On right now’s episode of the 5 Issues podcast: Biden visits El Paso in first journey to the border
President Joe Biden visited the U.S.-Mexico border Sunday. Plus, supporters of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro storm the Brazilian Congress, Supreme Courtroom, and presidential palace, Reviewed Editor-in-Chief David Kender recaps CES, California braces for extra extreme climate, and USA TODAY Well being Reporter Nada Hassanein seems to be at a brand new Alzheimer’s drug that seems to gradual the illness.
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Hit play on the participant above to listen to the podcast and comply with together with the transcript beneath.This transcript was routinely generated, after which edited for readability in its present type. There could also be some variations between the audio and the textual content.
Taylor Wilson:
Good morning. I am Taylor Wilson and that is 5 Issues you’ll want to know Monday, the ninth of January, 2023. Right now, a take a look at Biden’s go to to the border, plus Bolsonaro supporters storm authorities buildings in Brazil, and we glance again at this yr’s Client Electronics Present.
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President Joe Biden visited the US-Mexico border yesterday for the primary time since taking workplace. He went to El Paso, Texas and walked alongside the border wall with Juarez, Mexico. On the journey, Biden met with native officers, group leaders, and others dealing each day with a humanitarian disaster that entails migrants sleeping on the streets. The variety of migrants crossing the border has risen dramatically throughout Biden’s first two years in workplace, and El Paso is the most important hall for unlawful crossings. The town’s mayor declared a state of emergency final month.
Biden’s journey got here after he introduced a brand new coverage to confront the surge of asylum seekers on the border. The coverage requires expulsions of as much as 30,000 migrants a month from 4 international locations, Venezuela, Nicaragua, Haiti, and Cuba. The US has troublesome diplomatic relations with a number of of the international locations and Mexico has agreed to simply accept migrants.
President Joe Biden:
Should you’re attempting to go away Cuba, Nicaragua or Haiti, don’t. Don’t simply present up on the border. Keep the place you might be and apply legally from there.
Taylor Wilson:
The brand new coverage has angered asylum and immigration advocates. In the meantime, the Title 42 Trump period coverage that enables the federal government to shortly expel asylum seekers will go in entrance of the Supreme Courtroom sooner or later this yr, after the court docket dominated final month that the Biden administration can not cease the expulsion of migrants underneath this system.
Church buildings and different organizations are serving to asylum seekers on the border, many in limbo who’re unable to proceed to the US inside. They’ve pleaded with Biden to offer them a chance to remain. Biden subsequent heads to Mexico to fulfill with North American leaders on immigration and different points.
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Supporters of former Brazilian president, Jair Bolsonaro, stormed their Congress, Supreme Courtroom and presidential palace yesterday within the capital of Brasilia.
[Audio from the scene]
The scene, harking back to January sixth US assaults, got here every week after his leftist rival, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva was inaugurated. Lula was not in Brazil on the time of the breach. Bolsonaro has been in Florida since earlier than Lula’s inauguration. Like former President Donald Trump, he spent the months since his defeat making claims that the election was rigged. His supporters yesterday broke by way of safety obstacles, scaled partitions and invaded authorities buildings. Some known as for a army coup to revive Bolsonaro to energy. Movies on social media confirmed assaults on cops, and demonstrators constructing barricades to maintain police out. It took three hours for safety forces to regain management.
However the violence got here with few employees contained in the buildings. Bolsonaro wrote on Twitter yesterday that peaceable protest is a part of democracy, however that vandalism and invasion of public buildings are exceptions to the rule.
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The Client Electronics Present, or CES, returned to its traditional type in Las Vegas this previous week after a few scaled down years due to the pandemic, and the tech present had tons to supply reviewed. Editor-in-chief, David Kender, simply received again from the present in Vegas and joins me now. David, thanks for approaching the pod.
David Kender:
Thanks for having me.
Taylor Wilson:
All proper, so what have been a few of the coolest belongings you noticed this yr?
David Kender:
Two of the massive classes at CES are vehicles and televisions, and they didn’t disappoint. And in a bizarre manner, the traces between vehicles and TVs are beginning to blur a bit bit. One of many massive, massive merchandise that folks have been speaking about was a color-changing BMW. It is a idea automobile that was lined in 200 e-ink panels, so it might do all these totally different colours and make patterns and it was fairly wild. But in addition in vehicles, Sony and Honda premiered a brand new automobile model that they’ll be launching known as Afeela. That is a really, very excessive tech electrical automobile and it is slated for a 2025 launch.
And on the TV aspect, LG had a totally wi-fi tv, so that you need not run audio cables, you need not run HDMI cables, any of that. All of the video inputs, they go into one thing that they name a join field, and you’ll put that anyplace within the room, it really works fairly far-off after which it blasts the sign to your TV. And it was actually superb. Yearly, I really feel like I see a variety of Jetsons stuff and that is what I really like concerning the present.
Taylor Wilson:
David, inform us concerning the CES Editors Selection Awards you have printed on the positioning. What have been a few of the massive tech merchandise to make the listing?
David Kender:
We had a smartwatch from Citizen. We had this actually stunning excessive tech fridge from Samsung. We had a bunch of laptops. We discovered merchandise from throughout, in any respect totally different value factors.
Taylor Wilson:
David, I am actually enthusiastic about this one, Reviewed this yr is debuting it is first ever accessibility awards at CES. So, inform me about a few of the groundbreaking new accessibility tech that Reviewed is recognizing.
David Kender:
One massive space that we have been seeing a variety of modifications in is listening to aids. So, only recently, listening to aids turned over-the-counter merchandise. Earlier to that, should you had a listening to concern and also you wanted a listening to support, you wanted to go to a health care provider, so that you needed to have entry to a health care provider or had insurance coverage. It was very costly to get the prescription. The merchandise themselves might value a number of thousand {dollars}.
That has all modified in the previous couple of months, and all of a sudden you could have shopper electronics manufacturers like Bose and others, entering into that house and determining methods to do it with a bit bit extra of a tech edge as a result of they’re tech corporations, but in addition attempting to determine methods to convey that value down. And we beloved a product known as Lexie, which partnered with Bose with a purpose to work out how to try this diagnostic take a look at, in order that the listening to support truly works for you with out having to go to a health care provider. All of that is making listening to aids less expensive and extra accessible to the tens of millions of individuals with listening to loss points.
Taylor Wilson:
David Kender, editor-in-chief of Reviewed, thanks a lot for making the time.
David Kender:
So lengthy.
Taylor Wilson:
You’ll find out extra from this yr’s present at reviewed.com.
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California is about to be hit by extra extreme climate right now, the newest amid weeks of storms to slam the state. Governor Gavin Newsom stated yesterday that he’ll ask President Joe Biden to declare a federal emergency, with as much as a foot of rain in some areas and widespread flooding, excessive winds and potential mudslides. Evacuation warnings are in place for areas north of San Francisco and greater than half of Sacramento’s residents have been in the dead of night on the top of heavy rains yesterday. Authorities say current circumstances are accountable for no less than six deaths within the state.
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On Friday, federal drug regulators permitted one of many first Alzheimer’s medicine that seems to gradual the memory-robbing illness, regardless of debate amongst some consultants over the drug security and efficacy. Producer PJ Elliott spoke to USA TODAY Well being Reporter Nada Hassanein to search out out extra.
PJ Elliott:
Nada thanks a lot for leaping on 5 Issues.
Nada Hassanein:
Yeah, thanks for having me.
PJ Elliott:
I need to begin off by asking you to only discuss this drug that simply received approval from the FDA with treating Alzheimer’s, and what’s it being proven to do?
Nada Hassanein:
So, lecanemab was permitted by the FDA underneath an accelerated pathway and research have proven or prompt that it could decelerate the plaque that is been related to Alzheimer’s illness. This approval comes only a week after one other Alzheimer’s drug was discovered to have too broad of a label and a congressional investigation discovered that that drug firm and the FDA went in opposition to protocol when learning the drug. And so, consultants have been holding their breath when this drug got here alongside, for this anticipated approval.
However the approval additionally comes two days after researchers detailed a loss of life presumably linked to the drug in a letter printed within the New England Journal of Medication. And that affected person, after receiving the drug, obtained emergency remedy for stroke and really suffered a number of mind hemorrhages and died.
PJ Elliott:
At what level can these recognized with Alzheimer’s begin taking the treatment?
Nada Hassanein:
So Eisai, the drug sponsor, has stated that they’ll attempt to make it out there inside the months, however the concern is there is a coverage that the company that oversees Medicare has established that medicine permitted underneath the accelerated pathway aren’t actually lined. So, till Eisai information for conventional approval and the FDA approves it by way of that manner, it’s going to be actually restricted to sufferers who should not on Medicare.
PJ Elliott:
What have been a few of the outcomes from the testing part?
Nada Hassanein:
The scientific trials did discover that the drug decreased cognitive decline by about 27%, however consultants do fear about uncomfortable side effects, together with mind swelling and bleeding.
PJ Elliott:
So, is that this drug for all sufferers with Alzheimer’s?
Nada Hassanein:
So, it is vital to notice that the FDA solely permitted this drug for Alzheimer’s sufferers with early stage illness, gentle stage illness, as a result of that’s the inhabitants that was studied within the scientific trials.
PJ Elliott:
Nada, thanks a lot in your time. I actually respect it.
Nada Hassanein:
Thanks a lot for having me, PJ.
Taylor Wilson:
Thanks for listening to five Issues. You’ll find us seven mornings every week proper right here, wherever you are listening proper now. I am again tomorrow with extra of 5 Issues from USA TODAY.
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