The Pour Over Today - Monday, July 17, 2023
Episode Date: July 17, 2023Today, we’re talking about a cold case arrest, the status of the national defense budget bill, the World Health Organization’s caution against aspartame, and other top news for Monday, July 17th. ...Stay informed while remaining focused on Christ with The Pour Over. Sponsored by TUVU
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Today we're talking about a cold case arrest, the status of the National Defense Budget Bill,
the World Health Organization's caution against aspartame, and other top news for Monday, July 17th.
Stay informed while remaining focused on Christ with The Pour Over.
Here's the quote of the day.
What repeatedly enters your mind and occupies your mind eventually shapes your mind
and will ultimately express
itself in what you do and who you become. John Ortberg. Let's start with some espresso shots.
The key to a cold case? Cold pizza. In 2010, police searching for a missing woman uncovered
11 bodies hidden in sand dunes along Gilgo Beach in Long
Island, New York, and started hunting for a serial killer. A newly formed task force took up the cold
case last spring and got a tip that led to search warrants, subpoenas, burner phones used to contact
three victims, and incriminating online searches, including searches for victims' pictures and
updates on the case. Hare found with the victim' remains in 2010 was compared to DNA from crust in a tossed
pizza box this year, leading police to arrest their 59-year-old suspect at his Manhattan
office building last Wednesday.
The man, an architect from outside Gilgo Beach, has so far been charged with murdering three
of the victims and has pleaded not guilty.
It is only by God's grace, a free, unearnable gift, that we are forgiven and saved. This
knowledge of our own sin and brokenness means Christians should be compassionate and kind,
not condemning even as we pursue justice and accountability. Ephesians 4 verse 32 says,
Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one
another, as God in Christ forgave you. There's a new game of ping pong happening at the Capitol.
The National Defense Authorization Act, an annual bill authorizing national defense budget funds,
has largely passed with bipartisan support for the last 60 years, but not this year.
In the Republican-controlled House, $886 billion in funding was authorized with strings attached.
Amendments include eliminating armed forces' diversity, equity, and inclusion positions,
removing transgender surgeries and hormone treatments from insurance coverage,
and pulling back a policy allowing service members to get reimbursed for travel expenses
when crossing state lines for abortions, which is already a hot topic in the Senate.
Four Republicans opposed and four Democrats supported the otherwise party-aligned bill.
Now it heads to the Democratic-led Senate, where there's not much confidence for it.
National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said the House-passed version is never getting to the president's desk.
Discussing controversial issues can lead to strained relationships and hurt feelings.
As Christians, we can demonstrate God's love by showing understanding, compassion, and understanding to others as we engage with others, even as we seek to be faithful
to God's word. Colossians 4 verse 6 says, Let your conversation be always full of grace,
seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone.
Experts are arguing, again. This time the debate is about whether soda will rot your insides the old-fashioned way
by giving you heart disease and diabetes, or if it poses a fresh threat, cancer.
The World Health Organization declared that aspartame, the low-calorie sweetener found
in everything from diet sodas to yogurt and chewing gum, may possibly be linked to liver
cancer among high consumers.
Over a dozen cans of soda
daily for a 150-pound adult. The World Health Organization said the findings are based on
limited evidence and called for further studies. The U.S. FDA responded with unusual criticism of
the World Health Organization's report, standing behind their 50-year-old position that aspartame
is safe. While aspartame's link to cancer is
tentative, the World Health Organization does say with confidence that switching to diet is
unlikely to help you achieve your health goals. Here's a verse to consider whether you partake
in a few sodas a day, run a few miles a day, both or neither. Therefore, we do not lose heart,
though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being
renewed day by day. 2 Corinthians 4, verse 16. This episode of the podcast is brought to you by
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In other brews, here's a rapid round of updates.
In other brews, here's a rapid round of updates.
Q2 fundraising financials are in for the 2024 presidential lineup, and familiar faces are dominating donations.
President Biden hauled in $72 million and former President Trump raised $35 million.
Despite their significant leads over their respective packs, polls indicate that Americans would rather not see Biden and Trump in a rematch.
The Biden administration is canceling $39 billion in student loans across 804,000 borrowers to fix the Accuracy of Income-Driven Repayment, IDR, plans, under which borrowers are eligible for forgiveness after 20 or 25 years of monthly payments. According to the Department of Education, historical inaccuracies did not count qualifying
IDR payments that should have moved borrowers closer to their forgiveness.
Wimbledon served up two surprises this weekend. First, unseated and unsponsored 24-year-old
Czech Marketa Vondrusova overcame her 2-10
grass court record to defeat Tunisian Hans Geber in the finals. Not to be outdone, the world number
one 20-year-old Spaniard Carlos Alcarez outlasted seven-time Wimbledon champ Novak Djokovic in five
sets, the third longest final in Wimbledon history. The country's biggest banks are all swan diving into piles of cash.
J.P. Morgan, Wells Fargo, and Citigroup surprised analysts with better-than-expected quarterly profits.
The biggest bank, J.P. Morgan, saw profits jump a massive 67%
thanks largely to its acquisition of First Republic Bank,
which it bought out of failure at a heavily discounted price in early May.
India is the latest country to catch lunar fever. Chandrayaan-3, Sanskrit for mooncraft,
launched Friday from Sriharikota in southern India, headed for the moon's south pole
and scheduled to land in a month. This follows a failed attempt four years ago and, if successful,
would make India the fourth country following USSR, US, and China to land on the moon.
That's all we have for today. Thanks so much for listening. If you're listening on the Apple
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We appreciate your support and hope you have a great day. We'll see you on Wednesday.