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WATCH: Anti-Israel protester admits she doesn't know why she's at NYU protest
A viral video shared by former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani purports to show an anti-Israel protester admitting that she has no idea why she is protesting NYU.
foxnews.com
Russian court fines TV presenter who threw 'almost naked' party over her calls for peace
Anastasia Ivleeva, a TV presenter and actress, has been fined for social media posts advocating peace during Russia's invasion of Ukraine, officials said.
foxnews.com
Mississippi plaintiff rejects settlement for brother who died after police pulled him out of car
Bettersten Wade, who sued the city of Jackson, MI, over the death of her brother rejected a settlement after officials publicly disclosed what the city would pay his survivors.
foxnews.com
Meet the stunning WAGs of the 2024 NFL Draft
Before the opening round of the 2024 NFL Draft on Thursday night, get to know the biggest supporters of this year's top prospects.
nypost.com
Blue Jays vs. Royals prediction: MLB odds, picks, best bets for Thursday
Stitches is betting on the Blue Jays beating the host Royals and the Astros toppling the Cubs at Wrigley Field.
nypost.com
With DNC nomination set for after Ohio deadline, legislators negotiate to ensure Biden is on ballot
Republicans and Democrats in Ohio are negotiating to make sure that President Biden appears on the November ballot since Biden's formal nomination will be after Ohio's ballot deadline.
foxnews.com
5 food trucks to know about in 2024: 'Wonderful support'
Food trucks are commonplace now in the United States, and serve a variety of dishes. Here are five notable restaurants on wheels to check out across the United States.
foxnews.com
Prince Harry could cancel UK May trip over safety concerns after losing security: report
The Duke of Sussex, 39, is said to be thinking about backing out of his rumored London trip next month to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Invictus Games.
nypost.com
A Test Told Me I’m Basically Made of Plastic. You Probably Are Too
BPA and phthalates are everywhere. A new test can reveal how much of both are in your body.
time.com
Trump is in New York for the hush money trial while the Supreme Court hears his immunity case in D.C.
Trump is back in an N.Y. courtroom as his hush money trial resumes. In D.C., the Supreme Court considers if he should be immune for actions he took as president.
latimes.com
Rasheed Wallace rips 76ers’ $180 million man Tobias Harris for playoff duds: ‘Step that s–t the f–k up’
Harris is averaging a measly 8.5 points, less than half of his season average of 17.2.
nypost.com
Court orders seizure of $440M JPMorgan funds in lawsuit over US-Russia sanctions
A Russian court ordered the seizure of $439.5 million in funds from JPMorgan Chase’s bank accounts in Russia that the largest American lender froze after the Ukraine invasion, according to a court filing. The court’s ruling Wednesday comes after state-owned VTB Bank filed a lawsuit in a St. Petersburg arbitration court after the Russian bank...
nypost.com
NYC union leader says members support Trump over Biden 3-to-1: 'I see a wave coming'
New York union leader Bob Bartels explained why as a lifelong Democrat he plans to vote for Trump in November and why the blue-collar vote could shift in favor of the former president.
foxnews.com
What Peyton Manning told Zach Wilson after QB’s trade from Jets to Broncos
Wilson landed with the Broncos on Monday after three turbulent seasons with the Jets.
nypost.com
Southwest Airlines to end service at four airports, fire 2,000 employees
Southwest expects to end this year with 2,000 fewer employees than it had at the start of the year.
nypost.com
2024 NFL Draft odds: Landing spots for projected top-10 receiver Rome Odunze
Rome Odunze would be the clear WR1 in most drafts, but he’s become the forgotten man in this year's receiver group. 
nypost.com
Ukraine implements passport renewal restriction for military-age men outside the country
Ukraine has announced that men of conscription age cannot renew their passports from outside the country in an effort to stem the outflow of potential soldiers.
foxnews.com
Pet Shop Boys’ Neil Tennant takes a swipe at Taylor Swift’s ‘disappointing’ music: She doesn’t have ‘famous songs’
"What's Taylor Swift's 'Billie Jean'?" the "West End Girls" singer asked during a livestreamed conversation with the Guardian on Monday.
nypost.com
Restaurant offers tempting hot wing challenge — but requires waiver for possible ‘loss of life’
A restaurant offering a hot wings challenge makes daring competitors sign a waiver before they begin - in case of "loss of life".
1 h
nypost.com
Harvey Weinstein rape conviction overturned by N.Y. Court of Appeals
In a stunning reversal in a case that helped spark the #MeToo era, a New York appeals court overturned the sex assault conviction of movie mogul Harvey Weinstein, citing errors by the trial judge.
1 h
latimes.com
AI in MedTech: Pioneering the Future
The MedTech industry is at the forefront of a transformative era, and AI is the driving force reshaping its landscape.
1 h
newsweek.com
Why Harvey Weinstein's Rape Conviction Was Overturned
Weinstein was convicted in 2020 of criminal sex act in New York.
1 h
newsweek.com
Arizona Prosecutors Have Found 'Gold' Against Trump Allies: Legal Analyst
Former Pentagon special counsel Ryan Goodman discussed details in the Arizona fake electors plot indictment.
1 h
newsweek.com
The Rise of Big Vet
In the pandemic winter of 2020, Katie, my family’s 14-year-old miniature poodle, began coughing uncontrollably. After multiple vet visits, and more than $1,000 in bills, a veterinary cardiologist diagnosed her with heart failure. Our girl, a dog I loved so much that I wrote an essay about how I called her my “daughter,” would likely die within nine months.Katie survived for almost two years. My younger son joked that Katie wasn’t going to let advanced heart failure get in the way of her life goal of never leaving my side, but the truth was that I was the one who wouldn’t let her go. Katie’s extended life didn’t come cheap. There were repeated scans, echocardiograms, and blood work, and several trips to veterinary emergency rooms. One drug alone cost $300 a month, and that was after I shopped aggressively for discounts online.People like me have fueled the growth of what you might call Big Vet. As household pets have risen in status—from mere animals to bona fide family members—so, too, has owners’ willingness to spend money to ensure their well-being. Big-money investors have noticed. According to data provided to me by PitchBook, private equity poured $51.6 billion into the veterinary sector from 2017 to 2023, and another $9.3 billion in the first four months of this year, seemingly convinced that it had discovered a foolproof investment. Industry cheerleaders pointed to surveys showing that people would go into debt to keep their four-legged friends healthy. The field was viewed as “low-risk, high-reward,” as a 2022 report issued by Capstone Partners put it, singling out the industry for its higher-than-average rate of return on investment.[From the December 2022 issue: How much would you pay to save your pet’s life?]In the United States, corporations and private-equity funds have been rolling up smaller chains and previously independent practices. Mars Inc., of Skittles and Snickers fame, is, oddly, the largest owner of stand-alone veterinary clinics in the United States, operating more than 2,000 practices under the names Banfield, VCA, and BluePearl. JAB Holding Company, the owner of National Veterinary Associates’ 1,000-plus hospitals (not to mention Panera and Espresso House), also holds multiple pet-insurance lines in its portfolio. Shore Capital Partners, which owns several human health-care companies, controls Mission Veterinary Partners and Southern Veterinary Partners.As a result, your local vet may well be directed by a multinational shop that views caring for your fur baby as a healthy component of a diversified revenue stream. Veterinary-industry insiders now estimate that 25 to 30 percent of practices in the United States are under large corporate umbrellas, up from 8 percent a little more than a decade ago. For specialty clinics, the number is closer to three out of four. And as this happened, veterinary prices began to rise—a lot. Americans spent an estimated $38 billion on health care and related services for companion animals in 2023, up from about $29 billion in 2019. Even as overall inflation got back under control last year, the cost of veterinary care did not. In March 2024, the Consumer Price Index for urban consumers was up 3.5 percent year over year. The veterinary-services category was up 9.6 percent. If you have ever wondered why keeping your pet healthy has gotten so out-of-control expensive, Big Vet just might be your answer.To get a sense of what might happen when the profit-seeking dial gets turned up too high in veterinary medicine, we need look no further than human health care. An extensive body of research shows that when private equity takes over a hospital or physician practice, prices and the number of expensive procedures tend to go up. A study found serious medical errors occur more frequently after private equity buys the hospital. Another study found that costs to patients rise, too, sometimes substantially. And that’s in a tougher regulatory environment. In veterinary medicine, there is no giant entity like Medicare capable of pushing back on prices. There is no requirement, in fact, to provide care at all, no matter how dire the animal’s condition. Payment is due at the time of service or there is no service. Whenever I told people I was working on this article, I was inundated with Big Vet complaints. Catherine Liu, a professor at UC Irvine, took her elderly pit-bull mix, Buster, to a local VCA when he became lethargic and began drooling excessively. More than $8,000 in charges later, there was still no diagnosis. “Sonograms, endoscopy—what about just a hypothesis of what the symptoms could be? Nothing like that at all was forthcoming,” Liu told me. Shortly before Buster died, a vet in private practice diagnosed him with cancer. The disease, Liu said, had not once been mentioned by the vets at VCA. (Mars Petcare, VCA’s parent company, declined to comment on the episode.)I don’t mean to single out VCA here—in fact, I should note that a VCA vet’s medical protocol was almost certainly responsible for my dog’s longer-than-expected life. One reason Mars-owned chains attract outsized attention for their high costs and customer-service failures is that the company actually brands its acquisitions. That’s unusual. A study conducted by the Arizona consumer advocate Todd Nemet found that fewer than 15 percent of corporate-owned practices in the state slap their own brand identity on their vets; most keep the original practice name, leaving customers with the illusion of local ownership. (When I asked Thrive Pet Healthcare, a chain majority-owned by TSG Consumer Partners, about why the company doesn’t brand its clinics, a spokesperson replied, “We realize the value of local hospital brands and are committed to preserving and supporting them.”) Indeed, some pet owners told me that they realized that ownership of their vet had changed only after what they thought was a routine visit resulted in recommendations for mounds of tests, which turned out to have shot up in price. Paul Cerro, the CEO of Cedar Grove Capital, which invests in the pet industry, says this issue is frequent in online reviews. “People will say, ‘I’ve been coming here for four years, and all of a sudden I’m getting charged for things I’ve never been charged for,’ and they give it one star.”[Read: The great veterinary shortage]Big Vet denies charging excessive prices. VCA Canada, for instance, recently told The Globe and Mail that prices can increase after an acquisition because “the quality of the care, the quality of everything we offer to them, goes up as well.” A spokesperson for Mars told me, “We invest heavily in our associates, hospitals, state-of-the-art equipment, technology, and other resources.” NVA, which is planning an initial public offering in 2025 or 2026, did not directly answer a question about why veterinary prices were rising so rapidly, instead sending me a statement saying, in part, “Our vision is to build a community of hospitals that pet owners trust, are easy to access, and provide the best possible value for care.” Do rising prices really just reflect higher-quality care? There may be some truth to this, but there is also evidence to the contrary. A study published last year in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, for example, found that vets working for large corporations reported more pressure to generate revenue, whereas veterinarians working for independent practices reported higher levels of satisfaction for such things as the “ability to acquire new large equipment” and the “ability to get new/different drugs.” Preliminary research by Emma Harris, the vice president of Vetster, a veterinary telehealth start-up, found significant differences in pricing between corporate and privately owned veterinary clinics in the same geographic region. Usually, she told me, the increases “occurred immediately after the sale to a private-equity-owned group.”All of this doesn’t sit well with many in the sector. Vets tend to be idealistic, which makes sense given that many of them rack up six figures in student-loan debt to pursue a profession that pays significantly less than human medicine. One vet, who worked for an emergency-services practice that, they said, raised prices by 20 percent in 2022, told me, “I almost got to the point where I was ashamed to tell people what the estimate was for things because it was so insanely high.” (The vet asked for anonymity because they feared legal repercussions.) Others described mounting pressure to upsell customers following acquisition by private equity. “You don’t always need to take X-rays on an animal that’s vomited just one time,” Kathy Lewis, a veterinarian who formerly worked at a Tennessee practice purchased in 2021 by Mission Veterinary Partners, told me. “But there was more of that going on.” Prices increased rapidly as well, she said, leading to customer complaints. (Mission Veterinary Partners did not respond to requests for comment.)The combination of wheeling-and-dealing and price increases in the veterinary sector is beginning to attract the government’s attention. In the United States, the Federal Trade Commission required, in 2022 consent decree, that JAB seek prior approval before purchasing any emergency or specialty clinic within 25 miles of one it already owns in California and Texas for the next decade. In her written comments, FTC Chair Lina Khan said she feared these one-by-one purchases could lead to the development of a stealth monopoly. (JAB denied any wrongdoing.) And in the United Kingdom, where corporate ownership is higher than in the United States (even the practice originally owned by the author of the classic veterinary novel All Creatures Great and Small has been rolled up), government authorities are moving forward with an investigation into high prices and market concentration after an initial inquiry drew what regulators called an “unprecedented” response from the public.Pet owners used to have an easier time accepting the short lives of domestic animals. Few people were taking the barnyard cat or junkyard dog in for chemotherapy or ACL surgery, to say nothing of post-op aquatic physical therapy. “When we started out over 20 years ago, you had to live near a veterinary teaching hospital to have access to something like an MRI,” Karen Leslie, the executive director of the Pet Fund, a charity that aids people with vet bills, told me. “Now it’s the standard of care. It’s available basically everywhere—but that starts at $2,000.”Big Vet, in Leslie’s view, helped fuel an increase in expensive services. The same medical progress that’s helped humans beat back once-fatal diseases is doing the same for cats and dogs, extending their life spans to record lengths. But only if you have the money to pay for it. Some pets—my late Katie, Liu’s late Buster—receive one expensive test or treatment after another, sometimes helpful, sometimes not. Other equally loved pets may go without basic care altogether, or even fall victim to what the industry calls “economic euthanasia,” where they are put down because their owners can’t afford their medical bills. (Pet insurance, widely promoted by the industry, is unlikely to help much. Uptake rates are in the low single digits, a result of relatively high costs and often-limited benefits.)[Watch: Volunteer veterinarians in Ukraine]The American Veterinary Medical Association’s tracker shows that vet visits and purchases of heartworm and flea-and-tick medications are down compared with this month last year, even as practice revenues are up, suggesting that some owners are having trouble affording routine, preventative care. The market researcher Packaged Facts found that a full third of pet owners say that they would take their animal to the vet more often if it were less expensive. Shelter Animals Count, an animal-advocacy group, reports that the number of pets surrendered to shelters rose in the past two years. Carol Mithers, the author of the upcoming book Rethinking Rescue, told me that some people give up pets because they believe the shelter system will provide them with necessary medical treatment—something that is, heartbreakingly, not true.The veterinary past is easy to romanticize. The truth is that pets have never received all the needed care, and that wealthy pet owners have always had access to more care. But the emergence of Big Vet and the injection of cutthroat incentives into a traditionally idealistic, local industry threatens to make these problems far worse. It portends a future in which some pet owners get shaken down, their love for their pets exploited financially, while others must forego even basic care for their pets. I don’t think Katie, who loved all animals, would approve. I certainly don’t.
1 h
theatlantic.com
A Sacramento homeless encampment signed a lease with the city. The experiment is in jeopardy
A unique lease with California’s capital established a camp and guaranteed housing. A year later, the city is terminating the agreement.
1 h
latimes.com
Harvey Weinstein rape conviction overturned by NY appeals court
A New York appeals court has overturned Harvey Weinstein’s 2020 rape conviction, ordering a new trial in stunning landmark #MeToo case.
1 h
foxnews.com
Supreme Court to hear arguments on Trump immunity case
The Supreme Court is hearing arguments Thursday in the blockbuster case over whether former President Donald Trump may claim immunity from prosecution in the federal election subversion case. Follow here for the latest live news updates, analysis and more.
1 h
edition.cnn.com
'Un-American' and 'absurd'? Why the Supreme Court didn't dismiss Trump's immunity claim
CNN's Senior Supreme Court analyst Joan Biskupic explains why the Supreme Court is seriously considering former President Donald Trump's argument of "total immunity" in the Department of Justice's federal election case.
1 h
edition.cnn.com
'Un-American' and 'absurd'? Why the Supreme Court didn't dismiss Trump's immunity claim
CNN's Senior Supreme Court analyst Joan Biskupic explains why the Supreme Court is seriously considering former President Donald Trump's argument of "total immunity" in the Department of Justice's federal election case.
1 h
edition.cnn.com
The True Danger of the Chaos at Columbia and Other Elite Universities | Opinion
The mob mentality that has turned free speech into a free-for-all at Columbia University and other colleges is telegraphing a message far beyond any single campus and well beyond the United States.
1 h
newsweek.com
Harvey Weinstein's 2020 rape conviction overturned by New York court
Harvey Weinstein's 2020 conviction​ on felony sex crime charges has been overturned by the State of New York Court of Appeals.
1 h
cbsnews.com
J.J. McCarthy’s fiancee closes Michigan ‘chapter’ before NFL Draft
J.J. McCarthy's fiancée Katya Kuropas said goodbye to their college life ahead of the 2024 NFL Draft on Thursday.
1 h
nypost.com
Trump immunity case live updates: Supreme Court to hear historic arguments
The Supreme Court will hear a historic case on whether former President Donald Trump can be criminally prosecuted over his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
Cubs reliever Luke Little had to change glove because of American flag patch: ‘Debacle’
The 23-year-old, a North Carolina native, said he has been using the same glove since Class A ball.
1 h
nypost.com
Implications as Supreme Court weighs Idaho's abortion ban
Demonstrators on both sides turned out yesterday as the Supreme Court heard the Biden administration's challenge to Idaho's near-total ban on abortion.The Justice Department claims Idaho has violated federal law that requires hospitals to provide emergency medical treatment – that may include abortions.The state argues that the federal law doesn't specifically mention abortion.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Pro-Palestinian Protesters Score Win Over One College's Ties to Israel
The University of Rochester's governing body has agreed to investigate its academic ties to Israeli universities, according to reports.
1 h
newsweek.com
GOP state lawmakers appeal to SCOTUS to challenge Biden's 'usurpations' of their power to run elections
Twenty-seven Pennsylvania GOP lawmakers have appealed to the Supreme Court to let them sue the President Biden over his executive order on elections.
1 h
foxnews.com
Burkina Faso's military massacred more than 200 civilians, Human Rights Watch says
More than 2 million civilians, mostly children, have been displaced in the conflict between jihadis linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State group and Burkina Faso's military.
1 h
foxnews.com
Celebrity-backed nail salon chain Glosslab down to two stores in NYC
“We stopped getting supplies like gloves and files. I had to buy my own gloves one time and eventually there were no more masks and the towel laundry service stopped recently.” 
1 h
nypost.com
Harvey Weinstein’s Sex Crimes Conviction Overturned by New York Appeals Court
Johannes Eisele/AFP via GettyNew York’s highest court has overturned fallen Hollywood titan Harvey Weinstein’s sex crimes conviction.In a 4-3 decision, the appeals court ruled Thursday that Weinstein was tried not only for the crimes he was charged with but with his past behavior.This is a developing story and will be updated.Read more at The Daily Beast.
1 h
thedailybeast.com
Live updates: Ex-National Enquirer publisher to continue testimony at Trump’s hush money trial
Former National Enquirer publisher David Pecker is expected to continue his testimony in Donald Trump’s trial on allegations of business fraud related to hush money payments.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Kourtney Kardashian enjoys 45th birthday breakfast at IHOP after hitting back at body shamer
The Poosh founder has been ringing in her 45th year all month long, from a boar ride with pals to a tropical trip with Travis Barker and their kids.
1 h
nypost.com
Harvey Weinstein's rape conviction overturned in New York
The rape conviction of movie producer Harvey Weinstein has been overturned by New York's highest court.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
German parliament votes to establish annual 'veterans' day' to recognize military service
The German parliament has approved the establishment of an annual national "veterans' day" to honor those who have served in the military, officials say.
1 h
foxnews.com
Harvey Weinstein’s felony sex crime conviction overturned by NY’s highest court
Harvey Weinstein’s New York rape conviction was overturned by the state’s highest court Thursday — which ordered that the disgraced Hollywood mogul should face a new trial. In a 4-3 ruling, the New York State Court of Appeals found that a Manhattan judge “erroneously” allowed testimony from three women whose allegations weren’t connected to the...
1 h
nypost.com
Testimony resumes in Trump "hush money" trial
Former National Enquirer publisher David Pecker will be back on the stand Thursday in Donald Trump's New York criminal trial. The judge in the case has yet to decide if the former president will be held in contempt for violating a gag order. Attorney and CBS News campaign reporter Katrina Kaufman has more.
1 h
cbsnews.com
More dairy cows to be tested for bird flu after findings in grocery store milk
To stop the virus from spreading, dairy cows will be tested for bird flu more closely. This comes after the FDA reported finding fragments of the bird flu virus in pasteurized grocery store milk. Regulators say there is little risk to humans.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Lisa Vanderpump Shuts Down Jax Taylor’s Claim That ‘Vanderpump Rules’ Is Scripted, Suggests Taylor “Writes His Own Scripts”
"Nobody can write a script like Vanderpump Rules."
1 h
nypost.com