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Huizenga Co-Sponsors Steel Industry Preservation Act

By Gary Stevens Jul 29, 2021 | 6:00 PM WASHINGTON (WHTC-AM/FM) – Congress members are reaching across the political aisle to try and strengthen the American steel industry. On Wednesday (July 29, 2021), four House members introduced the Steel Industry Preservation Act, which centers on a tax credit for the recycling of waste products in steel manufacturing. Zeeland Congressman Bill Huizenga, one of the co-sponsors of this bill, says that, if signed into law, the legislation would give the domestic steel industry a needed shot in the arm and helps the environment as well. “This is a good faith effort to try and say, ‘OK, how can we create a better atmosphere?’” he said on “WHTC Morning News” during his weekly interview on Thursday. “This is using recycled steel and having it come back in and stay here in the United States, rather than shipping it out overseas and having it remanufactured over there. We want to do it here in the United States and consume it

GOP Lawmakers Blast Biden s Surrender: Americans Have Had Enough

27 Jul 2021 Several Republican politicians have blasted the Biden administration for surrendering to more Chinese coronavirus mandates after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced it is now recommending vaccinated individuals mask up in certain settings, concluding the American people “have had enough of Biden and Fauci’s fake science.” On Tuesday, Biden’s CDC backtracked on previous guidance, drastically modifying its position by recommending vaccinated individuals wear masks in certain settings. The Biden White House was utterly unable to explain the discrepancies in talking points after weeks of health officials pitching vaccines as the primary way for the U.S. to return to pre-pandemic normalcy.

Arizona Professor Will Lead NASA Project To Locate Menacing Objects Near Earth

By Jalpan Nanavati PHOENIX – NASA has appointed a University of Arizona professor to lead a project to track asteroids that potentially could crash into Earth. The mission involves launching a telescope into a high orbit to locate such near-Earth objects using the infrared radiation they emit. Amy Mainzer, a professor of planetary sciences, will lead a team building the Near Earth Object Surveyor, an infrared telescope that will track and characterize any asteroids that one day could crash into the planet. “We want to spot them when they are years to ideally decades away from any potential impact with the Earth,” Mainzer said.

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