Anonymous ID: 71f86d Aug. 25, 2023, 6:52 p.m. No.19432177   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2203

Biden's beer ban: Americans may be urged to have just one drink a week under new plans

 

Americans may be urged to drink no more than one or two beers weekly as part of stricter new alcohol guidelines.

 

President Biden's alcohol czar, George Koob, the director for the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAA), told Dailymail.com that the USDA could change its Alcohol laws to match Canada, where people are advised to drink that drink per week.

 

He said: "If there are health benefits, I think people will start evaluating where we're at (In the US)."

 

Currently, the US recommends that women have up to one bottle of beer, a small glass of wine, or a shot of spirits a day, while men can have up to two.

 

The US guidelines also say a drink is defined as containing 0.6 fluid ounces of alcohol, equivalent to one beer, one glass of wine at 12 percent alcohol, or one shot.

 

The guidance is currently up for review, but won't be set in place until 2025.

 

More at: https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical/biden-s-beer-ban-americans-may-be-urged-to-have-just-one-drink-a-week-under-new-plans/ar-AA1fMfQf?ocid=socialshare&cvid=3bbfcbc63abc4b349e7d761fa45cfda1&ei=7

Anonymous ID: 71f86d Aug. 25, 2023, 6:56 p.m. No.19432213   🗄️.is 🔗kun

China's economic crisis is real and it's spectacular

 

I admit to being a bit obsessed with this story and I’ll also admit the reason is largely schadenfreude. I’m enjoying seeing China’s arrogant nationalists, the communist apparatchiks who believe the party knows what’s best for everyone getting humbled by the simplest of problems: economic reality. After seizing the freedom of millions of people in Hong Kong and threatening to do the same to Taiwan, China suddenly finds itself facing a severe crisis of confidence.

 

For much of the past four decades, China’s economy seemed like an unstoppable force, the engine behind the country’s rise to a global superpower. But the economy is now plagued by a series of crises. A real estate crisis born from years of overbuilding and excessive borrowing is running alongside a larger debt crisis, while young people are struggling with record joblessness. And amid the drip feed of bad economic news, a new crisis is emerging: a crisis of confidence.

 

A growing lack of faith in the future of the Chinese economy is verging on despair. Consumers are holding back on spending. Businesses are reluctant to invest and create jobs. And would-be entrepreneurs are not starting new businesses.

 

“Low confidence is a major issue in the Chinese economy now,” said Larry Hu, chief China economist for Macquarie Group, an Australian financial services firm…

 

In the past few weeks, investors have pulled more than $10 billion out of China’s stock markets. On Thursday, China’s top securities regulator summoned executives at the country’s national pension funds, top banks and insurers to pressure them to invest more in Chinese stocks, according to Caixin, an economics magazine.

 

Things are bad and China’s response has been to stop publishing the bad data. They stopped publishing youth unemployment data this month and stopped publishing consumer confidence data earlier this summer. But the cover-up isn’t working this time.

 

The real bright spot in this current crisis is that the blame falls on the person making all of the decisions: Xi Jinping.

 

The Chinese Communist Party’s legitimacy still relies heavily on ordinary Chinese feeling their lives are improving, and Xi knows that, said Ling Chen, an assistant professor at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University.

 

“So far nobody can challenge him politically. But economic performance is always the very core of the regime’s legitimacy and that affects how well he can govern the country,” Chen said.

 

Now Xi has replaced promises of material wealth with demands for political loyalty, and told young people to suck it up and “eat bitterness” for the good of the nation…

 

“That is an Achilles’ heel politically for Xi,” [former CIA officer Randall] Phillips said, because Xi has ultimate responsibility for China’s economic predicament — and coming up with the solution.

 

During the 2008 financial crisis, China’s solution was to goose the economy with more stimulus spending. That worked in the short run but also created a lot of debt. Xi could try that again but unsustainable debt creates its own problems. He also can’t rely on foreign investment given that he seems to be cracking down on information gathering by foreign companies. These look like mistakes but maybe they are just a shift in China’s goals.

 

More at: https://hotair.com/john-s-2/2023/08/25/chinas-economic-crisis-is-real-and-its-spectacular-n573763

Anonymous ID: 71f86d Aug. 25, 2023, 6:59 p.m. No.19432235   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2245 >>2250

.The Biden Admin Is Going After Another Common Household Item in the Name of Climate Change

 

After attempts to ban gas stoves burned such proposals' Democrat proponents and proposed new federal vehicle efficiency standards seek to force costs even higher, the Biden administration is now going after (drumroll please) ceiling fans. Republicans in the House of Representatives, however, are not fans of the proposal due to the impact it looks to have on America's small businesses.

 

In a new letter to the U.S. Department of Energy and its leader Secretary Jennifer Granholm, members of the House Small Business Committee pointed out the problems with the latest policy in the Biden administration's supposedly "green" energy crusade that's anything but.

 

"This proposed rule would decrease the maximum estimated energy consumption permissible for large diameter and belt driven ceiling fans," the letter from House Small Business Committee Chairman Roger Williams (R-TX) and Reps. Beth Van Duyne (R-TX), Maria Elvira Salazar (R-FL), Jake Ellzey (R-TX), and Aaron Bean (R-FL) explains.

 

"This rule would require numerous small business fan manufacturers to redesign their products and may put between 10 and 30 percent of small business ceiling fan manufacturers out of business," the lawmakers warn Secretary Granholm and the Department of Energy. "It appears that the Department of Energy (DOE) may not have properly considered small entities during this rulemaking process."

 

More at: https://townhall.com/tipsheet/spencerbrown/2023/08/25/biden-administration-climate-police-are-now-coming-after-yourceiling-fan-n2627533