Monday, May 04, 2026

Science grab bag (emphasis on wolves and dogs)

Science grab bag time.  Starting off with a discovery that's kind of been known already for awhile.  Melissa Ait Lounis (DAILY GALAXY) reports:

More than1,600 years after its disappearance, massive stones from the Lighthouse of Alexandria are being recovered from the Mediterranean seabed. Archaeologists have brought up massive stone blocks tied to one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.

In the waters off Alexandria, a submerged site known for decades is now yielding some of its most striking elements. The PHAROS project reports that 22 monumental stone blocks linked to the lighthouse have been lifted from the seabed after years of underwater exploration.

Built in the 3rd century BCE, the lighthouse guided ships through dangerous coastal waters for centuries before its destruction. Its remains, scattered underwater, are now being carefully documented and analyzed.
The recovered elements include lintels, doorjambs, thresholds and paving slabs. Each block weighs between 70 and 80 tons, reflecting the scale of the original structure. The team led by Isabelle Hairy at the CNRS explains that these pieces likely formed part of the lighthouse’s monumental entrance, where architectural styles combined Egyptian and Greek influences.

The presence of these remains has been known since 1968, when the ruins were first observed beneath the water. A major step came in 1994, when archaeologist Jean-Yves Empereurled a campaign that identified and cataloged more than 3,300 objects. Among them were sphinxes, obelisks, columns and granite blocks, all spread across the seabed and linked to the lighthouse and surrounding structures.


So that's very interesting.  Cassian Holt (MORNING OVERVIEW) reports:

On a wind-battered rock in the Baltic Sea, archaeologists have uncovered a puzzle that cuts to the heart of how dogs first entered human lives. Wolf bones dating back roughly 5,000 years show that people were not just tolerating large carnivores in their camps, they were transporting them to places wolves could never have reached alone. The find forces researchers to rethink whether domestication was a single, linear story or a patchwork of experiments in living with wolves that sometimes stopped short of producing dogs.
The remains, recovered on a tiny island far from any natural wolf habitat, carry genetic and chemical signatures of close contact with humans yet still look strikingly wild. That tension, between wild identity and human dependence, is what makes these animals so disruptive to long-held theories about when, where, and why dogs emerged from their wolf ancestors.
The animals at the center of this debate were found on Stora Karlsö, a small limestone island off Sweden that is better known today for seabird colonies than for large predators. In the Bronze Age and earlier, the island was even more isolated, with sheer cliffs and surrounding waters that would have posed a serious barrier to any swimming carnivore. Modern gray wolves are strong travelers across land and ice, but there is no realistic way a breeding population could have established itself on such a confined outcrop without help from people, which is why the discovery of multiple wolf skeletons there immediately raised eyebrows among researchers who study domestication.
Archaeological surveys of Stora Karlsö have long documented human activity, including burial sites and evidence of seasonal occupation, but the presence of large carnivores adds a new dimension to that story. The wolf bones were not scattered randomly like driftwood; they appeared in contexts that suggest deliberate placement, sometimes near human remains, hinting that these animals were part of a shared social and ritual landscape rather than occasional visitors that died by chance.
When researchers examined the skeletons, they found that the animals were unmistakably gray wolves in size and morphology, not the smaller, more gracile forms associated with early dogs. Yet the condition of the bones told a more intimate story. Some showed signs of healed injuries, which implies that the wolves had lived long enough under care or at least in a stable environment where survival after trauma was possible. That pattern fits better with animals living alongside people than with fully wild predators eking out a living on a marginal island.
Chemical analysis of the remains, including isotopic signatures, indicated diets rich in marine resources such as fish and seals, foods that are difficult for wolves to obtain on their own in large quantities. The most plausible explanation is that humans were provisioning these animals with the same coastal bounty they themselves relied on, a conclusion echoed in reporting that describes how it is difficult for wolves to capture such marine organisms without human assistance. In other words, the bones capture a snapshot of wolves that were physically wild but nutritionally and logistically tied to human communities.


So that's very interesting -- especially for dog lovers.  Isabela Erickson (TRUFFLE COSTA) notes dogs that are the closest to wolves:

For centuries, humans have shaped dogs into countless breeds, but a groundbreaking new study reveals that some modern-day canines retain a startling genetic proximity to their wild wolf ancestors. Prepare to discover the domestic breeds that carry the most ancient DNA, linking them directly to the untamed wilderness. This gallery uncovers which dogs truly stand apart.
Hailing from Central Africa, the Basenji is often called the "barkless dog" due to its unique yodel, an ancient vocalization. Genetically, this primitive breed stands out as one of the closest to wolves, with a genome remarkably untamed. Their independent nature, foxy expression, and distinctive curled tail all hint at a lineage largely untouched by selective breeding until recent times.
Originating from the mountainous regions of northern Japan, the Akita Inu is a large, powerful breed revered for its loyalty and courage. Genetic studies reveal its deep ancestral roots, placing it remarkably close to ancient wolves. Their strong physique, double coat, and watchful demeanor echo traits from an untamed past.
Famed for their incredible endurance and striking blue or multi-colored eyes, Siberian Huskies carry a strong genetic signature of their wolf ancestors. Bred by the Chukchi people for sledding in harsh Arctic conditions, their adaptability, pack mentality, and robust physical traits underscore a lineage closely tied to wild canids.


Centuries-old DNA has confirmed that Greenland’s sledge dog Qimmit is the oldest yet known domesticated dog breed, a discovery that sheds more light on their close relationship with the region’s indigenous Inuit people.

The findings, published in the journal Science, also reveal fresh insights into the history of Inuit migration and their Arctic adaptation.
Researchers, including those from the Ilisimatusarfik University in Nuuk, Greenland, assessed genomes from over 90 dogs across Greenland spanning the past 800 years, capturing data from both ancient and modern canines.

They then compared the genome data with those of over 1,900 published dog genomes.

Scientists discovered that the Qimmit breed forms a distinct clade with other ancient Arctic dogs, most notably a 3,700-year-old Alaskan dog.

Sledge dogs have been a central part of Arctic life for over 9,500 years.


And let's wrap up with Elizabeth Rayne (POPULAR MECHANICS)

As humans, it’s important to remember that some of our oldest primate ancestors were apelike creatures. Besides our much larger brains and visibly obvious differences, such as facial features, one thing we evolved to be much more adept at than chimps and gorillas (which we diverged from millions of years ago) is walking on two feet. But just when did human predecessors first descend from the trees and walk upright?

A 4.4-million-year-old female skeleton named Ardi may answer that question. Predating even the iconic Lucy by a million years, she belongs to the species Ardipithecus ramidus, and is revealing more about our origins and how we became bipedal.

Unearthed in the Ethiopian desert back in 1994, Ardi is the oldest known partial hominin skeleton, though her species has been known since 1925 under the name Australopithecus ramidus. Biological anthropologist Thomas Prang of Washington University in St. Louis and his research team discovered that Ardi was able to walk upright but still retained a grasping foot and other apelike features.

“Our observations of the human and ape fossil record are inconsistent with recently proposed models of human origins, which envision the last common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees as a generalized arboreal ape,” he said in a study recently published in Communications Biology. “Instead, our results strongly imply that humans evolved from an African ape-like ancestor.”


"The Snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):

Monday, May 4, 2026.  Chump pimps a new plan that was supposed to start this morning ("will begin Monday morning, Middle East time") but it didn't start and it's now about 3:30 pm in Iran, Iraq and the region, Chump has a hissy fit over remarks made and pulls US troops from Germany, his war with Pope Leo was not a win for Chump, Senator Patty Murray speaks out in support of  mifepristone, and much more.



Iran pushed back against President Trump’s latest attempt to break the effective blockade of the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, threatening to attack American warships and any commercial vessels that sought to transit through the waterway without Iranian permission.

Ali Abdollahi, a top Iranian military commander, warned “all commercial ships and oil tankers to refrain from any attempt to transit without coordination with the armed forces,” Iranian state media reported.

“⁠We warn that any foreign armed force — especially the aggressive U.S. military — if they intend to approach or enter the Strait of Hormuz, will be targeted and attacked,” he added.

Mr. Trump said on Sunday that the United States would assist ships trapped in the waterway because of the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran to get out but did not provide details of what that would entail.



As Ben notes on MEDIASTOUCH NEWS this morning, it's not what Donald says it is.



At the top of the video below, you will see Katty Kay on MORNING JOE talking about what Chump posted last night regarding this.  On the screen, they displays Chump's social media posts including one from Chump declaring "This process, Project Freedom, will begin Monday morning, Middle East time." The problem with that?  It's close to 3:30 pm in that region right now.  




"It does not currently involve US Navy warships escorting vessels through the strait, the officials said,"  Katty read from THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.  Leigh Kimmins (DAILY BEAST) notes:


U.S. officials contradicted the president in statements given to the WSJ. They said the plan “doesn’t currently involve U.S. Navy warships escorting vessels through the strait.” It is “not an escort mission,” one official told CNN.

U.S. ships will merely be located “in the vicinity” to oversee tankers moving through the strait, Axios was told. 



How's that going to work out?  Who knows but Adam Schreck and Sam Metz (AP) report this morning:


The U.S. military is rejecting claims that Iran struck a U.S. Navy vessel.

The denial on Monday came as the U.S. remains active in the area near the Persian Gulf, offering to guide ships through the Strait of Hormuz and dislodge Iran’s blockade on vessels that don’t receive its authorization..

Iranian news agencies — including the semiofficial agency Fars and the Iranian Labour News Agency — claimed that Iran had struck a U.S. Navy vessel southeast of the strait of Hormuz, accusing it of “violating maritime security and navigation norms.”


In related news, AP reports:

The Pentagon announced last week that it would pull some 5,000 troops out of Germany, but Trump told reporters on Saturday that “we’re going to cut way down. And we’re cutting a lot further than 5,000.”

He offered no reason for the move, which blindsided NATO, but his decision came amid an escalating dispute with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz over the U.S-Israeli war on Iran, and Trump’s anger that European allies have been reluctant to get involved in the conflict in the Middle East.


Sam Levine (GUARDIAN) reports:


Donald Trump has threatened to withdraw more US troops from Germany after stunning European leaders and some senior members of his own party by last week announcing the withdrawal of 5,000 soldiers from Germany.

The move left 30,000 US troops still in the country, according to CNN. But Trump threatened on Saturday that more cuts were coming. “We are going to cut way down, and we’re cutting a lot further than 5,000,” he told reporters on Saturday.

[. . .]

The Republicans who chair the armed services committees in Congress, Senator Roger Wicker of Mississippi and Representative Mike Rogers of Alabama, released a joint statement on Saturday saying they were “very concerned” by the possibility of reducing troops in Germany.


Republicans and Democrats in Congress are speaking out on the move.  For example, Ashleigh Fields (THE HILL) adds:


Rep. Jason Crow (D-Colo.) on Sunday criticized the Trump administration’s decision to withdraw 5,000 troops from Germany following a public spat with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. 

Last week, the German chancellor said that Washington was being “humiliated” by Iran amid the closure of the Strait of Hormuz in remarks condemned by President Trump

Crow said, “It appears as though this decision was made because Donald Trump was upset by a comment made by the German chancellor, like he is getting emotional and angry about this, and he’s making really consequential troop decision — troop movement decisions based upon being upset by the comments of a foreign leader, which is no way to run a foreign policy,” during an appearance on CBS News’s “Face the Nation.”

“So, we’re looking into it, and we’re going to make sure that any movements, if they do occur, are actually in our interests,” the House Democrat added. 


In other Chump disasters, let's move over to Chump's war with Pope Leo.   Michael McGough (WASHINGTON MONTHLY) observes:


For anyone old enough to remember the 1980s and Ronald Reagan and Republicans’ success at wooing Catholic voters away from the Democratic Party, which the GOP once lambasted as the home of “Rum, Romanism and Rebellion,” the contretemps between Donald Trump and Pope Leo XIV is particularly stunning. It’s also stunning for Democrats of a certain age who remember being crestfallen that the GOP had wooed so many Catholic voters from the party of Al Smith, John F. Kennedy, and Tip O’Neill. The Reagan Democrats—many of whom were Catholic—were a prize to be treasured, not cast away with a Truth Social post. For his part, Vice President JD Vance, a recent but hardly humble Catholic convert, rendered unto Caesar, saying Leo should “be careful when he talks about matters of theology.” Um, noted.

Michael Novak, the late conservative Catholic scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, who devoted much of his career to chronicling and persuading Catholics to move right, is spinning in his grave under Rock Creek Cemetery.

Trump’s irascibility, hot temper, and twitchy thumbs couldn’t keep him from condemning the pontiff for being “WEAK on Crime, and terrible for Foreign Policy” after the pope made comments calling for peace in the Mideast—where the United States and Israel launched a war against Iran—and other remarks about political leaders manipulating religion for personal gain. The pope later clarified that the speech containing the last criticism wasn’t directed at Trump.

Not satisfied to frame Pope Leo, a working-class White Sox fan from Chicago, as a liberal elitist, Trump went on to say: “I don’t want a Pope who criticizes the President of the United States because I’m doing exactly what I was elected, IN A LANDSLIDE, to do, setting Record Low Numbers in Crime, and creating the Greatest Stock Market in History. Leo should be thankful because, as everyone knows, he was a shocking surprise.”

Naturally, politicians and pundits hotly debated whether Trump’s dissing of a spiritual leader would alienate Catholics whom Republicans have long courted. The short answer is that no one can be sure, but it could make a difference in close, swing races if there are many, given the potential for a Democratic blowout.

Trump has been quiet lately about the pope, but the pope keeps talking about war and peace, as he did the other day when he met the archbishop of Canterbury.


Catherina Gioino (FORTUNE) observes Chump's gross stupidity:


Trump’s version of the American Dream says the winners are being stolen from: by immigrants and globalists, and by institutions that no longer serve the people who built them. His opponents mostly argue within the same framework, insisting the system should be fairer but still organized around the same ideals. Pope Leo XIV is the first American pope, and is also the only person in the world with the moral authority, the biography, and the institutional platform to critique the MAGA vision of America on its own terms, using its own words.

Trump chose to pick a fight with the Pope in a way that his own base argue is against the very things he preaches. His approval rating has fallen to 34% in Pew’s latest survey, the lowest of his second term. The Iran war he launched has closed the Strait of Hormuz, disrupted 20% of global oil supplies, pushed gas prices past $4 a gallon, and driven inflation back to 3.3%, the highest since May 2024, with economists warning it could reach 4.2% by year’s end.

The IMF has flagged global recession risk. A majority of voters, 53%, now call the Iran military action a failure, and Democrats hold a 10-point lead on the generic congressional ballot heading into the midterms. An AP poll puts Trump’s approval on the economy at 30%. And into this steps an American pope with a 42% favorable rating and an 8% unfavorable rating, a net favorability 34 points better than the president’s, making the moral case against the very war that is producing the economic pain. The reason why he remains so untouchable despite Trump’s attacks is that he embodies the same thing Trump is: an American.


Chump picked a fight with the Pope.  The Pope.  Who doesn't work for Chump.  Who is a powerful figure in the Catholic Church.  His power is independent of Chump's and may very well be more than Chump's.  But Chump elected to pick a fight with Pope Leo.


Who isn't dependent upon Chump for anything.


Marc Ramirez, Phaedra Trethan, Mike Stunson, Bailey Allen, Liam Adams and Rachel Gow (USA TODAY) note:

 It's been nearly 1,000 years since King Henry IV stood barefoot in the Italian snow to beg forgiveness after clashes with Pope Gregory VII and over two centuries since Napoleon imprisoned Pope Pius VII in France. Now, a new battle is underway between a pope and a world leader, this time in America.

It's the war of words between President Donald Trump and Pope Leo XIV. And for dozens of U.S. Catholics interviewed by the USA TODAY Network across the nation, it's Leo who has the upper hand in the crusade. A year into his historic papacy he has given them hope for the future of the Catholic Church.

At Villanova, where Leo graduated in 1977, Catholic convert Jacob Adams, 25, said outside the campus' St. Thomas Church that young people don’t have much appetite for war. Hence, they appreciate Leo's strong words in defiance of Trump's recent comments about destroying “a whole civilization” in the Iran war.

“Right or left, there are people calling for peace,” said Adams, a former evangelical who supported Trump in 2020 and 2024. “I like what (Leo) is doing to hold (Trump) accountable.”

With the pontiff about to finish year one in his papacy, the USA TODAY Network spoke with Catholics nationwide about their views of Leo and found their responses overwhelmingly upbeat. Many say Leo is palpably different from Pope Francis, with an everyman affability they believe is helping fuel a global resurgence in Catholicism - especially among the young.


And while Pope Leo was being embraced over the last months, Chump was seeing his own support dwindle to record lows.  And that was before Chump posted the photo of himself as God.  That's blasphemy.  In the US, we don't call for off-with-their-heads over blasphemy but we also don't embrace blasphemy.  

And it is in the weakened period that Chump's learning who has the actual power.  Malcolm Ferguson (THE NEW REPUBLIC) notes:

Pope Leo XIV has named three new bishops in the United States, each of whom have been vocal critics of President Trump.

Evelio Menjivar, a formerly undocumented immigrant, will be the new bishop for the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston in West Virginia, and Gary Studniewski and Robert Boxie III will be auxiliary bishops in Washington, D.C. The appointments indicate a deliberate choice on the pope’s part to select representatives in the United States who will be similarly unafraid to raise their voices against the Trump administration.

Menjivar, who immigrated from El Salvador to the U.S. in the trunk of a car when he was a teenager, decried Trump’s immigration crackdown last year in the National Catholic Reporter. “The federal government has pursued a ‘shock and awe’ campaign of aggressive threats and highly visible operations of questionable legality that go far beyond mere immigration ‘enforcement,’” he wrote. “We must stand with those at risk … and we cannot let the dark side of anti-immigrant animus take hold.”


Y. John Raby and Giovanna Dellorto (INDEPENDENT) add:


The new bishop, who has spent his ministerial career in the nation's capital and surrounding communities, will work in a less Catholic and more rural region, overseeing the diocese’s 61,000 Catholics and 92 parishes throughout West Virginia.

While acknowledging the beauty of West Virginia mountains and natural resources, he said many people in one of the nation’s poorest states “continue to endure hardship, marginalization and inequality.”

Cardinal Robert McElroy of Washington praised Menjivar-Ayala’s advocacy for migrants during his tenure in the capital, saying in a statement that “his passion for justice and sensitive care for the Hispanic and immigrant communities of our Archdiocese have planted seeds of grace that will yield a harvest here for decades to come.”

In an article he wrote last year for the Catholic Standard, the official newspaper of the Washington archdiocese, Menjivar-Ayala spoke out against the treatment of immigrants by Trump’s administration.



Moving over to Todd Blanche. Devlin Barrett (NEW YORK TIMES) reports on acting attorney general Todd Blanche:


Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, on Sunday sought to contrast the Justice Department’s indictment of the former F.B.I. director James B. Comey over a social media post with other instances in which people have shared the same message, saying that the department had gathered additional evidence during an 11-month investigation.

Mr. Comey was indicted last week over a photo that he posted on Instagram in May 2025 of seashells on a beach that spelled out “86 47,” which the department characterized as a threat to the president. The charge was the second attempt by the Justice Department under President Trump to prosecute Mr. Comey and the department’s latest effort to pursue charges against the president’s perceived enemies.

Asked on NBC’s “Meet The Press” whether others who displayed the same numbers, or bought or sold T-shirts with the same message, would face the same prosecution, Mr. Blanche said no.

The “86 47” message, Mr. Blanche said, is “posted constantly — that phrase is used constantly.” He added, “Every one of those statements do not result in indictments.” What makes Mr. Comey’s case different, he argued, is other evidence collected, which he said he could not describe.


Blanche wasn't the only one on MEET THE PRESS this morning.  Senator Adam Schiff also appeared.  Max Rego (THE HILL) reports:

Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) said Sunday that the Department of Justice (DOJ) sought another grand jury indictment of James Comey because acting Attorney General Todd Blanche wants to stay in the post full-time. 

Schiff told host Kristen Welker on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that the DOJ sought the indictment, which a grand jury in the Eastern District of North Carolina returned on Tuesday, because Comey is a “political opponent” of President Trump. 

He also listed other reasons, saying, “It’s the fact the president has called upon [Comey] to prosecution. It’s the fact that Todd Blanche wants to keep this job.”

“It’s the fact that [former Attorney General] Pam Bondi didn’t successfully bring a case against one of the president’s enemies,” added the California Democrat, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee. 


Also taking to the morning airwaves Sunday?  Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy.   Jennifer Bowers Bahney (MEDIAITE) notes:

ABC News’s Martha Raddatz confronted Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy about a dismal new poll showing Americans feeling “bleak” about gas prices.
[. . .]

Raddatz then hit Duffy with the new ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos poll.

“Mr. Secretary, I know you’re feeling optimistic about this, but Americans are apparently not. Our new poll makes clear they feel generally bleak about their financial situation,” Raddatz said.

She continued, “Forty-four percent cut back on driving, 42 percent cut household expenses, 34 percent changed vacation plans. The rise in gas prices is having a real effect. So what would you say to those Americans? We see no end in sight yet of that war.”

Duffy began to talk about “what the president has done for consumers,” mentioning the one big, beautiful bill; tax refunds; no tax on tips or Social Security.

“But Mr. Secretary, what I’m talking about is now. I’m talking about now,” Raddatz interjected.

“I’m talking about now,” she repeated. “What is your message to Americans now who are suffering because of these gas prices?”



Let's note this from Rachel Maddow (from last Monday but MS NOW just posted it two hours ago).




Let's wind down with this from Senator Patty Murray:


Washington, D.C. — Today U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee and a senior member and former chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee, issued the following statement in response to the Fifth Circuit ruling that, as of now, has resulted in requiring patients nationwide to fill mifepristone prescriptions in-person at a health center:

“Mifepristone is safe and effective—millions of women have used this medication since the FDA approved it over 25 years ago. The only reason mifepristone is regulated as heavily as it already is, is because of anti-abortion politics, not because of science. Yet Republican anti-abortion extremists will stop at nothing to rip this basic health care away from women in America. Let’s be clear about what just happened: three judges on the most extreme appeals court in the country sided with anti-abortion politicians over the FDA’s career scientists, over a quarter-century of safety data, over millions of American women who have safely used mifepristone, and over practically every major medical association in the United States.

“The real-world consequences of this decision are devastating and immediate—and it is beyond infuriating and infantilizing what these judges are forcing women to do. A patient in rural Washington who was going to receive her medication by mail, now has to find a clinic, take time off work, arrange childcare, and travel—sometimes hours—for a pill she could have safely taken at home. A woman managing a miscarriage will be forced to make that same trip in the middle of one of the worst weeks of her life.

“This should not be
a country where women’s access to health care is determined by the whims of a few zealous anti-abortion judges with zero medical or scientific training—do Americans really want a country where a panel of judges get to decide what medicine we can or can’t take? What’s next: cancer drugs? HIV medication? Let’s be eyes wide open that Republicans will accept nothing short of a national abortion ban—I will be fighting to ensure access to medication abortion every single way possible and to restore the right to abortion in every state for every woman.”

Two-thirds of U.S. adults oppose banning medication abortion. The overwhelming majority of Americans don’t want abortion legislated at all.

Senator Murray leads the Democratic caucus on reproductive health care issues, and she has led the fight in Congress to protect and expand access to mifepristone. Senator Murray led the Congressional response to FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, a lawsuit brought by Republican anti-abortion extremists trying to rip away access to mifepristone—Murray led multiple amicus briefsorganized her colleagues, and raised the alarm at every turn. In June 2024, the Supreme Court dismissed the case on standing, but Murray made clear that “the nationwide threat to medication abortion has not gone away—far from it. If Donald Trump and his anti-abortion allies return to power, they will do everything they can to rip away access to mifepristone and ban abortion nationwide.” 

Senator Murray has grilled Trump’s FDA Commissioner, Marty Makary, on access to mifepristone at every opportunity she’s had—including at a HELP Committee hearing on his nomination in March, and an Appropriations Agriculture-FDA subcommittee hearing in May. In 2023, Senator Murray pressed national pharmacies including Costco to ensure access to mifepristone, and in August, when Costco announced it would no longer sell mifepristone at its stores, Murray spoke out to demand they reverse course.

In November of 2025, Senator Murray led the entire Senate Democratic caucus in a letter to HHS Secretary Kennedy and FDA Commissioner Makary expressing alarm over the Trump administration’s plans to conduct “its own review of the evidence” on the safety and effectiveness of mifepristone. Murray’s letter laid into the recent junk science “report” on mifepristone put out by the Ethics and Public Policy Center (EPPC)—an avowedly anti-abortion think tank—that appears to be the basis for the Trump administration’s announced review of mifepristone. “By elevating the sham EPPC report as rationale for restricting access to mifepristone, HHS is blatantly undermining well-established science and weaponizing disinformation to fit the Trump administration’s clear agenda to cut off abortion access in any way possible,” Murray and the senators wrote.

Most recently, at the start of this year, Murray blasted her Republican counterparts on the Senate HELP Committee for holding a sham hearing to discredit medication abortion.

Throughout her career, Murray has beat back countless Republican attacks on reproductive care and other family planning services—and she is widely credited with successfully pushing the Bush administration’s FDA to follow the science and make Plan B available over the counter.

###



The following sites updated:


Saturday, May 02, 2026

They're corrupt as hell

The Crooked Court does the bidding of Donald Chump.  Tom Boggioni (RAW STORY) reports:


The appearance of all six conservative Supreme Court justices — and only the conservatives — at a White House black tie dinner for Britain’s King Charles III is raising eyebrows within the legal community.

According to MS NOW legal analyst Lisa Rubin, all six justices nominated by Republican presidents attended the Tuesday night event. "None of the three justices nominated by Democratic presidents were there, invited or not," Rubin reported.

The timing is particularly striking because the dinner occurred just hours before the court released a 6-3 decision significantly weakening the Voting Rights Act, and on the eve of oral arguments about the legality of the administration ending temporary protected status for Syrian and Haitian immigrants.

Historically, state dinners feature only a single Supreme Court justice. During Trump's first state dinner in 2018, Chief Justice John Roberts and his wife were the sole court representatives invited.

Georgetown Law professor Steve Vladeck warned that the symbolism of the event undermines public trust. "The problem here is ... that these six justices — and only these six — were there. It does nothing to disabuse the appearance that the court is playing partisan political favorites, an impression this court should be invested in avoiding," Vladeck told MS NOW.


They don't care about the appearance.  The American people caught on and that's why public trust in the Supreme Court has cratered.  We know they're sell outs and liars.  They're corrupt as hell.


Ruth's "Mr. Chump will soon be a bad and fading memory" went up earlier and so did Mike's "Idiot of the Week,"  Stan's "THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA 2" and Rebecca's "erika krirk gets the message that she's not wanted and general hospital."

"The Snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS): 

Friday, May 1, 2026.  Midterms loom and all Chump and the GOP have left is more lies, Chump continues to destroy our economy, NYT sues for Epstein's suicide note, Senator Patty Murray and other women senators call for better funded and better coordinated research into menopause, and much more.


Are you thrilled with that tax refund?  Jordan Major (FINANCE BUZZ MONEY) reports:

Tax season was supposed to deliver a noticeable boost for American households. After passing sweeping changes under the "Working Families Tax Cuts" law, Donald Trump and his administration promoted the idea that taxpayers would see refunds rise by $1,000 or more.

New data from the Internal Revenue Service tells a different story. Refunds have increased, but the average gain is closer to a few hundred dollars more than the previous year, leaving many taxpayers wondering where the rest of that promised boost went and how to supplement that income.
As of mid-April, the average refund sits at about $3,397, up from roughly $3,055 at the same time last year. That works out to about $342, or roughly an 11% increase year over year, according to IRS filing data.

The numbers confirm that refunds are higher, but they fall well short of the $1,000 increase that had been widely discussed. With most returns already filed by this point in the season, there is little indication that the average will climb enough to close that gap.

The result is a shortfall of around $600 compared to what many taxpayers were led to expect.


Wait, are you saying Chump promised something and then failed to deliver?  Oh, surely, surely not.  Is he not a man of his word? Who could have guessed that?

Besides anyone who saw the way his first presidential term ended.  Chump's a liar, a con artist and a convicted felon.   His companies declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy six times.

Jordan Major notes that the difference in expectations versus what was actually delivered might impact voting in November's midterm elections.  


Fifty-five percent of Americans said “their financial situation is getting worse,” according to a Gallup poll released this week. That’s a record for the 25-year-old survey. Americans are similarly pessimistic in other measures of economic sentiment — the Michigan consumer sentiment index, for instance, is near record lows — lower than during the Great Recession.
That dissatisfaction is evident in President Donald Trump’s poll ratings as well: A recent Fox News survey put Trump’s approval on the economy at just 34%, and other polls are similarly brutal. But it was not inevitable that voters would turn their discontent about the economy on the president. For that, Trump has only himself to blame.

For decades, when large numbers of  Americans expressed negative feelings about the economy, they were generally reacting to high unemployment, high year-over-year inflation or both. But even as inflation decreased in the latter half of former President Joe Biden’s term, the issue played a central role in Trump’s return to the White House. Since Biden, though, Americans’ views of the economy have been much more negative than typically associated with inflation around 3% and unemployment below 5%.


Well it's a good thing that Chump didn't promise to fix prices on day one, right?  What's that? Downie notes:

The worst thing a president could do in this situation is introduce more price shocks, which brings us back to Trump. In the 2024 campaign, he promised he would make prices go down “on Day One.” That was always a ridiculous pledge — the president can’t pull a lever and instantly lower prices. But many voters believed him: Republican voters’ inflation expectations plunged to zero after the 2024 election.

Voters might have forgiven Trump at least somewhat for the failed “Day One” pledge had he otherwise done nothing to increase inflation. But he has introduced further price shocks: first, imposing blanket tariffs, then instigating a war with Iran. Gas is averaging $4.23 a gallon across the U.S., up more than 40% since the conflict started. There’s no end in sight for the war: “maximalist demands on both sides,” my MS NOW colleagues reported, “show no signs of softening.” No one really knows what weeks or months more of a blockaded Strait of Hormuz will mean for fuel prices — or the global economy. But don’t expect Americans’ feelings about the economy to brighten anytime soon.

Again, you can't trust Chump.  He lies.  He's a con artist.  He lied to the American people.  About everything.  

His war of choice with Iran is not helping the US economy.   


Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was put on the spot during a tense exchange after Sen. Maggie Hassan fact-checked him to his face on soaring food costs.

The confrontation began when Hassan pressed Kennedy on whether high grocery prices make it harder for families to afford the fresh, healthy foods he has encouraged Americans to eat.
Kennedy responded by saying beef had dropped by 1% in the last quarter — but Hassan quickly challenged that claim.

"No. Look, beef prices are up 20%, banana prices are up nearly 7% since President Trump took office. Cheese prices are up 6%," she said (1). "So again, when groceries get more expensive — easier or harder for families to afford the very healthy foods that you want them to eat?"

Kennedy said Americans can eat beef, poultry or fish, before adding that the price of beef is tied to the size of the cattle herd. "The herd dropped," he said.
Hassan wasn't satisfied.

"You're not answering," she said.

Sometimes, when the truth comes out, the wheels come off the car and you're not going anywhere at that point.  Chump is there now.  He's damaged our economy so bad with tariffs and with the war on Iran that now other issues emerge, some of which are beyond his power.  For example, Kirk Maltais (WALL STREET JOURNAL) reports:

Increasing drought levels across the U.S. Plains lifted U.S. wheat prices near two-year highs, while potential for an El Niño could make things even drier this summer.

Chicago wheat futures have gained nearly 30% since the start of the year — the biggest gain among row crop futures — due to the combination of U.S. drought, global fertilizer shortages and a looming El Niño. This week, most-active wheat futures settled at their highest level since June 2024, at $6.58 a bushel, according to data from FactSet.
Heading into the harvesting season for the key winter wheat crop, much of the western side of the U.S. Plains are locked in drought. Over 81% of Southern Plains is experiencing some form of drought, according to the latest data from the U.S. Drought Monitor. Nearly 20% of the region is experiencing either “extreme” or “exceptional” drought.

Only 30% of U.S. winter wheat is in either good or excellent condition as of the start of this week, according to the most recent weekly Crop Progress report from the Department of Agriculture. By comparison, 49% of the crop was good-or-excellent at this point last year.



Inflation is at its highest level in three years thanks to President Trump.

Prices are up 3.5 percent compared to last year, the biggest year-to-year increase in three years, the Commerce Department said Thursday. Much of this is attributable to gas prices due to the war in Iran. But even with fuel and food subtracted, inflation is still up by 3.2 percent, above the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent target.

The rising prices outweigh the modest 0.6 percent gain in U.S. workers’ incomes, the department’s report said. Any tax refunds that Americans receive are also being blunted by higher gas and food prices. 


This as REUTERS reports, "U.S. inflation accelerated in March as the Iran war raised gasoline prices, bolstering financial market expectations that the Federal Reserve could keep interest rates unchanged well into next year. [. . .] In the 12 months through March, PCE inflation shot up 3.5%, the biggest rise since May 2023, after increasing 2.8% in February."   


MS NOW held a roundtable with Gen Z voters.  The economy, job market, protecting democracy, affordability were issues the voters raised. 




"I don't see them using their powers to help young people, help the working class, help the people that are struggling," says one Gen Zer of the Chump administration. 


Well maybe in the year-plus between now and the mid-terms, the GOP will find a way to improve things.  What's that?  May just started and the midterms are in November?  Six months?  Six months away?

Well then there's nothing for the GOP to do but lie.

Which, as Chris Hayes pointed out and exposed last night, is what the GOP is trying to do. 



Another level of suffering?  Many Americans are without healthcare now thanks to Chump and Republicans in Congress who supported Chump's 'big beautiful bill.'  Reed Abelson and Margot Sanger-Katz (NEW YORK TIMES) report this morning:

Millions of Americans appear to be dropping Obamacare coverage in the months since Congress failed to extend the generous subsidies that had become a defining feature of the Affordable Care Act.

Initial sign-ups had already fallen by about 1.2 million people. But insurance companies, state officials and industry analysts are reporting that many more have lost Obamacare coverage now that people are facing long-term higher costs. The federal government has yet to report current enrollment data.

Many insurers and analysts are estimating overall declines of about 20 percent, dropping to around 19 million from the 24 million who were covered under the A.C.A. last year. Other indications suggest there could be even larger potential losses by the end of the year, a deep retrenchment for Obamacare coverage and a reversal of significant gains in the last several years.

The rising cost of health care has shown up as a top concern among Americans in several public opinion polls. Premiums are rising for Americans who get insurance through work, too, as health care costs have been increasing nationwide. Out-of-pocket costs are growing too, as plans with high deductibles have become popular.


Thanks Donald Chump.   


Six months away.  


When President Donald Trump attempted to overturn the 2020 election, the institutional guardrails of American democracy held — but just barely.

If faced with the same tests today, those guardrails and the people who held the line would largely be missing, a ProPublica examination found.

At least 75 career officials who once held roles at federal agencies related to election integrity and safety are gone. Two dozen appointees — including many who either actively worked to reverse the 2020 vote or are associates of such people — have been hired to replace them. And once-fringe actors now have access to vast powers.

As the midterms approach, current and former government officials and election security experts expressed concerns that Trump appointees who’ve espoused debunked conspiracy theories about balloting are now in positions to control the narrative around the vote’s soundness.

It’s hard to debunk false claims “coming with the seal of the federal government,” said Derek Tisler, counsel and manager with the Brennan Center for Justice’s elections and government program. “I certainly worry what damage that could do to voters’ confidence.”

Here are some of the key things you should know about the Trump administration’s efforts to, as the president said, “take over” the midterms. Read the full investigation here.

1. In 2020, institutional guardrails helped to prevent Trump from overturning the election.

Following his defeat in the 2020 election, Trump pushed for federal officials to uncover proof that he had, in fact, beaten Joe Biden at the polls. Election cybersecurity experts with the Department of Homeland Security relayed to Attorney General William Barr that the election fraud claims that they looked into were false. Barr then told the president what he didn’t want to hear: The election had not been hacked.

Barr was one of many federal officials — most of them Trump appointees — who refused to bend to the president’s demands, which only intensified in the weeks leading up to Jan. 6, 2021. Despite the violent uprising at the Capitol on that day, the election results held firm.

2. Less than 18 months into his second term, Trump has dismantled many of those same guardrails.

Since the start of his second term, Trump and his appointees have made significant changes at federal agencies tasked with helping to safeguard elections. In all, at least 75 career officials who’d played important roles in elections work at DHS, the Department of Justice and other agencies have left, been fired or been reassigned, ProPublica found.

In their place are roughly two dozen people Trump has installed in positions that could affect elections. Ten of them actively worked to reverse the 2020 vote, and the rest are associates of those people. In some cases, ProPublica found, officials have been hired from activist groups that are pillars of the election-denial movement.

3. Among the first agencies Trump gutted after returning to office was one that had repeatedly disproved his stolen-election claims.

Officials at DHS’ Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency had provided research to the first Trump White House that disproved many theories claiming that the 2020 election had been hacked. CISA also played a crucial part in publicly countering these claims by producing a “Rumor Control” website to rebut them.

Then, only weeks into Trump’s second term, DHS leadership put employees focused on countering disinformation and helping safeguard elections on leave. They also froze CISA’s other election security work, which included assessing local election offices for physical and cybersecurity risks. Eventually, all CISA employees specializing in elections were fired or transferred.

A DHS spokesperson told ProPublica that the changes at CISA were in response to “a ballooning budget concealing a dangerous departure from its statutory mission,” which included “electioneering instead of defending America’s critical infrastructure.”

FBI Director Kash Patel dismantled the agency’s public corruption team, which had previously been deployed to help monitor possible criminal activity on Election Day. The Foreign Influence Task Force, which aimed to combat foreign influence in U.S. politics, was also disbanded.

(An FBI spokesperson said the bureau “remains committed to detecting and countering foreign influence efforts by adversarial nations.”)

The voting section of the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division had enforced federal laws that protect voting rights, particularly those that combat racial discrimination. But now, nearly all of the section’s roughly 30 career lawyers have resigned or been moved. Trump then filled the section with conservative lawyers, including at least four who participated in challenging the 2020 vote or have worked with people who helped Trump try to overturn the 2020 election.


That's an excerpt, read it in full. 


Donald Chump loves to lie and he loves to lie about his dead friend Jeffrey Epstein.  Today, he tries to pretend like they were briefly friends.  The two met and became friends in the 80s.  Donald Trump tries to say around 2007 the friendship (but their contact continued after that).  So we're talking about a decades long relationship.  Decades.  Plural.  That's a lot to cover up and it's led him to tell big lies over even the stupidest of things.  Like the birthday greeting and drawing he did for Epstein -- the one he tried to sue THE WALL STREET JOURNAL for reporting on.  Of course, he drew it.  But he lied about that and when you lie about one thing, you tend to lie about other things as well.  




A suicide note purportedly written by Jeffrey Epstein in a Manhattan jail has been kept secret for nearly seven years, locked up in a New York courthouse.

A cellmate said he discovered the note in July 2019, after Mr. Epstein was found unresponsive with a strip of cloth around his neck. Mr. Epstein survived that incident but weeks later was found dead in the jail.

The note was eventually sealed by a federal judge as part of the cellmate’s own criminal case, according to documents and interviews. That means investigators scrutinizing Mr. Epstein’s high-profile death lacked what could have been a key piece of evidence.

On Thursday, The New York Times petitioned the judge to unseal the note, which said it was “time to say goodbye,” the cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, recalled. While Mr. Tartaglione mentioned the note on a podcast last year, the scrawled message has remained hidden from public view, even at a time of unprecedented transparency around the government’s investigations into Mr. Epstein. Since December, the Justice Department has released millions of pages of documents related to the sexual predator.



The suicide note would garner attention.  Chump can't take the attention.  But he may have to deal with increased attention on this topic.  Robert Davis (RAW STORY) explains Michael  Popok did on MEIDASTOUCH's LEGAL AF where he explained that Maurene Comey being allowed to move through the federal courts for her wrongful termination suit meant more attention on Epstein:

On Tuesday, a federal judge in New York ruled that Comey can keep her lawsuit in federal court and said that Trump's DOJ had effectively sealed its own fate when it admitted that her termination relied solely on the Constitution, not the civil service statutes.

"They fired her under the presidential authority under Article II, hoping that this would never see the light of day," Popok said. "I think this new ruling by Judge Jesse Furman in the Southern District of New York may unlock Epstein's scandal as well as help get her job back because Judge Furman has just ruled that she gets to keep her case in federal court."

[. . .]

Popok also noted that the ruling would affect the Epstein investigation. Comey was responsible for convicting Epstein's accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell, to a 20-year sentence on sex trafficking charges. Now that Maxwell is angling for a pardon, Popok argued that Trump doesn't want someone like Comey in his ear, reminding him of how untrustworthy she is.

"So, on the surface, it's Maurene Comey allowed to stay in federal court rather than be shuffled off into an administrative law procedure, never to be heard from again," Popok said. "That's the top line. But right below the surface is the connection between her and Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein, Trump, and Todd Blanche, now the acting U.S. attorney. And I think this gets blown sky-high as this particular case continues."





Let's wind down with this from Senator Patty Murray's office:

Washington, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senators Patty Murray (D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, and Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, reintroduced comprehensive bipartisan legislation that would be the most expansive effort so far to boost federal research on menopause and would—for the first time—coordinate the federal government’s existing programs related to menopause and mid-life women’s health. The Advancing Menopause Care and Mid-Life Women’s Health Act, authorized at $275 million over five years, would better address menopause and mid-life women’s health issues by strengthening and expanding federal research, health care workforce training, awareness and education efforts, and public health promotion and prevention activities.

75 million women are in perimenopause, menopause, or post-menopause right now in the U.S.—with 6,000 more women reaching menopause each day. But despite the fact that half the population in the U.S. will eventually experience menopause, menopause research has long been underinvested in and overlooked. To date, there are few federally funded clinical trials on menopause and menopausal hormone therapy and very little menopause education for doctors—only 30 percent of U.S. residency programs offer a formal menopause curriculum, and 80 percent of OB-GYN residents admit to being ill-prepared to discuss menopause.

“For too long, menopause has been something women are expected to deal with by themselves and like many areas of women’s health, it hasn’t received the attention or investment it deserves—that needs to change,” said Senator Murray. “This legislation takes important steps by increasing funding for menopause research and providing federal agencies with additional tools to better study and support mid-life women’s health. While this administration continues to dismantle programs and research that support women’s health, I’ll keep fighting to make sure we make it a federal priority.”

“Menopause is something half of the global population will experience, and it is imperative that we better understand it—as women, as healthcare professionals, as partners and support systems,” said Senator Murkowski. “This legislation makes it possible to invest time and energy into doing just that. I am honored to join this bipartisan group of determined women and strong leaders to advocate for women’s health.”

“ACOG is pleased to endorse the Advancing Menopause Care and Mid-Life Women’s Health Act. As ob-gyns, we see firsthand the urgent need for improved public health awareness and access to trusted, evidence-based information on menopause and mid-life women’s health—especially at a time when health misinformation is rapidly increasing,” said Steven J. Fleischman, MD, MBA, FACOG, President of the American College of OB-GYNs (ACOG). “We’re encouraged that this bill would expand long overdue investments in federal research into menopause and evidence-based approaches to better support patients through the menopausal transition. We thank Senator Patty Murray and Senator Lisa Murkowski for their continued leadership and dedication to advancing menopause care.”

“The Society for Women’s Health Research (SWHR) is pleased to endorse the Advancing Menopause Care and Mid-Life Women’s Health Act once again, and we thank Senator Murray and Senator Murkowski for reintroducing the bill,” said Kathryn Schubert, President & CEO of the Society for Women’s Health Research. “By boosting research, strengthening clinician training, and raising awareness, this legislation will transform how our health system serves women in midlife and menopause — a population that has for too long been overlooked.”

“Menopause is not just a moment in time — it marks a major inflection point in a woman’s life and long-term health,” said Halle Berry, Academy-Award winning actor, advocate, and founder of women’s health company Respin. “I found out I was in menopause at 54 and spent years being misdiagnosed and in search of answers. The Advancing Menopause Care and Mid-Life Women’s Health Act is a profound step toward addressing the harmful gaps in research, education, and healthcare and I’m excited to see this bill reintroduced. Thank you to Senators Murray and Murkowski, and to all the fierce Members of Congress who have supported and continue to support this effort.”  

The Advancing Menopause Care and Mid-Life Women’s Health Act would:

  • Expand federal research on menopause and mid-life women’s health:
    • Authorize $25 million per year over five fiscal years for NIH to award grants to support biomedical, public health, clinical, and translational research and innovation related to menopause and mid-life women’s health.
    • Establish new Research, Condition, and Disease Categorization (RCDC) categories for chronic or debilitating conditions among women related to perimenopause, menopause, post-menopause, and mid-life women’s health.
    • Strengthen coordination within the NIH and across HHS to expand federal research into menopause and mid-life women’s health, including new pharmacological or non-pharmacological treatments, and prevent adverse health outcomes among women experiencing menopausal symptoms.
    • Support translational research activities to speed the translation and implementation of federal research to support evidence-based health care delivery of perimenopause, menopause, post-menopause care, and related women’s health services.
    • Require HHS to expand public health research, health care quality research, data collection and reporting, and occupational health research related to menopause and mid-life women’s health.
  • Support public health promotion activities to address chronic conditions affecting mid-life women’s health, strengthen early detection, diagnosis, and treatment of menopausal symptoms; improve health care delivery; and support the development of recommendations and best practices to expand access to mental health and substance use services for women experiencing perimenopausal, menopausal, or postmenopausal symptoms. Authorized at $10 million per year over five fiscal years.
  • Establish a national public health awareness, education, and outreach program on menopause and mid-life women’s health. Authorized at $10 million per year over five fiscal years.
  • Improve professional training resources for health care providers on menopause and mid-life women’s health through a new grant program. Authorized at $10 million per year over five fiscal years.
  • Direct the designation of Centers of Excellence in Menopause and Mid-Life Women’s Health, and authorize grants to support the improvement of professional training resources for health care providers on menopause and mid-life women’s health.
  • Require HHS to report to Congress on federal research activities related to menopause and mid-life women’s health, related barriers to care for patients in rural and underserved areas; barriers to training for health care providers, and recommendations to expand access to care and increase public awareness.­­
  • Support coordination between HHS and other federal departments and agencies—including Veteran’s Affairs (VA) and the Department of Defense (DoD)—related to menopausal symptoms, mid-life women’s health, aging, and public health promotion activities.

This legislation is cosponsored by Senators Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD), Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-DE), Cory Booker (D-NJ), Maria Cantwell (D-WA), Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV), Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Maggie Hassan (D-NH), John Hickenlooper (D-CO), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Jack Reed (D-RI), Jacky Rosen (D-NV), Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), and Tina Smith (D-MN).

The legislation is endorsed by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, American Society for Reproductive Medicine, American Urogynecologic Society, Endocrine Society, National Association of Nurse Practitioners in Women’s Health, Society for Reproductive Investigation, Society for Women’s Health Research, and Women’s First Research Coalition.

In the FY26 appropriations bills, Senator Murray championed women’s health research at and across NIH, as well as $5 million for a new Menopause Research to Action initiative at the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), which will focus on scaling up and deploying research and care delivery models into routine clinical practice, as well as supporting efforts to share best practices. Senator Murray also secured language to encourage the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to continue outreach and engagement activities with health care providers on perimenopause, menopause, post-menopause, and mid-life women’s health, and to facilitate the development and testing of new pharmacological treatments for menopausal symptoms. Murray also supported language to explore the creation of Centers of Excellence in Menopause at VA.

Senator Murray, a senior member and former Chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee, has always championed and fought to boost investments in women’s health care and research. When she was the top Democrat on the HELP Committee, Murray led negotiations and passage of the 21st Century Cures Act in 2016, bipartisan legislation that provided $4.8 billion over the next 10 years to invests in a wide range of health priorities—including women’s health care. Murray leads and has repeatedly introduced the Jeanette Acosta Invest in Women’s Health Act, which would increase women’s access to preventive and lifesaving cancer screenings. Murray has also been a strong advocate for women veterans’ health care—transforming the VA over decades to meet the needs of women veterans, whether by authoring and passing the Women Veterans Health Care Improvement Act in 2010 or by delivering annual funding as an appropriator to help VA provide the necessary care for women veterans. In 2024, as Appropriations Chair, Murray delivered a record $900 million investment in women veterans’ health care, as well as a $300 million funding boost for the National Institutes of Health (NIH).  

The full text of the legislation is HERE.

###


And THE BLACK COMMENTATOR notes:

BlackCommentator.com                    

           

April                     30, 2026 Issue 1085

         
           
              

The                       Black Commentator

             

 Issue                           #1085

             

             

 is                           now Online

              April 30, 2026
           

           
           

Read                         issue 1085

                       

Our email address                 is BlackCommentator@gmail.com

           

Our voicemail                 number is 856.823.1739




The following sites updated: