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With one notable – and extremely regrettable – exception, matters went largely according to script in Week 12 around the college football world. As such, there might not appear to be much worth overreacting to. But as the late great Gilda Radner often said in her persona of Rosanne Rosannadanna, it’s always something. (Google her, kids. She was terrific.)

In this week’s top five overreactions, we’ll start with how the absence of a key player might affect the outlook of an entire league. We’ll then take our usual weekly snapshot of the race for the sport’s top honor, and wrap up with some thoughts on the future, both immediate and long-term.

The ACC is out of the College Football Playoff

The biggest piece of on-field news on Saturday was the devastating injury suffered by Florida State quarterback Jordan Travis, an unfortunate development in what was supposed to be a tune-up game against FCS member North Alabama. The possible ramifications for the College Football Playoff committee were addressed in the Misery Index, but the thinking here is that the Seminoles will still be among the top four should they get to the finish line at 13-0.

The fact of the matter is there are only nine power-conference teams with one loss or none. At least four of those teams will lose one more time head-to-head with Michigan and Ohio State squaring off next week, Georgia and Alabama slated to meet for the SEC title, and Washington and Oregon likely on course for a rematch. The fourth pairing is the ACC finale, now set between the Seminoles and Louisville. Given that there can be at most four unbeaten teams in that group, it seems highly unlikely that the committee would subject itself to the backlash that would result if even a short-handed team were omitted from the playoff in favor of a one-loss conference champ or non-champ. Just the same, it would be helpful if the Cardinals still have just the one loss when they get to Charlotte to keep that game a top-10 matchup.

The Seminoles would almost certainly be out of that mix with a loss, either next week against Florida or in said ACC finale, so then the question becomes whether Louisville would have a case. The Cardinals, obviously, would have to get through their own Rivalry Week date with Kentucky before dealing with the ‘Noles. They’d have an argument at 12-1, but they’d likely need a fair amount of chaos ahead of them. For one thing, their loss to Pitt would be the most damaging result among the contenders. Furthermore their best win would be against a Florida State team that would not be at full strength.

Jayden Daniels/Bo just won the Heisman Trophy

At roughly the same time as LSU’s Jayden Daniels was putting up video game numbers against an overmatched Georgia State, Oregon’s Bo Nix was doing his own number on an equally powerless Arizona State. Over the rest of the night, nearly every highlight from those performances was peppered with comments about whether this was his – or his – Heisman moment. It probably didn’t hurt either guy’s cause that Washington Michael Penix Jr. had a subpar statistical outing even though he still managed to get the ‘W’ for the Huskies at Oregon State.

We’ve been over this before, but it bears repeating – there’s no such thing as a Heisman moment. Numbers do matter, and voters take stats into consideration. But they also look at the total picture, including the opponents against whom those stats were accumulated. This close to the finish, however, those impressions could be lasting ones. Stay tuned.

UP AND DOWN: Winners and losers from Week12 in college football

REPORT CARD: Auburn routed after paying New Mexico State big bucks

Bigger conferences will mean better conferences

Deeper perhaps, but the potential for late-season tiebreaker insanity will be much greater starting next year when 16-, 17- and 18-team conferences without divisions dot the FBS landscape.

One need only look at the impending mess on the horizon in the Big 12. The Oklahoma schools and Kansas State are tied for second heading into the final week of the regular season, and a four-way logjam at the top is possible if Texas finds a way to lose to Texas Tech.

So long as the top four prevail next week matters would sort out with little difficulty, as the Longhorns would remain first and Oklahoma State would claim the second spot via a head-to-head sweep of the Sooners and Wildcats. But in future seasons with more teams and without increasing the number of conference games things are likely to get a lot more complicated around this time of year. Oklahoma and Kansas State, for example, didn’t meet this year. When teams that didn’t face each other inevitably land in tie situations, you’ll start hearing phrases like ‘record against common opponents,’ or even the dreaded ‘random draw.’ It probably won’t be long before some of these mega-conferences start tinkering with how they determine their champions once the 12-team playoff era begins.

Michigan-Ohio State is the biggest game in the history of everything

Well, we’ll say this much. The stakes are probably a bit higher than last year when both the Wolverines and Buckeyes wound up in the playoff anyway. To be sure, the loser will be considered as we laid out last week in this space, but there’s a potentially more crowded field this time. We’ll also stipulate that it’s undoubtedly the headliner of the final Saturday before conference championship week, as there’s just one other ranked matchup on the weekend docket (more on that below).

There are a lot of Thanksgiving turkeys on tap

Aside from that little tussle in Ann Arbor, the rivalry formerly known as the Civil War* between Oregon and Oregon State is the only other meeting of ranked teams on the Week 13 slate. This date on the calendar is usually reserved for a school’s biggest rival, but many of those contests this year are paper mismatches.

Crazy things can always happen in such encounters, but the traditional Thursday night start to the holiday weekend might be dubbed the Rotten Egg Bowl this time as Ole Miss will not be inclined to show mercy against Mississippi State, which has just one SEC win and is already searching for its next coach. Trophies can’t make every game better. The Territorial Cup showdown between surging Arizona and rebuilding Arizona State looks like another blowout in waiting, and the Old Oaken Bucket battle between Indiana and Purdue will bring their respective miserable seasons to a merciful end.

But there might yet be fireworks in these games, especially for teams trying to achieve bowl eligibility at the expense of their archrivals. These include South Carolina (maybe), Florida (unlikely), and Washington State (not happening). But we know we’ll watch anyway after enjoying our feasting. It’s what we do, right?

*It’s still the Civil War as far as we’re concerned.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Much of the debate about the postseason in college football is focused on the teams fighting to reach the College Football Playoff. But that is not the only drama in the final weeks of the season.

There are also the races at the bottom of the bowl picture as teams fight to extend their seasons. And that plays out with teams fighting to gain the necessary six wins to become eligible.

It’s a complex puzzle to sort out through the first 12 weeks. However, what was once fuzzy throughout the season has become clearer entering the final games for most of the teams hoping to become bowl-eligible.

How many available bowl spots are remaining?

The are 41 bowl games this postseason, which does not include the College Football Playoff championship game. That means 82 teams in the Bowl Subdivision must finish with six or more wins to fill all the spots.

Here’s the current situation involving the 130 teams eligible to play in the postseason.

► 67 teams have at least six wins.

► 39 teams cannot reach six wins.

► That leaves 24 teams capable of grabbing one of the 15 remaining spots.

The games that will decide who is bowl-eligible

In an interesting wrinkle to things, none of the 24 teams still capable of earning a bowl game play each other. That means there are two dozen matchups on the Week 13 schedule will play a role in what postseason picture looks like.

Tuesday, Nov. 21

Eastern Michigan (5-6) at Buffalo, ESPN2, 7:30 p.m. ET

Thursday, Nov. 23

Mississippi at Mississippi State (5-6), ESPN, 7:30 p.m. ET

Friday, Nov. 24

Nebraska (5-6) vs. Iowa, CBS, noon ET

TCU (5-6) at Oklahoma, Fox, noon ET

Toledo at Central Michigan (5-6), ESPNU, noon ET

Utah State (5-6) at New Mexico, CBSSN, 3:30 p.m. ET

Saturday, Nov. 25

Houston at Central Florida (5-6), FS1, noon ET

Navy* (5-5) at SMU, ESPN2, noon ET

Northern Illinois (5-6) at Kent State, noon ET

Florida Atlantic at Rice (5-6), 1 p.m. ET

Georgia State at Old Dominion (5-6), 2 p.m. ET

Wake Forest at Syracuse (5-6), CW, 2 p.m. ET

Louisiana-Monroe at Louisiana-Lafayette (5-6), 3 p.m. ET

Arkansas State at Marshall (5-6), 3:30 p.m. ET

Brigham Young (5-6) at Oklahoma State, ABC, 3::30 p.m. ET

Illinois (5-6) at Northwestern, Big Ten, 3:30 p.m. ET

Virginia Tech (5-6) at Virginia, ACC, 3:30 p.m. ET

Wisconsin at Minnesota (5-6), FS1, 3:30 p.m. ET

Washington State (5-6) at Washington, Fox, 4 p.m. ET

Florida State at Florida (5-6), ESPN, 7 p.m. ET

Charlotte at South Florida (5-6), ESPNU, 7:30 p.m. ET

Clemson at South Carolina (5-6), SEC, 7:30 p.m. ET

California (5-6) at UCLA, ESPN, 10:30 p.m. ET

Colorado State (5-6) at Hawaii, 11 p.m. ET

* Navy will play Army on Dec. 9. That game comes six days after the bowl matchups are set, so they must win Saturday to be included on the bowl schedule.

What happens if there are not enough six-win teams for all the bowls?

Given that several teams are playing ranked opponents and others are big underdogs, it seems likely that there will be vacant spots to fill.

NCAA rules state that teams during the transition process from the Championship Subdivision to the Bowl Subdivision can fill available openings if they win six games. James Madison and Jacksonville State have 10 and eight victories, respectively, and will be next in line should there be enough losses among the five-wins team this weekend.

What about if there are more spots to fill after James Madison and Jacksonville State are added? Available spots will be allocated to five-win teams based on the APR scores reported for the 2021-22 academic year.

Here are the schools with the highest APR scores that have already achieved five wins or could reach five wins this season.

Minnesota — 992

Wake Forest (must beat Syracuse to get five wins) — 992

Rice — 987

Mississippi State — 985

Central Florida — 984

South Carolina — 983

Michigan State (must beat Penn State to get five wins) — 982

Ball State (must beat Miami (Ohio) to get five wins) — 980

What teams are bowl-eligible or already out?

Note: A team out cannot reach five wins and qualify by APR.

American Athletic:

In: Tulane, SMU, Texas-San Antonio, Memphis.

Out: Charlotte, Temple, Tulsa, East Carolina.

ACC

In: Florida State, Louisville, North Carolina State, North Carolina, Clemson, Boston College, Duke, Georgia Tech, Miami (Fla.),

Out: Pittsburgh, Virginia.

Big 12

In: Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, Kansas, West Virginia, Iowa State, Texas Tech.

Out: Baylor, Cincinnati.

Big Ten

In: Michigan, Ohio State, Iowa, Penn State, Maryland, Northwestern, Rutgers, Wisconsin.

Out: Indiana, Purdue.

Conference USA

In: Liberty, New Mexico State, Western Kentucky.

Out: Louisiana Tech, Texas-El Paso.

Independents

In: Notre Dame.

Out: Army (has two FCS wins), Connecticut, Massachusetts.

Mid-American

In: Toledo, Miami (Ohio), Ohio, Bowling Green.

Out: Akron, Buffalo, Kent State.

Mountain West

In: UNLV, Air Force, Fresno State, Wyoming, Boise State, San Jose State

Out: Hawaii, Nevada, San Diego State.

Pac-12

In: Washington, Oregon, Arizona, Oregon State, Southern California, UCLA, Utah.

Out: Arizona State, Colorado, Stanford.

SEC

In: Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Missouri, LSU, Tennessee, Texas A&M, Auburn, Kentucky.

Out: Vanderbilt.

Sun Belt

In: Troy, Appalachian State, Coastal Carolina, Arkansas State, Georgia Southern, Georgia State, South Alabama, Texas State.

Out: Louisiana-Monroe, Southern Mississippi.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It’s not hard to imagine the future of the U.S. women’s team.

All you have to do is check out the roster for the December camp.

No Alex Morgan or Alyssa Naeher on the roster announced Monday for two games against China. No Becky Sauerbrunn, Crystal Dunn or Kelley O’Hara, either. The team is firmly in the hands of the next generation, led by Lindsey Horan, Rose Lavelle, Sophia Smith, Trinity Rodman and Naomi Girma, with first looks at NWSL Rookie of the Year Jenna Nighswonger and Korbin Albert, a 20-year-old who left college after two years to sign with Paris Saint-Germain.

Of the 26 players on the roster, 11 have fewer than five caps. There are only 11 with 25 or more caps with the USWNT, though one of those, Abby Dahlkemper, hasn’t played for the U.S. since April 2022 because of a back injury.

Now, this doesn’t mean new coach Emma Hayes has decided to turn the page on the veteran stars. (She’s not even in place yet, though interim coach Twila Kilgore said she and Hayes collaborated on the roster.) But one thing became abundantly clear during the World Cup debacle, and that was that the expiration date for the Golden Generation — World Cup titles in 2015 and 2019, and Olympic gold in 2012 — was nearing, and no matter how many youngsters former coach Vlatko Andonovski brought in, it wasn’t enough.

The USWNT needs to expand its player pool, both for next summer’s Paris Olympics and beyond. With a limited number of roster spots at every camp, something had to give.

‘I’m very confident both Emma and I know what the players that are not called into camp are capable of doing and what their value is. We simply wanted to use this roster to get more players in, to look at them and get some evaluations in a quicker period of time,’ Kilgore said.

‘It’s a great opportunity for each of them to show us why they are here. That they want to win. That they’re going to be brave. That they’re going to be creative. That they’re going to be themselves. That they can take on information quickly and apply it in a game, which is really important at the international level,’ Kilgore added. ‘And that they want to be here for the long term.’

Kilgore had already begun doing this in camps earlier this fall. Teenagers Jaedyn Shaw and Olivia Moultrie got their first call-ups, as did Chelsea’s Mia Fishel. The idea was to introduce them to the USWNT environment in low-pressure situations, Kilgore said, but also to do it in time for the new coach to have as much intel as possible on the player pool.

Again, this doesn’t mean Hayes is going to field a roster of young 20-somethings in Paris, and Kilgore said several times the veterans on this roster remain very much in the mix. Naeher is still one of the best keepers in the international game and, even at 38, Sauerbrunn is as good a center back as there is.

But Morgan, who will be 35 in Paris, has struggled to find the net lately. She has scored just three goals since she converted the penalty that lifted the USWNT to the Concacaf W Championship over Canada in July 2022, qualifying the Americans both for the World Cup and Olympics.

She could still regain the form that made her one of the world’s most dangerous players for the better part of a decade. It wasn’t even a year ago she finished second to Spain’s Alexia Putellas in voting for FIFA’s Best Women’s Player. Or maybe she’s better suited to a substitute role now, as Carli Lloyd and Abby Wambach eventually were.

‘Each and every one of them are professionals and they responded as professionals,’ Kilgore said about her conversations with the veterans not on the roster. ‘They understand we’re watching everything they do, everything matters, that they’re not out of the mix and there’s equal opportunity moving forward to make this roster.’

The trickiest balance in sports is getting the most out of top players for as long as possible but recognizing when it’s time to move on. Or time for them to have different roles. Making the calculation even harder is when players are beloved or have made such significant impacts, as the USWNT veterans have.

But that’s why Hayes is going to be the highest-paid coach in the women’s game. To make tough decisions like these, whether it’s before Paris or after. To do so, she’s going to need all the information she can get, on both the current players and their eventual replacements.

Hayes has managed at Chelsea for more than a decade, but she got her start in coaching in the United States and still keeps close tabs on the USWNT. During the interview process, U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker said it was clear she was well-versed in the team, both its current players as well as the wider talent pool.

But Hayes will not take over the USWNT until after Chelsea’s season ends in late May, giving her just two camps with the U.S. women before Paris.

‘It’s not ideal Emma can’t start with us right away,’ Crocker acknowledged. ‘But from my perspective, what was important is that we’ve got the best candidate for the long term rather than the wrong candidate for the short term.’

It makes it even more important, too, that younger players get evaluated in the national team setting now so Hayes knows exactly what she’ll have to work with when she takes over. Kilgore said she and Hayes are talking often, and their decisions are collaborative.

Kilgore also plans to spend time in London over the next six months to work with Hayes. Crocker said he’s ‘hopeful’ Hayes can be at USWNT camp next week, to meet the players if nothing else, but is trying to be respectful of her schedule and her job with Chelsea.

‘What we’ve got in both Twila and Emma is two outstanding, collaborative leaders who I know can work together (so) we can start to implement some of those changes both on the pitch and off the pitch that we want to see the team to become in the future,’ Crocker said. ‘It will be an evolving process that starts now, and you can see that from the roster that’s been picked.’

At some point, generational turnover will occur. This is a glimpse at what the USWNT might look like after it happens.

Here’s the full USWNT roster for December camp

GOALKEEPERS: Jane Campbell (Houston Dash), Aubrey Kingsbury (Washington Spirit), Casey Murphy (North Carolina Courage)

DEFENDERS: Alana Cook (OL Reign), Abby Dahlkemper (San Diego Wave FC), Tierna Davidson (Chicago Red Stars), Emily Fox (North Carolina Courage), Naomi Girma (San Diego Wave FC), Casey Krueger (Chicago Red Stars), M.A. Vignola (Angel City FC)

MIDFIELDERS: Korbin Albert (Paris Saint-Germain), Sam Coffey (Portland Thorns FC), Savannah DeMelo (Racing Louisville FC), Lindsey Horan (Olympique Lyon), Rose Lavelle (OL Reign), Olivia Moultrie (Portland Thorns FC), Jenna Nighswonger (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Emily Sonnett (OL Reign)

FORWARDS: Mia Fishel (Chelsea FC, ENG), Ashley Hatch (Washington Spirit), Midge Purce (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Trinity Rodman (Washington Spirit), Jaedyn Shaw (San Diego Wave FC), Sophia Smith (Portland Thorns FC), Alyssa Thompson (Angel City FC), Lynn Williams (NJ/NY Gotham FC)

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Rep. Jared Moskowitz, D-Fla., slammed Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., over his call to make Israeli aid conditional on its actions in Gaza, as the tensions in the Middle East continue to push a wedge between Democrats in the U.S.

Sanders, who caucuses with Democrats, released a statement over the weekend urging President Biden to force Israel into curbing its West Bank settlements and pledging no long-term blockade of Gaza before the U.S. releases aid dollars.

Moskowitz pledged that he would work to remove those conditions from the legislation if it was sent to the House of Representatives or force stricter measures on aid to Gaza. 

‘I am absolutely for humanitarian aid to Gaza. But if Bernie Sanders puts political requirements on the Aid to Israel, I will work in the House to remove those conditions or condition Aid to Gaza that requires the removal of Hamas,’ Moskowitz wrote on X over the weekend. Both Moskowitz and Sanders are Jewish.

‘Let’s not play this game. Send the aid to both,’ Moskowitz added.

Hamas militants infiltrated southern Israel on Oct. 7, brutally killing roughly 1,200 people – mainly civilians. 

Israel has responded with force, bombarding Gaza and waging an armed ground invasion. The Hamas-controlled Gazan government said over the weekend that the region’s death toll has reached 13,000 since Oct. 7.

The subject of Israel has exacerbated divisions within the Democratic Party, particularly between new progressives and the left-wing establishment.

More than 20 hardline-left Democratic lawmakers broke from their party to vote against a resolution condemning antisemitism and support for Hamas on school campuses earlier this month. A similar number of moderate Democrats later joined Republicans to censure Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., the only Palestinian American in Congress, over her statements about the war. 

‘The Netanyahu government, or hopefully a new Israeli government, must understand that not one penny will be coming to Israel from the U.S. unless there is a fundamental change in their military and political positions,’ Sanders wrote on X over the weekend.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., backed up the call for conditional aid. ‘Conditioning aid to Israel, as we do with virtually all other US allies, is a responsible course of action,’ she wrote on the platform.

‘The United States has a legal and moral responsibility to ensure that public resources do not facilitate gross violations of human rights and international law,’ Ocasio-Cortez said.

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FIRST ON FOX: Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kans., endorsed former President Trump in the 2024 presidential race on Monday, calling for an end to the ‘political primary charade.’

Marshall, an ally of Trump since the former president’s one term in office, said he is endorsing Trump to bolster the priorities of farmers, restore border security and slash inflation rates caused by the Biden administration.

‘Since the day Joe Biden stepped foot in the Oval Office, this White House declared war on American agriculture and American energy independence in pursuit of their Green New Deal agenda and electric vehicle mandates,’ Marshall said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

‘Joe Biden declared war on American sovereignty by opening our borders, ceding control to the cartels, allowing nearly 10 million illegal aliens into our country, and permitting lethal fentanyl to pour into our communities,’ he continued.

Marshall blamed Biden’s ‘absent leadership’ and said he abandoned the country’s ‘Christian values and undermined our constitutional rights.’

‘Our farmers and ranchers feed the world, and Kansans deserve a President who understands that, and a leader who values the energy Americans produce. That is why I’m endorsing President Donald Trump. While others may try to imitate him, only President Trump will put our country back on track on day one,’ he said.

‘Along with the onslaught of strangling regulations, Joe Biden declared war on our economy by unleashing a level of federal spending never seen in modern history, causing the highest inflation and interest rates that we’ve seen in decades,’ he said.

He added, ‘It’s time for the GOP to unite behind President Trump. Let’s end the political primary charade and focus on retiring Joe Biden.’

Marshall was a vocal critic against the Democrat-led impeachment hearing in 2021 following the Jan. 6 Capitol riots and voted to acquit Trump in February. At the time, he said ‘both sides of the aisle are guilty of heated rhetoric,’ regarding Jan. 6. 

‘But, equally guilty are the House Managers and the Democrats for their hypocrisy, and President Trump’s defense team painted that picture clearly,’ he said in February 2021.

The senator also supported Trump’s efforts to tighten election integrity after the contested 2020 general election. 

Marshall joins a group of a dozen Republicans in the upper chamber who have already endorsed Trump. 

Meanwhile, Trump has the support of nearly 80 Republicans in the House. On Sunday, Trump also received the backing of Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.

Trump leads the GOP nomination race with the backing of a record 62% of Republican primary voters in a new Fox News survey published last week. That translates to a roughly 50-point gap between Trump and Ron DeSantis (14%), and Nikki Haley (11%). Vivek Ramaswamy (7%), Chris Christie (3%), and Asa Hutchinson (1%) trail even further. 

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A Democrat congressman is walking back a comment he made against former President Trump over the weekend that sparked a social media firestorm.

‘Yesterday on TV, I mistakenly used the wrong word to express the importance for America that Donald Trump doesn’t become President again,’ Rep. Daniel Goldman of New York posted on X on Monday. 

‘While he must be defeated, I certainly wish no harm to him and do not condone political violence. I apologize for the poor choice of words.’

Goldman was referring to a comment he made over the weekend while discussing Trump’s actions on January 6.

‘His rhetoric is really getting dangerous,’ Goldman said during an interview with President Biden’s former press secretary Jen Psaki on her MSNBC show.

‘More and more dangerous. We saw what happened on January 6th, when he used his inflammatory rhetoric now, and his recent truth social post is incredibly, incredibly scary for anyone that might be trying to work in government. And it is just unquestionable at this point that man cannot see public office again. He is not only unfit, he is destructive to our democracy, and he has to be eliminated.’

Goldman’s comment drew criticism on social media from conservatives pointing out that the congressman was using ‘dangerous rhetoric’ himself.

‘Sometimes they slip and say the quiet part out loud,’ radio host Mike Ghallager posted on X.

‘I hope Speaker Johnson censures this nut job!!!,’ pro-Trump operative Alex Bruesewitz posted on X. 

‘By using his own ‘logic,’ Goldman should never see public office again,’ Trending Politics co-owner Collin Rugg posted on X.

Several conservatives on social media didn’t accept Goldman’s clarification including Twitchy Managing Editor Sam Janney.

‘You knew exactly what you were doing and what you were saying … you are only walking this back because you don’t like being held accountable for your own words,’ Janney posted on X. ‘We see you.’

In a statement to Fox News Digital, Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung said, ‘Democrats have been calling for violence against President Trump and his supporters since 2016.’

‘This is not new or surprising rhetoric,’ he added.

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The White House issued a brutal response Monday to what it said was the ‘inappropriate’ nickname President Biden has been given by critics of his support for Israel amid its war with Hamas terrorists.

Dubbed ‘Genocide Joe,’ Biden has increasingly become the target of far-left protests across the country, including by some in his own party accusing him of supporting an effort to wipe out Gaza and the Palestinian people. 

‘We’re not worried about nicknames and bumper stickers. I mean, it’s First Amendment free speech. The president’s focused on … making sure that we can continue to support Israel as they fight a terrible terrorist group, Hamas,’ National Security Council spokesman John Kirby initially told New York Post reporter Steven Nelson, who asked him for a response to the nickname during the White House press briefing.

Kirby then shifted his response to blast those using the term ‘genocide’ in a context outside of referring to the express goal of Hamas: the complete eradication of Jews.

‘People can say what they want on the sidewalk, and we respect that. That’s what the First Amendment is about. But this word genocide is getting thrown around in a pretty inappropriate way by lots of different folks,’ he said. 

‘What Hamas wants, make no mistake about it, is genocide. They want to wipe Israel off the map. They’ve said so publicly on more than one occasion, in fact, just recently. And they’ve said that they’re not going to stop,’ he said, adding that attacks like that of Oct. 7 would continue to happen ‘again and again and again.’

Kirby acknowledged that there had been ‘too many’ civilian deaths within Gaza as a result of military action, but that Israel was ‘not trying to wipe the Palestinian people off the map.’

‘Israel’s trying to defend itself against a genocidal terrorist threat. So if we’re going to start using that word, fine, let’s use it appropriately,’ he said.

Kirby’s comments come just over a week after tens of thousands of anti-Israel protesters descended on the White House, demanding a cease-fire in the war but refusing to denounce Hamas for its civilian-targeted brutality. 

‘Genocide Joe needs to halt his actions immediately and realize that he’s going to face massive opposition from Democrat voters next election,’ one protester told Fox News at the demonstration.

Earlier this month, Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., a member of the far-left ‘Squad,’ accused Biden of ‘complicity’ in the deaths of Palestinian children via his support for Israel.

‘Your silence is deafening. Your complicity is even worse,’ Tlaib wrote in an Instagram post directed toward Biden. ‘A whole generation of children is being wiped out in front of us.’

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Former President Donald Trump’s personal physician has released his medical report, giving the former president a clean bill of health and praising his recent weight loss and improved diet.

The report, released Monday by Dr. Bruce Aronwald, who has served as Trump’s physician since 2021, comes as concern over President Biden’s health continues to grow ahead of the 2024 presidential election, specifically regarding his age and cognitive ability. 

Trump’s physician said the former president’s performance on cognitive exams was ‘exceptional.’ The report was notably released on Biden’s 81st birthday.

‘I am pleased to report that President Trump’s overall health is excellent. His physical exams were well within the normal range and his cognitive exams were exceptional. In addition, his most recent extensive laboratory analysis remains well within normal limits and was even more favorable than prior testing in some of the most significant parameters, most likely secondary to weight reduction,’ Aronwald wrote.

He wrote that Trump’s cardiovascular studies were ‘normal,’ that all of his cancer screenings came back negative, and that he had ‘reduced his weight through an improved diet and continued daily physical activity, while maintaining a rigorous schedule.’

‘It is my opinion that President Trump is currently in excellent health, and with his continued interest in preventative health monitoring and maintenance, he will continue to enjoy a healthy active lifestyle for years to come,’ Aronwald added.

A recent NBC poll indicated 59% of registered voters have ‘major concerns’ about Biden’s physical and mental health as he eyes a second term, with an additional 27% having either ‘moderate’ or ‘minor’ concerns.

Another poll released last month found 76% of voters agreed Biden is ‘too old’ to serve another term.

Additionally, Republicans have increasingly said Biden does not have the ‘cognitive ability’ to serve another four years, including Rep. Ronny Jackson, R-Texas, the former White House physician for Presidents Obama and Trump.

‘He’s got these people that surround him that are inappropriately encouraging him to continue to run because it builds up who they are and what they do. But our border, our wars overseas, our economy, you know, it’s just a disaster right now. And he just can’t do the job. And it’s just on display every day that he’s not capable of doing this job anymore,’ Jackson warned during an appearance on Fox & Friends on Monday.

Fox News’ Taylor Penley contributed to this report.

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With the Israel-Hamas war lingering into its seventh week, the State Department was pressed Monday on how the Biden administration envisions the conflict ending and what precisely comes next. 

State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said the Palestinian people must be front and center of any decision-making process, with the ultimate goal being the establishment of an independent Palestinian state. 

‘We want to see the establishment of a Palestinian state that unites the West Bank and unites Gaza so the Palestinian people can determine their own future,’ Miller said. ‘And that is the policy we support. It’s the policy that we will try to achieve.’ 

Miller said such decisions should be imposed on the Palestinian people – neither by the United States nor Israel.

A reporter pressed Miller on his comments, noting that they appeared to be at odds with Prime Minister Netanyahu who said the Israeli military will retain security control in Gaza and remain there indefinitely. 

‘Ultimately, at the end of the conflict, there is going to have to be a larger conversation with the government of Israel, with the Palestinian people and with the other countries in the region about what the path forward is,’ Miller said. 

‘We’re very clear about what that path cannot be on the one hand – a return to Hamas governance in Gaza and having a safe haven from which to launch terrorist attacks from Israel. You’ve heard from Hamas leaders, even in the last week say they want to launch a series of October 7 again and again and again.’ 

Hamas, an Iranian-backed terrorist group, invaded Israel on October 7. More than 1,300 Israelis were killed in the attack, with thousands more wounded and many taken hostage by Hamas, and raped, tortured, and murdered. 

Hamas was voted into power by the Palestinian people in 2007 and quickly began a draconian reign of terror. In the 16 years since, Hamas has ruled the Gaza Strip with an iron fist, seeking to impose sharia law on the population.

Hamas is internationally recognized as a terror organization by Israel, the United States, the United Kingdom, the European Union and many other countries.  

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In this special edition of StockCharts TV‘s The Final Bar, Dave breaks down the technical setups on all of the Magnificent 7 stocks, addressing the balance between strong trends and overbought conditions. He answers viewer questions on investor sentiment, trailing stops, potential upside for TSLA, and the latest thinking on crude oil prices.

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