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In the early editions of the modern Olympic Games, some athletes took tonics or stimulants to aid their performance.

In 1904, a marathon runner supposedly ingested strychnine – a poisonous substance that is most commonly used today as a pesticide – in small doses during the race, sometimes washing it down with a swig of brandy.

In the 120 years since, doping scandals have been an unfortunate and unavoidable part of both the Summer and Winter Olympics – from state-sponsored doping efforts in East Germany and Russia, to the gold medals stripped away from star athletes such as Ben Johnson and Marion Jones after they failed drug tests. It’s always something. And the Paris Olympics will almost certainly be no different.

Here are five of the most prominent doping storylines that are swirling ahead of the 2024 Games.

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Is there a doping scandal going into Paris?

Why of course there is – and it could very well hang over these Games, or at least the swimming events in Paris.

The New York Times and German broadcaster ARD reported in April that 23 Chinese swimmers quietly tested positive for the same banned drug, trimetazidine (TMZ), before the previous Summer Olympics in Tokyo in 2021. However, those positive tests weren’t made public at the time by either China’s anti-doping authority or the World Anti-Doping Agency, in violation of WADA’s anti-doping code.

WADA has since said that it accepted the results of a Chinese investigation into the positive tests, which determined that they stemmed from contamination at a hotel but was unable to identify the source. Some of the swimmers who tested positive went on to win medals in Tokyo. And 11 of them are slated to compete again at the Paris Games.

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What are anti-doping authorities doing about the Chinese swimmers?

U.S. anti-doping leaders and lawmakers have repeatedly blasted WADA for its handling of the Chinese swimmers case. And U.S. law enforcement officials are reportedly set to interview the head of swimming’s international federation as part of their own probe into the matter under the auspices of the Rodchenkov Anti-Doping Act, which gives the U.S. authority to investigate international doping as long as it could impact (or has impacted) American athletes.

Despite widespread criticism, and frustration from athletes, WADA has defended its actions and vigorously maintained that it handled the Chinese swimmers case properly. The International Olympic Committee has since said it has ‘full confidence’ in WADA and its leadership.

The 11 Chinese swimmers who are competing in Paris after testing positive for TMZ in 2021 can, and likely will, be subjected to random drug testing while at the 2024 Games – just like any other athletes in any other sport. Though the international swimming federation also said in a report earlier this month that Chinese swimmers would be tested at least eight times from Jan. 1 to the day of the opening ceremony, which is more than twice as many times as other athletes.

Will any star athletes miss the Paris Olympics after failing a drug test?

Lots of athletes are on this list, but not many of them would qualify as stars.

Swimmer Sun Yang, a three-time Olympic gold medalist from China, and pole vaulter Thiago Braz, the 2016 Olympic gold medalist from Brazil, are probably among the most notable names who will be absent in Paris because of anti-doping violations. American runner Shelby Houlihan is also continuing to serve the four-year ban that kept her out of the 2021 Olympics; She tested positive for a banned drug but has argued it came from contaminated pork.

There are also plenty of athletes on the other side who are returning from anti-doping violations or have been cleared. The biggest name is probably superstar Sha’Carri Richardson, who missed out on the Tokyo Games after testing positive for marijuana at the Olympic trials. Fellow sprinter and former world champion Christian Coleman is also in the relay pool after being suspended for a string of missed drug tests.

One other minor but interesting case involves U.S. weightlifter Wes Kitts. He is serving a one-month suspension for a minor infraction but is eligible to return Aug. 2 – just days before he is scheduled to compete in Paris.

Is Russia banned from the Paris Olympics because of doping?

Nope! This time it’s actually banned because of its invasion of Ukraine.

While a small number of Russian athletes will compete at the Paris Games, they will do so as ‘Individual Neutral Athletes’ after the IOC sanctioned Russia and its national Olympic committee for violating the Olympic truce with its war in Ukraine and infringing on the territory of another country’s Olympic committee.

This is a similar outcome but change in reasoning from other sanctions Russia has faced over the past decade, related to its state-sponsored doping program. Russian athletes have not been banned outright from any of the recent editions of the Olympics, though they were required to compete as ‘Olympic Athletes from Russia’ in 2018 and represent the ‘Russian Olympic Committee’ rather than the nation itself in 2021 and 2022.

Are there any other interesting doping subplots in Paris?

This doesn’t have so much to do with doping as it does the fallout of doping, but the Paris Olympics will feature medal ceremonies for athletes who are receiving reallocated medals from past Games – an effort by the IOC to make up for some of the pageantry and celebration that they missed out on.

U.S. track and field athletes Lashinda Demus and Erik Kynard, for example, will be honored with gold medals from the 2012 London Olympics after the athletes who placed in front of them were found to have violated anti-doping rules. Another athlete, Beverly McDonald of Jamaica, will finally get a reallocated bronze medal that stems all the way from the 2000 Games in Sydney.

If the Court of Arbitration for Sport decides to deny Russia’s last-gasp appeal and announces the decision in time, members of the U.S. figure skating team will also be able to finally receive their 2022 Olympic gold medals in Paris, which will be upgraded from silver due to the now-infamous doping scandal involving Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva. Their ceremony has been tentatively scheduled for Aug. 7.

Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on social media @Tom_Schad.

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The start of NFL training camp represents a fresh start for teams and players across the league, with the upcoming season giving even the worst, most woebegone franchises the hope that their fortunes might improve.

For Joe Burrow, a fresh start means a fresh haircut.

The Cincinnati Bengals star quarterback arrived Tuesday for his team’s training camp sporting a new hairdo that quickly set various corners of the internet ablaze.

Burrow enters the 2024 season looking to reestablish himself as one of the league’s top quarterbacks. After guiding the Bengals to Super Bowl 56 in 2022 and taking them to the AFC championship game in 2023, he missed the final seven games of the 2023 season after suffering a torn scapholunate ligament in his right wrist during the first half of the Bengals’ 34-20 loss to the Baltimore Ravens on Nov. 16.

As the Bengals look to make it back to the NFL playoffs out of the deep and daunting AFC North, they’ll do so with a new-look quarterback — literally.

All things Bengals: Latest Cincinnati Bengals news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Here’s more on Burrow’s haircut:

Joe Burrow haircut, explained

Burrow walked into the first day of the Bengals’ training camp looking much different than he did the last time he was on an NFL field.

Throughout his NFL career, and going back to his days as a Heisman Trophy winner at LSU, Burrow has been known for his luscious, parted locks. However, as the run-up to the 2024 NFL season officially began, Burrow went for a different stylistic choice.

The Bengals star’s hair was trimmed down to a buzz cut and dyed bleach blonde, making him look more like the rapper Eminem or wrestler Cody Rhodes.

While the buzzcut is a new twist, the bleached blonde hair is actually a return of sorts to Burrow’s roots (though not his natural follicle roots, as he has brown hair). At one point during his standout career at Athens High School in southeast Ohio, Burrow’s hair was dyed blonde, as some on social media were quick to point out.

It’s not the first time this offseason that Burrow’s hair has been the subject of chatter.

In May, an NFL aggregation account posted a photo on X of Burrow with shoulder-length, flowing hair that reminded many of actor Hayden Christensen as Anakin Skywalker in the 2005 film ‘Revenge of the Sith,’ the third ‘Star Wars’ prequel.

For as much fun as the internet had with it, the picture was photoshopped.

Joe Burrow hair reaction

Predictably, Burrow’s haircut drew quite the reaction on social media.

Much of the commentary has centered around his resemblance to Rhodes and Eminem, though others have noted that trying to look like Eminem could make Burrow more similar to Stan, the rapper’s fictional deranged fan who was the subject of a 2000 song of the same name.

Ken, the famous doll and Ryan Gosling’s character in the 2023 blockbuster ‘Barbie,’ was also a common point of comparison.

Here’s a sampling of what people on X, formerly known as Twitter, had to say about Burrow’s hair:

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

PARIS − International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach said Tuesday that the Palestinian and Israeli national Olympic committees have been ‘living in peaceful coexistence.’

Bach made the comments in a press conference a few days before the Paris Games were due to begin following a request by the Palestinian delegation to exclude Israeli athletes from the Games because of the war in Gaza.

Bach said the IOC’s rules were ‘very clear’ on such requests and that the Olympics are ‘not a competition between countries or governments’ but ‘among athletes.’ He was responding to a letter sent to him on Monday by the Palestinian Olympic Committee. Palestine is recognized as a sovereign state by the vast majority of United Nations member states. The U.S. and several large western European nations have not done so.

The letter alleged that Israel’s bombardment of Gaza was a violation of the Olympic truce, known as ‘Ekecheiria,’ the tradition that dates back to ancient Greece. It stipulates that countries that participate in the sporting event should cease all conflicts seven days before the Games kick off − until seven days after they finish.

Meet Team USA: See which athletes made the U.S. Olympic team and where they are from

The truce idea was intended to allow safe passage for the athletes of warring countries to compete in the Games.

The Palestinian request also stressed that its athletes, especially those in Gaza, had suffered greatly in Israel’s military offensive, which has killed at least 39,000 people, according to the Hamas-run health ministry. Israel launched the war after Hamas attacked its southern border on Oct. 7, murdering and kidnapping civilians.

In striking down the Palestinian request, Bach said the ‘difference between the world of politics’ and sports was that the Israeli and Palestinian Olympic committees had not been fighting each other. He said that to make the kind of exclusion determination the Palestinians were asking for would be to infringe on the IOC’s political neutrality.

He said that if the IOC were to approve exclusions on the basis of nations that are at war with one another the number of Olympic committees in Paris would probably be cut in half.

‘There’s way too many wars and conflicts in the world,’ he said.

Eight Palestinian athletes are taking part in the Games. The Palestinian Olympic Committee said that approximately 400 Palestinian athletes have been killed in Israel’s military operation.

Israel is sending 88 athletes to Paris. The Games’ organizers said they would be given extra security protection. Israel’s National Security Council on Tuesday released a message directed at Israelis in Paris urging them to be mindful of potential terrorist attacks, protests and other unrest aimed at them.

‘Our first victory is that we are here and going, and that we didn’t give up and have been competing in hundreds of competitions since Oct. 7,’ Israel Olympic Committee President Yael Arad said Monday.

Both Israeli and Palestinian athletes are expected to abide by the IOC’s rules of neutrality.

‘No kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas,’ according to Rule 50 of the Olympic Charter.

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Haason Reddick is digging in on his standoff with the New York Jets.

The two-time Pro Bowl pass rusher did not report to training camp Tuesday with the rest of the team.

Reddick, 29, did not participate in the team’s voluntary offseason program or mandatory minicamp after the Philadelphia Eagles traded him to the organization on April 1. He is now subject to $50,000 fines for each day of camp missed. Those penalties cannot be waived since Reddick is not on his rookie contract.

Reddick is set to earn $14.5 million in the final year of his deal this upcoming season. In Philadelphia, he pushed for a new deal after recording 27 sacks in the past two years and earned Pro Bowl nods in each campaign.

Jets coach Robert Saleh said at mandatory minicamp that he had spoken with Reddick and was not concerned about the pass rusher’s preparation.

All things Jets: Latest New York Jets news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

‘The guy’s a great dude,’ Saleh said. ‘He’s been in multiple places and played at a high level at multiple places. He’s a pro, a seasoned vet and the last guy I’m worried about on whether or not he’ll be ready to play football He know what he needs to do to get himself ready.’

Reddick is expected to play a vital role for a Jets front that lost edge rusher Bryce Huff, who led the team with 10 sacks last year, to the Eagles in free agency.

‘I try to stay out of all that, but I know he’s an amazing player, an amazing person,’ Jets defensive tackle Quinnen Williams said Tuesday. ‘And I know this organization is amazing at getting these things done in a decent time. He’s a phenomenal player, and when he steps on the field, he changes the aura.’

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Former President Trump says he’s open to debating Vice President Kamala Harris more than once as the two face off in the 2024 presidential election.

‘Absolutely. I’d want to. I think it’s important,’ Trump said Tuesday when asked by Fox News’ Bill Melugin on a conference call with reporters if he would commit to debating Harris at least once.

‘I would be willing to do more than one debate, actually,’ Trump emphasized.

Minutes later, Trump noted, ‘I haven’t agreed to anything. I agreed to a debate with Joe Biden.’

President Biden, in a blockbuster announcement Sunday, suspended his 2024 re-election rematch with Trump and endorsed his vice president. The move by Biden ignited a surge of endorsements by Democratic governors, senators, House members and other party leaders backing Harris to succeed Biden as the party’s 2024 standard-bearer.

Biden suspended his campaign amid mounting pressure from within the Democratic Party for him to drop out after a disastrous performance in last month’s first presidential debate with Trump.

The 81-year-old president’s uneven delivery and awkward answers during the first 20 minutes of the debate in front of a national audience quickly prompted questions about his mental and physical ability to serve another four years in the White House.

Harris on Monday night announced that she’d locked up the nomination by landing commitments of backing from a majority of the nearly 4,000 delegates to next month’s Democratic National Convention, which kicks off Aug. 19 in Chicago. 

Trump told reporters debating Harris instead of Biden ‘will be no different because they have the same policies.’

The former president, who skipped out on the GOP presidential primary debates with his Republican challengers, said, ‘I think debating is important for a presidential race. I really do.

‘I think if you’re the Democrat nominee or the Republican nominee, you have an obligation to debate. I think it’s very important.’

Trump, in comments with reporters on a call where he amplified his criticism of Harris on the crucial issue of border security, once again took aim at ABC News, which was scheduled to host the second debate between Biden and Trump in early September.

‘I’m not thrilled about ABC because they’re truly fake news,’ Trump said.

He noted that when it comes to the next presidential debate, ‘I have at least equal say. And I don’t like the idea of ABC.’

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– Pro-life advocates, quietly despondent about the changes on abortion to the Republican Party platform, are re-energized by the Democrats’ new likely nominee-to-be, who many feel they can successfully paint as ‘the extremist she is’ on the issue of abortion.

The politics of abortion have changed since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and sent the issue of abortion access to the states. Democrats seized the moment, blaming former President Trump and his allies for the decision and trying to convince voters that a vote for a Democrat is a vote to restore Roe in some capacity. 

Just before the Republican National Convention last week, the RNC softened long-standing GOP language in the party’s platform, removing references to calls for a nationwide ban on abortion to appeal to a broader group of voters. 

Pro-life groups were still quick to support the Trump ticket, believing a Republican administration would still be most favorable to their cause of installing more protection for unborn babies and pregnant mothers, despite the changes to the GOP platform. 

But a new memo obtained by Fox News Digital reveals that pro-life advocates are ready to coalesce around a new objective – painting Harris as an abortion ‘extremist’ who ‘can’t name any limits on abortion she supports.’

In a memo sent Tuesday to GOP candidates, leadership and officeholders and state leaders from SBA Pro-Life America, one of the leading advocacy groups in the country, SBA claims, ‘Everyone expected abortion to be a major issue in the 2024 elections, but it now intensifies with Kamala Harris at the top of the ticket.’ 

The memo contrasts President Biden, an Irish Catholic who ‘could barely utter the word abortion and for decades supported at least some basic limits, such as limits on taxpayer-funded abortions’ with Harris, SBA says, ‘shouts abortion – and has not once voted or voiced support for ANY limits on abortion.’ 

‘Harris is so committed to abortion that she can’t see anything else, including the developmental stages of children before birth or the real needs of women,’ the memo states. 

The memo points to then-Sen. Harris, who voted two times against a limit on abortions at 20 weeks with exceptions, ‘well after science shows unborn babies can feel pain – calling it an ‘immoral’ bill.’ 

‘She’s also voted twice against ensuring medical care for babies who survive an abortion attempt,’ the memo notes. 

The memo also references Harris’ time as California attorney general, when she backed legislation that forced pregnancy resource centers to advertise for abortion clinics – which was eventually struck down as unconstitutional at the U.S. Supreme Court.

The memo notes that in 2022, Harris supported closing down pregnancy resource centers which, in lieu of abortions, provide free medical care, baby formula, diapers and other necessities. 

Jeanne Mancini, president of the March for Life, noted in a post on X on Monday that pro-life activists ‘around the country are more emboldened than any time since Roe to rally and educate Americans about [Harris’] radical record on abortion.’

‘There is no doubt that there was some disappointment and concern from grassroots pro-life activists over the GOP Platform changes, but with Kamala Harris at the helm there is a renewed enthusiasm among pro-lifers to fight for the unborn this election cycle,’ one Republican pro-life activist told Fox News Digital. 

‘Harris is a stooge for Big Abortion, so much so that she even voted against legislation that called for providing health care to babies born alive from failed abortions, making it easier to paint her as the extremist she is,’ the source said. 

Another pro-life activist told Fox that with Harris as the new presidential candidate, it ‘should force Trump and JD Vance to lean in on this issue’ to ‘show moderates just how radical Kamala is – abortion on demand at any time and for any reason.’

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You already gave your bank your address, date of birth, Social Security number and your mother’s maiden name. Now, they want your voice.

Banks say it’s an extra layer of biometric protection against fraud and cybercrime. But with the rise of hackers stealing voice data for deepfakes, is it worth the risk?

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The identity arms race

No matter how much money you have in the bank, a hacker or scammer wants it — and they’re always one step ahead.

If you’re skeptical of your bank having your voice data on record, you’re not crazy — you’re smart. A voice can be cloned using AI with as little as 10 seconds of audio and a few bucks.

Call your bank’s customer service line and . It takes two minutes. If you can do it now, great. If you can’t, I highly recommend you set a reminder to do it later. This is important.

Scammers have been known to plant fake numbers in search results. Don’t just Google search the name of your bank and call that number. Go directly to your bank’s website or call the number on the back of your debit or credit card.

Go a step further

Because you’re smart, you use strong unique passwords, you enable 2FA, you don’t bank on public Wi-Fi, and you always monitor your accounts. (More on all that below if you need help.)

But it might be worth a phone call or trip to your local bank branch to ask if they offer extra security features. Popular options include:

This physical or digital device generates one-time passcodes that are usually only good for 30 seconds for safer online banking.

Set up text or email notifications for real-time account activities, such as large transactions or account changes. It’s a bit of a pain when you have to approve all your charges, but it has saved me from scams and phony charges.

Many banks offer options to automatically lock your account after a certain number of failed online login attempts.

: This is enhanced security for certain activities using additional verification steps. For example, Morgan Stanley asks me for a one-time passcode if I log in at a new location.

Get your banking security up to par

Maybe you need to get the basics in order first. That’s OK, and it’s definitely not too late to take a couple smart steps.

Turn on two-factor authentication so only you can access your accounts. 

With 2FA enabled, a secondary form of verification is required to prove your identity instead of just entering your username and password to log in to an account.

The second form of verification can be something only you know (an answer to a question), something you have (your device), or who you are (a fingerprint, voice pattern or facial scan). You enter the temporary code, and voila — you’re in. 

 An authenticator app. Biometrics (your face or fingerprint scan) are a close runner-up. A text code is the most hackable.

Only log onto your bank from a network you can trust.

Looking at you, random coffee shop Wi-Fi. Public Wi-Fi networks do little to nothing to protect your privacy. Cybercriminals know this and use free Wi-Fi networks to find victims. Malware, phony hotspots, unsecured networks and nefarious passers-by might all be able to cut in, compromising your data and account.

If you connect to public Wi-Fi without taking precautions, thieves can steal login credentials to any account you sign into while on the network, including your bank accounts.

If you must connect to free public Wi-Fi, don’t do it without a virtual private network (VPN). A VPN allows you to browse the internet while encrypting your sensitive information. This helps hide your online credentials and IP address. 

I use ExpressVPN, a sponsor of my national radio show.

Now, help me get the word out. Share this story with friends and family to keep them safe before the tsunami of voice-cloning scams hits. They’re coming.

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Former U.N. ambassador and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley is demanding that a group claiming to represent former Haley voters who support the presidential campaign of Vice President Kamala Harris stop using her name.

‘Kamala Harris and I are total opposites on every issue. Any attempt to use my name to support her or her agenda is deceptive and wrong,’ Haley said in a statement shared first with Fox News on Tuesday. ‘I support Donald Trump because he understands we need to make America strong, safe, and prosperous.’

Haley’s comments were directed toward a political action committee (PAC) that was previously known as ‘Haley Voters for Biden.’

The group started featuring Harris’ name on Sunday, after President Biden ended his re-election bid and endorsed his vice president to succeed him as the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee.

Haley launched her own White House bid in February of last year, becoming the first major Republican candidate to challenge former President Trump for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination. And she was the last rival to Trump left standing before she dropped out of the race in early March. Even after ending her campaign, Haley continued to grab up to 20% of the vote in some of the ensuing Republican presidential primaries.

Haley was a very vocal critic of the former president during their heated primary race. But in late May, in her first public comments since announcing the end of her 2024 campaign, Haley said she would vote for Trump. And in a speech last week at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, she formally endorsed Trump.

The group, which says it’s a coalition of former Haley voters, pledged their support for Harris soon after Biden endorsed his vice president.

‘We support @JoeBiden’s recommendation and will immediately change the name of our organization to Haley Voters for Harris. There is no time to lose,’ the group wrote in a social media posting on Sunday afternoon.

The group, which changed the name of its page on X and on its website, also spotlighted that it has no affiliation with Haley or her aligned political committees.

‘We also do not and never claimed to speak for Nikki Haley. We are reaching out to a subset of Haley voters who will vote their consciences,’ the group wrote. ‘Haley said Trump had to earn our votes. He has done nothing to do so – constantly deriding her – and picked Vance as his running mate.’

But a letter from a law firm representing Haley’s presidential campaign, shared with Fox News, demanded that the group ‘cease and desist from any unlawful use of Ambassador Haley’s name in your political action committee name, and from any use of her name, image or likeness that implies her support for the election of Kamala Harris as President of the United States.’

‘Any use by you of Ambassador Haley’s name, image, or likeness is without her permission. Ambassador Haley has been clear in her support of Harris’ opponent. Any intimation that Ambassador Haley supports Harris is intentionally false and misleading,’ the letter continued.

The letter warns that if the group fundraises under the name ‘Haley Voters for Harris’ or a similar name, the Haley campaign will alert investigative authorities, including the Justice Department and the FBI.

Less than 36 hours after Biden’s blockbuster news, Harris announced that she had locked up the nomination.

‘I am proud to have earned the support needed to become our party’s nominee,’ the vice president wrote in a social media post just after midnight early Tuesday morning.

Harris showcased that she’d won commitments of backing from a majority of the nearly 4,000 delegates to next month’s Democratic National Convention, which kicks off Aug. 19 in Chicago. 

As much of the Democratic Party – including governors, senators and House members as well as party leaders – quickly coalesced behind Harris following Biden’s blockbuster news, state delegations to the convention started huddling the past two days and announced their support for the vice president. And an Associated Press survey of Democratic delegates indicated by late Monday that Harris had gone over the top.

Last week, before Biden ended his bid, Haley reiterated her criticism of Harris when it comes to the crisis at the nation’s southern border.

In her address at the GOP convention, Haley emphasized that the vice president ‘had one job… and that was to fix the border. Now imagine her in charge of the entire country.’

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In this video from StockCharts TV, Julius takes a look at the markets through the lens of the “market factors” panel you can find on your StockCharts dashboard. Starting from the RRG, he then moves to the individual charts for these factors and notes a low correlation for small-cap value stocks. This makes them a good group to look in for new (buying) opportunities, as they seem to be moving relatively agnostic to the moves in the S&P 500 and S&P composite indices.

This video was originally broadcast on July 23, 2024. Click anywhere on the icon above to view on our dedicated page for Julius.

Past episodes of Julius’ shows can be found here.

#StayAlert, -Julius

A defamation suit against Fox News by a government official who served on a short-lived U.S. government media disinformation board was dismissed Monday by a federal judge.

The lawsuit from Nina Jankowicz alleged that Fox News had defamed her on numerous occasions, leading to waves of online attacks and threats of violence after the formation of the Disinformation Governance Board, where she served as a director.

In May of 2022, just weeks after its launch, the Department of Homeland Security paused the board’s work and accepted Jankowicz’s resignation. The board was officially dissolved and its charter rescinded in August of that same year.

In rejecting Jankowicz’s claims, the judge said that 36 of the 37 statements made on Fox News programs were about the disinformation board and not Jankowicz. The judge ruled that the remaining statement — which was also a reference to the board and not Jankowicz, despite showing an image of her as it was said — was not disinformation because it was a factual statement that matched the wording in the board’s own charter describing its purpose.

“This was a politically motivated lawsuit aimed at silencing free speech and we are pleased with the court’s decision to protect the First Amendment,” Fox News said.

The disinformation board was launched by the Department of Homeland Security in an effort to counter disinformation coming from Russia as well as misleading information that human smugglers circulate to target migrants hoping to travel to the U.S.-Mexico border.

Dozens of Republican lawmakers and conservative pundits took to social media immediately after the board’s launch, calling for it to be disbanded. They described the board as an Orwellian body that could be used to suppress free speech.

In April of last year, Fox News agreed to pay Dominion Voting Systems nearly $800 million to avert a trial in the voting machine company’s lawsuit that would have exposed how the network promoted lies about the 2020 presidential election.

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