection in about half of people who participated in a voluntary vaccine safety tracking system, while a quarter to a third of those people had chills, fever, or joint pain. In one study, 37 percent of healthcare workers who got the vaccines were sick enough in the following couple of days that they had to miss work. When Novavax came on the scene a little less than two years after the mRNA vaccines rolled out, a large study suggested it would have milder side effects. In particular, fever was less common among people who got the vaccine, occurring in only 6 percent of people after a second dose. Other side effects were also less frequent, and all went away faster than the symptoms that followed mRNA vaccines — after a matter of hours rather than days. “There are a lot of people that are legitimately knocked out for a couple of days with the mRNA, and you’re not going to get that with Novavax.” There’s no big head-to-head comparison study of both mRNA vaccines and Novavax to quantify just how big the differences in their side effects are. However, a small Chinese study published earlier this year hints at just how much more tolerable Novavax is than its mRNA counterparts. Among people who got the current versions of the Novavax and Pfizer vaccines in late 2022, those who got the Pfizer mRNA vaccine were six times as likely to have fever and more than three times as likely to have chills and muscle aches. Only 2 percent of people in the Novavax group had each of these symptoms; the only symptom they reported more often than the Pfizer group was fatigue. Kirsten Lyke, an infectious disease doctor and vaccine researcher at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, led a safety study on mixing and matching brands of initial Covid vaccines and booster doses. Although the study wasn’t designed to compare the side effects of different vaccines, it was clear people who got Novavax booster doses had milder side effects that resolved more quickly than those boosted with mRNA vaccines. “There are a lot of people that are legitimately knocked out for a couple of days with the mRNA, and you’re not going to get that with Novavax,” she says. Novavax works as well as mRNA vaccines So Novavax causes fewer annoying side effects than other vaccines. How well does it protect you from Covid? When the mRNA vaccines first became available in late 2020, the yardstick experts used to communicate their quality was their effectiveness at preventing infection. At the outset, Moderna’s and Pfizer’s vaccines had 95 percent vaccine effectiveness, which meant that among 100 people at risk of catching the virus, they kept all but 5 of them from getting infected. Novavax was tested at a different time, after the virus had evolved, and many people had already been exposed to Covid-19. Its initial effectiveness was measured at 90 percent. The current evidence suggests that people initially vaccinated with mRNA vaccines who go on to get a Novavax booster are well covered — in Lyke’s study, they developed antibody levels well above the level needed to protect people from Covid. Although mRNA boosters may lead to higher antibody levels, “higher isn’t necessarily better,” she says. Other studies have suggested the antibodies Novavax elicits may hang around longer than the ones other vaccines provoke; still others indicate that when it comes to more real-world outcomes like developing symptoms after infection, Novavax is as good as any other vaccine on the market. Those studies are from 2021 and 2022, and involved Covid variants that are different from the ones circulating now. More recent assessments of how good the newest version of Novavax is at preventing Covid infection and severe illness — like the data the FDA reviewed before approving the 2024-2025 version of the Novavax booster — are from studies in mice, not humans. Still, they suggest the latest editions of Novavax are in the ballpark of its earlier versions when it comes to protecting us from the virus’ worst. You can check the Novavax website to find a pharmacy near you where you can get a Novavax vaccine. Fundamentally, it’s time to stop worrying about whether one vaccine is slightly more effective at preventing certain outcomes than others, says Lyke. “At this point, we’re kind of beyond that,” she says. “We have a lot of options and you can pick and choose,” she says, “and you’re probably not going to make a wrong decision.”
vox.com
Republican Pushes Bill to Shoot Down Mystery Drones
Tennessee Congressman Mark Green said it is "critical" to allow local law enforcement to take down the drones.
newsweek.com