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Covid-19 Shots For Healthy Children Remain On CDC Vaccine Schedule - Anderson Cooper 360 - Podcast on CNN Audio

Covid-19 Shots For Healthy Children Remain On CDC Vaccine Schedule - Anderson Cooper 360 - Podcast on CNN Audio

CNN3 days ago

Covid-19 Shots For Healthy Children Remain On CDC Vaccine Schedule Anderson Cooper 360 47 mins
Covid confusion as Health and Human Service Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says "no" to those shots for kids, but the CDC says otherwise. Plus, how Taylor Swift won the fight to take back control of the best-selling songs she created.

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Belmont 2025: Post Positions, Odds, And Journalism's Tough Second Shot
Belmont 2025: Post Positions, Odds, And Journalism's Tough Second Shot

Forbes

time21 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Belmont 2025: Post Positions, Odds, And Journalism's Tough Second Shot

Will The Re-Match Look Like This: Sovereignty #18, ridden by jockey Junior Alvarado crosses the finish line to win the 151st running of the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs on May 03, 2025 in Louisville, Kentucky. (Photo by) In a fine, sporting turn of the Triple Crown season, the 2025 Belmont Stakes favorite Journalism, at 8-5 in the Saratoga morning line, will face both the horse that blazed by him to win the Kentucky Derby, Sovereignty (2-1), and the show horse that was within strides of passing him in that race, Baeza (4-1), all pictured above in the middle of that wet battle on May 3. Talk about racing kismet. The 'Big Sandy,' as the brawny Belmont track has been nicknamed by the racing community, is still under renovation, and thus has added this other seemingly small, but deceptively big, similarity to the Derby. For the second year in a row, the Belmont's $2-million Belmont Stakes, will be a fair imitation of the Kentucky Derby at one-and-a-quarter miles. What's a quarter-mile? Another to put that would be to say, if Baeza had had another quarter-mile in front of him in the Kentucky Derby, Journalism would be the show horse. And another way to put that would be to say, although Saratoga has drawn a modestly-sized field, it's jam-packed with athletic talent. But before we get into what Bob Baffert and his onrushing front-runner Rodriguez have in mind for the top three, here are the freshly drawn post positions and the Saratoga morning line. (Source: NYRA, 6/3/2025) Piquant in the Saratoga draw is the fact that Journalism will be breaking just a stall to the outside of the horse that nearly beat him in the Derby, and both of them have a fair shot at settling in the early going. But the fact that matters more is that Journalism ran back in the Preakness, and did it quite well, just two weeks back. Sovereignty's Derby victory in the last furlong over Journalism was quite decisive, and the horse came out of the race well, but trainer Bill Mott and the Sovereignty connections decided with fair dispatch that Sovereignty would sit out the Preakness to return now. John Shirreffs and the Baeza team decided the same. Rodriguez missed both the Derby and the Preakness with his foot injury, which has been given a sterling stamp of full recovery. The point, which we'll be hearing about ad infinitum this week, is that the four most dangerous horses to Journalism in the Belmont are spanking fresh. And he's not.

Patriots receiver Stefon Diggs attends first practice since viral boat video emerged
Patriots receiver Stefon Diggs attends first practice since viral boat video emerged

Associated Press

time22 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Patriots receiver Stefon Diggs attends first practice since viral boat video emerged

FOXBOROUGH. Mass. (AP) — New England Patriots receiver Stefon Diggs participated in his first offseason practice since video appeared on social media showing him passing what appeared to be a bag of pink crystals to women on a boat. Diggs attended Monday's voluntary practice session six days after videos were posted online of him chatting with three women before producing the substance. It wasn't clear what the substance was. An NFL spokesman said the league would not comment, and Patriots coach Mike Vrabel said the team would handle the matter internally. Diggs, 31, has attended multiple events this offseason with hip-hop star Cardi B — including the Met Gala and a Boston Celtics-New York Knicks playoff game. The Patriots have two remaining optional workouts on Tuesday and Thursday as part of the spring organized team activity window allotted to each NFL team. Both of those remaining sessions are closed to the media. The players have a mandatory three-day minicamp beginning on June 9. Diggs signed with the Patriots this offseason, getting a three-year, $69 million deal that guarantees him $26 million. The four-time Pro Bowl selection had six straight 1,000-yard receiving seasons for the Vikings and Bills before he was traded from Buffalo to Houston last spring. ___ AP NFL:

Sen. Joni Ernst defends her "we all are going to die" comments: "I'm very compassionate"
Sen. Joni Ernst defends her "we all are going to die" comments: "I'm very compassionate"

CBS News

time22 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Sen. Joni Ernst defends her "we all are going to die" comments: "I'm very compassionate"

Republican Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa defended herself Monday after drawing attention for telling a town hall attendee worried about proposed changes to Medicaid that "we all are going to die." "I'm very compassionate, and you need to listen to the entire conversation," Ernst told CBS News on Monday. Ernst's now-viral musings on mortality came during a contentious town hall meeting Friday, as attendees grilled the senator about a GOP-backed domestic policy bill that passed the House last month. The legislation — titled the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, after President Trump referred to the measure that way — would impose work requirements on some Medicaid recipients, among other changes. At one point, as Ernst defended some of the legislation's changes to the low-income health insurance program, a person appeared to yell that people will die. "People are not — well, we all are going to die, so for heaven's sakes," Ernst responded. Ernst went on to say that she will "focus on those that are most vulnerable" and added, "those that meet the eligibility requirements for Medicaid we will protect." The senator later dug in and posted a sarcastic apology video to Instagram. "I made an incorrect assumption that everyone in the auditorium understood that, yes, we are all going to perish from this Earth. So, I apologize," Ernst said in the video. "I'm really, really glad that I did not have to bring up the subject of the Tooth Fairy as well." The town hall comments drew criticism from some opponents of Ernst, who is up for reelection next year. Nathan Sage, who is running for the Democratic nomination for Senate, said Ernst is "not even trying to hide her contempt for us." And Democratic state Rep. JD Scholten announced Monday he's entering the race, saying in an Instagram post he wasn't planning to launch his campaign now but "can't sit on the sidelines" after Ernst's town hall. As passed by the House, the domestic policy bill would add restrictions to Medicaid, including a work, volunteer or schooling requirement for non-disabled adults without children. The bill would also add more frequent eligibility checks, cut funding for states that use the Medicaid system to cover undocumented immigrants, freeze provider taxes and ban coverage for gender transition services. The bill's proposed changes to Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, better known as food stamps, could save hundreds of billions of dollars, which would help pay for extending Mr. Trump's 2017 tax cuts and boosting border security. But before it reaches Mr. Trump's desk, the bill still needs to pass the Senate, where some Republicans are pushing to roll back some of the Medicaid cuts. In last week's town hall, Ernst said she agrees with parts of the legislation passed by the House, but "the bill will be changing."

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