Font Size
Reporters? Or unpaid publicists? On her Thursday show, MSNBC s Hallie Jackson was joined by NBC reporter Blayne Alexander in Atlanta just publicizing calls to boycott Georgia and the lies that justify them, including President Biden s Wednesday remarks where he outrageously called the Georgia s new election law Jim Crow on steroids.
MSNBC just casually put that on screen, like it was an authoritative statement of fact.
Jackson noted that The sports world and corporate America pushing back against the new law, too, as President Biden now says he supports calls to move the MLB All-Star game out of Georgia because of it and CEOs of Delta Airlines and Coca-Cola, both based in Atlanta are slamming the law as unacceptable.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
China is ramping up plans for government-sponsored satellites to beam internet from space, taking on U.S. rivals like SpaceX and Amazon in the race to own the next frontier of connectivity.
Why it matters: There s growing concern that China is trying to enter the space internet market with the same strategy it used on earth with Huawei and 5G use a state-backed company to undercut competitors and spread global influence.
What s happening: China is attempting to launch its own network to rival global competitors.
China s StarNet would launch 10,000 satellites in the next 5 to 10 years, according to an Asia Times report that cites a publication run by the official China News Service.
Two months and nearly 300 Capitol riot arrests later, FBI is hunting hundreds more msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Two months and nearly 300 Capitol riot arrests later, FBI is hunting hundreds more Dinah Voyles Pulver, USA TODAY
FBI Director Wray: Raw warning about Capitol violence shared multiple times with police
Replay Video UP NEXT
In the two months since an angry mob forced its way into the U.S. Capitol, agents in all but one of the FBI’s 56 field offices have been drafted to track down those who participated in the deadly insurrection.
Investigators who typically work cases involving the trafficking of drugs, child pornography and sex have taken calls from rioter’s angry ex-wives and former girlfriends and employers turned tipsters.