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The NWSL has more teams than ever, which makes for more kit designs than ever.

On Tuesday, Nike unveiled new uniforms for all 14 teams ahead of the 2024 season kickoff on March 16. It’s the first time in league history that each team got a fresh design.

Each club has a primary kit that celebrates is own identity with ties to the team history and city’s culture and a secondary jersey ‘inspired by the strength of the collective.’

There is lots of color among the NWSL uniforms, including splashes of blue, purple, red, orange and teal. But some uniforms rely on tried and true black and white designs.

Fans will notice there are no white shorts in the lineup. Nike said this came directly from feedback from the players that white shorts were a distraction on the pitch. This isn’t the first time white has been problematic for sports uniforms. Last year, Wimbledon relaxed its dress code so that women could wear dark-colored underwear after complaints that the traditional all-white look was problematic with periods.

Here is our ranking of the NWSL primary kits, and if we feel really strongly one way or the other about the secondary ones, you’ll know.

Which NWSL Nike kit was the best? Which ones fell flat?

1. Orlando Pride

The Orlando Pride got a true refresh. It makes sense and is fun and inviting. The primary kit is a whimsical nod to orange trees in the central Florida area with the orange colored base and green leaves woven in. It’s a stark departure from the old look, but the secondary kit stays true to the club’s roots with a purple look that’s a perfectly rich tone. Bravo.

2. Chicago Red Stars

This one’s a head-turner! The Chicago Red Stars are instantly recognizable in this cool kit. The bright blue has splashes of white in a thoughtful geometric design that ‘represents the patchwork of people and cultures that make up the city the club calls home.’ The red stars tie in nicely to the city’s flag.

3. Seattle Reign FC

Out with the old, in with the new. There were a few teams that had a rebrand, name change or are coming back to the NWSL this year. Seattle Reign FC, returning after some time as OL Reign, showed the rest of them how it’s done. Their primary kit is a super sleek design that embraces gold to connect with royalty. The color is tastefully placed on the arm bands and lettering against a deep navy backdrop. And that queen crest is just incredible.

4. San Diego Wave FC

This Nike kit screams beach and sunshine and that’s exactly what it’s supposed to do. San Diego Wave FC is a club that’s kind of in the middle in terms of legacy. Established in 2022, it doesn’t have a ton of history to celebrate, but isn’t a brand new team that needs to make a splash. They stayed true to their club identity while the rolling sunset graphics makes any fan want to attend a match ASAP.

5. New Jersey/New York Gotham FC

NJ/NY Gotham FC is a club that’s been ahead of the game in terms of style. They continue their impressive run with this primary kit. The speckled black and blue pattern is meant to emulate the big city skyline and the black sash represents the Hudson River. The color contrast pops well and the design is interesting and meaningful. Can’t ask for more than that.

6. Houston Dash

A good uniform fits into the city’s tradition while standing on its own. And that’s exactly what the Houston Dash’s primary kit does. The orange is a similar color to the MLB’s Houston Astros and the MLS’s Houston Dynamo FC. But the bubble star pattern and color gradient here make it interesting and distinct.

7. Angel City FC

This is how to do a black kit right. Angel City FC didn’t rely on their crest to be a pop of color against a boring backdrop. Instead, they added a tasteful gray wing design and brought a cool gravel texture to the top of the shirt as a ‘nod to the grit and determination needed on the road to success.’ And the secondary kit is an elegant shade of pink that further establishes their strong brand identity.

8. Kansas City Current

The Kansas City Current primary kit is fun if only because of the bright colors. They really committed to the red and teal while some other clubs washed their identity away in black. The design, which features three waves in different shades of red coming together, is meant to emulate the crest, but isn’t anything spectacular.

9. Utah Royals

The Utah Royals are coming back to the NWSL after leaving in 2020. Their new look maintains the original bright yellow and navy blue colors of their first run in the league. The primary kit has a subtle mountain design, which is a cool tribute to the mountains of the area. This kit’s not bad. Just kind of predictable.

10. Washington Spirit

The Washington Spirit’s primary kit is a multi-striped black and white pattern meant to evoke the architecture of the nation’s capital. And the secondary look is a light yellow bordering neon green, which supposedly hints at an aesthetic that will be further revealed at a later time. Not that every team in Washington, D.C. has to be red, white and blue with eagles on their uniforms, but there’s not a lot of storytelling here and the yellow is such a tease.

11. North Carolina Courage

Everything on the North Carolina Courage primary kit feels kind of literal. The triangle graphic represents the state’s region of Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill and ‘celebrates the various angles of attack the team throws at its opponents on the pitch.’ So that means Syracuse men’s basketball should have zones on their uniforms, right? There’s also a ‘Be>Seem’ slogan on the bottom, to represent the state motto, ‘to be rather than to seem,’ which feels forced for the digital age. And the pink secondary kit screams Pepto Bismol and is not fresh and fun at all.

12. Racing Louisville FC

Don’t get me wrong. Purple is a fantastic color (thus why the Orlando Pride get bonus points for their secondary kit and the Utah Jazz won our NBA City Edition jersey rankings). But Racing Louisville’s Nike kit doesn’t feel like a soccer jersey that would motivate anyone to race any harder across the pitch. It feels like a preppy sweater from ‘Mean Girls.’

13. Portland Thorns

It’s understandable if the Portland Thorns wanted a more dramatic redesign to give them a fresh start because of the many controversies surrounding the club the past few years. But the black and red was so so good. On the new primary kit, which has a bright red base, there’s some thorn details around the arm and neck that feel more ‘Passion of the Christ’ than fierce soccer team.

14. Bay FC

A team’s inaugural year is a chance to really make a splash and establish an identity. So Bay FC, who is entering its first year in the NWSL, had a tremendous opportunity. The Bay Area has so so much sports history with the San Francisco 49ers, Golden State Warriors and Oakland Roots, a USL Championship club that really embraces the community. Bay FC was clearly relying on the pop of ‘poppy’ orange here, but to simply put the crest on a plain black jersey is so disappointing!

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NHL trade deadline is rapidly approaching.

So the Dallas Stars’ acquisition of defenseman Chris Tanev from the Calgary Flames on Wednesday night could be a sign that things are starting to pick up again. There had been a relative lull following two significant deals by the Vancouver Canucks and Winnipeg Jets during the All-Star break.

Follow this tracker for news and analysis on deals that have happened this season in the months leading up to the NHL trade deadline. A separate live blog will be posted on the March 8 deadline day.

TRADE DEADLINE: What do playoff contenders need?

Feb. 28: Dallas Stars acquire Calgary Flames defenseman Chris Tanev in three-team trade

The Stars give up 20-year-old defense prospect Artem Grushnikov, a 2024 second-round pick and a conditional 2026 third-rounder for Chris Tanev and the rights to UMass goalie Cole Brady. Tanev, 34, a pending unrestricted free agent, is valued for his defensive play and ranks second in the league in blocked shots. He’ll help steady a Stars team that has given 23 goals during a 1-4-2 slide. He’s also a right-hand shot, important to the Stars, whose defense is filled with left-hand shots. Brady was drafted by the New Jersey Devils in 2019. The Stars sent a 2026 fourth-round pick to the Devils to retain half of Tanev’s $4.5 million salary. The Flames trade was the second in a month after they earlier sent Elias Lindholm to the Canucks.

Feb. 22: Columbus Blue Jackets, Pittsburgh Penguins make trade

The Pittsburgh Penguins acquired forward Emil Bemstrom from the Columbus Blue Jackets for forward Alex Nylander and a conditional sixth-round pick. Both players are pending restricted free agents and likely could benefit from a new opportunity. Nylander, 25, whose brother William stars for the Toronto Maple Leafs, has spent most of the season in the American Hockey League. Bemstrom, 24, has played 32 games this season, recording 11 points. His career best was 22 points last season. Nylander’s career best was 26 points in 2019-20 with the Chicago Blackhawks.

Feb. 2: Winnipeg Jets acquire Sean Monahan from Montreal Canadiens

The Winnipeg Jets gave up a 2024 first-round draft pick and a 2027 conditional third-round pick for pending unrestricted free agent center Sean Monahan. The move came two days after the Vancouver Canucks acquired center Elias Lindholm.

Monahan, 29, healthy this season after recent injury-filled campaigns, had 35 points in 49 games – his best scoring pace since 2018-19. Those numbers included 16 power-play points and two short-handed goals. He had 11 points in his last seven games before the trade and had won 55% of his faceoffs.

Jan. 31: Vancouver Canucks acquire Elias Lindholm from Calgary Flames

The Vancouver Canucks showed they are going for it and the Calgary Flames showed they’ll be sellers. All-Star forward Elias Lindholm, a pending unrestricted free agent, is a strong, two-way center who will boost the No. 1 overall Canucks’ top six forward group and help their middle-ranked penalty kill.

The Flames get forward Andrei Kuzmenko, prospects Hunter Brzustewicz and Joni Jurmo, a 2024 first-round pick and a conditional fourth-round pick. Kuzmenko, who has been a healthy scratch at times this season and had only eight goals, will benefit the Flames if he rediscovers his 39-goal form from last season.

The Flames still have to make decisions on pending unrestricted free agents Noah Hanifin and Chris Tanev before the deadline.

Jan. 25: Minnesota Wild, Pittsburgh Penguins make minor trade

The Minnesota Wild acquired minor league defenseman Will Butcher from the Pittsburgh Penguins for minor league forward Maxim Cajkovic. Though Butcher has 275 games of NHL experience and Wild defenseman Jared Spurgeon is out for the season, Butcher will stay in the American Hockey League.

Jan. 8: Anaheim Ducks, Philadelphia Flyers make trade

The rights to Cutter Gauthier, 19, voted the top forward at the world junior championships for gold-medal-winning USA, are heading to Anaheim for defenseman Jamie Drysdale and a 2025 second-round pick. Both players were top-six draft picks. Flyers general manager Daniel Briere said the Boston College forward wasn’t interested in signing with Philadelphia, and he called Drysdale, 21, a ‘pretty special’ and ‘exciting’ player. Drysdale is in the first year of a three-year contract but missed all but eight games last season and had played only 10 games this season because of injuries. He had 32 points in his lone full season.

Dec. 15: Seattle Kraken acquire forward Tomas Tatar from Colorado Avalanche

The Avalanche receive a fifth-round pick in the trade. The Kraken rank near the bottom of the league in scoring, and they’re hoping for the Tomas Tatar of previous seasons, not this season. He’s a seven-time 20-goal scorer who has just one goal this season after not getting a free agent contract until September. But he’s a veteran of 810 games with 212 career goals, including 50 on the power play. He’ll help Seattle deal with injuries among its forwards. The team placed Jaden Schwartz on long-term injured reserve.

In a depth trade, the San Jose Sharks acquired center Jack Studnicka from the Vancouver Canucks in exchange for defenseman Nick Cicek and a sixth-round pick.

Dec. 8: New York Islanders acquire St. Louis Blues’ Robert Bortuzzo

The New York Islanders acquired defenseman Robert Bortuzzo from the St. Louis Blues in exchange for a seventh-round pick. The trade was announced after the team said Ryan Pulock (lower body) was going on the injured list, joining fellow defensemen Adam Pelech and Sebastian Aho. Bortuzzo, 34, won a Stanley Cup with the Blues in 2019 but had been limited to four games this season and often was a healthy scratch. He’ll be an unrestricted free agent this summer.

Dec. 6: Buffalo Sabres acquire Columbus Blue Jackets’ Eric Robinson

The Buffalo Sabres acquired winger Eric Robinson from the Columbus Blue Jackets in exchange for a conditional seventh-round pick in 2025. The fourth-liner had 82 points in 266 career games, including one goal in seven games this season at the time of the trade.

Nov. 30: Vancouver Canucks acquire defenseman Nikita Zadorov

The Vancouver Canucks got stronger on defense by adding rugged 6-foot-6, 248-pound defenseman Nikita Zadorov from the Calgary Flames. The Canucks gave up the fifth-round pick they acquired a day earlier in the Anthony Beauvillier trade, plus a 2026 third-round pick. Calgary’s return doesn’t seem high for a player who led the Flames in hits and is going to a division rival, but Zadorov had requested a trade and is a pending unrestricted free agent. The Flames, who have pushed closer to a playoff position after a tough start, also have forward Elias Lindholm and defensemen Noah Hanifin and Chris Tanev in the final years of their contracts.

Nov. 28: Chicago Blackhawks trade for Anthony Beauvillier after waiving Corey Perry

The Chicago Blackhawks placed Corey Perry on unconditional waivers in order to terminate his contract. The team said it determined that Perry ‘engaged in conduct that is unacceptable, and in violation of both the terms of his Standard Player’s Contract and the Blackhawks’ internal policies intended to promote professional and safe work environments.’ The Beauvillier trade happened later. The Vancouver Canucks, who acquired Beauvillier last season in the Bo Horvat trade, will receive a fifth-round draft pick. More important for Vancouver, the Blackhawks take on his entire $4.15 million cap hit, giving them flexibility before the trade deadline. Beauvillier, a winger like Perry, had two goals and six assists in 22 games this season.

Perry later issued an apology for his ‘inappropriate and wrong’ behavior.

Nov. 8: Minnesota Wild trade Calen Addison to San Jose Sharks, acquire Zach Bogosian from Tampa Bay Lightning

Addison was sent to the San Jose Sharks for forward Adam Raska and a 2026 fifth-round draft pick. The defenseman is a power play specialist, but he is unreliable in his own zone. That led to him being a healthy scratch often down the stretch last season. With the Wild getting Jared Spurgeon back soon from injury (he was activated from long-term injured reserve), the power play opportunities will dwindle. Addison will be more valuable to the Sharks, who dealt Erik Karlsson last summer. He will be a restricted free agent at season’s end.

Bogosian lacks Addison’s offense, but the veteran takes care of his end of the ice. He’s a right-handed shot, like Addison.

“He’s a big guy,’ Minnesota general manager Bill Guerin told reporters. ‘He still skates well. He brings heaviness. He brings some grit and we need that.”

The trade buys the Lightning a little bit of salary cap breathing room. Bogosian, in the final season of a three-year contract, has a $850,000 cap hit.

Oct. 10: Carolina Hurricanes acquire forward Callahan Burke from Colorado Avalanche for defenseman Caleb Jones

The Hurricanes loaded up on defense this offseason and Jones was the odd man out. Both players will play for the American Hockey League’s Colorado Eagles.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A social media influencer is suing Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill for “violently charging at her during a ‘friendly football lesson,’ per the Miami Herald.

According to the lawsuit filed in Broward County (Florida) circuit court, Hill is alleged to have broken Sophie Hall’s leg last summer while the two participated in football drills at Hill’s residence.

According to the lawsuit, she caused Hill to be pushed backwards during one of the drills, which caused “laughter” from the witnesses presented. The incident allegedly angered Hill. Shortly after during one of the plays, Hill “violently and with great force” charged into the woman, per court documents.

Representatives for Hill did not immediately respond to USA TODAY Sports’ request for comment.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Hill is listed as 5-foot-10, 191 pounds on the Dolphins official website.

Last July, Hill reached a settlement to resolve a June incident in which he was accused of striking an employee at a Miami marina.

Hill is coming off a 2023 season that saw him lead the NFL with 1,799 receiving yards. He also tied a league-high with 13 touchdown receptions. Hill is a five-time first-team All-Pro and he’s made the Pro Bowl in all eight of his NFL seasons.

The Dolphins acquired Hill in a March 2022 trade with the Kansas City Chiefs.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The infamous Kansas City Chiefs superfan ‘ChiefsAholic’ pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday to charges related to a string of bank robberies in seven states, and he could face up to 50 years in prison.

Xaviar Babudar, who was known to don a werewolf costume at Chiefs games and had a large social media presence among fans, admitted to stealing more than $800,000 from bank robberies throughout the Midwest in recent years, and then using the stolen money to place bets on Chiefs games. The 29 year old plead guilty to one count of money laundering, one count of transporting stolen property across state lines and one count of bank robbery.

Babudar faces a prison sentence of up to 50 years without parole. His sentencing is scheduled for July 10.

‘ChiefsAholic’ charges

The bank robberies Babudar admitted to began in March 2022, and he stole hundreds of thousands of dollars in several states that year. After he was Oklahoma in December 2022, he was released on bond in February 2023.

All things Chiefs: Latest Kansas City Chiefs news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

In June 2022, prior to the start of the 2022 NFL season, prosecutors said Babudar placed $10,000 on two bets at a casino in Illinois, one on Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes to win Super Bowl 57 MVP, and another one on the Chiefs winning the Super Bowl. After Kansas City defeated Philadelphia, Babudar won $100,000 off the bets he placed and was mailed a check in March 2023. When Babudar received his winnings, he cut off his ankle monitor and fled Oklahoma. He was eventually arrested in Sacramento, California, on July 7.

“His violent crime spree across the Midwest and beyond traumatized bank employees and victimized financial institutions in seven states,” U.S. Attorney Teresa Moore said in a statement. “The defendant tried to conceal hundreds of thousands of dollars in stolen cash by using it to gamble online and at casinos, but the odds caught up with him. With today’s conviction, he will be held accountable for the full scope of his criminal conduct, including his attempt to flee from justice.”

As part of the plea agreement, Babudar must pay $532,675 in restitution to the victim financial institutions. He also has to forfeit any property he obtained through money laundering, which includes an autographed painting of Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes that he purchased at an auction.

Babudar’s attorney, Matthew Merryman, told reporters outside the courthouse that the plea deal reduces the charges from 20 to three, according to ESPN.

‘Today was a big day for Xaviar Babudar,’ Merryman said. ‘He took responsibility for his actions. He stood up in court, humble and repentant, and admitted what he had done. … Moving from 20 charges down to three charges, it was an opportunity. Xaviar Babudar would never physically harm anyone.’

Officials said Babudar had lived a ‘nomadic existence’ through the Kansas City area prior to his arrest.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Caitlin Clark is the best scorer in women’s basketball this season. And now, she’s also the best scorer in the history of women’s NCAA basketball. 

On Feb. 15 vs. Michigan, Clark broke the record set in 2017 by Washington’s Kelsey Plum when, fittingly, Clark hit a logo 3 with 7:48 left in the first quarter. She finished with a career-high 49 points, and congratulations poured in from all over the sports world.

There are still other records to break: Clark is on pace to top the men’s scoring record, set by Pete Maravich in 1970 (3,667 points) in just three seasons, back before the 3-point line existed. 

On Feb. 28, in a blowout win over Minnesota, Clark passed Lynette Woodard, who set the all-time women’s college scoring record at Kansas from 1977-81 when she scored 3,649 points for the Jayhawks. The NCAA didn’t run women’s basketball back then, which means Woodard’s record has been confined to the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) record books. 

Both records would be impressive feats for the senior All-American who led Iowa to the national championship game in April after being named the consensus national player of the year. Clark is expected to be the 2024 national player of the year, too. 

How many points did Caitlin Clark score in Iowa’s last game?

at Minnesota, Feb. 28: Caitlin Clark notched her second consecutive triple-double in Iowa’s 108-60 win at Minnesota, as she tallied 33 points, 12 assists and 10 rebounds. It was the 17th triple-double of her career.

How many career points has Caitlin Clark scored?

Caitlin Clark has 3,650 career points (and counting!) after scoring 33 at Minnesota.

How far is Caitlin Clark from the scoring record?

Caitlin Clark’s next game on TV?

Clark and Iowa will return to the court on Sunday when they host No. 2 Ohio State — which upset them earlier this year — for Senior Day. Tip is set for 1 p.m. ET, and the game will be broadcast on Fox.

Iowa’s schedule the rest of the season:

Sunday, March 3 vs. Ohio State, 1 p.m. on FOX
March 6-10, Big Ten Tournament in Minneapolis, times and TV vary

What is Caitlin Clark’s shooting percentage?

In a word: impressive. Clark is currently connecting on 46.9% of her shots and 39.5% from 3-point range, eye-popping when you consider the attention she demands from defenses. Her ability to score consistently from long-range is especially impressive considering that she takes so many 3s from 25 feet or deeper (the college 3-point line is 22 feet, 1.75 inches).

How many points does Caitlin Clark average per game?

Through 28 games in the 2023-24 season, Clark is averaging 32.2 points. Over her career, she’s averaged 28.3 points.

One of the most impressive parts of Clark’s game is that she’s averaged more points each season. Here’s how it breaks down:

Freshman year: 26.6 points
Sophomore year: 27.0 points
Junior year: 27.8 points
Senior year: 32.2 points

What is Caitlin Clark’s highest-scoring game?

Clark’s highest-scoring game came on Feb. 16, 2024, when she dropped 49 points vs. Michigan in Iowa’s 106-89 win. It wasn’t just her single-game career high, but also a program record for single game scoring. Additionally, she handed out 13 assists and grabbed five rebounds, the 58th double-double of her career.

Caitlin Clark game log

Here’s a breakdown of Clark’s scoring this season for the Hawkeyes:

at Minnesota, 2/28/24: 33 points
vs. Illinois, 2/25/24: 24 points
at Indiana, 2/22/24: 24 points
vs. Michigan, 2/15/24: 49 points (career-high)
at Nebraska, 2/11/24: 31 points
vs. Penn State, 2/8/24: 27 points
at Maryland, 2/3/24: 38 points
at Northwestern, 1/31/24: 35 points
vs. Nebraska, 1/27/2024: 38 points
at Ohio State, 1/21/2024: 45 points
vs. Wisconsin, 1/16/2024: 32 points
vs. Indiana, 1/13/2024: 30 points
at Purdue, 1/10/2024: 26 points
at Rutgers, 1/5/2024: 29 points
vs. Michigan State, 1/2/2024: 40 points
vs. Minnesota, 12/30/2023: 35 points
vs. Loyola Chicago, 12/21/2023: 35 points
vs. Cleveland State, 12/16/2023: 38 points
at Wisconsin, 12/10/2023: 28 points
vs. Iowa State, 12/6/2023: 35 points
vs. Bowling Green, 12/2/2023: 24 points
vs. Kansas State, 11/26/2023: 32 points
vs. Florida Gulf Coast, 11/25/2023: 21 points
vs. Purdue Fort Wayne, 11/24/2023: 29 points
vs. Drake, 11/19/2023: 35 points
vs. Kansas State, 11/16/2023: 24 points
at UNI, 11/12/2023: 24 points
vs. Virginia Tech, 11/9/2023: 44 points
vs. FDU, 11/6/2023: 28 points

Who is Pete Maravich, NCAA’s all-time leading scorer?

The NCAA’s all-time leading scorer, ‘Pistol’ Pete Maravich of LSU, was a shooting, dribbling and passing whiz who dominated the college game during his three seasons in Baton Rouge.

The son of Tigers coach Press Maravich averaged an astounding 44.2 points per game for his career, finishing with an NCAA record 3,667 – a total that Iowa women’s star Caitlin Clark has a chance to surpass this season.

Unlike Clark, Maravich did not have the advantage of the 3-point shot, which was universally implemented by the NCAA for the 1987 season. He also accumulated his record-setting point total in just three seasons of college basketball.

Who is Lynette Woodard, women’s college basketball’s all-time leading scorer?

Woodard is a Wichita, Kansas native and after her high school playing days, she arrived at the University of Kansas in 1977.

Woodard was the captain and second-leading scorer for the United States as Team USA took the gold medal in basketball at the 1984 Olympic games in Los Angeles. A year later, she became the first woman ever to play for the Harlem Globetrotters.

When Woodard started playing college basketball, the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women was the governing body for women’s college sports. The NCAA did not start sponsoring women’s sports until 1982, holding the first NCAA women’s tournament that season.

Because Woodard’s 3,639 career points at Kansas predates the NCAA’s sponsor of women’s sports, her stats and records are not found or recognized in the NCAA’s official record books.

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House Republicans are preparing to unveil what they call the ‘strongest’ anti-Chinese government bill in U.S. history Thursday.

If passed, it would dramatically curtail trade with China in areas critical to national security, including telecommunications, pharmaceuticals and military technology.

On the cultural front, the bill would establish avenues for the promotion of U.S.-backed ideals and points critical of Beijing’s ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) within China’s own borders.

Republican Study Committee (RSC) Chairman Kevin Hern, R-Okla., is leading the proposal, the Countering Communist China Act, which is being promoted by his 175-member group.

‘We must treat the CCP like the threat they are and use every tool at our disposal to combat their influence in our schools and our government,’ Hern told Fox News Digital.

‘This bill targets the CCP in a comprehensive and vigorous way, putting American safety and economic security first. It’s the strongest legislation against the CCP ever introduced to Congress, and for good reason.’

Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C., RSC’s National Security and Foreign Policy Task Force chairman, told Fox News Digital, ‘The CCP dictatorship in China run by Xi Jinping threatens global security, endangers our allies and is destroying the future of the people of China.’

The bill would restrict outbound investments in Chinese technology companies, while also placing trade restrictions on Beijing-backed companies dealing with military tech and surveillance.

It would also call for expanded U.S. production in supply chains dealing with medicine and critical minerals, both of which are heavily dominated by China.

The bill would not fully sever U.S.-China trade, however. Trade in sectors unrelated to national security, such as agricultural goods and toys, is not covered by the proposed restrictions.

Hern’s comprehensive legislation is also aimed at addressing the fentanyl crisis by levying sanctions on Chinese officials and entities linked to the international flow of the lethal drug into the U.S. It also calls for empowering U.S. citizens to sue Chinese government officials after the fentanyl death of a loved one.

Amid the restrictions, the bill also seeks to promote pro-democracy viewpoints to both people in China and the Chinese-speaking diaspora. 

A summary of the bill obtained by Fox News Digital called for the formation of ‘new Mandarin Chinese language social media accounts, radio stations, videos, etc. to amplify the voices of Chinese people as they highlight CCP human rights abuses, and fight for democracy.’

It would be a significant initiative given China’s crackdown on information within its borders, including internet restrictions on content critical of the CCP.

U.S.-China relations, especially on trade, have suffered from rising geopolitical tensions. They primarily stem from Beijing’s aggression in the South China Sea, both countries’ relationship with Taiwan and longstanding allegations of intellectual property theft by CCP-backed entities.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Households are hitting pause on their tub-to-shower conversion plans and buying new shower curtains instead.

After a pandemic-era renovation craze, the nation’s two largest home improvement retailers say customers are spending less on big projects in favor of cheaper do-it-yourself fixes.

Lowe’s said this week that it’s seeing shoppers cut back on kitchen and bathroom purchases and becoming more cautious about buying big-ticket appliances.

“Those who did engage in home improvement activities took on smaller, nondiscretionary projects with a heightened focus on value,” Lowe’s CEO Marvin Ellison told investors when the company reported its fourth-quarter earnings Tuesday. Sales dropped 6.2% compared to a year ago, which the retailer blamed on “persistent inflation and a stagnant housing market.”

A week earlier, Home Depot, the largest U.S. home improvement chain, reported its own sales dip, declining 3.5% in the fourth quarter from the year before.

“Major home renovation projects are on hold as consumers watch their finances, but they still have an appetite for lower-cost improvements they can do themselves,” said Joe Derochowski, home industry adviser at the market data company Circana.

Rising prices appear to be the main reason for consumers’ home renovation pullback. Circana data shows retail sales revenue for kitchen and bath projects declined just 1% from 2020 to 2023 — but unit sales were down 25% over that period, suggesting customers’ budgets are stretching across fewer items thanks to inflation.

The pace of consumer price increases has slowed dramatically, with the annual rate landing just above 3% last month after peaking over 9% in mid-2022. But after three straight months of improvement, consumer confidence ticked down in February, with a slight dip in household expectations for making large purchases in the next six months.

Home improvement spending has been cooling for months, Lowe’s and Home Depot have said, after a frenzy to upgrade both newly purchased homes and those where people suddenly found themselves spending more time together during Covid lockdowns.

But while the action has died down, households appear to be deferring, not ditching, their more ambitious renovation projects.

They didn’t imagine that a bathroom might cost 20, 30 grand to remodel.

Contractor Emmanuel Forge

Home Depot Chief Financial Officer Richard McPhail told analysts last week that business is dragging “at a lesser degree than we faced in 2023,” adding that “our market is on its way back to normal demand conditions.”

Derochowski expects many consumers to revisit their pricier plans later in 2024. “There is pent-up demand that will bring opportunity for spending on larger home improvement projects over the coming year as the economy improves,” he said.

Emmanuel Forge, a traveling contractor who posts home-renovation advice on TikTok and Instagram under his Remodel School brand, said he’s had no trouble finding work lately. But he said many homeowners underestimate how much projects cost, and some abandon their aspirations after doing the math.

“They didn’t imagine that a bathroom might cost 20, 30 grand to remodel,” Forge said. “They thought it might be five grand and a weekend or two.”

Contractors’ and home improvement retailers’ businesses are closely tied to the housing market.

As 30-year fixed mortgage rates dipped below 3% in 2020, existing home sales soared to an adjusted annual peak rate of 6.6 million, according to the National Association of Realtors. Americans poured money into fixing up their properties at the same time. Comparable sales skyrocketed 29% at Lowe’s and 25% at Home Depot in the fourth quarter of 2020.

But as the Federal Reserve lifted interest rates to more-than-20-year highs to quell inflation, mortgage rates rose, too. By the end of last year, 30-year rates flirted with 8%, cooling existing home sales to an annual rate of around 4 million, as more would-be buyers held back. Fewer home sales means fewer homeowners looking to renovate.

Materials costs have risen in recent years, driven up by the supply chain snags of 2021 and 2022, and labor costs have soared as well. Average hourly earnings for specialty trade contractors jumped 16% from December 2020 to December 2023, keeping pace with the increases all workers saw during that period, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The higher costs are one reason Forge said he could see homeowners opting not only for smaller projects but ones they can tackle on their own.

“Maybe instead of them buying $3,000 of cabinets to install themselves, they’re just going to paint them with $300 of paint,” he said.

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Lawyers for Sam Bankman-Fried, the former head of the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX, have requested a sentence of just five to six years in prison in the wake of his conviction last year on seven counts of fraud.

U.S. probation officials have recommended a sentence of 100 years for Bankman-Fried’s role in orchestrating what prosecutors described as an elaborate, multibillion-dollar fraud. He is slated to be sentenced March 28.

But in a 98-page memo filed Tuesday, Bankman-Fried’s lawyers portray him as suffering from an array of neurological and personality issues that could not be overcome, turning him into a ‘tragic’ figure.

‘Sam presents at times as a paradox,’ the lawyers write. ‘Not because he is deliberately deceiving or conniving, but rather because that is how he is ‘wired’ as a human. He has an exceptional IQ, but difficulty with conventional styles of communication, especially around emotion.’

They add that those who know Bankman-Fried know he is ‘selfless, altruistic, and cares about those less fortunate.’

‘Well before … FTX ever existed, Sam committed his life to philanthropy, pledging to earn money and give it away, with the goal of ‘helping the world’s poorest people,” the lawyers write, citing another statement made by a Bankman-Fried character witness.

Bankman-Fried wasn’t motivated by greed or material concerns, the lawyers write — a notion seemingly belied by the lavish style Bankman-Fried and his colleagues enjoyed in the Bahamas while running FTX that included living in a $35 million penthouse.

The lawyers further allege that the loss to FTX customers was ultimately zero — and indeed, representatives for the bankruptcy estate of FTX said earlier this month that they expect to fully repay customers and creditors with legitimate claims.

Bankman-Fried is currently being held at a detention facility in New York City. Citing the statement of a fellow inmate, the lawyers say Bankman-Fried’s neurodiversity and lack of physical stature, plus the high-profile nature of his crimes, may put him at risk of physical harm in prison.

‘Sam being the ‘least physically intimidating person … has and will lead to him being frequently targeted for hazing, harassment, and assault more so than the average inmate,’ the lawyers write.

Prosecutors have until March 15 to respond to the memo.

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If you’re a TSA PreCheck member traveling on United Airlines via Chicago’s O’Hare or Los Angeles international airports, life just got a bit easier.

United recently updated its website to show that ‘Touchless ID’ technology, which lets users go through security just by scanning their faces and without having to show physical IDs or boarding passes, is now available at those two major hubs for TSA PreCheck users.

In addition, United passengers at O’Hare can use their faces at a new bag-drop shortcut.

To enroll in United’s Touchless ID, passengers need to scan their passports and add their Known Traveler Numbers in the United app. They then need to check in for their flights on the mobile app to opt in and give United permission to use their facial scans as IDs.

Once at the airport, passengers would only need to scan their faces at new Touchless ID kiosks.

For now, Touchless ID at United is available only for customers on single-passenger reservations who are at least 18 years old. And the bag-drop feature at O’Hare is still in a testing phase, meaning agents will still check IDs.

United says it plans to continue rolling out Touchless ID to more bag-drop counters, security checkpoints and boarding gates.

Delta Air Lines has already deployed similar technology at its hubs in Atlanta and Detroit and at New York’s John F. Kennedy and LaGuardia international airports.

Clint Henderson, the managing editor of The Points Guy travel website, there are already dedicated check-in lanes for touchless at those airports for Delta flyers.

“The agents working at the TSA PreCheck and Clear lines told me to use a new special lane for biometrics that allowed me to skip ahead of both the regular PreCheck and the separate Clear lanes,” Henderson said in a TPG post. “After one minute, the TSA agent waved me over. I simply showed my face in front of a camera, and the agent told me to go ahead to the screening machines. There was no wait.”

In November, the Department of Homeland Security, the TSA’s parent agency, announced it hopes to roll out an entirely ‘self-service’ screening option that bypasses TSA agents entirely. It involves the use of ‘pods’ that combine facial screening and baggage scanning; the program is being tested at Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas.

On its website, TSA says it does not store images captured by facial recognition technology ‘except for a limited period of time for testing and evaluation purposes.’ It says it retains personal identifying information only for as long as is necessary to fulfill the specified purposes of its biometric technology pilots.

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WK Kellogg CEO Gary Pilnick’s cost-saving suggestion of eating cereal for dinner has yet to win over consumers who are feeling the strain of grocery prices.

Pilnick posed buying cereal for dinner to save money on groceries in an appearance on CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” Feb. 21. He was responding to a question regarding how high food prices are and how more than 11% of disposable consumer income goes toward purchasing it, according to the most recent data available at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. A clip from the interview is making the rounds online and has been met with what dissenters see as the irony in Pilnick’s proposal.

“The cereal category has always been quite affordable and it tends to be a great destination when consumers are under pressure,” the cereal company’s CEO said.

“If you think about the cost of cereal for a family versus what they might otherwise do, that’s going to be much more affordable,” he added. “We talk about making sure that we have the right pack at the right price in the right place. So having a different sized pack that’ll have a different price point, that’ll take some pressure off the consumer while they’re shopping. So, those are some of the things that we’re doing. But, in general, the cereal category is a place that a lot of folks might come to because the price of a bowl of cereal with milk and with fruit is less than a dollar. So you can imagine why a consumer under pressure might find that to be a good place to go.”

As this portion of the interview circulates online, social media users ripped into Pilnick for suggesting what they feel he would never regularly do himself.

“Greedflation is forcing families to make choices like eating cereal for dinner to save money. Kellogg’s CEO is bragging about it while they show the huge climb in corporate profits that helped create the problem in the first place. F— this sh–,” a critic posted on X.

Pilnick’’s annual salary is $1 million plus up to $4.4 million more in bonuses as of September 2023, per a filing with the SEC. The company reported $651 million in net sales as of Dec. 30, the end of the last quarter.

“Meanwhile, he’s eating at 5 star restaurants every night and when he isn’t, his personal chef cooks him dinner. Absolutely disgusting. Eat. The. Rich,” one person commented on an Instagram post of the clip.

“People: we don’t have dinner, we starving. CEO: then just eat cereals. People: but they expensive. CEO: We hear you! we’re making the packs smaller, so it costs less,” another person commented on the YouTube video.

“Im sorry but who and what ceo would even have the confidence to say something like this? I’m 30 something and cereal for dinner isn’t nutrition. Low income does this for something vs nothing,” another person wrote under the YouTube video.

WK Kellogg did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In the full CNBC interview that aired, Pilnick was asked about “the potential” for his cost-cutting solution to “land the wrong way.”

“It’s landing really well right now,” he answered. “Over 25% of our consumption is outside the breakfast occasion. A lot of it’s at dinner and that occasion continues to grow. Cereal for dinner is something that is probably more on trend now and we would expect to continue as that consumer is under pressure.”

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