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‘I took a little bit from Obama and Trump…’ The real people and events that inspired Netflix hit Don’t Look Up – Kilgore News Herald

The 'Don't Look Up' plot is not an accurate reflection of what is happening in the world today. However, it has a little bit of everything. Although it tells the odyssey of two astronomers, veteran professor Randall Mindy (DiCaprio) and PhD student Kate Dibiasky (Lawrence), to warn the skeptical population about a large meteorite threatening to destroy the Earth, it is actually a reference to global warming and the current health crisis. McKay explained during the Deadline Contenders Film panel in November 2021: "There was this moment where I realized it was all about how we've befouled, broken, profitized, graphichized our lines of communication, the way we actually talk to each other. That was the moment where I was like, 'Oh, we definitely have to make that,' and I wrote all the cast, and they were all like, 'Oh, yeah - Now more than ever."

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'I took a little bit from Obama and Trump...' The real people and events that inspired Netflix hit Don't Look Up - Kilgore News Herald

"Unprovoked and unjustified": Former Presidents Obama, Bush urge world to condemn Russia’s invasion – Yahoo News

Former Presidents Obama and Bush condemned Russia's attack on Ukraine on Thursday, calling it "unprovoked and unjustified" and urging people around the world to stand with Ukraine.

Why it matters: Russian President Vladimir Putin's overnight invasion of Ukraine overnight has caused dozens of civilian casualties and thrown thousands of Ukrainians into a panic to flee, and it's only just started. Russian forces are confirmed to have crossed the Ukrainian border by land, air and sea.

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What they're saying: "Russia's attack on Ukraine constitutes the gravest security crisis on the European continent since World War II," Bush said in a statement.

He condemned Russian President Vladimir Putin's "unprovoked and unjustified invasion" and urged the American government and people to put their full support behind Ukraine and its people "as they seek freedom and the right to choose their own future."

Russia attacked "not because Ukraine posed a threat to Russia, but because the people of Ukraine chose a path of sovereignty, self-determination, and democracy," Obama said in a statement.

"For exercising rights that should be available to all people and nations, Ukrainians now face a brutal onslaught that is killing innocents and displacing untold numbers of men, women, and children."

"[E]very American, regardless of party, should support President Biden's efforts, in coordination with our closest allies, to impose hard-hitting sanctions on Russia," Obama said, adding that any resulting economic consequences are "a price we should be willing to pay to take a stand on the side of freedom."

Go deeper: Ukraine-Russia crisis dashboard

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"Unprovoked and unjustified": Former Presidents Obama, Bush urge world to condemn Russia's invasion - Yahoo News

A Signed Basketball From President Obamas Pickup Game With Kobe and LeBron Is up for Auction – Robb Report

President Barack Obama made pickup basketball history when he assembled an NBA dream team to play an informal game in 2010. Now, an important piece of memorabilia from that day is hitting the auction block.

The ball, which was present a game Obama played in front of a group of wounded warriors and members of the White Houses mentoring program, the former presidents signature. Alongside it are the signatures of NBA greats including the late Kobe Bryant, LeBron Games, Magic Johnson and Carmelo Anthony. Heritage Auctions recently listed the rocka Spalding TF-1000as a lot in its Winter Platinum Night Sports Auction.

The game itself took place inside a gym at Fort McNair, a short drive away from the White House. The roster of players included past and present stars, including Dwyane Wade, Derrick Rose and Joakim Noah. Former Miami Heat power forward Alonzo Mourning reportedly came out of retirement to join Johnson on the court for the occasion, while Maya Moore, then a star of the UConn womens basketball team, also played in the game. Afterward, some of the players attended a White House barbecue in celebration of the presidents 49th birthday, the Associated Press reported.

Unfortunately, no reporters were allowed to watch the game, so well never get to see clips of 44 hooping with NBA stars. But the ball itself is a pretty cool piece of presidential and sports history. Each autograph is gradedObamas and Bryants received 9/10 grades, the highest gradesand some come adorned with inscribed jersey numbers, including Bryants iconic No. 24. Theres also a letter of authenticity by PSA/DNA.

Obama made his love of the game clear shortly after taking office in 2009. He renovated the White Houses tennis court, making it a multi-purpose space for both tennis and basketball. The game was host to some fiery pickup games, including the infamous match where Obama took an inadvertent elbow, requiring 12 stitches to his lip.

Luckily no one was hurt during the Fort McNair game. Bidding on the ball has already blown past Heritage Auctions $12,000 initial estimate. Currently, its going for $17,500but you have until the sale ends on February 27 to beat that bid.

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A Signed Basketball From President Obamas Pickup Game With Kobe and LeBron Is up for Auction - Robb Report

Road to America’s recovery begins with President Obama’s ouster – Olean Times Herald

Chief Justice Roberts rewording of Obamacare to make it pass constitutional muster created a new low for a court already jaundiced by recusal questions. It also demonstrates the folly of giving any justice, especially also-ran justices like Roberts, et al, lifetime appointments.

The courts decision portends several unsettling scenarios:

If implemented, Obamacare will create $500 billion in new taxes in addition to the $500 billion in cuts to the Medicare program.

Estimates indicate that some 75 percent of these increased taxes will be borne by people with incomes less than $110,000. It seems President Obama misled us with his promised $200,000 cut-off but, hey, suck it up middle class!

If one thinks the courts are going to correct the destruction this administration has wrought on the country, think again. The only way to reverse course is for the electorate to rise up and change the pitiful lack of leadership we have.

In November, we can watch the continued decline of America by the failed economic, energy and social policies of an administration which has clearly shown it has no respect for this country, its constitution or its people.

Alternatively, we can begin to put our country on the road to recovery by removing from office President Obama and the progressive loonies, regardless of party, who support his unrelenting assault on a nation that was once the envy of the world.

Austin Leahy

Ellicottville

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Road to America's recovery begins with President Obama's ouster - Olean Times Herald

Harvard economist and former Obama advisor says Russia is ‘basically a big gas station’ and is otherwise ‘incredibly unimportant’ in the global…

Russia's President Vladimir Putin signed decrees to recognize the independence of Donetsk and Luhansk. Moscow ordered troops into these areas on Monday, escalating the prospect of war between Russia and Ukraine.Alexei Nikolsky/TASS via Getty Images

Jason Furman said Russia's economy is "unimportant" other than gas, The New York Times reported.

His comments come as the US and Europe prepare heavy sanctions on Russia if it invades Ukraine.

But there are concerns that their plans to punish Moscow will penalize the rest of the world too.

Russia's economy is "incredibly unimportant in the global economy except for oil and gas," Jason Furman, a Harvard economist and former advisor to President Barack Obama, told The New York Times.

"It's basically a big gas station," he said.

His comments come as the West prepares heavy sanctions on Russia if it invades Ukraine. While they have the potential to throw the Russian economy into chaos, these measures could also reverberate to further damage the US, Europe, and the rest of the world as they battle inflation and rising energy prices a ripple effect that the West hopes to mitigate.

On Monday, Moscow declared the independence of two breakaway regions of Ukraine and sent troops there escalating the prospect of a major war. President Joe Biden has already ordered sanctions on the separatist regions Donetsk and Luhansk prohibiting US citizens from engaging in any exports, imports, or new investments in these areas.

Despite Russia's size and wealth in raw materials, its economy is more on par with Brazil than with nations like Germany, France, and the UK, according to the latest nominal GDP data from the World Bank. According to the World Bank, Russia's economy is smaller than Italy's and South Korea's, two nations with less than half of Russia's population.

But as Furman noted, Russia's oil and gas exports are significant to the world.

The European Union imports about 80% of the natural gas it uses, according to the US Energy Information Administration, and Russia accounts for 41% of the natural gas imports and 27% of the oil imports in the continent, according to Eurostat.

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Compounded with energy prices in the EU surging from 20 euros to 180 euros a megawatt-hour over the past year, the disappearance of those gas and oil imports could spell disaster for the region and the interconnected global economy. Meanwhile, in the US, gas prices have hit a seven-year high, climbing to about $3.50 per gallon on average, while inflation over the past year has grown at its highest rate in 40 years, at 7.5%.

On the other hand, Ukraine has also been a major supplier of grain to other regions, sending 40% of its wheat and corn exports to the Middle East and Africa, The Times reported.

In response to a potential food crisis in those regions, US Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack said on Saturday that American farmers would increase production and "step in and help our partners," The Associated Press reported.

Ukraine accounts for 12% of the world's grain exports and is estimated to provide 16% of global corn exports this year, the AP reported. Vilsack told the outlet he believed that American consumers would largely be unaffected but that Europeans would face "a different story."

"You have to look at the backdrop against which this is coming," Gregory Daco, the chief economist for consulting firm EY-Parthenon, told The Times. "There is high inflation, strained supply chains and uncertainty about what central banks are going to do and how insistent price rises are."

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Harvard economist and former Obama advisor says Russia is 'basically a big gas station' and is otherwise 'incredibly unimportant' in the global...