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"President Biden says that we are not returning to lockdowns, shutdowns, and school closures, but he also once said that we didn't have to wear masks anymore once we were vaccinated. So why should Americans trust him now?"Principal Deputy Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre responded:
"Well, because we listen to the scientists, we listened to the expert[s]. This is a public health situation. This is not about politics at all. This is about saving lives. And this is what the president is all about. He wants to make sure that we are saving lives. If you look at ... the last six months, that's what he's done, every day. And you see that in the numbers. Now we're at a point where we have to double down and make it very, very clear to people that we can't, we can't let the pandemic win, we have to continue to fight."

What began in March as a limited ban on evicting tenants who received federal assistance soon snowballed into a total ban on evictions, with a realtors' group telling Biden back in January that 40 million Americans were already in arrears on rent, to the tune of $70 billion in missed payments.Meanwhile over in the UK housing market: UK house prices now 30% higher than pre-2008 crisis peak
Biden had already exhausted his own options by declaring a month-long extension of the benefits in June, at a time when 14% of American adult renters were behind on paying their landlords.
Many states have disbursed less than 5% of their share of the $45 billion Congress earmarked for such aid.
At least 3.6 million Americans were facing eviction within the next two months as of July 5, the US Census Bureau's Household Pulse Survey showed. Eviction proceedings often take time to initiate, however, meaning many more may face a similar fate before the end of the year.
While federal Covid-19 assistance for those who kept their jobs - perhaps taking a pay cut or reducing to part-time - has topped out at only a few thousand dollars over the past 18 months, unemployment payments were for some time so lucrative that many gave up looking for work entirely, realizing they could make more money sitting at home collecting checks. These payments have doubtless saved millions more from potential eviction, but they're also starting to dry up as many states face worker shortages, meaning those jobless masses have to find work again.
Though the moratorium has failed to help some renters, it has succeeded in starving out the mom-and-pop landlords who couldn't afford to lose a year's worth of rent from their tenants, forcing them to sell their properties to their much larger institutional brethren, who increasingly control housing policy.
Only a third of these small landlords qualified for what little mortgage relief has been doled out, and none were spared the yearly expense of property taxes. But private equity firms such as Blackstone, with trillions of dollars in assets to absorb deadbeat tenants, have happily moved in to snap up entire neighborhoods, further driving up rents in a vicious cycle that invariably leaves the average American worse off.
Indeed, the private equity firms have apparently gotten greedy, buying up houses across the US for thousands of dollars more than they're worth. So much so, in fact, that, in an already hugely inflated market, home sales actually dropped unexpectedly for the month of June everywhere except the northeastern states.
This shocking halt to ever-increasing housing costs suggested to observers that the market might - at least temporarily - have bitten off more than it could chew. Biden may simply be trying to calm things down, but with Congress knee-deep in virtue-signaling hearings, it's unlikely it'll have time to actually stop what it's doing and save Americans' lives.
"we condemn the mass arrests and detentions of protestors in Cuba and call on the government to respect the universal rights and freedoms of the Cuban people, including the free flow of information to all Cubans..... On July 11, tens of thousands of Cuban citizens participated in peaceful demonstrations across the country to protest deteriorating living conditions and to demand change. They exercised universal freedoms of expression and assembly, rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights..."
Comment: Israel is allowed to continue and expand its spy operation unabated. It defies logic - unless we consider its infiltration into the decision-making power structures within many governments. What we 'know' is merely the tip of the problem. And, that is its hedge.
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