Federalist Radio Hour - From Covid To The Security State, Abusive Emergency Powers Are Suffocating Us

On this episode of The Federalist Radio Hour, Clyde Wayne Crews, the vice president for policy and senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, joins Culture Editor Emily Jashinsky to discuss the case for curbing reflexive federal spending and the expansion of government power in the face of national crises. 

Read "The Case for Letting Crises Go to Waste" from Crews here: https://cei.org/opeds_articles/the-case-for-letting-crises-go-to-waste/

The Commentary Magazine Podcast - The Democrats Shout ‘Run Away!’ from Joe Biden

The podcast takes up a shocking New York Times poll that finds the president’s approval rating at a catastrophic 33 percent, with nearly two-thirds of Democrats wanting another candidate in 2024. And what’s this about the January 6 committee not bothering to ask Trump’s White House counsel what he might have said on that day? Give a listen. Source

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CBS News Roundup - World News Roundup: 07/11

Wildfires rage in the west as heat grips much of the nation. Steve Bannon agrees to January 6th testimony. Spirit Airlines plane catches fire as it lands. CBS News Correspondent Steve Kathan has today's World News Roundup.

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The Intelligence from The Economist - Gota goes: Sri Lanka’s president resigns

Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka’s president, announced he will step down on Wednesday after protestors occupied Colombo, the country’s capital, over the weekend. Whoever succeeds him will inherit a host of thorny economic problems. Why Europe’s big tech firms are well placed to weather a downturn. And remembering Peter Brook, an extraordinary theatre director who died at the age of 93. To sign up for tomorrow’s webinar about Britain’s future after Boris Johnson’s resignation, sign up at www.economist.com/boris-resigns.

Unexpected Elements - Long Covid ‘brain fog’

Following a bout of Covid-19, a significant number of people suffer with weeks or months of 'brain fog' - poor concentration, forgetfulness, and confusion. This is one of the manifestations of Long Covid. A team of scientists in the United States has now discovered that infection in the lung can trigger an inflammatory response which then causes patterns of abnormal brain cell activity. It’s the kind of brain cell dysregulation also seen in people who experience cognitive problems following chemotherapy for cancer.

Also in the programme, the latest discoveries about the asteroid Bennu from the Osiris Rex mission, how Malayasian farmers led US researchers to a botanical discovery, and a new explanation for why dinosaurs took over the world 200 million years ago.

Artists can conjure up people, cities, landscapes and entire worlds using just a pencil or a paintbrush. But some of us struggle to draw simple stick figures or a circle that’s actually round. CrowdScience listener Myck is a fine artist from Malawi, and he’s been wondering if there’s something special about his brain that has turned him into an artist. It’s a craft that combines visionary ideas with extraordinary technical skill, but where does that all come from? Do artists have different brains from non-artists? What is it that makes someone a creative person, while others are not? And is artistic ability innate, or is it something you can learn? Presenter Marnie Chesterton goes on a colourful journey into the mind to find out how artistic people see the world differently.

(Image: System of neurons with glowing connections. Credit: Getty Images)

The Daily Detail - The Daily Detail for 7.11.22

Alabama

  • Senator Tuberville reacts to Biden Exec. order on abortions
  • ALGOP Exec. Committee considers resolution denouncing 2020 election results
  • Lauderdale County man indicted by grand jury for sex abuse of children
  • AL man being held in KY will return to state to face kidnapping charges
  • Birmingham leaders say security is placed at al venues for World Games

National

  • Weekend polls spell bad news for Biden administration
  • A watchdog group files lawsuit against US department of Energy re: reserve oil
  • CA doctor looks to create floating abortion clinic off Gulf coast in federal waters
  • Tesla CEO Elon Musk signals a withdrawal from buying Twitter for $44B
  • Donald Trump holds rally in Alaska, mentions Musk and more

Everything Everywhere Daily - The Worst Roman Emperors

Depending on how you define it, there were somewhere between 70 to 100 Roman emperors between the ascension of Augustus to the fall of the western empire in 476. A period of about 500 years.

Some of them managed to be just and competent rulers who ruled for extended periods of peace and prosperity. 

Others….were not. 

Learn more about the worst Roman emperors who ran the gamut from insane to incompetent, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.


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The City - Wondery Presents: Who Killed Daphne?

When a car bomb kills Daphne Caruana Galizia on the beautiful Mediterranean island of Malta, the hunt for her killers exposes secrets with consequences that go far beyond its shores. In the aftermath of her death an international team of journalists comes together to continue her work. Along the way they start to uncover clues that might lead to her killers. From Wondery, comes a new story about power, corruption and one woman’s fight for the truth. Hosted by investigative reporter Stephen Grey.

Listen to Who Killed Daphne: wondery.fm/TC_DAPHNE

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