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Was White House Talking To Insurrectionists As They Trashed The Capitol?
Was White House Talking To Insurrectionists As They Trashed The Capitol?
Was White House Talking To Insurrectionists As They Trashed The Capitol? https://digitalalabamanews.com/was-white-house-talking-to-insurrectionists-as-they-trashed-the-capitol/ The Jan. 6 Committee may hear testimony tomorrow about alleged ongoing phone contact between the White House and insurrectionists as they trashed the Capitol that day. | AP WASHINGTON—The House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 Donald Trump-directed insurrection, invasion and coup d’état attempt at the U.S. Capitol will fill in more blanks in that overall story at its latest open investigative hearing, on September 28 at 1 pm, Eastern time. Those blanks could include the report in a new book by Denver Riggleman, a former  one-term Republican congressman and a former panel investigator, that a White House staffer was on the phone with the Trumpite invaders as they trashed the Capitol. “When you see that the White House switchboard had connected to a rioter’s phone while it’s happening, that’s a pretty big a-ha moment,” Riggleman told NBC interviewer Bill Whitaker in a taped interview played on Meet The Press. “And that’s really what all of our hearings have been about,” panel member Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., told the program’s host, Chuck Todd, while painting the big picture of Republican Trump’s coup plans and goal of staying in the White House–thus trashing the U.S. Constitution–even though he lost the 2020 presidential election to Democratic nominee Joe Biden The hearings have other potential topics, including Secret Service text messages and emails, since recovered, showing advance knowledge agents had of the coup plans, and their response, or lack of it. And, Raskin, a constitutional law professor on leave told a top CBS correspondent on September 23 the hearing could cover top Trump aides Roger Stone, Michael Flynn and Steve Bannon “interfacing with domestic violence extremists” before the coup try Trump pushed. The panel’s September 28 hearing could be its last public investigative hearing. But it won’t be an end of the revelations, either that day or beyond: Responding to a Fulton County, Ga. (Atlanta) grand jury subpoena, Trump’s last chief of staff, Mark Meadows, testified September 27 behind closed doors about his role in Trump’s tries to subvert the electoral vote count in the key swing state of Georgia. Biden turned Georgia “purple” by beating Trump by 11,379 votes out of five million cast. With Meadows listening in, Trump pressured the state’s top elections official, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, “to find” 11,380 Trump votes to reverse the outcome. In essence, Trump asked Raffensperger, a conservative Republican, to steal the election. Raffensperger refused. Meadows later traveled to Georgia with the same intent. The grand jury, directed by DA Fani Willis, wants to quiz him about both tries. Willis expects a report from the jurors late this year. Five members of the violent white nationalist Oath Keepers group, including leader Stewart Rhodes, go on trial for “seditious conspiracy” in U.S. District Court in D.C., starting with jury selection on September 27. The Oath Keepers, along with the Proud Boys, led the actual invasion after Trump urged them to march on the Capitol in an inflammatory pre-invasion rally on January 6. Justice Department prosecutors plan to tell jurors the Oath Keepers openly tried to start “a civil war” to keep Trump in power. Three Oath Keepers have already pleaded guilty to the same charges and may be called among up to 40 witnesses at the scheduled five-week trial. Raskin confirmed the phone call Riggleman discussed, though neither could say who in the White House made it. He also told Meet The Press host Chuck Todd it wasn’t the only one. Can’t say anything specific “I can’t say anything specific about that particular call, but we are aware of it. And we are aware of lots of contacts between the people in the White House and different people that were involved obviously in the coup attempt and the insurrection,” Raskin said. “And that’s really what all of our hearings have been about,” said Raskin—painting the big picture of Trump’s coup plans and goal of staying in the White House even though he lost to Biden, thus trashing the U.S. Constitution and the peaceful handover of power. More than 1,000 Trumpites, white nationalists and neo-Nazis invaded the Capitol, sending lawmakers, staffers and reporters running for their lives and temporarily stopping the electoral vote count that confirmed Biden won the 2020 balloting. Five people—four of them police officers defending the Capitol—subsequently died, and another 140 officers were injured. Some were so injured, or so traumatized by their failure to stop the invaders, they had to retire on disability. The House later impeached Trump for his planning of the coup, and named Raskin the lead prosecutor. But the Senate refused to convict him. The 57-43 vote in the evenly split Senate included seven Republicans. But 67 votes are needed for conviction. That big picture will also come out in both an interim report from the committee and its final report, both scheduled before the end of the 117th Congress at noon on Jan. 3, 2023. The final report is expected to cover other topics as well, notably who paid the costs of the invasion. It will also include detailed recommendations to Congress on how to prevent future coup tries and insurrections. Those costs aren’t cheap, though no dollar figures have circulated yet. But they include airfare for invaders traveling from as far away as San Diego, buses chartered to bring dozens from Florida and elsewhere on the East Coast, and the huge cache of weapons they stored in nearby suburban Virginia. And they include costly hotel bills. Many invaders booked rooms in the Capitol Hilton, a convention hotel just blocks from the White House. And Trump’s top coup plotters among his staff, including Flynn, Bannon and personal attorney Rudy Giuliani, established a  “war room” in the Willard Hotel, an even more-expensive hostelry even closer to the White House than the Hilton. Finally, even if the January 6 committee goes out of business, its findings will be completely public—and the investigations will continue. Raskin, for one, expects the Senate to stay Democratic after the November election, even if the Trumpite-dominated Republicans take over the House and shut his committee down. So the panel, he says, will just send all its evidence to both the Justice Department and the Senate Judiciary Committee. CONTRIBUTOR Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Was White House Talking To Insurrectionists As They Trashed The Capitol?
Vote For Your Favourite Drama In The TV Times Awards 2022
Vote For Your Favourite Drama In The TV Times Awards 2022
Vote For Your Favourite Drama In The TV Times Awards 2022 https://digitalalabamanews.com/vote-for-your-favourite-drama-in-the-tv-times-awards-2022/ (Image credit: Future) It’s been another terrific year of television and what better way to celebrate all your favourite TV than with the launch of our annual TV Times Awards?!  The ten shows vying for the Favourite Drama category vary from long-running series to brand-new shows, from gentle family dramas to gritty thrillers but what they all have in common is they represent the best TV dramas around. So without much further ado, here are the nominations for the 2022 TV Times Awards Favourite Drama category.  Favourite Drama — TV Times Awards 2022 All Creatures Great and Small  — Channel 5 Bridgerton — Netflix Call the Midwife — BBC1 Casualty — BBC1 Death in Paradise — BBC1 Doc Martin — ITV Peaky Blinders — BBC1 Sherwood — BBC1 Shetland — BBC1 Vera — ITV TV Times Awards 2022 — how to vote  Joining in the voting is easy! Just head to the TV Times Awards online voting page to pick from your favourite TV shows and stars.  Choosing won’t be easy — but here is a reminder of why these dramas made the cut…  All Creatures Great and Small — Channel 5 All Creatures Great and Small (Image credit: ViacomCBS Photographer: Todd Antony) The reboot of the classic series based on James Herriot’s novels about his life as a vet in the Yorkshire Dales has proved surprisingly popular — especially considering the original 1970s TV adaptation, starring Christopher Timothy and Peter Davison, was such a hit it ran for over a decade. Some of that is to do with the gorgeous scenery but, to make it into our favourite drama category, it also needed strong storylines and a great cast which All Creatures Great and Small brings together in one compelling package.  Bridgerton — Netflix Bridgerton  (Image credit: Netflix/Liam Daniel) Bridgerton season 2 had a tough act to follow. Bridgerton season 1 was Netflix’s second most watched show ever (only beaten by Squid Game). And yet this sparkling period drama rose gamely to the challenge creating a wittier, even more expansive view of the Regency world, adapted from Julia Quinn’s Bridgerton books. Season 2 focuses on the repressed elder Bridgerton brother Anthony and his reluctant (“enemies-to-lovers”) romance with Kate Sharma, the sister of his bride-to-be. And it’s just as delicious as the first…  Call the Midwife — BBC1 Call the Midwife (Image credit: BBC / Nealstreet Productions / Sally Mais) The long-running period drama, set in the 1950s and 60s, has been a fan favourite for over 10 years, following the lives of a group of midwives in the east end of London. Last season (11) saw all the much-loved characters back at Nonnatus House to celebrate its centenary including Helen George  (Trixie Franklin), Jenny Agutter (Sister Julienne), Leonie Elliott (Lucille Anderson) and Linda Bassett (Phyllis Crane). But as always there was romance, heartbreak and even a brush with death. Will Call the Midwife be your pick? Casualty — BBC1 Casualty (Image credit: BBC) The long-running British hospital drama has reached a whopping 37 series (and over 30 years) and it’s still going. If there was an award for longevity, Casualty would be top of the list (it’s the longest-running primetime medical drama series in the world), but it’s not just surviving, it’s thriving. It’s continued to evolve and stay relevant and all these years later fans still watch in droves for the heartburn and heartbreak, acting talent and intense action on the wards. Does Casualty get your vote? Death in Paradise — BBC1 Death in Paradise (Image credit: BBC) The magical combination of sleuthing and sunshine, courtesy of the long-running crime drama Death in Paradise, proved irresistible to viewers, especially in its usual broadcasting slot in the bleak UK winter. Viewers have been traveling to Saint Marie for over 10 years, reveling in the Caribbean scenery (Catherine’s bar is a hit), the quirky characters (particularly the awkward, yet brilliant, detectives that get shipped out to tackle the strangely high crime rate) and the expanding list of guest stars. Doc Martin — ITV Doc Martin (Image credit: ITV) Martin Clunes’ grumpy haemophobic Doc Martin/Ellingham has been a huge audience hit for ITV from his first appearance in Portwenn (actually the seaside village of Port Isaac) to the final series of the Cornish medical Doc Martin, which is currently airing on ITV. Ably supported by a colourful cast, from Caroline Catz’s long-suffering Louisa Ellingham, to the comedy father and son pairing Bert and Al Large (Ian McNeice and Joe Joe Absolom), Martin’s super-fan Mrs Tishell (Selina Cadell) to Martin’s most pragmatic advisor, his aunt Ruth Ellingham (Eileen Atkins). It’s a gentle comedic drama that touches the heartstrings. Peaky Blinders — BBC1 Peaky Blinders (Image credit: BBC) Peaky Blinders is one of the grittiest dramas in the category. Set in Birmingham just after WWI, it’s based on the adventures of a real-life gang that operated in the late nineteenth century. The gang leader is Tommy Shelby (Cillian Murphy), supported by family members Aunt Polly (the late Helen McCrory), Arthur (Paul Anderson), Ada (Sophie Rundle) and John Shelby (Joe Cole). A global sensation it made it to six seasons and still left the fans wanting more. Is Peaky Blinders your favourite drama? Sherwood — BBC1 Sherwood (Image credit: BBC) Sherwood is the new kid on the block, making the TV Times Awards list after its very first series. It’s a police and crime drama that’s set in Nottinghamshire against the backdrop of a divided working-class community. Starring Lesley Manville (Mrs Harris Goes to Paris). David Morrissey (The Walking Dead, Britannia) and Joanne Froggatt (Downton Abbey, Liar) Sherwood is based on the events that surrounded a series of real-life murders. It’s compelling, quality television. Shetland — BBC1 Shetland (Image credit: BBC) The world-weary Jimmy Perez investigates the murders that pile up in surprising numbers (just like on Saint Marie and in Midsummer!) on the bleak yet beautiful island of Shetland. Over the years he’s developed a close working partnership with colleagues Tosh, Sandy and Billy as well as his slightly scratchy relationship with Duncan, his daughter’s biological father… Shetland continues to be a beautifully crafted study in muted colours and clever crime storylines. Does it get your pick? Vera — ITV Vera (Image credit: ITV) The indomitable Vera (Brenda Blethyn) is Detective Chief Inspector Vera Stanhope of the Northumberland & City Police, to give her her full title. Always almost retired, she’s a perfectionist and highly driven. Vera is all thriller, no filler. Quality acting, nuance, well-plotted crimes and the ever-changing Northumbrian weather. Now running at 12 (well-deserved) seasons and counting, Vera’s never going to get any rest. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Vote For Your Favourite Drama In The TV Times Awards 2022
Alabama Native Bubba Wallace And NASCAR To Host Bubbas Block Party At Railroad Park In Downtown Birmingham This Friday Sept. 30 Talladega Superspeedway
Alabama Native Bubba Wallace And NASCAR To Host Bubbas Block Party At Railroad Park In Downtown Birmingham This Friday Sept. 30 Talladega Superspeedway
Alabama Native Bubba Wallace And NASCAR To Host “Bubba’s Block Party” At Railroad Park In Downtown Birmingham This Friday, Sept. 30 – Talladega Superspeedway https://digitalalabamanews.com/alabama-native-bubba-wallace-and-nascar-to-host-bubbas-block-party-at-railroad-park-in-downtown-birmingham-this-friday-sept-30-talladega-superspeedway/  Hip-Hop Star Big K.R.I.T. Set to Perform at Free, Family-Friendly Event; NASCAR Playoffs Racing Set at Nearby Talladega Superspeedway for Weekend, Oct. 1-2 Birmingham, AL – (September 27, 2022) – NASCAR today announced plans for a community block party hosted by 23XI Racing driver and Alabama native Bubba Wallace at Railroad Park in downtown Birmingham this Friday, September 30. The event will precede two days of NASCAR Playoffs racing action at Talladega Superspeedway, culminating Sunday, Oct. 2, with the NASCAR Cup Series YellaWood 500, which Wallace is the defending champion. Bubba’s Block Party is a community-focused NASCAR initiative that aims to drive awareness, access and engagement to the sport among the Black community while generating excitement around the race weekend. The family-friendly event will take place from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. “We’re excited to bring Bubba’s Block Party, a community event, to the heart of Birmingham” said Brandon Thompson, NASCAR Vice President of Diversity and Inclusion. “Events like this allow us to bridge the rich history and culture of Birmingham to a NASCAR staple like Talladega.” The free event will host guests for hours of live music, games and activities, as well as an assortment of food offerings. Wallace, from Mobile, who made history in last year’s YellaWood 500 when he became the first Black driver to win a NASCAR Cup Series race since 1963, will engage the audience as part of a fireside chat which will focus on his career journey and NASCAR’s efforts to promote diversity and inclusion across the sport. “Our sport has made real gains in expanding and diversifying our fan base,” said Bubba Wallace. “It’s my hope that Bubba’s Block Party will resonate with the Birmingham community and allow people to see all that NASCAR has to offer. I want everyone to feel welcomed, to experience the thrill of the sport and have a good time.” Throughout the afternoon, attendees can enjoy performances by rapper Big K.R.I.T., Mannie Fresh and WBHJ’s own DJ Gorgeous, racing simulators, t-shirt printing and a Kids Zone. NASCAR will join forces with Black Restaurant Week and DoorDash for a food truck village at the event serving up local bites from Black-owned businesses to drive awareness, support and economic impact. Featured businesses include Simone’s Kitchen ATL, Fat Charles BBQ, Deb’s Italian Ices, Aww Shucks and Underground Vegan. Bubba’s Block Party is open to the public and is a family-friendly event suited for children ages 4 and up. For more information and to RSVP visit bubbasblockparty.com Sunday’s YellaWood 500, the second race in the premier series Playoff’s Round of 12, gets underway at 1:00 p.m. CDT. Saturday’s slate at the 2.66-mile trioval includes a Playoffs doubleheader for with the Chevy Silverado for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series at 11:30 a.m. CDT, followed by the Sparks 300 for the NASCAR Xfinity Series at 3:00 p.m. CDT. For all ticket information for NASCAR Playoffs weekend, fans are encouraged to call 1-877-Go2-DEGA or visit www.talladegasuperspeedway.com. Fans are encouraged to keep up with all the happenings at the biggest, baddest race track on the planet by following Talladega Superspeedway on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, as well as the all-new NASCAR Tracks App. for the latest speedway news. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Alabama Native Bubba Wallace And NASCAR To Host Bubbas Block Party At Railroad Park In Downtown Birmingham This Friday Sept. 30 Talladega Superspeedway
Ian Strengthens Into Major Category 3 Hurricane As It Makes Landfall In Cuba
Ian Strengthens Into Major Category 3 Hurricane As It Makes Landfall In Cuba
Ian Strengthens Into Major Category 3 Hurricane As It Makes Landfall In Cuba https://digitalalabamanews.com/ian-strengthens-into-major-category-3-hurricane-as-it-makes-landfall-in-cuba/ Hurricane Ian strengthened into a major Category 3 storm early Tuesday as it made landfall in western Cuba, U.S. officials said. Landfall was just southwest of the town of La Coloma in the Pinar del Río province around 4:30 a.m. ET, with maximum sustained winds of 125 mph, the National Hurricane Center said in an early Tuesday update. The hurricane is now moving north toward Florida at 12 mph, where it is expected to approach the state’s west coast Wednesday. Ian is expected to make landfall in Venice on Florida’s Gulf Coast at 125 mph as a Category 3 hurricane Wednesday, according to Florida Division of Emergency Management Director Kevin Guthrie, who spoke at a news conference Tuesday morning. Ian will slow down to a pace of 3 to 4 mph Thursday and Friday over or near Florida’s west coast, prolonging storm surge, wind and flash flooding impacts. Tornadoes over the Florida peninsula are also possible over the next three days. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a statewide emergency, saying Ian could bring 5 to 10 feet of storm surge to the state. “What we have here is really historic storm surge and flooding potential,” he said at the news conference. “That storm surge can be life-threatening.” DeSantis encouraged residents to heed evacuation orders in place from Pinellas County down to the Fort Meyers area by getting to higher ground. About 2.5 million residents are under some type of evacuation orders, he said. Parts of the state may also be without power anywhere from three days to a week, Guthrie said. Boarded-up windows in Indian Shores, 25 miles west of Tampa, had a message for Hurricane Ian on Monday.Ricardo Arduengo / AFP – Getty Images Hundreds of thousands of people were evacuated from Cuba’s Pinar del Río as authorities sent in emergency and medical personnel ahead of the storm’s arrival this week, The Associated Press reported. Two hours east, in Havana, fishermen hauled out their boats, city workers unclogged storm drains, and residents expressed alarm at the prospect of flooding, according to the AP. “I hope we escape this one, because it would be the end of us,” Abel Rodrigues, 54, told the news agency. “We already have so little.” Earlier Monday, Ian passed by the nearby Cayman Islands with no major damage reported. Emergency officials issued an “all clear” notification at 3 p.m. local time, and Premier Wayne Panton said the British territory was “very fortunate to have been spared the worst of a potentially very serious storm.” The latest on Hurricane Ian Ian is expected to make landfall in Venice on Florida’s Gulf Coast at 125 mph as a Category 3 hurricane Wednesday. Ian will slow down to a pace of 3 to 4 mph Thursday and Friday over or near Florida’s west coast, prolonging storm surge, wind and flash flooding impacts. About 2.5 million residents are under some type of evacuation orders. Parts of the state may also be without power anywhere from three days to a week. As the storm headed for Florida, oil companies evacuated workers from deep-water platforms in the Gulf of Mexico, and airports in Tampa and Pinellas County in Florida announced that they would close Tuesday. American Airlines announced travel waivers for people flying to or out of 20 airports in Florida and the Caribbean. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers said the team was temporarily moving its operations to Miami-Dade County. Residents on Florida’s Gulf Coast stocked up on food and prepared with sandbags and plywood for their windows. Hundreds of thousands of people were under evacuation orders. Bob Copeland helps fill free sandbags for Wilbur Villamarin, left, and his son Fabian on Monday at an Orange County park in preparation for the arrival of Hurricane Ian.Phelan M. Ebenhack / AP “This storm is trending to slow down, which means it could potentially sit on top of us for 47 hours,” said Cathie Perkins, the director of Pinellas County Emergency Management, NBC affiliate WFLA of Tampa reported. “That’s a lot of rain, and it’s not going to be able to drain out quickly,” she said. Tim Stelloh is a breaking news reporter for NBC News Digital. Chantal Da Silva Chantal Da Silva is a breaking news editor for NBC News Digital based in London.  Mirna Alsharif is a breaking news reporter for NBC News. Kathryn Prociv Kathryn Prociv is a senior meteorologist and producer for NBC News.  Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Ian Strengthens Into Major Category 3 Hurricane As It Makes Landfall In Cuba
5 Huntsville Area High School Football Games To Watch In Week 7
5 Huntsville Area High School Football Games To Watch In Week 7
5 Huntsville Area High School Football Games To Watch In Week 7 https://digitalalabamanews.com/5-huntsville-area-high-school-football-games-to-watch-in-week-7/ Here are five games to watch in the Huntsville area this week with the complete schedule following. HARTSELLE (6-0) AT MUSCLE SHOALS (5-0) Time/location: 7 p.m., Friday, J.F. Moore Stadium Last week: Class 6A, No. 6-ranked Hartselle won 69-21 at Oxford. Ninth-ranked Muscle Shoals beat visiting James Clemens 38-10. Region: Both teams are 2-0 in Region 7 and tied with Decatur for first place. The skinny: This matchup pits the No. 2 and 3 scoring offenses in Class 6A — Hartselle at 44.3 points per game and Muscle Shoals at 41.8 … Hartselle’s regular season winning streak is at 19 games, one victory behind Montgomery Catholic for longest such streak in the state. … The Tigers scored 52 unanswered points against Oxford after falling behind 21-17 midway through the second quarter. Hartselle quarterback Jack Smith accounted for four touchdowns – three rushing and one passing. … This is the third of four straight road games for the Tigers. … Muscle Shoals quarterback Cole Woods threw a pair of TD passes against James Clemens. … Hartselle defeated Muscle Shoals 52-35 last season. Ri Fletcher ran for 216 yards and four touchdowns, and he caught a TD pass. The Tigers have won two of the last three and four of the last six meetings to take a 16-11-1 series lead. WEST MORGAN (5-0) AT DESHLER (6-0) Time/location: 7 p.m., Friday, Howard Chappell Stadium, Tuscumbia Last week: West Morgan had an open week. Deshler beat visiting Colbert County 36-33. Region: Both teams are 3-0 in Class 4A, Region 7 and tied for first place. The skinny: Something has to give as Deshler enters with the No. 5 scoring offense in 4A (44.0) and West Morgan counters with the No. 3 scoring defense (8.8). … West Morgan is aiming for its first 6-0 start since 2003. … The Rebels were last on the field Sept. 16 in a 35-16 win over Rogers. West Morgan had two Pick 6s and a punt return for a TD. … Deshler is 6-0 for the first time since opening 9-0 in 2011. … Tigers receiver Dee Newsome caught a 29-yard touchdown pass on the final play of the game to beat Colbert County. … This is the second of four straight home games for Deshler. … West Morgan beat Deshler 28-19 last season for its first win in four tries against the Tigers. HATTON (4-1) AT TANNER (4-2) Time/location: 7 p.m., Friday, Rip Swanner Stadium Last week: Hatton beat visiting East Lawrence 50-7. Tanner won 66-0 at Columbia. Region: Tanner is 2-1 in Class 2A, Region 8, and tied with Falkville and Red Bay for second place. Hatton is a game back at 1-1. The skinny: Tanner has eclipsed 60 points three times this season and boasts the No. 2 scoring offense in Class 2A at 49 points per game. … The Rattlers returned three fumbles for a touchdown against Columbia. … Hatton’s Briley Kerby scored four touchdowns – two passing and two rushing – against East Lawrence. … The Hornets have the No. 4 scoring defense in 2A (12.2). … Tanner and Hatton last met in 2019. The Rattlers lead the series 11-9. FLORENCE (4-2) AT BOB JONES (3-2) Time/location: 7 p.m., Friday, Madison City Schools Stadium Last week: Florence beat visiting Minor 35-16. Bob Jones had an open week. Region: Both teams are 2-1 in Class 7A, Region 4, and tied with Huntsville and Sparkman for second place. The skinny: Both teams need a win to stay near the front of the Region 4 race. Bob Jones has already lost to Huntsville and has yet to face Sparkman and first-place Austin. Florence lost to Austin and has yet to play Huntsville or Sparkman. … Of Florence and Bob Jones’ combined six on-the-field wins, there is just one victory against a team with a winning record — Florence over 3-2 Minor. The Falcons also have forfeit win over 3-2 Pinson Valley. … Florence scored all five of its touchdowns against Minor on the ground, while forcing three turnovers. … Bob Jones quarterback Dylan Willingham threw a pair of touchdown passes in the Patriots’ last game, a 28-24 loss to Huntsville on Sept. 15. … Bob Jones beat Florence 29-21 last season. The other half of the Patriots’ current quarterback duo, Ray Hardy, had three TD runs in the victory. Bob Jones leads the series 12-6. FAIRVIEW (4-1) AT ARDMORE (3-2) Time/location: 7 p.m., Friday, Cooper Field Last week: Fairview had an open week. Ardmore beat visiting Elkmont 42-0. Region: Both teams are 2-0 in Class 5A, Region 8, and tied for second place, a half game behind Russellville. The skinny: Both teams enter on a three-game winning streak. … Ardmore is coming off its first shutout victory since 2018 – which also happened to be against Elkmont. … Thomas Colston had three touchdown runs to pace the Tigers offense last week … Fairview’s last game was a 50-7 win over West Point on Sept. 16. The Aggies ran for 357 of their 394 yards of offense. Eli Frost had four touchdown runs. … This is the first meeting between Ardmore and Fairview since 2005. The Tigers have a 3-1 series edge. The complete Huntsville area schedule Thursday Huntsville at Albertville Guntersville at Scottsboro Woodville at Gaylesville Friday Arab at Crossville Fairview at Ardmore Asbury at Madison Academy Cullman at Athens Grissom at Austin Florence at Bob Jones, Madison City Schools Stadium Brewer at Russellville Brindlee Mountain at Susan Moore Mae Jemison at Buckhorn Decatur at Columbia, Milton Frank Stadium, Huntsville Clements at Marion County Westminster Christian at DAR Appalachian at Decatur Heritage, West Morgan High, Trinity Sardis at Douglas Elkmont at Colbert Heights Falkville at Lexington Hartselle at Muscle Shoals Gadsden City at Hazel Green Lee-Huntsville at Fort Payne James Clemens at Sparkman North Jackson at New Hope North Sand Mountain at Sand Rock St. John Paul II at Priceville Whitesburg Christian at Pisgah Ider at Section Hatton at Tanner Randolph at Madison County Wilson at West Limestone West Morgan at Deshler Open: Boaz, Danville, East Limestone Schedule subject to change Note to readers: if you purchase something through one of our affiliate links we may earn a commission. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
5 Huntsville Area High School Football Games To Watch In Week 7
What To Know About Amazon's October Prime Day Sale
What To Know About Amazon's October Prime Day Sale
What To Know About Amazon's October Prime Day Sale https://digitalalabamanews.com/what-to-know-about-amazons-october-prime-day-sale/ Amazon just announced that it’s hosting Prime Day 2022 again — sort of. For the first time ever, Amazon is having a second Prime Day-like mega sale in one year: Amazon already hosted Prime Day in July, and the second sale will take place Oct. 11-12. Like the Prime Days before it, Amazon’s Prime Early Access Sale is exclusive to Prime members. It will offer Black Friday-level deals across product categories and brands like Peloton, New Balance, Philips Sonicare and more, according to the retailer. News about a second Amazon sale comes after Target set the dates for its second Deal Days 2022 event last week — Oct. 6-8 — and Overstock announced Overstock Day will take place Oct. 2–3. Prime Day, Deal Days and Overstock Days are just the beginning of the early Black Friday deals you’ll see this season, experts told us. In recent years, retailers have started rolling out deep discounts as early as October to give shoppers a head start on holiday shopping. This may be one reason why Amazon decided to host another Prime Day in 2022, experts said. “The move and the timing really would allow Amazon to position its sale as a kickoff to the holiday shopping season,” said Jessica Young, director of research at Digital Commerce 360. “This is about grabbing consumers who increasingly demand sneak-peek, Cyber weekend-level deals, which start earlier and earlier each year.” To help you prepare for Prime Day, we talked to experts about what the sale might look like and the types of deals we may see. We’ll continue updating you in the weeks leading up to Amazon’s sale as we learn more. When is ‘Amazon Prime Day 2’? October’s Prime Early Access Sale will take place Oct. 11-12. This is the first time Amazon is hosting two Prime Day-like events in one year, but it’s not the first time Prime Day has been scheduled for October. Due to pandemic-related challenges, Amazon held Prime Day 2020 in October — otherwise, the sale usually happens in the summer. Amazon sold billions of dollars’ worth of products during Prime Day 2020 even with the supply chain obstacles it was facing, so “there’s little reason to think an October event won’t be a big win this year,” said Vipin Porwal, founder and consumer savings expert at Smarty. But members don’t have to wait until Oct. 11 to shop deals. Amazon has already begun rolling out early access deals exclusive to Prime members, as well as exclusive coupons you can apply to specific products at checkout. Some early deals are only available for a set period of time, and other deals only apply to a limited batch of products. To make sure you don’t miss something you have your eye on, you can set up alerts through Amazon to know when they go live. What is Amazon Prime Day and what will October’s event look like? Amazon Prime Day is a multi-day sale hosted by the mega-retailer during which it offers a wide range of deals exclusively to Prime members. Prime Day is typically 48 hours long and shoppers can find discounts on everything from clothing to kitchen appliances. Amazon said October’s Prime Early Access Sale is happening in 15 countries like Canada, Italy, Turkey and more. In contrast, over 20 countries had access to July’s Prime Day. The benefits of Prime Day extend beyond saving on products. Amazon also often offers a variety of promotions and incentives leading up to and during the event. Before July’s Prime Day, for example, Amazon offered a Stampcard through which members could collect stamps by completing tasks like watching shows on Prime Video, using Prime Reading and more to earn a $10 credit. Other Prime Day incentives have previously been offered through the Amazon Prime credit card. October’s sale is likely to look very similar to July’s, experts told us. But because it’s the second Prime Day-like event in one year — a new concept to Prime members and Amazon sellers — Porwal said there may be a smaller pool of deals to choose from. Amazon sellers “need to see the value and hype in this ‘second Prime Day’ to be able to justify significant price drops,” Porwal said. Since there are only a few months between July’s Prime Day — the retailer’s most successful one yet — and October’s event, Amazon’s upcoming sale is an experiment for the retailer, who will be watching closely to see how shoppers respond. “Yes, shoppers will be more mentally prepared to holiday shop next month than they were in the dog days of summer, and yes, magnified price-consciousness might nudge them into considering some of the deals,” Young said. “But when sales aren’t rare and special, it tempers the sense of urgency when one is announced. Because you know another one will be around the corner soon enough.” Do I need a Prime membership to get Amazon Prime Day discounts? Yes — Amazon Prime Day is exclusive to Prime members. It’s one of the many benefits Prime members have access to, in addition to fast and free shipping options, streaming and entertainment exclusives and more. But keep in mind that Amazon raised the price of a Prime membership this year for new and existing members. With the price increase, an Amazon Prime membership costs $15 a month (up from $13 a month), or you can pay $139 annually (previously $119). The retailer also offers a Prime Student membership for $69 a year, up from $59 a year. Additionally, Amazon offers a discounted Prime membership that’s about half the price of a standard membership for those who qualify for certain types of government assistance programs, like EBT and Medicaid. The discounted option is $7 a month and you have to verify your qualification every 12 months. Which other retailers are hosting early Black Friday sales? Experts expect numerous retailers to announce their early Black Friday sales and deals within the next few weeks. As of now, we know that Target Deal Days is Oct. 6-8 and Overstock Day is Oct. 2-3. We’ll continue updating you as we learn more. Will a second Prime Day-like event happen every year? “This is always the million dollar question,” Young said. Amazon has yet to announce if two Prime Day-like sales will happen annually. But “if it performs like other Prime Day events, it could very well become an annual challenge to Black Friday and Cyber Monday events,” Porwal said. He noted that shoppers have already shown interest in taking advantage of early Black Friday deals, so Prime-exclusive early Black Friday deals could become a perk members expect during the holiday shopping season. July 2022 Prime Day bestsellers Every year, Amazon announces bestselling Prime Day products worldwide as well as in select countries. The retailer said bestselling product categories in the U.S. during the July 2022 event included consumer electronics, household essentials and home products. To give you an idea of what types of items are typically popular during Prime Day, we listed products from a few brands Amazon said were among the U.S. bestsellers during July 2022 according to its data. This summer, we also compiled Select reader favorite Prime Day items, as well as staff favorites. Apple Watch Series 7 The Apple Watch Series 7 was a popular product among Prime Day shoppers and Select staffers — senior editor Morgan Greenwald and I both took advantage of the sale and purchased one. The watch has a built-in GPS system to track workouts like runs or walks, and the brand says its Always-on Retina display offers almost 20% more screen area compared to the Series 6 watch, which was also on sale during July’s Prime Day. You can measure your heart rate and blood oxygen level with the watch, take an ECG and monitor your sleep cycle. It’s IPX6 dust and water-resistant and comes in two sizes: 41mm and 45mm. Crest 3D Teeth Whitestrips Amazon said Crest teeth whitening products were bestsellers during July’s Prime Day, and these teeth whitening strips were popular among Select readers as well. You get 22 sets of strips in a box, and they’re formulated with hydrogen peroxide, an ingredient the American Dental Association says is commonly used in whitening treatments to penetrate tooth enamel and break down discoloration. Bentgo Kids Leak-Proof 5-Compartment Bento-Style Kids Lunch Box July’s Prime Day was around the time some families began shopping for school supplies, including lunch boxes like this one from Bentgo. It’s designed with five compartments to put food and two latches the brand says prevents contents from leaking out. The lunch box is microwave- and dishwasher-safe, according to the brand. Amazon Echo Dot (4th Gen) Experts told us Amazon devices are some of the most deeply discounted products on Prime Day every year, and we saw many Echo devices listed at their lowest price ever during July’s event. The Echo Dot is a speaker equipped with Alexa, so you can use voice commands to play music, check the weather, set alarms or timers and more. The device is also compatible with smart home devices like lights, locks and thermostats, allowing you to control them with voice commands as well. The 4th generation of the Echo Dot also comes in a version with a built-in clock, which I purchased on Prime Day. Blink Outdoor Blink was another popular brand during July’s Prime Day, and its outdoor camera was a Select reader favorite. The brand says the wireless camera has a two-year battery life and allows you to monitor your home during the day or at night with infrared night vision. The camera pairs with the Blink app and is built with two-way audio, so you can see, hear and speak to visitors in real-time. You can also get motion detection alerts to your phone. Laneige Lip Sleeping Mask This lip mask was one of the beauty products Prime members shopped in July and it also made our list of Select reader favorites. It’s formulated with coconut oil, shea butter and murumuru seed butter to moisturize lips, as well as anti...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
What To Know About Amazon's October Prime Day Sale
College Football Widespread Inconsistency Nailbiters Upsets And More.
College Football Widespread Inconsistency Nailbiters Upsets And More.
College Football Widespread Inconsistency, Nailbiters, Upsets, And More. https://digitalalabamanews.com/college-football-widespread-inconsistency-nailbiters-upsets-and-more/ With four weeks in the books, college football is now a third of the way through the 2022 regular season. By now, most teams should have developed an identity. Instead we are seeing widespread inconsistent performance across the board. SEC Texas A&M 23 Arkansas 21 – The Hogs appeared to be in control of the game early by jumping out to a 14-0 lead. With a first down at the three yard line, Arky looked like they are going to punch in another score when QB KJ Jefferson tried to dive over the pile for some reason and is stripped of the ball. An Aggie picked up the ball but is stymied around the 19 yard line. However, he hands the ball to a teammate who carries the ball all the way to the end zone. This play loomed large because it turned a potential 21-7 lead into 14-13 (missed PAT). It also swung momentum to TAMU as all the energy and confidence was sucked out of the Arkansas sidelines. The Aggs scored 23 straight points until the Razorbacks came back with a 4th quarter touchdown. With 1:35 to go, Arkansas had a shot at the win with a 42 yard field goal attempt. However the ball unbelievably hit the top of an upright and bounced off. I’m talking the top of the goalpost. It’s the wacky wild weird world of college football. Tennessee 38 Florida 33 – The Vols success was mostly due to explosive plays. Five different UT players had plays of 40 yards or more including a 70 yard touchdown pass. UF coach Billy Napier called an aggressive game, converting 5 of 6 fourth downs, but he may have gotten a little cocky going for a two point conversion down 11 points with 4:49 to play. The attempt failed meaning a touchdown, PAT, and a field goal would not be enough to tie. The Gators would score another touchdown and again failed on a two-point try. Another victim of baseless analytics. UT defeated Florida for the first time since 2016. UGLINESS Auburn 17 Missouri 14 (OT) – Like we always say – weird things happen in Jerdin-Hair. Especailly when you play chicken-s—t football. This matchup was an ugly affair of missed field goals (1 each), fumbles (2 each), sacks (4 each), TFLs (Aub 7, Miz 12), punts (8 each), and mistakes galore. But someone had to win. Aubie scored two quick touchdowns in the first quarter and then figured that was good enough. Mizzy came back to tie it with two TDs in the second quarter. And there the score sat until overtime. On the final possession of the fourth quarter, Missouri got down to the Aubie 3 yard line with a first down and just under a minute to play. Eli Drinkwitz took the wuss path and took a knee – not once, but twice. He chose to attempt a 25-yard field goal. Perhaps channeling Papa Nasty or maybe it’s the gremlins that haunt this stadium or maybe it’s the football gods punishing Drink for not at least trying to score a touchdown, the Miz kicker missed a potential game winning 26-yard field goal. In OT, the War Beagles missed a field goal but the stupid Mizz players jumped offsides and a 39-yarder connected to take the lead. On Missouri’s second play, running back Nathaniel Peat made an incredible 19 yard run towards the end zone and reached the ball out to cross the line but inexplicably lost control of it and the ball rolled out of the end zone for a touchback. SEC VS CUPCAKES: TCB Man, I love hearing Saban talk Xs and Os. Alabama 55 Vanderbilt 3 – The Crimson Tide put together their first complete game of the season, outgaining the ‘Dores 628 to 129. To call it a dominating effort would be an understatement. Mississippi State 45 Bowling Green 14 – Will Rogers threw for 406 yards and tied a school record with six touchdown passes. But on the other hand, the Bullies gained all of 45 rushing yards. Typical Mike Leach. I don’t like seeing Jayden Daniels taking hits like this but this run is so impressive! The stiff arm and then to have the strength to pick up yardage while u have a defender holding onto u! pic.twitter.com/7ujGKucmI6 — STTDB-WHO DAT-LETS DANCE (@LSU_allday504) September 25, 2022 LSU 38 New Mexico 0 – The Lobos were held to 88 total yards. Also of note, Tigers starting quarterback Jayden Daniels had an injury scare when he was slammed to the ground after a long run in the third quarter (see Tweet above). He did not return to the game after this play. South Carolina 56 Charlotte 20 – MarShawn “Don’t Call Me Lynch” Lloyd had a coming out party picking up 169 rushing yards and three touchdowns. SEC VS CUPCAKES: STRUGGLES Georgia 39 Kent State 22 – The final score does not fairly reflect the story of this game. The Dwags looked flat and made plenty of mistakes. WR Ladd McHonkey had a nightmare day with a muffed punt, a lost fumble, and two drops on easy touchdowns. But it wasn’t just his fault. Stetson Bennett MCMLXII threw an interception and did not find the end zone as a passer. UGA had some difficulties holding back the KSU rush. THe starters were forced to go the distance. It’s too bad the Bulldogs got this lesson so early in the season against a one-win cupcake. Kentucky 31 Northern Illinois 23 – UK got a big scare at home by the same team that Vanderbilt beat by 10 on the road a week earlier. The Wildcats struggled with their protection allowing Will Levis to get sacked 5 times [perhaps they were missing their OL coach from last year?]. In addition, the Huskies were going with option #2 at quarterback after the starter got injured against Vandy and could not go. Ole Miss 35 Tulsa 27 – OM jumped out to a 35-14 first half lead and then packed it in. The Golden Hurricanes made it interesting outscoring the BlackRebelSharkManBearPigs 13-0 the rest of the way. STILL NOT BACK Middle Tennessee 45 Miami 31 – MTSU never trailed, forced turnovers on Miami’s first three possessions, and stopped the Hurricanes on downs on three other occasions. ‘Canes QB Tyler Van Dyke (16/32, 138 YDS, 1 TD, 2 INT) had a poor game and got benched. Miami’s defense gave up 507 yards of offense. Still not back. Texas Tech 37 Texas 34 (OT) – Texas had to kick a 48-yard field goal with no time left just to tie it and get in overtime. Overrated Bijan Robinson lost a fumble in the first OT and Tech kicked a 20 yard game-winner. Still not back. OTHER STRUGGLES Michigan 34 Maryland 27 – RB Blake Corum rushed for a career-high 243 yards and two touchdowns. Clemson 51 Wake Forest 45 (2OT) – There is no ‘D’ in ACC. These two combined for over 1,000 yards of offense. Southern Cal 17 Oregon State 14 – Golden Child QB Caleb Williams (16-36, 180 YDS, 1 TD; 27 RUSH YDS) struggled against the Beavers. A touchdown pass with 1:13 left preserved the win. James Madison 32 Atlantalachian State 28 – Appy blew a cursed 28-3 advantage and allowed the Dukes to score four straight unanswered touchdowns. JMU is the new kid in town. Keep an eye on them. See ADOPT section below. Kansas State 41 Oklahoma 34 – The quarterback has changed but K-State has beaten Okie three of the last four seasons. ETC. Kansas 35 Duke 27 – KU is 4-0. See ADOPT section below. Notre Dame 45 North Carolina 32 – This game was a lot more one-sided than the score makes it look. UNC scored two late TDs to save some face. Ohio State 52 Wisconsin 21 – Wisky is straight up garbage. Minnesota 34 Michigan State 7 – Sparty was dominated: 508 to 240 total yards, 32 to 14 first downs, 42:30 to 17:30 possession time. It’s going to be a long year for Mel. HOT SEAT Sacramento State 41 Colorado State 10 – For the fourth straight week, an FBS team has fallen to an FCS team. The Rams got absolutely thumped to move to 0-4. CSU has been outscorded 164-43. Jay Norvell left a cush job at Nevada and has this program in shambles in less than a year. UCLA 45 Colorado 17 – I don’t see how Karl Dorrell can save his job after the dreadful product he is putting out. Outscored 173-47. Old Dominion 29 Arkansas State 26 – Butch Jones might be back to washing Saban’s car in a few months. Arky Lite is 1-3 with only a win against Grambling. DICK MOVE OF THE WEEK??? Does FCS Stephen F Austin deserve good sportsmanship accolades for taking a knee against NAIA team Warner or criticism for running up 98 points? Answer: They never should have been playing them to begin with. If you’re scoring at home, it goes FBS, FCS, Division II, Division III, and then NAIA. DUMBEST BROADCASTING MOVE OF THE WEEK Sam Hartman with a DIME to Donavon Greene for the 28 yard TD — with the Yankee game call because ESPN keeps forcing us to watch Aaron Judge not hit a HR/strike out. pic.twitter.com/9k1qQoXKeV — @ (@FTBeard7) September 24, 2022 ESPN keeps cutting into college football games to show Aaron Judge ground out. The Yankees behemoth is trying for 61 home runs that would be an American League record for a season – NOT an MLB record mind you. Just the AL. At one point, Wake Forest drove the length of the field in less time than it took for a single Judge at-bat. I think most college football fans do not give a flip about this non-event. NOT SURE HOW LEGAL THIS IS MOST CARTOONISH HELMETS OF THE WEEK SPOILER: They didn’t work. MOST UNRECOGNIZABLE UNIFORMS OF THE WEEK An Ohio State Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK NAME OF THE WEEK How have we not honored this guy yet? Ole Miss RB Quinshon Judkins has Key & Peele All-Star written al over it. KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE BALL BOUTTE PEACE OUT WATCH Hmmm… This is a first. Last Thursday it was announced that LSU WR Kayshon Boutte would miss Saturday’s game against New Mexico due to the birth his child. So, this wasn’t an emergency or anything. It was scheduled for the same time as the game. He still no touchdowns on the season. STATIONARY RUNNING BACK OF THE WEEK Vandy RB Ray Davis could not get the Kinks out on Saturday as he gained 17 yards on 11 rush attempts. That is 1.5 ypc. His team as a whole had 14 yards on 26 carries (...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
College Football Widespread Inconsistency Nailbiters Upsets And More.
Race For 2024: Ron DeSantis And Greg Abbott Rivalry Builds Ahead Of White House Bids Report Says
Race For 2024: Ron DeSantis And Greg Abbott Rivalry Builds Ahead Of White House Bids Report Says
Race For 2024: Ron DeSantis And Greg Abbott Rivalry Builds Ahead Of White House Bids, Report Says https://digitalalabamanews.com/race-for-2024-ron-desantis-and-greg-abbott-rivalry-builds-ahead-of-white-house-bids-report-says/ September 27, 2022 09:48 AM Gov. Ron DeSantis said he did not have the “good political fortune” of having America’s southern border with Mexico in his state of Florida in the latest sign of a growing 2024 rivalry, according to a new report. A reference to Gov. Greg Abbott (R-TX), DeSantis told donors last year that Texas’s 1,254-mile border with Mexico was good political fortune that he was not lucky enough to have, according to a report from the New York Times. The comment came as both men eye a possible Republican White House bid in 2024, with DeSantis considered the front-runner if former President Donald Trump does not run. “No one has ever been elected governor of even a small state who didn’t, somewhere deep in their heart, start dreaming about being president,” Chris Wilson, a pollster who has worked for both men, told the outlet. “So it’s not shocking to see both Abbott and DeSantis jockeying at least a little toward 2024 or beyond.” HURRICANE IAN NOW A CATEGORY 3 STORM, BRINGING STORM SURGES TO FLORIDA’S WEST COAST Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, gestures as he speaks on Sept. 14, 2021, at the Doral Academy Preparatory School in Doral, Florida. Behind the governor is state Sen. Manny Diaz Jr. (Wilfredo Lee/AP) Both governors have dominated the Republican conversation in recent months. Most recently, both governors have transported illegal immigrants from the southern border to liberal “sanctuary” cities. Abbott started the operations in April and has sent a total of 11,000 immigrants to Washington, D.C., New York City, and Chicago so far. DeSantis followed suit earlier this month when he flew immigrants who illegally crossed Texas’s border with Mexico to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts despite being Florida’s governor. “Every state that wants to help, I’m happy for it,” Dave Carney, Abbott’s top campaign strategist, told the New York Times of DeSantis’s actions. Both states have passed similar bills that ban transgender students from playing in female sports teams at public schools and cut funding for cities in their respective states that have retracted funding for police departments, including Austin, Texas. Despite the rivalry, both men have a solid working relationship, according to Abbott’s press secretary Renae Eze. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER “Gov. Abbott and Gov. DeSantis have a solid working relationship, having worked together on various initiatives through Republican governors organizations,” Eze said. Both men are up for reelection during the midterm elections in November, with Abbott facing Democratic opponent Beto O’Rourke (D-TX). DeSantis faces former Rep. Charlie Crist (D-FL). Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Race For 2024: Ron DeSantis And Greg Abbott Rivalry Builds Ahead Of White House Bids Report Says
Photos Show 10-Mile Line At Russian Border As Many Flee Mobilization
Photos Show 10-Mile Line At Russian Border As Many Flee Mobilization
Photos Show 10-Mile Line At Russian Border As Many Flee Mobilization https://digitalalabamanews.com/photos-show-10-mile-line-at-russian-border-as-many-flee-mobilization/ A traffic jam at Russia’s border with Georgia has stretched for nearly 10 miles after President Vladimir Putin’s partial military mobilization order, satellite images show. The line of cars and trucks trying to leave formed at a crossing point on the Russian side of the border, according to U.S.-based firm Maxar Technologies, which released the photos on Monday. “The traffic jam likely continued further to the north of the imaged area,” the U.S.-based firm said. Aerial photos from the company show vehicles snaking into another long line near Russia’s border with Mongolia. Cars have also lined up at Russia’s borders with Finland and Kazakhstan since last week, when Putin announced a call-up of hundreds of thousands of reservists to fight in the Kremlin’s faltering war in Ukraine. It marks Russia’s first military mobilization since World War II. Soon after the speech, tickets sold out to the few cities that still have direct flights from Russia, and Google searches rose for queries like “how to leave Russia.” Confusion over who could be summoned has also pushed thousands to flee, along with fears that Russia’s borders could shut to men of military age. They don’t have many options if they don’t want to deploy to Ukraine. Russian flights in E.U. airspace are banned, and Baltic nations closed their land borders. In recent days, piles of abandoned bicycles near border posts appeared in social media footage. Russian news agency TASS said more than 5,000 cars were waiting for hours at the border with Georgia on Tuesday. In Kazakhstan, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev said Tuesday his country would talk with Moscow about the influx and sought to “maintain agreement with neighboring countries.” He called it a “difficult situation” but said there was no reason to panic after tens of thousands of crossings by Russian citizens were reported in recent days. Finnish authorities said they saw a nearly 80 percent increase in entries from Russia after the mobilization, but the Finnish Border Guard also said Tuesday that “the majority of arrivals move on to other countries.” The Kremlin has described reports of an exodus as overblown, despite growing signs of a backlash to the mobilization. Riot police have arrested hundreds of protesters, as rights groups worry the order will disproportionately round up men in remote or impoverished parts of the country. And at an enlistment station in the Irkutsk region, one man shot and wounded a military recruiter on Monday. Mary Ilyushina contributed to this report. War in Ukraine: What you need to know The latest: Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a “partial mobilization” of troops in an address to the nation on Sept. 21, framing the move as an attempt to defend Russian sovereignty against a West that seeks to use Ukraine as a tool to “divide and destroy Russia.” Follow our live updates here. The fight: A successful Ukrainian counteroffensive has forced a major Russian retreat in the northeastern Kharkiv region in recent days, as troops fled cities and villages they had occupied since the early days of the war and abandoned large amounts of military equipment. Annexation referendums: Staged referendums, which would be illegal under international law, are set to take place from Sept. 23 to 27 in the breakaway Luhansk and Donetsk regions of eastern Ukraine, according to Russian news agencies. Another staged referendum will be held by the Moscow-appointed administration in Kherson starting Friday. Photos: Washington Post photographers have been on the ground from the beginning of the war — here’s some of their most powerful work. How you can help: Here are ways those in the U.S. can help support the Ukrainian people as well as what people around the world have been donating. Read our full coverage of the Russia-Ukraine crisis. Are you on Telegram? Subscribe to our channel for updates and exclusive video. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Photos Show 10-Mile Line At Russian Border As Many Flee Mobilization
Tuesday September 27 2022 | TALKERS Magazine Talk Media Trade
Tuesday September 27 2022 | TALKERS Magazine Talk Media Trade
Tuesday, September 27, 2022 | TALKERS Magazine – Talk Media Trade https://digitalalabamanews.com/tuesday-september-27-2022-talkers-magazine-talk-media-trade/ Salem Tampa Bay Prepares for Hurricane Ian. Pictured above is Salem Media Group Tampa chief engineer Robert Hailey (right) leading his engineering team installing plywood panels over doors and windows at the company’s Tampa radio stations – the home base for the Salem Radio Network nationally syndicated “Mike Gallagher Show” – as they prepare for the arrival of Hurricane Ian. Deni Lang Named Promotions and Marketing Director for SummitMedia Richmond. Radio pro Denise “Deni” Lang is named promotions and marketing director for SummitMedia LLC’s Richmond station group that includes sports talk WURV-HD2 “ESPN Richmond” and four music brands. Summit VP of events and promotions Justin Ragland says. “We are fortunate that Deni is both a radio pro and has a proven track record of success in this market. Her relationships in Richmond run deep and her experience promises to bring an exciting future of innovative radio promotions for our team.” Lang joins SummitMedia from Audacy’s crosstown CHR WRVQ-FM where she served as brand manager. She says, “I’m excited to join SummitMedia and work with an incredible group of people that genuinely loves radio and has a passion to work hard. I plan to build upon the achievements of this team and help drive ratings and revenue for this amazing cluster.” Paul Gallant Goes Solo on KFNC-FM, Houston. Houston sports talk personality Paul Gallant is now hosting the 10:00 am to 12:00 noon show on Gow Media’s KFNC-FM/K223CW “ESPN 97.5 & 92.5.” He’d been co-hosting the program with Vanessa Richardson since February of this year, but she exits KFNC to focus on her role with regional network AT&T SportsNet, where she’s been hosting pre- and post-game shows for Houston Astros broadcasts. KFNC general manger Todd Farquharson says, “We’re excited to have Paul host his own show. He’s super creative, energetic, and likeable. He’ll get the audience involved and have fun.” Gallant comments, “You know what I’ve always loved about sports/talk radio? That it’s interactive. Whether through a phone call, text message, tweet or on Twitch, it’s the best place for sports fans to come together and celebrate…or vent. And that’s what ‘The Paul Gallant Show’ is going to be… Houston’s platform to talk about its teams. THE most interactive sports talk show in Houston.” Suspect in Death of WWJ, Detroit Anchor Jim Matthews Arraigned. According to a report by WJBK-TV, Detroit “FOX2 News,” the suspect in the murder of WWJ-AM, Detroit overnight news anchor Jim Matthews was arraigned on one count of first-degree homicide, homicide felony murder, two counts of intent to murder, and three counts of unlawful imprisonment. Although described as someone who was “welcomed in as a guest in the home” of Matthews, 55-year-old Arthur Williamson has a lengthy criminal record, including convictions for assaulting police, assault with intent to commit murder, and kidnapping. He was previously released from prison in 2018. In addition to Matthews’ death, a 10-year-old child is still in critical condition due to blunt force trauma and Matthews’ girlfriend Nichole Guertin is in stable condition after suffering stab wounds. The couple’s five-year-old daughter was unharmed. Authorities say they are “still piecing together the timeline,” and say there is “limited clarity” because the victims are still hospitalized. The Economy/Inflation, Trump Legal Issues, Midterms/2024 Presidential Race, Immigration, Hurricane Ian Aims for Tampa, Russia-Ukraine War, European Politics, and NASA’s DART Mission Among Top News/Talk Stories Yesterday (9/26). Inflation, the sell-off on the world’s financial markets, and threats of a recession; former President Donald Trump’s New York civil suit and the DOJ’s documents investigation; the November midterm elections and the potential nominees for president in 2024; the Biden administration’s immigration policy and the transporting of migrants; Hurricane Ian hits western Cuba and threatens the Tampa Bay area; Vladimir Putin’s threat of nuclear force in the Ukraine war; concerns about a neo-fascist trend in European politics after Giorgia Meloni leads the conservative alliance to victory in Italian elections; and NASA’s DART mission hits an asteroid in an attempt to change its course were some of the most-talked-about stories on news/talk radio yesterday, according to ongoing research from TALKERS magazine. KWAM Seeks News Staffers. KWAM, Memphis “The Mighty 990” is expanding its local news coverage. KWAM has promoted Ben Deeter – executive producer of “Wake Up Memphis” – to full-time news anchor and anchor of the radio station’s political coverage. KWAM owner Todd Starnes says there are plans to add more reporters and anchors. Email resumes to: info@kwamradio.com. FOX News Media Seeks Freelance Radio Anchor. This onsite position in either Los Angeles, Chicago or New York is a freelance radio anchor for the FOX News Audio family as on-air talent for FOX News Radio Network/FOX News Headlines 24/7 Sirius XM Channel 115. In this position, you will work under tight deadlines and deliver top-notch newscasts. You have a passion for breaking news and the flexibility to work on a day’s notice. Learn more about this position here. Reporter Position Open at FOX News Media in Washington, DC. For this onsite reporter position FOX News Media is looking for an experienced, full-time reporter to join the Washington DC team. You will cover a wide range of political, government, and Congressional stories for FOX News Audio (FOX News Headlines 24/7 and FOX News Terrestrial Radio). You possess strong journalism skills and thrive in a fast-paced, deadline-driven environment.  Most importantly, you have great editorial judgment and the ability to break important news stories. Learn more and apply here. Freelance Producer/Editor Opportunity at FOX News Media. This exciting opportunity is based in New York for a freelance producer/news editor to supervise the staff for our network radio news operations (terrestrial and FOX News Headlines 24/7 – Channel 115 on SiriusXM Radio). In this role you are our editorial leader, working with news anchors to craft the content and structure of a 24/7 news operation. This is fast-moving news environment! Your ability to thrive in a fast-paced, deadline-driven newsroom allows you to deliver top-quality segments/newscasts. You excel at multi-tasking and pay close attention to details. Your writing and editing skills are excellent and your editorial judgment is first-rate. Find out more here. Tags: arraigned, Arthur Williamson, AT&T SportsNet, Audacy, Deni Lang, Detroit, Hurricane Ian, Jim Matthews, Justin Ragland, Mike Gallagher, news/talk radio, Nichole Guertin, Paul Gallant, Robert Hailey, Salem Media Group, Salem Radio Network, SummitMedia, Talkers Magazine, Tampa, Todd Farquharson, Vanessa Richardson, WWJ Category: Front Page News, Industry News Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Tuesday September 27 2022 | TALKERS Magazine Talk Media Trade
DeSantis Privately Calls Trump A moron And Vents About Him Running For President
DeSantis Privately Calls Trump A moron And Vents About Him Running For President
DeSantis Privately Calls Trump A ‘moron’ And Vents About Him Running For President https://digitalalabamanews.com/desantis-privately-calls-trump-a-moron-and-vents-about-him-running-for-president/ Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has privately vented to staffers that Donald Trump, a likely contender for the Republican presidential ticket in 2024, is a “moron” and has no business running for the Oval Office for a second time. The revelations about the inside murmurings from the Republican governor arrive from a deeply reported Vanity Fair profile, which tracks the firebrand Florida politician’s rise from a controversial figure in the GOP to a likely challenger in the 2024 presidential election. Though the governor has been mum publicly about any animus he holds towards the former president, behind closed doors it’s apparently a different story. Former staffers for the Florida Republican reportedly told Vanity Fair that, “[DeSantis] calls him a TV personality and a moron who has no business running for president”. Elsewhere in the report, donors for Mr DeSantis describe how the man who seems to have successfully taken up the mantle of being a champion for MAGA Republicans plans to go on a “full frontal attack” should he be forced to face off with the man who birthed the movement in 2015. “DeSantis says the only way to beat Trump is to attack him head-on,” one GOP source briefed on conversations told Vanity Fair. “He says he would turn to Trump during a debate and say, ‘Why didn’t you fire Fauci? You said you would build the wall, but there is no wall. Why is that?’” The revelations about Mr DeSantis sniping at Mr Trump, who credits himself for landing the firebrand politician in the governor’s mansion in Florida, arrive as a separate report found that the one-term president can also be rather two-faced when it comes to discussing his potential 2024 rival. According to a new book from New York Times journalist Maggie Haberman, Mr Trump has reportedly described Mr DeSantis as “fat,” “phony” and “whiny”. Former Trump aides confided in the veteran White House reporter for her upcoming book, Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America, claiming that they’d overheard conversations where the president painted his potential 2024 rival in unflattering terms while simultaneously credited himself for delivering him an election victory in the governor’s race. Ron DeSantis is the second most popular Republican leader. Donald Trump has noticed. (AP) “I heard that Trump was describing Florida Governor Ron DeSantis in similar terms, calling him ‘fat,’ ‘phony,’ and ‘whiny,’ while claiming credit for making his candidacy in 2018,” Ms Haberman writes. During an appearance on the right-wing Newsmax channel in the summer, Mr Trump was asked by the host what his thoughts were on the Florida governor making a run for commander-in-chief on the GOP ticket, a matchup that the former US president has indicated he would surely win if he did decide to run. “Well, I don’t know that he wants to run, you know, I have a good relationship with Ron,” the one-term president began, before adding: “But I was very responsible for him getting elected, as you know,” he said. Neither Mr Trump nor Mr DeSantis have announced their bids for the White House, but it has been widely speculated that both men have been soft launching their campaigns for the past few months as they engage in national profile-raising activities. For Mr DeSantis, that has looked like sending two planes of migrants from the US southern border and dropping them in Martha’s Vineyard, despite not telling the people onboard where they were actually headed. As for Mr Trump, the past few months have been spent stumping for MAGA Republicans he’s endorsed for various midterm races across the country, using the public events as pseudo-Trump rallies evocative of his runup to the 2016 election. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
DeSantis Privately Calls Trump A moron And Vents About Him Running For President
Texas AG Denies He ran To Avoid Subpoenas Says He Felt Threatened
Texas AG Denies He ran To Avoid Subpoenas Says He Felt Threatened
Texas AG Denies He ‘ran’ To Avoid Subpoenas, Says He Felt Threatened https://digitalalabamanews.com/texas-ag-denies-he-ran-to-avoid-subpoenas-says-he-felt-threatened/ Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) “ran” from his home and took off in a truck with his wife, a state senator, when a process server showed up to the residence Monday morning to serve Paxton with subpoenas in an ongoing lawsuit, according to an affidavit filed later that day. The subpoenas for Paxton’s testimony are part of a lawsuit filed in August by reproductive health groups looking to protect their ability to help patients access legal abortions in states outside of Texas, where performing nearly all abortions became illegal following the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade in June. On Monday evening, Paxton addressed the process server’s claims, writing on Twitter that, earlier in the day, he had been avoiding a “stranger lingering outside my home” and was concerned for his and his family’s safety. “This is a ridiculous waste of time and the media should be ashamed of themselves,” Paxton wrote in response to the Texas Tribune, which earlier reported the story. “All across the country, conservatives have faced threats to their safety — many threats that received scant coverage or condemnation from the mainstream media.” Paxton’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Washington Post late Monday. A representative for Paxton’s wife, state Sen. Angela Paxton (R), also did not immediately respond to a request for comment. This is a ridiculous waste of time and the media should be ashamed of themselves. All across the country, conservatives have faced threats to their safety — many threats that received scant coverage or condemnation from the mainstream media. — Attorney General Ken Paxton (@KenPaxtonTX) September 27, 2022 In the affidavit signed and filed on Monday, process server Ernesto Martin Herrera said that he arrived at Paxton’s residence in McKinney around 8:30 a.m., parking on the street in front of the house. Seeing the silhouette of a man in the living room, Herrera knocked on the front door, according to the affidavit. A woman answered it, Herrera said, and he explained that he needed to deliver legal documents to Paxton. The woman, who eventually identified herself as “Angela,” said that Paxton was on the phone and was in a “hurry to leave,” the affidavit states. Herrera added that he saw a black Chevrolet truck parked in the driveway. He could not immediately be reached for comment Tuesday morning. Herrera said he went back to his car and waited, “per my client’s instructions,” according to the affidavit. Around 9:20 a.m., he saw a different vehicle — a black Chevrolet Tahoe — drive up to the home and back into the driveway. About 20 minutes later, Herrera said he saw Paxton walk out of the garage, so he approached Paxton and called him by name. “As soon as he saw me and heard me call his name out, he turned around and RAN back inside the house through the same door in the garage,” Herrera stated in the affidavit, emphasizing the word “ran” with bold type and an underline. Less than 10 minutes later, “Angela” emerged from the house and opened one of the truck’s rear doors before getting into the driver’s seat and starting the vehicle, Herrera said in the affidavit. Paxton then ran from his home to the truck, as Herrera called out his name and said he had court documents for him, Herrera claimed. “Mr. Paxton ignored me and kept heading for the truck,” Herrera stated. Herrera said he told Paxton that he was going to put the documents on the ground, and then did so beside the truck. Paxton “got in the truck leaving the documents on the ground, and then both vehicles left,” Herrera wrote. The subpoenas are seeking Paxton’s appearance and testimony at a court hearing scheduled for Tuesday morning. As of early Tuesday, the hearing remained on the court’s schedule. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Texas AG Denies He ran To Avoid Subpoenas Says He Felt Threatened
Dow Jumps More Than 300 Points To Bounce Back From Lowest Level Since 2020
Dow Jumps More Than 300 Points To Bounce Back From Lowest Level Since 2020
Dow Jumps More Than 300 Points To Bounce Back From Lowest Level Since 2020 https://digitalalabamanews.com/dow-jumps-more-than-300-points-to-bounce-back-from-lowest-level-since-2020/ Stocks rose Tuesday, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 bounced back from their lowest closing levels in nearly two years. The Dow advanced 328 points, or 1.1%. The S&P 500 gained 1.5%, and the Nasdaq Composite rose 2%. The British pound rebounded slightly after plunging to a record low against the dollar earlier in the week. Sterling traded more than 1% higher at $1.087 per dollar after hitting an all-time low of $1.0382. Treasury yields also came off their highs, boosting sentiment. The benchmark 10-year yield dipped nearly 5 basis points to 3.823%. Chicago Federal Reserve President Charles Evans signaled some apprehension about the central bank raising rates too quickly to fight inflation, in contrast to a slew of Fed officials who recently reiterated a tough stance against rising prices. The move comes after five straight days of losses for stocks, with the S&P 500 closing at its lowest level since 2020. The Dow dropped more than 300 points on Monday, putting it in a bear market after falling more than 20% below its record high. The 30-stock average also posted its lowest closing level since late 2020. Technical indicators show that the selling has been historic. According to Bespoke Investment Group, the 10-day advance decline line for the S&P 500 has hit a record low, meaning market breadth is at its worst level in at least 32 years. The latest round of selling appears to have several catalysts, including an aggressive Federal Reserve and surging interest rates, which in turn have roiled currency markets. On Monday, the British pound slid to a record low against the dollar, unnerving investors on both sides of the Atlantic. “Typically, US investors wouldn’t care too much about something like this, and especially more recently. And so this to me says that now there is this fear that is gripping investors a lot more than it did before. That in turn will lead to a capitulation moment where we really are at a bottom,” said Max Gokhman, CIO at AlphaTrAI. Stocks open higher Stocks rose Tuesday, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 bounced back from their lowest closing levels in nearly two years. The Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 328 points, or 1.1%. The S&P 500 gained 1.5%, and the Nasdaq Composite rose 2%. — Sarah Min Home prices in July cooled at the fastest rate in the history of S&P Case-Shiller Index Home prices continued to cool at a fast pace in July, though they’re still higher than they were a year ago. Prices nationally rose 15.8% over July 2021, and while that is a wide gain, it was well below the 18.1% gain in the previous month, according to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Indices. The 10-City composite rose 14.9% year over year, down from 17.4% in June. The 20-City composite gained 16.1%, down from 18.7% in the previous month. July’s year-over-year gains were lower compared with June in each of the cities covered by the index. “July’s report reflects a forceful deceleration,” wrote Craig J. Lazzara, managing director at S&P DJI in a release, noting the difference in the annual gains in June and July. “The -2.3% difference between those two monthly rates of gain is the largest deceleration in the history of the index.” — Diana Olick Bank of America says clients are shifting into defensives Bank of America said clients snapped up health care and other defensive stocks as markets stumbled in recent weeks. Health care stocks saw the fifth largest inflow in Bank of America’s weekly history going back to 2008, according to a Tuesday note. The sector reported the biggest inflows of the past six weeks after posting outflows for the majority of this year. “Defensive sectors in aggregate have seen inflows the last six weeks vs. cyclical sector outflows in five of the last six weeks (a reversal vs. most of this year),” Jill Carey Hall, equity and quant strategist at Bank of America, wrote in a Tuesday note. Investors piled into communication services, technology and utilities in addition to health care. They sold stocks in seven sectors led by consumer discretionary, energy and financials. — Sarah Min Fed’s Evans is getting nervous about central bank raising rates too fast Chicago Federal Reserve President Charles Evans said he’s worried the central bank is raising rates too far, too fast. Evans, who is set to retire next year, said there is not much time to look at monthly releases to see the impacts of each current rate hike before the future one comes. The Fed has set three consecutive, 75 basis point rate hike increases, while indicating plans for future rate hikes, as it tries to cool inflation running near four-decade highs. “There are lags in monetary policy and we have moved expeditiously,” he told “Squawk Box Europe.” “We have done three 75 basis point increases in a row and there is a talk of more to get to that 4.25% to 4.5% by the end of the year, you’re not leaving much time to sort of look at each monthly release.” Watch the interview here. — Alex Harring Tech stocks outperform in premarket trading Markets got a boost from technology stocks in Tuesday premarket trading as rate spikes eased. Mega-cap tech stocks led the way higher. Apple advanced 1.5%, Microsoft was up 1.2%, Google-parent Alphabet jumped 1.5% and Amazon rose 1.9%. Semiconductors outperformed in the premarket. Shares of Nvidia were up nearly 2%. Intel climbed 1.6%. Broadcom rose 1.7%. — Sarah Min Here are the stocks making the biggest moves premarket These companies are making headlines before the bell: Keurig Dr Pepper — The consumer stock fell 1.5% premarket after Goldman Sachs downgraded the stock to neutral from a buy rating. The Wall Street firm said it sees increased risk to Keurig’s margins as commodity inflation, especially related to coffee, remains elevated. Lucid Group — Shares of the electric vehicle player jumped 2.7% in premarket trading after Cantor Fitzgerald initiated coverage with an overweight rating. The firm said Lucid’s luxury and premium vehicles provide greater efficiency, longer range, faster charging and more space relative to its peers. Check out more premarket movers here. — Yun Li Oil rises after tumbling to lowest level since January Oil prices were modestly higher Tuesday morning after crude tumbled to its lowest level since January during the prior session. West Texas Intermediate crude futures, the U.S. oil benchmark, stood at $77.50 per barrel, for a gain of 1%. Global benchmark Brent crude added 1.3% to trade at $85.19. Supply cuts in the Gulf of Mexico supported prices Tuesday morning. BP and Chevron have both announced production shut-ins as Hurricane Ian barrels down. WTI fell to a session low of $76.49 during Monday trading, a price last seen on Jan. 4. Several factors have weighed on prices, including the stronger dollar as well as recession fears. — Pippa Stevens British pound bounces after hitting record low, dollar dips The British pound rebounded Tuesday, trading more than 1% higher against the dollar at $1.083 a day after hitting a record low against the U.S. currency. The move comes as traders awaited clarity on UK monetary policy, with many calling for aggressive rate hikes to stabilize pound. “The Bank of England’s Monday pledge that ‘the MPC will not hesitate to change interest rates by as much as needed to return inflation to the 2% target sustainably in the medium term’ failed to reassure investors hoping for an emergency rate hike,” BCA Research said in a note. The U.S. dollar, meanwhile, dipped 0.4% against a basket of currencies. —Fred Imbert European markets nudge higher after choppy start to the week European markets were slightly higher on Tuesday as stocks attempted to rally after choppy trade at the start of the week. The pan-European Stoxx 600 was 0.6% higher by early afternoon in London, having earlier given back gains of around 1.3% during a volatile session. Travel and leisure stocks added 1.7% to lead gains while banks slipped 0.4%. Close attention remains on the pound and U.K. bond markets after a historic sell-off on the back of British Finance Minister Kwasi Kwarteng’s fiscal policy announcements on Friday. Both the U.K. Treasury and the Bank of England attempted to assuage concerns on Monday after a tumultuous market reaction. – Elliot Smith Fed’s Mester says it is better to act ‘aggressively’ against high inflation U.S. inflation is “unacceptably high” and uncertainties make monetary policy decisions “not trivial,” said Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester in prepared remarks at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “When there is uncertainty, it can be better for policymakers to act more aggressively,” she said. “Aggressive and pre-emptive action can prevent the worst-case outcomes from actually coming about.” She said she will be “very cautious” when assessing inflation data. “I will need to see several months of declines in the month-over-month readings,” she said. “Wishful thinking cannot be a substitute for compelling evidence.” –Jihye Lee CNBC Pro: Analysts like Nvidia once again, with Citi giving it almost 100% upside Analysts are once again starting to get bullish on Nvidia, after the semiconductor giant lost favor amid geopolitical tensions and a slowdown in the chip sector. Citi and JPMorgan both said last week that solid demand in PC gaming, as well as cloud adoption in data centers, were set to be tailwinds for Nvidia. So how much upside did they each give Nvidia shares? CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Weizhen Tan Oil, U.S. dollar diverge For the first half of 2022, the price of oil and the U.S. dollar both rose sharply. However, that has changed in recent weeks, with notable moves for both on Monday. The Dollar Index rose as high as 114.527 on Mo...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Dow Jumps More Than 300 Points To Bounce Back From Lowest Level Since 2020
Iowa Teen Appeals Court Order To Pay Family Of Alleged Rapist
Iowa Teen Appeals Court Order To Pay Family Of Alleged Rapist
Iowa Teen Appeals Court Order To Pay Family Of Alleged Rapist https://digitalalabamanews.com/iowa-teen-appeals-court-order-to-pay-family-of-alleged-rapist/ Despite an online campaign for her expenses, having raised 5 times the amount she was sentenced to pay through GoFundMe donations, an Iowa teen who was charged with killing her alleged rapist will now appeal her court order. According to KCRG, 17-year-old Pieper Lewis was ordered to pay $150,000 to the family of her alleged rapist, Zachary Brooks. The GoFundMe account raised $561,000 to date, more than enough for her to pay the restitution, but Lewis’ lawyers appealed, saying it is an “illegal sentence”. They pointed to the fact that Brooks was “identified as a person responsible for human-trafficking her for sex.” According to KCCI, Pieper Lewis was charged with involuntary manslaughter and willful injury after killing Brooks two years ago, and she pled guilty. She was sentenced to a $150,000 restitution fine and five years of probation. It is unclear how the GoFundMe money will be used, but it will likely go towards her appeal and future legal expenses. Learn more about this case from our previous coverage below: GoFundMe Raising Big Money for Iowa Teen Who Admitted Killing Man Want to keep up to date with the latest in local and music news? Download our app! It’s completely free and not only will you be the first to know about breaking news, but we’ll also keep you updated on concerts and other events coming to the area. You’ll also have exclusive opportunities to win tickets. What are you waiting for? Get the free app today. Iowa’s 25 Most Violent Cities According to the FBI LOOK: What major laws were passed the year you were born? Data for this list was acquired from trusted online sources and news outlets. Read on to discover what major law was passed the year you were born and learn its name, the vote count (where relevant), and its impact and significance. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Iowa Teen Appeals Court Order To Pay Family Of Alleged Rapist
Mitch McConnell: Democrats Need More Moderates Like Sen. Kyrsten Sinema
Mitch McConnell: Democrats Need More Moderates Like Sen. Kyrsten Sinema
Mitch McConnell: Democrats Need More Moderates Like Sen. Kyrsten Sinema https://digitalalabamanews.com/mitch-mcconnell-democrats-need-more-moderates-like-sen-kyrsten-sinema/ Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema is a Democrat, but Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell had high praise for her anyway when he hosted her Monday at his alma mater, the University of Louisville. “I’ve only known Kyrsten for four years, but she is, in my view … the most effective first-term senator I’ve seen,” he said as he introduced her at an event held by the McConnell Center, which he founded over 30 years ago along with university officials. “She is, today, what we have too few of in the Democratic Party: A genuine moderate and a dealmaker,” said McConnell, a longtime Republican who earned a reputation for partisan obstruction during former President Barack Obama’s administration. He said Sinema has been “right in the middle of, if not the principal leader of” negotiations that resulted in bipartisan legislation passed during President Joe Biden’s term, including a $1.2 trillion infrastructure plan and the first big gun reform bill to become federal law since 1994. (McConnell voted for both proposals.) “As you can tell, I have a very high opinion of the senator from Arizona,” he said. “But my biggest compliment to her is: She protects the institution of the Senate.” More: Mitch McConnell cautious on GOP’s odds of taking Senate in midterms, rebukes threats to FBI McConnell was referencing Sinema’s steadfast refusal to get rid of the filibuster, a 60-vote threshold the Senate must meet to advance most bills. Many congressional Democrats have urged her and fellow Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia to agree to neutralize the filibuster so they can pass priority legislation, such as a bill that would’ve made major changes to federal elections and expanded access to voting. Sinema and Manchin’s stance has allowed the McConnell-led Senate Republicans to block those Democratic proposals instead. More: Sen. Kyrsten Sinema backs Inflation Reduction Act, giving Biden the votes for Senate passage “It took one hell of a lot of guts for Kyrsten Sinema to stand up and say, ‘I’m not going to break the institution in order to achieve a short-term goal,'” said McConnell, who alluded Monday to his own refusal of former President Donald Trump’s demands that Senate Republicans ax the filibuster when they were in control. McConnell introduced Sinema so she could give a talk on the importance of bipartisanship. She kicked off her lecture by talking about her friendship with McConnell: “You know, at first glance Sen. McConnell and I have relatively little, or some could even say nothing, in common. For starters, he drinks bourbon. I drink wine. He’s from the Southeast and I’m from the great Southwest. He wears suits and ties, and I wear dresses and these fair sneakers. And perhaps most obviously, we come from opposing political parties. “But despite our apparent differences, Sen. McConnell and I have forged a friendship. One that is rooted in our commonalities, including our pragmatic approach to legislating, our respect for the Senate as an institution, our love for our home states and a dogged determination on behalf of our constituents.” Sinema went on to highlight the work she and several other senators of both parties have done since early 2021 to reach compromises tackling infrastructure needs, gun violence and other issues that managed to become law despite the Senate filibuster. Sinema echoed McConnell’s arguments in favor of the filibuster on Monday. She said axing it would turn the Senate into the House of Representatives, where lawmakers represent “the passions of the moment” and where each party passes “a little bit of crazy legislation” when they’re in control. She suggested the Senate is supposed to counterbalance that. Sinema went a step further than McConnell, though, by saying she’d like to restore that 60-vote threshold for presidential nominations, including for federal judges. “Not everyone likes that,” she said when some folks applauded. “It would make it harder for us to confirm judges, and it would make it harder for us to confirm executive appointments in each administration. But I believe that if we did restore it, we would actually see more of that middle ground in all parts of our governance.” Judicial filibusters were rolled back by Democrats and the GOP when each party controlled the Senate.  McConnell led Senate Republicans to nix that for U.S. Supreme Court nominations, specifically. That allowed them to confirm three Trump-nominated Supreme Court justices with a simple majority, ensuring they could overcome Democratic opposition. The conservative majority they installed on the court went on to eliminate the nationwide right to abortion this summer, which radically restricted abortion access in Kentucky. Reach reporter Morgan Watkins: 502-582-4502; mwatkins@courierjournal.com; Twitter: @morganwatkins26. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Mitch McConnell: Democrats Need More Moderates Like Sen. Kyrsten Sinema
Tue. 8:38 A.m.: Jury To Be Picked For Oath Keeper Boss Jan. 6 Sedition Case
Tue. 8:38 A.m.: Jury To Be Picked For Oath Keeper Boss Jan. 6 Sedition Case
Tue. 8:38 A.m.: Jury To Be Picked For Oath Keeper Boss’ Jan. 6 Sedition Case https://digitalalabamanews.com/tue-838-a-m-jury-to-be-picked-for-oath-keeper-boss-jan-6-sedition-case/ Stewart Rhodes, founder of the Oath Keepers, speaks during a June 25, 2017, rally outside the White House in Washington. Jury selection is expected to get underway today in one of the most serious cases to emerge from the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol against the founder of the far-right Oath Keepers extremist group and four associates charged with seditious conspiracy. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File) Jury selection is expected to get underway today in the trial of the founder of the far-right Oath Keepers extremist group and four associates charged with seditious conspiracy, one of the most serious cases to emerge from the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. Stewart Rhodes and the others are the first Jan. 6 defendants charged with the the rare Civil War-era offense to stand trial for what authorities allege was a serious, weekslong plot to violently stop the transfer of presidential power from election-denier Donald Trump to Joe Biden. The case against Rhodes and his Oath Keeper associates is the biggest test yet for the Justice Department in its massive Jan. 6 prosecution and is being heard in federal court in Washington. Seditious conspiracy can be difficult to prove and the last such guilty verdict was nearly 30 years ago. Hundreds of people have already been convicted of joining the mob that overran police barriers, brutally beat officers and smashed windows, sending lawmakers fleeing and halting the certification of Biden’s electoral victory. But prosecutors in the case against the Oath Keepers will try to show that the Oath Keepers’ plot to stop Biden from becoming president started before all the votes in the 2020 race had even been counted. Authorities say Rhodes, a former U.S. Army paratrooper and a Yale Law School graduate, spent weeks mobilizing his followers to prepare to take up arms to defend Trump. The Oath Keepers repeatedly wrote in chats about the prospect of violence, stockpiled guns and put “quick reaction force” teams on standby outside Washington to get weapons into the city quickly if they were needed, authorities say. The day before the riot, authorities say, Rhodes met with the leader of another far-right extremist group, then-Proud Boys Chairman Enrique Tarrio, in an underground parking garage in Washington, though little is known publicly about what they discussed. Tarrio is charged separately with seditious conspiracy alongside other Proud Boys and is scheduled to stand trial in December. On Jan. 6, Oath Keepers wearing communication devices, helmets and other battle gear were captured on camera storming the Capitol in military-style “stack” formation. Rhodes isn’t accused of going inside the Capitol, but phone records show he was communicating with Oath Keepers who did enter around the time of the riot and he was seen gathered with members outside afterward. On trial with Rhodes, of Granbury Texas, are Thomas Caldwell, of Berryville, Virginia; Kenneth Harrelson, of Titusville, Florida; Jessica Watkins of Woodstock, Ohio; and Kelly Meggs of Dunnellon, Florida. Attorneys for the Oath Keepers have pushed unsuccessfully to get the trial moved, arguing they can’t possibly get a fair jury in Washington. The court has already dismissed several potential jurors based on their answers to a questionnaire, which asked them about their feelings about Jan. 6 and other matters. Jurors already dismissed include a journalist who has covered the events of Jan. 6. and someone else who described that day “one of the single most treasonous acts in the history of this country.” Conviction for seditious conspiracy calls for up to 20 years behind bars. The last time prosecutors secured a seditious conspiracy at trial was in 1995 in the case against Islamic militants who plotted to bomb New York City landmarks. Three of Rhodes’ Oath Keepers followers have pleaded guilty to the charge and are likely to testify against him at trial. Rhodes’ lawyers have claimed those Oath Keepers were pressured into pleading guilty and are lying to get a good deal from the government. Rhodes’ attorneys have suggested that his defense will focus on Rhodes’ belief that Trump would invoke the Insurrection Act and call up a militia to support his bid to stay in power. Defense attorneys say Rhodes’ actions in the weeks leading up to Jan. 6 were in preparation for what he believed would have been lawful orders from Trump under the Insurrection Act, but never came. The defense has said that Oath Keepers were dressed in battle gear to protect themselves from possible attacks from left-wing antifa activists and that the “quick reaction force” outside Washington was meant for defensive purposes if Trump invoked the Insurrection Act. Nearly 900 people have been charged so far in the Jan. 6 riot and more than 400 have pleaded guilty or been convicted at trial. Sentences for the rioters so far have ranged from probation for low-level misdemeanor offenses to 10 years in prison for a retired New York City police officer who used a metal flagpole to assault an officer at the Capitol. Today’s breaking news and more in your inbox Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Tue. 8:38 A.m.: Jury To Be Picked For Oath Keeper Boss Jan. 6 Sedition Case
Walker Charges Warnocks demonized The Police; Emphasizes His Independence From Trump
Walker Charges Warnocks demonized The Police; Emphasizes His Independence From Trump
Walker Charges Warnock’s ‘demonized’ The Police; Emphasizes His Independence From Trump https://digitalalabamanews.com/walker-charges-warnocks-demonized-the-police-emphasizes-his-independence-from-trump/ NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! ATLANTA – ATLANTA – Republican Senate nominee Herschel Walker says it is time to “get crime stopped,” and he is taking aim at Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock of Georgia over the issue that Republicans from coast to coast are spotlighting with six weeks to go until November’s midterm elections. Walker, in comments at a Black business roundtable discussion in Atlanta and in an interview with Fox News Digital, highlighted his independence from Donald Trump, saying that the former president “don’t run” him or his campaign for Senate. Republican candidates, committees and allied groups in recent weeks have been hammering Democrats – both on the campaign trail and on the airwaves – over crime, an issue that national polls indicate voters trust Republicans over Democrats.  Walker, asked what he would do if elected to bring down crime rates, said on Monday that “one of the things you want to do right away is try to bring some type of trust between the citizen and the police.” IS THE NEGATIVE VIEW OF DEMOCRATS IN GEORGIA A DRAG ON RAPHAEL WARNOCK? GOP Senate nominee Herschel Walker speaks at a Black business leaders round table discussion, on Sept. 26, 2022 in Atlanta. Alveda King, the niece of the late civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., is pictured right. (Fox News) The first-time candidate and former college and profession football star then criticized Warnock, who is the senior pastor at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church where Martin Luther King Jr. used to preach, charging that “the guy I’m running against, he’s demonized police officers by calling them names…The police don’t trust him.” Walker was likely referencing comments Warnock made during a 2015 sermon discussing the shooting death a year earlier of 18-year-old Black teenager Michael Brown by police in Ferguson, Missouri, and the ensuing unrest and protests, which grabbed national headlines. Warnock said some police involved in the incident had been “showing up in a kind of gangster and thug mentality.” However, targeting Warnock on the issues of crime and law enforcement may not be so easy. The senator helped author the “Help to Protect Act,” which aims to boost federal funding for local police departments for training, equipment, officer recruitment and retention, and mental health support. Warnock’s bill passed the Senate last month, with a different version passing the House last week. 11 SENATE RACES WILL DETERMINE WHETHER DEMOCRATS OR REPUBLICANS CONTROL THE CHAMBER AFTER MIDTERM ELECTIONS Additionally, Walker grabbed headlines earlier this year following reports that he greatly embellished his background in law enforcement. “Georgians will have a clear choice between Reverend Warnock’s record of fighting to invest in local law enforcement and Herschel Walker’s pattern of lies and exaggerations, including the false claim that he served in law enforcement himself,” Warnock campaign communications director Meredith Brasher told Fox News. Republicans view Warnock, who narrowly defeated GOP Sen. Kelly Loeffler one of Georgia’s twin Jan. 5, 2021 Senate runoff elections, as vulnerable as he seeks a full six-year term representing the battleground state of Georgia. The race is one of a handful across the country that will likely determine if the Democrats retain their razor-thin majority of if Republicans win back control of the chamber. Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock, of Georgia, with supporters at a rally for seniors in Atlanta on Sept. 26, 2022 (Fox News) Walker, who won a Heisman Trophy and helped steer the University of Georgia to a college football national championship four decades ago, jumped into the GOP race to face off against Warnock a year ago, after months of support and encouragement to run for the Senate by Trump, his longtime friend. Thanks to Trump’s support, as well as his own legendary status among many in Georgia and his immense, favorable name recognition in the Peach State, Walker easily captured the Republican nomination in May over a handful of lesser-known rivals.  CHECK OUT THE LATEST FOX NEWS 2022 MIDTERMS POWER RANKINGS However, Walker spotlighted his independence from Trump in comments he made at the business roundtable. “I don’t dance and sing for nobody. I don’t care whether people always talk about Donald Trump. Yeah, I know Donald Trump. I’ve known him forever,” Walker said. “Donald Trump endorsed me…He better endorse me. I’ve known him forever. But he don’t run Hershel Walker. Nobody run me. Nobody’s ever ran me.” When asked during the ensuing interview with Fox News if he would like Trump to return to Georgia during the final weeks leading up to the election, Walker answered “if he comes to do something for me. I’m fine with it.” However, he emphasized “I’m still running for this office. I think they want to try to use Donald Trump and this and that. Herschel Walker is running for the Senate here in Georgia, not Donald Trump. I think everybody liked for Donald to be running, but he’s not running.” For nearly two years, Trump has repeatedly condemned longtime Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell, ever since McConnell congratulated now-President Biden for winning the 2020 presidential election. Trump continues to make unproven claims his loss to Biden was due to a “rigged” and “stolen” election. When asked if he would support McConnell as Senate GOP leader if he wins in November, Walker answered “you know, right now he’s the leader, right.” THE WALKER-WARNOCK DEBATE OVER DEBATES IN GEORGIA’S SENATE SHOWDOWN At his event – where he was accompanied by conservative Reps. Burgess Owens of Utah and Byron Donalds of Florida, and Alveda King, the niece of Martin Luther King, Jr. – and in his interview, Walker once again showcased his push for increased domestic production in order to lower record inflation, which is the top issue on the minds of voters. “I think one thing we’ve got to do is become energy independent again,” Walker stressed. On the combustible issue of legalized abortion, which has grown in importance since the blockbuster move by the Supreme Court’s conservative majority in June to rescind the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling, sending the fight back to the states, Walker reiterated that “my thing is I’m for life. I’m a Christian. I’m not going to apologize for it.” Walker said “I think it [abortion] should be a state issue, but it’s not.”  He repeated that he “would vote for” a bill by GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina that calls for a 15-week federal abortion ban. When asked if his support for a federal abortion ban is a turn-off to the majority of Georgians who according to polls oppose their state’s new restrictive abortion law, Walker disagreed, saying “no, I’m not turning them off.” Walker charged that Warnock is “extreme” on the issue of abortion. Warnock, a couple of hours earlier at a rally in Atlanta for seniors, once again showcased his support for women’s reproductive rights. “I have a profound reverence for life. And I also have a deep respect for choice. And I just happen to think that a patient’s room is too narrow and cramped a space for a woman, her doctor and the United States government. That’s too many people in the room,” Warnock told the crowd of supporters. “So I trust women in their wisdom to sit with their own doctor and if they choose, to sit with their pastor. And to pray about that and let their own conscience guide them. Even God gave us a choice.” Warnock and Walker will face off in one televised debate, on Oct. 14 in Savannah, Georgia.  CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Walker grabbed attention a week ago when he seemed to downplay himself ahead of the debate, saying “I’m not that smart” – comments that his campaign argued were sarcasm. Asked by Fox News if he was attempting to lower expectations of his debate performance ahead of the showdown with Warnock, Walker said “not at all. Everyone has been telling me he’s [Warnock] such a smooth talker. He’s such an incredible speaker….So I reckon I’m not as smart as Warnock. But I’m looking forward to the debate, because this country boy’s gotta show up and be prepared to go, and we’re gonna show the people the differences between he and I.” Paul Steinhauser is a politics reporter based in New Hampshire.  Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Walker Charges Warnocks demonized The Police; Emphasizes His Independence From Trump
2024 Chevrolet Silverado HD Commands The Road With More Power Enhanced Interior And Smarter Technology | Al Bawaba
2024 Chevrolet Silverado HD Commands The Road With More Power Enhanced Interior And Smarter Technology | Al Bawaba
2024 Chevrolet Silverado HD Commands The Road With More Power, Enhanced Interior And Smarter Technology | Al Bawaba https://digitalalabamanews.com/2024-chevrolet-silverado-hd-commands-the-road-with-more-power-enhanced-interior-and-smarter-technology-al-bawaba/ Press release Published September 27th, 2022 – 09:18 GMT Highlights Chevrolet brings everything heavy-duty truck lovers want and need with the 2024 Silverado HD — with no compromises in capability and comfort, to customers in the Middle East. Chevrolet brings everything heavy-duty truck lovers want and need with the 2024 Silverado HD — with no compromises in capability and comfort, to customers in the Middle East. The 2024 Silverado HD arrives with powertrain upgrades, a more commanding presence paired with an overhauled interior, enhancements to its revolutionary trailering technology, and infotainment and active safety technology2 upgrades. “The 2024 Chevrolet Silverado HD brings new levels of power and capability to the driver that needs a truck that can tackle the hard jobs without breaking a sweat. From offering more confidence and convenience with trailering to a more premium interior and refined design, the 2024 Silverado HD is prepared for anything,” said Farah Amhaz, Head of Product Marketing at General Motors Africa & Middle East. “In addition to building on the prolific capability of the Silverado HD, the upcoming arrival introduces a new dynamic to Chevrolet’s iconic truck line-up, offering more options to drivers in the region.” The lineup includes 2500HD and 3500HD models in Regular Cab, Double Cab and Crew Cab configurations. Dual-rear-wheel models are available on 3500HD and they support the lineup’s highest trailering capacity: 16,329 kg3. The 2024 Silverado HD is available in Work Truck, LT and LTZ. Allison 10-speed transmission enhances gas-engine trailering capability For the first time, the proven Allison 10-speed automatic transmission is now standard equipment for the Silverado HD’s powertrain: the 6.6L V-8 gas engine. It replaces the previous six-speed automatic, offering smaller “steps” between the gears, which enables engine to hold closer to its peak power for longer periods. The improvements translate to a more confident feeling of on-demand power, regardless of whether the truck is towing a trailer. When it comes time to tow, the 10-speed configuration helps channel every single Nm of torque to the tires in every gear. In turn, the 2024 Silverado HD’s Gross Combined Weight Rating with the 6.6L gas engine increases to 11,793 kg7, up from 10,886 kg previously. Additionally, the Allison transmission’s 10-speed design optimizes grade braking with the gas engine, with the closer gear ratios enabling greater engine-braking control. That, in addition to precise tuning for smooth shifts and quicker downshifts, complements the enhanced feeling of on-demand power, greater control, precision and refinement. Commanding presence  The 2024 Silverado HD has a commanding presence, driven by a freshened front-end appearance that features a new fascia, new headlights, new grille and more. The truck’s chiseled appearance combines with timeless design that not only looks, but is, prepared for anything. C-shaped LED graphic lamps frame the new fascia, inspired by the signature design of the Silverado 1500, while bold, new headlights on the LTZ trim feature dual-projector technology. The main and high beams of these new lights are now split into dual functions, and as owners approach or depart their 2024 Silverado HD, an animated lighting sequence welcomes or bids them farewell from the truck.  Additional exterior updates include standard tow hooks, and “CHEVROLET” lettering featured on the hood scoop. Six new exterior colors have been added as well: Sterling Gray, Dark Ash, Radiant Red, Auburn Metallic, Lakeshore Blue Metallic (late availability) and Meteorite Metallic (late availability). Atop numerous updates, Silverado HD’s design continues to boast the breakthrough features and technologies that contribute to its true truck capability. They include the Durabed cargo box that optimizes every square inch for maximum cargo capability — including up to 83.5 cubic feet with the long box — as well as the CornerStep rear bumper, BedSteps, available six-position Multi-Flex tailgate, available 220-volt power outlet, available power tailgate and more.  Redesigned, more refined interior In addition to the exterior styling updates, all models receive a new interior designed for greater work-ready functionality and next-level technology integration. LT and LTZ models introduce a dramatically redesigned passenger space centered around an all-new instrument panel that houses an expansive infotainment screen: a 13.4-inch-diagonal infotainment1 display. A 12.3-inch-diagonal configurable driver information center complements the new infotainment display. The infotainment screen and other controls are also canted toward the driver, giving the driver more of a “command center” perspective. This ethos pulls directly from the simple and iconic looks the C/K Series trucks set in the 1970s and 1980s. This smarter command center also includes a redesigned wireless phone charger4 area to reduce distractions and a flow-under console. The latter design provides the spaciousness of a bench seat while retaining the functionality of a center console. Ahead of the driver is an available and configurable head-up display. “It’s a more open-feeling and contemporary interior that passengers will find inviting,” said Phil Zak, executive director of Global Chevrolet Design. “It’s an environment that intentionally puts more at the driver’s fingertips, for a greater feeling of confidence and connection with the vehicle.”  Additional interior updates and upgrades include: Fresh screen displays and graphics inspired by the recently refreshed Silverado 1500 Authentic leather-wrapped surfaces and real wood accents available on certain models New center console that incorporates an available wireless charger4  A new column shifter that enables more space for side-by-side cupholders in the console: There is a total of 10 total cupholders available, depending on the model and configuration New audio control knobs that help strike an ideal balance between physical and digital controls, along with similar buttons recently introduced in the refreshed Silverado 1500 that allow some popular features to be accessed with a single push Climate vents and controls for second-row passengers Enhanced hidden storage, including in the console, upper and lower gloveboxes and even a sunglasses holder behind the infotainment screen.  Enhanced infotainment and driver awareness technologies The Silverado HD is designed to make the drive more enjoyable, with new, more intuitive infotainment1 technologies and an expanded roster of driver awareness technologies.  On the infotainment side, Google built-in8 compatibility enables customers to connect virtually every aspect of their daily lives through Google Assistant, which is available through the infotainment system touchscreen or voice command. With the Google Assistant, it’s easy to send texts, play music, receive directions with Google Maps, adjust vehicle settings and even control smart home devices all hands free. When it comes to safety and driver assistance technologies2, Adaptive Cruise Control is a newly available feature. It complements and bolsters the suite of standard active safety and driver assistance features that includes:  Front Pedestrian Detection and Braking Forward Collision Alert Automatic Emergency Braking Lane Departure Warning Following Distance Indicator. Coming in Q1 2023 The 2024 Chevrolet Silverado HD will make its public debut at the State Fair of Texas starting with the press day on Sept. 29, and the truck will be on display throughout the public days. Production begins in the first half of 2023 at General Motors’ Flint Assembly in Michigan, and at Oshawa Assembly in Canada9. Pricing and additional details will be released closer to the start of production.  © 2000 – 2022 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com) Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
2024 Chevrolet Silverado HD Commands The Road With More Power Enhanced Interior And Smarter Technology | Al Bawaba
Post Politics Now: Congress Returns With A Friday Shutdown Deadline Looming
Post Politics Now: Congress Returns With A Friday Shutdown Deadline Looming
Post Politics Now: Congress Returns With A Friday Shutdown Deadline Looming https://digitalalabamanews.com/post-politics-now-congress-returns-with-a-friday-shutdown-deadline-looming/ Today, the Senate returns to Washington with plans to take a key procedural vote on a stopgap funding measure to keep the government open beyond Friday. Much of the immediate drama centers on whether to retain an energy permitting provision proposed by Sen. Joe Manchin III (D-W.Va.) that is drawing opposition from both sides of the aisle. The broader legislation, released Monday night, also includes a major new round of emergency aid to Ukraine to defend itself against Russia. At the White House, President Biden plans to deliver remarks focused on “lowering health care costs and protecting and strengthening Medicare and Social Security,” according to an advisory. It is the latest attempt by Biden to try to highlight work by Democrats ahead of midterm elections in which inflation is proving a challenge for the party. Your daily dashboard Noon Eastern time: White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell brief reporters. Watch live here. 1:15 p.m. Eastern: Biden delivers remarks on Medicare and Social Security at the White House. Watch live here. 3 p.m. Eastern: The Senate convenes to consider a stopgap funding measure. Watch live here. Got a question about politics? Submit it here. After 3 p.m. weekdays, return to this space and we’ll address what’s on the mind of readers. The latest: Bipartisan group of lawmakers seeks executive action on investments in China Return to menu A bipartisan group of lawmakers led by Sens. Robert P. Casey Jr. (D-Pa.) and John Cornyn (R-Tex.) is urging the White House to take executive action that could require U.S. companies and investors to notify the government before making certain investments in countries such as China and Russia that are seen as adversaries. In a letter to President Biden, signed by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), among others, the lawmakers say the action is needed while they regroup to try to pass legislation that would “prevent the offshoring of critical production capacity and intellectual property to our foreign adversaries.” On our radar: Senate Electoral Count Act bill faces critical test Return to menu A Senate bill to strengthen the Electoral Count Act, the 19th century law that governs Congress’s role in certifying presidential election results, will be considered by the Senate Rules Committee on Tuesday afternoon, the final step for the bill before it heads to the floor for a vote. Writing in The Early 202, The Post’s Theodoric Meyer and Leigh Ann Caldwell say that all signs point to a major bipartisan victory on an issue that has divided the country since President Donald Trump exploited loopholes in the law in his attempt to overturn the 2020 election results. Analysis: Sinema, McConnell and the upside-down politics of Arizona Return to menu When Blake Masters was campaigning for the Republican Senate nomination in Arizona, he called for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) to be ousted as Republican leader in the Senate. “I’ll tell Mitch this to his face,” Master said during a June primary debate. “He’s not bad at everything. He’s good at judges. He’s good at blocking Democrats. You know what he’s not good at? Legislating.” Writing in The Early 202, The Post’s Theodoric Meyer and Leigh Ann Caldwell write that when Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) appeared with McConnell on Monday at the University of Louisville’s McConnell Center barely six weeks before the midterm elections, she was full of praise for him. And McConnell returned the favor, calling her the “most effective first-term senator” he has seen since joining the Senate in 1985. On our radar: White House offers preview of policies to be unveiled at hunger conference Return to menu The White House will convene a national conference on dietary health and food security Wednesday, for the first time in over 50 years, to launch a national campaign that seeks to tackle high obesity rates and end persistent hunger in the United States by 2030. The Post’s Andrew Jeong reports that in a 44-page summary of its dietary policies to be unveiled at the conference, the Biden administration pledged to make healthful food more affordable and accessible and to invest in expanding physical-activity options and enhancing research on food and nutrition. On our radar: Oath Keepers sedition trial could reveal new info about Jan. 6 plotting Return to menu Jury selection is scheduled to start Tuesday in a trial on charges of seditious conspiracy for five members of the extremist group Oath Keepers, including leader Stewart Rhodes. U.S. prosecutors will try to convince jurors that Rhodes’s call for an armed “civil war” to keep Donald Trump in power on Jan. 6, 2021, was literal — and criminal. The Post’s Spencer S. Hsu, Rachel Weiner and Tom Jackman write that Rhodes’s trial could reveal new information about the quest to subvert the 2020 presidential election results, as prosecutors continue to probe Trump’s conduct and that of his inner circle. Analysis: The false claim that Senate Republicans ‘plan to end Social Security and Medicare’ Return to menu When an election campaign enters its final weeks, year after year, both political parties rely on familiar themes to attack their opponents. For Republicans, it’s crime and immigration. For Democrats, it’s Social Security and Medicare. In a tweet this weekend, Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) wrote: “Republicans plan to end Social Security and Medicare if they take back the Senate.” Murray, who has been in the Senate since 1993, is running against Republican Tiffany Smiley. Writing in The Fact Checker, The Post’s Glenn Kessler says that Murray’s tweet is a succinct example of what we called “Mediscare” attacks — an effort to warn seniors that Republicans will take away their hard-earned benefits. Per Glenn: Obituary: Jim Florio, former New Jersey congressman and governor, dies at 85 Return to menu Jim Florio, a New Jersey Democrat who spent 15 years in the U.S. House of Representatives before he became his state’s governor in 1990, pushing through one of the strongest gun-control laws in the country but also an unprecedented tax hike that drove him from office after a single term, died Sunday at a hospital in Mount Holly, N.J. He was 85. His daughter, Catherine Florio Pipas, confirmed his death but did not cite a cause, The Post’s Emily Langer writes. Per Emily: Mr. Florio grew up in Brooklyn, the son of an Italian American shipyard painter, and brought to the political arena the same intensity that he had shown as an amateur boxer. He had once entered the ring with an opponent who broke Mr. Florio’s left cheekbone, permanently crushing that side of his face. “I don’t start fights,” Mr. Florio told the New York Times of his later bouts in politics, “but I don’t walk away from them.” You can read the full obituary here. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Post Politics Now: Congress Returns With A Friday Shutdown Deadline Looming
An Agnostic Teaches Us About Jesus Baptist News Global
An Agnostic Teaches Us About Jesus Baptist News Global
An Agnostic Teaches Us About Jesus – Baptist News Global https://digitalalabamanews.com/an-agnostic-teaches-us-about-jesus-baptist-news-global/ Nearly a decade ago, I had a pleasant surprise. I received an email from a friend I had not seen or heard from since the late 1960s. Charles lived two doors down from us, and we spent many hours playing together, along with his younger brother. Our experience together did not include church or school because his family was Catholic, and he went to Catholic school. It was out of the blue when I received his email. How that happened is a long story for another time. We talked on the phone and caught up on a lot. He still lived in Colorado, where we grew up, and I was glad to hear about his siblings. Over the next few years, Charles’ wife died, and he did volunteer work in Africa for several years with the Peace Corps. We kept in touch occasionally. Terry Austin One of the more interesting things I discovered was that he was no longer a Catholic. In fact, he now identifies as an agnostic. We talked about it, but I was confident it wasn’t my job to bring him back to the Christian fold. Four years ago, during election season, Charles called to inform me that he would be in Dallas for a few weeks and wanted to get together. He was coming to work for Beto O’Rourke’s campaign for Texas senator. He was shocked when he parked in front of my house to see a yard sign supporting Beto. He knew my father as a Baptist preacher, so he assumed I was an evangelical Christian, which was not a good thing in his mind. Charles already was on his way out of the church when his son announced that he was gay. After his siblings, who are now evangelical Christians, condemned his son, Charles made the final break. Who can blame him? Before he saw my yard sign, Charles had been hesitant to tell me this part of the story. We had a great visit. It was good for him to see that I’m not an ogre even though I’m still a believer in Jesus, and it was good for me to see that he’s not an ogre even though he’s not so sure about God at all. During his time in Africa, he became very interested in the refugee issue around the world. He set off on a project and asked for my help. We are putting together a book to help evangelical pastors (of all people) understand how they can/should help refugees. He also is working to raise funds to give the book away free to thousands of pastors. Charles has a fascinating life, and I’m enjoying living it with him vicariously. Oh yeah, since I saw him last, he decided there was no reason to stay in Colorado, and Trump had so disgusted him that he sold his house, bought a new one in Portugal, and is now living there as a citizen. “The truly sad thing is that Christian preachers need to be convinced to care about refugees.” Here’s the amazing thing: An agnostic has established a massive goal of convincing Christian preachers of the need to care about refugees. That’s a wagon I’m glad to jump on. The truly sad thing is that Christian preachers need to be convinced to care about refugees. Think about that. Those who call themselves “Christians” because their God is known as “Christ” struggle with how to relate to refugees. Did they totally miss the story and words of Jesus? In the early years of his life, Jesus was a refugee in a foreign country, Egypt. How many times did he tell us that he lived his life for the poor and outcast? It is also obvious that Jesus expects the same from us. Many Christians understand this, and my friend’s task is not to send a book to every pastor. He plans to single out the evangelical pastors, the ones who have been clear about what they think of refugees. I’m aware that evangelical pastors have not issued a statement as to their beliefs about refugees, but is there any doubt? I got stuck in a traffic jam yesterday, Sunday, as a church down the road was dismissing its third or fourth (who can keep track) service this weekend, and the streets were flooded with joyful evangelicals who had just done their thing. This church, with more than 20,000 attendees each weekend, is led by a man who was on Trump’s council of supporting pastors, or whatever they called it. I would be shocked if fewer than 90% of those on the street yesterday were not Republican supporters of Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. We know what Abbot thinks about refugees. He and his Florida buddy and their Arizona cousin are grabbing up refugees off the streets and shipping them to liberal areas of the country. The motive seems to be that once they have scary refugees on their streets, those people will be just as disgusted and want them booted out or locked up. However, they are making the same mistake we all make at times. The mistake is to think our own shortcomings are not so bad because anyone who had our experience would feel the same way. “Walk a mile in my shoes, and you’ll hate these people also,” is what they believe. “It seems that states with the strongest ‘right to life’ policies are the first in line when it comes to using people as pawns for their political purposes.” Two things stand out about the recent experience of governors sweeping up refugees off the streets and shipping them to liberal parts of the country. It seems that states with the strongest “right to life” policies are the first in line when it comes to using people as pawns for their political purposes. As I think about it, it might just be a continuation of the same political thinking. Do you really believe these strident pro-life politicians care that much about children? Probably not. They simply found a way to manipulate the unborn to gain political support. Just as they have been manipulating the unborn, now they are manipulating the already born. Both exemplify little regard for the right to life. The second thing of note is the response of the communities that were surprised when a busload of refugees suddenly showed up in their neighborhood. They didn’t panic. They didn’t hurl blame at the government. They didn’t stuff the children in cages and put handcuffs on the adults. They went to work doing the things Jesus told us to do. They fed and clothed them, set about the task of finding shelter and sustainable work, and located resource people like attorneys and medical people. Our book project is back on target now that Charles is settled in Portugal. He knows lots of people and clearly understands the refugees’ needs, which keeps him busy with that part of the project. He also has taken on the task of finding the money people to bring his dream to life and make this project happen. He has much to do, but I probably have the most difficult job. My assignment is to find a way to convince evangelical preachers to listen to Jesus. I suspect I’ve bitten off more than I can chew. Terry Austin says from his first day of life he was taught to love the church. He has lived out that passion in various ways as a pastor, church consultant, author and critic. He is currently a full-time writer and book publisher and actively engaged with house churches. Related articles: Religious groups step up as DeSantis and Abbott make immigrants pawns for publicity DeSantis and Abbott working hard to see who can be more cruel to immigrants, faith leaders contend Evangelical leaders descend on Capitol to advocate for immigration reform now Read More…
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An Agnostic Teaches Us About Jesus Baptist News Global
AP News Summary At 7:33 A.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 7:33 A.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 7:33 A.m. EDT https://digitalalabamanews.com/ap-news-summary-at-733-a-m-edt/ Hurricane Ian makes landfall in Cuba en route to Florida HAVANA (AP) — Hurricane Ian has made landfall in western Cuba, lashing the island with rain and winds as it barreled north toward the Florida coast. The U.S. National Hurricane Center says that Ian hit Cuba early Tuesday as a Category 3 storm as it continued to strengthen, with sustained winds of 125 mph. Authorities in Cuba evacuated more than 50,000 people in Pinar del Rio province, the country’s main tobacco-growing region, ahead of Ian’s arrival, which was expected to bring flooding. The government also set up dozens of shelters in the island. The hurricane is expected to strike Florida as early as Wednesday, possibly as a Category 4 storm. Vote in Ukraine’s Russia-held areas stokes tension with West KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — The final day of voting is taking place in Russian-held regions of Ukraine in referendums that are expected to serve as a pretext for their annexation by Moscow. The preordained ballots are heightening tension between the Kremlin and the West, with Russia warning it could resort to nuclear weapons to defend its own territory. Formal annexation of captured chunks of eastern Ukraine, possibly as soon as Friday, sets the stage for a dangerous new phase in the seven-month war. But the nuclear threats haven’t impressed Ukraine or its western allies. France’s foreign minister is the latest high-ranking foreign official to visit Kyiv in a show of support. Bam! NASA spacecraft crashes into asteroid in defense test CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — A NASA spacecraft has rammed an asteroid in an unprecedented test to see if a potentially menacing space rock could be knocked off course. The galactic grand slam occurred at a harmless asteroid 7 million miles away Monday. The Dart spacecraft plowed into the small space rock at 14,000 mph. Scientists say the impact should have carved out a crater and hurled streams of rocks and dirt into space. Most importantly, though, scientists are hoping the collision altered the asteroid’s orbit. NASA won’t know how much the spacecraft nudged the asteroid for a couple of months. Jury to be picked for Oath Keeper boss’ Jan. 6 sedition case Jury selection is expected to get underway Tuesday in one of the most serious cases to emerge from the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. The founder of the far-right Oath Keepers extremist group and four associates are charged with seditious conspiracy. Stewart Rhodes and the others are the first Jan. 6 defendants charged with the the rare Civil War-era offense to stand trial. Authorities allege there was a serious, weekslong plot to violently stop the transfer of presidential power from election-denier Donald Trump to Joe Biden. Russia to medevac wounded in school shooting to Moscow MOSCOW (AP) — Russia’s health minister says 15 people wounded in a school shooting in central Russia will be medevaced to Moscow for further treatment a day after a gunman killed 17 people and wounded 24 others. Health Minister Mikhail Murashko said Tuesday that a medical evacuation is planned for 15 of the injured including 13 children and two adults. He said three of them are in critical condition. The gunman was a 34-year-old graduate of the school in Izhevsk. He killed himself after the shooting. World shares mostly gain after Dow tumbles into bear market Stocks are mostly higher in Europe and Asia after heavy selling on Wall Street put the Dow Jones Industrial Average into what’s known as a bear market. U.S. futures rose Tuesday and oil prices gained. Tokyo, Sydney and Shanghai advanced while Hong Kong declined. The week started out with a bout of selling amid an extended slump for many markets. The benchmark S&P 500 is down more than 7% in September. But buying kicked in on Tuesday, as investors awaited a slew of updates on the U.S. economy, including one on consumer confidence due out later in the day. Abe’s militaristic funeral captures Japan’s tense mood TOKYO (AP) — For all the heated arguments ahead of the controversial funeral of assassinated former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe — both for and against — it was the images of Tuesday’s ceremony that most clearly tell the story of a deeply divided nation still struggling to process the legacy of perhaps the most polarizing leader in its modern history. Sections of Tokyo looked more like a police state than the capital of one of the most stable nations in the world. Twenty thousand police officers and more than 1,000 soldiers crammed neighborhoods around the massive funeral hall as thousands of protesters took to the streets. Rules sought for ‘gooning,’ taking troubled kids to care ST. LOUIS (AP) — There’s a little-known practice in the U.S. known as “gooning.” Brawny men show up under the cover of darkness and force a teenager into a vehicle, taking them against their will to a boarding school, foster home or treatment center. The process is typically initiated by parents at their wit’s ends over a child they perceive as troubled. For the kids, it’s the traumatic first leg of a journey to placements that can be hundreds of miles from home. Teens who resist might be handcuffed or blindfolded. One secure transport operator was indicted last month, but criminal charges are rare because the industry is virtually unregulated. As Cantonese language wanes, efforts grow to preserve it SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Three decades ago, finding opportunities to learn the Cantonese language in San Francisco wasn’t hard. But today in the city that’s drawn Cantonese speakers from South China for over 150 years, there is fear that political and social upheaval are gradually diminishing the language. The Chinese government’s push for wider use of Mandarin, which is already the national language, along with the country’s changing migration patterns have contributed to an undeniable shift away from Cantonese. It’s a change that has reverberated from East to West. From the U.S. to the U.K. and beyond, there is worry that Cantonese won’t survive in some families for another generation. Giants take 2 body blows from Cowboys, a loss and injury EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) — The New York Giants took it on the chin against the Dallas Cowboys. Dropping a hard-fought 23-16 decision to the rival Cowboys on Monday night to lose for the first time under new coach Brian Daboll hurt. What was worse came at the end of the game. Wide receiver Sterling Shepard, the Giants’ longest-tenured player and one of the key leaders on a young team, sustained a leg injury on New York’s final offensive play and it did not look good. Daboll said there’s a possibility the injury is very serious, especially with the receiver returning to action after an Achilles tendon injury last season. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Read More…
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AP News Summary At 7:33 A.m. EDT
Okeechobee County Parts Of Treasure Coast Back In Hurricane Ian's Cone Of Uncertainty
Okeechobee County Parts Of Treasure Coast Back In Hurricane Ian's Cone Of Uncertainty
Okeechobee County, Parts Of Treasure Coast Back In Hurricane Ian's Cone Of Uncertainty https://digitalalabamanews.com/okeechobee-county-parts-of-treasure-coast-back-in-hurricane-ians-cone-of-uncertainty/ Video above: The latest tropical forecast from WPBF 25 First Warning Weather meteorologists. Parts of Okeechobee County and the Treasure Coast are back in the cone of uncertainty for Hurricane Ian as of Tuesday morning. All of our area is under tropical storm warnings and watches as Hurricane Ian rapidly intensifies while moving toward the state.Weather | Radar | Hurricanes | Traffic | uLocal | Facebook | Twitter | InstagramGov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency for the entire state of Florida in preparation for the storm. WPBF 25 First Warning Weather meteorologists forecast South Florida will begin to see the effects of Ian with severe weather risks Tuesday and Wednesday. WPBF 25 News has declared both days First Warning Weather Days. Some schools have canceled classes.Informational: 2022 WPBF 25 First Warning Weather Hurricane Survival GuideThis comes as another disturbance churns in the Atlantic. Outlook: As of 5 a.m. Tuesday, Ian is 5 miles south of Pinar Del Rio, Cuba. The storm has maximum sustained winds of 125 mph and is moving north at 12 mph.The storm’s cone of uncertainty moved to the east, including Okeechobee County and parts of the Treasure Coast. Related Coverage: Utility companies, water management districts prepare for possible stormThe storm is expected to turn to the northeast and move over the Florida Keys Tuesday and approach the west coast of Florida Wednesday. Up to 8 inches of rain is likely in the Keys.Tampa Bay could see about 10 feet of storm surge, the NHC forecast. The deepest water will occur to the immediate coast near the right of the hurricane’s center.Central and western Florida could see up to 16 inches of rain, with the rest of the peninsula seeing about 8 inches. Tornadoes are possible across the Florida peninsula late Monday night and Tuesday. South Florida is under a threat for severe storms Tuesday and Wednesday. Video Below: State leaders urge everyone in Florida to prepare for possible storm impactsWatches and Warnings: A hurricane warning is in effect for: Cuban provinces of Isla de Juventud, Pinar del Rio, and Artemisa Bonita Beach to the Anclote River, including Tampa Bay Dry TortugasA hurricane watch is in effect for:North of Anclote River to the Suwannee River A tropical storm warning is in effect for:Cuban provinces of La Habana, Mayabeque, and MatanzasLower Florida Keys from Seven Mile Bridge westward to Key WestFlamingo to Bonita BeachSuwanee River to the Anclote RiverVolusia/Brevard County Line south to Jupiter InletLake Okeechobee A tropical storm watch is in effect for: North of the Suwannee River to Indian PassAltamaha Sound to Volusia/Brevard County lineDeerfield Beach to Jupiter InletA storm surge warning is in effect for:Anclote River southward to FlamingoTampa BayA storm surge watch is in effect for…The Florida Keys from the Card Sound Bridge westward to Key WestDry TortugasFlorida BayAucilla River to Anclote RiverAltamaha Sound to Flagler/Volusia County LineSaint Johns RiverFor full descriptions of what the watches and warnings mean, watch the video below.WPBF 25 Storm Shorts: Terms you need to know WPBF 25 First Warning Weather meteorologist Glenn Glazer discussed the possibility of a tropical system hitting Florida in late September in the WPBF 2022 Hurricane Season Forecast.Video below: WPBF 25 News 2022 Atlantic Hurricane Season ForecastStay updated on the latest weather updates with the WPBF 25 News app. You can download it here. Video above: The latest tropical forecast from WPBF 25 First Warning Weather meteorologists. Parts of Okeechobee County and the Treasure Coast are back in the cone of uncertainty for Hurricane Ian as of Tuesday morning. All of our area is under tropical storm warnings and watches as Hurricane Ian rapidly intensifies while moving toward the state. Weather | Radar | Hurricanes | Traffic | uLocal | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency for the entire state of Florida in preparation for the storm. WPBF 25 First Warning Weather meteorologists forecast South Florida will begin to see the effects of Ian with severe weather risks Tuesday and Wednesday. WPBF 25 News has declared both days First Warning Weather Days. Some schools have canceled classes. Informational: 2022 WPBF 25 First Warning Weather Hurricane Survival Guide This comes as another disturbance churns in the Atlantic. Outlook: As of 5 a.m. Tuesday, Ian is 5 miles south of Pinar Del Rio, Cuba. The storm has maximum sustained winds of 125 mph and is moving north at 12 mph. The storm’s cone of uncertainty moved to the east, including Okeechobee County and parts of the Treasure Coast. Related Coverage: Utility companies, water management districts prepare for possible storm The storm is expected to turn to the northeast and move over the Florida Keys Tuesday and approach the west coast of Florida Wednesday. Up to 8 inches of rain is likely in the Keys. Tampa Bay could see about 10 feet of storm surge, the NHC forecast. The deepest water will occur to the immediate coast near the right of the hurricane’s center. Central and western Florida could see up to 16 inches of rain, with the rest of the peninsula seeing about 8 inches. Tornadoes are possible across the Florida peninsula late Monday night and Tuesday. South Florida is under a threat for severe storms Tuesday and Wednesday. Video Below: State leaders urge everyone in Florida to prepare for possible storm impacts Watches and Warnings: A hurricane warning is in effect for: Cuban provinces of Isla de Juventud, Pinar del Rio, and Artemisa Bonita Beach to the Anclote River, including Tampa Bay Dry Tortugas A hurricane watch is in effect for: North of Anclote River to the Suwannee River A tropical storm warning is in effect for: Cuban provinces of La Habana, Mayabeque, and Matanzas Lower Florida Keys from Seven Mile Bridge westward to Key West Flamingo to Bonita Beach Suwanee River to the Anclote River Volusia/Brevard County Line south to Jupiter Inlet Lake Okeechobee A tropical storm watch is in effect for: North of the Suwannee River to Indian Pass Altamaha Sound to Volusia/Brevard County line Deerfield Beach to Jupiter Inlet A storm surge warning is in effect for: Anclote River southward to Flamingo Tampa Bay A storm surge watch is in effect for… The Florida Keys from the Card Sound Bridge westward to Key West Dry Tortugas Florida Bay Aucilla River to Anclote River Altamaha Sound to Flagler/Volusia County Line Saint Johns River For full descriptions of what the watches and warnings mean, watch the video below. WPBF 25 Storm Shorts: Terms you need to know WPBF 25 First Warning Weather meteorologist Glenn Glazer discussed the possibility of a tropical system hitting Florida in late September in the WPBF 2022 Hurricane Season Forecast. Video below: WPBF 25 News 2022 Atlantic Hurricane Season Forecast Stay updated on the latest weather updates with the WPBF 25 News app. You can download it here. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Okeechobee County Parts Of Treasure Coast Back In Hurricane Ian's Cone Of Uncertainty
University Of Birmingham Loans Historic Painting To New York Museum
University Of Birmingham Loans Historic Painting To New York Museum
University Of Birmingham Loans Historic Painting To New York Museum  https://digitalalabamanews.com/university-of-birmingham-loans-historic-painting-to-new-york-museum/ The University of Birmingham has lent one of its paintings to the largest art museum in America in order to gain worldwide exposure. The ‘Moorish Ambassador’ painting, located at UoB’s Shakespeare Institute will be heading to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. The portrait of Moroccan ambassador Abd al-Wahid bin Mas’ud is currently part of the research and cultural collection at UoB. The ambassador served to promote a relationship between Morocco and England during the 17th century with Abd al-Wahid bin Mas’ud reporting to the court of Queen Elizabeth I. With the painting located at UoB’s Shakespeare Institute in Stratford-Upon-Avon, the ambassador has retained a strong link to William Shakespeare with a longstanding theory that the Moroccan inspired William Shakespeare’s character of Othello. However, there is no concrete evidence to prove these popular claims. Read More: Amazon is selling a £14 low energy heater that ‘packs a punch’ – and it costs pennies to run The portrait will be part of a collection at the New York museum titled ‘The Tudors: Art and Majesty in Renaissance England’. Speaking on UoB’s YouTube channel, Clare Mullett, head of research and cultural collections spoke about the reasons behind the painting’s temporary departure. “We, of course, will miss having him in Stratford, but he will be acting as an ambassador to the university and representing the university and our collections on a global stage where hundreds of thousands of people will get to see him and hear his story,” she said. Professor Michael Dobson of the Shakespeare Institute described the painting as “one of the most vivid souvenirs of the London in which Shakespeare was living, around the time he began dramatising a little Italian short story about a Moorish warrior working for Venice”. The Tudor exhibition at the New York museum will run from October 10 – January 8, 2023, meaning the portrait could be back in the West Midlands by January of next year. Read More: I made a perfect Victoria Sandwich cake in my air fryer and I think I deserve a Hollywood handshake Mum tries to dress like a Primark mannequin and the results were ‘sheer genius’ I got a £2.79 breakfast magic bag from Toby Carvery and made a rookie mistake I took my kids to WaterWorld to see what it’s REALLY like after visitors called it ‘poorly run’ and ‘overpriced’ Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
University Of Birmingham Loans Historic Painting To New York Museum
Fire Weather Watch For Alabama Tuesday And Wednesday
Fire Weather Watch For Alabama Tuesday And Wednesday
Fire Weather Watch For Alabama Tuesday And Wednesday https://digitalalabamanews.com/fire-weather-watch-for-alabama-tuesday-and-wednesday/ News Published: Sep. 27, 2022, 5:45 a.m. The Alabama counties in beige will be under a fire weather watch on Wednesday. Mobile and Baldwin counties will be under a fire weather watch today as well. Low humidity levels and breezy conditions will make outdoor burning a bad idea for the next few days. Parts of Alabama will be under a fire weather watches both today and Wednesday. The National Weather Service said the combination of dry air and breezy winds could lead to an increased risk of wildfires — and outdoor burning will be a bad idea. A fire weather watch means that critical fire weather conditions are expected. These kind of watches aren’t issued all that often in the state. The weather service said any fires that develop will likely spread rapidly, and that outdoor burning is not recommended. Winds out of the northeast at about 10-20 mph are expected on Tuesday and Wednesday, along with relative humidity levels in the 20 percent range. A fire weather watch will be in effect for Mobile and Baldwin counties today, and then a big part of Alabama on Wednesday except north Alabama and the southeast corner of the state. Dry conditions are expected to persist into part of Thursday before moisture and possibly rain associated with Hurricane Ian makes its way into the state from the southeast. * Fire weather watch for south Alabama: Today for Mobile and Baldwin counties. Wednesday for all of southwest Alabama. * Fire weather watch for all of central Alabama from 11 a.m. until 7 p.m. on Wednesday. Note to readers: if you purchase something through one of our affiliate links we may earn a commission. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Fire Weather Watch For Alabama Tuesday And Wednesday
5 Things To Know For Sept. 27: Hurricane Ian Japan Trump Student Loans Ukraine KESQ
5 Things To Know For Sept. 27: Hurricane Ian Japan Trump Student Loans Ukraine KESQ
5 Things To Know For Sept. 27: Hurricane Ian, Japan, Trump, Student Loans, Ukraine – KESQ https://digitalalabamanews.com/5-things-to-know-for-sept-27-hurricane-ian-japan-trump-student-loans-ukraine-kesq/ By Alexandra Meeks, CNN The CIA has a museum with exhibits featuring spy gadgets, declassified artifacts and items like the covers for the binder and tablet used for President Joe Biden’s daily briefing. Interested in visiting? Well, unfortunately, the museum isn’t open to the public — but the agency has shared some very interesting pictures from inside. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On with Your Day. (You can get “5 Things You Need to Know Today” delivered to your inbox daily. Sign up here.) 1. Hurricane Ian Hurricane Ian made landfall in western Cuba this morning as it continues barreling toward Florida, where residents in some coastal areas are already evacuating. The Category 3 storm is packing maximum sustained winds of 125 mph and life-threatening storm surge, the National Hurricane Center said. According to its projected path, Ian is expected to emerge over the southeastern Gulf of Mexico and continue churning toward Florida, passing west of the Florida Keys later today, and then approach the state’s west coast late Wednesday into Thursday. Projections show the Tampa Bay area could get its first direct hit from a hurricane since 1921, and the impact on the region could be devastating. 2. Japan Japan held an elaborate state funeral for former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe today. Abe, Japan’s longest-serving prime minister, was shot dead during a campaign speech in July, stunning a nation where gun violence is extremely rare. More than 4,300 guests attended the service in Tokyo, including Vice President Kamala Harris and other foreign dignitaries. While many mourners left flowers and visited memorial sites to pay their respects to the late leader, thousands took to the streets in anti-funeral protests across Tokyo. The demonstrations grew tense at times as large groups of protesters voiced their discontent about Abe’s policies while in office and their opposition to the high cost of the funeral while the country grapples with rising inflation. 3. Trump The Justice Department on Monday declared that their list of seized materials from the search of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence was “full and accurate,” despite Trump’s claims of planted evidence. According to the FBI, the agency had only a single business day to compile the first version of the inventory — filed several weeks ago — but has since had more time to review and catalog the list. An FBI agent said the revisions to the new list were “minor.” Trump now faces a Friday deadline to submit to the special master descriptions of any seized items that he claims are missing from the list, or items that were included in the inventory that he claimed, without evidence, the FBI may have planted during their search. 4. Student Loans President Biden’s plan to cancel up to $20,000 in federal student loan debt for low- and middle-income borrowers could cost $400 billion, according to a Congressional Budget Office report released Monday. Biden announced the forgiveness plan in August, after facing mounting pressure from Democrats to broadly cancel some student loan debt. The Department of Education plans to release an application for the program in October. Under the plan, individual borrowers who earned less than $125,000 in 2020 or 2021 and married couples or heads of households who made less than $250,000 annually in those years will see up to $10,000 of their federal student loan debt forgiven. If the borrower also received a federal Pell grant while enrolled in college, the individual is eligible for up to $20,000 of debt forgiveness. 5. Ukraine The so-called secession referendums in four Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine are set to conclude today. With the results of the Russian-organized voting expected to be announced as soon as this evening, US officials anticipate Russia could move quickly to escalate its faltering war and annex those areas of Ukraine, potentially within days. Doing so would prompt a swift response from the US, which has pledged not to recognize the results. The US is not currently expected to respond until Russia has moved to annex the regions, officials said, and whether Russia ultimately attempts to do so remains to be seen. BREAKFAST BROWSE Halloween decorations perplex the internet in viral video An Illinois family has the internet wondering how they created this levitating Halloween decoration inspired by the Netflix show “Stranger Things.” Should you eat bread? Bread tastes so good, but we often get messages that, nutritionally, it’s so bad. Here’s expert advice about which loaves are healthier than the rest. ‘The Crown’ gets a new queen Production of Season 6 of “The Crown” was briefly paused after the death of Queen Elizabeth II, but Season 5 is still on track to start on November 9. Here’s who will take over the role of the Queen. President Biden welcomes Atlanta Braves to the White House The reigning baseball champions were invited inside the White House on Monday to celebrate their 2021 World Series win. Check out photos from the event here and see the jersey they gifted to Biden. Regaining sense of smell and taste after Covid-19 Imagine if your cup of coffee one day had no smell or taste at all. Well, that’s the reality for some people with long Covid. This week on Chasing Life, Dr. Sanjay Gupta and Stanford University smell expert Zara Patel discuss how “smell training” can help some people regain their lost senses after Covid-19. TODAY’S NUMBER 41 That’s how many protesters have reportedly been killed in violent demonstrations in Iran over the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, state media outlet the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting said. The death of Amini this month, who was arrested in Tehran by the morality police — a unit that enforces strict dress codes for women — has sparked protests in more than 45 Iranian cities over issues ranging from women’s freedoms to the crippling economic impacts of sanctions in the region. TODAY’S QUOTE “We’re embarking on a new era of humankind, an era in which we potentially have the capability to protect ourselves from something like a dangerous, hazardous asteroid impact.” — Lori Glaze, director of NASA’s Planetary Science Division, celebrating after a spacecraft intentionally slammed into an asteroid Monday in humanity’s first test of planetary defense. The purpose of the DART mission, or the Double Asteroid Redirection Test, was to help determine how NASA could deflect objects that could pose a threat to Earth in the future. The impact occurred at 7:14 p.m. ET Monday and was greeted by cheers from the mission team. Watch the moment DART collided with the asteroid here. TODAY’S WEATHER Check your local forecast here AND FINALLY Elephants smash giant pumpkins Carve out a few minutes of your day to watch these elephants smash massive pumpkins. Have a gourd Tuesday! (Click here to view) The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More…
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5 Things To Know For Sept. 27: Hurricane Ian Japan Trump Student Loans Ukraine KESQ
Thomas Oatway | Fantasyland In Trump White House
Thomas Oatway | Fantasyland In Trump White House
Thomas Oatway | Fantasyland In Trump White House https://digitalalabamanews.com/thomas-oatway-fantasyland-in-trump-white-house/ It is becoming obvious that the Donald Trump White House was Fantasyland as far as classified document control was concerned. I worked in the classified environment during my career, and what was happening in MAGA Trumpland was bizarre.  First, our document control department kept close control of top-secret documents. And top-secret compartmentalized information had to be kept in an approved facility. The Trump bedroom, a closet at Mar-a-Lago, or a Bekins transport vehicle would definitely not qualify. If I or anyone removed such a document and took it home, a federal agent would surely be at the front door that evening. What were the White House document control people doing?  Were they also the “best people”? The late Art Linkletter made a nice living interviewing children saying the funniest things. We do not have this entertainment these days, but we do have politicians. For example, Trump compared his document controversy to an overdue library book. Funny that he would make that point. He likely never had a library card, or took out reading material. Another politician, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Florida, suggested that the Trump classified document controversy was simply a “storage issue.” Yes, but storage of classified documents in your son’s bedroom is pretty funny comedy. Rubio, who graduated from the same university as I did, must have entered under an “infirmative action” program. And the standards for student performance must have deteriorated over the years. That is my story, and I am sticking with it. Thomas Oatway Valencia Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Thomas Oatway | Fantasyland In Trump White House
Democrats Work To Take Focus Off Biden In Midterm Elections
Democrats Work To Take Focus Off Biden In Midterm Elections
Democrats Work To Take Focus Off Biden In Midterm Elections https://digitalalabamanews.com/democrats-work-to-take-focus-off-biden-in-midterm-elections/ September 27, 2022 06:45 AM Former White House press secretary Jen Psaki made headlines over the weekend with a prediction that Democrats know “they will lose” if the midterm elections are a referendum on President Joe Biden. Psaki further opined that Democrats are vulnerable on the issues of crime and the economy, while they hold the high ground on “extremism.” While the admission from one of the officials who used to be closest to Biden may have surprised some, there is evidence that both parties agree and are running races based on the parameters Psaki outlined. CHINA SWIPES AT BIDEN DURING UN SPEECH, WARNS AGAINST ‘PANDORA’S BOX’ OF TURBULENCE, WAR “It’s a 100% absolutely true statement,” said Republican strategist David Carney. “It’s what our side has been saying for a long time.” The shaky stock market and inflation are hurting voters’ paychecks and leading them to favor Republicans on the economy, Carney argues, while rising crime and spiking illegal immigration rates do the same for those issues. “Any campaigning on our side that’s not talking about this president’s incompetence has a good shot at losing,” he said. The incumbent is grappling with an economy beset by high inflation and a job approval rating in the low 40s. A new poll from ABC News and the Washington Post found that 56% of Democratic-registered voters and Democratic-leaning voters want another candidate to top the ticket in 2024. The same poll found that Republicans hold a 22-point advantage on handling crime. Biden himself has hit on the extremism issue Psaki outlined as a winner for Democrats. He’s made much in recent weeks of denouncing former President Donald Trump and “MAGA Republicans,” most notably in a Philadelphia speech before an imposing red background and a pair of uniformed Marines. “There’s no question that the Republican Party today is dominated, driven, and intimidated by Donald Trump and the MAGA Republicans,” Biden said. “And that is a threat to this country.” This focus on Republicans, Carney argues, is evidence that Biden and the Democrats cannot run on their record in November. Otherwise, 8.3% inflation, a wobbly economy, and gas prices that are high and rising again will be top of mind for voters. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre was asked about Psaki’s comments during Monday’s press briefing. After pointing to a rise in manufacturing jobs and lowered prescription drug prices, she turned toward the core issue. “I cannot talk about the midterms from here. What I can say is that we are going to go out there. … We are going to talk about how we have delivered for the American people,” she said, adding that the Inflation Reduction Act is “very popular with the American people, with Republicans and Democrats.” But she also emphasized the distance between Democrats and Republicans, whom she accused of wanting to cut Medicare and raise prescription drug costs for seniors. Many Republicans say Democrats are now the ones talking about Trump and backing Trump-aligned candidates because they see it as a winning midterm strategy. Democratic strategist Brad Bannon argues that Trump is responsible for inserting himself into the midterm conversation, as is the Supreme Court with its Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization ruling overturning the constitutional right to abortion. “[Trump] made it a referendum on himself when he encouraged a failed coup and when he kept top-secret documents at Mar-a-Lago,” he said. “Trump made this a referendum on Trump.” Other prominent Democrats have not been as forthcoming as Psaki about Biden’s status with the public and the need to focus elsewhere, though figures ranging from House and Senate candidates to first lady Jill Biden have dodged the question of whether he should run again. Despite Psaki’s comments and Joe Biden’s still-low approval numbers, Bannon emphasized that Democrats are in a much stronger position going into November than they were just a few months ago. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER “The situation has turned out a lot less well for Republicans than they anticipated early in the year,” he said. “That’s because of two things. One is Trump’s refusal to leave the stage. It’s clear now that whatever is good for Donald Trump is bad for Republicans. The other is the Dobbs decision.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Democrats Work To Take Focus Off Biden In Midterm Elections
BetMGM Gambles With NBC Sports Deal
BetMGM Gambles With NBC Sports Deal
BetMGM Gambles With NBC Sports Deal https://digitalalabamanews.com/betmgm-gambles-with-nbc-sports-deal/ As he stepped up to the plate at Dodger Stadium, St. Louis Cardinals first baseman/designated hitter Albert Pujols was two swings away from becoming just the fourth player in league history to reach 700 career home runs. The 42-year-old is in the midst of his final season in Major League Baseball and it is certainly one to remember, especially since the Cardinals will play in October with a legitimate chance to capture a World Series championship. Perched several levels above the field, Wayne Randazzo was behind the microphone for the Apple TV+ Friday Night Baseball broadcast with a near-capacity crowd fixated on the field and many more watching from afar. Once Pujols crushed his 699th career home run, the palpability of hitting number 700 became much more genuine in scope. As the perennial slugger stepped up to the plate for the third time, Randazzo and the Apple TV+ broadcast team were ready for the chance to deliver an enduring moment in baseball history. For Randazzo, 36, it represented a milestone in his broadcast career and the realization of a dream of his to be able to call indelible accomplishments in Major League Baseball on a national stage. From the time he was a child in Chicago, the nuance and grandeur associated with baseball served as factors that persuaded him to work in sports media – and the announcers explaining it all helped him effectively learn the game. One announcer in particular that stood out to Randazzo during his formative years of fandom was Harry Caray, the longtime play-by-play voice of his childhood team, the Chicago Cubs. Caray’s unique style of announcing and ability to entertain baseball fans of all ages impacted Randazzo’s development as a broadcaster and cultivation of a distinctive style. “His enthusiasm and passion for calling the games was really infectious to me,” Randazzo said of Caray, “so I always wanted to get involved with it and followed different sportscasters that I liked.” After initially attending Arizona State University to study broadcast communications, Randazzo transferred schools and attended North Central College, a school considerably smaller in size with a robust broadcast program. As a member of the school’s radio station, WONC, Randazzo immediately networked with the sports director at the time who gave him opportunities to call various types of sporting events and eventually ascended to the role himself. His passion and drive to succeed were so great that he was willing to do whatever it took to get him on the air. “There were just a lot of opportunities there to call football, basketball, and baseball [where I could] really start to hone my skills and the craft and really just kind of be behind the microphone and call those sporting events,” Randazzo said. “It was a lot of fun for me to go to a school that allowed me to be able to do that.” Throughout his time in college and in conversations with other people within the industry, Randazzo was often told about the highly competitive and cutthroat nature of sports media that has dissuaded some incipient talents from working in it. Unfazed and confident in his own abilities, Randazzo landed a sports internship with WGN Radio in Chicago following his first year in college and was surprised to enter into an environment centered around the principles of congeniality and collaboration. “It was still the number one station in Chicago – it was the king,” Randazzo said. “…I just remember everyone being really happy there…. It just seems like everybody was on cloud nine just to be there. I thought that was a really cool environment they had at the time there.” Over his time interning at the station, Randazzo felt immersed as a member of the team and had several mentors including Mike Ferrin and Andy Masur, the latter of whom still works for WGN as a play-by-play announcer and anchor along with serving as a columnist for Barrett Sports Media. As Randazzo’s internship concluded, the people at the station helped him land a job at the Illinois Radio Network as a morning sports anchor and reporter at 21 years of age. “Everybody just really looked out for me,” Randazzo said of the team at WGN. “I think they thought I was a good intern and they listened to my tapes and they thought my tapes were good. They thought I had a future in the business and they really taught me as much as they could and they set me up on a good path.” Two years later, Randazzo attended the job fair at the Major League Baseball Winter Meetings, which in 2007, were taking place at the Opryland Hotel in Nashville. Equipped with various demo tapes and résumés with the hope of landing a broadcasting job, Randazzo interacted with team representatives and received several offers to work as the number two broadcaster in the booth for minor league teams. Unexpectedly, Randazzo also received two offers to be the lead play-by-play announcer for minor league baseball from both the Hickory Crawdads (High-A affiliate of the Pittsburgh Pirates) and Mobile BayBears (Double-A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks). Randazzo took the job in Mobile, and also worked as the team’s director of media relations meaning he was working as both a broadcaster and public relations practitioner simultaneously. “It was an unbelievable learning experience,” Randazzo said. “I was doing all the games by myself and traveling with the team. I didn’t know what I was doing at all [but] it was a great chance to spend three hours a night broadcasting these games and just learning how to do it.” Randazzo returned home to Chicago after three seasons with the Mobile BayBears to join 670 The Score as an update anchor and part-time talk show host. Once baseball season came around, he joined the Kane County Cougars, then-Single A affiliate of the Kansas City Royals, to work both in sales and as the play-by-play announcer. The experience of working in a major market while continuing to refine his skills as a broadcaster was a unique blend that set Randazzo up for sustained future success. “When I went to Chicago, it was really a big deal to get on 670 The Score and to do updates,” Randazzo said. “It was really my first taste of being known in a market [and…] it was great to have that experience to really work in front of an audience for the first time.” Aside from those roles, Randazzo also joined the Big Ten Network as a play-by-play announcer for its sporting events and signed on with ESPN to announce games on ESPN3 and ESPNU, which over the years have included basketball, college football, and ultimate frisbee. Setting himself up as a professional with stellar versatility and adaptability, he felt he would be able to easily fit with the New York Mets broadcasting team once a position opened prior to the 2015 season to host pregame and postgame coverage on the radio. “They wanted someone who could host, do interviews, and also do play-by-play,” Randazzo recalled of the job opening. “They were kind of looking for a jack-of-all-trades and I was one. I really put myself in a position to do everything so that if something like that opened, I could slide over and do it.” In his first year with the New York Mets Radio Network with its flagship station, WOR-AM at the time, the Mets advanced to the World Series, meaning that Randazzo was able to provide coverage deep into the postseason. It was a special opportunity for him in his first year and one he hopes to have again as the team looks to make a championship run this year. At the same time though, being able to be around professional broadcasters including Howie Rose, Josh Lewin, and Gary Cohen allowed Randazzo to receive advice and work on improving his skills and get them to the point where he could eventually earn a promotion as a play-by-play announcer. “I got better at play-by-play and I think I grew so much as a play-by-play announcer in that role, even compared to seven years doing Minor League Baseball, because the stakes were different,” Randazzo said. “The highlights were put out into the universe [and] you heard your calls back on different networks or different stations. I felt like I had to step up my game and I did to a point that when Josh [Lewin] left, I was really kind of right there; I was the only target really to replace him.” Randazzo was promoted to work alongside Howie Rose on the radio broadcasts, a distinctive pairing of two professional broadcasters bereft of a former athlete doing color commentary such as Keith Hernandez and Ron Darling, who work with Cohen on the Mets’ television broadcasts on SNY. Yet his promotion, which coincided with the transition to WCBS Newsradio 880 as its flagship station, was conditional in that he was signed to a one-year contract, meaning that he had to prove that he belonged. “I thought there might be some pressure but there really wasn’t,” Randazzo said regarding his first year in the booth. “I was getting used to the role and developing chemistry with Howie…. I never really thought about it; I thought things would take care of themselves if I did what I was capable of, and that’s all I focused on.” Howie Rose, an accomplished broadcaster with experience calling games in multiple sports on both television and radio, has served as a mentor to Randazzo who seeks to continue to grow in the industry. Rose was mentored by his childhood idol, Marv Albert, and enjoys passing it forward by mentoring younger broadcasters himself and serving as a resource throughout their journeys in sports media. For Randazzo, having the opportunity to work with Rose on a regular basis and be the recipient of his broadcasting expertise has significantly catalyzed his growth as an announcer, giving him the skills for success no matter the situation. “When you’re a young announcer in his orbit and you reach out to him for something, he is there right away,” Randazzo said. “He’...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
BetMGM Gambles With NBC Sports Deal
Heidi Przybyla Joins POLITICO As National Investigative Correspondent
Heidi Przybyla Joins POLITICO As National Investigative Correspondent
Heidi Przybyla Joins POLITICO As National Investigative Correspondent https://digitalalabamanews.com/heidi-przybyla-joins-politico-as-national-investigative-correspondent/ Announcement from Managing Editor, Enterprise Peter Canellos and Executive Editor Dafna Linzer: All — We are thrilled to announced that Heidi Przybyla is joining our permanent staff as national investigative correspondent. She is the definition of a high-impact Washington reporter after 16 years as a political, congressional and White House reporter for Bloomberg followed by stints as an enterprise reporter at USA Today and correspondent at NBC News. She is equally comfortable in front of a keyboard or camera, covering a presidential debate or digging into a policy investigation. As a POLITICO contributor, she broke important new ground with a series of investigative scoops on GOP efforts in advance of the midterms to recruit and train supposedly non-partisan poll workers. Now, she will report to Peter Canellos doing investigative and A1 stories, working with colleagues across the newsroom, and utilizing her wide array of sources to help us compete on stories central to the intersection of policy, power and politics. Heidi’s years on the White House and congressional beats included such major events as 9/11 and the Iraq War, along with years of brinksmanship between the parties over budget and tax priorities. In 2016, she was USA Today’s lead reporter on Hillary Clinton’s campaign. More recently, her timely news and investigative reporting has forced candidates to shift positions and acknowledge uncomfortable truths about their records. Hours after her report on then-candidate Joe Biden’s longtime support for the anti-abortion Hyde Amendment, he reversed himself and repudiated his former position. During the Trump administration, she was the first reporter to obtain a memo to the FBI and texts showing that Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh was in touch with former classmates in advance of sexual harassment claims that later became public. One day after her report warning of serious cardiac dangers from hydroxychloroquine – the drug President Donald Trump touted without evidence as a treatment for Covid-19 – the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology issued a public warning. She also revealed through internal health department documents that Trump’s political apppointees overruled career staff to cancel a federal program to prevent teen pregnancy. Days later, HHS agreed to modify its earlier decision to cancel the program outright. And she was first to report the contours of the first set of articles of impeachment against then-President Trump in 2019. Her most recent focus has been on exposing efforts by political operatives to alter longstanding election practices and procedures. Her reporting on the state of democracy in the U.S., followed by a number of competitors, has shown that even those candidates and officials who’ve sought to distance themselves from Trump’s most explosive claims are nonetheless willing to seek partisan advantage by manipulating the system. Heidi will join us officially on October 11. Please welcome her and congratulate her on her new role. Peter Dafna Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Heidi Przybyla Joins POLITICO As National Investigative Correspondent
Bills Would Curtail Objections At Future Jan. 6 Vote Counts
Bills Would Curtail Objections At Future Jan. 6 Vote Counts
Bills Would Curtail Objections At Future Jan. 6 Vote Counts https://digitalalabamanews.com/bills-would-curtail-objections-at-future-jan-6-vote-counts-4/ WASHINGTON — Members of Congress have officially objected to the results in four of the last six presidential elections, a partisan practice that has been legal for over a century but became much more fraught after a violent mob of then-President Donald Trump’s supporters attacked the U.S. Capitol last year. In an effort to prevent another Jan. 6, 2021, bills moving through the House and the Senate would make it harder to lodge those objections when Congress counts the electoral votes in a joint session after every presidential election. The move to curtail the objections is part of a larger effort to overhaul the 1800s-era Electoral Count Act and safeguard the integrity of the vote after Trump tried to persuade his Republican allies in Congress to vote against Democrat Joe Biden’s victory and overturn his 2020 defeat. Under current law, only one member of the House and one member of the Senate has to challenge a state’s results to trigger votes on that state’s electors in each chamber. If a simple majority in each chamber votes to sustain the objection, that state’s votes can be thrown out. The House and Senate bills would each raise that threshold substantially, with the House bill requiring a third of each chamber to object and the Senate bill requiring a fifth of each chamber to object. The House legislation, passed last week, would also lay out new requirements for the grounds for an objection. “It is just too easy to trigger an objection when it only requires one person in each chamber,” says Maine Sen. Susan Collins, a Republican co-sponsor of the Senate version. Eleven GOP senators have signed on to the legislation, which is up for a vote in a Senate committee on Tuesday. If the bills are consolidated into one measure that becomes law, it will do away with a tradition that has become increasingly popular as Congress has become more polarized. Democrats have objected the last three times that Republicans were elected — twice against George W. Bush and once against Trump — but in each of those cases the Democratic candidate had already conceded the election. The stakes were raised considerably in 2021, when Trump and his allies were actively trying to thwart Biden’s win, with a strategy to throw out Biden electors in Congress and the support of a violent mob that broke into the Capitol, interrupted the joint session and threatened the lives of lawmakers and Vice President Mike Pence. House Administration Chairwoman Zoe Lofgren of California, the Democratic sponsor of the House bill with Republican Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, said the bill would protect the voters’ will from “frivolous” objections and more sinister efforts. “If you want to object to the vote, you better have your colleagues and the Constitution on your side,” Lofgren said just before the bill passed. “Don’t try to overturn our democracy.” At the 2021 joint session, two GOP senators — Ted Cruz of Texas and Josh Hawley of Missouri — joined a larger group of House Republicans in objecting to Biden’s electoral votes in Arizona and Pennsylvania, two swing states that Trump had won in the 2016 election but lost in 2020. Both the House and the Senate voted to certify Biden’s win in those states in the hours after the rioters had injured police officers, rampaged through the Capitol and sent lawmakers running for their lives. But eight senators and almost 140 members of the House voted to sustain the objections. Congress had only held such votes twice since the enactment of the Electoral Count Act 135 years ago. In 1969, two Democratic senators joined a member of the House to object to the vote of one elector in North Carolina during the certification of Republican Richard Nixon’s victory. In 2004, Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer of California and Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones, D-Ohio, objected to President George W. Bush’s electors in Ohio over what they said were voting irregularities. In both cases, the House and the Senate rejected the objections. In several other instances, members of the House have lodged objections without the support of a senator. In 2000, several members of the Congressional Black Caucus objected to Bush’s electors in Florida after the Supreme Court had forced a halt to vote-counting in that state and decided the election. Vice President Al Gore, whom Bush had defeated, gaveled the objections down as he presided over the session. In 2016, several Democrats stood and objected to Trump’s win over Democrat Hillary Clinton but no senator joined, and Vice President Joe Biden dismissed them. Like Gore, Clinton had already conceded defeat. Members on both sides of the Capitol have been working on the revisions to the Electoral Count Act since the 2021 insurrection, saying the law’s vague language was not robust enough protection against Trump’s overt attempts to subvert the will of the people. The bills would also clarify that the vice president’s role is solely ceremonial and try to prevent states from creating slates of illegitimate electors, as Trump’s allies tried to do. The House bill is more expansive than the Senate bill, and the two sides will eventually have to resolve their differences into a single measure. That includes the House language with new grounds for any objection, which would restrict the process even further. Under the House legislation, no member could make an objection unless it fell under a strict set of parameters that relate to the Constitution — that the state is not validly a state, if the state submits too many electoral votes or if a candidate is not eligible, for example. House Republicans argued against the legislation by saying it was a political attack on Trump, noting the frequent Democratic objections over the years. It only received nine Republican votes, all from members who are not returning to the House next year. Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., responded that if lawmakers believed there had been too many objections in the past, “you should absolutely be supporting this legislation.” Hawley, who was photographed raising a fist to pro-Trump protesters outside the Capitol ahead of last year’s joint session, said in an interview that he is “skeptical” of the effort to change a law that has been in place for so many years. “My concern is that it’s going to look like to Republican voters that Democrats can object as much as often as they want,” the Missouri Republican said, noting the objections in 2000, 2004 and 2016. “As soon as Republicans do, they change the law,” Hawley said. “I can promise you, that will be the perception.” Still, 11 Republican senators have signed on to the Senate bill, enough to break a filibuster and pass the bill in the 50-50 Senate. Pennsylvania Sen. Pat Toomey, who is retiring, was the latest GOP senator to sign on to the legislation last week. “The poor drafting of the 1887 Electoral Count Act endangered the transition of power from one Administration to the next,” Toomey said when he announced his support. “Unfortunately, in the over 100 intervening years, individual Democratic and Republican members of Congress have occasionally attempted to exploit the ambiguities in this law to cast doubt on the validity of our elections, culminating in the debacle of January 6, 2021,” he said. “It is past time Congress act.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Bills Would Curtail Objections At Future Jan. 6 Vote Counts