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In today’s edition, we break down how panels of undecided voters in Arizona and Pennsylvania responded to the debate. A handful of Arizona voters previously turned off by both Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald expressed interest in the Democratic nominee in an NBC News panel after the debate. Read more →Harris avoids some big questions, but Trump’s lack of control costs himBy Chuck ToddIn many ways, Tuesday’s debate was quite familiar. Just like our politics for the last nine years, the entire debate revolved around one person: Donald Trump. Read more →That’s all from the Politics Desk for now.
Persons: Chuck Todd, Donald Trump, Harris, Emma Barnett, Alex Tabet, Kate Snow, Jacob Soboroff, Kamala Harris, Donald, Lynne Kelleher, Kamala, , , I’m, ” Hannah Reed, Trump, Joe Biden, Reed, Denise Lewis, she’s, isn’t, here’s Trump, who’s, Lewis, Read, → Harris, Don’t, Joe Biden’s, Biden, Chuck →, ove Organizations: NBC, White House, Capitol, Democratic, Trump, Libertarian, Biden Locations: Arizona, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Bucks, Scottsdale, Harris
All three undecided voters assembled for a similar exercise in the Philadelphia suburbs remained on the fence, with Harris getting a look from two and former President Donald Trump from one. Undecided voters only account for a few percentage points of the electorate right now, according to public polls, with a closely divided country getting behind Trump and Harris. “Finally, we have someone who’s a woman who gets that it’s about us.”But Lewis said Harris didn’t fully seal the deal with her last night. Herr also saw a contrast between how Trump and Harris conducted themselves on the debate stage. After the debate, Navarro said he’s still leaning toward Trump, but Harris has given him more to think about.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Harris, Donald Trump, , ” Lynne Kelleher, Kamala, , Donald, I’m, Kelleher, Trump, Hannah Reed, Joe Biden, Reed, ” Reed, Andrew Wallace, Biden, Wallace, Denise Lewis, she’s, Lewis, we’ve, We’ve, ” Lewis, Harris didn’t, here’s Trump, who’s, Jeff Herr, “ McCain, “ McCain Republican ” didn’t, he’s, ” Herr, Herr, GOP Sen, John McCain, McCain’s, “ That’s Trump, “ Harris, Romeo Navarro, Navarro, there’s, didn’t, ” Navarro, Emma Barnett, Kate Snow, Alex Tabet, Jacob Soboroff Organizations: NBC, ABC, Trump, Democratic, Biden, “ McCain Republican, Capitol, GOP, Phoenix Locations: Pa, , Arizona, Philadelphia, Bucks County, Phoenix, Scottsdale, Tucson, Churchville
Monterey Park Police officers at the scene of a mass shooting on Jan. 22, 2023 in Monterey Park where 10 people were killed at a dance hall. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images)The gunman behind the deadly dance hall shooting in the Los Angeles suburb of Monterey Park may have been targeting his ex-wife on the Lunar New Year, the California city's mayor said Monday. A vigil will be held Tuesday in Monterey Park in memory of the dead. And about a dozen hours after the bloodshed in Monterey Park, police tracked Tran's white van to a car park 30 miles away in the suburb of Torrance where the suspect killed himself. "I tried to reach her, but I didn't get any response," Monterey Park resident Vivian King said of a friend she last heard from earlier in the weekend.
Instead, this ketamine clinic feels like an oasis of zen, strewn with twinkle lights, lush greenery and comfy meditation pillows. Chere Scythes, right, listens to guided meditation during a ketamine session at Field Trip Health in New York City. “And so many of these clinics don’t have mental health professionals staffing them. When those mental health concerns pop up, they may not be equipped to respond appropriately.”Ketamine also isn’t a cure-all. “That deep dark depressive cloud started to lift.”In combination with her antidepressants, she has continued the ketamine treatments and now gets one every five weeks.
DEA warns of threat over 'rainbow fentanyl'
  + stars: | 2022-09-27 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailDEA warns of threat over 'rainbow fentanyl'NBC’s Kate Snow joins Shep Smith to report on a major government crackdown on fentanyl in the U.S. Today, Attorney General Merrick Garland warned about ‘rainbow pills' that look like candy.
Drug cartels are using brightly colored “rainbow fentanyl” pills to target children as young as middle schoolers, the head of the Drug Enforcement Administration warned Monday, signaling a new threat in the opioid crisis. “This is another tactic that they’re using to get more fentanyl to more people,” Milgram said. The DEA and other law enforcement agencies have seized fentanyl in the colorful presentation in 21 states, she said. In recent weeks, Milgram said, the agency has been called to middle schools to investigate fake pills that looked like medication but were actually fentanyl. The district is offering the lifesaving drug Narcan at all schools free to reverse the effects of fentanyl.
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