(Photo by Anna Moneymaker-Pool/Getty Images)
Neil Patel
Co-Founder and Publisher, The Daily Caller
April 29, 2021
8:03 PM ET
Font Size:
The left had a lot of fun this week mocking a false claim in some conservative circles that President Joe Biden was planning on limiting hamburger consumption. There are a few lessons in all of this. The first is obvious and has been driven home in the corporate media: Conservatives need to be more careful on the facts. By taking liberties on the potential costs of Biden’s climate goals, conservatives walked into a hailstorm of criticism that could easily have been avoided.
Wednesday, April 21, 2021
By Brad Polumbo
President Biden is touting his new $2.3 trillion+ spending plan as a boon to workers, even dubbing it the “American Jobs Act.” But there’s reason to believe that a key provision in Biden’s plan would result in a sizable drop in income for millions of American families.
The president wants to pay for his multi-trillion-dollar spending proposal in part by raising the corporate tax rate from 21 percent to 28 percent. A new study from the conservative-leaning Heritage Foundation finds that this tax increase on “Big Business” would ultimately be borne in large part by workers. Heritage macroeconomist Parker Sheppard projects that the economy would shrink to the tune of $1,650 lost per household, with the median worker seeing an $840 decline in their annual income.
The Challenges I Experienced Before (and After) My Celiac Disease Diagnosis 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.
This was the promise of AstraZeneca s chief executive Pascal Soriot on Sunday.
Researchers developing the vaccine believe that they have the formula, which makes it as effective as its rival cadidates, according to Soriot, as reported by Associated Press News report.
Some have raised worries that the AstraZeneca vaccine may not be as good as the one made by Pfizer, which is already being distributed in the UK. and other countries.
Oxford University is developing AstraZeneca vaccine.
Partial results show that the AstraZeneca shot is bout 70 percent effective for preventing illness from the COVID-19 infection.
This is compared to the 95 percent efficacy rate reported by Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech,