Tag Archives: Divided

New film ‘Civil War’ explores a divided America at war with itself – PBS NewsHour

  1. New film ‘Civil War’ explores a divided America at war with itself PBS NewsHour
  2. Opinion | What It Would Really Take to Have an American Civil War The New York Times
  3. ‘Civil War,’ ‘Independence Day’ and the movies that love to blow up DC – The Washington Post The Washington Post
  4. ‘Civil War’ Director Says ‘I Honestly Don’t Know’ If It’s ‘Responsible or Irresponsible’ to Release the Movie in an Election Year, but Asks: ‘What’s the Consequence of Silence?’ Variety
  5. Civil War Rotten Tomatoes

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WoW Is Offering Paid Expansion Early Access For The First Time, And Fans Are Divided – GameSpot

  1. WoW Is Offering Paid Expansion Early Access For The First Time, And Fans Are Divided GameSpot
  2. World of Warcraft: The War Within—Anduin is the Perfect Focus Gizmodo
  3. World of Warcraft players underwhelmed by The War Within’s new allied race Dexerto
  4. Blizzard Entertainment announces the next three expansions for World of Warcraft, starting with The War Within RPG Site
  5. World of Warcraft: The War Within’s most exciting new endgame activity puts a spin on the traditional MMO raid formula: “If you have five Fire Mages you can run a Delve” Yahoo Entertainment
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Dream Girl 2 Twitter review: Internet is divided on Ayushmann Khurrana’s comedy – Hindustan Times

  1. Dream Girl 2 Twitter review: Internet is divided on Ayushmann Khurrana’s comedy Hindustan Times
  2. Dream Girl 2 Movie Review: Before Hera Pheri 3, Let’s See How To Ruin One Of The Best Comedies! (Dil Ka Telephone Nahi Karta Ring Ring) Koimoi
  3. Dream Girl 2 box office collection Day 1: Ayushmann Khurrana and Ananya Panday starrer beats OMG 2 to sco IndiaTimes
  4. Dream Girl 2 Exclusive: Ananya Panday wants to steal THIS from Suhana Khan; Ayushmann Khurrana envies Ranbir Bollywood Life
  5. Box Office Collections Of Ayushmann Khurrana’s Last 5 Movies Before Dream Girl 2 Zoom TV
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Jim Gaffigan on making darker jokes in today’s divided America: “It’s a decent vehicle for comedy” – Salon

  1. Jim Gaffigan on making darker jokes in today’s divided America: “It’s a decent vehicle for comedy” Salon
  2. Jim Gaffigan Says His Stand-Up Was Forced to Evolve in the Trump Era: ‘As a People, We’ve Been Through Hell’ (Video) Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Jim Gaffigan: Dark Pale Review – A special full of death and diarrhea jokes Ready Steady Cut
  4. Jim Gaffigan comedy special filmed in Tampa is out now. Here’s how to watch. Tampa Bay Times
  5. Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Jim Gaffigan: Dark Pale’ On Prime Video, The Comedian Takes On Death, Diarrhea And Dad Life Decider
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Northwest Side College Gym Set To Become A Temporary Migrant Shelter — But Neighbors Divided At Chaotic Meeting – Block Club Chicago

  1. Northwest Side College Gym Set To Become A Temporary Migrant Shelter — But Neighbors Divided At Chaotic Meeting Block Club Chicago
  2. Tensions flare over plan to house migrants at Chicago’s Wilbur Wright College CBS Chicago
  3. Wilbur Wright College migrants: Meeting to discuss potential housing for up to 400 Chicago migrants on Dunning campus gets heated WLS-TV
  4. Plan to house migrants at Chicago gym met with both boos, support Chicago Tribune
  5. Tense discussions before meeting on housing migrants at Chicago college CBS Chicago
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Twitter Is Deeply Divided on How Ashton Kutcher & Mila Kunis Will Reportedly Plan to Spend Their $275 Million Fortune – Yahoo Life

  1. Twitter Is Deeply Divided on How Ashton Kutcher & Mila Kunis Will Reportedly Plan to Spend Their $275 Million Fortune Yahoo Life
  2. Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis no-inheritance plan for kids going viral Insider
  3. Ashton Kutcher And Mila Kunis Sparked A Debate About Trust Funds And “Nepo Babies” After A Resurfaced Report Reminded Fans That They Don’t Plan On Leaving Their Kids Any Inheritance BuzzFeed News
  4. Ashton Kutcher, Mila Kunis Donating Entire $275 Million Fortune, To Leave Nothing for Their Kids: ‘The only rich kids missing out on nepo money’ FandomWire
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Taj: Divided By Blood Review – Neither Mughal-E-Azam Nor Game Of Thrones – NDTV Movies

  1. Taj: Divided By Blood Review – Neither Mughal-E-Azam Nor Game Of Thrones NDTV Movies
  2. Taj: Divided By Blood Review: Aditi Rao Hydari & Aashim Gulati’s Doomed Love Saga Is Overshadowed By Inconsistency & Lack Of Poetry Koimoi
  3. Taj director wanted to show real human emotions: ‘Otherwise its a Marvel film’ Hindustan Times
  4. Taj Divided by Blood Review: A Royal Romance to Destroy Everything Leisure Byte
  5. Taj: Divided by Blood Twitter review: ‘Bold and bingeworthy’, say users, hail performances of lead cast Indiatimes.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Medical experts divided on whether 2nd FDA-approved Alzheimer’s drug provides a benefit

An MRI scan of the brain of a patient affected by Alzheimer’s disease. (Getty Images)

The Food Drug and Administration recently approved a drug that may help patients in the early stages of Alzheimer’s by slowing down the progression of the disease. In clinical trials, the drug called lecanemab reduced the rate of cognitive decline among participants.

But doctors and health experts are divided on whether the drug warranted an accelerated FDA approval. While some of them have praised the agency’s decision, describing the drug as groundbreaking, others are skeptical of whether it provides a substantial benefit.

In the U.S, over 6 million people are living with Alzheimer’s, an incurable and fatal disease that affects the brain and causes loss of cognitive function over time. While there are available medications that can treat Alzheimer’s symptoms, there have been no treatments that can address the underlying cause of the disease. This is why some doctors have welcomed the accelerated approval of lecanemab. The FDA is likely to consider a full approval later this year.

“We’re pretty excited that we finally have something,” Dr. Reisa Sperling, who directs the Center for Alzheimer Research and Treatment at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, recently told NPR.

Heather Snyder, vice president of Medical and Scientific Relations at the Alzheimer’s Association, told Yahoo News the organization “celebrates” the Jan. 6 approval of the drug. “This is now the second approved treatment that evidence suggests changes the course of Alzheimer’s disease in a meaningful way,” she said.

Lecanemab, which will be marketed as Leqembi, is the second Alzheimer’s drug to receive a fast-track approval by the FDA. This accelerated authorization is usually given to promising treatments targeting diseases for which there are no other effective options available. In the summer of 2021, the agency gave a similar drug called aducanumab, sold under the brand name Aduhelm, accelerated approval as well. But the move was controversial because the FDA approved the drug despite conflicting evidence about whether it provided a benefit to patients, and against the recommendation of one of its committees of outside experts.

Aduhelm’s accelerated approval prompted a congressional investigation. Since then, the federal Medicare program has decided not to cover Aduhelm treatment for the general population, but only for patients who were enrolled in the clinical trial. Some hospital systems across the country have also declined to offer the drug to Alzheimer’s patients. Due to the controversy surrounding the drug’s efficacy and its high price, as well as the negative publicity it has received, few patients have gotten the treatment. As a result, many doctors who treat the disease have been left, once again, with limited options.

Snyder said that even though Leqembi is not a cure, by slowing the progression of the disease, the drug would give patients more time to enjoy aspects “of daily life.”

“That could be things like participating in a birthday party or going to a wedding, recognizing their spouse, their children, their grandchildren, their neighbors, and really that time is enabling an individual to also make decisions about their care as they go forward as well,” she said.

Lecanemab, which will be marketed as Leqembi, received accelerated approval by the FDA on Jan. 6. (Eisai via Reuters)

Like Aduhelm, the drug lecanemab was developed by Eisai in partnership with fellow drugmaker Biogen. These treatments are monoclonal antibody therapies that are designed to remove a substance called beta-amyloid from the brain. Beta-amyloid is a naturally occurring protein that becomes toxic when it clumps together and forms the sticky plaques that are a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease.

The theory behind the development of monoclonal antibody treatments like lecanemab is that amyloid plaques cause the loss of brain cells that leads to cognitive decline in people who suffer from Alzheimer’s. By reducing the amount of amyloid plaques in the brain, these treatments are believed to help slow down the process of memory loss and cognitive decline.

In a clinical study of nearly 1,800 people in the early stages of Alzheimer’s, those who were given lecanemab for 18 months experienced 27% less decline in memory and thinking compared to those who received the placebo. Although the trial results were positive and unprecedented, some experts believe the excitement for the drug is not proportional to its apparent benefit.

“The clinical trial data shows a statistically significant but clinically undetectable difference in the outcome measure between active treatment and placebo over 18 months,” Dr. Michael Greicius, a professor of neurology and neurological sciences at Stanford University, told Yahoo News.

He said the accelerated FDA approval of lecanemab made sense because in clinical trials, the drug showed that it can affect a biomarker associated with a disease. In this case that biomarker is the reduction of beta-amyloid in the brain. “Lecanemab definitely removes amyloid plaques,” Greicius said.

But some experts fear that the approval of lecanemab will incentivize drug companies to focus on therapies targeting amyloid plaques while neglecting other treatment approaches that may be more fruitful.

“I do consider it a game changer but in a negative sense for how it will change the clinical and research landscape around Alzheimer’s disease,” Greicius said.

The new drug, which is given through intravenous infusions every two weeks, is costly. The companies that develop the medication have said it will price it at $26,500 per year. So far, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has said it will not cover the drug, and unless it receives full FDA approval that isn’t likely to change.

“What CMS is doing by restricting coverage for approved treatments is unprecedented,” Snyder said. “It’s not something we’ve seen before and it’s wrong.”

If CMS ultimately decides not to cover lecanemab, Greicius said, the drug will likely be used but not very widely, as it would have to be paid for out of pocket.

He noted that there are some safety concerns about lecanemab that need to be considered, particularly a condition that can occur with most other drugs that remove amyloid plaques from the brain, known as ARIA, or amyloid-related imaging abnormalities. Two forms of ARIA involve brain swelling and bleeding.

In the lecanemab study, more than 12% of people who got the drug experienced swelling of the brain, and more than 17% had bleeding. While few participants experienced complications, there have been at least three deaths linked to the drug, though those patients appeared to have had additional risk factors.

But Snyder said these side effects should not be a reason for doctors and patients in the early stages of the disease to not consider the medication.

“It’s really important to remember this, Alzheimer’s is fatal … and all treatments have side effects” she said. “So it’s important that we manage those and we understand them, and an individual should weigh any treatment decision — not just with this medication or this disease, but across the board — be able to weigh the potential benefits and risks [in] conversation with their clinician.”

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New Malaysian PM Anwar vows to heal divided nation, economy

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Long-time reformist leader Anwar Ibrahim was sworn in as Malaysia’s prime minister Thursday and vowed to heal a racially divided nation, fight corruption and revive an economy struggling with the rising cost of living.

His rise to the top a was a victory for political reformers who were locked in a battle with Malay nationalists for days after a divisive general election on Saturday produced a hung Parliament. Anwar took his oath of office in a simple ceremony at the national palace that was broadcast on national television.

Malaysia’s king, Sultan Abdullah Sultan Ahmad Shah, named Anwar as the nation’s 10th leader after saying he was satisfied that Anwar is the candidate who is likely to have majority support.

In his first news conference, Anwar said he would form a unity government comprising his Alliance of Hope that won 82 seats, the National Front with 30 seats and a bloc from eastern Sarawak state with 23 seats. He said that would give him a majority of 135 seats, with other smaller blocs expected to join.

“There is no question about my legitimacy,” Anwar said after his rival, former Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, disputed that he has majority support. Anwar said his government will propose a vote of confidence when Parliament reconvenes Dec. 19.

An unexpected surge of ethnic Malay support propelled Muhyiddin’s right-leaning National Alliance to win 73 seats, with its ally Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party emerging as the biggest single party with 49 seats.

The stalemate was resolved after the National Front, led by the United Malays National Organization, agreed to support a unity government under Anwar. Such a tie-up was once unthinkable in Malaysian politics, long dominated by rivalry between the two parties.

“His Royal Highness reminds all parties that the winners do not win all and the losers do not lose everything,” a palace statement said. Sultan Abdullah urged all opposing parties to reconcile to ensure a stable government and end Malaysia’s political turmoil, which has led to three prime ministers since 2018 polls.

The stock market and the Malaysian currency surged following news of Anwar’s appointment.

Police had tightened security nationwide as social media posts warned of racial troubles if Anwar’s multiethnic bloc won. Anwar’s party has urged supporters to refrain from celebratory gatherings to avoid risk of provocation.

Anwar said he wishes his victory will bring new hope for Malaysians longing for a more equitable nation, and assured majority Malay Muslims that they have nothing to fear. He said his priority will be to strengthen the economy as it faces an expected slowdown next year and fight rising inflation.

Many rural Malays fear they may lose their privileges with greater pluralism under Anwar. Fed up with corruption and infighting in the long-ruling UMNO, many opted for Muhyiddin’s bloc in Saturday’s vote.

“Malaysia is more than six decades old. Every Malaysian regardless of ethnicity, religious belief or region, particularly Sabah and Sarawak, should not be left to feel that they are ignored in any way. None should be marginalized under my administration,” he said. Sabah and Sarawak on Borneo Island are among two of the country’s poorest states.

Anwar declared Monday a public holiday to mark his bloc’s victory.

Anwar’s rise to the top job caps his roller-coaster political journey and will ease fears over greater Islamization. But he faces a tall task in bridging racial divides that deepened after Saturday’s poll, as well as reviving the economy. Malays form two-thirds of Malaysia’s 33 million people, which include large ethnic Chinese and Indian minorities.

“Anwar is a globalist, which will assure international investors. He has been seen to be a bridge builder across communities, which will test his leadership moving forward but at the same juncture offers a reassuring hand for the challenges that Malaysia will face,” said Bridget Welsh, a Southeast Asia political expert at Malaysia’s Nottingham University.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken offered his congratulations to Anwar in a statement noting the U.S. looked forward to deepening its friendship with Malaysia.

Anwar, now 75, was a former deputy prime minister whose firing and imprisonment in the 1990s led to massive street protests and a reform movement that became a major political force. Thursday marked his reformist bloc’s second victory — its first being historic 2018 polls that led to UMNO’s ouster and the first regime change since Malaysia’s independence from Britain in 1957.

Anwar was in prison at the time on a sodomy charge he said was politically motivated. He was pardoned and was due to take over from Mahathir Mohamad. But the government collapsed after Muhyiddin defected and joined hands with UMNO to form a new government. Muhyiddin’s government was beset by internal rivalries and he resigned after 17 months. UMNO leader Ismail Sabri Yaakob was then picked by the king as the prime minister.

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Debate on Police in Jackson, Miss., Adds Tension to City Divided by Water Crisis

JACKSON, Miss.—State officials and some residents in Mississippi’s capital are at odds over how to address rampant violent crime, causing tensions to escalate in a city already rife with arguments over who was responsible for a breakdown that left many without clean drinking water.

Mississippi officials are planning to more than double the size of the police force that protects the Capitol and state office buildings to 170 officers by the end of next year. They gave the police force power to patrol a larger area of Jackson, which has one of the highest per capita homicide rates in the U.S. The Jackson Police Department, which has about 250 officers, will continue to oversee the remaining 92% of the city.

Officials in the state government, dominated by Republicans, say the move will make state buildings and the areas around them safer for workers and visitors. Some residents in the predominantly Black city say the mostly white Mississippi leadership is essentially creating a bubble around where they work and neglecting poorer communities with more violence.

“It’s like poor people are left out when it comes to fighting crime,” said

Willa Womack,

the president of the Battlefield Park Neighborhood Association, representing an area that isn’t part of the Capitol Police expansion plan.

Memorial murals in Jackson, Miss., which has one of the highest per capita homicide rates in the U.S.

Sean Tindell,

commissioner of the Mississippi Department of Public Safety, which oversees the Capitol Police, said he has started meeting with local residents to hear their concerns. 

“Sometimes it can be tense,” he said. “But really all we are trying to do is make the city of Jackson safer.”

Jackson, population 150,000, reported 154 homicides last year, up from 128 in 2020 and 82 in 2019. As of Oct. 26 this year, 114 homicides were reported—a rate of 76 per 100,000 residents. That compares with a homicide rate in Chicago of about 21 per 100,000 for the same period.

State and local officials in Jackson have been divided for years, often over the city’s failing water infrastructure, which left many residents without drinking water in late August and early September. The two sides have argued over whether the problems were caused by local mismanagement or inadequate state funding. The Environmental Protection Agency recently said it was investigating a complaint that state agencies discriminated against the city, which is more than 80% Black. 

A spokeswoman for the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality said that the complaint filed by the NAACP contains inaccuracies, but that she couldn’t provide details for legal reasons.

State leaders have raised the possibility in recent years of taking over city operations including the airport. 

While Mississippi’s Republican-led legislature and GOP Gov.

Tate Reeves

gave the Capitol Police expanded authority last year, the department is still adding officers. Its budget grew to $11 million in the current fiscal year from $6.6 million in the fiscal year that ended in June, according to a spokeswoman. 

Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba and Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves at a press conference last month.



Photo:

Rogelio V. Solis/Associated Press

New areas the Capitol Police are patrolling include downtown, universities and the affluent, predominantly white neighborhoods of Belhaven and Fondren. Before the expansion plan, the department was primarily responsible for the Capitol and other state office buildings. 

Andy Frame

of the nonprofit Jackson Association of Neighborhoods said he has seen little cooperation between the city and state on law enforcement.

“There’s no real coordinating effort,” said Mr. Frame. “The state has a negative view of how the city runs things, and neither side trusts the other.”

Jackson Democratic Mayor

Chokwe Antar Lumumba

declined to be interviewed through a spokeswoman, as did the city’s police chief.

In May, Mr. Lumumba said at a press conference that his administration was working to reduce violent crime, but that requests for state funding to supplement Jackson’s approximately $37 million police budget to add technology and new programs were rejected.

“We’ve asked for millions and millions of dollars, and the city of Jackson’s police department has not received any of it,” he said.

A spokesman for the governor said that the state has worked to support Jackson in its fight against crime and that the Capitol Police expansion is a one way it is doing that.

Maati Jone Primm, a Jackson bookstore owner, says she believes white Republican state politicians want to take over the city.

Jackson’s police department, like many across the country, is struggling with staffing shortages. It currently has about 100 fewer officers than its budget allows. The City Council recently voted to increase starting salaries for officers, but pay remains below that of nearby departments.

Lacey Glencora Loftin,

who analyzes crime statistics for the Jackson Police Department, provided data showing that the area to be overseen by the Capitol Police is wealthier and has less violent crime than other sections of the city.

Mr. Tindell, the state public-safety official, said the Capitol Police expansion is intended to protect the areas around state buildings better and make it safer for people to visit them. He said he hoped his department’s expansion would allow Jackson police to focus on more- troubled neighborhoods.

Maati Jone Primm,

a 61-year-old Jackson bookstore owner, said she believes white Republican state politicians want to take over the city, rather than cooperating with its leaders and Black residents.

“The message is, ‘I’m going to command all of your resources,’” she said.

Dane Lott,

29 years old, saw a shooting in 2019 near the coffee shop and bookstore she manages, which is located in the new Capitol Police zone. She said Jackson needs additional officers, and she doesn’t care whether they work for the city or state. 

“More presence is the most helpful thing,” she said.

Dane Lott, who manages a coffee shop and bookstore in Jackson, says she doesn’t care whether additional officers work for the city or the state.



Photo:

Timothy Ivy for The Wall Street Journal

Write to Cameron McWhirter at Cameron.McWhirter@wsj.com

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