{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/5d892b22719a100a4a0192bd/6000a854f583c823619c578a?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"1/14/21 - Vaccinations Reach Capacity | Impeachment and Insurrection | Book Club: The Prophets","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/5d892b22719a100a4a0192bd/1610655709443-8a068da508ac4c54e2c1e7ec5ac23a49.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>Appointments for COVID-19 vaccinations through the health department has reached capacity following a surge in demand.</p><p>Then, we examine the latest effort to impeach and convict President Donald Trump, and how accountability for the insurrection at the Capitol could extend to lawmakers.</p><p>Plus, in our Book Club, “The Prophets,” by Robert Jones, Jr.</p><p><strong>Segment 1:</strong></p><p>Vaccine appointments available through the state's drive-thru vaccine locations are full.&nbsp;The Mississippi Department of Health says recent changes to the state's vaccine rollout have filled all 52 thousand appointments at the state's drive-thru vaccination sites. These changes also created technical difficulties and long wait times for residents hoping to schedule an appointment for themselves or a loved one.&nbsp;Dr. Mark Horne, President of the Mississippi State Medical Association, says the quick changes to vaccine availability caused a surge in demand that was difficult to accommodate.</p><p><strong>Segment 2:</strong></p><p>Following a day of debate and voting on Capitol Hill, President Donald Trump became the first President to be impeached multiple times yesterday.&nbsp;Lawmakers voted in a bi-partisan majority on a single article of impeachment - inciting insurrection - following the violent insurrection at the Capitol last week.&nbsp;10 Republicans crossed the aisle to join Democrats in placing some of the blame at the feet of the President.&nbsp;That group did not include Mississippi's three Republican House delegates.</p><p>Matt Steffey is a Professor at the Mississippi College School of Law.&nbsp;We spoke to him ahead yesterday's vote on latest effort to impeach and convict President Donald Trump, and how accountability for the insurrection at the Capitol could extend to lawmakers.</p><p><strong>Segment 3:</strong></p><p><span class=\"ql-cursor\">﻿</span>A debut novel by a black, queer writer is garnering a lot of attention for its story of a loving relationship between two enslaved men on a plantation in Mississippi.&nbsp;The book is being praised for its prose.&nbsp;Author, Robert Jones Jr., is already a well-known and respected writer and tells us about his work that precedes today’s Book Club choice, “The Prophets.”&nbsp;</p>","author_name":"MPB Think Radio"}