The Pour Over Today - UCLA protests, Abortion bans, Rates kept steady, & More | 05.03.24
Episode Date: May 3, 2024Today, we’re talking about UCLA’s campus protest, why abortion is back in the political spotlight, the Federal Reserve keeping interest rates steady, cities that are trying to become less appealin...g, and other top news for Friday, May 3. Stay informed while remaining focused on Christ with The Pour Over Today.
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Today, we're talking about the UCLA's campus protests, why abortion is back in the political
spotlight, the Federal Reserve keeping interest rates steady, cities that are trying to become
less appealing, and other top news for Friday, May 3rd.
Stay informed while remaining focused on Christ with the pullover today.
Here's the quote of the day,
No individual has any right to come into the world or go out of it without leaving behind
him distinct and legitimate reasons for having passed through it.
George Washington Carver.
Let's get started with some espresso shots.
Campus protests are only escalating as the semester winds down.
Monday night, mass counter-protesters surrounded
UCLA's encampment, throwing fireworks and attacking pro-Palestinian protesters.
Classes were cancelled, and an investigation is underway. Tuesday night, police breached Columbia
University's Hamilton Hall, which students had vandalized and blockaded nearly 20 hours prior,
and arrested over 100 protesters. Mayor Eric Adams warned that professional outside agitators
are co-opting what should be a peaceful gathering.
He encouraged parents to get involved
before the situation escalates.
In response, the House passed
the Anti-Semitism Awareness Act 320 to 91 on Wednesday.
The bill requires the education department
to enforce anti-discrimination laws
according to a broader anti-Semitism definition that includes calling for the harming of Jews
and harassing individuals over Israel's actions. The bill's future in the Senate is unclear.
On campus, across the world, or in the living room, Christians conquer evil and injustice
with good.
The Lord's radical command is to respond to toxic speech with kind words, to disrespect
with compassion and care, and to bullying with honor.
The light exposes the darkness for what it is, and Jesus promises the light will win
in the end.
1 Peter 3, 8 and 9 says,
Finally, all of you be like-minded and sympathetic, love one another and be compassionate and humble,
not paying back evil for evil or insult for insult, but, on the contrary, give a blessing,
since you were called for this, so that you may inherit a blessing.
so that you may inherit a blessing. Abortion is back in the political spotlight.
Two Arizona state Republican lawmakers joined all their Democratic colleagues to repeal
a near total abortion ban, All Stages of Pregnancy, from 1864.
A 15-week abortion ban passed in 2022 became Arizona's prevailing law
when Governor Katie Hobbs signed the repeal yesterday. Meanwhile, Florida
moved in the opposite direction. On Wednesday, the state's 15-week abortion
ban was replaced by a six-week ban. The battles aren't over. This November, at
least three states, including Florida, and possibly eight more, including
Arizona, will have abortion measures on the ballot.
Each referendum is different, but many propose a constitutional amendment enshrining abortion
access into fetal viability around 24 weeks.
We are called to love everyone always.
That means loving and caring for the unborn, single mothers, women who have received abortions,
and people who passionately disagree with you on this topic.
1 Corinthians 13, 4-6 says, Love is patient, love is kind, love does not envy, is not boastful,
is not arrogant, is not rude, is not self-seeking,
is not irritable, and does not keep a record of wrongs. Love finds no joy in unrighteousness
but rejoices in truth.
The central bank is unimpressed by inflation's lack of further progress. As expected, the Federal Reserve kept interest rates steady on Wednesday at a 23-year high for the sixth straight meeting.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell indicated recent inflation data shows it will take longer than previously expected to consider cutting rates, but settled investors' queasy stomachs by saying a rate hike is unlikely.
The stock market rallied on that news, a remarkable shift considering investors started this year
hoping for as many as six rate cuts, now most expect just one.
Meanwhile, consumer confidence dropped to a 21-month low, dragged down by the cost of
food and gas and fears of a worsening job market.
The number of job openings had
declined over recent months but remains well above pre-pandemic numbers.
Here's a verse to consider whether your portfolio is experiencing hockey stick growth or not.
I know how to make do with little, and I know how to make do with a lot. In any and all circumstances, I have learned the secret of being content, whether well
fed or hungry, whether in abundance or in need."
Philippians 412
Sometimes it feels like money doesn't stretch very far these days, but when you sponsor a
child through Compassion International, just $43
per month is crazy powerful. Sponsorship means education, clean water, healthy food, medical
care, and most importantly, hope. Through local churches in the area, sponsored children
build relationships with Jesus-loving adults who can offer the specific support kids need
to thrive. Not sure where to start?
Go to compassion.com slash TPO or find the link in the show notes and search by birthday
to see if there's a child with your birthday that needs a sponsor.
In other brews, here's a rapid round of updates.
The United Methodist Church repealed its ban on LGBTQ clergy Wednesday.
Delegates at the Denomination's General Conference decisively voted 692 to 51 to remove a rule
forbidding practicing homosexuals from being ordained or appointed,
and pass a measure prohibiting punishment for performing or refusing to perform same-sex marriages.
Since 2019, over 7,600 Methodist congregations have disaffiliated over LGBTQ issues.
Please, don't come back. Popular destinations grappling with overtourism are taking steps
to become less appealing. Venice just became the first city in the world to charge an entry
fee. The Japanese town of Fuji-Kawaguchiko is erecting a screen to block views of Mount
Fuji, and Barcelona removed a popular bus route from online apps to hide it from visitors.
In St. Louis, Missouri, the wheels on the bus aren't going round and round. The St.
Louis Public Schools District is offering to pay families to drive their kids to school
after the district's bus vendor faced service disrupting walkouts over hate crime allegations.
Rising tensions have the district looking for new options all through the town.
Half of a Texas dairy farm's cats died after exposure to bird flu in raw milk. The current
avian flu outbreak is the worst in US history among birds and has infected 0.1% of cattle
herds. While the findings raise concerns about mammal-to-mammal transmission, health agencies reiterate that
human infection is unlikely and Patre's milk is safe.
Ryan Garcia's left hook may have had a little extra juice.
The boxer tested positive for the PED Osterine, a drug that can stimulate muscle growth, the
day before and the day of his high-profile
win against opponent Devin Haney last month.
Garcia has 10 days to request his backup sample be tested.
If positive, the win stands to be overturned.
And that's all we have for today.
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We'll see you on Monday.