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    Todd Blanche grilled, soldiers face testosterone tests and Canadian wildfires rage

     
    TODAY’S politics story

    AG nominee Blanche grilled at confirmation hearing

    What happened
    Todd Blanche, President Donald Trump’s nominee for attorney general, yesterday faced five hours of intense questioning from both Democratic and Republican lawmakers during his confirmation hearing. GOP Sen. John Cornyn of Texas “raised serious questions” about Blanche’s involvement in creating a now-defunct $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” fund for Trump’s allies, The New York Times said. Democrats “seized on” his oversight of the Justice Department’s “sloppy redactions” in its release of the Jeffrey Epstein files, The Washington Post said. At one point Blanche, currently the acting attorney general, accidentally said he was the president’s lawyer, “a job he had earlier in his career,” Politico said.

    Who said what
    “President Trump trusts me to give him counsel,” Blanche told Senator Chris Coons (D-Del.). “Counsel does not mean I’m a yes man.” Democrats on ⁠the Judiciary Committee are united in their opposition to Blanche’s appointment, so “even one Republican committee vote against him would be enough to sink the nomination,” The Washington Post said. “I continue to have some concerns,” Cornyn told reporters afterwards. Blanche’s “gaffe” about still being Trump’s lawyer “could haunt him,” Politico said.

    What next?
    Several witnesses are expected to testify today about Blanche’s character, including Epstein accuser Liz Oyer, whom Blanche fired from her post as DOJ pardon attorney. The Senate Judiciary Committee could vote on Blanche’s confirmation as early as July 30. Committee chair Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said “he’ll be confirmed probably the last week before we go on August recess.”

     
     
    TODAY’S Military story

    Pentagon announces testosterone screenings

    What happened
    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said yesterday that the Pentagon will introduce testosterone screenings for soldiers over the age of 30. The screenings will be available to troops under 30 by request, and any soldier found to have lower testosterone levels will have the option to undergo hormone treatment. The new policy is designed so soldiers “have the right testosterone levels to operate at” their “absolute best,” Hegseth said in a video on X.

    Who said what
    The secretary’s messaging “blends known science” on testosterone with “broader and less substantiated claims,” The Associated Press said. The new policy shows the secretary “takes direction from the far corners of the manosphere,” Rep. Chrissy Houlahan (D-Pa.), an Air Force veteran, told the outlet. Hegseth “did not address” whether the “thousands” of women who “serve in frontline combat roles” would also be “subjected to hormone testing,” Politico said. 

    What next?
    The screenings will be “conducted annually as part of service members’ periodic health assessments,” said Task & Purpose. But Hegseth has not disclosed when the screenings will begin.

     
     
    TODAY’S health Story

    Canadian wildfire smoke spreads over US

    What happened
    More than 100 wildfires are burning out of control in Canada, sending plumes of smoke south across the border to blanket parts of the Northeast and Midwest, and turning skies orange. Poor air quality triggered health warnings across multiple states including New York, Michigan and Massachusetts. In Canada, Toronto’s air quality briefly registered as the worst of any city in the world. 

    Who said what
    The “primary health concern” with wildfire smoke is fine particulate matter, which can “bypass the body’s defenses” when inhaled, Canadian physician Dr. Farhan M. Asrar said on The Conversation. The “best thing to do” is to keep a close eye on the air quality in your area, Heatmap News said. This summer’s wildfire activity in Canada is “nowhere near the hyperactivity of 2023,” CNN said, but “planet-heating fossil fuel pollution is increasing the chance of prolonged smoke seasons.”

    What next?
    Forecasters expect air quality to remain low across the Midwest and Northeast today and possibly Friday. It’s “too early to determine the weekend outlook,” The Wall Street Journal said.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    A procedure that uses high-powered sound waves to seal blood vessels can treat twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome, a serious condition that occurs when fetuses grow in separate amniotic sacs but share a placenta, resulting in unbalanced blood flow. In a world-first, doctors at Queen Charlotte’s and Chelsea Hospital in London tried the noninvasive treatment on Briony Garrett when she was pregnant with identical twin girls, and both were born healthy. More studies are needed, but experts are encouraged by the results.

     
     
    Under the radar

    Raspberry sugar high: a sweet discovery up in space

    Astronomers have detected a type of sugar found in raspberries and self-tan lotions near the center of the Milky Way. A study published in the journal Nature Astronomy reveals evidence of erythrulose, a simple sugar, in interstellar gas and the dust clouds between stars.

    The discovery may conjure up images of a “civilization of pale safety-conscious frugivores” in outer space, said The Guardian. But for astronomers, it’s significant because it shows that “compounds important for life can form in the frigid expanse between the stars.”

    Sugar “does more than sweeten tea and powder doughnuts,” said The Associated Press. “Different varieties fuel our cells and even make up DNA,” so scientists are “itching to know how sugars form because they are a key ingredient for life as we know it.” 

    Erythrulose itself “isn’t essential for life but can easily convert to a form that’s thought to be crucial to kick-starting life on Earth,” said the AP. And it’s “especially tantalizing” to think that erythrulose might have acted as a “feedstock” for the more complex sugars that evolved into nucleic acids, the “building blocks of modern-day DNA and RNA,” said Nature.

    That’s why the “detection of erythrulose is so relevant for the origins of life,” said study co-author and astrophysicist Izaskun Jiménez-Serra to Live Science. And if we can discover even more complex sugars in the Milky Way, more light could be shed, said astrophysicist Anthony Remijan to Nature. An “actual building block of RNA and DNA — that would be the next big thing.”

     
     
    On this day

    July 16, 1969

    Apollo 11 launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, carrying astronauts Buzz Aldrin, Neil Armstrong and Michael Collins on humanity’s first mission to land on the moon. Aldrin and Armstrong walked on the lunar surface four days later, completing a goal set eight years earlier by John F. Kennedy.

     
     
    TODAY’S newspaperS

    ‘Delayed action’

    “Delayed action could hinder” ICE “shooting probe,” says the Houston Chronicle on Thursday’s front page. “Halt on traffic arrests is lifted,” says The Washington Post, as “ICE reverses after Trump’s criticism.” “Tense hearing puts Blanche in tough spot,” says The New York Times. The “Trump administration quietly swaps slavery panels at President’s House,” says The Philadelphia Inquirer. “Is it lights out for fireflies?” says USA Today. 

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    Epic quest

    Christopher Nolan fans are going to extremes to ensure they can see his film “The Odyssey” in IMAX 70 mm when it opens tomorrow. Amber Connaghan of California purchased her ticket a year in advance and decided to hold off on trying for a second child because it would be “too close to ‘The Odyssey,’” she said to Variety. Pittsburgh resident Tim McHugh is flying to Los Angeles to watch the movie, while New Yorker Simon James purchased tickets for 18 screenings over three weeks.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Jessica Hullinger, Justin Klawans, Rafi Schwartz, Chas Newkey-Burden and Helen Brown, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Eric Lee / Getty Images; Sean Gardner / Getty Images; Anthony Soufflé / The Minnesota Star Tribune / Getty Images; Illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Shutterstock / Getty Images.
     

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