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Pediatricians now recommend drugs and surgery for kids with obesity

Early start —

Doctors step up fight against childhood obesity, say “watchful waiting” doesn’t work.


Woman on a kg weight scale

Children as young as 12 with obesity should now consider taking weight loss drugs, and those as young as 13 with severe obesity should consider metabolic or bariatric surgery, according to aggressive new guidelines released Monday by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

The new guidance marks the first time the AAP has recommended weight loss drugs for childhood obesity. Overall, the medical group is urging immediate, intensive action to get ahead of childhood obesity and overweight before the complex conditions lead to long-term health problems, such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes.

“There is no evidence that ‘watchful waiting’ or delayed treatment is appropriate for children with obesity,” said Sandra Hassink, an author of the guideline and vice chair of the AAP’s Clinical Practice Guideline Subcommittee on Obesity, said in a statement. “The goal is to help patients make changes in lifestyle, behaviors, or environment in a way that is sustainable and involves families in decision-making at every step of the way.”

Obesity and overweight have long been stigmatized as simple conditions driven by personal choices. But in reality, the AAP points out, they are complex medical conditions that involve combinations of genetic, physiologic, socioeconomic, and environmental factors.

“Weight is a sensitive topic for most of us, and children and teens are especially aware of the harsh and unfair stigma that comes with being affected by it,” said Sarah Hampl, MD, a lead author of the guideline, said in a statement. “Research tells us that we need to take a close look at families—where they live, their access to nutritious food, health care, and opportunities for physical activity—as well as other factors that are associated with health, quality-of-life outcomes and risks.”

The AAP defines the condition of overweight as having a body-mass index (BMI) at or above the 85th percentile to 95th percentile. Obesity is defined as having a BMI at or above the 95th percentile, and severe obesity is defined by a BMI at or above 120 percent of the 95th percentile for age and sex.

In addition to recommendations related to weight-loss medications for obesity and surgery for severe obesity, the guidance includes recommendations for motivational interviewing and intensive health behavior and lifestyle treatment. The AAP also recommends that pediatricians evaluate children with overweight, obesity, and severe obesity for lipid abnormalities, high blood pressure, signs of pre-diabetes or diabetes, and mental health conditions. The guidance discusses the increased risk children face due to special health needs, low socioeconomic status, and structural racism.

Last month, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention extended the growth charts for children and adolescents (aged 2 to 19 years) to track growth and treatment of children with severe obesity.

“Childhood obesity is a serious and increasing problem in the United States,” Karen Hacker, director of the CDC’s National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (NCCDPHP), said in a statement at the time. “The Extended BMI-for-Age Growth Charts allow clinicians to track growth and visualize high BMI percentiles with families.”

Before the pandemic, obesity affected about 14.7 million children and adolescents. The pandemic made things worse. According to a CDC study published in 2021, the rate that BMIs in children and adolescents were increasing doubled during the pandemic compared with pre-pandemic years. Those most affected by the increase were children and teens with overweight or obesity, and younger school-aged children.

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Beth Mole

It’s Raining Cats and Dogs in California—but What Happens to All That Water?

(The opinions expressed by contributors are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of RedState.com.)

It’s absolutely pouring in Los Angeles Monday night as another storm hits the area, with rivers running down my street, my yard turned into a large swimming pool, and evacuations being ordered in Prince Harry’s town of Montecito (just south of Santa Barbara).

I wrote last week about how instead of welcoming this desperately needed precipitation, the media has largely been portraying it in a negative light, bemoaning the terrifying-sounding “bomb cyclone” and predicting horrible things. Yes, the historic onslaught will cause some damage, but you don’t get Nature on your terms—you get it on Nature’s.

LOCAL : Thunderstorms continue throughout Santa Barbara/Venutra and Los Angeles counties. Lightning strikes reported East of Ojai and West of Santa Clarita. Santa Barbara Airport closed until further notice.#SantaBarbara #venturacounty #LosAngeles @NWSLosAngeles pic.twitter.com/f5I4Wv5cN8

— CaliforniaNewsWatch (@CANews_Watch) January 10, 2023

The question is, with billions of gallons dropping out of the sky, where does all that water go? Shouldn’t this be enough to end the drought and leave us with oodles of H2O?

Turns out, the answer lies in bad planning, wasted resources and bureaucratic entanglements. Why do I say that? Because most of this water will fly down the LA River and into the ocean, an ephemeral visitor that we fail to capture or effectively utilize. In effect, God is giving us the very answer to one of California’s most vexing problems—and we’re simply letting it slip through our hands.

It never rains in Southern California… Except when it does.

And it all goes straight into the Pacific Ocean pic.twitter.com/9wKXCgiK0L

— Bob Hoge (@Bob_Hoge_CA) January 10, 2023

The Los Angeles Times explains:

It was by all accounts a washout, but despite heaps of water pouring into the area, drought-weary Los Angeles won’t be able to save even half of it. The region’s system of engineered waterways is designed to whisk L.A.’s stormwater out to sea — a strategy intended to reduce flooding that nonetheless sacrifices countless precious gallons.

Voters in 2018 approved Measure W, which is aimed at improving L.A.’s aging stormwater capture system. Officials are making progress, but experts say there’s a long way to go. Of an estimated 5 billion to 10 billion gallons pouring into the Los Angeles Basin from current storms, only about 20% will be captured by the county.

I lived in LA several years before I understood why the city paved over the river and turned it into an unsightly mass of concrete carving through neighborhoods, usually with only a slight trickle running through it. But then I experienced my first big rain, and watched as the river turned from a dribble to a raging maelstrom. Only the tall walls of the river held it back, preventing it from sending massive floods into the surrounding areas.

The one thing they forgot to plan for, however, was how to capture it:

Part of the challenge is that the current system was built about 100 years ago, in an era when Angelenos were more concerned about saving lives and property from flooding than they were about drought. Their solution was to lay millions of barrels of concrete to get rid of that water faster — channelizing the L.A. River, Ballona Creek and nearly every other waterway in the area.

The L.A. River was wild Thursday after another storm hit Southern California, bringing rain, flash flood concerns, strong winds and dangerous surf in the region.

See our complete storm coverage at https://t.co/wMtFyrJaqo pic.twitter.com/vHfN35OUvS

— Los Angeles Times (@latimes) January 5, 2023

Despite being one of the highest-taxed states in the nation, California continues to watch one of it most valuable resources simply slip away into the Pacific Ocean. Meanwhile, Governor Gavin Newsom and the Sacramento legislature enacted strict water use measures this summer, leading to most of our lawns dying, and enforced tough standards on home devices—meaning our showers barely get you wet and our toilets hardly flush. It’s part of the culture of “lack” that has taken over in our society; despite having vast resources we are always focused on what we don’t have.

What we do have, however, is water, and tonight I will watch it pour down all across Southern California. Tomorrow I will watch it make its way to the ocean.

–> See also:

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Michele Mayoral

27 Major GOP Donors Endorse Harmeet Dhillon for RNC Chair, Say Party’s ‘On the Edge of Permanent Irrelevance’ Without Course Correction

The Republican Party “is on the verge of permanent irrelevance if we fail to come together to correct course,” a letter signed by 27 GOP mega donors says. The donors believe that a course correction is only possible with a change of leadership, and as such, they are “calling on members of the RNC to thank Ronna McDaniel for her service and to support the only RNC member seeking to succeed her, Harmeet Dhillon—a bold visionary with the energy and experience to retool the party for success in 2024 and beyond.”

The scathing letter calls out the losses under current chair Ronna McDaniel, and more:

We cannot continue on our current trajectory as a Republican Party. We must change, in order to fulfill our promise to Republican voters to win elections. After three consecutive losing election cycles and decades of a handful of consultants plundering Party resources, many members of the RNC seem content to double down on the incumbent leadership that is presently failing us. The once great Party of Lincoln is on the verge of permanent irrelevance if we fail to come together to correct course.

The Republican Party currently faces the most organized, radical, and weaponized Democrat Party the nation has ever seen. Despite this clear and present threat to our freedom, the highest levels of the Republican National Committee appear to be more focused on blaming others for their lack of leadership and lining the pockets of cherry-picked consultants than on winning elections.

The donors who signed the letter are:

  • Joy Ashlock (Chuluota, FL)
  • Agnieska & Witold Balaban (New York, NY)
  • Marianne Bourgeois (Lafayette, LA)
  • Leila Centner (Miami, FL)
  • Jackie & Doug Deason (Dallas, TX)
  • Ambassador Alfred Hoffman Jr. (Jupiter, FL)
  • Mary Catherine & Don Huffines (Dallas, TX)
  • Sherry & Joe Hurt (Odessa, TX)
  • Laine & Greg Lansing (San Diego, CA)
  • Lisa McMurray (Odessa, TX)
  • Dave Moore (Dallas, TX)
  • George O’Neill Jr. (Lake Wales, FL)
  • Leandro Rizzuto Jr. (Boca Raton, FL)
  • Bubba Saulsbury (Odessa, TX)
  • Bill Scrogins (Jacksonville, FL)
  • Dr. Bob Shillman (Rancho Sante Fe, CA)
  • Joy & Jeffrey Spragens (Fisher Island, FL)
  • Lewis Topper (Jupiter, FL)
  • Robert Zarnegin (Beverly Hills, CA)
  • Barbara & Les Zellan (New Braunfels, TX)

McDaniel issued her own endorsements from a group of seven mega donors last week, who’ve given a total of $14 million to the RNC during her tenure. She did not mention, though, that three of the seven  donors own companies with RNC contracts, including the RNC’s highest-paid telemarketing and GOTV phone call contractor, and that companies owned by the three donors have been paid more than $35 million during that same time frame.

Numerous state Republican party committees have held votes of no confidence in McDaniel; the Alabama Republican Party’s vote was announced Monday.

(NOTE: Harmeet Dhillon, represented RedState Managing Editor Jennifer Van Laar in a lawsuit filed by  former Rep. Katie Hill, who resigned her post after Van Laar wrote a series of articles detailing Hill’s abuse of her staff. Van Laar has publicly endorsed Dhillon in the RNC chair race.)

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Lloyd Kazmierczak

Diamond of “Diamond and Silk” fame has passed

Lynette Hardaway, more famously known as “Diamond” of the President Trump supporting duo “Diamond and Silk” has passed on at the age of 51:

The World just lost a True Angel and Warrior Patriot for Freedom, Love, and Humanity! Please respect the privacy of Diamond’s family! Memorial Ceremony TBA.

Contributions towards Preserving Diamond’s Legacy are only being accepted at the following link:https://t.co/g6J6NlBXE7

— Diamond and Silk® (@DiamondandSilk) January 10, 2023

Tributes are pouring in, including one from former President Trump himself:

Oh no. ???? pic.twitter.com/zJB8GV70Wf

— Catturd ™ (@catturd2) January 10, 2023

Diamond was a beloved voice:

RIP Diamond. Sad to hear of the passing of this awesome lady. pic.twitter.com/hNAqGNPXof

— Tim Young (@TimRunsHisMouth) January 10, 2023

RIP, Diamond. https://t.co/DDHlMMBRtY

— Tom Fitton (@TomFitton) January 10, 2023

RIP Diamond from Diamond & Silk ???? pic.twitter.com/Jqty1XqGtm

— Vince Langman (@LangmanVince) January 10, 2023

RIP Diamond from Diamond and silk. Wow. This was very unexpected. They were so cool and always showed love. Man.

— CCG BRYSON (@RealBrysonGray) January 10, 2023

My hearts breaks upon hearing of the tragic loss of our friend Diamond. Her personality was bigger than life with an infectious faith that undoubtedly led thousands to Christ. Her love for this country was strong and true.

Rest in Peace beautiful lady. Prayers for Silk & family. pic.twitter.com/VsnlajYIxv

— Tudor Dixon (@TudorDixon) January 10, 2023

RIP Diamond, of @DiamondandSilk. You certainly left your mark on the conservative political landscape. pic.twitter.com/nJh0F41Kmh

— Errol Webber (@ErrolWebber) January 10, 2023

She certainly did.

As expected whenever a prominent Conservative passes away, there are also a lot of hateful tweets directed at the occasion of Ms. Hardaway’s passing, but those are perhaps better left for another time. For now, it’s time to celebrate the life of a fearless patriot who was steadfast in her resolve to get her message out.

Our thoughts and prayers go out to Diamond’s loved ones. Rest in Peace, Lynette.

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Arden Mongold

John Kirby’s description of what Biden saw at a migrant processing center is NOT a surprise

On Sunday, President Biden visited El Paso, Texas, and before his arrival, something amazing but not unpredictable happened: The “border crisis” had been swept under the rug:

This is El Paso before Biden’s visit and after his announcement he was coming to El Paso. We needed him to see what his policies have done to our Border cities and South Texas is still waiting for his Border visit.

Photos: Fit Fam El Paso pic.twitter.com/kLbOpBleEh

— Mayra Flores (@MayraFlores2022) January 8, 2023

El Paso cleared the illegal homeless camps for Biden’s visit today: pic.twitter.com/SqE08tzQ4w

— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) January 8, 2023

Given that, John Kirby’s description of what Biden saw when visiting a migrant processing center will come to you as NO surprise:

CAVUTO: “He never met with migrants themselves…”

KIRBY: “He did visit a migrant processing center. There weren’t any migrants there at the time he visited…” pic.twitter.com/vEJJ6Fpkz9

— Townhall.com (@townhallcom) January 9, 2023

Considering the apparent fact that all negative optics of Biden’s disastrous open border policies had been swept away ahead of the president’s arrival, is it any surprise that there were no illegal immigrants at the migrant processing center?

Because they shipped them all off and cleaned up the streets so there wouldn’t be anything for him to see. https://t.co/s1MCLKI6eM

— sandihansen (@shansen6022) January 10, 2023

Bingo!

This is some North Korea style propaganda https://t.co/V00MdkGQ10

— Katie Pavlich (@KatiePavlich) January 10, 2023

Where did they us them or put them up so he could not see them? https://t.co/ndJAafuqrJ

— Ellen M Martin-Weglarz (@MartinWeglarz) January 10, 2023

Apparently the best way to keep the border secure would be to have Biden stay down there every day.

***

Related:

BLISTERING thread uses Biden’s southern border photo-op to show what Dems REALLY think of immigrants

Biden’s obvious photo-op along the southern border BACKFIRES in a spectacularly painful (hilarious) way

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Bong Center

D’OH! Biden’s slam on Trump over classified documents at Mar-a-Lago has aged poorly

Democrats don’t really want to ‘SEE’ immigrants.

That must be the case since they worked so hard in El Paso, TX to make sure Biden didn’t see what was really going on with illegal immigrants and the border … otherwise, why did they ‘clean up’ their mess? You’d think if they really wanted to address what is happening along our southern border they’d have wanted Biden to see everything.

But at the end of the day, we all know Biden’s visit was more of a photo-op than actually working on any sort of a plan to stop the leaking border. Pradheep Shanker put together a fairly short but spot-on thread:

Literally @whcos and @POTUS, after visiting the border without meeting a single illegal immigrant, after El Paso cleaned out the immigrant Hoovervilles and the welcome center was scrubbed of any evidence of illegal immigrants… pic.twitter.com/Z0gS59I73Y

— Pradheep J. Shanker (@Neoavatara) January 9, 2023

WHOOHOO!

They went to the border.

It was pointless and meaningless, and they don’t intend to do anything but use it for campaigning but still … THEY WENT.

This is literally what Democrats think of immigrants: they don’t want to see them. They want to have them flood southern states, but don’t want to deal with them personally.

Biden proved that.

Don’t believe me? Ask the mayors of NYC and Chicago.

— Pradheep J. Shanker (@Neoavatara) January 9, 2023

Notice how much they all lose their minds when illegal immigrants are shipped to literal sanctuary cities … they freak out. BUT it’s AOK for them to flood the southern border because out of sight, out of mind.

Or something.

And these same clowns that opposed the border wall, still oppose the border wall, refuse to complete the wall…now have him triumphantly walking in front of the border wall.

Liars. All of them. https://t.co/IFYUwpzEkd

— Pradheep J. Shanker (@Neoavatara) January 9, 2023

Calling them liars is putting it nicely.

Self-serving, pandering, lying, a-holes is how we’d have put it.

Ahem.

The fact the city of El Paso cleaned up the town and ran the illegal aliens out so Biden could do his tour makes me think we should move our National Guard a little bit East.

Let the aliens take over El Paso, but contain them from moving further into the US.

— They Call Me Ralph (@NewRandomGeek) January 9, 2023

As planned, now they will just move on as there are now no issues at the border “as demonstrated” by the White House and confirmed by CNN

— Lift Off (@inloworbit) January 9, 2023

They’ll claim they SAW IT FIRSTHAND AND EVERYTHING.

Mayorkas has repeatedly lied that the border is secure, so now they have visual “proof”…
“I don’t see immigrants lying in the streets or stuffed into shelters in any of these pictures, do you?” said the Press Secretary at the briefing as Sec. Mayorkas nodded approvingly.

— Scott (@BadName717) January 9, 2023

People will buy those lies though.

— F. Mule (@BarefootMusings) January 9, 2023

Democrats will.

Yes.

***

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Matt Taibbi BUSTS WaPo NOW claiming there was little Russia Twitter troll ‘influence’ on ’16 election

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Nancie Mayoral

Jonathan Chait has ‘made a copy editing tweak’ after Christopher Rufo asks for a correction

Saying it’s a “copy editing tweak” shifts the blame over to the copy editor, who should have caught whatever it is in the first place; it’s obviously not the writer’s fault.

As Twitchy reported earlier, Christopher Rufo learned that the Washington Post would be appending a correction to its hit piece on him. Rufo also reached out to Jonathan Chait’s editor at New York magazine for a correction. Christina Pushaw has been branded as a homophobe and transphobe because she once called Florida’s Parental Rights in Education bill “the anti-grooming bill” — that’s the type of rhetoric that extremism experts told a New York Times reporter can increase the likelihood of violence against trans people.

Andrew Sullivan once asked Rufo if he’d condemn the use of the word “groomer”:

But you can surely condemn the use of the word “groomer” as a slur to suggest teachers are pedophiles, right?

— Andrew Sullivan (@sullydish) March 23, 2022

Rufo insists he’s never called anyone a groomer and has advised people not to use the term.

Part of the Orban playbook is putting schools in the hands of political hacks like Chris Rufo https://t.co/WPzY84sMYY

— Jonathan Chait (@jonathanchait) January 9, 2023

Hi Jonathan, what’s the best contact for your editor? You’ve included a significant factual error in your recent piece. I have never called any person a “groomer”; in fact, I have explicitly counseled *against* doing so.

You should issue a correction. pic.twitter.com/iGGuH6x4eT

— Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️ (@realchrisrufo) January 9, 2023

Hi, Chris. Here is a story discussing your practice of describing Ron DeSantis’s critics as groomers. https://t.co/WVLKykUnuP https://t.co/r95Qg98L8o

— Jonathan Chait (@jonathanchait) January 9, 2023

FYI, the original scare quotes were intended to convey skepticism toward the charge Rufo employs, not a direct quote. We have made a copy-editing tweak to clear up any potential confusion. https://t.co/f1Nc7cfkHr

— Jonathan Chait (@jonathanchait) January 9, 2023

As Rufo notes, the charge Rufo prefers to use against various DeSantis critics is “grooming,” not being a “groomer.” We have tweaked the copy to make sure no erroneous impression is possible. pic.twitter.com/hkxVSd5BFO

— Jonathan Chait (@jonathanchait) January 9, 2023

So you lied.

— jimtreacher.substack.com (@jtLOL) January 9, 2023

I have done a control+F search for “groomer” and “groomers” in your article, but neither yielded any evidence that I have “attacked [my] critics as ‘groomers.'”

Specifically, which critics have I attacked using that word? Cite your sources (besides yourself).

— Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️ (@realchrisrufo) January 9, 2023

Just own up to it. You saw a lot of people using the term as an attack and you assumed that I have used it, too. But you didn’t actually check to make sure that was a fact and you got it wrong.

It’s time to make the correction. Just own up to your mistake.

— Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️ (@realchrisrufo) January 9, 2023

Source: trust me bro

— g (@gkvky6zffq) January 9, 2023

Chait works like 4 hours a week and pounds out these articles in ~30 min. We should be grateful his word processor has spell and grammar checking. Same people who keep “fact-checking” everything except their own writing.

— Cerberus (@Cerberus0fHades) January 9, 2023

Anecdote related to this. I saw @realchrisrufo speak at an off-the-record event, & then after his talk listened to him talk circle of others, & did not once here him utter the g-word. I was actually quite impressed at his diligence in taking the high-road & avoiding that language https://t.co/x6SoapgqWL

— jonstokes.(eth|com) (@jonst0kes) January 9, 2023

We did a piece about conservatives arguing both for and against using the term groomer to describe, say, the dean of students saying the great thing about his job is watching students pass around butt plugs and lube. Why, if Jesus Christ were alive today, He would be called a groomer by the far-right, says Matthew Dowd.

***

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Related:

Christopher Rufo spotlights WaPo fessing up to ‘supreme embarrassment’ in hit piece https://t.co/jpveM8gGw3

— Twitchy Team (@TwitchyTeam) January 9, 2023

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Michele Grisby

Shannon Watts retiring from ‘political juggernaut’ Moms Demand Action

We’re hearing from a few sources, including Mike Bloomberg himself, that Shannon Watts is stepping down from her role as Dana Loesch’s punching bag on Twitter and from Moms Demand Action as well, the grass-roots advocacy group that she grew into a “political juggernaut.”

Over the past decade, @ShannonRWatts has transformed @MomsDemand from a Facebook page into one of the most powerful and effective advocacy groups in the country.

— Mike Bloomberg (@MikeBloomberg) January 9, 2023

“One of the most powerful and effective advocacy groups in the country”? How so?

She’s been a great partner and friend, and the 50-state movement she has helped inspire and lead has never been stronger. https://t.co/7EUDsNawg5

— Mike Bloomberg (@MikeBloomberg) January 9, 2023

“Shannon Watts, one of the country’s most influential gun-safety activists, says she will retire later this year from Moms Demand Action, the grass-roots advocacy group she began in her kitchen a decade ago and grew into a political juggernaut.” https://t.co/gNHdJLzeid

— Rob Romano (@2Aupdates) January 9, 2023

“Although she denies opposing the Second Amendment, gun-rights groups have long portrayed her as an enemy of the Constitution who wants legal weapons confiscated.”

— Rob Romano (@2Aupdates) January 9, 2023

“Watts changed the original name, ‘One Million Moms for Gun Control,’ after Rep. Carolyn McCarthy (D-N.Y.) told Watts that ‘gun control’ would ostracize people.”

— Rob Romano (@2Aupdates) January 9, 2023

“Watts, however, has accepted that she could face real danger at any time. Before speaking engagements, she said, the primary job of her unarmed security guard is to identify the hospital that would treat her if she got shot.”

— Rob Romano (@2Aupdates) January 9, 2023

So she walks around 24/7 expecting to be shot?

yeah so powerful and effective that Constitutional Carry went from being legal in 3 states to now being legal in 25 states…. Great effectiveness.

— Beth Mushin (@beth_mushin) January 9, 2023

one of the country’s most influential gun-safety activists … began in her kitchen a decade ago and grew into a political juggernaut.”
—-
A decade ago? Over that time more and more states have passed CCW and Constitutional Carry laws.
Great work! https://t.co/06WVkUfAS5

— Arthur Kimes (@ComradeArthur) January 9, 2023

“retire”

She’s still going to be a full time activist.

— Assault Clip, #2A Voter (@assaultclip) January 9, 2023

I wonder who hired her now?

— Sean D Sorrentino (@SorrentinoSean) January 9, 2023

CNN? MSNBC?

Retired with a fat pension, surely.

— Jake Palmateer (@Tahawus506) January 9, 2023

Gun safety activist? That’s not accurate. Anti gun rights extremist is much more accurate.

— Harold Wren (@HaroldWren11) January 9, 2023

I’m sure she’ll retire quietly, and we’ll never hear from her again, right folks?

… right?

— Zephyr (@DJ_Zephyr102) January 9, 2023

wonder what her real net worth is now

— Davepool (@2_Ring_Circus) January 9, 2023

So Bloomberg says the movement she inspired has never been stronger? Really? Constitutional carry is spreading across the country. Some “juggernaut” — we’d kind of forgotten about her.

***

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Related:

Look no further than Shannon Watts’ reaction to CNN hiring Stephen Gutowski for proof that they made the right decision https://t.co/SP1iL2IxyU

— Twitchy Team (@TwitchyTeam) October 19, 2022

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Tama Pecora

The Bonds in Kaleidoscope Are Confusing. We Can Help With That.

The following story contains spoilers for Season 1 of Kaleidoscope.


Back in 2012, when the United States east coast was devastated by Hurricane Sandy, one of many locations hit particularly hard was Wall Street. And while there was physical and structural damage just about everywhere the storm hit, Wall Street felt the damage elsewhere: in its wallet. That’s because it was reported that 1.3 million bond and stock certificates—worth somewhere in the range of $70 billion—were flooded in an underground vault as a result of Sandy. That money, it would seem, was gone.

While 99.9% of the bonds were ultimately recovered within six months of the flooding, the ‘what if’ of the story turned out to inspire Netflix’s first big series of 2023. This true story proved to be the genesis for the heist at the core of the innovative new heist thriller series, Kaleidoscope. “That’s a perfect cover-up for a heist,” creator Eric Garcia told Netflix’s Tudum. “If I’m doing a heist, I’m going to use Hurricane Sandy as my excuse.”

So what are the bonds in Kaleidoscope, anyway?

kaleidoscope bonds

Netflix

Just like with basically anything pertaining to finance and/or currency, you can do a real deep dive on bearer bonds, why they’re issued, and what they’re all about. But that can get pretty inside baseball, so we’ll keep it simple here: for the purpose of Kaleidoscope, you essentially just need to know that bearer bonds are a type of currency that is fixed in value (meaning their price will never change on the whims of any sort of market) and isn’t registered, officially, anywhere or to anyone.

That means whoever holds the physical bonds is the owner of the currency and makes them a good and untraceable target for—say—a heist.

“They can be used as cash to buy anything from stolen jewels to stolen art. If they’re unmarked, they can’t be traced. If you have them in your possession, they are yours,” Kaleidoscope star Giancarlo Esposito, who plays Leo/Ray, told Tudum.

In the United States, bonds were historically issued as a sort of pay-it-forward investment at times when the country was short on resources. In a memorable bit of historical fiction, in Captain America: The First Avenger, the U.S. Government uses Steve Rogers as “Captain America” as a piece of propaganda to sell War Bonds to aid their efforts in World War II. In theory, people would give money to help in the moment and get the “bonds” that would pay out with interest at a later time.

And who, exactly, are the Triplets?

kaleidoscope l to r delphi harrington as suzanne grosvenor, john hans tester as stefan thiele, john yi as cho young woo in episode “yellow” of kaleidoscope cr courtesy of netflix © 2022

Netflix

The most powerful group of people depicted in Kaleidoscope is a trio called “The Triplets,” who not only control the $7 billion in bearer bonds that serve as the object of interest for both Roger’s company/impenetrable vault and Leo/Ray’s heist but who also are depicted as and said to be people who are extremely dangerous. They are Cho-young-woo, Suzanne Grosvenor, and Stefan Thiele; the show opens—assuming you begin with “Yellow”—with Hannah Kim (Leo/Ray’s daughter, but working and functioning as Roger’s right-hand woman) proving to Thiele that their company, SLS, is adept and secure enough to handle their $7 billion in bonds.

On numerous occasions during the show, characters essentially say they don’t want to get involved with The Triplets, with the fear being that they come from a position of a lot of power—and could retaliate without any kind of consequence.

OK, OK. Got it. So what happened to the bonds at the end of Kaleidoscope?

kaleidoscope l to r rufus sewell as roger salas, tati gabrielle as hannah kim in episode “blue” of kaleidoscope cr courtesy of netflix © 2022

Netflix

It probably seems like some really complicated switcheroos went down at the end of Kaleidoscope, as explained in the tail end of the episode “White” (while the first 7 episodes can be watched in any order, it’s suggested that viewers finish up with “White”). But it’s not as complicated as you might think.

At the end of the day, everything that Leo/Ray’s crew planned was successful. Well, as far as the heist aspect goes—RJ still died, Bob got left for dead and ultimately lost his voice, and Ava got shot on her way out of the building, among other hiccups—but as far as bees getting in the way of the gait detector, flooding the vault, and framing Roger for the theft of a priceless ruby years earlier, everything went according to plan.

The one unexpected thing that happened aspect of things was that Leo/Ray’s inside man—his daughter, Hannah, whom he’d thought was on his side as Roger’s most trusted lieutenant—was actually running her own scheme. Hannah, with the help of her sister Liz, actually switched out the vast majority of the bonds with similarly-weighted construction paper; Ray/Leo’s crew thought they were successful, but Hannah was collecting the bonds herself to sell them back to the triplets.

It was said throughout the series how dangerous The Triplets were, and this insistence was not lost on Hannah. Instead of allowing her father to run this dangerous heist—and likely lose his life if/when The Triplets found out—she teamed up with them to allow them to, essentially, double their money up. They wanted to “clean” (aka launder) their money all along, and by staging a heist, they were able to recoup the same money via insurance payouts. But since Hannah also returned the bonds to them, this rich and powerful trio wound up doubling up.

kaleidoscope giancarlo esposito as leo pap in episode “yellow” of kaleidoscope cr courtesy of netflix © 2022

Netflix

The show reflects a reality where the powerful win and the little guy just has to take it and accept the crumbs. “The rich get richer, and we get to live,” Hannah tells her father. Clearly, Hannah cut a deal with The Triplets to also leave her father out of it and allow him to complete his plan of framing Roger.

But in the episode “Pink,” we also see that Hannah’s fear of The Triplets was not unfounded; Agent Abbasi (a horrible person who called ICE on Ava’s childhood nanny and friend) was still poking around and asking questions about them, and after an interaction with an old man, she was likely poisoned and dropped dead in the middle of the street. Rough!

We can also see in the episode “Pink” that Hannah’s work with The Triplets likely didn’t go without reward; when she has her reunion FaceTime with Leo/Ray, she’s living comfortably in quite a lavish home. If she was even rewarded a 1% commission on helping The Triplets clean/launder/double their $7 billion, she would’ve come away with $70 million. Not too shabby a nest egg. If Kaleidoscope continues its story in a Season 2, we’ll see how far that money goes—and if any other hiccups manifest along the way.

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Evan Romano

Evan is the culture editor for Men’s Health, with bylines in The New York Times, MTV News, Brooklyn Magazine, and VICE. He loves weird movies, watches too much TV, and listens to music more often than he doesn’t.

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Alejandro Mongold

11 Great MagSafe Wallets With Strong Connection and Smart Design

best magsafe wallets

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EVER SINCE Apple dropped its first MagSafe-compatible wallet, the demand for attachable phone wallets you can easily pop on and off via a magnetic connection has grown rapidly. MagSafe wallets garner appeal for their inherent minimalist design, making it easy to carry a few cards with you wherever you go—no traditional wallet required. Many of these wallets have evolved beyond just being a cardholder, and include built-in phone stands and protective encasements in the design that further boost functionality. Simply put, if you have an iPhone 12, 13, or 14—the only iPhone models with MagSafe technology—then donning a MagSafe wallet in your future may be in store.



  • Best MagSafe Wallet Overall

    Leather Wallet with MagSafe and Find My Support
    Apple

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  • Best Customized MagSafe Wallet

    Custom MagSafe Wallet
    Casetify

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  • Amazon’s Choice

    Magnetic Card Wallet Holder with MagSafe
    TWZKG Store

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  • Strongest Magnetic Connection

    Wallet for MagSafe
    Otterbox

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  • Most Rugged MagSafe Wallet

    Pelican Magnetic Wallet & Card Holder
    Case-Mate

    Read More

It’s worth mentioning MagSafe wallets require a little-to-no learning curve, as all you have to do is align the back of the wallet to your iPhone 12,13, or 14 model and let the magnet do the rest. If you have a good MagSafe wallet, the strength of the magnetic connection between your phone and wallet will be locked-in and firm. If your MagSafe wallet is not the best quality, then you’ll probably be unimpressed by how strong the wallet holds to the phone—a weak connection means more chances of the wallet accidentally slipping off the back of your phone when taking in and out of your pocket.

In order to save time on vetting each and every MagSafe wallet, we did the trial and error for you. Maybe you’re someone who works outside of your career and needs a wallet that’s tough and protective. Or perhaps you’re looking for a full leather wallet you can throw on before a long night on the town. Regardless of what you’re looking for, these MagSafe wallets were all curated with functionality and style in mind. Ahead are the top 11 MagSafe wallets that cater to all sorts of lifestyles.

Best Luggage Brands | Best AirTag Wallets | Best Wallets | Best Gifts for Men | Best Money Clips | Best Belts | Best iPhone Wallet Cases | Best Smartwatches

Best MagSafe Wallet Overall

Apple

Leather Wallet with MagSafe and Find My Support

Card Capacity2-3 cards
Can it hold cash easily?No
MaterialFull leather

Best Customized MagSafe Wallet

Casetify

Custom MagSafe Wallet

Card Capacity2 cards
Can it hold cash easily?No
MaterialRecycled PC plastic

Amazon’s Choice

TWZKG Store

Magnetic Card Wallet Holder with MagSafe

Card Capacity2 cards
Can it hold cash easily?No
MaterialPU leather

Strongest Magnetic Connection

Otterbox

Wallet for MagSafe

Card Capacity3 cards
Can it hold cash easily?No
MaterialPolycarbonate

Most Rugged MagSafe Wallet

Case-Mate

Pelican Magnetic Wallet & Card Holder

Card Capacity4 cards
Can it hold cash easily?Yes
MaterialIPX4 hard shell plastic

Best MagSafe Wallet and Case Combo

Bellroy

Bellroy Mod Case + Wallet

Card Capacity3 cards
Can it hold cash easily?Yes
MaterialLeather

Most Creative MagSafe Wallet

PopSockets

Phone Wallet with Expanding Grip

Card Capacity3 cards
Can it hold cash easily?No
MaterialPolycarbonate

Best Folding MagSafe Wallet

ESR

HaloLock Vegan Leather Wallet Stand, MagSafe

Card Capacity3 cards
Can it hold cash easily?Yes
MaterialVegan leather

Best MagSafe Wallet with Stand

MOFT

MagSafe Wallet Stand for iPhone

Card Capacity3 cards
Can it hold cash easily?Yes
MaterialVegan leather

Most Stylish MagSafe Wallet

Native Union

Clic (Re) Classic Wallet, MagSafe Compatible

Card Capacity3 cards
Can it hold cash easily?No
MaterialYatay plant-based material

Best Leather MagSafe Wallet

Mujjo

Full Leather Magnetic Wallet for iPhone

Card Capacity3 cards
Can it hold cash easily?No
MaterialVegtable-tanned Ecoo leather

Can a MagSafe Wallet Replace My Regular Wallet?

Most MagSafe wallets will probably not replace the wallet you’re using at the moment, but that doesn’t mean MagSafe wallets are irrelevant. For days or moments where you expect you’ll only need an ID and your credit card, a MagSafe wallet can prove to be the ultimate space saver. Maybe you’re going to the bar with friends for a night and want to limit the number of goods you’ll be carrying on you? Or perhaps you’re making a quick trip to the grocery store and don’t want to shove your big ol’ bifold in the front pocket of your sweatpants? Does your career require working outside? A MagSafe wallet can be great for carrying on a job site.

Whatever the use might be, a MagSafe wallet is the perfect sidekick wallet—or even a main wallet if you are truly about the minimalist lifestyle.

Will a MagSafe Wallet Fall Off?

If you stick to reading our recommendations and the reviews on MagSafe wallets you’re looking to buy, then you shouldn’t have a problem with the wallet falling off your phone. Your MagSafe wallet could have all the coolest specs around but if it’s constantly slipping off the back of your phone when pulling it out of your pocket or setting it down then it’s not going to be very fun to use. So remember, a MagSafe wallet is only as good as its magnetic connection.

How We Selected

As of this year, there are hundreds of MagSafe wallets available on the market. Men’s Health editors and writers, including our Gear and Commerce Editor John Thompson, thoroughly researched and tested dozens of the best MagSafe wallets around and evaluated their durability, design, and materials used. We also considered price points, as some MagSafe wallets provide a better overall value than others.

Gear and Commerce Editor
John Thompson is the Gear and Commerce Editor at Men’s Health, where he covers fashion, grooming, gear, and technology.

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Randy Drews