groups as shoplifters have become more violent and employees more terrified. grocery stores may soon lock up their items. we began with a white house insisting that it s being transparent over the investigation into classified documents found in president biden s personal space. white house correspondent kevin corke is live for us in the nation s capital with more on this. good evening. critics argue that the white house s definition of the word transparent is decidedly different than, say, merriam-webster s definition which says it means among other things free from pretense or deceit, to be frank or obvious, readily understood or characterized by visibility or accessibility of information. all right, that all sounds simple. critics say none of that is how they would describe the process that saw the white house make a major discovery back on the 2nd of november and then not divulge it to the public until mid-january. so much for transparency. case in point: the infamous g
fast. but there sa to jusn t one if with a ton o of outstandinghese questions. how do these records just all of a sudden become found? why the six year gap between biden leaving office as vp and azmera in this miraculous discovery? about four days we ve been hearing about this nameless personal attorney to joe biden, well who dutifully turned over the documents. bob., today, we finally have a name, bob bauer. fois is is a revelationa re thy might gloss over, but it sons. significant for a couple of reasons. number one , he served as whiteh house counsel under barackou obama. he is also married to biden s senior adviser, anita dunn. so why is the white house keeping questions from going to him, given that the justice department cited the personal counsel as having made this initial outreach to nationalnatl archives and that has been in touch with the justice department? is that the person who thesebe r questions should be directed? why the white house counsel,e whatever th
anyone to know that is considering perpetrating this type of crime, you will live dna behind, as bryan kohberger has apparently learned. and probably in anna walsh of austria s case, her husband will probably learn that as well so hopefully it will help deter cr. some individuals seem to do this type of thing only once and then move on with their lives and live pretty normal lives. we are seeing a lot of that in genetic genealogy. i do hope this can help deter someone who is making this type of decision in the future. trace: cece moore, very, very insightful. thank you for coming on. we appreciate it. thanks for having me. trace: the cdc says the key safety monitoring system has linked the new pfizer covid booster to a potential increase in certain kinds of stroke. yet the cdc is still advising yet the cdc is still advising people to take the shot.
100,00 0 children are still waiting. you can help the dave thomas foundation, big. d the cdc and the fda droppih a major bombshell today. the agency s safety monitoring system uncovered a potential linknk between pfizer s covid vaccineand and strokes. strothe system raises the questf of whether peopl e sixty five and older were more likely to have a stroke inl twenty one days following vaccinatioowinn, compared with twenty two to forty two. drtoda. fox today tried spinning the warning. the important thing annea tol to point out is how transparent and up front the cdc has been.rd this is a signal, as your reporter correctly said, most likely is not going to be b
The Food and Drugs Authority’s Safety Monitoring System from March 2021 to November 2022, has recorded 9,000 side effects - known as Adverse Events Following Immunization (AEFI) from the over 21 million doses administered to persons. This means for 100, 000 COVID-19 doses administered about 43 persons complained of AEFI.…