In today’s Daily Show Prep, the topics focus on Trump’s McDonald’s visit, sparking controversy and humor, and Kamala Harris’s questionable claims about working at McDonald’s. Inflation takes center stage as Kroger defends against accusations of price-gouging, explaining pricing in context. There’s growing frustration with inflation as middle-class Americans struggle to keep up. The third hour covers election controversies, including critiques of Kamala’s evolving positions and Liz Cheney’s false J6 narrative. With 52% feeling worse off than four years ago, the 2024 election is heating up.
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Claims that a Kroger executive ‘admitted to price-gouging’ are false. Saying milk and eggs were increased beyond the inflation rate isn’t gouging, by definition.
Price gouging is when a seller raises prices on goods or services to an unreasonable or unfair level, usually during a time of crisis. Some ways to identify price gouging include: Extraordinarily high prices: Businesses can increase prices, but they shouldn’t raise them excessively to take advantage of a crisis.
Comparing prices to similar products: Some states prohibit significant price increases compared to other products. For example, if bottled water is priced at double the cost of similar products, that may be price gouging.
Increases exceeding a certain percentage: In some states, increases exceeding 20% may be considered price gouging.
Price gouging laws vary by jurisdiction, but they generally come into effect during declared states of emergency and focus on essential goods. In most states, price gouging is a violation of unfair or deceptive trade practices law.
FBI Crime Data Updates, Kamala’s Plagiarism Scandal, and ABC’s Brutal Fact-Check on Harris
This episode covers explosive updates on crime and politics. We explore South Bend’s police recruiting data, updated FBI crime stats, and the collapse of media narratives on violent crime. In Hour 2, we dive into Kamala Harris’s plagiarism scandal and the New York Times’ admission of misconduct. By Hour 3, ABC fact-checks Kamala’s latest attack on Trump, and CBS faces backlash over deceptive edits. Plus, updates on Ron DeSantis and Arizona’s legal drama.
This episode dives into breaking stories making waves across the country. A viral protest projects “Trump 2024” onto a water tower, sparking outrage and financial support online. Nevada forfeits another volleyball match over its transgender athlete controversy. We also explore shocking assault reports, large-scale product recalls, and bizarre legal rulings — plus, the latest on the Delphi murders trial. In Hour 2, Pastor Lucas Miles joins us to discuss fake Christian organizations, abortion statistics, and Kamala Harris’s faith advisory board. Tune in to hear community responses on immigration in Logansport.
They discuss research showing 32 million Christians are sitting out this election, fake Christian organizations are causing Christians to not vote, support for pastors endorsing candidates has been steadily rising, and the Gretchen Whitmer Eucharist scandal.
Third-trimester abortions amount to 1% of abortions in the United States according to the CDC. Guttmacher says there are around 930,160 abortions per year in the U.S. That’s over 9300 late-term abortions a year in the U.S., or roughly 11% more than there are abortions due to rape. Other estimates have the late-term number closer to 10k per year.
Below his burial site experts found more than 250 other skeletons, sixty percent of which are believed to have been sacrificial killings or ritual executions. This was estimated due to countless bodies missing hands and skulls, more than fifty 21 year-old women found in neatly-separated layers, and finally a mass burial grave with over 40 men and women who appear to have been violently killed.
In fact evidence supports some were alive when they were buried, attempting to claw their way out of the mass of dead bodies.
Among the more densely populated Eastern Woodland cultures, warfare often served as a means of coping with grief and depopulation. Such conflict, commonly known as a “mourning war,” usually began at the behest of women who had lost a son or husband and desired the group’s male warriors to capture individuals from other groups who could replace those they had lost. Captives might help maintain a stable population or appease the grief of bereaved relatives: if the women of the tribe so demanded, captives would be ritually tortured, sometimes to death if the captive was deemed unfit for adoption into the tribe. Because the aim in warfare was to acquire captives, quick raids, as opposed to pitched battles, predominated.
Can’t confirm this story but the timeline lines up with other stories about Tim Walz, and we have been told by the left to investigate every one of these stories because the office is too important not to.
Friendly reminder that less than a month and a half ago, the media, Democrats and Colorado officials all said this story was #FakeNews, but it was real.
The NYT reporter got owned for her awful 2020 election questions, but I’d like to point out that no one cares Democrats are actively saying they won’t certify a Trump victory. Some are saying they won’t let him take power, even if there are no questions of a legitimate victory.