Earlier primary date not feasible for 2024, Pennsylvania counties warn

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Counties in Pennsylvania have told Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro and lawmakers that it is too late to move up the state’s 2024 presidential primary date if counties are to successfully administer the election.

In a letter, the County Commissioners Association of Pennsylvania said there is no longer enough time for counties to handle the tasks associated with moving next year’s primary election from the current date set in law, April 23.

The counties’ association drafted the letter after weeks of efforts by lawmakers to move up the primary date, in part to avoid a conflict with the Jewish holiday of Passover. That became embroiled in partisan and intraparty disagreements after Senate Republicans then touted moving up the date as a way to give the late primary state more say in deciding 2024’s presidential nominees.

PENNSYLVANIA HOUSE GREENLIGHTS EARLIER 2024 PRIMARY, BUT WILL LIKELY RUN AFOUL OF SENATE

County officials say they are planning for 2023’s election, less than five weeks away, and already spent many months of planning around holding 2024’s primary election on April 23.

“While we thank the General Assembly and the administration for their thoughtful discussions around this matter, at this date counties can no longer guarantee there will be sufficient time to make the changes necessary to assure a primary on a different date would be successful,” the organization’s executive director, Lisa Schaefer, wrote in the letter dated Friday.

Shapiro has supported changing the primary date to avoid it falling on Passover, but his administration has been silent about the protracted fight in the Legislature over moving it. Lawmakers have not yet shown a willingness to let the matter drop.

On Thursday, Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman, a Republican, released a letter insisting that the House agree to the Senate’s preferred date of March 19, instead of the House’s counterproposal of April 2.

“In the Senate we now consider this matter to be closed,” Pittman wrote.

Counties face a number of challenges if the primary date moves.

Those include rescheduling more than 9,000 polling places that are typically contracted a year or more ahead of time, including in schools that then schedule a day off for teacher training. Schools would have to consider changing their calendars in the middle of the academic year, Schaefer said.

Counties also would need to reschedule tens of thousands poll workers, many of whom were prepared to work April 23 and had scheduled vacations or other obligations around the date, Schaefer said.

Meanwhile, Pennsylvania — a presidential battleground state won by Democrat Joe Biden in 2020 — is still buffeted by former President Donald Trump’s baseless lies about a stolen election.

Schaefer said county elections staff are facing an increasingly hostile environment that has spurred “unprecedented turnover.”

Changing the presidential primary at this late date would put the state “at risk of having another layer of controversy placed on the 2024 election, as anything that doesn’t go perfectly will be used to challenge the election process and results,” Schaefer said. “This will add even more pressure on counties and election staff, and to put our staff under additional pressure will not help our counties retain them.”

PENNSYLVANIA CONSIDERING EARLIER 2024 PRIMARY DATE

Senate Republicans had backed a five-week shift, to March 19, in what they called a bid to make Pennsylvania relevant for the first time since 2008 in helping select presidential nominees. County election officials had said April 9 or April 16 would be better options.

House Democrats countered last week with a proposal to move the date to April 2, two days after Easter. However, Senate Republicans are echoing the concerns of county election officials who say the nexus with Easter will make it difficult to get voting machines and election materials into churches that also serve as polling places.

House Republicans opposed a date change, saying it threatened counties’ ability to smoothly administer the primary election.

Critics also suggested that moving up the date would help protect incumbent lawmakers by giving primary challengers less time to prepare and that 2024’s presidential nominees will be all-but settled well before March 19.

 

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Florida storms send porta-potty door flying, impales into a light pole: ‘National flag of Florida’

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A porta-potty door ended up in an obscure place Wednesday night after a possible tornado tore through northern and central Florida and left the hatch wedged firmly in a light pole.

The peculiar scene caused residents to share the now-viral image of the dismembered porta-potty and the door that had stuck near the top of a streetlight near a McDonald’s restaurant in Dunedin, Florida.

Ben Napoli shared the video of the porta-potty with FOX 35, saying that the portable toilets parts “were everywhere.”

IOWA MAN DIES AFTER GETTING TRAPPED IN A GRAIN BIN

“The porta-potty parts were everywhere!” Napoli told FOX 35. “Some parts smashed through windows, the basin with the blue liquid was in front of the thrift store spilled all over the place, and the door ended up in the light pole. 

“Crazy to see something like that,” Napoli said.

Tornado watches were issued for much of northern and central Florida on Wednesday night as strong winds rolled through the Sunshine bring torrential downpours and possible tornadoes. 

On Thursday morning, law enforcement and residents shared images and videos of the extensive damage from the storm. The Clearwater Police Department shared torn off roofs, fallen trees and scattered debris throughout the town.

STORM SYSTEM CAUSES DAMAGE ACROSS FLORIDA, POSSIBLE TORNADOES REPORTED

Napoli said that the possible tornadoes left a tight damage field.

“You could tell exactly where it went and houses and buildings 50 feet away were completely unharmed,” he said. 

Social media users to comment on the bizarre photo of the porta-potty door.

“S— hit more than the fan,” one person quipped on X.

“Just the national flag of Florida,” another X user joked

“That’s a very Florida thing to see,” another person wrote.

 

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Comedian Jeff Dye facing DUI charge after fleeing car accident: police

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Comedian Jeff Dye is facing charges of driving under the influence and fleeing the scene of an accident, Fox News Digital confirmed.

Dye, 40, was arrested Oct. 8 after he drove his white Tesla into a tree and fled on foot, according to the Burbank Police Department. Witnesses reported the collision around 9:30 a.m. PST, and Dye was found by police about two blocks East of the accident location.

Police arrested Dye after getting witness statements and statements from the comedian himself.

DIDDY’S SON, JUSTIN COMBS, ARRESTED FOR DUI

The Burbank Police Department told Fox News Digital no other vehicles were involved in the accident, and nobody was injured.

“Although no one was injured, this is a traumatic event for Jeff,” a lawyer for the comedian told Fox News Digital. “We ask that you reserve judgment and respect his privacy as I take care of this matter. He is presumed innocent.”

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Dye gained fame as a touring stand-up comedian before hosting a handful of TV shows. He has appeared on MTV’s “Money from Strangers,” “Numbnuts” and “Girl Code.”

He also finished as a finalist on “Last Comic Standing” in 2008.

Dye went on to appear on Comedy Central’s “This is Not Happening” and currently hosts the “Who the BLEEP is that?” game show on Fox.

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Dye was most recently romantically linked to Kristin Cavallari, though their relationship seemed to be mostly casual. The couple was first spotted together in October 2020.

“She’s having fun and enjoying dating,” a source told People magazine at the time. “They’re still hanging out, but it’s not exclusive, and he’s not her boyfriend.”

The two seemingly called it quits in March 2021.

Fox News Digital’s Tracy Wright contributed to this report.

 

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Get sick at this California restaurant and pay the price — plus rare, prehistoric fish turns heads

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‘DRINK RESPONSIBLY’ – One California restaurant is reportedly telling “mimosa lovers” to watch their consumption at bottomless brunch unless they want to pay a price. Continue reading…

RARE SOLAR SIGHTING – A “ring of fire” eclipse will occur this weekend in the U.S. The phenomenon won’t be visible again until 2039. Continue reading…

PREHISTORIC – An angler and a professional guide may have broken two fishing records after they reeled in a massive alligator gar. See photos of the rare fish. Continue reading…

BACHELOR PAD – Female frogs apparently fake their own deaths to avoid unwanted male interaction, a recent study says. Continue reading…

GIFT OF THE GAB – Costco customer stuns TikTok with a little-known deal that comes with a membership. Continue reading…

REVEALING Q&A – Pete Hegseth reveals why faith in God, a dedication to family and his kids’ education are vital to him. Continue reading…

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CALLING ALL CROSSWORD PUZZLE LOVERS! – Play our Fox News daily crossword puzzle for free here! And not just one — check out the multiple offerings. See the puzzles…

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Billboards in Israel were briefly hacked to display pro-Hamas messages as cyberwar ramps up

US Top News and Analysis 

Israel supporters hold flags as they protest, following Hamas’ biggest attack on Israel in years, in Bogota, Colombia October 9, 2023.
Luisa Gonzalez | Reuters

Cybersecurity threats in Israel are mounting amid the Israel-Hamas war, including two hijacked smart billboards that briefly showed pro-Hamas content, and a cyberattack on a college that published hundreds of thousands of personal records.

Hackers accessed two smart billboards in or near Tel Aviv for a few minutes on Thursday and “managed to switch the commercials into anti-israeli, pro-Hamas footage,” Gil Messing, chief of staff at Check Point Software Technologies, a cybersecurity firm based in Tel Aviv, told CNBC, adding that the footage featured “mainly the Israeli flag under fire… footage from Gaza, things like this.”

“We had to open the network for a few minutes, and they must’ve immediately penetrated it in that moment,” Eilon Rosman, CEO of CTV Media Israel, the company that owned the two billboards, told the media outlet Geektime on Thursday, according to a CNBC translation.

Most cyber threats that Check Point has seen since Saturday involve either defacement of websites or distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks for a brief period of time, Messing told CNBC, adding that the billboard incidents are “very marginal… when you compare it to everything else that’s been going on here.”

Check Point tracks hacking groups on the dark web or on their Telegram pages, and the firm has seen threats of attacks on critical infrastructure, such as water utilities, according to one Telegram group message viewed by CNBC that threatens Mekorot, Israel’s top water management agency.

More than 40 groups are currently attempting, or say they’re attempting, cyber attacks, Messing said, adding that these threats aren’t uncommon and sometimes don’t come to anything.

“These people are threatening, not necessarily executing,” Messing said. Later, he added, “The motivation is more about creating fear and discomfort, not so much about creating damage that is significant.”

The biggest cyberattack so far this week involved Ono Academic College, a private college near Tel Aviv, Messing said. On Monday, a hacker group claiming to be from Jordan breached the college’s system and published about 250,000 records of employees, students, former students and more on Telegram. The college subsequently had to take its systems offline.

“Cyber attack experts investigated and discovered that information was leaked from our computer system. We are dealing with the issue and are in touch with the national cyber authority and have also informed the authority responsible for privacy protection,” the College said in a statement translated by CNBC. “We estimate that our IT systems will be fully operational in the next few days.”

“This is a significant attack,” Messing said.

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US Looms Large Over Possible Vietnam-China Summit  

USA – Voice of America 

A possible visit to Vietnam by Chinese President Xi Jinping would be likely to test Hanoi’s balancing act between Beijing and Washington, analysts say.

Reuters reported last week that Vietnamese and Chinese officials are preparing for a possible meeting between Vietnamese Communist Party chief Nguyen Phu Trong and Xi in Hanoi at the end of October or early November.

The visit has not been announced by Beijing or Hanoi.

The Chinese Embassy in Washington declined a request for comment and deferred the question to the Foreign Ministry in Beijing. VOA Vietnamese called the ministry and left a voice mail but did not receive a response.  

If the visit takes place, the Vietnamese leader will have hosted the leaders of two superpowers in his country in less than two months.

Hanoi elevated its ties with Washington to a comprehensive strategic partnership, placing the U.S. on par with China in its diplomatic engagement, during U.S. President Joe Biden’s visit to Hanoi in early September.

Tricky balancing act

Analysts say Xi’s visit would be a litmus test for Hanoi’s so-called “bamboo policy” of balancing the interests of competing powers.

Le Hong Hiep, senior fellow at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, told VOA Vietnamese this week that Beijing is not “comfortable” to see Vietnam upgrade relations with and becoming closer to the U.S.

“Xi’s possible visit is part of China’s efforts to at least maintain Vietnam’s balance in its foreign policy towards the U.S. and China, if not trying to pull Vietnam to China’s side,” Hiep said.

“Beijing sees the need and seeks to rebalance its influence, as well as reaffirm its status and influence following Hanoi’s upgradation of relations with Washington,” Hoang Viet, a lecturer at Ho Chi Minh City University of Law, told VOA Vietnamese.

According to the Reuters report, Hanoi and Beijing are discussing the text of a joint statement that would pair their nations in a “community of common destiny.”

Xi first proposed the concept of a “community of common destiny” in late 2012, based on a millennia-old Chinese vision of a world where people would live in perfect harmony and would be as dear to one another as family, according to a report from China’s official state media outlet, Xinhua.

Alexander Vuving, a professor at the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies in Honolulu, said Xi will push Vietnam to join China’s “community of common destiny” to try to build a coalition to counter Washington.

“If Vietnam agrees to join China’s ‘community of common destiny,’ this would be touted as an upgrade of the current ‘comprehensive strategic partnership of cooperation’ between China and Vietnam,” Vuving said in an email to VOA Vietnamese this week.

Joining the community would be an upgrade to Vietnam’s relationship with China, and “would be interpreted by China that Beijing is always closer, or ahead of, or above Washington in relations with Vietnam,” Vuving said.

Vietnam remains the only country in mainland Southeast Asia that has not joined China’s “community of common destiny,” according to Vuving.

Hiep said Vietnam will try to maintain its long-standing foreign policy of developing balanced relations with major powers and diversifying its foreign relations.

“China remains an important partner of Vietnam’s, economically, politically and strategically, but China is just one of the major powers with which Vietnam builds relations, and the development of Sino-Vietnamese relationship does not necessarily mean that Vietnam has to abandon or lower its relations with other partners, including the United States,” said Hiep.

Territorial dispute

Separate from striking a balance between Washington and Beijing, Vietnam has unresolved bilateral issues with China, according to analysts.

Nguyen Ngoc Truong, former president of the Center for Strategic Studies and International Development, a government-affiliated think tank in Hanoi, told VOA Vietnamese that Vietnam’s top concerns are “promoting economic and trade relations with China” and “ensuring a peaceful, stable and secure environment, including the South China Sea issue.”

Vietnam, with the Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei, opposes China’s sweeping claims to much of the South China Sea. Since May 2014, when Beijing began building on the sea’s outcroppings it controlled, there have been frequent confrontations between Vietnamese and Chinese law enforcement ships in the disputed region.

The sea is believed to be rich in oil and gas resources and vital to international navigation, with nearly $3.4 trillion of trade passing through it each year.

Carl Thayer, professor emeritus at the University of New South Wales in Australia, said Trong is expected to raise the South China Sea issue during the meeting with Xi.

Seeking ways to “properly handle emerging incidents at sea and maintain security and stability at sea” will be on the agenda if the meeting occurs, according to Thayer.

As for Xi, he is likely to announce measures that China will take to increase the value of two-way trade by removing customs bottlenecks, allowing increased market access for Vietnamese agricultural products and an expansion of Vietnamese trade promotion offices in China, Thayer said.

 

Xi will also promote connectivity through aviation, land and railway transport, including the development of the Lao Cai-Haiphong railway, he added. The railway will be part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, according to reports on VietNamNet and Dan Tri news outlets.

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Flexport is laying off 20% of its workforce

US Top News and Analysis 

Ryan Petersen, chief executive officer of Flexport, participates in a panel discussion during the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., on Wednesday, May 4, 2022.
Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Supply chain software startup Flexport plans to cut approximately 20% of its global workforce as part of a new round of layoffs that’s expected to begin on Friday, CNBC has learned.

Flexport CEO Ryan Petersen sent a note to staffers Thursday afternoon informing them of the job cuts, according to a copy of the memo viewed by CNBC. The company will inform employees of whether they’re impacted or not via email beginning Friday morning, Petersen wrote.

“Today I have a difficult decision to share: We will reduce the size of our global team by approximately 20% with the process starting tomorrow, Friday, October 13,” Petersen wrote.

A Flexport spokesperson pointed CNBC to a company blog post from Petersen confirming the layoffs. The spokesperson declined to share Flexport’s total headcount. The company employed approximately 3,500 people as of late September, according to Pitchbook data.

The layoffs add to recent turmoil at the company since Petersen returned as CEO last month after abruptly ousting his hand-picked successor Dave Clark. Petersen claimed repeatedly that Clark, a 23-year veteran of Amazon, overspent and overhired during his tenure at Flexport. But documents viewed by CNBC, and sources close to Clark, showed that Petersen and members of Flexport’s board helped implement decisions that Flexport has suggested were ill-advised.

Since taking back the helm, Petersen quickly overhauled the company’s top ranks, ousting several of Clark’s key recruits, as well as its CFO and HR chief. He also rescinded 55 offer letters and moved to lease out unoccupied office space across the country.

In the blog post, Petersen said following the cuts Flexport will be “in a great position to take advantage of the opportunities in front of us to return to profitability as soon as the end of next year.” The move will “not impact the customer experience,” Petersen added. He said the company is focused on the quality of its services like quote to invoice accuracy and shipment milestone accuracy.

“Today is a tough day, but we are a resilient, purpose-driven team that will overcome this setback and deliver on the promise of our mission of making global commerce so easy that there will be more of it,” he said.

Petersen wrote in the memo that employees in the U.S. and Canada are being directed to work from home on Friday unless they work out of a Flexport warehouse. Staffers based in Asia will be contacted about the layoffs on Monday, according to the memo.

For U.S. employees, the company is offering nine weeks of severance, health care coverage through the end of the year, immigration support and job recruiting assistance, Petersen said in the memo. Staffers located outside of the U.S. will receive information about their separation packages at a later date.

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Texas elementary teacher resigns after investigation learns she gave students melatonin gummies: report

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

A Humble, Texas, elementary school teacher has resigned after an investigation discovered she gave some of her students melatonin gummies in September, according to reports.

FOX 26 in Houston reported that Humble Independent School District (ISD) officials received information about a teacher at Pine Forest Elementary School giving her students melatonin gummies in September.

The Mayo Clinic says the human body produces melatonin for general needs, but taking melatonin supplements helps promote sleep and is safe for short-term use.

MELATONIN WARNINGS: NEARLY HALF OF PARENTS GIVE IT TO THEIR KIDS TO HELP THEM SLEEP, BUT EXPERTS URGE CAUTION

After receiving a tip that a teacher was providing melatonin gummies to elementary school students, Humble ISD officials quickly launched an investigation which determined she did so on her own, and without permission from parents.

Officials also reportedly said the teacher failed to tell the nurse and school administrators of her actions.

District officials said they were “appalled that the teacher made this decision,” adding that her actions were unacceptable, the news station reported.

MELATONIN GUMMIES FOUND TO CONTAIN POTENTIALLY DANGEROUS LEVELS OF THE HORMONE: STUDY

The teacher, who resigned and has not been in a classroom since late September, has not been identified by school officials.

The incident was reported to the State Board for Educator Certification, Child Protective Services and the police, officials said.

The Pine Forest Elementary School principal also called all parents of the students in the teacher’s class about the incident, and all students are doing well.

MELATONIN SHOULD BE AVOIDED IN CHILDREN UNLESS DIRECTED BY A HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONAL, SAYS SLEEP ACADEMY

The American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) conducted a survey that found nearly half (46%) of parents in the U.S. have given melatonin to a child under the age of 13, and almost one-third (30%) of parents have given the supplement to a teen over the age of 13 to help him or her fall asleep.

While administering melatonin to a child may seem like a natural solution, a 2022 AASM health advisory warned against using it for children because melatonin is not regulated by the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

The increased use of melatonin has also led to a spike in reports of melatonin overseas, calls to poison control centers and emergency room visits among children, the AASM said.

Fox News Digital’s Melissa Rudy contributed to this report.

 

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Kissinger says it was ‘grave mistake’ for Germany to take in so many migrants amid pro-Hamas protests

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Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger says it was a “grave mistake” for Germany to allow so many migrants in, warning that it creates a “pressure group” in a country — just as Germany has seen pro-Hamas celebrations in the streets.

“It was a grave mistake to let in so many people of totally different culture and religion and concepts because it creates a pressure group inside each country that does that,” the 100-year-old former U.S. diplomat said in an interview with Germany’s Welt TV.

Kissinger was born in Germany and fled Nazi Germany as a Jewish refugee with his family before becoming America’s top diplomat under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford.

THOUSANDS OF ‘SPECIAL INTEREST ALIENS’ FROM MIDDLE EAST COUNTRIES STOPPED AT SOUTHERN BORDER SINCE 2021 

He was responding to a question about scenes in Germany where Arab protesters in Berlin streets had, according to Welt, celebrated the recent Hamas terrorist attacks against Israel and handed out candy to participants.

“I don’t have a grievance against the German people. I find celebrations about what happened, which technically was a criminal act, as painful,” he said.

Germany most recently took in significant numbers of migrants, including many from Muslim-majority countries, during the 2015 European migrant crisis — with then-Chancellor Angela Merkel declaring, “Wir schaffen das” or “We can do this.” Kissinger did not specifically mention the 2015 crisis in his remarks.

Israel was hit by a surprise attack by Hamas terrorists on Saturday. At least 1,200 Israeli civilians and soldiers have been killed in the attack along with at least 27 Americans. At least 5,000 rockets have been fired into Israeli territory.

There have been scenes of pro-Hamas and pro-Palestinian protests in multiple countries, including the U.S., United Kingdom and France. In the U.K., Home Secretary Suella Braverman recently issued guidance to British police chief constables to urge them to monitor such protests.

“At a time when Hamas terrorists are massacring civilians and taking the most vulnerable (including the elderly, women, and children) hostage, we can all recognise the harrowing effect that displays of their logos and flags can have on communities. I therefore ask that your police forces are alert and ready to respond to any potential offences,” she wrote.

NYC PROTEST RALLY FOR PALESTINIANS BLAMES ISRAEL FOR DEADLY HAMAS ATTACK AMID RETALIATORY AIRSTRIKES IN GAZA 

In New York City, supporters for Israel and the Palestinians gathered Monday, with protesters shouting at each other and police officers preventing confrontations.

“We’re going to liberate Palestine,” one protester told a group of Israel supporters. “We already liberated parts of it already. So get ready to get barbecued.”

Kissinger told Welt that there must be “some penalty” and “some limitation” for Hamas, but he also warned about escalation in the region.

“The first instinct is to bring back peace, but you can’t make concessions to people who have declared and demonstrated by their actions that there cannot be peace.”

Fox News’ Louis Casiano contributed to this report.

 

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Jim Cramer says this earnings season might be ‘a rough one’

US Top News and Analysis 

CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday said he thinks the upcoming earnings season might be tough thanks to continued inflation, as well as new weight loss drugs seeding fear for investors in the food and beverage sector.

“This time, it already feels like it’s going to be a rough one because the market seems to be nauseated by the companies that’ve already reported, with the sole exception of tech, which is once again getting a pass,” he said. “I think it’s because we’re rooting for lower inflation and less wage growth, but so far we just aren’t getting that scenario.”

Cramer said the market is facing an “unforgiving backdrop” that may cause many on Wall Street to interpret earnings negatively. He pointed to Thursday’s consumer price index report, which saw inflation rise more than expected, as well as weak demand for the government’s 30-year Treasury bond auction as factors.

He also also highlighted PepsiCo, one of the first big companies to report earnings this season. The Frito-Lay parent’s Tuesday report beat Wall Street’s expectations and it raised its full-year outlook. However, its stock has dropped in the past few days, finishing Thursday down 2.79%.

Cramer attributed the stock’s losses in part to fears about GLP-1 drugs. He said investors may be worried that food companies, especially ones that sell junk food, will see their business hurt if consumers on weight loss medication no longer crave their products. Cramer also said many might see PepsiCo’s price-to-earnings multiple as too high, trading at more than 20 times earnings.

Price-to-earnings is a valuation metric that compares a company’s share price to its earnings per share.

However, Cramer said investors should still be wary of being too negative.

“If the bond market behaves, like it had the last couple days, if there’s no new issuance of long-term paper by the Treasury, if we get some less hot economic numbers, then we will stabilize,” he said. “But, right now, the combination of higher rates and these drugs that impact diabetes, obesity, renal failure, heavy drinking, and strokes, and even high blood pressure — not to mention sleep apnea — have been anathema to the stock market, especially the overvalued packaged food plays.”

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