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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

Talking head laughs in Buttigieg's face after he glosses over the Biden admin's epic failure
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www.theblaze.com

Talking head laughs in Buttigieg's face after he glosses over the Biden admin's epic failure

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg was recently asked about one of his boss' unrealistic green schemes, namely the installation of electric vehicle charging stations across the country. His answer prompted CBS' Margaret Brennan to laugh in his face. Apparently keen to keep the laughs coming, Buttigieg subsequently blamed airline turbulence on climate change. Only 499,992 to go Ahead of the 2020 election, then-candidate Joe Biden promised the American people in four debates and during his CNN town hall interview that he would build half a million new charging stations across the nation if elected. After taking the White House, Biden reiterated his promise, stating in November 2021, "We're going to build out the first-ever national network of charging stations all across the country — over 500,000 of them. ... So you'll be able to go across the whole darn country, from East Coast to West Coast, just like you'd stop at a gas station now. These charging stations will be available." That month, the then-Democrat-controlled Congress passed a corresponding $1 trillion infrastructure package. Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and 18 other Republican lawmakers, evidently unswayed by former President Donald Trump's critiques, subsequently helped Democrats pass the measure in the U.S. Senate. Of the 1,000 billion taxpayer dollars sunk into the bill, $73 billion was designated for updating the nation's electricity grid so it could carry more renewable energy and $7.5 billion to build Biden's promised EV charging stations by 2030. According to the EV policy analyst group Atlas Public Policy, the funding designated for the rollout should be enough for at least 20,000 charging spots and 5,000 stations. Now years into the scheme, it appears increasingly unlikely that Biden's costly promise will materialize. In March, the Federal Highway Administration confirmed to the Washington Post that only seven of Biden's planned 500,000 EV charging stations were operational, amounting to a total of 38 spots for drivers in Hawaii, New York, Ohio, and Pennsylvania to charge their vehicles. Politico noted last year that that a National Renewable Energy Laboratory study estimated the country will need 1.2 million public chargers by 2030 to meet the demand artificially created by the Biden administration's climate agenda and corresponding regulations. As of June 2023, there were roughly 180,000 chargers nationwide. House Committee on Energy and Commerce Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.) and other Republican lawmakers penned a February letter to Buttigieg and Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, expressing concerns that "American taxpayer dollars are being woefully mismanaged." Over the weekend, Margaret Brennan pressed the issue further in conversation with the Biden DOT secretary on CBS' "Face the Nation." Laughable "Let me ask you about a portion of this that I think does fall under your portfolio, and that's the charging stations you mentioned. The Federal Highway Administration says only seven or eight charging stations have been produced with a $7.5 billion investment that taxpayers made back in 2021," said Brennan. "Why isn't that happening more quickly?" "So the president's goal is to have half a million chargers up by the end of this decade. Now, in order to do a charger, it's more than just plunking a small device into the ground. There's utility work, and this is also really a new category of federal investment." "But we've been working with each of the 50 states," continued Buttigieg. "Every one of them is getting formula dollars to do this work." Brennan leaned in and asked, "Seven or eight, though?" "Again, by 2030: 500,000 chargers," responded Buttigieg. Brennan laughed at Buttigieg's suggestion, evidently unable to conceal her disbelief in the possibility that another 499,992 chargers could be installed and operational inside the next six years. "And the very first handful of chargers are now already being physically built. But again, that's the absolute very, very beginning stages of the construction to come," added Buttigieg. Despite the Biden administration admittedly being at the "very, very beginning stages," it is nevertheless trying to get gas-consuming cars off the streets and replacing them with EVs that will all rely on the handful of existing charging stations. In March, the administration announced a rule that would limit the amount of exhaust permitted from cars such that by 2032, over half of the new cars need to be so-called zero-emissions vehicles, reported the New York Times. Keeping it light While short on satisfactory answers, Buttigieg still had plenty of alarmism to go around. The DOT secretary told Brennan, "The reality is the effects of climate change are already upon us in terms of our transportation. We've seen that in the form of everything from heat waves that shouldn't statistically even be possible threatening to melt the cables of transit systems in the Pacific Northwest, to hurricane seasons becoming more and more extreme, and indications that turbulence is up by about 15%." A study published last year in Geophysical Research Letters suggested that clear-air turbulence "is predicted to become more frequent because of climate change," claiming that the strongest category of clear-air turbulence was 55% more frequent in 2020 than in 1979. Brennan pressed Buttigieg on whether the kind of extreme turbulence experienced last week by Singapore Airlines flight SQ321, which was traveling from London to Singapore, would soon become more common in the United States. "To be clear, something that extreme is very rare. But turbulence can happen and sometimes it can happen unexpectedly," said Buttigieg. "This is all about making sure that we stay ahead of the curve, keeping aviation as safe as it is." The "Face the Nation" interview was slapped with a community note on X, noting that National Transportation Safety Board data "shows there is no rising trend in aircraft turbulence incidents." — (@) Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

'Furiosa' flops hard — female-led reboot was worst Memorial Day No. 1 movie since 1995
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'Furiosa' flops hard — female-led reboot was worst Memorial Day No. 1 movie since 1995

The latest reboot from the "Mad Max" series was not enough to pull in moviegoers for Memorial Day weekend, marking another low point for the movie industry that saw the weakest numbers for Memorial Day in nearly 30 years."Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga" garnered fantastically little at the box office, especially for a special, four-day opening weekend. With just $26,300,000 in its first three days, the holiday opening added just a few million to its total, finishing the long weekend with only $32,000,000, according to Box Office Mojo.This was barely enough to edge out "The Garfield Movie," with one stark difference. The reported budget for the lasagna-loving cat was around $60 million while "Furiosa" put up a tab of somewhere between $168-$233 million. As Screenrant reported, the movie would generally need to take in between $336-$466 million to be considered successful for studio Warner Bros., which may serve as a challenge.The stunning, brave, and powerful female-led film was the lowest-earning No. 1 film for a Memorial Day box office opening since 1995 when "Casper" took the top spot with just $16.8 million. The Australian post-apocalyptic adventure, coupled with the comic strip cat, also marked Hollywood's worst Memorial Day weekend for the industry in the 29-year span.Comparatively, things weren't looking so bad in 2023 when "The Little Mermaid" opened to $188 million on Memorial Day weekend. In 2022, Tom Cruise excited crowds with "Top Gun: Maverick" and had a $160 million holiday opening, finishing with $700 million domestically. 'This was indeed a historically slow Memorial Day weekend for movie theaters.'The lackluster Memorial Day box office should worry the entire movie industry, which NBC News noted has yet to have a box office smash in 2024. No film has broken $100 million in terms of an opening weekend this year, and that burden is now shifted to the shoulders of even more upcoming sequels and reboots."Despicable Me 4" is one possible performer, while the remake of 1996 hit "Twister" comes back with the aptly named "Twisters" in July. Disney's "Inside Out 2" and "Deadpool and Wolverine" are more sequels that have high hopes.A reliance on sequels hasn't been working out however, especially for the likes of Disney, which has announced it will continue to move forward with known storylines."I just think that right now, given the competition in the overall movie marketplace that actually there's a lot of value in the sequels obviously because they're known and it takes less in terms of marketing," said Disney CEO Bob Iger during a May 2024 earnings call.Despite sequels and reboots for "Indiana Jones," a "Haunted Mansion," and "The Marvels" performing terribly, Iger insisted this was the path forward for the company. This, of course, included "more Avengers.""The team is, I think, one that I have tremendous confidence in. And the IP that we're mining, including all the sequels that we're doing is second to none. So I feel really good about what's coming up," the CEO added.While "Furiosa" seemed to be plagued with being too long and providing too little, Comscore senior analyst Paul Dergarabedian simply noted that "this was indeed a historically slow Memorial Day weekend for movie theaters."Hollywood hopes its upcoming sequels will "allow the industry to hit the reset and get the industry moving in a positive direction," Dergarabedian told NBC News.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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National Review
National Review
1 y

Activist Investor Ramaswamy Urges Buzzfeed to Embrace Political Diversity, Floats Tucker Carlson, Bill Maher as Big-Name Hires
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Activist Investor Ramaswamy Urges Buzzfeed to Embrace Political Diversity, Floats Tucker Carlson, Bill Maher as Big-Name Hires

‘From Candace Owens to Destiny, Tucker Carlson to Bill Maher, Aaron Rodgers to Charles Barkley, no talent should be off-limits.’
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National Review
National Review
1 y

Merchan and Bragg Fashion a Vague Fraud Instruction to Convict Trump
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Merchan and Bragg Fashion a Vague Fraud Instruction to Convict Trump

The proposed jury instruction would encourage the jury to convict Trump in the absence of proof that he did anything illegal.
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
1 y

Dude. WUT? We Didn't Have Eric Swalwell Defending Terrorists on Our BINGO Card But ... Here We Are
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twitchy.com

Dude. WUT? We Didn't Have Eric Swalwell Defending Terrorists on Our BINGO Card But ... Here We Are

Dude. WUT? We Didn't Have Eric Swalwell Defending Terrorists on Our BINGO Card But ... Here We Are
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
1 y

OOPS! Biden Campaign Just Proved BS Cases Against Trump are ABSOLUTELY About Interfering in 2024 Election
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twitchy.com

OOPS! Biden Campaign Just Proved BS Cases Against Trump are ABSOLUTELY About Interfering in 2024 Election

OOPS! Biden Campaign Just Proved BS Cases Against Trump are ABSOLUTELY About Interfering in 2024 Election
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
1 y

What We Can Learn From Europe's Immigration Woes
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redstate.com

What We Can Learn From Europe's Immigration Woes

What We Can Learn From Europe's Immigration Woes
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
1 y

Michigan Is in Play - Donald Trump and Joe Biden Can Thank Rashida Tlaib
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redstate.com

Michigan Is in Play - Donald Trump and Joe Biden Can Thank Rashida Tlaib

Michigan Is in Play - Donald Trump and Joe Biden Can Thank Rashida Tlaib
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
1 y

While the House GOP Tries to Maintain Its Majority, Trump Takes Aim at Freedom Caucus Chair Bob Good
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redstate.com

While the House GOP Tries to Maintain Its Majority, Trump Takes Aim at Freedom Caucus Chair Bob Good

While the House GOP Tries to Maintain Its Majority, Trump Takes Aim at Freedom Caucus Chair Bob Good
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
1 y

Apple figured out how to make the iPhone 16 Pro’s bezels ultra-thin
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bgr.com

Apple figured out how to make the iPhone 16 Pro’s bezels ultra-thin

As someone looking to upgrade to the iPhone 16 this fall, I'm not worried about production issues or launch delays. This isn't Apple's first rodeo, and there's no life-threatening emergency like the pandemic that could mess with the regular iPhone production schedule. However, in early April, we saw reports that Apple's smartphone display vendors were struggling to meet Apple's demands for the iPhone 16. Specifically, Apple wants the iPhone 16 Pro and 16 Pro Max to feature even thinner bezels than their predecessors. The design posed manufacturing issues for Samsung and LG, the kind that could impact iPhone production. I think the race to the thinnest possible bezels is getting out of hand, but I get why smartphone vendors are doing it and why Apple needs the iPhone 16 Pros to feature even smaller bezels. I said at the time I'd hate bezel size to become an issue that slows iPhone production, but it looks like I no longer need to worry. Samsung and LG have reportedly received approval to mass-produce the OLED panels for the iPhone 16 Pro models. Apple is also expected to approve OLED screens for the iPhone 16 Pro Max in the coming weeks. Continue reading... The post Apple figured out how to make the iPhone 16 Pro’s bezels ultra-thin appeared first on BGR. Today's Top Deals Today’s deals: $120 off eufy X10 Pro Omni, First M2 iPad Air discount, $99 Ninja smokeless grill, more Amazon gift card deals, offers & coupons 2024: Get $380+ free Best Apple deals for May 2024 Today’s deals: $399 iPad Air 5, Igloo coolers, $150 off M3 MacBook Air, Vitamix blenders, Ninja sale, more
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