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Blinken turns to ‘effective partner’ Egypt to calm MideastAssociated Presson May 26, 2021 at 3:46 pm

Secretary of State Antony Blinken steps off his plane upon arrival at Cairo International Airport, Wednesday, May 26, 2021, in Cairo, Egypt.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken steps off his plane upon arrival at Cairo International Airport, Wednesday, May 26, 2021, in Cairo, Egypt. | AP

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken landed in Cairo a day after holding intensive talks with Israeli and Palestinian leaders.

CAIRO — U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken jetted to Egypt on Wednesday as he pressed ahead with a diplomatic mission aimed at shoring up a cease-fire that ended an 11-day war between Israel and the Gaza Strip’s ruling Hamas militant group.

Blinken landed in Cairo a day after holding intensive talks with Israeli and Palestinian leaders. In Egypt, he met with President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi and other top officials. Later he traveled to Jordan to meet with King Abdullah II.

Blinken has vowed to “rally international support” to rebuild the destruction in hard-hit Gaza while promising to make sure that none of the aid reaches Hamas. He is instead trying to bolster Hamas’ rival, the internationally recognized Palestinian Authority.

Blinken has set modest goals for the trip, his first official visit to the Middle East as secretary of state. His main goals have been to help rebuild Gaza and lower the tensions in contested Jerusalem that helped fuel the war.

But he has made it made clear the U.S. has no immediate plans to pursue peace talks between the sides and done little to address the underlying causes of the decades-long conflict, though he expressed hope for creating a “better environment” that might lead to negotiations.

In Cairo, Blinken on Wednesday met with el-Sissi for nearly two hours. Meeting with American diplomatic staff afterwards, he described Egypt as a “real and effective partner” that helped end the Gaza war and is helping “build something positive.” El-Sissi spoke to President Joe Biden last week before and after the ceasefire was announced.

“I think we both believe strongly that Palestinians and Israelis deserve equally to, to live in safety and security to enjoy equal measures of freedom, opportunity and dignity. And we’re working on that together,” Blinken said before departing to Jordan.

Both Egypt and Jordan are key U.S. allies that have peace agreements with Israel and frequently serve as mediators between Israel and the Palestinians. Egypt maintains ties with Hamas, but also enforces a tight blockade on Gaza, along with Israel, with a shared goal of preventing the Islamic group from arming.

The stop in Cairo, along with Biden’s phone talks with el-Sissi, signal a closer relationship between the countries after a cooler beginning, when the U.S. expressed concern over el-Sissi’s human rights record.

The Gaza reconstruction effort will be an important test. The 11-day war killed more than 250 people, mostly Palestinians, and caused heavy destruction in the impoverished coastal territory. Preliminary estimates have put the damage in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

Ahmed Aboul Gheit, secretary-general of the Arab League, said U.S. commitment is critical for the region. Before the Gaza war, the Biden administration had kept its distance, preferring to focus on higher foreign policy priorities like China and Iran.

“In the absence of an effective role for the U.S., we should expect nothing but more cycles of violence and bloodshed of innocent people,” he wrote in the Saudi daily Asharq Al-Awsat.

One of the U.S. goals is to ensure that any assistance be kept out of the hands of Hamas, which opposes Israel’s right to exist and which Israel and the U.S. consider a terrorist group.

In Gaza, Hamas leader Yehiyeh Sinwar told journalists Wednesday that the group welcomed international reconstruction aid, as long as it did not come from Israel, and had no objections to international oversight.

“I emphasize our commitment in Hamas that we will not take a single penny earmarked for rebuilding or humanitarian issues,” he said.

Sinwar, who has close ties with the group’s armed wing, said Hamas receives ample military assistance from outside sources — led by Israel’s archenemy, Iran. “When I said we do not take money destined for aid, this is because we have comfortable sources of funds covering our activities,” he said.

He also lashed out at Blinken for trying to strengthen the Palestinian Authority at Hamas’ expense. “They are trying to add more fuel to the fire of Palestinian division,” Sinwar said.

British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab was in Israel on Wednesday to build on the momentum of Blinken’s visit.

Echoing Blinken’s message, Raab said the U.K. supported Israel’s right to defend itself against Hamas rocket fire and would seek to prevent aid money from reaching Hamas. But he also expressed hope that cease-fire efforts would lead to a broader regional peace effort.

“We want to support Israel but we also want the Palestinians to find a track towards an enduring peace,” he said.

Blinken said Tuesday the U.S. is trying to bolster the rival government of President Mahmoud Abbas, whose forces were ousted from Gaza by Hamas in 2007. Abbas’ Palestinian Authority now administers autonomous areas in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Abbas has been largely sidelined by recent events, is deeply unpopular at home and has little influence in Gaza.

Abbas hopes to establish an independent state in all of the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem — areas captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war.

In a gesture to the Palestinians, Blinken on Tuesday announced plans to reopen a diplomatic office in Jerusalem that oversees outreach to the Palestinians. He also pledged nearly $40 million in additional aid to the Palestinians.

In all, the Biden administration has pledged some $360 million to the Palestinians, restoring badly needed aid that the Trump administration had cut off.

The truce that ended the Gaza war on Friday has so far held, but it did not address any of the deeper issues plaguing the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Those challenges include a hawkish Israeli leadership that seems unwilling to make major concessions, Palestinian divisions, years of mistrust and deeply rooted tensions surrounding Jerusalem and its holy sites.

The war was triggered by weeks of clashes in Jerusalem between Israeli police and Palestinian protesters in and around the Al-Aqsa Mosque, built on a hilltop compound revered by Jews and Muslims that has seen several outbreaks of Israeli-Palestinian violence over the years. The protests were directed at Israel’s policing of the area during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and the threatened eviction of dozens of Palestinian families by Jewish settlers.

The truce remains tenuous since tensions are still high in Jerusalem and the fate of the Palestinian families is not yet resolved.

On Wednesday, an Israeli court heard arguments from a Palestinian family trying to block their eviction in Silwan, another east Jerusalem neighborhood targeted by settler groups.

“The settlers want to take my house, to steal my house with their fake papers,” said Kaet Abdel Fath El Rajabi, who said his family has lived in the building for 60 years. Several dozen protesters stood outside the courthouse in support of the family.

In his remarks after his meeting with Blinken on Tuesday, Netanyahu hardly mentioned the Palestinians, warning of a “very powerful” response if Hamas breaks the cease-fire while expressing support for economic development in the West Bank.

Blinken repeatedly affirmed what he said was Israel’s right to defend itself. But he also called on leaders of all sides to chart a “better course” in hopes of laying the groundwork for peace talks aimed at establishing an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel.

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Federman reported from Jerusalem.

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Blinken turns to ‘effective partner’ Egypt to calm MideastAssociated Presson May 26, 2021 at 3:46 pm Read More »

Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun calls for cancellation of Tokyo OlympicsAssociated Presson May 26, 2021 at 3:46 pm

Japan’s Asahi Shimbun newspaper on Wednesday called for the Tokyo Olympics to be canceled with the games set to open in less than two months.
Japan’s Asahi Shimbun newspaper on Wednesday called for the Tokyo Olympics to be canceled with the games set to open in less than two months. | Eugene Hoshiko/AP

Coming out against the Olympics could be significant since the newspaper, like many in Japan, is a sponsor of the postponed Tokyo Games that are scheduled to open on July 23.

TOKYO — Japan’s Asahi Shimbun newspaper on Wednesday called for the Tokyo Olympics to be canceled with the games set to open in less than two months.

It is the first of Japan’s major newspapers to make the move and joins some regional newspapers that have recently added to the growing opposition to holding the Olympics.

Coming out against the Olympics could be significant since the newspaper, like many in Japan, is a sponsor of the postponed Tokyo Games that are scheduled to open on July 23. Asahi is typically liberal-leaning and often opposes the ruling party led by Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga.

“We cannot think it’s rational to host the Olympics in the city this summer,” the newspaper said in its editorial under a headline that read: “We Demand PM Suga Decide Cancellation.”

“Distrust and backlash against the reckless national government, Tokyo government and stakeholders in the Olympics are nothing but escalating,” the editorial added. “We demand Prime Minister Suga to calmly evaluate the circumstances and decide the cancellation of the summer event.”

Asahi has a morning circulation reported at 5.16 million, and 1.55 million for its evening edition. It is second in circulation behind Yomiuri Shimbun, and subsequently is the second largest circulating newspaper in the world behind Yomiuri.

Despite the editorial, there is no indication the International Olympic Committee or local organizers have any plans to pull the plug on the games. But opposition is mounting with only a tiny percentage of Japanese people now vaccinated.

Tokyo organizing committee CEO Toshiro Muto said Wednesday he was aware of the editorial, but offered little response.

Asahi is one of about 70 local Olympic sponsors that have chipped in almost $3.5 billion to the organizing committee budget. It is also one of a half dozen newspapers that are sponsors.

“Of course, different press organizations have different views. And that’s very natural,” Muto said, adding local partners, or sponsors, continued to offer “support.”

Senior IOC member Richard Pound said in an interview with Japan’s JiJi Press last week that the final deadline to call off the Olympics was still a month away.

“Before the end of June, you really need to know, yes or no,” JiJi quoted Pound as saying.

The British Medical Journal called last month for a hard look at going forward with the Olympics. Local medical officials have also been skeptical, and billionaire businessman Masayoshi Son suggested over the weekend that the IOC was forcing the Olympics on Japan.

“Right now, more than 80% of the nation’s people want the Olympics postponed or canceled,” said Son, the founder and CEO of SoftBank Group Corp. who also owns the SoftBank Hawks baseball team.

“Who is forcing this to go ahead, and under what rights?” Son added.

Asahi also criticized the IOC, calling it “self-righteous” and also lambasted IOC vice president John Coates. Last week, Coates was asked if the Olympics would be held if a state of emergency were in force.

“Absolutely, yes,” he replied.

The newspaper said there was a “huge gap” between Coates’ words and the sentiments “of the people.”

“Despite its overgrown size and excessive commercialism and many other problems, the Olympics have been supported because of empathy for its ideals. … But what is the reality now?” Asahi asked.

On Tuesday, the Japanese government said a warning by the United States to avoid travel to Japan would have no impact on holding the Olympics.

Japan has officially spent $15.4 billion to organize the Olympics, and government audits suggest it might be much larger. The IOC gets billions from selling broadcast rights, which amounts to about 75% of its income.

Public opinion polls in Japan show between 60%-80% want the Olympics canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and an online petition asking the games be canceled has gained 400,000 signatures in a few weeks.

Tokyo, Osaka and other regions of the country are under a state of emergency that is likely to be extended past its May 31 expiration.

Organizers and the IOC, often citing the authority of the World Health Organization, say the games can be held safely with 15,000 Olympic and Paralympic athletes entering Japan, joined by tens of thousands of judges, officials, sponsors, broadcasters and media.

Fans from abroad have already been banned, and organizers are to announce next month if any fans at all will be allowed into Olympic venues.

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Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun calls for cancellation of Tokyo OlympicsAssociated Presson May 26, 2021 at 3:46 pm Read More »

Memories and Montrose metered parking: IHSA might move bass finals, Monty & Rose ballooned, Stray CastDale Bowmanon May 26, 2021 at 2:25 pm

A boat speeds back toward Montrose Harbor in the middle of the best view of downtown Chicago from the south side of Montrose, the day before parking meters turned on at Montrose Harbor Drive. Credit: Dale Bowman
A boat speeds back toward Montrose Harbor in the middle of the best view of downtown Chicago from the south side of Montrose, the day before parking meters turned on at Montrose Harbor Drive. | Dale Bowman

Parking meters going in at Montrose Harbor pull up memories; plus notes on the IHSA bass finals possibly moving, a balloon spooks nesting Monty and Rose and, as always, the Stray Cast.

I napped last Wednesday at my favorite view on the Chicago lakefront from the south side of Montrose Harbor.

I figured I had better get it in before pay-meter parking began Thursday.

The sun broke through briefly, enough to heat the car.

For years, besides fishing with my favorite view of downtown, I stopped at Montrose to eat lunch or nap. In younger days, more nefarious things ensued late at night.

I love the spot. Not to get too biblical, but it restores my soul.

As I savored the downtown skyline, Maria Rizzo circled the new meter, trying to figure out whether she needed to pay. I told her it did not start until the next day, then asked if it would affect her.

‘‘Probably not,’’ she said.

The city is counting — correctly, I think — on the draw of fishing, scenery, picnicking, bike paths, soccer fields, birding and dreaming on the hill to keep people coming and paying for parking.

For now the meters are only on Montrose Harbor Drive, from Park Bait around to the circle. A couple of free quick-stop spots remain in front of Park Bait.

IHSA bass fishing move?

Boats lining up Saturday on Carlyle Lake before takeoff on Day 2 of the Illinois High School Association’s state finals for bass fishing. Credit: Dale Bowman
Dale Bowman
Boats lining up Saturday on Carlyle Lake before takeoff on Day 2 of the Illinois High School Association’s state finals for bass fishing.

Friday and Saturday might have been the last time the Illinois High School Association’s state finals for bass fishing were held at Carlyle Lake.

At the IHSA board meeting June 14, a decision is expected about whether Carlyle or Springfield will host the next three state finals, associate executive director Kurt Gibson said. Carlyle hosted the first 12.

Illinois hunting

Hunters harvested 13,383 turkeys during Illinois’ spring season, a drop from 15,831 in 2020. Click here for a more detailed breakdown.

Wild things

A balloon hitting the protective wire spooked mating piping plovers Monty and Rose off their nest May 17 at Montrose beach, according to chicagopipingplovers.org. Celebratory balloons outside are like housecats outside: Nothing good comes of it.

Stray cast

Tony La Russa does to the joy of Sox what summer sun does to fluddles.

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Memories and Montrose metered parking: IHSA might move bass finals, Monty & Rose ballooned, Stray CastDale Bowmanon May 26, 2021 at 2:25 pm Read More »

Eye-popping ‘Cruella’ dazzles with spectacular outfits and offbeat origin storyRichard Roeperon May 26, 2021 at 1:00 pm

Born with shocking two-toned hair, the title character of “Cruella” (Emma Stone) dreams of becoming a fashion designer. | Disney

Emma Stone’s having a ball as she embodies the future Dalmatian snatcher from underdog street thief to scheming fashionista.

We’re not even halfway through the Disney villain origins story “Cruella” when this much is clear: If this movie DOESN’T win Academy Awards for best makeup and hairstyling and best costume design, I can’t wait to see what tops it.

While overlong and at times too self-conscious in its quest for period-piece hipster status, “Cruella” is a visual feast, from the dizzying array of outfits designed by and worn by Emma Stone’s Estella/Cruella to some striking, glam-inspired makeup to dazzling set pieces with dozens of extras wearing amazing ensembles. Reynolds Woodcock from “The Phantom Thread” would pass out from the sheer overwhelming number of scenes involving fashion design, discussion of fashion design, more fashion design — and pop-up fashion events taking place during traditional fashion events. This is a VERY fashionable film.

It’s also funny and ridiculous and dark and occasionally meandering, clocking in at 2 hours and 14 minutes when 110 minutes or so might have been a better fit. Especially in the final half-hour, events are stretched to the limits and we’re hearing exposition when we don’t need any further clarification. Still, the talented director Craig Gillespie (“Lars and the Real Girl,” “I, Tonya”) has delivered a clever, devilishly offbeat story with appropriately over-the-top and wildly entertaining performances from Emma Stone as the titular character and Emma Thompson as her nemesis, who is so casually cruel (in a manner of speaking), so cold and cunning, she makes Streep in “The Devil Wears Prada” look like the Employer of the Year.

“Cruella” takes us all the way back to the arrival of a newborn baby named Estella who has a curious shock of hair — half black, half white — and a penchant for acting out. When her mother Catherine (Emily Beecham) drops off 12-year-old Estella (played by Tipper Seifert-Cleveland) for her first day at a new school, she cautions Estella not to let the “Cruella” side of her personality get the better of her — but Estella’s efforts to play nice don’t last through the first day, as she’s the frequent target of bullying, and she fights back with a vengeance.

After an unspeakable tragedy leaves Estella all alone with only her faithful dog Buddy by her side, the girl winds up in London, where she teams up with a couple of Dickensian orphans named Jasper (Ziggy Gardner) and Horace (Joseph MacDonald), who support themselves via pickpocketing and small-time thievery. They’re a scrappy bunch, eh govnah?

Cut to a decade later, and we’re smack dab in swinging 1970s London, with Estella (now played by Emma Stone), Jasper (Joel Fry) and Horace (Paul Walter Hauser) still rip-off artists and still the best of friends. Estella is holding onto her dream of becoming a fashion designer, and she eventually lands a job working for the legendary and legendarily monstrous designer known as the Baroness (Emma Thompson), a demanding taskmaster with three menacing Dalmatians constantly by her side. Oooooh, she’s the worst, which makes for fantastic fun.


Disney
The monstrous Baroness (Emma Thompson) takes a chance on Cruella as an employee at her design house.

“Cruella” often has the rhythms of a musical, with director Gillespie pulling off one elaborate comedy/action sequence after another, accompanied by a Billboard chart roster of pop and rock tunes, from “She’s a Rainbow” by the Rolling Stones to “These Boots Were Made for Walkin’ ” by Nancy Sinatra to “Car Wash” by Rose Royce to “Should I Stay or Should I Go” by the Clash. (There’s a sensational, “Goodfellas”-esque tracking shot set to “Time of the Season” by the Zombies.) The film has the madcap tone and pop-music vibe of Matthew Vaughn’s “Kingsman: The Secret Service” and Edgar Wright’s “Baby Driver,” and the combo platter of pop tunes and popping visuals is entertaining as hell, though the gimmick veers close to wearing out its welcome.

Estella’s transition from an essentially likable underdog to an ambitious, ruthless and borderline psychotic villain-in-training is rather abrupt — but it’s explained by certain plot developments we won’t reveal. Emma Stone seems to be having a lot of fun playing Estella, but it looks like she’s having the time of her life playing the increasingly wicked Cruella, who becomes an underground fashion design star in the West End with her bold vision and attention-getting stunts, even as she plots her revenge against the Baroness.


AP Photos
Retailer Artie (John McCrea) takes his fashion cues from David Bowie.

Stone and Thompson are magical together as they verbally spar, while Joel Fry gives a winning performance as Jasper, who is clearly in love with Estella, and Paul Walter Hauser provides comic relief as the hapless but loyal Horace. Mark Strong is his usual reliable self as The Baroness’ longtime valet, who has a trick or two up his sleeve, while John McCrea is warm and funny and quick as Artie, who runs a cutting-edge fashion store and has a look and style inspired by David Bowie.

There’s a LOT going on in “Cruella” and we haven’t talked much about the Dalmatians, who do play a key role in the story — as well they should. (There’s also a mid-credits scene sure to delight anyone who remembers the 1961 animated version or the 1996 live-action telling of “101 Dalmatians.”)

Even as Cruella’s heart turns colder, we understand where she’s coming from. The world can be cruel, and Cruella would tell you she’s merely adapting to it.

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Eye-popping ‘Cruella’ dazzles with spectacular outfits and offbeat origin storyRichard Roeperon May 26, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Colorado takes on high prescription drug costs that state and others are payingKaiser Health Newson May 26, 2021 at 1:00 pm

Supporters of Colorado legislation to create a prescription drug affordability board rally on the steps of the state Capitol in Denver. The bill, backed by Democratic Gov. Jared Polis, has passed the Colorado Senate and is making its way through the House.
Supporters of Colorado legislation to create a prescription drug affordability board rally on the steps of the state Capitol in Denver. The bill, backed by Democratic Gov. Jared Polis, has passed the Colorado Senate and is making its way through the House. | Markian Hawryluk / KHN

Unable to set prices, the state, like many others, is exploring legislative and administrative approaches to cut out-of-pocket costs on medications.

DENVER — Tired of waiting for federal action to reduce prescription drug costs, Colorado is acting on its own — even if it must do so with one arm figuratively tied behind its back.

Unable to set prices or change patent protections, the state is exploring legislative and administrative approaches to cut out-of-pocket costs on medications.

None of the efforts alone would result in broad-based, deep cuts. Still, state officials estimate the combined impact of the measures could save Coloradans 20% to 40% in out-of-pocket costs.

“That’s why it’s so important to have a variety of levers,” said Kim Bimestefer, executive director of the Colorado Department of Health Care Policy & Financing. “You start stacking all these up, and it’s remarkable how much we can drive down the cost.”

Like many states, Colorado — which spends more than $1 billion annually on drug purchases — has been looking to lower drug prices

One bill would create a prescription drug affordability board, which could review prices of medications sold to consumers and set payment limits. The legislation, backed by Democratic Gov. Jared Polis, has passed the Colorado Senate and is making its way through the House. The board’s job would be to ensure that those savings are passed on to consumers.

Drugs would qualify for an affordability review under various triggers, including when prices increase by more than 10% a year or exceed either $30,000 a year for brand-name drugs or $100 a month per person for generics. Patients and consumer advocates also could nominate drugs for review.

State officials estimate those categories probably cover 100 to 125 medications, but the board would be permitted to set limits for only 12 drugs a year. It could review affordability of more drugs and make recommendations for other types of administrative or legislative action to lower costs.

“It is inherently limited,” said Isabel Cruz, a policy manager with the nonprofit Colorado Consumer Health Initiative. “That’s the political reality that we had to accept.”

The bill is intended to help people like Koen Lichtenbelt, 18, of Ridgeway, Colorado, who was diagnosed with a rare autoinflammatory disease when she was in kindergarten. The condition damaged his nerves. In December, doctors prescribed the drug Hizentra, with an out-of-pocket cost of $10,000 a month. His parents footed the bill for three months before their insurance plan agreed to cover it.

His mother Cat Lichtenbelt said, that’s “$30,000, which is the price of a car, but, you know, this is our son’s life.”

Once on the medication, Koen, who’d been missing half of his school days for years, was able to graduate this year. He’s been accepted to Colorado State University but is taking a gap year to work as a first-responder at a fire department. Had he not had access to the drug, Lichtenbelt said, her son would likely need to rely on state aid.

“There is a need for pharmaceutical companies to continue to develop medications and drugs to improve people’s lives,” she said. “However, what is the price point at which there is access to actually being able to use those drugs?”

Democratic Colorado state Rep. Yadira Caraveo, a co-sponsor of legislation to create a prescription drug affordability board, speaks at a rally in support of the bill on the steps of the Colorado state Capitol in Denver.
Markian Hawryluk / KHN
Democratic Colorado state Rep. Yadira Caraveo, a co-sponsor of legislation to create a prescription drug affordability board, speaks at a rally in support of the bill on the steps of the Colorado state Capitol in Denver.

Beside opposition from hospital and pharmacy groups, the pharmaceutical industry is throwing its weight against the bill, threatening that, in Colorado, it won’t sell the drugs facing payment limits.

“Creating a board of unelected bureaucrats with the authority to arbitrarily decide what medicines are worth and what medicines patients can get would be a disaster for patients,” said Hannah Loiacono of the national Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America.

The Colorado BioScience Association says setting payment limits could reduce funding available for pharmaceutical discoveries.

“If passed, this bill will create unpredictability for the startups and development-stage companies in Colorado’s life sciences ecosystem, making it harder for them to raise funds,” said Jennifer Jones Paton, the group’s president and CEO. “Investors will look elsewhere.”

Still, the bill is expected to pass. Proponents said it’s unlikely a manufacturer could carve out specific drugs or states from its supply chain and noted that drug companies already sell their highest-cost drugs at lower prices to Medicaid, community clinics and charity hospitals.

On July 1, the governor’s office is launching a tool embedded in electronic medical records allowing doctors and other prescribers to see what patients with public or private health plans would pay for a medication. Bimestefer said 80% of prescribers in Colorado have the tool enabled, and 37% are using it ahead of the official start date.

The state also is pursuing contracts with drug companies linking prices to the effectiveness of the drugs, measured, for example, by whether they reduce hospitalizations.

The Colorado legislature previously approved importing drugs from Canada for consumers to purchase at lower costs. Now, with federal approval, the state is reviewing bids from contractors to make that happen, estimating Canadian imports would reduce costs for 50 common drugs by 63%.

But the state found that importing drugs from Australia and France could save 78% to 84%. Colorado would need an adjustment to federal law to import from those countries.

“If we open up other countries, we could increase the supply of the drugs coming in,” Bimestefer said. “This will actually help us battle pharma if we can turn on the spigot full, full, full throttle.”

Colorado’s efforts are part of a national trend, said Megan Olsen, a principal in the policy practice at Avalere, a Washington, D.C., healthcare consulting firm.

According to the National Academy for State Health Policy, nearly every state is considering some prescription drug cost bill this year. There are 14 prescription drug affordability board bills, 24 foreign drug importation bills and 58 bills addressing prescription drug coupons or cost-sharing. And, following a December Supreme Court ruling allowing states to regulate pharmacy benefit managers — the companies that control drug prices paid by insurance companies, states are considering 97 such measures.

Trish Riley, executive director of the academy, said states serve as 50 health policy laboratories, experimenting with policies that can set precedent for other states, prove the viability of various approaches and put pressure on the federal government to act. Some national policies, such as the Children’s Health Insurance Program, started as state measures.

“We’re on the front lines,” Bimestefer said. “And we can see some of the solutions more readily.”

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom producing in-depth journalism on health issues.

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Colorado takes on high prescription drug costs that state and others are payingKaiser Health Newson May 26, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Amazon buying MGM, studio behind James Bond franchise and ‘Shark Tank’Joseph Pisani | AP Retail Writeron May 26, 2021 at 1:10 pm

Amazon’s purchase of MGM is the latest deal in the media industry that’s aimed at boosting streaming services to compete against Netflix and Disney+. 
Amazon’s purchase of MGM is the latest deal in the media industry that’s aimed at boosting streaming services to compete against Netflix and Disney+.  | AP

Amazon is paying $8.45 billion for MGM, making it the company’s second-largest acquisition after it bought grocer Whole Foods for nearly $14 billion in 2017.

NEW YORK — Amazon is going Hollywood.

The online shopping giant is buying MGM, the movie and TV studio behind James Bond, “Legally Blonde” and “Shark Tank,” with the hopes of filling its video streaming service with more stuff to watch.

Amazon is paying $8.45 billion for MGM, making it the company’s second-largest acquisition after it bought grocer Whole Foods for nearly $14 billion in 2017.

The deal is the latest in the media industry that’s aimed at boosting streaming services to compete against Netflix and Disney+. AT&T and Discovery announced on May 17 that they would combine media companies, creating a powerhouse that includes HGTV, CNN, Food Network and HBO.

Amazon doesn’t say how many people watch its Prime Video service. But more than 200 million have access to it because they’re signed up for its Prime membership, which gives them faster shipping and other perks. Besides Prime Video, Amazon also has a free streaming service called IMDb TV, where Amazon makes money by playing ads during movies and shows.

Buying MGM would give Amazon access to more films, shows and famous characters, including Rocky, RoboCop and Pink Panther. Amazon will also get a cable channel: Epix, which MGM owns.

Known for its roaring lion logo, MGM is one of the oldest Hollywood studios, founded in 1924 when films were silent. It has a long list of classics in its library, including “Singin’ in the Rain.” More recent productions include reality TV staples “Shark Tank” and “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills,” as well as the upcoming James Bond movie “No Time to Die” and an Aretha Franklin biopic called “Respect.”

Amazon already has its own studio but has had mixed results. Two of its shows, “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” and “Fleabag,” won best comedy series Emmys. But many of its films have failed to click with audiences at the box office. Recently, Amazon has been spending on sports and splashy shows. It will stream “Thursday Night Football” next year and is producing a “Lord of the Rings” show, which reportedly cost $450 million for its first season alone.

The deal, which is subject to customary approvals, will make Amazon, already one of the most powerful and valuable companies in the world, even bigger. Regulators around the world are scrutinizing Amazon’s business practices, specifically the way it looks at information from businesses that sell goods on its site and uses it to create its own Amazon-branded products.

A report by the House Judiciary Committee in October called for a possible breakup of Amazon and others, making it harder for them to buy other businesses and imposing new rules to safeguard competition.

Amazon, founded in 1995 as an online bookstore, has become a $1.6 trillion behemoth that does a little bit of everything. It has a delivery business network that gets orders to people in two days or sooner; sells inhalers and insulin; has a cloud-computing business that powers the apps of Netflix and McDonald’s; and has plans to send more than 3,200 satellites into space to beam internet service to Earth.

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Amazon buying MGM, studio behind James Bond franchise and ‘Shark Tank’Joseph Pisani | AP Retail Writeron May 26, 2021 at 1:10 pm Read More »

Marjorie Taylor Greene pollutes the RepublicS. E. Cuppon May 26, 2021 at 1:25 pm

U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Georgia. | Michael Brochstein/Sipa USA

It seems the Republican Party believes it needs Greene’s anti-Semites to win. What else could explain its muted response to her garbage? What a disgrace.

After the freshman congresswoman from Georgia recently lit a firestorm comparing mask mandates to the persecution of the Jews during the Holocaust, she came out with a fresh batch of crazy. In the early morning hours on Tuesday, Marjorie Taylor Greene took to Twitter to double down on the obscene remarks she made to Christian Broadcasting Network’s David Brody.

Her first tweet to greet the day: ”Vaccinated employees get a vaccination logo just like the Nazi’s forced Jewish people to wear a gold star. Vaccine passports & mask mandates create discrimination against unvaxxed people who trust their immune systems to a virus that is 99% survivable.”

Her next tweets after that weren’t much better.

In response to a report that the University of Virginia is requiring vaccines for all in-person learning next year — students can request medical and religious exemptions — Greene tweeted: “Well hate freedom media would you look at this story. It appears Nazi practices have already begun on our youth. Show your VAX papers or no in person class for you. This is exactly what I was saying about the gold star. This is disgusting!”

Having insufficiently insulted the world’s Jewish population, apparently, Greene decided it was a good idea to target two prominent Jewish members of the media for disagreeing with her vulgar comparisons.

To Ben Shapiro, founder of the Daily Wire, she tweeted, “I never compared [mask and vaccine mandates] to the Holocaust, only to the discrimination against Jews in early Nazi years. Stop feeding into the left wing media attacks on me.” And to Jake Sherman, a reporter at MSNBC: “You are a liar. Stop twisting my words.”

To quote Shapiro, Greene’s thinking is indeed “demented nonsense.” It’s also so obviously out of bounds, it should be easily and roundly condemned by Republican leadership.

Yet there were crickets from Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy after her initial comments. Finally, in the wake of these new ones, McCarthy released a statement and a tweet, which read in part: “Marjorie is wrong, and her intentional decision to compare the horrors of the Holocaust with wearing masks is appalling. Let me be clear: the House Republican Conference condemns this language.”

Good. Now what? Will it call for her censure? Better yet, her expulsion?

Jewish groups and leaders immediately condemned the initial remarks that McCarthy couldn’t bother to.

“Such comparisons demean the Holocaust and contaminate American political speech,” said the American Jewish Congress, demanding an apology.

Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of the Anti-Defamation League, also reminded CNN viewers that Greene has trafficked in anti-Semitic tropes and conspiracy theories before.

“This is a woman who thinks there are Jewish space lasers starting forest fires. She’s a QAnon enthusiast. She is offensive in almost everything that she does.”

To which Greene’s ever-impolitic and loyal goose stepper Nick Dyer responded, with another tinge of anti-Semitism: “The people of Northwest Georgia aren’t interested in the opinions of a radical leftist.”

How long will Republican leadership allow this horror show to play out?

While Democrats forced McCarthy to strip Greene of her House committee assignments the first time around, after threats of violence against Democratic members of Congress surfaced, the party has otherwise left her alone to keep peddling this kind of filth — and raise a whopping $3.2 million in her first three months in office.

Just like the party decided in 2016 that it needed the white supremacists and bigots Donald Trump was courting to win an election, it seems to believe it needs Marjorie Taylor Greene’s anti-Semites to win again. What else could explain its muted response to Greene’s garbage?

What a disgrace.

As anti-Semitic attacks rise all over America, a U.S. member of Congress is loudly and repeatedly comparing mask and vaccine mandates — meant to keep every American safe from COVID-19 — to the tactics used by Adolph Hitler to persecute the millions of Jews sent to their deaths in the Holocaust.

She’s doing it for three discrete reasons, all of which are despicable. First, because she’s an anti-Semite, an undeniable fact she’s proven over and over again. Second, merely to own the libs with anti-science, culture-war red meat. And third, to become famous, the only way she knows how.

Those of us in the media are regularly scolded for columns like these giving her oxygen. But the idea of not covering a rabid lunatic with a seat in Congress and obvious fundraising power wouldn’t just be pointless, it would be malfeasance.

Marjorie Taylor Greene is a scourge and a cancer on the Republican Party. That much is obvious. But as long as the Republican Party tacitly accepts her for her voters and her money, the Republican Party is also a scourge and a cancer on America.

S.E. Cupp is the host of “S.E. Cupp Unfiltered” on CNN.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene pollutes the RepublicS. E. Cuppon May 26, 2021 at 1:25 pm Read More »