How did President Biden perform during first solo news conference?
Insight from Beverly Hallberg, president of District Media Group.
Airbnb Inc’s (NASDAQ: ABNB) supply has more than doubled over the past four years, exceeding some of the traditional hotel chains in aggregate, Reuters reports based on AirDNA. The pandemic induced higher demand for short-term rentals with larger living space, and their remote location drove Airbnb’s performance compared to the traditional lodging industry. Airbnb’s global active listings rose 2.5% year-over-over in February 2021. The company noted over 5.4 million global active listings with higher rent availability compared to the aggregate 3.3 million units at hotel chains including, Marriott International Inc (NASDAQ: MAR), Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc (NYSE: HLT), and InterContinental Hotels Group PLC (NYSE: IHG). Airbnb had 2.3 million units in 2017 beginning. The uptick in local travel and cost-cutting strategy spurred the company’s valuation compared to Marriott, Hilton, and Hyatt Hotels Corp (NYSE: H) amid the havoc wreaked by the pandemic on the travel industry. Airbnb also recorded a far less severe revenue decline than Expedia Group Inc (NASDAQ: EXPE) and Booking Holdings Inc (NASDAQ: BKNG). Price action: ABNB share prices traded higher by 0.22% at $176.55 on the last check Friday. See more from BenzingaClick here for options trades from BenzingaNetEase Cloud Music And Merlin Expand Partnership In ChinaZhihu Raises 2M From IPO, Private Placement At .5 Per Share© 2021 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
The coworkers' behavior continued even after the man left his job. The post Man infuriated after discovering coworker’s ‘unfortunate’ behavior: ‘He had no reason to do that’ appeared first on In The Know.
Nobody thought the husband's argument had a leg to stand on.
Palantir Technology Inc. (NYSE: PLTR) shares were trading higher Thursday. Cathie Wood’s Ark Investment Management (NYSE: ARKK) Innovation ETF bought 1,209,900 shares of Palantir, representing about 0.125% of the ETF. Palantir stock was up 2.47% at $22.42 at last check. Palantir Daily Chart Analysis: The daily chart above shows that the Palantir stock price is approaching key technical levels and looks to potentially be forming what technical traders call a “head and shoulders” pattern. The stock previously had resistance near $20 before breaking above, the stock then retested this area and found support near the $20 level. This is an area where the stock could bounce. The chart looks to be forming a head and shoulders pattern. The pattern is considered to be a bearish reversal pattern. Although the pattern is considered bearish, it may not always act in that manner. The pattern occurs when the stock runs up and makes a high, consolidates and goes on to make a new high, falls and bounces near support before rising toward the initial high and finally sells off below the initial support. See also: How to Buy Palantir Technologies (PLTR) Stock Bulls would like to see the stock bounce near the potential support level of $20 before crossing above the head and shoulders pattern and ending bearish sentiment in the stock. This could indicate the stock is making a reversal upward near support levels. Bears would like to see the stock fall through the $20 support and consolidate, retesting the price level as resistance, before the stock may make further downward moves.This would confirm the head and shoulders pattern that may be seen on the daily chart. Photo courtesy of Palantir. See more from BenzingaClick here for options trades from BenzingaTesla Stock Looks To Find Support: Technical Levels To WatchAptose Biosciences Stock Trades Higher After Q4 Earnings: Technical Levels To Watch© 2021 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
“Ramona Quimby, Age 8” is the first book I remember reading. It’s led to a long love of books ever since. “
WASHINGTON — He reflected on his reputation as a “nice guy” and a “decent man.” He talked about how his great-grandfather set sail on the Irish Sea to make the difficult journey to America. He observed that “politics is the art of the possible.” In his first formal news conference since taking office, President Joe Biden offered an early glimpse of the man who inhabits the Oval Office and how he is approaching the presidency so far. Unlike President Donald Trump’s hot-tempered blowups or President Barack Obama’s extended answers of professorial cool, Biden was the sober political veteran comfortable with thinking out loud, talking personally and conversationally, and showing occasional impatience before a roomful of reporters. When he received a question he did not like, such as whether he expected to run in 2024 against Trump, he shrugged it off with, “I don’t know where you guys come from, man.” But Biden did say he expected to run again, with Vice President Kamala Harris at his side. Sign up for The Morning newsletter from the New York Times After nearly four decades in politics, including eight years as vice president, he showed himself as a student of the office. “It’s a matter of timing,” he said when asked about his legislative priorities. “As you’ve all observed, the successful presidents better than me have been successful in large part because they know how to time what they’re doing. Order it. Decide priorities. What needs to be done.” To that end, he cited his $3 trillion infrastructure bill as “the next major initiative.” And when asked why he did not push to abolish the Senate filibuster, which requires 60 votes to pass most legislation and which Biden called a relic of the Jim Crow era, he said simply that “successful electoral politics is the art of the possible” — and that he wanted to see whether he could change the filibuster first. Biden also recalled the Senate of yore, as he has done multiple times as president: “It used to be you had to stand there and talk and talk and talk and talk until you collapsed. And guess what, people got tired of talking.” But he joked about how outdated his own views could sometimes sound. “I believe we should go back to a position in the filibuster that existed just when I came to the United States Senate 120 years ago,” he said. The president engaged on questions about his administration’s attempt to ramp up capacity to temporarily care for the thousands of migrant children who are arriving at the southwestern border without legal guardians. He also took aim at the zero-tolerance policies enacted by Trump, saying his administration is trying “to put in place what was dismantled.” “I like to think it’s because I’m a nice guy,” Biden said. “But it’s not. It’s because of what’s happened.” At times, he was equal parts off the cuff — “I guess I should be flattered,” he responded when pressed on his “moral” approach to detaining families at the border — and exasperated. “That’s a serious question, right? Is it acceptable to me? Come on,” Biden said when asked if the state of Customs and Border Protection facilities in Texas, where children are being temporarily housed, was acceptable to him. Other times he was solicitous of reporters. “Am I giving you too long an answer?” he asked Yamiche Alcindor of PBS NewsHour. “If you don’t want the details — I don’t know how much detail you want about immigration. Maybe I’ll stop there.” He spoke of immigration in personal terms, as the last resort of desperate people seeking a new life in the United States. When families decide to leave Mexico or Guatemala, the president said, they do not say, “I got a great idea: let’s sell everything we have, give it to a coyote, have him take our kids across the border into a desert where they don’t speak the language, won’t that be fun?” Biden added: “That’s not how it happens. People don’t want to leave. When my great-grandfather got in a coffin ship in the Irish Sea, expectation was he going to live long enough on that ship to get to the United States of America? They left because of what the Brits had been doing. They were in real, real trouble. They didn’t want to leave. But they had no choice. So, you’ve got — we can’t — I can’t guarantee we’re going to solve everything. But I can guarantee we can make everything better. We can make it better.” The president’s appearance came after weeks of requests from reporters and speculation about why the White House was delaying the decision to have him hold a news conference. Biden’s advisers had said that the plan had been to pass the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package into law before holding one. As he took questions for over an hour, the president also did little to fuel the narrative being crafted by conservative news media that he is lacking in his mental facilities. He appeared well prepared and sure of his facts, although he did refer to the “North China Sea,” which does not exist. During the news conference, a limited number of journalists were allowed in the room. Those who attended wore masks and sat 6 feet apart to comply with social-distancing rules. Biden called on reporters by their first names, from a list drawn up beforehand by his staff. In that sense, it was another return to normalcy, after four years of Trump’s free-for-all, fact-challenged news conferences. At one, Trump mocked a reporter for wearing what he called “the largest mask I think I’ve ever seen” and at another claimed that injecting disinfectants into the human body could help combat the coronavirus. Reporters shouted to be heard, and Trump appeared to relish the chaos. Biden’s performance, in contrast, was relatively sedate. “It’s a really big relief after four years, when every presidential news conference was a cataclysmic event,” said Lis Smith, a Democratic strategist. She said Biden had stayed on message and “has woven in empathy into everything he does.” “Biden did what he needed to do,” said David Axelrod, a former top adviser to Obama. “He drove the progress on the virus at the top, parried difficult questions on the border and filibuster, and generally refrained from making unwelcome news.” It is unclear where Biden will fall in terms of regularly addressing the news media in a formal setting. Trump gave 44 formal news conferences during his presidency, though he regularly had lengthy question-and-answer sessions with reporters during Oval Office events or before crossing the White House lawn to board Marine One. Obama held 65 news conferences, according to data compiled by The American Presidency Project, which tracks such solo appearances. Biden also left a series of open questions about some of the most politically contentious problems facing his administration. He would not say how soon he planned to allow reporters to see the conditions at migrant detention facilities along the U.S.-Mexico border. He did not commit to a timeline for pulling U.S. troops out of Afghanistan. And he declined multiple times to say whether he would try to change how the Senate functions. In those moments, Biden, a politician who has only recently embraced the art of restraint, seemed aware of the perils of making promises to a room full of reporters. “I’m not going to lay out a strategy in front of the whole world,” he said, “and you, now.” This article originally appeared in The New York Times. © 2021 The New York Times Company
Calls of boycott and anger have erupted in China against Nike and Swedish clothing giant H&M after Chinese netizens unearthed old statements from the brands taking a stand against cotton sourced from the northwestern Chinese region of Xinjiang over concerns of reports of forced labor involving the Muslim Uyghur minority. Tensions between western countries and China have now spilled over into the realm of fast fashion and sportswear. Nike and H&M’s statements, along with those of other international brands such as Adidas, Gap, New Balance and Zara parent company Inditex resurfaced soon after the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and European Union jointly condemned China’s years-long crackdown on Uyghurs and sanctioned Xinjiang government officials.
Microsoft Corporation’s (NASDAQ: MSFT) decentralized identity platform ION is now live on the Bitcoin blockchain. What Happened: After four years in the making, the layer two network was successfully deployed on the Bitcoin mainnet, according to the company's recent announcement. “We have deployed an ION node to our production infrastructure and are working together with other companies and organizations to do so as well,” said Daniel Buchner of Microsoft’s Decentralized Identity team. The project is also completely open-source, meaning it has been designed for any individual user to run their own node. “In fact, the more nodes in operation, the stronger the network becomes,” noted Buchner. Why It Matters: The ION Decentralized Identifier (DID) will utilize the Bitcoin blockchain to authenticate online IDs. Essentially, ION will use the same logic as Bitcoin’s transaction layers to validate a user’s identity. According to ION, all the IDs will be tied to Bitcoin’s blockchain using the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS) protocol, and nodes will be able to process 10,000 ID requests in a single transaction. Logging into a variety of online platforms, including social media, or even buying tickets online, could be made simpler by the verification provided by a users’ DID. Users can also use a DID as digital proof to represent any verifiable assertion, ranging from diplomas to membership cards. However, unlike traditional usernames and email addresses, DIDs will be owned and controlled by the users themselves, existing independently of an external organization or third party. “For us, Bitcoin was a necessary condition for success,” said Buchner to Bitcoin Magazine, adding, “When we started crunching the numbers, we realized that Bitcoin was the only chain that would probably be too costly to attack.” See more from BenzingaClick here for options trades from BenzingaArgo Blockchain And DMG Launch World's First 'Green Bitcoin' Mining Pool.4B Options Expiry Triggers Bitcoin Price Recovery© 2021 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Fox News’ “Fox & Friends” morning show on Friday went over President Joe Biden’s Thursday press conference and the reviews were not positive. “It was kind of hard to watch at times,” admitted co-host Steve Doocy after the show rolled a montage of a selection of Biden’s answers. “He did seem confused. No idea what he was talking about. I didn’t understand what he was talking about. He rambled on until he apparently would occasionally either run out of gas or run out of words and then pause for a moment. You know, maybe he was searching for a new direction or a new word, couldn’t find it and changed the subject. Ultimately, maybe he was just rusty. What was it, 65 days he hasn’t had a formal press conference? Maybe he should have done it earlier.” Will Cain suggested that the president might have gotten “lost” while looking through his notes, but added that “no one wants to make fun of Joe Biden or score cheap points.” Also Read: Fox News Slapped With $1.6 Billion Defamation Suit by Dominion Voting Systems “There were moments of clarity for Joe Biden, as well,” he said. In Biden’s Thursday press conference, he announced his administration’s plan to double its goal of getting 100 million vaccinations done in his first 100 days in office after passing that milestone last week. He also confirmed he plans to run for re-election. Watch “Fox & Friends” go through the conference above. Read original story ‘Fox and Friends’ Rips ‘Confused’ Biden With Edited Montage of First Press Conference: ‘Hard to Watch’ (Video) At TheWrap
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FOX News White House correspondent on follow up from president's first press conference on 'Special Report'
Laer Hohmann, a 2020 Hilton Head Island High graduate, remains hospitalized with serious injuries.
Rosalynne Montoya, a trans model and activist, said gendered body scans at airport security checkpoints make travel distressing for trans people.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, a top adviser to the Biden administration on the coronavirus pandemic, addressed comments that former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Robert Redfield made on Friday.
Former president calls doctor a “self promoter”
Dominion Voting Systems has filed a $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit against Fox News, arguing the cable news giant falsely claimed in an effort to boost faltering ratings that the voting company rigged the 2020 election. (March 26)
The Rockets' trade of Victor Oladipo at the trade deadline has only weakened the package they got back for James Harden.
Several civil rights groups filed a lawsuit against Georgia election officials challenging Republican-crafted voting restrictions signed into law by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp on Thursday.Why it matters: The lawsuit from New Georgia Project, Black Voters Matter Fund and Rise alleges that the restrictions violate the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the 14th Amendment by inflicting "unjustifiable burdens" that disproportionately affect people of color and young, poor and disabled citizens.Get market news worthy of your time with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free.The Georgia law imposes new ID requirements, limits the use of ballot drop boxes, changes early voting hours, prohibits third parties from collecting absentee ballots and bans non-poll workers from giving food and water to voters in line, among other restrictions.Kemp said at the signing of the bill on Thursday that it will ensure Georgia’s elections are "secure, accessible and fair."But, but, but: Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, one of the defendants in the lawsuit, has repeatedly said his office found no evidence of widespread fraud in the 2020 election, despite baseless claims to the contrary by former President Trump.The big picture: Georgia is the first battleground state to enact sweeping new legislation rolling back voting rights in the wake of the 2020 election, which saw record levels of mail-in and early voting due to the pandemic. Dozens of GOP-led state legislatures have proposed similar voting restrictions, infuriating Democrats and voting rights activists.Read the lawsuit. Go deeper: Georgia lawmaker released on bond after arrest during signing of GOP voting billMore from Axios: Sign up to get the latest market trends with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free
COX'S BAZAR (Reuters) - Four people were killed after police fired on protesters who they said attacked a police station in the Bangladeshi city of Chittagong on Friday during a demonstration against a visit to the country by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Dozens were also hurt in the capital Dhaka where police used rubber bullets and teargas in clashes with violent protesters, witnesses said. In Chittagong, thousands of supporters of an Islamist group that accuses Modi of alienating minority Muslims in India streamed out of mosques after prayers to register their protest against his visit, police official Rafiqul Islam said.