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River Street Sweets gives back on National Pralines Day

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www.wsav.com – Genevieve Lund – 2025-06-24 05:18:00

SUMMARY: Today is National Pralines Day, and Savannah’s River Street Sweets is celebrating by supporting children in need. From June 24 to 28, the shop will donate 10% of all praline sales to Feeding America’s Kids Cafe Program, which provides evening meals, homework help, and safe spaces for food-insecure children in the area. Founded in 1973, River Street Sweets has partnered with the program for nine years, aiming to raise $22,000 in 2024 to support over a dozen local sites through the Second Harvest of Coastal Georgia chapter. This initiative turns praline purchases into positive community impact.

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Fourth of July: What you need to know | FOX 5 News

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www.youtube.com – FOX 5 Atlanta – 2025-06-24 15:56:28

SUMMARY: As the 4th of July approaches, pet owners are urged to prepare animals anxious about fireworks by consulting veterinarians about anti-anxiety supplements or sedatives to ensure their safety. Experts recommend securing pets in safe areas and updating microchip information. Meanwhile, TSA expects 18.5 million travelers from July 1-7, with July 6 as the busiest day. A heat dome is causing record-breaking temperatures on the East Coast, reaching triple digits and forcing some recreational cancellations. At a New Jersey beach, extreme heat deters outdoor activities, leading to early departures and shortened high school graduations due to heat-related illnesses.

The Fourth of July will soon be here, but for pets, it can be severely frightening due to the fireworks. Now is the time to start getting ready for the holiday.

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Latest COVID-19 variant’s ‘razor blade throat’ | FOX 5 News

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www.youtube.com – FOX 5 Atlanta – 2025-06-24 02:03:40

SUMMARY: The latest COVID-19 variant, NBW\.1.8 (also called Nimbus), is causing a recent rise in cases and is nicknamed “razor blade throat” due to its intensely painful sore throat, making swallowing saliva or water very difficult. Symptoms include congestion, shortness of breath, and fatigue. Experts recommend good hand hygiene, avoiding crowded indoor spaces, and wearing masks if at high risk. Current COVID boosters remain effective at preventing severe illness, though not infection entirely. If infected, rest, nutrition, fluids, pain relievers, and throat lozenges can help manage symptoms. Seek medical care if fever or sore throat persists.

The latest COVID-19 variant driving a recent rise in cases has gained the nickname “razor blade throat.”

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Three years later, debate over abortion limits in Georgia is far from settled

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georgiarecorder.com – Maya Homan – 2025-06-24 02:00:00


Three years after the Dobbs ruling overturned Roe v. Wade, Georgia’s six-week abortion ban continues to spark intense debate. Democrats highlight tragic cases, like Adriana Smith, who was kept on life support due to the ban, and the deaths of Amber Nicole Thurman and Candi Miller related to abortion restrictions, as evidence of the law’s dangers. Republicans, including the ban’s author Sen. Ed Setzler, defend it as balanced legislation protecting life. Meanwhile, the state faces healthcare access challenges, with doctors leaving and patients struggling for care. Legal battles persist, complicated by recent rulings limiting abortion rights lawsuits, delaying resolution. The issue remains a critical factor in the 2026 Senate race.

by Maya Homan, Georgia Recorder
June 24, 2025

Roe v. Wade, the landmark Supreme Court case enshrining abortion rights across the country, was overturned three years ago today in a case known as Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, intensifying a yearslong battle over access to reproductive health care in Georgia.

The fallout of the Dobbs decision is continuing to cause ripple effects throughout the state, with advocates on both sides gearing up for a fight that will play out — at least in part — at the ballot box in 2026.

For Democrats, who are hoping to see incumbent U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff reelected for another term, access to reproductive health care is a crucial part of the campaign. High-profile cases of Georgia women whose deaths have been tied to Georgia’s six-week abortion ban have also cast a national spotlight onto the state’s restrictive laws.

Georgia’s law bans most abortions once fetal cardiac activity is detected, which is usually at about six weeks and before most women know they are pregnant. 

April Newkirk, mother of Adriana Smith, the brain-dead pregnant Georgia woman being kept on life support, attended a somber event marking what would have been Smith’s 31st birthday on June 15 at Park Avenue Baptist Church in Atlanta. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder

Adriana Smith, a 30-year-old mother and nurse, was roughly two months pregnant when she was declared brain dead after experiencing a series of blood clots in mid February. Doctors told Smith’s family that while she had no chance of recovery, her organs would be kept functioning so as not to violate Georgia law.

Months later her baby, Chance, was delivered by emergency cesarean section and taken to the neonatal intensive care unit, weighing one pound 13 ounces. The family said they planned to take Smith off life support last week.

Two other Georgians, Amber Nicole Thurman and Candi Miller, both died in 2022 after suffering complications from taking abortion pills. Thurman died in a hospital after doctors waited nearly a day to perform a routine procedure to remove fetal tissue from her uterus; Miller died after family members said she was afraid to seek medical care because of the recently enacted six-week abortion ban.

At a press conference held in front of a mural depicting Thurman and Miller, members of the Democratic Party of Georgia criticized the state’s law, citing cases like Thurman, Miller and Smith’s as evidence of the danger Georgia’s ban poses for those seeking reproductive health care.

“We’ve seen multiple women tragically lose their lives and all because some fat cat politicians think that they know better than women, they know better than those women’s families, they know better than doctors about how to make health care decisions about women’s own bodies,”  said Charlie Bailey, who chairs the Democratic Party of Georgia. 

Republicans running for the U.S. Senate in 2026 include Congressman Buddy Carter, who represents a district in coastal Georgia, and Georgia Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner John King, who have both praised Georgia’s six-week abortion ban. Congressman Mike Collins, a Jackson Republican, is also seen as a potential contender for the race, though he has not announced his candidacy.

Rep. Shea Roberts. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder

State Rep. Shea Roberts, an Atlanta Democrat, highlighted the turmoil Georgia’s abortion restrictions pose for doctors trying to administer care for pregnant patients, and criticized Republicans’ response to the ban’s repercussions.

“Georgia’s abortion laws are vague, often leaving doctors and hospitals scrambling with their lawyers instead of giving patients the care they need,” Roberts said. “These women should be alive today, and they should still be with their families, yet Carter, King and Collins have stood by the very ban that led to these deaths.”

However, state Sen. Ed Setzler, an Acworth Republican who authored Georgia’s six-week abortion ban, said he celebrated the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

“When the Dobbs decision came down, we were overjoyed because it gave legislatures, gave the elected representatives, the people, the ability to handle these very, very difficult circumstances, and balance the very difficult circumstances women find themselves in with the basic right to life of a living, distinct child, and our state took it very seriously,” he said. 

Sen. Ed Setzler, right, authored Georgia’s six-week abortion ban in 2019. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder

Setzler also defended his legislation, officially called the Living Infants Fairness and Equality (LIFE) Act, arguing that provisions aimed at helping pregnant Georgians recover child support during their pregnancies and allowing them to claim “unborn children” on their taxes provided families with extra support that other states’ bans did not include.

“Our state had worked in a very careful and balanced way to give balance to these difficult circumstances with the life of a child in a way that I think was thoughtful,” he added. “Many other states I don’t think took the time that we did to work through that, and I’m proud of the work we did.”

He also criticized Georgia’s Democratic Party, saying it was “sickening” that the party “seizes all these tragic circumstances to try to score points.”

However, reproductive health care advocates argue that restrictions on abortion have caused downstream effects that limit health care access for all Georgians and impact rural residents of the state most acutely.

“The effect Georgia’s abortion ban has on our health system is felt all over the state,” said Jaylen Black, the vice president of marketing and communications for Planned Parenthood Southeast. “Doctors are fleeing the state. Some of them won’t move to Georgia. Medical students avoid residency programs in our state, and that makes it harder for Georgians to get the care that they so desperately need.”

The yearslong court battle over Georgia’s abortion ban

Georgia’s six-week abortion ban was briefly overturned last year in a ruling by Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney, who declared the state’s law unconstitutional after the SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective filed a lawsuit in state court in 2022. 

That action was short-lived. The Supreme Court of Georgia quickly reinstated the ban after Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr filed an emergency injunction, allowing the restriction to remain in effect while the court considered a narrow portion of the lawsuit.

However, an unrelated state Supreme Court ruling from earlier this year has complicated the plaintiffs’ case. Wasserman v. Franklin County, which was decided in January, created a new precedent that prevents third-party entities from suing on behalf of someone else. As a result, abortion rights advocates like SisterSong are now unable to file lawsuits on behalf of their patients.

“At a minimum, a plaintiff must assert her own rights to maintain an action in Georgia courts,” the Supreme Court stated in a February ruling in the abortion case.

The case now sits with the Fulton County Superior Court, where McBurney will evaluate whether the plaintiffs still have standing to bring the lawsuit.

“For a second time, the Supreme Court has elected not to address this case on its merits (other than to stay this Court’s ruling on the merits),” McBurney wrote in an order this month. 

The parties now have until July 21 to submit briefs that incorporate the two Supreme Court rulings before the case can proceed.

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Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jill Nolin for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.

The post Three years later, debate over abortion limits in Georgia is far from settled appeared first on georgiarecorder.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

The article presents reproductive rights advocates and Democratic politicians as the primary voices, emphasizing the negative consequences of Georgia’s six-week abortion ban through tragic cases and critical statements. The language highlights human costs and frames the law as harmful and overly restrictive. It also provides space for Republican viewpoints defending the legislation, but these are generally framed as responses to Democratic critiques rather than equally balanced narratives. The focus on Democratic electoral goals and the framing of Republicans as supporting a law linked to deaths indicates a slight bias toward a pro-choice, center-left perspective, though it includes relevant counterpoints for context.

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