Got No Filters. Biden Tells Wheelchair Bound Athletes, “Don’t Jump.”

Biden Says ‘Don’t Jump’ While Taking Picture With Wheelchair Bound Athletes

Daily Caller–President Joe Biden was heard saying “don’t jump” while taking photos Wednesday with wheelchair bound athletes, though it remains unclear who his comment was directed toward.

Biden stood with a group of Olympic and Paralympic athletes while celebrating the athletes, who participated for Team USA during either the Tokyo 2020 Summer Games or the 2022 Beijing Winter Games.

Kicks On Route 66

A journey along the historic Route 66 is the ultimate American road trip. Stops along the iconic “Mother Road” include retro diners, quirky motels, eclectic art installations and extraordinary landscapes. You can get your “Kicks On Route 66” all the way from Chicago, Illinois to Santa Monica, California.

Joe Biden Says His Administration Has Solved The Impending Fertilizer Shortage

Or maybe not… Can the World Feed Itself? Historic Fertilizer Crunch Threatens Food Security

(Bloomberg)–For the first time ever, farmers the world over — all at the same time — are testing the limits of how little chemical fertilizer they can apply without devastating their yields come harvest time. Early predictions are bleak.

In Brazil, the world’s biggest soybean producer, a 20% cut in potash use could bring a 14% drop in yields, according to industry consultancy MB Agro. In Costa Rica, a coffee cooperative representing 1,200 small producers sees output falling as much as 15% next year if the farmers miss even one-third of normal application. In West Africa, falling fertilizer use will shrink this year’s rice and corn harvest by a third, according to the International Fertilizer Development Center, a food security non-profit group.

Joe Biden – “I Did That Recession”

U.S. economy shrinks 1.4 percent in first three months of the year, raising fears of recession

The Washington Post–The U.S. economy unexpectedly shrank at a 1.4 percent annualized rate in the first three months of 2022 after more than a year of rapid growth, according to a Bureau of Economic Analysis report released Thursday. The new data could fuel growing concerns about a recession amid steady inflationary pressures and uncertainty over the war in Ukraine.

The slowdown — the first since the covid recession ended in April 2020 — marks a reversal from the torrid pace that followed intense fiscal and monetary stimulus in the wake of the pandemic. Last year, for example, the U.S. economy grew by 5.7 percent, the fastest full-year clip since 1984.