Plus, a new subvariant dominates US Covid cases.
A powerful storm inundates California; the WHO warns of a highly transmissible new Covid variant. Tonight's Sentences was written by Jariel Arvin. |
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California storm brings floods and power outages |
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📍 If you read just one story Vox's Ben Jacobs explains four ways Kevin McCarthy's quest to become the Republican House speaker could end. [Vox / Ben Jacobs] |
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New Covid variant XBB.1.5 |
- The WHO on Wednesday warned about the increase in cases of the highly transmissible omicron XBB.1.5 subvariant in Europe and the northeastern United States. [Politico / Carmen Paun]
- The strain became the most dominant in the US in December, accounting for 40 percent of cases. It has spread to at least 29 countries. [CNN / Brenda Goodman]
- So far, there's no evidence that the new variant causes more severe illness; experts expect bivalent vaccines and prior exposure will help fight the virus. [Atlantic / Katherine J. Wu]
- However, health officials said the global community must better track emerging variants, to avoid sudden spikes in infections, hospitalizations, and deaths. [Washington Post / Andrew Jeong]
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Thursday, Rep. Kevin McCarthy lost more bids for House speaker despite offering further concessions to the party's right-wing flank. [Vox / Andrew Prokop] |
- The USDA has approved the world's first vaccine for bees — a new tool for curbing disease that's wiping out hives and threatening food pollination. [Guardian / Oliver Milman]
- Amazon announced it's cutting 18,000 employees due to economic uncertainty. It's the most layoffs at a major tech company amid a wave of firings in the sector. [Wall Street Journal / Dana Mattioli and Jessica Toonkel]
- The Federal Trade Commission has proposed banning noncompete clauses, which could lead to more choice and better pay for the American workforce. [Vox / Sara Morrison and Rani Molla]
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"We are not out of the woods by any stretch of the imagination. We are basically in the eye of the storm right now." |
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| Guest host Sigal Samuel talks with philosopher and author Martha Nussbaum about her new book, Justice for Animals. Nussbaum discusses several ethical, legal, and metaphysical theories for how humans should treat other animals, and offers her own distinct new approach. | |
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