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How pregnancy changes your brain—permanently

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Motherhood changes you forever—that’s no secret. The cocktails of hormones that flood your body during pregnancy bring with them a range of physiological and behavioral changes in preparation for the tiny human growing inside you. But some of these changes never go away, including those in your brain.

The changes in brain structure that accompany pregnancy have been known about for some time. But exactly how this neuronal rewiring is orchestrated has, until recently, remained a mystery. Now, researchers from the Francis Crick Institute in the U.K. have shone a light on the molecular underpinnings of this cerebral circuitry in a new study published in the journal Science on October 5.

“We found that the pregnancy hormones estradiol and progesterone structurally remodel specific neurons in the brain by binding to receptors with the ability to directly switch genes on and off,” Johannes Kohl, group leader of the State-Dependent Neural Processing Laboratory at the Francis Crick Institute and one of the study’s co-authors, told Newsweek.

To study these effects, the team analyzed how behavior of female mice changes throughout pregnancy compared to virgin mice. They then identified a group of specialized nerve cells in the brain’s coordination center, the hypothalamus, which have previously been implicated in parenting behavior.

Within these nerve cells, they found high concentrations of receptor molecules that bind to the reproductive hormones estrogen and progesterone. Removing them from the cells appeared to block normal parenting behavior in the pregnant mice but had no effect on their virgin counterparts.

Next, they looked more closely at how the binding of these hormones to their receptors affected brain activity in the maternal mice. For estrogen, the observed effects were only temporary, reducing the baseline activity of these nerve cells while also making them more excitable. But for progesterone, the effects involved permanent remodeling of the animals’ brains.

“In this particular case, progesterone binding to its receptor results in the formation of so-called dendritic spines—tiny protrusions on the information-receiving parts of neurons,” Kohl said. “These spines in turn recruit new inputs onto these neurons, thereby changing how they are integrated into parenting networks in the brain.”

In other words, progesterone indirectly creates the formation of new sites of communication between neurons. “Intriguingly, these changes are long-lasting, and pregnancy seems to permanently remodel the brain,” Kohl said. “The way these remodeled neurons are integrated in the rest of the parenting network in the brain is permanently changed by pregnancy.”

While these results were only seen in mice, this hormone-orchestrated remodeling fits nicely with previous observations made in humans. “Several studies in recent years have shown that pregnancy leads to volume changes in the human brain that are large enough to be detected using MRI scanners,” Kohl said. “But it remains unclear whether hormones are behind those changes, too, and whether these larger-scale changes are due to the microscopic changes that we have described.”

These hormonal brain changes may also contribute to feelings of “baby brain” during pregnancy—the forgetfulness, fatigue and mental fog experienced by many expectant mothers. “In mice—and potentially humans, but this still needs to be addressed—these changes very likely contribute to aspects of ‘baby brain’, like being more sensitive to infant stimuli,” Kohl said. “However, changes in other parts of the brain might in turn be behind other commonly reported changes such as forgetfulness.”

Things can also go wrong during this period of remodeling, which could potentially contribute to pregnancy-associated mood disorders. “While pregnancy hormones create a window of brain remodeling, things can go wrong during this time, which can result in, or contribute to, common disorders such as postpartum depression and anxiety,” Kohl said.

However, it is difficult to determine how important these hormonal changes are in the onset of parenting behavior in humans based on mouse studies alone. “I think it’s important to note that parenting in humans is very complex, and that in addition to hormones, many other social and environmental factors are very important,” Kohl said. “It is quite clear that you can be an excellent parent without ever experiencing any of the hormonal changes of pregnancy, and there are many possible forms of parenting, and constellations of caregivers.

“In mice, these hormonal changes, and their effects on specific neurons in the brain, are absolutely necessary for being a good parent. But even mice can become better at parenting without any hormonal changes, for example by repeated exposure to infants, or by observing mothers taking care of their young.”

Dunkin’ giving away free coffee for World Teachers’ Day: How to get yours

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Dunkin’ is giving away coffee in honor of World Teachers’ Day on Thursday, October 5, when educators can get a free medium hot or iced coffee with no purchased required, the restaurant chain said.

“The school year is in full swing, which means educators everywhere are working hard to keep their classrooms runnin’,” the company said on its website. “For the teachers who wake up at dawn, the principals working late nights, and the dedicated staff members making an impact every day – we see you and want to thank you with a much-deserved coffee break,” the company said on its website.

The giveaway applies to every type of educator, from a pre-school teacher to a college professor. No school or employee ID is required for the deal. You can get only one free coffee per person, and cold brews and nitro cold brews are excluded.

Still, eligible educators can add Dunkin’s fall flavor, pumpkin, to make it an even more special treat.

Fall Flavors

In addition to enjoying their coffee beverages with a little extra pumpkin flavor, Dunkin’ guests have an entire fall menu to peruse this season.

The autumn offerings include a glazed pumpkin cake donut, as well as Dunkin’s signature Munchkins with the same pumpkin sweetness. There’s also a pumpkin muffin topped with streusel and white icing along with pumpkin spice latte.

One of the additions to the menu for 2023 is the ice spice Munchkins drink. The beverage was launched on September 13 and will be available until Halloween.

It is frozen coffee with five layers, including Munchkins in the drink, topped with caramel drizzle and whipped cream.

Changes at Dunkin’

Some fans have been more critical of Dunkin’s store updates, including a controversial decision to switch up its rewards program benefits.

Traditionally, loyal Dunkin’ customers have earned a free beverage for their birthday every year, but this year, Dunkin’ decided to offer only additional rewards points instead.

The new rule stipulates that customers will earn three times the amount of points on purchases during their birthday, but it leaves out the complimentary beverage.

“The amount of free drinks Dunkin gives out and they can’t even give one on bdays is ridiculous,” a Redditor said about the change.

Some said the change is causing them to reconsider their coffeehouse of choice.

“Receiving a birthday perk is one of the reasons of being a rewards member. So the fact that Dunkin decided to do this as a perk seems like a slap in the face,” another user said.

“There are so many options they could’ve came up with. Like a BOGO offer, free munchkins, free donut, etc. Instead it’s making their customers go to other coffee chains.”

An inside look at the U.S. stealth bomber still a mystery 30 years on

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As someone who spent over three years working counterintelligence against the GRU, Russia’s military intelligence agency, and then 10 years as an intelligence officer in the United States Navy, I am used to living in a world of secrets and spies.

What may surprise those less familiar with such work in highly classified intelligence operations, is just how pedestrian so much of it is. It is hard to strike a visceral emotion and convey the sense of danger and importance associated with meeting a Russian intelligence officer inside a café, where to an outside observer, the most dangerous thing is deciding whether to leave space for cream in your coffee as you nosh on a biscotti.

But even with my experience, I recently had a new kind of encounter as part of my Newsweek series “Unconventional” that left a deep impression on me. Amid the unassuming cornfields and cattle of the heartland of Missouri, I had the chance to see a B2 Spirit, the world’s only stealth bomber, that 30 years later, remains an ultra-secret jet. Later this month, I’ll actually fly in one.

The “Mystique of the Unknown” is how Colonel Keith Butler, commander of the 509th Bomb Wing at Whiteman Air Force Base, described the B2 stealth bomber to me. Seeing the jet up close for the first time, I immediately understood exactly what he meant – but that mystique does not just apply to the jet, it extends to everything around it.

For starters, each of the 20 B2s in service has an individual hangar, known as a nest. B2s do not sit on the ramp under the watchful eye of Chinese and Russian spy agencies. Instead, they are tucked away in these nests and only emerge to take to the runway and fly away. America’s adversaries do not know if the B2s are being fueled up, loaded with weapons, or if they are even in the hangars to begin with.

Owing to its rural setting, Whiteman Air Force Base blends into the fabric of the Midwest a world away from global events and turmoil. The base is dotted with non-descript Air Force-style drab brown buildings, and when I was there, remarkably devoid of people and traffic. On the face of it, you would never guess that the nation’s stealth bombers call this sleepy setting home. Upon approaching the airfield, however, roving security vehicles and a barbed wire topped fence dotted with armed guard towers begin to let on that something far more significant lies within.

Before getting a chance to board the mythical bomber itself, I first entered a B2 simulator to get a feel of what my forthcoming flight would be like. B2 pilots rely on both simulators and T38s, a small two-seat sleek training jet, to train for flying the stealth bomber. Today it was a virtual flight in the sim led by a young Air Force Captain with a call sign of Booster.

A student pilot in the final phase of the B2 curriculum, Booster had an easy-going temperament with an encyclopedic knowledge of the bomber, and just the right amount of jet pilot swagger. Watching her fly the simulator up to a virtual tanker was like watching a skilled surgeon and F1 driver rolled into one, slight and smooth flicks of her wrist as she aimed the bomber and worked the throttles, all while explaining what she was doing without missing a beat. After trying my hand at the helm, our time with Booster and the simulator came to an end, and I was off to see the real thing.

Airfields, by design, are large open areas littered with aircraft and people all moving in controlled chaos. Whiteman is the exact opposite. The large B2 hangars, painted an unremarkable tan and brown, flank both sides of the ramp. Whiteman may look like an airfield, but there was only one aircraft to be seen, sitting in its nest, the giant hangar doors pulled open.

Seeing a B2 in real life can only be described as surreal. Driving towards the bomber in a flat featureless airfield, its size is hard to determine. The closer we got to the jet, the larger it grew until it dominated our field of view. Besides how massive the jet was from wing tip to wing tip, I was struck by how high off the ground the flight deck is. You ascend to the flight deck by a long almost vertical white ladder which leads you to a narrow landing.

The cockpit is cramped with only two seats arranged side-by-side, like you would find on a commercial airliner. In fact, the B2s cockpit and flight controls look more like those of your common passenger plane than what may be expected of a strategic long-range stealth bomber, complete with several small screens that display flight data. Nothing about the cockpit interior hints at the role this aircraft plays in nuclear deterrence.

But that’s exactly what it does. And peering into its white hospital clean bomb bay built to drop both conventional and nuclear munitions, I couldn’t shake the impression that the whole jet was built around it.

Part of the appeal of working in intelligence is the fact that you are let into a world of secrets. The B2 inspires a similar fascination. To live in the B2 community is to be part of a small and elite club that operates this mysterious, yet formidable aircraft on a daily basis. Seeing the aircraft alone is something so few experience – even when it’s flying right under your radar.

Internet disgusted at plane passenger’s seating position: "Tickle tickle"

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There aren’t any guidelines when it comes to passenger etiquette, but there are unwritten rules when it comes to sitting down.

However, one traveler seems to have broken them by sitting in an unusual position that has disturbed thousands of Reddit users. Poster u/ccrackacoldone shared a photo of the person in front whose foot is next to the Reddit user’s tray.

The viral photo has amassed more than 15,000 upvotes and over 4,100 comments, many of which are unimpressed with the passenger.

Former pilot Dan Bubb, 49, told Newsweek that basic courtesy and kindness go a very long way when traveling.

“It really comes down to common decency and respect for fellow passengers and flight crew members,” Bubb said.

Airplane Etiquette: 10 Rules of Flying

Bubb has shared 10 helpful tips aimed to help passengers understand what is expected from them when flying:

Passengers should not remove their shoes under any circumstances.If passengers are watching a television show or movie, they should use headphones.When flight attendants ask passengers what beverage they would like, the passengers should remove their headphones when responding.Passengers should not change soiled baby diapers on food tray tables. Instead, they should do that in the lavatory.When passengers are seated, even if the seatbelt sign is off, they should keep their seatbelts fastened.Avoid wearing perfumes. Even though these might smell nice, remember that you are in an enclosed tube with wings.Similarly, avoid bringing smelly food on planes.Pack lightly. Many destinations have laundromats. This will help cut down on the oversized carry-on bags.Remember that flight crews want to get home just as badly as passengers do. A simple “hello” or “how is your day going?” goes a long way. Also, complying with flight-attendant instructions is very important.Remember that flight attendants are there for your safety. They are not there only for passing out snacks and drinks.

The top comment read: “That’s a violation of more airlines unwritten safety procedures. Pretty sure when they offer you a drink you can point that out and they’ll do something about it.”

One user wrote, “Better order the hottest coffee and suddenly have a small spilling accident,” and another posted: “Tickle tickle.”

“People are so rude, inconsiderate, and disgusting,” a third user commented. “I would not take off my shoes on an airplane unless I had on footies or socks. And I definitely would not put my feet into someone else’s personal space. Who wants to look at her nasty feet?

“I think though in this situation I might take off my shoe and footie/sock on my left foot and put it on the armrest on the left side of her seat to give her a taste of her own medicine. Even though that’s gonna affect the person sitting next to her.”

Newsweek reached out to u/ccrackacoldone for comment. We could not verify the details of the case.

If you have a personal dilemma, let us know via life@newsweek.com. We can ask experts for advice on relationships, family, friends, money and work, and your story could be featured on Newsweek‘s “What Should I Do? section.

Biden Adopting Trump’s Wall Is Cynical, Hypocritical, and a Total Betrayal

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On Wednesday night, the Biden administration announced that it will waive 26 environmental laws to build additional border barriers in South Texas. A notice posted in the Federal Registry cited “high illegal entry” as the reasoning behind this action. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said in the notice that there was an “acute and immediate need” to build a new section of the border wall to prevent unlawful crossings. The new section of the wall will be paid for using money already appropriated by Congress.

To put this in the plainest language possible, Biden is now building the border wall. But he is pursuing a plan that is logistically and politically unsound, and it represents a major reversal from the President, who was once committed to undoing as many of Trump’s immigration measures as possible.

It will not help secure our border in any meaningful way—and could actually endanger the lives of migrants.

There is no doubt that the situation at the southern border has become a crisis. U.S. Border Patrol apprehended 181,059 people along the southern border in August and 132,648 in July, and these numbers are growing. Over 7,500 migrants were stopped on one Sunday in September alone.

But building more walls is not the solution. Just ask candidate Joe Biden. In 2020, he promised that “not another foot” of the wall would be built if he were elected. Shortly after he took office in 2021, Biden released a proclamation that said building a wall on the southern border is “a waste of money that diverts attention from genuine threats to our homeland security.” He was as right then as he is wrong now.

Besides, building a wall at the border won’t stop illegal migration. Donald Trump built 455 miles of border fencing, equipped with cameras and sensors, at a cost of $15 billion. It did not deter unauthorized migrants. In well-documented episodes, people used inexpensive ladders to scale the wall, climb over it, cut through it with power tools, saw through it, and build tunnels underneath it. Why would the Biden administration think that their additional section of the wall would be any different?

The public already gives Biden low marks on immigration. According to Gallup, only 31 percent of Americans approve of his handling of the issue. And this latest move by the President won’t help him on immigration. It will only signal to many Republicans that their calls for the wall were warranted, while potentially alienating Biden’s progressive and immigrant allies.

Consider that Rep. Henry Cuellar, a Latino Democrat from South Texas, has denounced the administration’s plan as “wasteful” and “a 14th century solution to a 21st century problem.”

To build a new section of the wall, the Biden administration is casting aside dozens of environmental laws like the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act, and the Endangered Species Act. By trampling on these laws, the administration is putting one of the most bio-diverse areas in North America at risk. Environmental experts say that Biden’s wall would likely run through a natural wildlife habitat, impede wildlife migration, and destroy a huge amount of wildlife refuge land. That’s a high cost to pay for a barrier that probably won’t make a dent in illegal immigration.

Asked by reporters at the White House about his administration’s plans, Biden said Thursday that he didn’t think that the barriers were effective, but that construction had to move forward because Congress had appropriated the money.

Really? If he doesn’t believe the wall is effective, then don’t build it. Presidents have great discretion on immigration matters, particularly when it comes to setting policy priorities.

It seems incredibly convenient that the administration has decided to go ahead with its wall just as the migrant crisis is escalating and Biden is facing bipartisan criticism regarding the border. And having more miles of wall along the border could drive more migrants to smugglers and to attempt crossings at more dangerous sectors. With record numbers of migrants dying trying to cross the border, Biden’s wall could cost lives.

Building a wall along the border did not work before, and it won’t work now. For Biden to embrace what was once Trump’s signature policy is cynical, hypocritical, and a betrayal of his purported commitment to real immigration solutions.

Raul A. Reyes is an attorney and contributor to NBC Latino and CNN Opinion. Follow him at Twitter: @RaulAReyes, or on instagram @raulareyes1.

The views expressed in this article are the writer’s own.

Mugged by Reality, Biden Builds a Border Wall Democrats Called ‘Racist’

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No matter how they try to spin it, one thing is clear about the Biden administration’s decision to waive more than 20 laws and regulations, including environmental restrictions, to build more sections of a wall along America’s southern border in South Texas. The Democrats who demonized President Donald Trump for his focus on stopping illegal immigration and characterized his quest to build such a barrier as “racism” have been mugged by reality.

Trump’s opponents smeared every effort to put a lid on the problem of illegal immigration as evidence of prejudice against Latinos. Democrats throughout the country declared municipalities to be “sanctuary cities,” championed amnesty and characterized the minimal attempts by Immigration and Customs Enforcement to deal with ever-growing crowds of migrants as oppression and police state tactics.

So, it was little surprise that no sooner had Biden won the 2020 election promising a “more compassionate” approach to illegal immigration, a massive surge at the border began. Since then, Biden halted much of the operations of border enforcement, undermined the work of the embattled border patrol by falsely accusing them of abuses and racism, and ended the building of the wall that Trump failed to complete.

As a result, the number of illegal border crossings—many by individuals pretending to be asylum seekers rather than economic migrants—has surged to record proportions. In the 2022 fiscal year, it was up to 2.7 million with more than 2.8 million in fiscal year 2023. In recent months, the numbers have grown even higher, adding to a humanitarian crisis for overwhelmed border communities.

That crisis has spread to urban centers in the north as even the small proportion of migrants who were sent there by border state governors or who made it there on their own have led to similar problems beyond the border region. Notwithstanding the hypocritical nature of the complaints of blue-state advocates of “sanctuary cities” about being saddled with having to care for so many migrants, this has generated a political problem for Biden that he can’t ignore.

Rather than head into a reelection campaign with a record of effectively erasing America’s southern border, undermining the rule of law, and spreading misery to blue states as well as red ones, Biden’s Department of Homeland Security has been forced to act.

DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas‘ statement accompanying the new policy admitted that “there is presently an acute and immediate need to construct physical barriers and roads in the vicinity of the border of the United States in order to prevent unlawful entries into the United States.” That gives the lie to Democratic rhetoric about Trump’s policies as well as administration assurances that the border is secure even when the evidence has been clear that it is not.

But when Biden was asked about it the next day, he insisted that borders don’t work.

Why the contradiction?

The administration knows that it must do something to stem the flood of illegal immigration. The crisis has reached a point where it could lose them Democratic votes as well as those of independents. But since admitting the flip-flop would outrage his party’s intersectional left-wing base—which takes it as an article of faith that opposition to open borders is racism—the president is pretending that nothing has changed and that any expenditure on a wall has been forced upon him by Congress‘ refusal to reallocate funds appropriated for it.

That is a lie so obvious that even a more credible press secretary than Karine Jean-Pierre couldn’t sell it.

The consequences of Biden’s support for amnesty and lax border enforcement are so onerous that no amount of Democratic gaslighting will make the public accept them as normal or acceptable. If an administration that would have rather done anything than complete construction of Trump’s wall is now going ahead with the project, that tells us all we need to know about their hypocrisy and the bankruptcy of their policies. Even if they won’t admit they were lying when they called Trump a racist for wanting a wall, their actions speak louder than their words.

Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS.org and a senior contributor to The Federalist. Follow him: @jonathans_tobin.

The views expressed in this article are the writer’s own.

Housing boost as millions awarded for affordable properties

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The U.S. Treasury Department on Wednesday earmarked hundreds of millions of dollars for affordable housing as elevated mortgage rates and high property values have scared away potential homebuyers.

The government awarded more than four dozen organizations $321 million to help build affordable housing for low-income Americans through the Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund’s Capital Magnet Fund.

The funding from the Capital Magnet Fund will also go toward the development of community facilities such as day care centers and health care clinics, the CDFI Fund said in a statement.

“[The] awards will provide Community Development Financial Institutions and nonprofit housing organizations with the critical resources they need to expand the availability of affordable housing for thousands of families and individuals in need across the country,” Marcia Sigal, acting CDFI Fund director, said in a statement.

Awardees must use the government money to raise more cash from the private sector to invest in affordable housing across the country. The CDFI Fund hopes the initial government money will help generate an additional $11 billion for projects.

“Today’s awards are projected to leverage more than $11.1 billion in private and public sector resources, all of which will be focused on addressing the shortfall in affordable housing that persists throughout our nation’s distressed and underserved communities,” Sigal added.

The Federal Reserve has been battling historic inflation levels since March 2022. And interest rates are now at a range of 5.25 to 5.5 percent, the highest in more than 20 years.

Inflation has reverberated throughout the consumer economy, especially in the housing market. Mortgage lending rates have soared to above 7 percent over the past month, the highest levels since the beginning of the 21st century, according to lender Freddie Mac.

“The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage has hit the highest level since the year 2000,” Sam Khater, Freddie Mac’s chief economist, said in a statement last week. “However, unlike the turn of the millennium, house prices today are rising alongside mortgage rates, primarily due to low inventory. These headwinds are causing both buyers and sellers to hold out for better circumstances.”

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) said Wednesday that mortgage applications declined by 6 percent from a week ago, the biggest such drop since 1996.

“The purchase market slowed to the lowest level of activity since 1995, as the rapid rise in rates pushed an increasing number of potential homebuyers out of the market,” Joel Kan, MBA’s deputy chief economist, said in a statement.

The CDFI Fund, which was founded in 1994 and has awarded more than $7.7 billion to community development financial institutions, community development organizations, and financial institutions, said on Wednesday that a chunk of the funding will be invested in rural projects.

“The awardees are required to leverage their awards with other private and public investment by at least 10-to-1, guaranteeing that a minimum of $3.21 billion will be invested in eligible projects across the United States,” the CDFI Fund said in a statement.

Biden administration cancels $9 billion in student debt as payments restart

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The Biden administration approved $9 billion in student debt relief Wednesday, just days after payments restarted following a three-year pause sparked by the pandemic.

The move provides student loan forgiveness for 125,000 Americans, according to the White House. Federal student loan payments began again Oct. 1 following the pandemic-era pause, affecting approximately 28 million borrowers.

“President Biden has long believed that college should be a ticket to the middle class, not a burden that weighs on families,” the White House said in a statement.

“That’s why from day one, his Administration has taken unprecedented steps to fix the broken student loan system, make college more affordable, and bring the promise of higher education in reach for more Americans,” the White House said.

The announcement Wednesday impacts three different categories of borrowers.

The administration approved $5.2 billion in debt relief for 53,0000 borrowers under Public Service Loan Forgiveness programs. The move cancels debt for eligible public sector and not-for-profit workers after they’ve made 10 years of direct student loan payments.

The administration also canceled nearly $2.8 billion in debt for nearly 51,000 borrowers who qualified for forgiveness based on past payments but were never provided loan relief.

An additional 22,000 borrowers with a total or permanent disability will receive $1.2 billion in student loan cancellation.

With Wednesday’s announcement the administration has now approved a total of $127 billion in student debt cancellation for 3.6 million borrowers, according to the White House.

That includes student debt relief for 715,000 public sector workers and 855,000 borrowers whom the Biden administration determined qualified for forgiveness in the past but did not receive loan relief due to administrative error.

“Today’s announcement builds on everything our administration has already done to protect students from unaffordable debt, make repayment more affordable, and ensure that investments in higher education pay off for students and working families,” Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in a statement.

The latest student loan forgiveness push comes roughly three months after the Supreme Court blocked a Biden administration program designed to waive up to $20,000 in student loans for millions of borrowers.

The court ruled in a 6-3 decision on June 30 that the administration needed authorization from Congress to create the student loan forgiveness program.

The decision was a blow to Biden, forcing the administration to seek alternative paths like the moves announced Wednesday to provide student debt relief.

Biden will deliver remarks at the White House on student loan debt Wednesday afternoon.

Ukraine receives boost from unlikely source

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The United States sent more than 1 million rounds of confiscated Iranian ammunition to Ukraine, according to a Wednesday statement from the U.S. military.

U.S. Central Command said that 1.1 million 7.62 mm rounds given to Ukraine were part of seizures by U.S. naval forces of weapons shipments believed to be from Iran for fighters backed by Tehran in Yemen. CENTCOM is a part of the U.S. Defense Department and is tasked with handling military operations in the Middle East.

Throughout the war, which was launched by Russian President Vladimir Putin in February 2022, Iran has been closely aligned with Russia and has provided Putin’s forces with Shahed combat drones. Despite the Iranian government’s initial denial that it had provided drones to Moscow, an Iranian official later admitted in November 2022 that his country supplied what he claimed was a “small number” of drones to Russia “months before the Ukraine war.”

The ammunition transfer to Kyiv comes at an opportune time for Ukraine, as Congress included no new aid for Kyiv in the stopgap spending bill that was passed last weekend to avoid a federal government shutdown.

Additionally, some officials from NATO countries that are Kyiv allies expressed concern this week that they may soon be running too low on ammo to send more to Ukraine.

“The U.S. is committed to working with our allies and partners to counter the flow of Iranian lethal aid in the region by all lawful means including U.S. and U.N. sanctions and through interdictions,” CENTCOM said in its press release.

The statement went on: “Iran’s support for armed groups threatens international and regional security, our forces, diplomatic personnel and citizens in the region, as well as those of our partners. We will continue to do whatever we can to shed light on and stop Iran’s destabilizing activities.”

Newsweek reached out to Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs via email for comment.

CENTCOM said Iran had intended the seized weapons for members of the Houthi movement in Yemen and noted that the weapons transfer violated a resolution of the United Nations Security Council. The seizure took place in December 2022, according to the statement.

“The government obtained ownership of these munitions on July 20, 2023, through the Department of Justice‘s civil forfeiture claims against Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC),” CENTCOM wrote.

Iran’s government has voiced its support for the Houthi movement but has denied conducting weapon transfers that would violate U.N. resolutions.

Meanwhile, the U.S. has accused Iran of providing the Houthis with a variety of weapons that have been allegedly used for attacks on Yemeni forces, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Fox News host pranked by Tucker Carlson fan live on air

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Fox News host Trace Gallagher has been pranked live on air by an apparent fan of former Fox host Tucker Carlson.

In a segment reporting on a shooting at a residence hall at Morgan State University in Baltimore, Maryland, Gallagher spoke to a caller claiming to be a student there.

“We’ve got Tyrone on the phone with us now,” Gallagher said. “Tyrone, when you say poker game, what exactly happened? What transpired?”

The caller replies: “Well, firstly we’re watching… we all get together every Tuesday night and we watch Tucker Carlson’s show on X. We used to watch him on Fox News, obviously he’s not there no more.”

Carlson is still “the most credible guy in the media in America,” the caller continues. “We always get together to watch Tucker Carlson and think he’s doing probably better now he’s not with Fox News because the corporate media always controls what the teleprompter readers are able to say.”

Gallagher then cuts the caller off, saying “clearly that was not a student at Morgan State.”

Mark Dice, a conservative YouTuber, took credit for the incident.

“Yeah, that was me who culture jammed Fox News live on air,” Dice wrote in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

“While shootings of any kind are terrible and it’s important to inform the public about a potential danger—cable news always exploits tragedies in order to keep viewers glued to their screens and fill the airtime with anything available to them,” he said. “In this case, some random caller whose name and identity they didn’t even bother to verify before putting on air as someone who supposedly knows what really happened.”

In an email to Newsweek, Dice described the call as “a culture jam, not a prank call.”

He said: “Culture jamming is when you subvert the media in a creative way in order to use that same form of media to critique media itself.”

Fox has been contacted for comment via email.

Carlson was fired from Fox News in April, after the network agreed to pay more than $787 million to settle a lawsuit with Dominion Voting Systems over airing false claims regarding the 2020 presidential election.

He has since touted his firing as a “great” experience.

“It’s great to get fired because it keeps you from being a truly horrible person,” he said. “The problem with men when they’re successful is they start to think they’re Jesus. It just happens. Getting fired reminds you that, no, you’re just like everybody else.”

Since launching his own show on X, disinformation experts have told Newsweek that Carlson has been been playing the role of a “useful idiot” for the Kremlin by echoing Russian propaganda.

Update 10/4/23, 3:35 a.m. ET: This article has been updated with comment from Mark Dice and additional information.