Healthcare groups blast passing of Trump's tax bill, warn it will harm millionsNew Foto - Healthcare groups blast passing of Trump's tax bill, warn it will harm millions

By Patrick Wingrove and Michael Erman (Reuters) -Healthcare groups slammed the passage of U.S. President Donald Trump's tax-cut and spending bill on Thursday, warning that its sweeping healthcare provisions would inflict widespread harm on millions of Americans. The bill, when enacted, will overhaul the government's Medicaid healthcare program that covers around 71 million low-income Americans, introducing changes including mandatory work requirements that are expected to leave nearly 12 million people uninsured, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Republicans have said the legislation will lower taxes for Americans across the income spectrum and spur economic growth. According to the CBO, the bill would lower tax revenue by $4.5 trillion over 10 years and cut spending by $1.1 trillion. Much of those spending cuts come from Medicaid. Bobby Mukkamala, president of the American Medical Association, an influential U.S. doctors' group, warned that the Medicaid cuts would limit access to care by leaving millions without health insurance and make it harder for them to see doctors. "It will make it more likely that acute, treatable illnesses will turn into life-threatening or costly chronic conditions. That is disappointing, maddening, and unacceptable," he said. The Alliance of Community Health Plans, which represents local, nonprofit health plans, also rebuked the bill's passage, saying it would drive up consumer costs while slashing federal health spending to historic levels. The group pledged to work with policymakers to minimize disruption for communities. Greg Kelley, president of the Service Employees International Union's healthcare branch, representing Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, and Kansas, called the bill a "moral failure" that threatened healthcare access, jobs, and the stability of the healthcare system. Craig Garthwaite, director of the healthcare program at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, said their research showed such cuts would hurt patient health. He said expanding Medicaid had saved lives and cutting it back was likely to have the opposite impact. Ge Bai, a Johns Hopkins health policy professor and adviser to the conservative Paragon Health Institute, said she expected the private market would step in as able-bodied adults lose Medicaid and subsidies. "These people will come back to the private market," she said. "The financial burden to purchase insurance will be shifted away from U.S. taxpayers to these people's shoulders." (Reporting by Patrick Wingrove and Michael Erman in New York; Additional reporting by Amina Niasse in New York and Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

Healthcare groups blast passing of Trump's tax bill, warn it will harm millions

Healthcare groups blast passing of Trump's tax bill, warn it will harm millions By Patrick Wingrove and Michael Erman (Reuters) -Healthc...
US Supreme Court sides with Trump in South Sudan deportation fightNew Foto - US Supreme Court sides with Trump in South Sudan deportation fight

By Andrew Chung (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court again sided with President Donald Trump's administration on Thursday in a legal fight over deporting migrants to countries other than their own, lifting limits a judge had imposed to protect eight men who the government sought to send to politically unstable South Sudan. Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin called the decision a "win for the rule of law, safety and security of the American people" and said the men would "be in South Sudan" by Friday. The court on June 23 put on hold Boston-based U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy's April 18 injunction requiring migrants set for removal to so-called "third countries" where they have no ties to be given a chance to tell officials that they are at risk of torture there, while a legal challenge plays out. The justices on Thursday granted a Justice Department request to clarify that their June 23 decision also extended to Murphy's separate May 21 ruling that the administration had violated his injunction in attempting to send a group of migrants to South Sudan. The U.S. State Department has urged Americans to avoid the African nation "due to crime, kidnapping and armed conflict." The court said that Murphy should now "cease enforcing the April 18 injunction through the May 21 remedial order." The Supreme Court has a 6-3 conservative majority. "The Supreme Court's ruling rewards the government for violating the injunction and delaying implementation of the remedy the district court ordered," said Trina Realmuto, executive director of the National Immigration Litigation Alliance, which helps represent the plaintiffs. "Eight men are now at imminent risk of deportation to perilous and unsafe conditions in South Sudan," Realmuto said. Two liberal justices, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson, dissented from Thursday's decision. "Today's order clarifies only one thing: Other litigants must follow the rules, but the administration has the Supreme Court on speed dial," Sotomayor wrote in a dissenting opinion. Fellow liberal Justice Elena Kagan, who dissented from the court's decision to lift Murphy's injunction, nevertheless agreed with the decision on Thursday. "I do not see how a district court can compel compliance with an order that this court has stayed," Kagan wrote. The administration has said its third-country policy is critical for removing migrants who commit crimes because their countries of origin are often unwilling to take them back. Murphy found that the administration's policy of "executing third-country removals without providing notice and a meaningful opportunity to present fear-based claims" likely violates due process requirements under the U.S. Constitution. Due process generally requires the government to provide notice and an opportunity for a hearing before taking certain adverse actions. The judge's May 21 order mandating further procedures for the South Sudan-destined migrants prompted the U.S. government to keep the migrants at a military base in Djibouti. After the Supreme Court lifted Murphy's April injunction on June 23, the judge promptly ruled that his May 21 order "remains in full force and effect." Calling that ruling by the judge a "lawless act of defiance," the Justice Department the next day urged the Supreme Court to clarify that its action applied to Murphy's May 21 decision as well. 'CLEAR REBUKE' Even as it accused the judge of defying the Supreme Court, the administration itself has been accused of violating judicial orders including in the third-country deportation litigation. "Today's decision makes clear it is district court judges who are defying Supreme Court orders, not the Trump administration. This decision is a clear rebuke of such judicial overreach," White House David Warrington said on Thursday. After the Department of Homeland Security moved in February to step up rapid deportations to third countries, immigrant rights groups filed a class action lawsuit on behalf of a group of migrants seeking to prevent their removal to such places without notice and a chance to assert the harms they could face. In March, the administration issued guidance providing that if a third country has given credible diplomatic assurance that it will not persecute or torture migrants, individuals may be deported there "without the need for further procedures." The Justice Department said in a filing that the United States has received credible diplomatic assurances from South Sudan that the migrants at issue will not be subject to torture. The Supreme Court has let Trump implement some contentious immigration policies while the fight over their legality continues to play out. In two decisions in May, it let Trump end humanitarian programs for hundreds of thousands of migrants to live and work in the United States temporarily. The justices, however, faulted the administration's treatment of some migrants as inadequate under constitutional due process protections. (Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)

US Supreme Court sides with Trump in South Sudan deportation fight

US Supreme Court sides with Trump in South Sudan deportation fight By Andrew Chung (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court again sided with Presi...
Dick Van Dyke Thought He'd Die When a Surfing Day Went Awry. But a Pod of Porpoises Came to His RescueNew Foto - Dick Van Dyke Thought He'd Die When a Surfing Day Went Awry. But a Pod of Porpoises Came to His Rescue

Monty Brinton/CBS via Getty Years ago, Dick Van Dyke's surfing expedition took a turn after he fell asleep TheMary Poppinsactor "started seeing fins" while out on his 10-foot surfboard, he recalled Van Dyke gave up surfing years ago Dick Van Dykecan thank a pod of porpoises for saving his life. TheChitty Chitty Bang Bangstar spoke about the stunning sea adventure in 2010 with Craig Ferguson, indicating he once fell asleep while riding his 10-ft. surfboard during a day at Virginia Beach. "I woke up out of sight of land," the acting iconsaid during an appearance on Ferguson's former talk show, The Late Late Show."I look around and I started paddling with the swells, and I started seeing fins swimming around me, and I thought 'I'm dead!' " Van Dyke was soon shocked to discover that he wasn't being swarmed by bloodthirsty sea predators, but rather by porpoises who apparently wanted to ensure that theMary Poppinsstar returned to dry land safely. "They pushed me all the way to shore," he said. "I'm not kidding, all the way to shore." He repeated the storyduring a 2023 appearanceon theReally? no, Really?podcast. Xinhua/Shutterstock At 99, theBye Bye Birdieactor no longer surfs, as he gave it up many years ago. But he still stays busy. In late June, Van Dyke missed one of his regularVandy Campevents in Malibudue to illness. "When you're 99 and a half years old, you have good days and bad days ... and unfortunately, today is not a good day for him, and he's sick that he can't be here," his wife, Arlene Silver, informed the crowd At that same event, many learned theonscreen icon had a secret talentafter Silver, 53, responded to a fan who pointed out that "not very many people know Dick Van Dyke was a computer animator." "Still is, and he has a credit for computer animation onDiagnosis: Murder," Silver added, referencing the show that saw Van Dyke playing a doctor who solves crimes. The series ran for eight seasons between 1993 and 2001 and spawned five TV movies. TheDick Van Dyke Showstar first met Silver at theSAG Awardsin 2006, and they eventually wed in 2012. During a Vandy Camp event in April, Van Dyketold PEOPLE exclusivelythat he has no plans to slow down in his late 90s. "I love what I do for a living," he said, as Silver chimed in, "[But] the minute he says that — the phone rings, and he's like, 'I don't want to go there.' If they come to our house, he will work all the time." Read the original article onPeople

Dick Van Dyke Thought He'd Die When a Surfing Day Went Awry. But a Pod of Porpoises Came to His Rescue

Dick Van Dyke Thought He'd Die When a Surfing Day Went Awry. But a Pod of Porpoises Came to His Rescue Monty Brinton/CBS via Getty Years...
Michael Madsen, 'Reservoir Dogs' and 'Kill Bill: Vol. 2' actor, dies at 67New Foto - Michael Madsen, 'Reservoir Dogs' and 'Kill Bill: Vol. 2' actor, dies at 67

Michael Madsen, the gravel-voiced character actor best known for playing sneering tough guys in Quentin Tarantino's "Reservoir Dogs" and "Kill Bill: Vol. 2," died Thursday morning from cardiac arrest, according to his manager, Ron Smith. He was 67. In an acting career spanning more than 40 years, Madsen racked up dozens of screen roles. He was best known for his collaborations with Tarantino, who cast him as a psychotic thief in "Reservoir Dogs" and a washed-up hitman in "Kill Bill: Vol. 2." "Reservoir Dogs," one of the seminal independent films of the 1990s, shocked audiences with its graphic violence, including a scene in which Madsen's character, Mr. Blonde, cuts off a police officer's ear while dancing to "Stuck in the Middle With You." Madsen's other notable big-screen credits include "The Doors," "Thelma & Louise" and "Donnie Brasco." Tarantino included him in the ensemble casts of the bloody Western "The Hateful Eight" and the 1969-set "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood." In addition to appearing in film and television projects, Madsen played voice roles in video games such as "Grand Theft Auto III," the "Dishonored" series and "Crime Boss: Rockay City." He also published poetry and photography. Michael Madsen was born in Chicago on Sept. 25, 1957, to a firefighter father and filmmaker mother; one of his siblings is the Oscar-nominated actor Virginia Madsen. He got his professional start working at Chicago's Steppenwolf Theatre, where he apprenticed under John Malkovich. The experience led to small early roles in 1980s films like "WarGames" and "The Natural." Madsen eventually broke through with "Reservoir Dogs," a low-budget crime thriller that launched Tarantino's career and helped transform the Sundance Film Festival into a Hollywood hot spot. The film also earned Madsen an indelible place in film history. The sadistic and trigger-happy Mr. Blonde was one ofthe 400 nomineesfor the American Film Institute's list of the all-time greatest movie villains. Roger Ebert praised Madsen's performance in an otherwise mixed review of "Reservoir Dogs." "One of the discoveries in the movie is Madsen, who has done a lot of acting over the years ... but here emerges with the kind of really menacing screen presence only a few actors achieve; he can hold his own with the fearsome [Lawrence] Tierney, and reminds me a little of a very mean Robert De Niro," Ebertwrote in his review. Madsen was originally lined up to play John Travolta's role in Tarantino's era-defining "Pulp Fiction," but he dropped out to appear in Kevin Costner's "Wyatt Earp" instead — a choice he said he came to regret. Tarantino's "Kill Bill: Vol. 2" allowed Madsen to flex his dramatic muscles as Budd, a former elite assassin who eventually finds himself working as a low-rent bouncer and living in a trailer. He worked steadily throughout his career, acting in various small-scale projects but occasionally appearing in high-profile releases, such as the James Bond franchise entry "Die Another Day" and the graphic novel adaptation "Sin City." Madsen was married three times, most recently to DeAnna Morgan. He is survived by four children, including actor Christian Madsen; another son, Hudson, died in 2022.

Michael Madsen, 'Reservoir Dogs' and 'Kill Bill: Vol. 2' actor, dies at 67

Michael Madsen, 'Reservoir Dogs' and 'Kill Bill: Vol. 2' actor, dies at 67 Michael Madsen, the gravel-voiced character actor...
18 shot 'in a matter of seconds' in deadly mass shooting: PoliceNew Foto - 18 shot 'in a matter of seconds' in deadly mass shooting: Police

Four people were killed and 14 others wounded in a "deplorable and cowardly" mass shooting in Chicago on Wednesday night, according to the police superintendent. Around 11 p.m., people were exiting a venue in the River North neighborhood and standing on the sidewalk when a vehicle pulled up and someone in the car opened fire on the crowd, Chicago Police Superintendent Larry Snelling said at a news conference. "They didn't care who was struck, and in a matter of seconds, they were able to shoot 18 people," Snelling said. The venue was targeted, but it's not clear who specifically was the target, police said. MORE: Bryan Kohberger admits to Idaho college killings in plea hearing The vehicle fled the scene immediately and no one has been taken into custody, police said. Two different calibers of shell casings were recovered, police said. Two men and two women were killed, all in their 20s, according to police. The two men were identified as Leon Andrew Henry, 25, and Devonte Terrell Williamson, 23, according to the Cook County Medical Examiner's Office. Fourteen others were wounded, including several who were hospitalized in critical condition, according to police. The injured victims are all in their 20s and 30s, and 11 of the 14 people hurt are women, police said. "When I arrived last night it was absolute chaos," Pastor Donovan Price, who works to help victims of violence, told reporters. "From people screaming, to blood on the streets, to people laying on the streets, a massive police presence. Just horrific. More than I've ever seen." MORE: Congressional intern killed in Washington, DC shooting: Officials The hospitals were "almost as chaotic" as the crime scene as people searched for their loved ones, Price said. "It can happen anywhere," he warned. "It's devastating." A second mass shooting also erupted on Chicago's far South Side on Wednesday night, leaving four people hospitalized, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson said. "We are frustrated, but we are also grieving," Johnson said, adding, "We will not rest until there is full accountability." Despite the shootings, murders were down 32% year-to-date in the city as of June 29 and shooting incidents were down 39%,according to Chicago's crime data.

18 shot 'in a matter of seconds' in deadly mass shooting: Police

18 shot 'in a matter of seconds' in deadly mass shooting: Police Four people were killed and 14 others wounded in a "deplorable...

 

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