The Pour Over Today - Monday, July 3, 2023
Episode Date: July 3, 2023Today, we’re talking about the Supreme Court’s rulings on student loans and Colorado wedding websites, Twitter’s latest policy change, and other top news for Monday, July 3rd. We’re taking Wed...nesday off to eat watermelon and watch fireworks, but will be back on Friday. Stay informed while remaining focused on Christ with The Pour Over. Sponsored by TUVU
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Today we're talking about the Supreme Court's rulings on student loans and Colorado wedding
websites, Twitter's latest policy change, and other top news for Monday, July 3rd.
Stay informed while remaining focused on Christ with The Pour-Over.
Here's the verse of the week.
Refrain from anger and forsake wrath.
Fret not yourself, it tends only to evil.
Psalm 37, verse 8. Let's start with some espresso
shots. Hear ye, hear ye. The Supremes have spoken on student loans and Colorado wedding websites.
Justices voted six to three along ideological lines to strike down President Biden's plan to forgive $430
billion in student debt, up to $20,000 per qualifying borrower. Biden had argued that
the pandemic gave his administration power to cancel loans under the HEROES Act of 2003.
The high court disagreed. The president has promised to try again, this time under the Higher Education Act
of 1965. That new plan could take until the end of the year to enact and may also end up before
the Supremes. In the meantime, after a three-year pause, federal student loans start accruing
interest again in September and payments will resume in October. Biden announced a one-year
on-ramp period where missed payments won't be reported to credit bureaus or placed in October. Biden announced a one-year on-ramp period where missed payments won't be
reported to credit bureaus or placed in default. The Supreme Court also ruled 6-3 that a Christian
web designer in Colorado did not have to design wedding websites for same-sex couples. The
majority stated that forcing her to provide her expressive and creative services would violate
her First Amendment rights. The dissent sharply criticized the decision,
saying it regulates same-sex couples to second-class citizens
and accused the ruling of granting a license to discriminate.
Followers of Christ are not identified by their political affiliation,
but by their love for others.
And yes, that means loving people you believe have unloving views
or perspectives on SCOTUS rulings.
Jesus, in John 13, verse 35, says,
By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.
In a move necessitated by extreme levels of data scraping and system manipulation,
Elon Musk
announced a new Twitter policy that limits how many tweets users can read per day. After changing
those limits multiple times over the weekend, Musk settled on 10,000 for verified paid accounts,
1,000 for unverified accounts, 500 for new unverified accounts. People without accounts
are no longer able to view any tweets,
but are instead immediately prompted to sign in or create an account. These limits are reportedly
temporary, but it's unclear when they'll be lifted. Musk says the issue is AI startups scraping and
stealing Twitter's data, which is overwhelming its servers and harming user experience.
He promised to sue. Critics of Musk say this minor problem became a big one
because he laid off employees and closed backup data centers.
Our goal is to keep the big things big and the small things small.
It's not that tweet limits are of no importance.
They're just not God of the universe important.
Stay focused on eternity.
It changes everything.
Psalm 19, verse 14 says,
May the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable to you, Lord,
my rock and my redeemer. This episode of the podcast is brought to you by Tuvu.
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In other brews, here's a rapid round of updates.
Disney-owned ESPN announced a new round of layoffs Friday,
including 20 on-air broadcasters such as Suzy Kolber, Steve Young, Jeff Van Gundy, and Jalen Rose.
In May, Disney said revenue from its networks had fallen 7%, and in February, the House of Mouse announced plans to cut
$5.5 billion in costs by eliminating 7,000 jobs.
Welcome to the big city, Ricky Bobby.
For the first time in its 75-year history, NASCAR held a race yesterday on a busy urban
street.
The 2.2-mile course wound through familiar spots in downtown Chicago, including Buckingham Fountain and Michigan Avenue.
Taking a trip in the Outback has taken a new meaning.
Australia became the first country to legalize psychedelics to treat some psychiatric conditions.
prescribe MDMA to treat PTSD and psilocybin to treat depression that has resisted other treatments.
A massive car accident northwest of Nairobi, Kenya left at least 51 people dead and 32
hospitalized on Friday night.
Witnesses say a truck veered off a highway and hit multiple vehicles before plowing into pedestrians.
Photos show a virtually unrecognizable pile of car parts.
The area is reportedly infamous for bad car accidents.
Take a bite out of this.
Apple stock closed above $190.73 on Friday.
That might not sound like a milestone, but it pushed the fruit company's
market gap above $3 trillion. Apple has previously touched this milestone in midday trading,
but is the first time any publicly traded company has ended the day worth a cool $3 trillion.
That's all we have for today. Thanks so much for listening. If you're listening on the Apple
Podcasts app, give us a 5-star rating and drop a review. If you're listening on Spotify,
give us a follow and hit the notification bell to never miss a new episode.
We appreciate your support and hope you have a great day.
We're taking Wednesday off to eat watermelon and watch fireworks, but we'll be back on Friday.