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Snubbed by Obama? Joe Biden says White House ‘residence’ was unseen by him – until he moved in

President Joe Biden served in the U.S. Senate for more than 30 years, and then served eight years as Barack Obama’s vice president. But until he moved in last month, he said Tuesday night, he’d never been inside the presidential “residence” area of the White House.

Biden made the disclosure during a town hall event in Milwaukee, hosted by CNN’s Anderson Cooper.

“I had been in the Oval Office a hundred times as vice president — more than that — every morning for the initial meetings but I had never been up in the residence,” Biden said.

“I had been in the Oval Office a hundred times as vice president — more than that — every morning for the initial meetings but I had never been up in the residence.”

— President Biden

Until becoming president, Biden said, he also hadn’t had the experience of having the White House staff fully available to address his every need.

“I was raised in a way that you didn’t look for anybody to wait on you,” Biden told the audience, adding that relying on the staff has made him feel “self-conscious” since moving into the White House.

“You’d never been in the residence of the White House?” Cooper asked, sounding surprised.

“I’d only been upstairs in the Yellow Room, the Oval upstairs,” Biden responded.

“I don’t know, I’ve never been there either,” Cooper joked.

Biden’s disclosure suggested that no president – whether Barack Obama or any other – had ever invited him into the area where the nation’s chief executive shares private time with his family.

It also appeared to add support to claims that Biden’s relationship with Obama, his former boss, wasn’t as close as both men have always publicly portrayed it to be.

Some reports have suggested that Joe Biden and Barack Obama are not as friendly with one another as they appear to be in public. (Associated Press)

“Don’t underestimate Joe’s ability to f— things up,” Obama reportedly once said privately about Biden, Politico reported last August.

Obama also withheld his endorsement of Biden for president until last April, after his former vice president had already been campaigning for months.

Later Tuesday, Cooper asked Biden if living in the White House for the past four weeks has been different than he expected it to be.

“You know, I don’t know what I ever expected it to be. It is different in that, um – [I don’t want to] get in trouble here – I said when I was running, I wanted to be president not to live in the White House but to be able to make the decisions about the future of the country.

“So living in the White House – as you’ve heard [from] other presidents who’ve been extremely flattered to live there — it’s a little like a gilded cage in terms of being able to walk outside and do things.”

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He said the vice president’s residence was “totally different,” being on a larger property, with room for bicycling plus a swimming pool.

At the beginning of the discussion, Biden joked about living at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.

“I get up in the morning, I look at Jill, and say, ‘Where the hell are we?’”

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Scientists find evidence Stonehenge might have been built in Wales then moved

British archaeologists believe they have pinpointed the origins of the 5,000-year-old prehistoric Stonehenge ruin. 

A team of scientists, led by University College London’s Mike Parker Pearson, reported in the journal Antiquity on Friday that they had unearthed a stone circle in Wales’ Preseli Hills that they believe had been dismantled and moved 175 miles to Salisbury Plain and reconfigured as Stonehenge. 

MYSTERIOUS MONOLITH POPS UP NEAR TURKISH WORLD HERITAGE SITE

The “Waun Mawn” site — previously disregarded over the years — was found to have just four large bluestones left arranged in an arc. Pearson and his researchers uncovered evidence of an additional six holes that originally held a stone in 2018, giving rise to the theory that people had taken them as they migrated.

Upon measuring the diameter of the circular ditch at Waun Mawn, the group found that the ditches surrounding both sites shared identical diameters of about 360 feet across. 

In this Tuesday Dec. 17, 2013 file photo, visitors take photographs of the world heritage site of Stonehenge, England.
(AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)

Waun Mawn — which appears to be Britain’s third-largest stone circle — and Stonehenge are the only two Neolithic monuments in Britain that conform to those specifications and examination of charcoal and sediment inside the holes suggested that Waun Mawn’s creation could be traced back to about 3,400 B.C.

In addition, the dimensions of the 43 bluestones at Stonehenge — many of which are buried — match the dimensions of the four at Waun Mawn and are the same type of rock as three of them.

One of the Stonehenge bluestones also has a cross-section that matches one of the gaps at Waun Mawn.

To further prove their connection, Pearson found that the entrance to both circles was aligned toward the midsummer solstice sunrise — though, the circle’s intended purpose remains shrouded in mystery.

Stonehenge was constructed in phases starting at around 3,000 B.C.

The Wiltshire county monument was built using both bluestones and newer and larger sarsen sandstones. 

Previous research over the last few decades showed that while the sarsen stones were brought from just 15 miles away in Marlborough, the bluestone pillars had been extracted from the Preseli Hills. 

In 2019, Pearson and his team provided evidence of the locations of two of the bluestone quarries, prompting them to look over Waun Mawn again.

Scientific analysis of human remains at Stonehenge indicated that some of them could have come from Wales, and further excavations are planned to try to understand more. 

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Pearson hypothesized both that Stonehenge was made to commemorate the ancestors of those who built it and that Stonehenge’s first stage may have served to unite the people of southern Britain. 

“Maybe most of the people migrated, taking their stones – their ancestral identities – with them, to start again in this other special place,” he said in a news release. “This extraordinary event may also have served to unite the peoples of east and west Britain.”

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FDA moved too fast to authorize coronavirus antibody tests, two top officials admit

Winter Park Resort in Grand County, Colorado. KMGH

A ski resort in Colorado has had a Covid-19 outbreak, with more than 100 active infections among its employees.

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment announced the outbreak at Winter Park Resort in January but released the data in its weekly outbreak summary on Wednesday.

There are at least 109 employees with active infections, they said.

“It has been determined that these cases have not been traced back to transmission through interaction with visitors but, rather, from social gatherings outside of the workplace and congregate housing,” Grand County, Colorado, officials said Monday in a joint statement with Winter Park Resort.

With ski season in full swing in Colorado, other resorts have also reported Covid-19 cases. But the outbreak at Winter Park is currently the largest, according to CDPHE data.

“We have been working closely with public health authorities since the pandemic began,” said Jen Miller, communications manager at the ski resort. “We did extensive planning and had to get approval from the state on our operations before we could open on December 3.”

Cases linked to socializing and living situations: Most of the cases have been traced back to social gatherings outside of work and to congregate housing, Miller said.

Precautions, according to Miller, include: reconfiguring lift corrals and lift-loading procedures, extra staff, new signage reminding visitors about mask requirements, limitations on dining, a reservation system to manage visitation and the number of people at the resort, contactless lodging and a state-approved testing site for their 1,700 active employees.

But some visitors have reported that mask mandates were not being enforced.

When asked about those reports, Miller said, “We’ve done extensive work and continue to evolve our operations as necessary. I can’t speak to one individual’s experience, but we do appreciate feedback and will continue to make modifications with the health and well-being of our employees, guests and community as our top priority.”

Conor Cahill, press secretary for Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, said ski resorts across the state need to “do a better job planning for and managing surge weekends.”

Read the full story here.

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Elon Musk sent Dogecoin soaring last week. Here are 6 times the Tesla boss has moved markets, from GameStop to Sandstorm.

From GameStop to obscure gold miners, Tesla boss Elon Musk can move markets

Move over Warren Buffet, a new market sage has the ear of investors. At least, investors interested in buying joke cryptocurrencies.

That’s right: Elon Musk. A tweet to his 45 million Twitter followers sent “meme” cryptocurrency Dogecoin soaring on Thursday.

The Tesla boss and SpaceX founder was a vocal supporter of the Reddit crowd during the GameStop saga, and one word of his can send investors piling into a company’s stock.

Where does Musk’s market-moving power come from? He is a deeply attractive figure to many amateur investors, who see him as a genius maverick whose electric-car company Tesla has defied Wall Street naysayers.

On top of that, people can trade the savings they’ve built up during lockdown on commission-free apps such as Robinhood. So why not follow where Musk leads?

Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at UK trading platform Markets.com, told Insider he thinks it’s “worrying in some ways that people’s financial interests are at the whim of his tweets – but it’s up to them if they want to be in those assets.”

Good or bad, investors are increasingly aware of Musk’s tweets. Here are 6 times he’s moved markets.

1. Elon Musk sent Dogecoin soaring 60% in minutes with a tweet

On Thursday, cryptocurrency Dogecoin soared as much as 59% in moments.

Why? Because Elon Musk returned to Twitter after a two-day absence to post a picture based on the movie Lion King which showed him holding up Doge, the meme Shiba Inu dog upon which Dogecoin is based.

The digital currency touched as high as $0.0579 on Thursday, although this was some way from the all-time high of $0.0792 reached in January. As of Friday morning, Dogecoin was down around 11% to $0.0457.

Read More: Investors are flocking to trade Dogecoin and other hot digital tokens on Voyager. Its CEO says Bitcoin will hit $100,000 this year

2. Musk helped power the GameStop frenzy

One of Musk’s most high-profile interventions in the markets came at the end of January, when he waded into the day-trading frenzy that sent GameStop shares soaring and battered hedge funds.

On January 26 after markets closed, and as interest in GameStop shares picked up among day traders on social network website Reddit, Musk simply tweeted “Gamestonk!!” with a link to the Reddit forum Wall Street Bets.

The next day, GameStop’s shares rocketed as much as 157% and closed 135% higher, with Wall Street Bets members widely discussing Musk’s tweet. GameStop tumbled a week later, however, to $70.15 on Friday.

The Wall Street Journal reported that one hedge fund who had bet on GameStop decided to get out after Musk’s tweet. Senvest Management ended up making $700 million.

3. The Tesla chief sent investors piling into the wrong Signal

One of the more bizarre examples of Musk’s market-moving power saw investors pile into a firm called Signal after the SpaceX boss tweeted about it. The only problem was, it was the wrong Signal.

Shares of Signal Advance, a small medical technology company, soared more than 11,000% to as high as $70.85 from $0.60 before Musk’s tweet.

Investors seemed to have confused Signal Advance with the encrypted messaging platform that Musk praised in a two-word message: “Use Signal.”

Read More: A fund manager who’s beaten 97% of his peers over the past 5 years shares 6 of the stocks he’s most bullish on as Biden takes a friendlier stance toward cannabis and electric vehicles

Dogecoin is a cryptocurrency based on the Doge meme, started seemingly as a joke

4. He caused Bitcoin to spike with a hashtag

Bitcoin is a big market, with a capitalization of more than $600 billion. But Musk sent the price of each coin soaring more than 15% at the end of January by simply adding the word “#bitcoin” to his Twitter profile.

The Bitcoin price spiked to as high as $38,406 on January 29, having spent most of the week in a range between $31,000 and $33,000.

Edward Moya, senior market analyst at currency platform Oanda, said in an note: “Bitcoin got lost in the GameStop mania and Musk’s tweet brought cryptos back into the limelight.”

Bitcoin was up around 3% on Friday morning to $38,103.

5. Arts-and-craft retailer Etsy got caught up in the Musk effect

Etsy’s shares jumped as much as 8% on January 26, although they closed lower.

What was behind the spike? Why, Elon Musk saying he had bought a “hand knit wool Marvin the Martian” helmet for his dog, of course.

His satisfaction with his purchase caused the Tesla chief to tweet “I kinda love Etsy” and for the company’s share price to promptly rally in early trading.

Read More: A top-ranked manager at a firm that handles $50 billion in wealth told us 4 ways investors can smartly play day-trading favorites like GameStop without risking it all

6. Musk’s techno tweet boosts obscure gold miner

It’s perhaps the strangest of Musk’s market-moving moments. In his return to Twitter last week, he said “Sandstorm is a masterpiece”, likely referring to the hit 2000 song by Darude.

Day traders went searching for meaning in the stock market, sending shares in Sandstorm Gold – a $1.3 billion Canadian gold miner –  soaring as much as 55% in pre-market trading.

The rally was short-lived, however, with the stock down 1% just before normal trading opened.



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CHIEFS KINGDOM — Former Kansas City Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer moved to hospice facility

STRIKE TO TYREEK HILL IN THE 4TH QUARTER, SET UP THE FIRST OF THREE TOUCHDOWNS THE CHIEFS SCORED IN THE FINAL QUARTER TO BEAT THE 49ERS. THERE IS ALSO SOME SAD NEWS WE WANT TO PASS ALONG TO CHIEFS KINGDOM TONIGHT. FORMER CHIEFS HEAD COACH MARTY SCHOTTENHEIMER HAS BEEN MOVED TO A HOSPICE FACILITY. HIS FAMILY SAYS HE MOVED TO THE FACILITY NEAR HIS HOME IN CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA WHERE HE IS LISTED IN STABLE CONDITION FOLLOWING COMPLICATIONS FROM ALZHEIMER’S. HIS FAMILY RELEASED A STATEMENT SAYING IN PART, AS A FAMILY WE ARE SURROUNDING HIM WITH LOVE AND ARE SOAKING UP THE PRAYERS AND SUPPORT FROM ALL THOSE HE IMPACTED THROUGH HIS INCREDIBLE LIFE. IN THE WAY HE TAUGHT US, WE ARE PUTTING ONE FOOT IN FRONT OF THE OTHER ONE PLAY AT A TIME. WITH THE CHIEFS, SCHOTTENHEIMER MADE AN APPEARANCE IN AFC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME IN 1993, BUT LOST TO THE BUFFALO BI

Former Kansas City Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer moved to hospice facility

Schottenheimer – a member of the Chiefs Hall of Fame and coach in Kansas City from 1989 to 1998 – was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2014

Former Kansas City Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer has been moved into a hospice facility, according to a statement released by the Schottenheimer family to ESPN NFL reporter Chris Mortensen.Schottenheimer – a member of the Chiefs Hall of Fame and coach in Kansas City from 1989 to 1998 – was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2014. He was moved into a hospice facility near his home in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Jan. 30. The statement said he is listed in stable condition following complications from his disease. His family asked for privacy at this time.“As a family, we are surrounding him with love, and are soaking up the prayers and support from all those he impacted through his incredible life,” Pat Schottenheimer, his wife, said in the statement. “In the way he taught us all, we are putting one foot in front of the other… one play at a time.”In 10 full seasons, Schottenheimer went 101-58-1 during the regular season — good for an amazing 63% win percentage. Schottenheimer went 3-7 in another 10 playoff games, including a memorable run in 1993 that ended in the AFC championship game.Related video: Video above is from after the 2020 Super Bowl.

Former Kansas City Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer has been moved into a hospice facility, according to a statement released by the Schottenheimer family to ESPN NFL reporter Chris Mortensen.

Schottenheimer – a member of the Chiefs Hall of Fame and coach in Kansas City from 1989 to 1998 – was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2014. He was moved into a hospice facility near his home in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Jan. 30.

The statement said he is listed in stable condition following complications from his disease. His family asked for privacy at this time.

“As a family, we are surrounding him with love, and are soaking up the prayers and support from all those he impacted through his incredible life,” Pat Schottenheimer, his wife, said in the statement. “In the way he taught us all, we are putting one foot in front of the other… one play at a time.”

In 10 full seasons, Schottenheimer went 101-58-1 during the regular season — good for an amazing 63% win percentage. Schottenheimer went 3-7 in another 10 playoff games, including a memorable run in 1993 that ended in the AFC championship game.

Related video: Video above is from after the 2020 Super Bowl.

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