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The U.S. Retirement System Gets A C Grade Experts Say Even Though Its Worth $39 Trillion. Here's Why
The U.S. Retirement System Gets A C Grade Experts Say Even Though Its Worth $39 Trillion. Here's Why
The U.S. Retirement System Gets A ‘C+’ Grade, Experts Say — Even Though It’s Worth $39 Trillion. Here's Why https://digitalalabamanews.com/the-u-s-retirement-system-gets-a-c-grade-experts-say-even-though-its-worth-39-trillion-heres-why/ Siriporn Wongmanee / Eyeem | Eyeem | Getty Images The U.S. retirement system may seem flush — yet it ranks poorly in relation to those in other developed nations. Collectively, Americans had more than $39 trillion in wealth earmarked for old age at the end of 2021, according to the Investment Company Institute. However, the U.S. places well outside the top 10 on various global retirement rankings from industry players, such as the Mercer CFA Institute Global Pension Index and Natixis Investment Managers 2021 Global Retirement Index. According to Mercer’s index, for example, the U.S. got a “C+.” It ranked No. 17 on Natixis’ list.   Here’s why the U.S. falls short, according to retirement experts. The U.S. has a ‘patchwork retirement design’ Iceland topped both lists. Among other factors, the country delivers generous and sustainable retirement benefits to a large share of the population, has a low level of old-age poverty, and has a higher relative degree of retirement income equality, according to the reports, which use different methodologies. Other nations, including Norway, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Denmark, Australia, Ireland and New Zealand, also got high marks. For example, Denmark, Iceland and the Netherlands each got “A” grades, according to Mercer’s index. More from Personal Finance: 6 money tips from pro athletes Isaiah Thomas and Dexter Fowler How the top financial habits of ‘super savers’ can help build wealth 5 ways to save amid record food price inflation Where the U.S. largely lags behind those countries, experts said, is that its retirement system isn’t set up so that everyone has a chance at a financially secure retirement. “Even though we have $40 trillion invested, it’s a very uneven, fragmented, patchwork retirement design that we work with in the U.S.,” said Angela Antonelli, executive director of the Center for Retirement Initiatives at Georgetown University. “Some people do very, very well but a lot of other people are left behind.” Consider this statistic: Just three of the 38 countries in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development rank worse than the U.S. in old-age income inequality, according to the bloc of developed countries.   Indeed, poverty rates are “very high” for Americans 75 years and older: 28% in the U.S. versus 11%, on average, in the OECD. Many Americans don’t have workplace retirement plans The U.S. retirement system is often called a “three-legged stool,” which consists of Social Security, workplace arrangements such as pensions and 401(k) plans, and individual savings. One of the structure’s primary shortfalls is a lack of access to workplace savings plans, according to retirement experts. Just over half — 53% — of U.S. workers had access to an employer-sponsored retirement plan in 2018, according to a recent estimate by John Sabelhaus, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and adjunct research professor at the University of Michigan. That’s an improvement from nearly 49% a decade earlier, he found. Even though we have $40 trillion invested, it’s a very uneven, fragmented, patchwork retirement design that we work with in the U.S. Angela Antonelli executive director of the Center for Retirement Initiatives at Georgetown University Approximately 57 million Americans fell in the retirement savings coverage “gap” in 2020, meaning they didn’t have access to a workplace plan, according to a Center for Retirement Initiatives analysis. The U.S. has a voluntary retirement savings system. The federal government doesn’t require individuals to save, or businesses to offer a pension or 401(k). Individuals also shoulder more personal responsibility to build a nest egg as businesses have largely transitioned away from pension plans. By contrast, 19 developed nations require some level of coverage, by mandating businesses offer a retirement plan, that individuals have a personal account, or some combination of the two, according to OECD data. In 12 of the countries, the arrangements cover more than 75% of the working-age population. In Denmark, Finland and the Netherlands, for example, the share is near 90% or more. In Iceland, where coverage is 83%, the private-sector retirement system “covers all employees with a high contribution rate that leads to significant assets being set aside for the future,” Mercer wrote. IRAs aren’t a catchall for workers without a 401(k) Of course, people in the U.S. can save for retirement outside the workplace — in an individual retirement account, for example — if their employer doesn’t offer a retirement plan. But that often doesn’t happen, Antonelli said. Just 13% of households contributed to a pre-tax or Roth IRA in 2020, according to the Investment Company Institute. IRAs held nearly $14 trillion in 2021, almost double the $7.7 trillion in 401(k) plans. But most IRA funds aren’t contributed directly — they were first saved in a workplace retirement plan and then rolled into an IRA. In 2019, $554 billion was rolled into IRAs — more than seven times the $76 billion contributed directly, according to ICI data. Lower annual IRA contribution limits also mean individuals can’t save as much each year as they can in workplace plans.   Americans are 15 times more likely to stash away retirement funds when they can do so at work via payroll deduction, according to AARP. “Access is our No. 1 issue,” Will Hansen, chief government affairs officer at the American Retirement Association, a trade group, said of workplace retirement savings. Employees of small businesses are least likely to have a 401(k) available, he added. “[However], the retirement system is actually a good system for those who have access,” Hansen said. “People are saving.” But the retirement security offered by that savings is tilted toward high-income households, according to federal data. Low earners, by contrast, “appear more prone to having little or no savings in their [defined contribution] accounts,” the Government Accountability Office wrote in a 2019 report. A 401(k) plan is a type of defined contribution plan, whereby investors “define,” or choose, their desired savings rate. Just 9% of the bottom quintile of wage earners have retirement savings, versus 68% of middle-income earners and 94% of the top quintile, according to a Social Security Administration report from 2017. Overall savings are also “constrained” by low wage growth after accounting for inflation and increasing out-of-pocket costs for items such as health care, the GAO said. Longer lifespans are putting more pressure on nest eggs. Social Security has some structural issues Social Security benefits — another “leg” of America’s three-legged stool — help make up for a shortfall in personal savings. About a quarter of senior households rely on these public benefits for at least 90% of their income, according to the Social Security Administration. The average monthly benefit for retirees is about $1,600 as of August 2022. “That doesn’t put you much above the poverty level,” Antonelli said of Social Security benefits for people with little to no personal savings. There are also some looming structural issues with the Social Security program. Absent measures to shore up its financing, benefits for retirees are expected to fall after 2034; at that point, the program would be able to pay just 77% of scheduled payments. Further, individuals can raid their 401(k) accounts in times of financial distress, causing so-called “leakage” from the system. This ability can infuse much-needed cash into struggling households in the present, but may subject savers to a shortfall later in life. The “leakage” factor, coupled with relatively low minimum Social Security benefits for lower earners and the projected shortfall of the Social Security trust fund, “will have a significant impact on the ability for the U.S. pension system to adequately provide for its retirees in the future,” said Katie Hockenmaier, U.S. defined contribution research director at Mercer. ‘There’s been a tremendous amount of progress’ Of course, it can be tough to compare the relative successes and failures of retirement systems on a global scale. Each system has evolved from “particular economic, social, cultural, political and historical circumstances,” according to the Mercer report. “It’s hard to state the U.S. is really far behind when there are so many other external policies countries make that impact their citizens and how effective their retirement will be in the long run,” Hansen said. Flaws in health-care and education policy bleed into people’s ability to save, Hansen argued. For example, a high student debt burden or big health bills may cause an American borrower to defer saving. In such cases, it may not be fair to place primary blame on the structure of the U.S. retirement system, Hansen said. And there have been structural improvements in recent years, experts said. The Pension Protection Act of 2006, for example, ushered in a new era of saving, whereby employers started automatically enrolling workers into 401(k) plans and increasing their contribution amounts each year. More recently, 11 states and two cities — New York and Seattle — have adopted programs that require businesses to offer retirement programs to workers, according to the Center for Retirement Initiatives. They can be 401(k)-type plans or a state-administered IRA, into which workers would be automatically enrolled. Federal lawmakers are also weighing provisions — such as reduced costs relative to factors like plan compliance and a boost in tax incentives — to promote more uptake of 401(k) plans among small businesses, Hansen said. “In the past 15 years — and now with co...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
The U.S. Retirement System Gets A C Grade Experts Say Even Though Its Worth $39 Trillion. Here's Why
Where Are The Worst Speed Traps In Alabama?
Where Are The Worst Speed Traps In Alabama?
Where Are The Worst Speed Traps In Alabama? https://digitalalabamanews.com/where-are-the-worst-speed-traps-in-alabama/ Whatever you do, don’t speed through these Alabama towns. If you do, there’s a good chance you’ll pay for it. Alabama is packed with hundreds of small towns and cities, most with their own police departments. But it turns out very few crank out speeding tickets at a rate well beyond their size. These are those towns. An AL.com analysis of state and federal data found just nine stand out, and most of them can be found in a compact corridor in north Alabama. [Can’t see the list? Click here.] No. 1: Hillsboro (Speed Trap Score: 40.6) The king of them all is a tiny town in Lawrence County called Hillsboro, between Decatur and the Shoals on Alabama Highway 20. Remember that road – it will come up later. Hillsboro was home to just 407 people in 2020, but it ticketed well above its weight class. Home to just two full-time police officers – and three military surplus vehicles – Hillsboro took advantage of federal grants to give out more than four tickets for every resident during overtime alone. Hillsboro officers gave out more speeding tickets on overtime than much, much larger cities, like Mobile and Montgomery, which are about 500 times its size. But even though Hillsboro cops wrote lots of tickets during that time, Chief Michael Taylor noted that they often issue warnings instead. In fact, records show they issued citations in just over half of grant-funded traffic stops. “We don’t write for money. If we did, I would never give anybody a warning,” Taylor said. “I have a heart, I have compassion, too.” No. 2: North Courtland (Speed Trap Score: 27.1) Just a few miles down the road from Hillsboro is another small Lawrence County town – North Courtland. It was home to just 482 people in 2020. Unlike Hillsboro, North Courtland didn’t receive federal grants in 2021 to help with traffic enforcement. But that doesn’t mean the town wasn’t writing tickets. North Courtland ranked fourth in Alabama in the amount of money per capita sent to the state from municipal court in 2021, with $120 per resident kicked up to Montgomery. It was one of just six towns that sent more than $100 per person to the state. And North Courtland only recently stepped up its traffic patrols. Back in 2017, the town sent only $9,000 to the state. In 2020 it sent nearly $69,000, followed by another $58,000 in 2021. That’s a 549% spike between 2017 and 2021, the third fastest increase in the state. No. 3: Town Creek (Speed Trap Score: 24.8) Another Lawrence County ticket trap, Town Creek is just a few miles down Alabama 20 from North Courtland. These top three form a sort of Orion’s Belt of speed trap towns, as all three are on a 15-mile stretch of that highway in northwest Alabama. [Can’t see the map? Click here.] Town Creek gave nearly 1,600 tickets from grant-funded overtime alone in 2021, despite being home to just over 1,000 people. That was more than the infamous Brookside, which used those same grants to help fund a police force gone wild. Jerry Garrett, the police chief in Town Creek, said that officers there typically ticket drivers who are traveling at least 15 mph over the speed limit. “I don’t want to get crazy with it,” he said, “but at the same time there’s a sign there and that sign’s there for a reason and there’s safety reasons.” No. 4: Summerdale (Speed Trap Score: 23.3) Summerdale is a small town in Baldwin County, on the way from just about anywhere to Alabama’s beaches. Home to just 1,500 people, more than 4,500 traffic cases were filed in municipal court there in 2020, or roughly 3.1 per person. That was the highest rate in the state. The vast majority of its municipal court cases – some 96% – were traffic cases that year. That was also among the highest rates in Alabama. No. 5: Brookside (Speed Trap Score: 20.0) Perhaps the most notorious ticket trap in Alabama in 2022, Brookside’s claim to ticketing fame has been well documented – and the data backs it up. The town issued more than 1,400 grant-funded traffic tickets in 2021, saw a 511% increase in money sent to the state from 2017 to 2021, and the municipal court there filed more than two traffic tickets for every resident in 2019, the last year for which that data was available. All those were among the highest in Alabama. A Brookside police cruiser patrols at exit 91 off I-22 outside of the Brookside city limits. (Joe Songer for al.com).Joe Songer No. 6: Silverhill (Speed Trap Score: 17.3) Another Baldwin County town, Silverhill, home to fewer than 800 people, saw nearly 2,500 traffic cases filed in its municipal court in 2019, and another 1,800 in 2020. The town is just an 11-minute drive from No. 4 Summerdale. [Can’t see the map? Click here.] It was also one of just nine towns in Alabama that sent more than $10 per resident to the Alabama State Driver’s Fund in 2021. Cities and towns send a small amount of money to that fund – usually about $8.50 – for every traffic ticket written there in a given year. “Most of the time, they give more warnings than they do citations,” said Silverhill Police Chief Kenneth Hempfleng, who added that his officers patrol an area larger than just the town. “We have a generous limit we let people go over… I’ve never in my entire career wrote anybody for going less than 10 over.” No. 7: Ohatchee (Speed Trap Score: 16.3) Ohatchee is home to just under 1,200 people, and scored relatively highly across the board in AL.com’s analysis. The town is nestled in northeast Alabama, and took advantage of federal grants to help fund overtime hours for its police force in 2021. But unlike some of the other towns on this list, Ohatchee wasn’t quite as ticket-happy. During grant-funded overtime, Ohatchee reported roughly 3,800 contacts – or interactions with drivers. That was among the highest in the state. But they gave tickets on only 36% of those stops, which was less than the statewide average, and well below many of the other towns on this list. No. 8: Georgiana (Speed Trap Score: 14.4) Home to 1,300 people, Georgiana really stood out in the amount of money it sent to the state finance department from traffic tickets. AL.com’s analysis shows the small town in south Alabama, which straddles I-65 between Montgomery and Mobile, ranked No. 4 in Alabama in money per capita sent to the State Driver’s Fund. No. 9: Rogersville (Speed Trap Score: 12.2) Rogersville is the final town in Alabama to secure a Speed Trap Score of 10.0 or higher. The town, home to nearly 1,300 people, is another northwest Alabama speed trap, between Huntsville and the Shoals. It scored highly due to the number of traffic cases filed and adjudicated in its municipal court in 2020. Both numbers were over 1.5 traffic cases per resident, and 89% of all municipal court cases there were traffic cases in 2020. The rest The nine towns above stood apart from the many small towns across this state, as just those nine scored above 10 on our Speed Trap Score. It’s a pretty simple index, combining the available data on courts, federal overtime grants for patrols and fines paid into the state. AL.com also checked traffic flow data to make sure no busy road could easily account for the numbers. That’s all explained in detail below. After that top nine the scores start to fall off rapidly, as towns collect less and less cash from drivers and spend less time handing out tickets, although the rest of the top 20 are still pretty busy patrolling their roads. No. 10: Saint Florian (Speed Trap Score: 9.4) No. 11: Repton (Speed Trap Score: 9.4) No. 12: Killen (Speed Trap Score: 8.3) No. 13: Napier Field (Speed Trap Score: 8.2) No. 14: Harpersville (Speed Trap Score: 7.9) No. 15: Newton: (Speed Trap Score: 6.9) No. 16: Gantt (Speed Trap Score: 6.6) No. 17: River Falls (Speed Trap Score: 6.4) No: 18: Kinston: (Speed Trap Score: 6.3) No. 19: Pinckard (Speed Trap Score: 5.9) No. 20: Bay Minette (Speed Trap Score: 5.3) How we got these numbers AL.com gave nearly every city and town in Alabama a Speed Trap Score based on an analysis of state and federal data. The higher the score, the worse the speed trap. That analysis primarily included data on federal grants used for traffic enforcement, data from the Alabama Department of Finance and information from the state’s Administrative Office of Courts. AL.com also considered information on traffic patterns from the Alabama Department of Transportation and population data from the U.S. Census Bureau. AL.com’s Speed Trap Score is made up of three components – the Grant Score, the Fund Score and the Court Score. Each of those scores is based on a different dataset, and are themselves made up of three key components from that data. Each point in one of the three scores represents a single standard deviation above the mean in one of its base components, keeping in mind that it was possible for towns to be below average in a given category, and thus lose points toward their Speed Trap Score. Town Creek, Alabama. A town in Lawrence County known for its speed traps. For Banking on Crime project. (Joe Songer for al.com).Joe Songer Grant Score The first score was based on federal grants that paid overtime for police to pull extra traffic enforcement duty. The grants are doled out by the Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs using money from the Federal Highway Traffic Safety Administration. These were the same grants that helped build the ticket trap in Brookside. Because the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency would not provide any public data on traffic enforcement, despite numerous requests and negotiations, this overtime data offered the best glimpse at how busy officers stayed by the hour and what kinds of tickets they wrote and how often they issued warnings instead of writing tickets. [Can’t see the list? Click here.] In all, 87 cities and towns got these federal grants in 2021, and th...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Where Are The Worst Speed Traps In Alabama?
Opinion | Trumps Frightening Rally In Ohio Shows The Media Still Doesnt Get It
Opinion | Trumps Frightening Rally In Ohio Shows The Media Still Doesnt Get It
Opinion | Trump’s Frightening Rally In Ohio Shows The Media Still Doesn’t Get It https://digitalalabamanews.com/opinion-trumps-frightening-rally-in-ohio-shows-the-media-still-doesnt-get-it/ Donald Trump has gone full QAnon. As he spoke during a rally for Ohio Republican candidates on Saturday, a soundtrack associated with the conspiracy theory played. That elicited one-armed salutes — another QAnon symbol — from many attendees. The display bore an uncanny resemblance to the infamous Nazi salute. The delusional incitement and zombielike response should put to rest the notion that President Biden (or anyone) should be “reaching out” to these people. They are unreachable, and pretending otherwise misleads voters. No Republican should ever escape an interview or news conference without being asked to condemn this monstrous event. The cynical GOP leaders who know that Trump is unfit for office and that many of his cult-followers have become violent should not be treated as ordinary party hacks. They are enablers of a dangerous movement. Yet they continually evade persistent, aggressive questioning. Compare this with the mainstream media’s response to Biden’s recent speech condemning the MAGA movement. Biden — though he generously (and inaccurately, in my book) distinguished the movement from the Republican Party writ large — highlighted the MAGA movement’s far-right extremism and its refusal to ascribe to the basic tenets of democracy (e.g., renunciation of violence, sanctity of elections). Yet many in the mainstream media turned up their noses. “Biden should have been more welcoming,” they said. “He’s too divisive!” Follow Jennifer Rubin’s opinionsFollow Add And herein rests the fundamental failure of the mainstream political media. Far too many continue to disguise the political reality we face. They refuse to use appropriate descriptors to describe Republican conduct, such as “fascist” or “racist.” Instead, they mislabel radical authoritarians as “conservatives.” If this were a foreign country, the media would accurately describe the MAGA movement as a far-right cult. Yet in the United States, too many reporters cannot help themselves in normalizing the movement. “It seems to be very deep in the mainstream press’s DNA to strain for equality when none exists,” said Margaret Sullivan, media critic and author of the upcoming memoir, “Newsroom Confidential: Lessons (and Worries) from an Ink-Stained Life.” She adds, “Maybe journalists just don’t have the language to truly get across how disturbing and abnormal some if this stuff is. If so, it’s high time to grapple with that.” And it’s not just Trump who has displayed the GOP threat to democracy. Consider also Florida’s Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’s inhumane transportation of asylum seekers to liberal states or cities to make a political statement. News reports suggest these people may have been tricked or lied to about where they were going and what awaited them at their destination. If so, there may be criminal as well as civil implications. California’s Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom and others have asked the Justice Department to investigate. Regardless of the legalities, the tactic is straight from the Jim Crow handbook. Though the GOP applauded DeSantis’s disdain for human beings fleeing dictatorial repressions, his actions followed in the steps of White citizen’s councils from the 1960s that bused thousands of Black Southerners to Northern communities. Politico reports: Throughout the South, Citizens’ Councils as far and wide as Macon, Ga., and Selma, Ala., Shreveport, La., and Jackson, Miss., lied with impunity, assuring Black residents that jobs and housing awaited them in their new home states. This was never the case, particularly on Cape Cod, where the off-season unemployment rate normally hovered near 20 percent. One man whom the Citizens’ Council had explicitly promised a job and home on the Cape told reporters that he felt hoodwinked. “I’d like to get my hands on those two men who shot me full of baloney about coming up here,” he fumed. DeSantis is the alternative to Trump, we are told. But alternative does not mean always better. The two Republicans prioritize intentional cruelty and unabashed xenophobia. Whether it is ripping children from parents’ arms or denouncing Mexican immigrants as “drug dealers” and “rapists,” they and other Republicans vying for consideration in 2024 seem entirely comfortable with dehumanizing vulnerable people. It is abject racism, and the vast majority of their party either applaud them for it or remain mum. Yet mainstream media hosts rarely manage to bring up the Jim Crow origins of DeSantis’s scheme when interviewing Republican lawmakers. They do not compel lawmakers to explain how using humans as props is legal or decent. Instead, the favored oh-so-polite conventions hold: a mildly probing question, followed by a filibuster answer and then a change of topic. Such performances are insufficient to illuminate the vileness of the party propounding these stunts. As the GOP becomes more brazen, the media seem to shrink further from their responsibility as truth-tellers and democracy advocates. Our democracy hangs in the balance. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Opinion | Trumps Frightening Rally In Ohio Shows The Media Still Doesnt Get It
'A Day Of Reckoning' Is Coming For Donald Trump. But It Might Not Be Jail: Former Federal Prosecutor
'A Day Of Reckoning' Is Coming For Donald Trump. But It Might Not Be Jail: Former Federal Prosecutor
'A Day Of Reckoning' Is Coming For Donald Trump. But It Might Not Be Jail: Former Federal Prosecutor https://digitalalabamanews.com/a-day-of-reckoning-is-coming-for-donald-trump-but-it-might-not-be-jail-former-federal-prosecutor/ Image via Gage Skidmore. America’s democracy crisis will not end anytime soon. Donald Trump and his acolytes in the Republican-fascist party continue to incite acts of right-wing violence, including terrorism, on a nationwide scale as part of their plan to end American democracy and replace it with authoritarianism and one-party rule. The Big Lie continues to spread across the United States. A majority of Republicans now subscribe to the repeatedly disproven theory that the 2020 Election was somehow illegitimate, that Trump is the “real” president and Joe Biden is a pretender and usurper. “MAGA” is American neofascism; it has fully conquered the Republican Party. America’s democracy crisis will not end anytime soon. Donald Trump and his acolytes in the Republican-fascist party continue to incite acts of right-wing violence, including terrorism, on a nationwide scale as part of their plan to end American democracy and replace it with authoritarianism and one-party rule. The Big Lie continues to spread across the United States. A majority of Republicans now subscribe to the repeatedly disproven theory that the 2020 Election was somehow illegitimate, that Trump is the “real” president and Joe Biden is a pretender and usurper. “MAGA” is American neofascism; it has fully conquered the Republican Party. This moment of crisis demands bold, immediate leadership and collective action, not just from Biden and other leading Democrats but from rank-and-file-Americans as well. But the urgency of stopping Trump and his forces is hamstrung by how the rule of law in a democracy operates slowly and justice often takes a very long time — if it ever does arrive. Will Donald Trump eventually be prosecuted, convicted and then imprisoned for his apparent high crimes, which may include violating the Espionage Act? Attorney and author Kenneth Foard McCallion believes that the answer is probably no. McCallion is a former Justice Department prosecutor who also worked for the New York State Attorney General’s office as a prosecutor on Trump racketeering cases. As an assistant U.S. attorney and special assistant U.S. attorney, he focused on international fraud and counterintelligence cases that often involved Russian organized crime. McCallion is also the author of several books, including “Profiles in Cowardice in the Trump Era” and “Treason & Betrayal: The Rise and Fall of Individual-1.” In this wide-ranging conversation, he offers his view that Donald Trump, along with his inner circle and his businesses, operate like an organized crime family. McCallion says these attributes and behavior help to explain Trump’s affinity for foreign demagogues and other corrupt elements, including Eastern European and Russian criminal organizations. McCallion reflects on his personal experience prosecuting Trump and his organizations, and the challenges of going up against a man he describes as a likely sociopath and a skilled pathological liar. McCallion explains the approach that Merrick Garland and the Department of Justice will likely take in prosecuting Trump for the government documents he stored at Mar-a-Lago and the events of Jan. 6. Any such prosecution will require both overwhelming irrefutable evidence and a simple and direct story to tell a jury about Trump’s misdeeds. McCallion also says that contrary to some media reports, Trump can definitely still be prosecuted even if he announces he is running for president. Toward the end of this conversation, McCallion outlines a likely scenario for the final disposition of such a prosecution. He believes that Trump may be brought down by a litany of civil lawsuits that will cripple him financially, not by a high-profile criminal case in which the former president is “perp-walked” in handcuffs and then sent to prison. This conversation has been edited for clarity and length. How are you feeling, given everything that’s happening? With your expertise and experience, how do you process all these events? What are you seeing? The next book I’m working on is actually titled “Civil War II,” but the ending is yet to be written. Over the last few weeks, I’ve been shocked at the extent of what we are learning about the Espionage Act and the hiding of secret government documents by Trump at Mar-a-Lago. Why did he do that? I don’t know. But I do believe that kind of hubris, and that inability to really let go of the mantel of the presidency, may in the end be his undoing. Trump has certainly left himself open for being prosecuted for serious crimes related to espionage and various other things. There are encouraging signs. I was quite delighted that a friend and former mentor of mine, Raymond Dearie, who is a retired district judge from the Eastern District of New York, where I was in the U.S. attorney’s office, will most likely be the special master [reviewing the Mar-a-Lago documents]. I was worried that the Justice Department and the attorney general had dozed off and napped for several months, but it appears they are hard at work now. The Jan. 6 committee really gave the Department of Justice a lot of impetus and momentum. There are also good indications that justice may actually be done with the New York attorney general’s [civil] case, and perhaps the Manhattan DA’s [criminal] case too. Is there actually anything shocking about any of the things Trump and his allies have done? Donald Trump has been a public criminal for decades. Jan. 6 was in many ways a predictable event and was announced beforehand. My point of view is pretty simple. We know who Donald Trump is. There is a long pattern of his evil behavior. What is “shocking” about any of this? He is utterly predictable. Those of us who know Donald Trump also understand that he is probably beyond reformation and may actually be psychopathic. However, I think it’s important to say that Donald Trump’s behavior and presidency, and what he continues to do, has been a shock to the democratic system. We cannot lose the capacity to be outraged at Trump’s behavior. We need to have that sense of outrage in order to protect the country’s democratic institutions, which are under attack right now. Where are the consequences for Donald Trump and his apparent criminal acts and other wrongdoing? I do believe that the Justice Department probably should have moved much faster with the Mar-a-Lago documents, given that we are entering an election season. However, we need to uphold the principle that no man is above the law no matter what time of year it may be, political happenings or not. It’s never a convenient season for the rich and powerful to be held accountable. It’s almost a perfect storm at this point between the Department of Justice investigation, the New York attorney general’s investigation and various civil suits against Trump. The pot is boiling now in several different respects. One or more of these investigations will almost certainly lead to the undoing of the Trump Organization. There is also significant personal liability for Donald Trump for the obstruction of justice and for a long list of crimes that are now being investigated. Attorney General Garland and the Justice Department really have to follow through this investigation to its logical conclusion. The evidence is overwhelming. Any honest prosecutor is not going to want to say, “I pulled my punches,” or, “I let Donald Trump go just because he’s the former president.” You have a lot of experience with Donald Trump. You faced him and his organization as a prosecutor. When you saw his candidacy in 2016 and then saw him win the election, what were you most afraid of? I worked with the organized crime section of the Justice Department when I went up against Donald Trump and his lawyer, Roy Cohn. We were primarily investigating labor racketeering, involving unions that were dominated by various organized crime families, including the Teamsters and others. In our investigation, we found that Donald Trump and some other developers used their connections with organized crime to get immunity from strikes by entering into corrupt contracts — promising “no-show” jobs, for example. These corrupt contracts gave Trump and others a competitive advantage. It quickly occurred to us, and I think it’s apparent to all of us now, that Trump and his organization are just another organized crime family. They try to maintain the code of silence, but that hasn’t been entirely successful. There is a complete disregard for the law. In terms of fraudulent intent, even if they could have made money honestly, Trump and his people — like many organized crime-controlled companies — try to cut corners. They take advantage of their connections with organized crime and their connections with corrupt foreign leaders, such as Putin. Russian organized crime always had a very close connection with the Trump organization. After Trump’s casinos in Atlantic City went under and the banks started pulling back their financing, Trump and his organization and his development projects have been financed through shady money from Eastern Europe and Russia, from the oligarchs. They have been Trump’s lifeblood for his financing. His worldview has always been oriented towards the countries where oligarchs and dirty money are prevalent. Donald Trump was dead set on attempting to convert the United States into a replica, to some extent, of the antidemocratic, authoritarian, oligarchical systems we see in Hungary, Russia and various other parts of Eastern Europe. Given your experience with Trump, what did the news media and the American public fail to understand about this man? Or perhaps, what were they afraid to acknowledge? Many people naively thought that Trump, despite his outlandis...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
'A Day Of Reckoning' Is Coming For Donald Trump. But It Might Not Be Jail: Former Federal Prosecutor
Trump Ally Goes On Trial For 'espionage Lite' And Obstruction KESQ
Trump Ally Goes On Trial For 'espionage Lite' And Obstruction KESQ
Trump Ally Goes On Trial For 'espionage Lite' And Obstruction – KESQ https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-ally-goes-on-trial-for-espionage-lite-and-obstruction-kesq/ By Kara Scannell, CNN Jury selection begins Monday in the trial of a former Donald Trump adviser whom authorities allege was involved in a two-year effort to try to influence the policy decisions of the Trump campaign and administration to benefit the United Arab Emirates. Tom Barrack, a wealthy businessman who served as the chair of Trump’s Presidential Inaugural Committee and an adviser to his campaign, was indicted last year along with his assistant Matthew Grimes and an Emirati official for allegedly acting as a secret backchannel for the Gulf nation. Barrack and Grimes allegedly conspired to capitalize on Barrack’s close relationship to Trump by promoting the UAE’s interests through media interviews, advocating for a candidate preferred by the UAE to serve as US ambassador to the country, helping UAE officials in their dealings with the White House, and by pushing back against a proposed summit at Camp David to resolve a dispute involving Qatar and Gulf states. The summit never happened. Barrack and Grimes have pleaded not guilty and deny any wrongdoing. The Emirati, Rashid Al Malik, fled the US in April 2018, three days after he was interviewed by the FBI. He remains at large. The trial is expected to challenge the US government’s use of the foreign agent statute and comes as the Justice Department has ramped up its prosecution of undisclosed foreign lobbying and related activities. Barrack and Grimes were charged with one count of conspiracy and one count of acting as foreign agents without notifying the Justice Department, under section 951 of the criminal code, which national security officials have called “espionage lite.” They face a maximum of 10 years in prison, if convicted. Barrack was also charged with obstructing the grand jury investigation and six counts of making false statements during an interview with the FBI in June 2019. The obstruction charge carries a maximum of 20 years in prison. Barrack and Grimes’ lawyers have argued prosecutors are trying to criminalize free speech and charged the men with a statute that is normally reserved for spies. “Mr. Barrack was never an agent of the UAE, nor did he commit obstruction or make any false statements. There is no basis whatsoever for the charges against Mr. Barrack,” his attorneys wrote in a court filing. The foreign agent case could turn on whether prosecutors can establish that Barrack and Grimes had an “agreement” to act at the “direction or control” of UAE officials. Lawyers for Barrack and Grimes, who was 22 years old at the time, said their clients never had an agreement to work for the UAE. “Although Section 951 has existed in some form for more than a century, it has never before been used against a person in Mr. Grimes’ position. Never. There is good reason for that. The statute, which targets spies and others engaged in criminal activity, does not apply to Mr. Grimes’ alleged conduct” his attorneys wrote. Former White House officials could testify Two unidentified former White House officials could be called as witnesses by either the prosecution or defense teams, according to a court filing. The prosecution case is expected to be based largely on numerous text messages and emails sent between the three men between 2016 and 2018. The trial is estimated to last four weeks. The testimony and evidence will revive names from Trump’s orbit, including campaign advisers Paul Manafort and Steve Bannon, son-in-law and former White House adviser Jared Kushner, and former Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, according to court filings. The trial comes as Trump is back in the spotlight, potentially announcing a presidential run in 2024, and facing numerous criminal investigations. Trump has denied any wrongdoing. ‘I nailed it … for the home team’ According to the indictment, the alleged foreign agent scheme lasted from April 2016, during the presidential campaign, to April 2018, through Trump’s first year in office. Prosecutors allege that in 2016, Barrack and Grimes received talking points from UAE officials for Barrack’s TV appearances in which he promoted the UAE’s interests. Following one appearance, Barrack emailed Al Malik, “I nailed it … for the home team,” referring not to the United States but to the UAE, according to the charges. In another instance, prosecutors allege, in April 2017, Barrack told Al Malik that Barrack himself was under consideration by Trump to become either US ambassador to the UAE or special envoy to the Middle East. Barrack’s appointment to either post “would give ABU DHABI more power!” he told Al Malik. “This will be great for us,” Al Malik replied. “And make you deliver more. Very effective operation.” Barrack responded, “And great for u!” Barrack was never appointed to either post. At the same time, prosecutors allege, Barrack obtained $374 million for his California investment firm from two Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth funds. An investment tracker credited the bulk of the investment to “Barrack Magic,” according to the indictment. The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More…
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Trump Ally Goes On Trial For 'espionage Lite' And Obstruction KESQ
Weekend Sports In Brief
Weekend Sports In Brief
Weekend Sports In Brief https://digitalalabamanews.com/weekend-sports-in-brief/ BASEBALL MILWAUKEE — Aaron Judge hit his 58th and 59th home runs of the season to move within two of Roger Maris’ American League record with 16 games remaining and lead the New York Yankees over the Milwaukee Brewers 12-8. Judge added a two-run double in the ninth as part of a four-hit day for New York (88-58), which hit five homers and avoided a three-game sweep. The Yankees opened a 5 1/2-game lead over second-place Toronto in the AL East and headed to the Bronx for a homestand against Pittsburgh and Boston that starts Tuesday. Judge’s 11th multihomer game tied the season record set by Detroit’s Hank Greenberg 1938 and matched by the Chicago Cubs’ Sammy Sosa in 1998. Seeking a Triple Crown, Judge leads the major leagues in homers and with 127 RBIs. His .3162 batting average is just behind AL leader Luis Arraez of Minnesota at .317 and Boston’s Xander Bogaerts at .3164. NFL SANTA CLARA, Calif. — San Francisco 49ers quarterback Trey Lance will miss the rest of the season after breaking his right ankle Sunday. Lance went down after running the ball on the second drive of a 27-7 win over the Seattle Seahawks. A cart came out on the field and Lance’s leg was put into an air cast before he was taken off. Coach Kyle Shanahan said after the game that Lance would need to undergo season-ending surgery, raising immediate questions about using Lance as a runner between the tackles so often early this season. Lance’s teammates and several Seahawks players paid him respect before he left the field and was replaced by former starter Jimmy Garoppolo, who threw a touchdown pass on his first full drive and passed for 154 yards. BALTIMORE — Tua Tagovailoa threw for 469 yards and six touchdowns, four of which came during a spectacular fourth quarter, and the Miami Dolphins rallied from a 21-point deficit to beat Lamar Jackson and the Baltimore Ravens 42-38. Tagovailoa’s 7-yard touchdown pass to Jaylen Waddle with 14 seconds left completed the incredible comeback after Miami (2-0) trailed 35-14 with under 13 minutes remaining. Tyreek Hill had touchdown catches of 48 and 60 yards during that rally, the latter of which tied the game with 5:19 to play. Justin Tucker kicked a 51-yard field goal with 2:18 remaining to put Baltimore ahead, but that was far too much time for Miami’s offense, which the Ravens (1-1) didn’t come close to stopping in the final quarter. The Dolphins overcame a spectacular performance by Jackson, who threw three first-half touchdown passes and then gave Baltimore its 21-point lead with a 79-yard TD run in the third. Jackson threw for 318 yards and three touchdowns. COLLEGE FOOTBALL NEW YORK — Washington made its season debut in The Associated Press college football on Sunday at No. 18, and Penn State and Oregon moved into the top 15 after all three had decisive nonconference victories. A weekend filled with blowouts by highly ranked teams kept the top 10 almost unchanged. No. 1 Georgia picked up six more first-place votes in the AP Top 25 presented by Regions Bank. The Bulldogs are up to 59 first-place votes and 1,569 points. No. 2 Alabama received three first-place votes and No. 3 Ohio State got one. No. 4 Michigan, No. 5 Clemson, No. 6 Oklahoma and No. 7 Southern California all held their spots. The one change in the top 10 was No. 8 Kentucky flip-flopping with No. 9 Oklahoma State. Arkansas stayed at No. 10. The top 10 teams, most playing overmatched nonconference opponents, won their games Saturday by a combined 521-120. The shuffling came in the next 10. No. 11 Tennessee moved up four spots. Penn State jumped eight to No. 14 after routing Auburn on the road. No. 15 Oregon moved up 10 spots after handily defeating BYU, which slipped seven places to No. 19. Michigan State dropped all the way out after being No. 11. Mississippi moved up four spots to No. 16 and No. 20 Florida slipped a couple of spots after barely getting by South Florida at home. Miami dropped 12 spots and landed at No. 25 after losing at Texas A&M. GOLF NAPA, Calif. — Max Homa chipped in from nearly 33 feet for birdie on the closing hole, then watched as Danny Willett shockingly three-putted from inside 4 feet to give Homa his second straight title at the Fortinet Championship. Homa high-fived his caddie when his ball hit the flagstick and dropped. His previous shot from a nearby bunker came up short of the green at the par-5 18th hole. Willett, meanwhile, had a one-shot lead at the rain-soaked PGA Tour season opener and stuffed his third shot to 3 feet, 7 inches. He rammed his first putt 4 feet, 8 inches by, then missed the comebacker to hand Homa his fifth victory on tour. Homa closed with a 4-under 66 for a total of 16-under 272 and now heads to Charlotte, North Carolina, as a captain’s pick for the Presidents Cup with three wins in the past 12 months. Willett shot 69. Taylor Montgomery was alone in third at 13 under after a closing 64. SUGAR GROVE, Ill. — British Open champion Cameron Smith made his decision to leave the PGA Tour for LIV Golf pay off when he closed with a 3-under 69 for a three-shot victory in the LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago. Smith was only briefly threatened in the third and final round. One of the key moments was a 10-foot par putt on the 13th hole, and neither Dustin Johnson nor Peter Uihlein could do enough to catch him. Smith won $4 million from the $20 million purse for individual play. Johnson (70) and Uihlein (69) each made birdie on the par-5 18th hole at Rich Harvest Farms and tied for second, each earning $1,812,500. Johnson’s birdie enabled his team to win for the fourth straight time, which was worth an additional $750,000 for Johnson, Talor Gooch, Patrick Reed and Pat Perez. In the five events Johnson has played, he now has made just over $12.5 million. PORTLAND, Ore. — Andrea Lee recovered from two early bogeys and pulled away with five birdies on the back nine to close with a 6-under 66 and win the AmazingCre Portland Classic for her first LPGA Tour title. Lee took the lead for good with an 18-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole and then hit a superb bunker shot from left of the 17th green to save par and keep a two-shot lead. She was in the middle of the 18th fairway when she watched Daniela Darquea of Ecuador finish with a third straight birdie for a 66 to pull within one shot. Lee drilled her approach to 15 feet and lagged her putt to within inches to tap in for the win. GUIDONIA MONTECELIO, Italy — Robert MacIntyre closed with a 7-under 64 and then beat U.S. Open champion Matt Fitzpatrick with a birdie on the first playoff hole to win the Italian Open on the Marco Simone course that will host the Ryder Cup next year. MacIntyre won for only the second time on the European tour, and this was the biggest for the 26-year-old Scot. The field included Fitzpatrick, European tour leader Rory McIlroy and Viktor Hovland. SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — Steve Stricker won his second straight PGA Tour Champions event, closing with a 6-under 64 and beating Robert Karlsson with a birdie on the first playoff hole in the Sanford International. Stricker won for the third time this year, becoming the fifth player on the 50-and-older circuit with at least three victories this season. Stricker and Karlsson, who shot a 66, finished at 14-under 196. WNBA UNCASVILLE, Conn. — Chelsea Gray scored 20 points to lead the Las Vegas Aces to their first WNBA title in a 78-71 road win over the Connecticut Sun in Game 4. Gray went 9 of 13 from the floor, and was named MVP after averaging 18 points over the run. The Aces improved to 4-0 in this year’s playoffs with two days rest. Riquna Williams added 17 points Kelsey Plum added 16 points for the Aces, Jackie Young had 13 and league MVP A’ja Wilson added 11 points to go with 14 rebounds. Vegas finished on an 8-0 run. As the buzzer sounded Wilson grabbed the ball and stomped the floor before being mobbed by her teammates. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Weekend Sports In Brief
Trumps Favorability Rating Drops To New Low: Poll
Trumps Favorability Rating Drops To New Low: Poll
Trump’s Favorability Rating Drops To New Low: Poll https://digitalalabamanews.com/trumps-favorability-rating-drops-to-new-low-poll-2/ Former President Donald Trump speaks at a rally in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Saturday, Sept. 3, 2022. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer) Former President Donald Trump speaks at a rally in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Saturday, Sept. 3, 2022. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer) by: Rachel Scully Posted: Sep 19, 2022 / 05:49 AM EDT Updated: Sep 19, 2022 / 05:49 AM EDT Former President Trump’s favorability rating has dropped to a new low after slowly trickling down over the past few months. A new NBC News poll released Sunday found that 34 percent of registered voters said they have a positive view of Trump, while 54 percent say they have a negative view of him. Trump’s favorability rating was at its lowest in April 2021, when his rating fell to 32 percent in the same NBC poll. The former president’s favorability score is down slightly since last month, with the same 54 percent saying they have a negative view of Trump, but 36 percent saying they had a positive view of him. While Trump’s favorability score has trickled down, President Biden’s score has gone up, though only slightly. This month, 45 percent said they approve of the president — a two-point increase since last month. Contrarily, 52 percent of voters say they disapprove of Biden, which has gone down three percentage points since last month. Pollsters also questioned voters about their views on the different investigations against Trump, specifically asking whether the various investigations should stop or continue. The poll found that 56 percent of voters believe the investigations should continue, while 41 percent say they should stop. The poll comes amid an FBI investigation into former President Trump and the documents he was holding at Mar-a-Lago. The government recovered thousands of government documents from the Florida property since Trump left office, including more than 300 documents with various classified markings. The NBC News poll surveyed 1,000 registered voters between Sept. 9-13, and has a margin of error of plus-minus 3.1 percentage points. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trumps Favorability Rating Drops To New Low: Poll
An Affordable And Easy-To-Use Tool For Automatic Fish Length And Weight Estimation In Mariculture Scientific Reports
An Affordable And Easy-To-Use Tool For Automatic Fish Length And Weight Estimation In Mariculture Scientific Reports
An Affordable And Easy-To-Use Tool For Automatic Fish Length And Weight Estimation In Mariculture – Scientific Reports https://digitalalabamanews.com/an-affordable-and-easy-to-use-tool-for-automatic-fish-length-and-weight-estimation-in-mariculture-scientific-reports/ Abstract Common aquaculture practices involve measuring fish biometrics at different growth stages, which is crucial for feeding regime management and for improving farmed fish welfare. Fish measurements are usually carried out manually on individual fish. However, this process is laborious, time-consuming, and stressful to the fish. Therefore, the development of fast, precise, low cost and indirect measurement would be of great interest to the aquaculture sector. In this study, we explore a promising way to take fish measurements in a non-invasive approach through computer vision. Images captured by a stereoscopic camera are used by Artificial Intelligence algorithms in conjunction with computer vision to automatically obtain an accurate estimation of the characteristics of fish, such as body length and weight. We describe the development of a computer vision system for automated recognition of body traits through image processing and linear models for the measurement of fish length and prediction of body weight. The measurements are obtained through a relatively low-cost prototype consisting of a smart buoy equipped with stereo cameras, tested in a commercial mariculture cage in the Mediterranean Sea. Our findings suggest that this method can successfully estimate fish biometric parameters, with a mean error of ± 1.15 cm. Introduction Aquaculture provides two-thirds of the world’s aquatic products1. It represents a key source of high-quality proteins for humans and has become one of the fastest-growing industries in global food production1,2,3. Along with the growth of the world population, global aquaculture production is expected to increase swiftly to meet demand in the forthcoming years3. However, the rapid growth of aquaculture production systems has led to several concerns, such as fish overfeeding, disease outbreaks, water pollution, and related environmental issues. These matters contribute to determining the social acceptability of the sector. For these reasons, the industry and the academic community are requested to seek strategies to increase productivity and efficiency of the aquaculture systems, while controlling the negative impacts4 and improving the environmental, economic, and social sustainability. In recent decades, the use of engineering, smart technologies (e.g. sensors such as probes and optical systems for water and fish monitoring), and statistical analyses have gradually gained traction in the aquaculture sector; the so-called “precision aquaculture” applies control engineering principles to fish production to improve farmers’ monitoring and management of fish farms5. As part of the green revolution, precision tools applied in the aquaculture systems will help solve problems of global overfishing by improving productivity and sustainability1,3, and create a more environmentally responsible aquaculture industry. Indeed, the management of land-based and off-shore aquaculture facilities requires an accurate periodical estimation of fish length and weight to monitor fish growth, thus allowing calibration of feed administration and assessment of fish health. Length and biomass estimation is usually conducted manually on a reduced fish subsample or derived through calculations based on feed administration. Manual measurements are weather-dependent, time-consuming, and work-intensive for fish farmers, and, above all, they are invasive and stressful to fish4,6,7. In addition, size estimates based on measurements of a limited number of specimens may not be sufficiently consistent and have a high margin of bias. Inaccurate length and biomass estimations in fish farming can result in overfeeding, and consequently higher production costs and greater environmental impact2,8. In contrast to traditional methods, “precision farming” methods are not affected by weather or time constraints, are non-invasive and non-stressful for the reared animals, and can help aquaculture facilities in optimizing their capital investment, feeding protocols, and harvesting schedule4,5. Therefore, fast and safe alternatives to measure fish growth traits would be extremely helpful to farmers and biologists. Computer vision deals with how computers can gain high-level understanding from digital images or videos. It can be used as an effective non-invasive technique for estimating animal biometrics, attracting the interest of researchers and farmers, as photos of the specimens can be captured and used to measure different body traits remotely4,9,10,11. The images captured by the cameras are analyzed by Artificial Intelligence (AI) algorithms to automatically obtain parameters such as body length, width or weight. Computer vision enables precise and reliable remote monitoring and automatic control of fish biological indicators, which are crucial for the correct time- and cost-efficient management of the farm. Fish length and mass estimation methods based on computer vision usually involve three steps: fish images are preprocessed; fish features are extracted from images and feature values, like body length, calculated; and the feature values are fitted to construct a prediction model to realize the estimation of fish mass7. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, most of the efforts in using computer vision systems in aquaculture are associated with the categorization, shaping, behavior, count, or estimation of fish body size (mostly length)11,12,13,14, with only a few studies focusing on measuring body area or predicting body weight4,15,16,17; Costa et al.18 and Torisawa et al.19 estimated large bluefin tunas’ lengths (ranging from 0.60 to 1.8 m) using a similar underwater twin camera module with an error of 2% and 5% of the fish’s actual length, respectively. Here we present a low-cost prototype system (“smart buoy”) tested in a commercial mariculture cage on Capraia Island (Italy). The buoy, equipped with a multi-parametric probe and stereoscopic cameras, is capable of capturing images of fish; these are then automatically analyzed by exploiting the cognitive capabilities of AI and computer vision algorithms. The technology allowed achieving automatic length estimation of cultured gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata, L.) at the end of the on-growing period. Results Distance-translation relationship A relationship between landmarks translation and the corresponding distance from the stereo camera is shown in Fig. 1. On the y-axis the distance (in micron/pixel) between the landmarks (4 pairs for each image) selected on the chessboard is represented; the x-axis shows the average translation of each pair of landmarks on the chessboard between the two stereo images. As shown in the scatterplot, a cubic polynomial model of the two variables shows a strong correlation (R2 = 0.899, p = 0.00). This can therefore be used to estimate the micron/pixel ratio of an object showing a specific translation of its landmarks. The minimum pixel translation considered to be consistent with the technical characteristics of the stereo camera (e.g., the distance between the two lenses and focal length) has been set to 140 pixels, since the translation of extremely distant targets is undetectable. Figure 1 Scatterplot of the mean translation of the landmarks (n = 208) and their corresponding micron/pixel ratio (cubic polynomial fitting ± 0.95 confidence limits). Measurement error estimation A total of 68 measurements obtained from 17 images of fish silhouettes resulted in a mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) of ± 1.15 cm, corresponding to ± 5.5% in the fish standard length (SL) estimations. AI estimation of fish length and weight The AI algorithm identified a total of 272 fish from 76 images of shoals captured within the cage. The images of 148 fish were discarded as the translation fell below the 140-pixel threshold. The remaining 124 fish were automatically processed for SL estimation (AI measurements). As a control sample, 190 seabreams were caught from the same cage where the study was carried out. Length and weight measurements were manually determined to obtain a length-to-weight relationship (W = 0.1342SL2.5465; R2 = 0.755) and to assess disparities with AI estimated measurements. This relationship was then used to obtain the fish mass from the estimated AI lengths. The mean length and weight ± SD of fish obtained from field samplings and those estimated by the AI approach are reported in Tab. 1. Mean differences, expressed as a percentage, were ± 3.0 and ± 3.6% for standard length and weight, respectively. Both distributions behaved as normal curves (Shapiro = 0.9, p = 0.07; Shapiro = 0.99, p = 0.59, respectively for Sampled and AI estimated), but variances were not homogeneous (Levene test p = 0.00), as evident from the histograms in Fig. 2 However, the most representative classes (26, 27 and 28 cm bins) were found to be the same from both actual and AI measurements. Figure 2 (Source: R version 4.2.1). Standard-length histograms for sampled versus AI estimated distributions The AI estimated distribution showed a greater dispersion (i.e., more stretched) compared to the sampled one, which resulted more clustered. On the other hand, the means were not significantly different (F Welch test = 3.90, p = 0.05). The q-q plot shown in Fig. 3 (where the x-axis represented the estimated quantiles for Sampled dataset and the y-axis those for AI estimated) showed that the two dataset batches did not come from populations with a common distribution, and that differences were higher for lengths over 30 cm and below 25 cm (significantly higher and lower in AI estimated, respectively). Thus, the two distributions showed different tail behavior, while the central ...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
An Affordable And Easy-To-Use Tool For Automatic Fish Length And Weight Estimation In Mariculture Scientific Reports
Trumps Save America Scam
Trumps Save America Scam
Trump’s ‘Save America’ Scam https://digitalalabamanews.com/trumps-save-america-scam/ In 2019, Donald Trump’s charitable foundation was fined $2 million for misusing funds and ordered to shut down. The foundation’s misdeeds included: improperly furthering Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign; funding the purchase of a 6-foot portrait of Trump; buying ads to promote Trump hotels; and paying settlements for legal claims against Trump unrelated to the charity. In short, Trump abused his foundation’s special tax status as a charity to help himself. But losing the foundation and forking over $2 million wasn’t enough to teach Trump a lesson. Neither was the $25 million he paid to settle with the Trump University students he duped. Trump went on to scam his supporters on a much grander and more dangerous scale in the aftermath of the 2020 election with his Save America political action committee—which, as the New York Times reported this month, is now a subject of interest to a federal grand jury. Now he’s using the same tactics to raise money off the FBI’s search of Mar-a-Lago. Trump’s Save America ruse is reasonably straightforward. Immediately after the media called the election for Joe Biden on November 7, 2020, a joint fundraising committee between the Trump campaign and the Republican National Committee called the Trump Make America Great Again Committee blasted Trump supporters with numerous donation requests. Many of those pleas asked for money to fund an “Official Legal Defense Fund.” Trump registered a new Save America PAC on November 9. Then, as explained by the Washington Post, Save America discreetly skimmed 75 percent of each contribution. The pitch worked exceedingly well. In the eight weeks after the 2020 election, Save America PAC raked in upwards of $30 million—and when you add in donations to the other combined Trump and RNC entities during that period, the overall haul was reportedly more than $250 million. To put that into context, by the end of September 2020, the Trump campaign only had $63 million on hand for the final month of campaigning, and the Biden campaign had $177 million. To raise that kind of dough, many solicitations led donors to believe their donations would go into an “Official Election Defense Fund.” Some examples—from between only November 7 and November 10—are available here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here. Which gives you an idea of how heavily the Trump operation bombarded donors with this particular kind of appeal. But it wasn’t true. The House January 6th Committee found that the “Official Election Defense Fund” never existed. And while the “Official Legal Defense Fund” was not referenced in every solicitation sent, a review of post-election emails sent by the Trump operation shows an overwhelming focus on challenging the election results. For example, many other solicitations asked donors to contribute to Trump’s “Official Election Defense Task Force” or a “Critical Election Defense Fund.” In June, Amanda Wick, a senior investigative counsel for the Jan. 6th Committee, delivered a video presentation on this topic. In the video, Gary Coby, the former Trump campaign digital director, is asked whether it would be fair to call the election defense fund a “marketing tactic.” “Yes,” said Coby—describing it as “just topic matter . . . where money can potentially go to be, how money can potentially be used.” So where did all the money go, if not to an official legal defense fund to challenge the election results? And was raising all this money in this way legal? Trump’s Save America PAC is constructed as a “leadership PAC” with relatively loose rules governing what can be done with the money. The main restriction is that a politician cannot use PAC money to fund his or her own campaign, which means that Trump has great latitude to do what he likes with the money, so long as he doesn’t use it to directly support a 2024 presidential bid. Traditionally, a leadership PAC is used by candidates to raise and distribute money for other candidates. Trump did do something roughly along these lines with some of the money. Approximately $4.2 million was spent funding efforts to elect Republican senators in the January 5, 2021, Georgia runoffs, which, coincidentally enough, also galvanized Trump’s “Stop the Steal” efforts. And the Trump campaign did mount legal challenges, floundering as they were. His lawyers lost 61 out of 62 cases and, joining a long line of former Trump lawyers, say they weren’t fairly paid for their services. In a separate case brought by Dominion Voting Systems, Trump’s lead campaign lawyer Rudy Giuliani has testified that he was not paid for his services. All told, Save America has reportedly raised over $135 million. But Trump, instead of spending the money paying his election lawyers, seems to have hoarded it, saving it for other purposes. Press reports and FEC filings show that: Save America gave nearly $8.7 million to Event Strategies Inc., the company that organized Trump’s Jan. 6th rally on the Ellipse. According to FEC filings, most of those funds were spent from March 2021 through June 2022. The New York Times reported that Save America paid more than $3.1 million in “legal consulting” fees and salaries for a number of former Trump aides who were subpoenaed to testify to the Jan. 6th Committee and who have been subpoenaed for other inquiries related to the seizure of classified documents at Mar-a-Lago. Weeks after the formation of the Jan. 6th Committee, Save America gave $1 million to the Conservative Partnership Institute, a nonprofit that employs Mark Meadows and Cleta Mitchell, Trump’s former chief of staff and former legal adviser. Meadows and Mitchell are both implicated in the overlapping inquiries from the Jan. 6th Committee and the Department of Justice. Save America gave $1 million to America First Policy Institute, a think tank set up by former Trump officials to promote Trump’s agenda. Earlier this month, it hosted a speech by Trump’s son-in-law and former White House advisor Jared Kushner. Save America donated $650,000 to the Smithsonian to pay for portraits of Trump and former first lady Melania Trump. Although Save America was never really a legal defense fund, Politico reports that Trump now has apparently tapped into it to pay for a pricey lawyer—not to defend his false claims about the 2020 election, but to defend himself in various legal and investigatory proceedings now underway. It is unclear whether Trump will get away with raising PAC money under the guise of an “official election defense fund” and spending it to boost unrelated personal and political interests. Given how broadly the laws are written regarding PACs, and the fact that the Federal Election Commission doesn’t seem vigorous about enforcement, it’s possible that the Save America PAC swindle may go unpunished. A useful comparison is the case of Steve Bannon, Trump’s former White House adviser, who is currently facing fraud charges for allegedly soliciting donations to build a wall along the southern border. In Bannon’s case, the entity was not a PAC but WeBuildTheWall, Inc., a charitable “social welfare” nonprofit organization, which is under tighter restrictions than PACs about how their funding can be spent—but the misleading of donors is comparable. Manhattan prosecutors say that Bannon repeatedly promised donors that the organization’s leader, Brian Kolfage, would “personally not take a penny of compensation from these donations.” That pitch was effective; the charity raised more than $25 million. But the marketing tactic was not true. Bannon is said to have helped Kolfage secretly pocket more than $350,000. To obscure the transfer of funds, Bannon is accused of routing significant amounts of money through third-party entities, including those he controlled. (Kolfage pleaded guilty to a fraud charge earlier this year.) If all this sounds familiar, it’s because federal prosecutors previously charged Bannon for these transgressions in 2020. Bannon never faced any consequences for them, however, because Trump issued him a pardon on his last day in office before the case could go to trial. This time, Bannon faces New York state courts, where Trump’s federal pardon does not apply. Meanwhile, Trump has revived his requests to support what he now calls his “Official Trump Defense Fund.” After the FBI searched Mar-a-Lago for classified documents, Save America blasted supporters with requests for help. USA Today found that: Fifteen of the emails reference an “Official Trump Defense Fund,” language that is strikingly similar to the “Official Election Defense Fund” that the House committee probing Trump’s role in the Jan. 6 Capitol attack said likely never existed. And yet again, the marketing tactic worked: Save America’s emails brought it as much as $1 million a day last month. After all, why would the mere possibility of prosecution lead Trump to give up on a successful racket that lets him practically print money by hitting up gullible admirers? Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trumps Save America Scam
Former DNI Raises Concerns Over Potential 'Misclassified Documents' Seized In Mar-A-Lago Raid
Former DNI Raises Concerns Over Potential 'Misclassified Documents' Seized In Mar-A-Lago Raid
Former DNI Raises Concerns Over Potential 'Misclassified Documents' Seized In Mar-A-Lago Raid https://digitalalabamanews.com/former-dni-raises-concerns-over-potential-misclassified-documents-seized-in-mar-a-lago-raid/ Former White House Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe said Sunday that the FBI took documents from Donald Trump’s Florida Mar-a-Lago home that had questionable classification levels. “The FBI took 11,000 documents from Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home, and they claim that there are reports of hundreds of documents that have classified markings,” Ratcliffe said in an interview on Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures.” Ratcliffe noted that he is unsure if any of the documents include “Russia-gate or Steele reporting documents” but that if they do, “there’s a question of whether or not they’re marked top secret, whether they are top secret.” Former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele’s infamous “Steele dossier” was used to obtain a spy warrant on members of the Trump 2016 presidential campaign. The widely discredited dossier was paid for by the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee. “I saw hundreds, if not thousands, of documents related to Christopher Steele, and the Steele reporting … things like the Alpha Bank connections that were in the Steele dossier, all of these things were make-believe but were marked ‘top secret,’” said Ratcliffe. “All of these things were no more top secret than your children’s creative writing assignments for their homework.” “So there’s an issue of classification of those documents, they’re going to have to look at documents marked ‘top secret’ to determine whether or not there really was any national security information in there of any value,” Ratcliffe said. “I can tell you from personal experience that many of those Russia-gate documents were not top secret, although they were marked that way.” Ratcliffe’s comments come after U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon appointed senior Judge Raymond Dearie as a “special master” to review documents the FBI seized from Mar-a-Lago in August. Dearie, 79, was appointed by President Ronald Reagan in 1986 to the federal bench in Brooklyn, New York. He retired in 2011 and now serves as a semi-retired senior judge. He previously served in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court between 2011 and 2019. Part of Dearie’s duties as a “special master” will be to determine whether any materials are protected by executive privilege or attorney-client privilege and should thus be shielded from the DOJ probe. Documents seized during the Aug. 8 raid by the FBI of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla., in a photo released on Aug. 30, 2022. (FBI via The Epoch Times) ‘Taken Advantage of By FBI’ When asked on Sunday for his thoughts regarding Dearie’s appointment as a special master, Ratcliffe said he believes he’s a good choice, noting that Dearie has been “taken advantage of” by the FBI before and will likely “not take the DOJ and FBI assertions at face value and will look at these documents.” During his time in the intelligence surveillance court, Dearie signed off on warrants that the FBI used to surveil Carter Page, a former associate of Trump, during its investigation into now disproved allegations that the Trump campaign was colluding with Russia. Former FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith later admitted to doctoring an email from the CIA that was used to support the surveillance warrants. Ratcliffe on Sunday also cited one document that he himself had declassified “on his way out the door,” which related to Igor Danchenko, a Russian national who lives in the United States and who was the primary sub-source for the Steele dossier. Danchenko is scheduled to be tried in October on five counts of lying to the FBI. “He is facing trial next month because he lied repeatedly to the FBI,” said Ratcliffe. “In January 2017 he admitted to the FBI that much of what was in the Steele reporting was just made up in conversation over beers with friends at a bar or word-of-mouth hearsay.” “He didn’t know whether any of the information in the Steele dossier was accurate and it was put together at the request of Hillary Clinton and her campaign.” Ratcliffe said the document he declassified was “an annex to the intelligence community assessment that then-FBI Director James Comey insisted on including and reporting to the American people claiming that all the information in the Steele dossier should be included in the investigation when they knew from their conversations with Danchenko that it was all false.” “So this is an example of one of many documents that were initially marked as ‘top secret’ and ‘classified’ but that was all a bunch of garbage,” he said. Follow Katabella Roberts is a news writer for The Epoch Times, focusing primarily on the United States, world, and business news. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Former DNI Raises Concerns Over Potential 'Misclassified Documents' Seized In Mar-A-Lago Raid
Stocks Struggle Dollar Dominant Ahead Of Central Bank Binge
Stocks Struggle Dollar Dominant Ahead Of Central Bank Binge
Stocks Struggle, Dollar Dominant Ahead Of Central Bank Binge https://digitalalabamanews.com/stocks-struggle-dollar-dominant-ahead-of-central-bank-binge/ The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, September 16, 2022. REUTERS/Staff/File Photo Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com https://tmsnrt.rs/2zpUAr4 S&P 500 futures slip, Nikkei futures down Fed leads pack of central bank meetings Market leaning toward 75 bp from Fed, PBOC eases Dollar firm near multi-year highs SYDNEY/LONDON, Sept 19 (Reuters) – Shares slipped and the dollar firmed on Monday as investors prepared for a packed week of central bank meetings which will see borrowing costs rise globally, with the chance of a super-sized hike in the United States. Markets are fully priced for a rise in interest rates of 75 basis points from the Federal Reserve, with futures showing a 20% chance of a full percentage point. They also indicate a real chance that rates could hit 4.5% as the Fed is forced to tip the economy into recession to subdue inflation. read more Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com “Asset performance during this Fed tightening cycle is very different from the norm for other rate hike episodes,” said David Chao, a global market strategist at Invesco “Usually, the Fed tightens when the economy is thriving and most assets do well. However, most assets have suffered this time, perhaps due to the surge in inflation and abrupt policy change.” Trading was thinned on Monday with British markets closed for Queen Elizabeth II’s state funeral, but Europe’s STOXX index (.STOXX) slid 0.5% to its lowest level in two months, dragged down by tech stocks. (.SX8P) read more MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS), fell 0.6%, continuing to set new two-year lows, also hurt by declining tech stocks, (.HSTECH) S&P 500 futures dipped 0.67%, while Nasdaq futures fell 0.83%. As well as the specific rate hike, investors will be watching Fed members’ “dot plot” forecasts for rates, which are likely to be hawkish, putting the funds rate at 4-4.25% by the end of this year, and even higher next year. That risk saw two-year Treasury yields surge 30 basis points last week alone to reach the highest since 2007 at 3.92%, so making stocks look more expensive in comparison and dragging the S&P 500 down almost 5% for the week. Treasuries are not yet trading, as both Japan and Britain have public holidays, but euro zone borrowing costs edged higher, with the short-dated yields not far off their multi-year highs. MARKETS SPLIT It is not just in the U.S. that interest rate rises are expected. Most of the banks meeting this week – from Switzerland to South Africa – are expected to hike, with markets split on whether the Bank of England will go by 50 or 75 basis points. read more China’s central bank went its own way, though, and cut a repo rate by 10 basis points to support its ailing economy, leaving blue chips (.CSI300) up 0.1%. The other exception is the Bank of Japan, which has shown no sign of abandoning its uber-easy yield curve policy despite the drastic slide in the yen. read more The dollar rose 0.34 to 143.45 yen on Monday , having backed away from the recent 24-year peak of 144.99 in the face of increasingly strident intervention warnings from Japanese policymakers. The euro was 0.36% lower at $0.9978 , and sterling slipped 0.3% to $1.1390 just off Friday’s 37-year lows, with traders keeping an eye on new British finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng’s emergency mini-budget, expected Friday. The dollar index , which measures the currency against six counterparts, was 0.4% stronger at 110.03. “We expect the USD to keep trending higher this week to a new cyclical high above 110.8pts because of the deteriorating outlook for the world economy,” said CBA analysts in a note. The ascent of the dollar and yields has been a drag for gold, which was down 0.55% $1,666 an ounce after hitting lows not seen since April 2020 last week. Oil prices slid, pressured by the stronger dollar Brent crude fell 1.3% to $90.18. U.S. crude dropped 1.3%, to $83.97. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Wayne Cole in Sydney and Alun John in London; Editing by Sam Holmes, Christian Schmollinger and Ed Osmond Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Stocks Struggle Dollar Dominant Ahead Of Central Bank Binge
Hurricane Fiona Makes Landfall In Dominican Republic As More Than A Million People In Puerto Rico Are Still Without Power | CNN
Hurricane Fiona Makes Landfall In Dominican Republic As More Than A Million People In Puerto Rico Are Still Without Power | CNN
Hurricane Fiona Makes Landfall In Dominican Republic As More Than A Million People In Puerto Rico Are Still Without Power | CNN https://digitalalabamanews.com/hurricane-fiona-makes-landfall-in-dominican-republic-as-more-than-a-million-people-in-puerto-rico-are-still-without-power-cnn/ 02:09 – Source: CNN Video shows bridge swept away in Hurricane Fiona CNN  —  Hurricane Fiona made landfall in the Dominican Republic early Monday after slamming Puerto Rico with heavy rain, life-threatening flooding and an islandwide power outage. The Category 1 storm came ashore near Boca de Yuma at 3:30 a.m. with maximum sustained winds of 90 mph, the National Hurricane Center said. As the storm is moving slowly to the northwest, it is still dropping flooding rain on Puerto Rico, where more than 1.4 million people are without power. So far, at least one death has been reported in the heavily-damaged city of Basse-Terre, the capitol of the French territory of Guadeloupe, the vice president of the territory’s environmental agency said Sunday. The hurricane made landfall on the southwestern coast of Puerto Rico Sunday afternoon, bearing down on the island with severe winds of up to 75 miles per hour and bringing 6-24 inches of rain to some areas by the end of the day, according to the National Weather Service. Fiona will continue to pummel Puerto Rico and eastern portions of the Dominican Republic into Monday. Eastern areas of the Dominican Republic may also see flooding as well as mudslides and landslides in higher areas, according to the hurricane center. Fiona could bring a total of up to 30 inches of rainfall to Puerto Rico and up to 12 inches to eastern and northern Dominican Republic. The hurricane is forecast to build strength once it passes over the Dominican Republic and is expected to move towards Turks and Caicos and the Bahamas on Monday and Tuesday, according to the National Hurricane Center. The Turks and Caicos are under a hurricane warning and southern Bahamas are under a tropical storm watch. LUMA Energy, the main power utility in Puerto Rico, said in a statement Sunday it could be days before power is restored, adding “several transmission line outages” are contributing to the blackout. The process will be done “gradually,” Governor Pedro Pierluisi said in a Facebook post. The website PowerOutage.us reported the entire island was without power, early Monday morning, adding LUMA had “reenergized some circuits, however there is limited information, and no numbers on how many customers have been restored.” Power outages have become a familiar crisis for many who live in Puerto Rico. Just five months ago, residents experienced another islandwide blackout after a fire broke out in a power plant. Some parts of the island still bear the scars of Hurricane Maria, which devastated Puerto Rico almost exactly five years ago. After Hurricane Maria inflicted catastrophic damage to the territory’s infrastructure, it took almost a year for power to be restored across the island. Samuel Rivera and his mother Lourdes Rodriguez lived without power for about a year after Maria struck, Rivera told CNN’s Layla Santiago. On Sunday morning, they lost power once again, conjuring up similar fears to those they had five years ago. They said they are also concerned a nearby river may overflow and the trees surrounding their home may be felled by the powerful winds. As Hurricane Fiona made landfall Sunday, most of Puerto Rico was under a flash flood warning in anticipation of the overwhelming downpour. The National Weather Service in San Juan warned of “catastrophic” and life-threatening flood conditions. One video of the dangerous flooding shows the rushing waters easily wipe away a bridge, carrying its structure downstream. Another taken by Samuel De Jesús depicts a scene in the city of Arecibo as the rain falls in sheets, adding to the quickly-moving waters overtaking large construction vehicles and entire trees. Many rivers on the eastern side of the island were in moderate to major flood stages Sunday afternoon, including one southeastern river which rose over 12 feet in less than 7 hours. By Sunday night, the National Weather Service also issued flash flood warnings across southern parts of central Puerto Rico. In response to the risk Puerto Rico faced, President Joe Biden approved an emergency declaration early Sunday to provide federal assistance to disaster relief efforts. More than 300 FEMA emergency workers were on the ground to respond to the crisis, the agency’s Associate Administrator for Response and Recovery, Anne Bink, told CNN. “Our heart goes out to the residents that again are going through another catastrophic event five years later,” Bink said, nodding to the five-year anniversary of Hurricane Maria. This time, she said, FEMA plans to implement lessons learned from the 2017 crisis. “We were much more prepared. We have four warehouses now strategically located throughout the island, which includes commodities, exponentially larger supplies than in the past,” she said. “We’re proactively there – and well ahead of any storm hitting – to make sure that we are coordinating. And all of the planning efforts we undertake during those blue skies days can be brought to bear when the rain falls.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Hurricane Fiona Makes Landfall In Dominican Republic As More Than A Million People In Puerto Rico Are Still Without Power | CNN
Smith Wins LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago In Second Start With Rival League
Smith Wins LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago In Second Start With Rival League
Smith Wins LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago In Second Start With Rival League https://digitalalabamanews.com/smith-wins-liv-golf-invitational-chicago-in-second-start-with-rival-league/ Cameron Smith celebrates with the champion’s trophy after winning the LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago tournament Sunday in Sugar Hill, Ill. – Photo by Charles Rex Arbogast of The Associated Press SUGAR GROVE, Ill. — British Open champion Cameron Smith made his decision to leave the PGA Tour for LIV Golf pay off Sunday when he closed with a 3-under 69 for a three-shot victory in the LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago. Smith was only briefly threatened in the third and final round. One of the key moments was a 10-foot par putt on the 13th hole, and neither Dustin Johnson nor Peter Uihlein could do enough to catch him. Smith won $4 million from the $20 million purse for individual play. “I think I had to prove to myself and other people that I’m still a great player, I’m still out here to win golf tournaments,” Smith said. “I didn’t have my best stuff, but I stuck tough and made some putts.” Johnson (70) and Uihlein (69) each made birdie on the par-5 18th hole at Rich Harvest Farms and tied for second, each earning $1,812,500. Johnson’s birdie enabled his team to win for the fourth straight time, which was worth an additional $750,000 for Johnson, Talor Gooch, Patrick Reed and Pat Perez. In the five events Johnson has played, he now has made just over $12.5 million. Uihlein’s team — Brooks Koepka is the captain — finished second, which was worth $375,00 for each team member. With the runner-up finish as an individual and team, Uihlein picked up nearly $2.2 million on Sunday. Smith let his short game do most of the damage. He made enough birdies on the front nine to stay in front, and hit a flop shop to a foot on the par-5 11th for another birdie. Uihlein made birdie on the 13th and looked as though he might be able to trim the deficit to one shot until Smith made his clutch par. Smith left no doubt at the end, hitting his approach over the water to 4 feet on the 17th to take a three-shot lead to the par-5 finish, and then holing an 18-foot birdie putt that gave his team a tie for third with Phil Mickelson’s team. Mickelson had his best round since joining Saudi-funded LIV Golf with a 66 and tied for eighth, his first top-10 finish in five events. Johnson is the only player from the 48-man field to have finished in the top 10 at every LIV Golf event. He was coming off a playoff victory two weeks ago outside Boston. Smith was No. 2 in the world when the 29-year-old Australian signed up with LIV Golf after the PGA Tour season ended, the highest-ranked player to join. Johnson remains one of the most significant players to sign up, a two-time major champion who was No. 1 in the world longer than any player since Tiger Woods. “He’s probably the one who you look at it feeling he’s going to be at the top of the leaderboard every week,” Smith said. “I hope he thinks the same of me, and hopefully, we can keep it going.” Sergio Garcia, criticized last week for withdrawing from the BMW PGA Championship after one round and showing up on the sideline of the Alabama-Texas football game, had a 67 and tied for fourth with Joaquin Niemann (68). The next LIV Golf event is in three weeks in Bangkok. The series does not return to America until the final team event at Trump Doral near Miami the last weekend in October. Cameron Smith hits his approach shot to the 18th green from the rough and next to a tree during the final round of the LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago tournament Sunday, Sept. 18, 2022, in Sugar Hill, Ill. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) Peter Uihlein watches his tee shot on the fourth hold during the final round of the LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago tournament Sunday, Sept. 18, 2022, in Sugar Hill, Ill. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) Cameron Smith, left, and Dustin Johnson head toward the fourth fairway during the final round of the LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago tournament Sunday, Sept. 18, 2022, in Sugar Hill, Ill. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) Cameron Smith acknowledges the crowd’s applause after wining the LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago tournament over Dustin Johnson, right, and Peter Uihlein, Sunday, Sept. 18, 2022, in Sugar Hill, Ill. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) Dustin Johnson watches his tee shot on the fourth hole during the final round of the LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago tournament Sunday, Sept. 18, 2022, in Sugar Hill, Ill. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) Print Headline: Smith wins LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago in second start with rival league Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Smith Wins LIV Golf Invitational-Chicago In Second Start With Rival League
Iran President Demands US 'guarantees' On Nuclear Deal | Macau Business
Iran President Demands US 'guarantees' On Nuclear Deal | Macau Business
Iran President Demands US 'guarantees' On Nuclear Deal | Macau Business https://digitalalabamanews.com/iran-president-demands-us-guarantees-on-nuclear-deal-macau-business/ Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi demanded US “guarantees” it will not withdraw again from a nuclear deal if it is revived ahead of his debut visit to the United Nations. With Western hopes fading for restoration of the landmark 2015 agreement with world powers, the hardline cleric said in a US television interview that he would still back a “good deal and a fair deal” But he said: “It needs to be lasting. There needs to be guarantees.” “We cannot trust the Americans because of the behavior that we have already seen from them. That is why if there is no guarantee, there is no trust,” he told CBS News’ “60 Minutes” program. Former president Barack Obama negotiated the agreement under which Iran drastically scaled back nuclear work in return for promises of sanctions relief. Three years later, Donald Trump pulled out and reimposed sweeping sanctions. President Joe Biden supports a return but Iran’s call for guarantees has become a sticking point, with the Democratic administration saying it is impossible in the US system to say what a future president would do. But Raisi said Trump’s pullout showed that US promises are “meaningless.” The parties to the 2015 deal — which also included Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia — saw it as the best way to stop the Islamic republic from building a nuclear bomb -– a goal Tehran has always denied. Raisi last year succeeded Hassan Rouhani, a relative moderate who spoke to Obama by telephone while visiting New York for the United Nations. EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell told AFP last week that negotiations to bring Iran back into the deal are stalemated, after proposals from the parties “were converging”. In early August a senior European Union official had said progress was being made on obstacles, including guarantees the US would not again scupper a deal. Three days later Borrell presented a “final” text of an agreement. A report from the UN’s nuclear watchdog earlier this month that it was unable to certify Iran’s nuclear program as “exclusively peaceful” has complicated diplomatic efforts to revive the deal. Iran is sticking to a demand that, to revive the 2015 deal, the International Atomic Energy Agency must conclude a probe launched when the agency found traces of nuclear material at three undeclared sites. Read More…
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Iran President Demands US 'guarantees' On Nuclear Deal | Macau Business
CBS Star Reporter Fears Were On The Brink Of Civil War
CBS Star Reporter Fears Were On The Brink Of Civil War
CBS Star Reporter Fears We’re On The Brink Of Civil War https://digitalalabamanews.com/cbs-star-reporter-fears-were-on-the-brink-of-civil-war/ In the books written about the plot to steal the 2020 election and the violent insurrection that followed, none have led with a 50-year-old high school teacher from Bucks County, Pennsylvania, afraid of a civil war. “This is not something I’ve seen in the history of this country, except for before the Civil War,” said Bob Harvie, the chair of the Bucks County Board of Elections, in the pages of The Big Truth, the new book from CBS News star Major Garrett and elections expert David Becker. “And it does scare me. I’m really worried we’re approaching a precipice that’s going to be impossible to come back from.” It’s people like Harvie who Garrett, the chief White House correspondent at CBS News, and Becker, the head of the ​Center for Election Innovation & Research, hoped to spotlight in their new book, The Big Truth: Upholding Democracy in the Age of “The Big Lie,” due out Tuesday from Diversion Books. The at-times distressing book tells the story of how democracy survived an unprecedented assault in 2020, often through the election officials who served as its soldiers. Featuring interviews with those in several pivotal states, lawmakers who fought to defend the election (and paid the electoral price for it), and political historians, the 283-page account reflects on the impact of the attack and how best to prevent it in the future. The idea for the book came just after the 2020 election, though it was rooted in both Garrett and Becker’s experiences in the months prior. The COVID-19 pandemic left Garrett unsure of how to do campaign reporting, particularly when no events or rallies were being held (to a certain extent). It led him to focus instead on how the election would be carried out, particularly as Donald Trump and his acolytes again laid the foundations to claim a “rigged” election. After the election, Garrett approached Becker, who served as CBS News’ election law expert, with the basic outline. “It was almost like the D-Day of elections,” Becker told The Daily Beast in a recent Zoom conversation with the pair. “American ingenuity and hard work—from liberal Democrats to conservative Republicans, from Alaska to Florida—paid off, and we somehow managed 160 million voters while 1,000 people were dying a day from a pandemic. And that story wasn’t being told.” Its necessity, however, became apparent after the Capitol riots, which seemed to serve as a culmination of a months-long, anti-democratic barrage. “After Jan. 6, David and I assumed that that would be the ultimate moment in which everyone would have said, ‘This is the abyss and we will all walk back from this abyss in a bipartisan way,’” Garrett said. “By the summer, it was clear that wasn’t happening, that there was already a recasting and a whitewashing of what Jan. 6 was, and a concerted effort by some Republicans, and certainly former President [Donald] Trump, to deny there was anything really wrong with Jan. 6.” The book serves, in their words, as a “meditation” on the Machiavellian plot, along with how such a scheme could be concocted. It opens with alternate Januarys in both 2023 and 2017, offering ideas of what the U.S. could or could have looked like had either Democrats employed the same tactics Republicans had after Hillary Clinton lost in 2016 or if Texas chooses to effectively secede if House Democrats waver on seating its delegation in the 2022 midterms. The portrayals are dramatic, if a tad alarmist, answers to the question: What could serve as the genesis of a modern-day civil war? The idea was to outline the worst-case scenarios in each of those contexts by referencing what had already happened, particularly as Texas had enacted laws directly in response to the Big Lie. Garrett said his first attempts at writing the chapters were even more climactic, requiring Becker to rein him in. “We didn’t want to terrify people,” Garrett said. However, both conceded that the written accounts were not too far off from reality. “We wanted to show people that what we’re talking about is just incremental steps from where we already are,” Garrett said. “I don’t think anyone reading that first chapter can honestly say, ‘Oh, that could never happen.’ They have to say, ‘Holy crap, we’re 85 percent there.’” The book does cover some well-worn territory, featuring interviews with outspoken Jan. 6 committee members Jamie Raskin (D-MD), Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), and Liz Cheney (R-WY), along with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. But it also roots itself in historical context, noting how elections were run in the past, how they persisted, and how that was tested in 2020. It examines past close calls, noting the tight election between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon; the public and legal spat between George W. Bush and Al Gore; and even some House Democrats objecting to certifying Trump’s win in 2017. It also examines the rhetoric and social media posts that stoked the flames of voter fraud and election irregularities, whether domestically or foreign-sourced. The goal was to highlight all possible examples the people who questioned the election often cited, hoping to contextualize—and not excuse—them to show how it didn’t mean the election was rigged. “You might have reasonable questions. Fine. We don’t discourage reasonable questions, and we don’t patronize those who have them,” Garrett said. “We try to write it in the spirit to say, ‘Fine, that’s okay. Not only do we not condemn you, we’re here for you.’ Because ultimately, David and I believe that there are far more people of goodwill and good faith in this country who, if they just step back a stride or two, will come to a different conclusion.” One element the two do not examine at all, however, is the role that media—particularly the powerful right-wing media ecosystem—played in elevating some of the wildest claims to the mainstream. Fox News and sister network Fox Business often touted many of the Trump campaign’s lies shortly after the election, even as the network’s own decision desk confirmed Trump’s loss. Those were further amplified by Fox impressionists Newsmax and One America News, where viewers often flocked—sometimes with Trump’s encouragement—when Fox became insufficiently pro-Lie. These outlets also featured guests who attacked Mark Zuckerberg’s multi-million-dollar donations to election organizations, including Becker’s Center for Election Innovation & Research, as “Zuckerbucks” that swayed the election in Biden’s favor—even when grants were distributed to states both Biden and Trump won. Trump-endorsed candidates have still tried to push those lies on Fox. Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake notably fought with news anchor Bret Baier in June over his refusal to cover the outlandish and discredited 2,000 Mules documentary, which falsely claims Democrats illegally paid people to dump ballots in pivotal states to swing the election. All three networks were later sued for defamation by voting system operators Dominion Voting Systems and Smartmatic, frequent villains of their coverage. The lawsuits emphasized the impact of their coverage in undermining confidence in the election, making the two authors’ decision to not examine conservative media’s influence all the more questionable. But Garrett defended the decision, arguing the two—including Garrett, who has been in the media for roughly 30 years—were better positioned to focus on the election processes instead of the media players that often tore them down. “Just to stay in our lane,” he said. “We don’t name and we don’t sift, because trust me, as you well know, sifting all of the various things that are conspiratorial or wacky in that space can take up a tremendous amount of time. And we just sort of wanted to be a little bit elevated above that.” Garrett, who served as Fox News’ senior White House correspondent until he left in 2010, did acknowledge his former employer’s complicity in allowing lies to run rampant. “It was a remarkable event for me to see the network attack its own decision desk, because I knew, based on my experience—12 years previous, so a lot of water had gone under the bridge—but it seemed to me that that decision desk was just as good as it had been when I was there,” Garrett said. “So all of that was remarkable to me, in the truest sense of the word.” He said the verdict on whether Fox can be salvaged will depend on its various election-related lawsuits. “Both litigants suing Fox have made it clear: They are not afraid of discovery, their systems will be opened,” Garrett said. “That tells me something about their orientation to what they do and how they do it. And whatever remedial steps will be taken, if they will be taken, will come as a result, I suspect, of that discovery process.” In its totality, though, the book is a “love letter to election officials” who protected the election from those attacks, whether from the media, campaign officials, or the former president himself. Becker noted how they were forced to operate those elections in person, even as COVID-19 left them sick, due to the nature of the job. “They do it not because it’s a job, but because it’s a calling,” Becker said. “They deserve a book that explains just how great a thing they accomplished in a moment of maximum personal peril, and the grips of a pandemic,” Garrett concurred. “This love letter became a much bigger meditation, but it’s still a love letter, and they deserve it.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
CBS Star Reporter Fears Were On The Brink Of Civil War
AP Sports SummaryBrief At 1:45 A.m. EDT
AP Sports SummaryBrief At 1:45 A.m. EDT
AP Sports SummaryBrief At 1:45 A.m. EDT https://digitalalabamanews.com/ap-sports-summarybrief-at-145-a-m-edt/ 49ers QB Trey Lance out for season with broken ankle SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — San Francisco 49ers quarterback Trey Lance will miss the rest of the season after breaking his right ankle. Lance went down after running the ball on the second drive of a 27-7 win over the Seattle Seahawks. A cart came out on the field and Lance’s leg was put into an air cast before he was taken off. The 49ers immediately announced he would not return. Lance’s teammates and several Seahawks players paid him respect before he left the field and was replaced by former starter Jimmy Garoppolo, who threw a touchdown pass on his first full drive and passed for 154 yards. San Francisco coach Kyle Shanahan announced Lance’s prognosis immediately after the game. Judge hits 58th and 59th homers, Yanks beat Brewers 12-8 MILWAUKEE (AP) — Aaron Judge hit his 58th and 59th home runs of the season to move within two of Roger Maris’ American League record with 16 games remaining and lead the New York Yankees over the Milwaukee Brewers 12-8. Judge added a two-run double in the ninth as part of a four-hit day for New York, which hit five homers and avoided a three-game sweep. The Yankees opened a 5 1/2-game lead over second-place Toronto in the AL East. Judge’s 11th multihomer game tied the season record set by Detroit’s Hank Greenberg 1938 and matched by the Chicago Cubs’ Sammy Sosa in 1998. Tagovailoa, Dolphins rally from 21 down to beat Ravens 42-38 BALTIMORE (AP) — Tua Tagovailoa threw for 469 yards and six touchdowns, four of which came during a spectacular fourth quarter as the Miami Dolphins rallied from a 21-point deficit to beat the Baltimore Ravens 42-38. Tagovailoa’s 7-yard touchdown pass to Jaylen Waddle with 14 seconds left completed the incredible comeback after Miami trailed 35-14 with under 13 minutes remaining. Tyreek Hill had touchdown catches of 48 and 60 yards during that rally, the latter of which tied the game with 5:19 to play. Justin Tucker kicked a 51-yard field goal with 2:18 remaining to put Baltimore ahead, but that was far too much time for Miami’s offense, which the Ravens didn’t come close to stopping in the final quarter. Week 2 provides a Comeback Sunday NFL hasn’t seen in years Call it a Comeback Sunday the NFL hasn’t seen in years.  The Dolphins and Cardinals made history by overcoming 20-point halftime deficits to win on the same day while the Jets rallied from a 13-point deficit in the final two minutes.  Two other teams almost joined the club. The Falcons fought back from a 28-3 third-quarter deficit – that score sounds familiar in Atlanta – only to fall short against the defending Super Bowl champion Los Angeles Rams.  Joe Burrow helped the Cincinnati Bengals erase a 17-3 halftime deficit in Dallas but Brett Maher kicked a 50-yard field goal as time expired to give the Cowboys a 20-17 win. Rodgers, Packers lean on Jones, take care of Bears 27-10 GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — Aaron Jones rushed for 132 yards and a touchdown and caught a scoring pass from Aaron Rodgers, who continued his domination of the Chicago Bears by leading the Green Bay Packers to a 27-10 victory. Green Bay bounced back from a season-opening 23-7 loss at Minnesota and beat the Bears for a seventh straight time, matching its second-longest win streak in the 205-game history of the NFL’s oldest rivalry. The Packers built a 24-7 halftime lead by dominating the second period, then made a goal-line stand in the fourth quarter to thwart a Bears comeback attempt. Rodgers went 19 of 25 for 234 yards and two touchdowns. AP Top 25 Reality Check: 3 weeks in, mystery teams plentiful Three weeks into the season and there are still more than few teams ranked in The Associated Press college football poll ranked that have a lot to prove. No. 4 Michigan is the prime example. The Wolverines have scored at least 50 in each of their first three games, but those opponents are a combined 0-9 against other FBS teams. But where it is ranked is based more on faith than accomplishments. Reality check rolls through the rankings this week, looking for mystery teams. Maher kick lifts Rush, Cowboys over Burrow, Bengals, 20-17 ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Brett Maher kicked a 50-yard field goal as time expired, and the Dallas Cowboys held on to beat the Cincinnati Bengals 20-17 after losing a two-touchdown halftime lead. Joe Burrow got the Bengals even at 17-17 by leading a 19-play drive in the fourth quarter, throwing a 5-yard touchdown pass to Tee Higgins and finding Tyler Boyd for the 2-point conversion. After the Cowboys stopped the Bengals with about a minute remaining, Cooper Rush got the Cowboys in range for Maher to help Dallas win the second time in two career starts filling in for the injured Dak Prescott. Aces poised to capture multiple WNBA tiles with Wilson, Gray The Las Vegas Aces are poised to win multiple championships over the next few years with core players like A’ja Wilson and Chelsea Gray signed to deals that will keep them in Nevada. Wilson has already won two MVPs and is just 26 years old. She also won defensive player of the year honors for the first time and helped the Aces win their first WNBA crown on Sunday. She’ll be key in helping the Aces defend their title next year. Winning back-to-back titles hasn’t been easy feat recently as no team has won consecutive WNBA championships since the Los Angeles Sparks did it in 2001 and 2002. Murphy’s 59-yard OT fumble return ends Cards’ win over Vegas LAS VEGAS (AP) — Byron Murphy Jr. scooped up Hunter Renfrow’s fumble and returned it 59 yards for a touchdown with 3:51 left in overtime and the Arizona Cardinals rallied from a 20-point deficit in the second half before running away with a 29-23 victory over the Las Vegas Raiders. Renfrow made a catch and fumbled while trying to stretch forward and Murphy snagged the loose ball and sprinted down the Cardinals’ sideline to the end zone. Murphy scored the touchdown that capped a phenomenal late rally started by Kyler Murray, who rushed for a touchdown as time expired and then threw a 2-point conversion pass to A.J. Green. Flacco rallies Jets to stunning 31-30 comeback over Browns CLEVELAND (AP) — Joe Flacco’s 15-yard touchdown pass to rookie Garrett Wilson with 22 seconds left rallied the New York Jets to a 31-30 win over the Cleveland Browns who blew a two-touchdown lead in the final two minutes. On third-and-10 Flacco, who had four TD passes, found a streaking Wilson over the middle. Earlier the 10th overall pick had dropped a crucial pass that allowed the Browns to open their lead. Nick Chubb’s third rushing TD put Cleveland up by 13 with 1:55 left. Rookie kicker Cade York pushed his extra point to the right after making a 58-yard field goal in the final seconds to beat Carolina last week. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Read More…
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AP Sports SummaryBrief At 1:45 A.m. EDT
Iran President Demands US 'guarantees' On Nuclear Deal Iraqi News
Iran President Demands US 'guarantees' On Nuclear Deal Iraqi News
Iran President Demands US 'guarantees' On Nuclear Deal – Iraqi News https://digitalalabamanews.com/iran-president-demands-us-guarantees-on-nuclear-deal-iraqi-news/ Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi attends the Shanghai Cooperation Organization leaders’ summit in Samarkand, Uzbekistan on September 16, 2022 New York – Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi demanded US “guarantees” it will not withdraw again from a nuclear deal if it is revived ahead of his debut visit to the United Nations. With Western hopes fading for restoration of the landmark 2015 agreement with world powers, the hardline cleric said in a US television interview that he would still back a “good deal and a fair deal” But he said: “It needs to be lasting. There needs to be guarantees.” “We cannot trust the Americans because of the behavior that we have already seen from them. That is why if there is no guarantee, there is no trust,” he told CBS News’ “60 Minutes” program. Former president Barack Obama negotiated the agreement under which Iran drastically scaled back nuclear work in return for promises of sanctions relief. Three years later, Donald Trump pulled out and reimposed sweeping sanctions. President Joe Biden supports a return but Iran’s call for guarantees has become a sticking point, with the Democratic administration saying it is impossible in the US system to say what a future president would do. But Raisi said Trump’s pullout showed that US promises are “meaningless.” The parties to the 2015 deal — which also included Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia — saw it as the best way to stop the Islamic republic from building a nuclear bomb -– a goal Tehran has always denied. Raisi last year succeeded Hassan Rouhani, a relative moderate who spoke to Obama by telephone while visiting New York for the United Nations. EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell told AFP last week that negotiations to bring Iran back into the deal are stalemated, after proposals from the parties “were converging”. In early August a senior European Union official had said progress was being made on obstacles, including guarantees the US would not again scupper a deal. Three days later Borrell presented a “final” text of an agreement. A report from the UN’s nuclear watchdog earlier this month that it was unable to certify Iran’s nuclear program as “exclusively peaceful” has complicated diplomatic efforts to revive the deal. Iran is sticking to a demand that, to revive the 2015 deal, the International Atomic Energy Agency must conclude a probe launched when the agency found traces of nuclear material at three undeclared sites. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Iran President Demands US 'guarantees' On Nuclear Deal Iraqi News
Iran To Open UN Fight To Free Billions Frozen In US Iraqi News
Iran To Open UN Fight To Free Billions Frozen In US Iraqi News
Iran To Open UN Fight To Free Billions Frozen In US – Iraqi News https://digitalalabamanews.com/iran-to-open-un-fight-to-free-billions-frozen-in-us-iraqi-news/ The Hague – Iran opens its legal battle before the UN’s top court Monday to unfreeze billions of dollars in US assets, which Washington says must go to victims of terrorist attacks blamed on Tehran. The case before the International Court of Justice comes as hopes fade of reviving a landmark deal — which former US president Donald Trump withdrew from in 2018 — that sought to tame Iran’s nuclear ambitions. Tehran took Washington to the Hague-based ICJ in 2016 after the US Supreme Court ordered some $2 billion in Iranian assets to be frozen, ordering the cash to go to survivors and relatives of attacks blamed on the Islamic republic. These included the 1983 bombing of a US Marine barracks in Beirut which killed 299 people including 241 US soldiers, and the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia which left 19 dead. Iran, however, said the freezing of the funds breached the 1955 Treaty of Amity with the United States, an agreement signed before Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution severed relations between the countries. Tehran argued the United States had illegally seized Iranian financial assets and those of Iranian companies — and with Iran’s clerical regime facing economic difficulties after sanctions and runaway consumer prices, resolving the case is crucial. In turn Washington had unsuccessfully tried to disqualify the lawsuit by arguing that Iran’s “unclean hands” — a reference to Tehran’s suspected backing of terrorist groups — should disqualify its lawsuit to recover the $2 billion of assets.  The US announced in October 2018 that it was pulling out of the Treaty of Amity after the ICJ in a separate case ordered Washington to lift nuclear-related sanctions on humanitarian goods for Iran. The ICJ is the top court of the United Nations and was set up after World War II to resolve disputes between member states. Its rulings are binding and cannot be appealed, but it has no means of enforcing them. – Stalled talks – Monday’s hearing, to which US representatives are set to reply on Wednesday, comes as hopes fade to revive a 2015 nuclear deal between Tehran and the West which gives Iran sanctions relief in return for restricting its nuclear programme. Former US President Donald Trump pulled out of what he called the “terrible” international nuclear agreement in 2018 and began reimposing sanctions, prompting Tehran to roll back its commitments made under the pact, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA. Talks have been ongoing in Vienna since April last year, aimed at restoring the agreement by lifting sanctions on Tehran once again and pushing Iran to fully honour its obligations. But European powers nine days ago raised “serious doubts” over Iran’s sincerity in seeking a nuclear agreement, adding that Tehran continued “to escalate its nuclear programme way beyond any plausible civilian justification.” The statement by France, Germany and Britain came a day after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken assessed that Iran’s latest reply on the nuclear deal is a step “backwards”. EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell — who had been coordinating talks over the past year and a half — told AFP last week that negotiations were in “stalemate.”  The disputes with Iran include Tehran’s insistence that the UN nuclear watchdog close a probe into three undeclared sites suspected of previous nuclear work. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Iran To Open UN Fight To Free Billions Frozen In US Iraqi News
Erasing QAnon Fascism: A Case Study In Black Comedy
Erasing QAnon Fascism: A Case Study In Black Comedy
Erasing QAnon Fascism: A Case Study In Black Comedy https://digitalalabamanews.com/erasing-qanon-fascism-a-case-study-in-black-comedy/ Karl Marx famously wrote in the Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte that historical facts appear twice, “the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce.” Following this observation, journalists’ longstanding denial of the fascist implications of Trump’s ties to QAnon long ago ventured into black comedy. President Biden recently referred to Trumpism – of which QAnon is a big part – as “semi-fascism.” He described Trump during the 2020 election season as “sort of like Goebbels.” This was in reference to the Big Lie propaganda that Trump popularized during the election, and which was used to stoke fascist violence on January 6. As Goebbels and Hitler infamously recognized regarding the Big Lie, if you say it enough, people will believe it. The QAnon connection, perhaps more than anything else, demonstrates Trump’s commitment to fascist politics. Consider the history thus far. During the run-up to the 2020 election, Trump retweeted QAnon accounts repeatedly. On the afternoon of the Fourth of July (2020), Trump retweeted from QAnon accounts 14 times. In the months before July Fourth, Media Matters documented that Trump retweeted 90 posts from QAnon supporters, and from 49 different QAnon accounts. He was later booted from Twitter and Facebook for stoking the January 6 insurrection – which itself included a strong QAnon presence. Trump continued to repost QAnon accounts on his new social media forum, Truth Social. As the New York Times reported last month, Trump has “amplified content” from 30 QAnon accounts to his nearly 4 million followers, “reposting their messages 65 times since he became active on the platform in April.” In sum, Trump has posted QAnon related content more than 150 times between 2020 and 2022, and across multiple social media venues. It strains credulity to argue that one can accidentally post QAnon content 150 times. These posts are deliberate, and Trump is clearly part of a political community that’s committed to normalizing the QAnon movement and its values. Trump actively winked at and collaborated with QAnon fascists throughout the 2020 election season. In the wake of the election, he met in the White House or collaborated in his campaign with numerous QAnon supporters, including “My Pillow” CEO Mike Lindell, ex-felon and retired general Michael Flynn, and lawyer Sydney Powell. The meeting with Powell and Flynn was to strategize about how to overturn the election results. When asked about the QAnon movement by reporters, Trump acknowledged that its supporters “like me very much” and he described them as patriots who “love America.” When asked by reporter Savannah Guthrie about his retweeting of QAnon personalities, Trump said that the movement was “very much against pedophilia. They fight it very hard.” And yet, he’s played dumb on QAnon by insisting that “I know nothing about it” – a point he believes allows him plausible deniability to deny his obvious ties to the movement. This is classic Trumpian gaslighting – it empowers him to continue mainstreaming the movement, while claiming not to be a supporter. In recent days, Trump has finally abandoned his claim of being ignorant to what QAnon is, and now explicitly embraces the movement. On his Truth Social platform, and as Vice reports, he “shared a picture of himself wearing a Q lapel pin, overlaid with the QAnon phrases, ‘The Storm is Coming’ and ‘WWG1WGA’” (“Where we go one, we go all”). As I’ve previously written in my book, Rising Fascism in America: It Can Happen Here, the QAnon movement is best classified as neofascist in political orientation. QAnon’s “conspiratorial politics are based on the claim that Democratic leaders are vampiric pedophile Satanists. This claim is recycled form Nazi-era propaganda, drawn from the ‘blood libel’ claims offered by the Third Reich, which posited that Jews needed to be targeted for elimination because of their efforts to drink the blood of children.” This propaganda claim is drawn straight from the notoriously antisemitic Russian propaganda pamphlet, “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion,” which was published at the turn of the twentieth century and warned about a secret Jewish plot to conquer the world. The antisemitic bent of QAnon is further revealed by mid-2022 polling from Morning Consult, which finds that half of the movement’s supporters subscribe to the belief that liberalism has “equipped Jews to destroy institutions, and in turn gain control of the world.” Looking at historical definitions of fascism, which I explore at length in Rising Fascism in America, QAnon checks the boxes on many fronts to be classified as a neofascist movement. Its members embrace the cult of personality, blindly believing that Donald Trump, who is framed almost as a deity figure, will defeat the “deep state” pedophiles by publicly executing Democratic officials, including Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and Joe Biden, and targeting the news media, Hollywood, and elements of the professional bureaucracy, which are all portrayed as complicit with the deep state. This cultist worship of Trump is also reflected in QAnoners’ support for a coup against the Biden administration, and with Q supporters prophesizing that Trump will be reimposed as president, despite clearly losing the 2020 election. As fascism goes, the cultist attachment to Trump overlaps well with the blind worship of Hitler in the classic era of fascism. Additionally, QAnon is authoritarian and dictatorial in its politics. It sees Trump as a would-be dictator who will rule over the American people and defeat the ominous, omnipresent “deep state” pedophilic threat. Contempt for democracy is another major facet of classical fascism, as is the antisemitism that QAnon traffics in, including their blood libel propaganda. Finally, QAnon is fascist in its commitment to eliminationism. It depicts the Republican Party’s and Trump’s political adversaries as demonic and beyond the pale – as an existential threat to American society and its children. Its supporters explicitly call for the public execution of Democratic officials. Trump has echoed this eliminationism in his recent attack on Biden, whom he called “an enemy of the state.” Eliminationism was also core to Third Reich fascism, via the consistent demonization of Jews as a threat to Aryan “pure blood,” and as representing a fifth column threat working on behalf of communist revolution (“Jewish Bolshevism”) that must be eradicated. For Trump to explicitly embrace QAnon and remove any remaining (willful) ignorance about his feelings toward the movement is of incredible significance to the future of what remains of American democracy. Sadly, U.S. political discourse has consistently failed to stress the severity of the threat at hand. Aside from Biden’s occasional references to Trumpism as a fascist threat, mainstream U.S. political discourse has been overwhelmingly reluctant to acknowledge the fascist politics of QAnon, and by extension, of Trump himself. My review of the Nexis Uni academic database reveals that “QAnon” was referenced in 312 articles from the New York Times in the first 8 months of 2022. Of those pieces, just three – less than one percent – refer to “fascism” or “fascist” tendencies alongside discussions of QAnon. Similarly, CNN ran 137 segments mentioning QAnon during this period, with just six of them – less than five percent of the total – referencing Q alongside discussions of “fascism” or “fascist” politics. At the Democratically oriented MSNBC, QAnon was mentioned in 181 segments during the first 8 months of 2022, with just 10 – less than six percent – discussing the movement alongside references to “fascism” or “fascist” politics [1]. U.S. political culture is notorious for downplaying the risks of Trumpian fascism. For years, political commentators, scholars, intellectuals, reporters, and government officials have downplayed the specter of rising fascism as the sort of thing that “can’t happen here” in a country (allegedly) as exceptional in its commitment to democracy as the United States. Trump’s now open support for QAnon is the final nail in the coffin for the fascism deniers, as it represents his open descent into the world of conspiratorial neofascism. The country is at a crossroads. We can address the threat now or pay the price later. The simple answer for how to combat it is to cut the head off of the snake of Trumpian fascism. Cults don’t just replace their leaders when they’re neutralized, and there’s little reason to think another rightwing personality – like a Tucker Carlson or Ron DeSantis – will simply slip into the role of the next Trumpian would-be dictator. Trump has openly violated numerous national laws for which he needs to be punished. Whether it be promoting a national insurrection on January 6 – which is a clear violation of federal law – or trying to extort a state official in Georgia (Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger) to manufacture fake votes and throw the 2020 election, or his violation of national security law by illegally holding classified government documents, there are multiple points of attack against the former president. I don’t believe blue state America will agree to be ruled over by a would-be dictator if Trump succeeds in 2024 in getting Republican-controlled swing states to nullify electoral victories for a Democratic candidate via bogus claims of “voter fraud.” What is more likely is that the country will collapse in a state of civil strife, instability, and violence, as it degenerates into uncontrolled violence (stoked by Trump), and as Trump seeks to impose himself as the next president against the will of the people. The Republican Party’s crisis of identity under Trump long ago reached a fever pitch. Without the party’s rank and file standing up and rejecting Trump as their presum...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Erasing QAnon Fascism: A Case Study In Black Comedy
Proud Boys Memo Reveals Meticulous Planning For street-Level Violence
Proud Boys Memo Reveals Meticulous Planning For street-Level Violence
Proud Boys Memo Reveals Meticulous Planning For ‘street-Level Violence’ https://digitalalabamanews.com/proud-boys-memo-reveals-meticulous-planning-for-street-level-violence/ The document is so dowdy and formal it resembles the annual minutes of a society of tax accountants. Its index lists sections on “objectives” and “rules of engagement” and carries an “addendum” that provides recommendations for hotels and parking. On the cover, two words give a clue to the notoriety of the group that produced it: “MAGA” and “WARNING”. That and the date: 5 January 2021, the day before the US Capitol attack. What goes unsaid on the cover and is barely mentioned throughout the 23 pages is that this is the work of one of the most violent political gangs in America, the far-right street fighters who Donald Trump told to “stand back and stand by”: the Proud Boys. The document, published by the Guardian for the first time, gives a very rare insight into the meticulous planning that goes into events staged by the far-right club. The Proud Boys have been designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center and are alleged to have acted as key organizers of the violent assault on the Capitol. In the wake of January 6, which has been linked to the deaths of nine people, the New York march featured in the document was called off and the strategy so fastidiously laid out was never implemented. But the document remains sharply revealing. It shows the lengths to which the Proud Boys go to prepare for potentially violent encounters and then to cover their tracks – something prosecutors have stressed but that has never been seen in the group’s own words. It exposes the militaristic structure and language the Proud Boys have adopted, and their aspiration to become the frontline vigilante force in a Trump-led America. It also provides clues as to how the group continues to spread its tentacles throughout the US despite the fact that many of its top leaders, including its national chairman, Enrique Tarrio, are behind bars awaiting trial on charges of seditious conspiracy. The purpose of the document is to provide a “strategic security plan” and call to action, summoning Proud Boys members to a pro-Trump Maga march that was scheduled for New York City on 10 January 2021. That was four days after Congress was to certify Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election – the occasion that would be targeted by the fatal insurrection. The document was obtained from a Proud Boys member by the extremism reporter Andy Campbell as he researched his new book, We Are Proud Boys: How a Right-Wing Street Gang Ushered in a New Era of American Extremism. The book will be published on Tuesday. Campbell shared the document with the Guardian. The author of the document is Randy Ireland, who as president of the group’s New York branch, the Hell’s Gate Bridge Chapter, is one of the most prominent Proud Boys in the US north-east. The paper was circulated through Telegram, the encrypted chat app widely used by the Proud Boys as an organizing tool, to at least nine other chapters in New York and beyond. Campbell told the Guardian the decentralized structure of the group, into what it claims are 157 active chapters in all but three states, is one of the Proud Boys’ greatest strengths, as reflected in the autonomous nature of the New York planning. “Chapter leaders like Randy can create their own events, run independently of each other,” Campbell said. “Enrique Tarrio and other leaders are in prison, but these guys are going to continue what they are doing.” ‘We will not disappoint’ The language in the planning paper is overtly militaristic. Ireland designates himself “General of Security Detail”, while his underlings in the chain of command are “VPs” of “Recruiting”, “Scout Security” and “Team Leads”. The plan is for 60 or so Proud Boys at the 10 January event in Manhattan to be corralled into seven “tactical teams” of five to eight men each (they are all men, as one of the overriding values of the group is misogyny). Members are told to bring protective gear, including “knife/stab protection, helmets, gloves, boots etc” and to make use of radio channels, walkie-talkies or Telegram to communicate with each other. They are to stick together in groups and under no circumstances allow “Normies” – ordinary Trump supporters who are not Proud Boys – or “Females” into their ranks. “Their presence will jeopardise the health and safety of all those involved with Security, and simply cannot be allowed to happen!” Ireland writes. Maps reproduced at the back of the document show positions “scouts” and “tactical teams” should adopt at key points along the route of the march, which was planned to start at Columbus Circle and pass Trump Tower. “That spot is understood in a very public way to hold special meaning for us,” the paper says, referring to Trump’s home on Fifth Avenue. “WE WILL NOT DISAPPOINT!” Campbell, who has been reporting on the Proud Boys since they started turning up at Trump rallies in early 2017, describes them as America’s most notorious political fight club. In the planning paper, he sees equal parts fantasy and danger. “These guys see themselves as super soldiers, like some sort of military outfit,” he said. “On one level it’s funny, as nothing is in fact going to pan out the way they say it will. But on another level, it’s alarming because it shows how much thought they put into this stuff.” In We Are Proud Boys, Campbell traces the group from its birth in 2015-16 through to its central role on January 6 when a member, Dominic Pezzola, became the first person to breach the US Capitol. At least 30 Proud Boys have been charged in relation to the insurrection, including Tarrio and four others accused of seditious conspiracy – among the most serious indictments yet handed down. The group was invented by the British-born founder of Vice magazine, Gavin McInnes, who branded himself a “western chauvinist” and peddled in bigotry. McInnes floated the Proud Boys name on his online chatshow in May 2016, introducing them as a “gang” and inventing a uniform, a black Fred Perry polo shirt with yellow trim. McInnes was careful to brand his creation as harmless fun, a satirical male-only patriotic drinking club that later attached itself to all things Trump. But Campbell argues that from the outset political violence was baked in. A Proud Boy was an organizer of the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, during which an anti-fascist protester was murdered. The group has held violent gatherings in Portland, Oregon. Outside a Republican event in New York in 2018, several members were arrested and charged with felonious assault. ‘Street-level violence’ Proud Boys membership is structured into four ranks, known as “degrees”, the fourth granted once you “get arrested or get in a serious violent fight for the cause”, as McInnes himself explained. In an interview with Campbell for the book, McInnes denied promoting violence and insisted the Proud Boys were never proactively aggressive, only reacting to leftwing attacks. That official line is reiterated in the document published by the Guardian. Ireland is careful to portray the Proud Boys as a defensive group. He writes: “If any violence does spout off, all Proud Boys are expected to respond immediately – only so far as to eliminate and end that threat to them or others. VERY IMPORTANT: Once the threat has been neutralized, WE STOP!” But there is a glaring contradiction: Ireland presents his chapter as a non-violent organization yet it goes out seeking violence. He assigns the group, uninvited, the role of a vigilante police force. “We are there as the first line of defense for all event attendees,” he writes, then contradicts himself by saying the only role of the Proud Boys is to play a “back-up role” to law enforcement and to “force them to do their jobs”. That speaks volumes. It carries the implication that if the police will not assail anti-fascist protesters, Proud Boys will. “I’ve reported at Proud Boys events where they stood back and relaxed as police lobbed teargas and other munitions into the crowd of counter-protesters,” Campbell said. “Then the Proud Boys didn’t have to do what Randy Ireland is hinting at here – step in and do the fighting themselves.” For Campbell, the most disturbing aspect of the document is that, with its soft-lensed double-talk and contradictory meanings, it falls into arguably the main ambition of the Proud Boys: the normalization of political violence. Despite having so many leaders behind bars, the group is prospering. As new chapters pop up, Americans are increasingly inured to the idea of heavily armed gangs in public settings. Proud Boys have posed as “security details” at anti-abortion rallies, anti-vaccination demonstrations, pro-gun protests and of course Trump rallies. “The street-level violence the Proud Boys helped to create is now being carried out by regular people,” Campbell said. “You saw it on January 6, you see it at Planned Parenthood and LGBTQ+ events where people are harassed and attacked by everyday Americans.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Proud Boys Memo Reveals Meticulous Planning For street-Level Violence
How To Watch Queen Elizabeth II
How To Watch Queen Elizabeth II
How To Watch Queen Elizabeth II https://digitalalabamanews.com/how-to-watch-queen-elizabeth-ii/   Updated 10:00 AM / September 18, 2022 How to watch Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral service What: The funeral service for Queen Elizabeth II Date: Monday, September 19, 2022 Time: Live coverage begins at 5:30 a.m. ET Location: Westminster Abbey in London, England On TV: CBS News live coverage anchored by Norah O’Donnell and Gayle King — find your local station here Online stream: Live on CBS News in the video player above and on your mobile or streaming device    60m ago Queen’s lying-in-state ends ahead of her funeral A day packed with funeral events in London and Windsor began early on Monday when the doors of 900-year-old Westminster Hall were closed to mourners after hundreds of thousands had filed in front of Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin since Sept 14. Many had spent cold nights on line outdoors to pay their respects at the foot of the flag-draped coffin in a moving outpouring of national grief. The closing of the hall marked the end of four full days of the coffin lying in state.  Monday has been declared a public holiday in honor of Elizabeth. Her funeral will be broadcast live to over 200 countries and territories worldwide and screened to crowds in parks and public spaces across the country. Police officers from around the country will be on duty as part of the biggest one-day policing operation in London’s history.    Updated 9:30 AM / September 18, 2022 The extraordinary life of Queen Elizabeth II Born in 1926, Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor was not originally destined to be queen. But that changed in 1936, when she was 10 years old, because her uncle Edward VIII abdicated to marry American divorcée Wallis Simpson, and Elizabeth’s father, George VI, took his place. Princess Elizabeth rapidly became a public favorite. During World War II, she not only worked to raise the country’s morale, appealing to her fellow Britons on public radio to “make the world of tomorrow a better and happier place,” she also served as a volunteer in the war effort, training as a mechanic in the women’s auxiliary service. Queen Elizabeth II through the years 76 photos Her marriage to Philip Mountbatten in 1947 give a war-weary country something to celebrate. Their children — Charles, then Anne, Andrew and Edward — re-established the royal line. Her marriage to Philip lasted 73 years, until his death on April 9, 2021, at the age of 99. Elizabeth was just 25 years old when she inherited the throne in February 1952, following the death of her father, George VI. Her coronation in June of the following year was the first ever to be televised. Duty was the royal family’s ethos under Elizabeth’s reign. “I declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to your service,” she once told the nation.  It was a promise she kept longer than any other British monarch in history, celebrating her Platinum Jubilee — 70 years on the throne — just months before her passing. Queen Elizabeth honored with grand procession through London 03:58 Her reign, however, was not without controversy.  Some protesters question the value of monarchical traditions in modern times and the concentration of inherited wealth in the family’s hands. In lands once ruled by the British Empire, a painful history of subjugation and the brutality of the slave trade still resonate in current events. Queen Elizabeth II’s unlikely path to the throne and the legacy she leaves behind 05:35   Updated 9:20 AM / September 18, 2022 Royal family’s new roles A series of changes rippled through Britain’s royal family following the death of its longtime matriarch. Elizabeth’s eldest son and heir, Prince Charles, was immediately elevated to sovereign and became King Charles III. His wife, Camilla, took on the title queen consort. Among Charles’ first official acts was to announce that his older son, Prince William, who is now next in line to the throne, has been granted the title Prince of Wales, the role Charles himself held for over 50 years. William’s wife Catherine is now Princess of Wales — a title last held by William and Harry’s mother, the late Princess Diana.  Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex — who gave up working as senior royals in 2020 and moved to California — did not receive new titles. But their children, 3-year-old Archie and 1-year-old Lilibet, gained the right to be known as prince and princess, as grandchildren of the monarch. Britain’s royal line of succession 32 photos   Updated 9:15 AM / September 18, 2022 Significance of Westminster Abbey Westminster Abbey, where the funeral is being held, has a long and storied history. In addition to being the site of Britain’s monarchical coronations since 1066, the abbey was also a special place to the late queen herself during her 96-plus years.  In 1947, at the age of 21, then-Princess Elizabeth married Prince Philip at Westminster Abbey’s altar. Five years later, her coronation was held here.  The flag flies at half mast at Westminster Abbey in London on September 12, 2022, following the death of Queen Elizabeth II on September 8. MARCO BERTORELLO/AFP via Getty Images Family joy would follow with the marriage of her grandson Prince William to Kate Middleton here in 2011. Family sorrow would come, too, with the funeral of the queen’s mother in 2002, and then the funeral of her husband in 2021. The last time a monarch’s funeral was held in Westminster Abbey itself was 262 years ago, for King George II. “This is Westminster Abbey. This is her majesty the queen. I think you can assume that you’re going to see tradition in action — great, living tradition in action,” said the Very Reverend Dr. David Hoyle, who was appointed by the queen as the 39th Dean of Westminster Abbey, and who is tasked with leading the service.  “I think the job of the abbey and the job of people like me, to some extent, is to keep stitching the story together — to say it’s possible in pretty divided and volatile times to say, all this can be gathered in, reconciled, redeemed, celebrated. So, her majesty’s reign, which started in the abbey, comes to an end in the abbey. It’s a bit more of stitching the story together.” Read more here. Read More…
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How To Watch Queen Elizabeth II
State NFL Roundup: Tyreek Hill Explodes In Miami Rally
State NFL Roundup: Tyreek Hill Explodes In Miami Rally
State NFL Roundup: Tyreek Hill Explodes In Miami Rally https://digitalalabamanews.com/state-nfl-roundup-tyreek-hill-explodes-in-miami-rally/ The Miami Dolphins traded five draft choices to the Kansas City Chiefs in March for wide receiver Tyreek Hill with the hope that the six-time Pro Bowler could help unlock the potential of quarterback Tua Tagovailoa. In their first game together, the former West Alabama standout caught eight passes for 94 yards in a 20-7 victory over the New England Patriots on Sept. 11. The lock popped open on Sunday, when Tagovailoa threw for 469 yards and six touchdowns in the Dolphins’ 42-38 victory over the Baltimore Ravens. MORE NFL: · ALABAMA ROUNDUP: JAYLEN WADDLE CAPS BIG DAY WITH GAME-WINNING CATCH · AUBURN ROUNDUP: JAMEL DEAN POSTS 2 FOURTH-QUARTER PICKS IN BUCS’ VICTORY · TUA TAGOVAILOA THROWS 6 TD PASSES IN DOLPHINS’ COMEBACK Hill had 11 receptions for 190 yards and two touchdowns. In reaching 190 receiving yards in a game for the fourth time in his NFL career, Hill caught touchdown passes of 48 and 60 yards. Since entering the NFL in 2016, Hill has 23 touchdown plays that covered at least 45 yards – 10 more than any other player during that time. Hill’s TD receptions came on consecutive possessions in the fourth quarter as the Dolphins wiped out a 21-point deficit in the final period to improve to 2-0 this season. Miami wide receiver Jaylen Waddle caught 11 passes for 171 yards and two touchdowns on Sunday as he and Hill became the first pair of teammates in NFL history with at least 10 receptions, 150 receiving yards and two touchdown receptions in the same game. Hill was among the 34 players from Alabama high schools and colleges (excluding Alabama and Auburn) who got on the field on the second Sunday of the NFL’s 103rd season. Three other former state players were involved in the Miami-Baltimore game: · Dolphins outside linebacker Trey Flowers (Columbia) made one tackle in his first game for Miami. · Ravens outside linebacker Jeremiah Moon (Hoover) is on the practice squad and not eligible to play. · Michael Pierce (Daphne, Samford) started at nose tackle for the Ravens. Pierce made two tackles. In the other Sunday games: New York Jets 31, Cleveland Browns 30 · Kwon Alexander (Oxford) started at linebacker for the Jets. Alexander made seven tackles, including one behind the line of scrimmage. · Browns offensive tackle Chris Hubbard (UAB) was designated as a game-day inactive. · Jets defensive end Bryce Huff (St. Paul’s Episcopal) was designated as a game-day inactive. · Jets punter Ty Long (UAB) is on the practice squad and not eligible to play. · Browns wide receiver Chester Rogers (Lee-Huntsville) is on the practice squad and not eligible to play. · Quincy Williams (Wenonah) started at linebacker for the Jets. Williams made five tackles. · Browns defensive end Alex Wright (Elba, UAB) broke up a pass. Detroit Lions 36, Washington Commanders 27 · Bobby McCain (Oxford) started at free safety for the Commanders. McCain made six tackles. · Commanders running back J.D. McKissic (Central-Phenix City) caught seven passes for 54 yards and ran three times for 9 yards. · Commanders safety Jeremy Reaves (South Alabama) made three tackles on special teams. · Logan Stenberg (James Clemens) started at right guard for the Lions. Jacksonville Jaguars 24, Indianapolis Colts 0 · Josh Allen (Abbeville) started at outside linebacker for the Jaguars. Allen made three tackles, recorded two sacks and forced a fumble. Indianapolis recovered the first-quarter fumble forced by Allen on his first sack. Allen got a third-down sack in the second quarter. · Jaguars tight end Gerrit Prince (UAB) is on the practice squad and not eligible to play. · Jaguars defensive end/outside linebacker Jordan Smith (UAB) is on injured reserve and not eligible to play. · Jaguars cornerback Darious Williams (UAB) made one tackle. Tampa Bay Buccaneers 20, New Orleans Saints 10 · Saints wide receiver Kawaan Baker (South Alabama) is on reserve/suspended by the commissioner and is not eligible to play. · Buccaneers defensive lineman Rakeem Nunez-Roches (Central-Phenix City) made one tackle. · Buccaneers safety Nolan Turner (Vestavia Hills) is on the practice squad and not eligible to play. · Jameis Winston (Hueytown) started at quarterback for the Saints. Winston completed 25-of-40 passes for 236 yards with one touchdown and three interceptions. All of Winston’s interceptions came in the fourth quarter, as did the touchdown pass – a 7-yard connection with wide receiver Michael Thomas with 3:02 to play. RELATED: WHAT’S WRONG WITH JAMEIS WINSTON’S BACK? New York Giants 19, Carolina Panthers 16 · Cordale Flott (Saraland) started at right cornerback for the Giants. Flott made his first NFL tackle in his first NFL start. · Panthers cornerback Tae Hayes (Decatur) is on the practice squad and not eligible to play. · Kadarius Toney (Blount) started at wide receiver for the Giants. Toney had two receptions – one gained 2 yards and one lost 2 yards. · Nick Williams (Minor, Samford) started at defensive end for the Giants. Williams made two tackles. New England Patriots 17, Pittsburgh Steelers 14 · Patriots cornerback Marcus Jones (Enterprise, Troy) was designated as a game-day inactive. · Steelers wide receiver George Pickens (Hoover) caught a 23-yard pass for Pittsburgh’s biggest gainer of the game. · Steelers outside linebacker Malik Reed (Dothan) made four tackles and registered a quarterback hit. · Steelers offensive tackle Trent Scott (Lee-Huntsville) dressed for the game but did not play. Los Angeles Rams 31, Atlanta Falcons 27 · Rams offensive lineman Chandler Brewer (Florence) is on the practice squad and not eligible to play. · Anthony Rush (UAB) started at defensive tackle for the Falcons. Rush made one tackle. San Francisco 49ers 27, Seattle Seahawks 7 · Mike Jackson (Spain Park) started at left cornerback for the Seahawks. Jackson made a career-high six tackles and scored his first NFL touchdown. When Seattle cornerback Tariq Woolen blocked a 20-yard field-goal attempt by Robbie Gould, Jackson grabbed the bouncing football and ran 86 yards to the end zone as the Seahawks cut San Francisco’s lead to 20-7 with 5:25 left in the third quarter. · Forty-Niners tight end Jordan Matthews (Madison Academy) is on injured reserve and not eligible to play. · Forty-Niners safety Jimmie Ward (Davidson) is on injured reserve and not eligible to play. Dallas Cowboys 20, Cincinnati Bengals 17 · Bengals cornerback Allan George (Andalusia) is on the practice squad and not eligible to play. · Bengals kicker Evan McPherson (Fort Payne) made his three attempts – field goals of 43, 50 and 46 yards – for Cincinnati’s first nine points. · Bengals cornerback Cam Taylor-Britt (Park Crossing) is on injured reserve and not eligible to play. · Cowboys wide receiver Jalen Tolbert (McGill-Toolen, South Alabama) was designated as a game-day inactive. · Cowboys defensive end Sam Williams (Lee-Montgomery) recorded a tackle for loss. Denver Broncos 16, Houston Texans 9 · Texans defensive end Mario Addison (Tarrant, Troy) is on injured reserve and not eligible to play. · Texans wide receiver Nico Collins (Clay-Chalkville) caught four passes for 58 yards. · Tytus Howard (Monroe County, Alabama State) started at right offensive tackle for the Texans. · Texans cornerback Tremon Smith (Saks) had a 22-yard kickoff return. · Broncos punter Corliss Waitman (South Alabama) averaged 42.8 yards on five punts with a 33.4-yard net. · Broncos wide receiver Montrell Washington (Samford) gained 19 yards on his first NFL rushing attempt, returned four punts for 59 yards and ran back a kickoff 17 yards. Washington had a 39-yard run nullified by an offensive-holding penalty. Arizona Cardinals 29, Las Vegas Raiders 23, OT · Raiders running back Ameer Abdullah (Homewood) caught a 23-yard pass. · Raiders defensive tackle Neil Farrell Jr. (Murphy) was designated as a game-day inactive. · Rodney Hudson (B.C. Rain) started at center for the Cardinals against his former team. · Cardinals cornerback Christian Matthew (Samford) played but did not record any stats. Green Bay Packers 27, Chicago Bears 10 · Bears fullback Khari Blasingame (Buckhorn) played but did not record any stats. · Bears wide receiver Velus Jones Jr. (Saraland) was designated as a game-day inactive. A hamstring injury kept Jones from practicing on Thursday and Friday. · Darnell Mooney (Gadsden City) started at wide receiver for the Bears. Mooney caught one pass, which lost 4 yards. · Nicholas Morrow (Huntsville) started at linebacker for the Bears. Morrow matched his career high with 11 tackles, including one behind the line of scrimmage. Week 2 started on Thursday night, when the Kansas City Chiefs defeated the Los Angeles Chargers 27-24. Chargers tight end Gerald Everett (UAB/South Alabama) caught six passes for 71 yards. Week 2 concludes with two games on Monday. The Tennessee Titans visit the Buffalo Bills at 6:15 p.m. CDT, and the Minnesota Vikings visit the Philadelphia Eagles at 7:30 p.m. ESPN will televise the Titans-Buffalo game, and ABC will televise the Vikings-Eagles game. FOR MORE OF AL.COM’S COVERAGE OF THE NFL, GO TO OUR NFL PAGE Mark Inabinett is a sports reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter at @AMarkG1. Note to readers: if you purchase something through one of our affiliate links we may earn a commission. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
State NFL Roundup: Tyreek Hill Explodes In Miami Rally
Healey Holds Commanding Lead Over Diehl In Massachusetts Governors Race | News | The Harvard Crimson
Healey Holds Commanding Lead Over Diehl In Massachusetts Governors Race | News | The Harvard Crimson
Healey Holds Commanding Lead Over Diehl In Massachusetts Governor’s Race | News | The Harvard Crimson https://digitalalabamanews.com/healey-holds-commanding-lead-over-diehl-in-massachusetts-governors-race-news-the-harvard-crimson/ Two weeks after the Massachusetts state primary, Maura T. Healey ’92 appears to be the governor-in-waiting. Healey, the state’s attorney general who won the Democratic gubernatorial nomination with virtually no competition, holds a commanding polling lead over rival Geoffrey G. Diehl, the Republican nominee backed by former President Donald J. Trump. Healey leads Diehl 52 percent to 26 percent, according to a poll from Suffolk University released last week. Healey would be the third consecutive Harvard College alumni to serve as governor. The poll showed Kevin Reed, the Libertarian nominee, siphoning off 10 percent of GOP primary voters, suggesting that some Republicans are repelled by Diehl. Diehl defeated his more moderate primary opponent, businessman Chris Doughty, in the primary earlier this month. Healey has gone on the attack against Diehl, charging that he is too conservative for Massachusetts, a blue state with a history of electing moderate GOP governors. Diehl has continued to tout Trump’s support and attack Healey as being too far to the left. The New York Times reported Sunday that Diehl’s campaign declined to say whether he would accept the outcome of the election. The former Plymouth state representative also previously endorsed Trump’s false claims that he won the 2020 election. Healey also holds a large fundraising advantage over Diehl. She had over $4.7 million in the bank at the end of August, according to state filings — compared to a meager $17,000 in Diehl’s coffers. Every statewide Democratic candidate holds a double-digit lead over their GOP opponent, according to the Suffolk survey. Andrea J. Campbell, the Democratic nominee for attorney general, leads Republican James McMahon, 50 percent to 24 percent, according to the poll. State Senator Dianna DiZoglio leads Republican Anthony Amore by 18 points. Longtime Democratic incumbent William F. Galvin leads Republican Rayla Campbell by 33 percentage points. President Joe Biden’s approval rating in Massachusetts sits at 48 percent, according to the poll, compared to 43 percent who disapprove. Governor Charlie D. Baker ’79 holds a 70 percent approval rating, according to the survey. —Staff writer Yusuf S. Mian can be reached at yusuf.mian@thecrimson.com. Follow him on Twitter @yusuf_mian2. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Healey Holds Commanding Lead Over Diehl In Massachusetts Governors Race | News | The Harvard Crimson
Voter Challenges Records Requests Swamp Election Offices
Voter Challenges Records Requests Swamp Election Offices
Voter Challenges, Records Requests Swamp Election Offices https://digitalalabamanews.com/voter-challenges-records-requests-swamp-election-offices-3/ Gwinnett County elections supervisor Zach Manifold looks over boxes of voter challenges Thursday in Lawrenceville, Georgia. Manifold estimated his office has a month to log and research the challenges, before mail ballots go out for the November elections. “It is a tight window to get everything done,” he said. John Bazemore ~ Associated Press Spurred by conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election, activists around the country are using laws that allow people to challenge a voter’s right to cast a ballot to contest the registrations of thousands of voters at a time. In Iowa, Linn County Auditor Joel Miller had handled three voter challenges over the previous 15 years. He received 119 over just two days after Doug Frank, an Ohio educator who is touring the country spreading doubts about the 2020 election, swung through the state. In Nassau County in northern Florida, two residents challenged the registrations of nearly 2,000 voters just six days before last month’s primary. In Georgia, activists are dropping off boxloads of challenges in the diverse and Democratic-leaning counties comprising the Atlanta metro area, including more than 35,000 in one county late last month. Election officials say the vast majority of the challenges will be irrelevant because they contest the presence on voting rolls of people who already are in the process of being removed after they moved out of the region. Still, they create potentially hundreds of hours of extra work as the offices scramble to prepare for November’s election. “They at best overburden election officials in the run-up to an election, and at worse they lead to people being removed from the rolls when they shouldn’t be,” said Sean Morales-Doyle of The Brennan Center for Justice, which has tracked an upswing in voter challenges. Rachel Rodriguez, left, the elections management specialist for Dane County, Wisconsin, looks over a table of ballots being tested before being sent to more than 200 voting locations across the state’s second-largest county, on Wednesday in Madison, Wisconsin. Her office is among those that have been hammered with requests by what appear to be coordinated campaigns by groups who reject the results of the 2020 presidential election. Scott Bauer ~ Associated Press The voter challenges come as activists who believe in the election lies of former President Donald Trump also have flooded election offices across the country with public records requests and threats of litigation, piling even more work on them as they ready for November. “It’s time-consuming for us, because we have to consult with our county attorneys about what the proper response is going to be,” said Rachel Rodriguez, an elections supervisor in Dane County, Wisconsin, which includes Madison, the state capital. She received duplicate emails demanding records about two weeks ago: “It’s taking up valuable time that we don’t necessarily have as election officials when we’re trying to prepare for a November election.” Michael Henrici, the Democratic commissioner of elections in New York’s Otsego County, received a single-line email last week warning of unspecified “election integrity” litigation, then a follow-up complaining he hadn’t responded. “These aren’t people with specific grievances,” Henrici said. “They’re getting a form letter from someone’s podcast and sometimes filling in the blanks.” Get our Daily Headlines Sent right to your inbox. Multiple investigations and reviews, including one by Trump’s own Department of Justice, found no significant fraud i n the 2020 presidential election, and courts rejected dozens of lawsuits brought by Trump and his allies. But Trump has continued to insist that widespread fraud cost him re-election. That has inspired legions of activists to become do-it-yourself election sleuths around the country, challenging local voting officials at every turn. In Linn County, Iowa, which includes the city of Cedar Rapids, Miller said he and the auditors who run elections in the state’s other 98 counties have been deluged with both records requests and voter challenges. “The whole barrage came in a two-week period,” Miller said, following the tour by Frank, who uses mathematical projections to make claims of a vast conspiracy to steal the election from Trump, “and it’s happening to auditors across the state.” Election offices routinely go through their voter rolls and remove those who have moved or died. Federal law constrains how quickly they can drop voters, and conservative activists have long complained that election officials do not move swiftly enough to clean up their rolls. The recent challenges stem from activists comparing postal change-of-address and other databases to voter rolls. Election officials say this is redundant, because they already take the same steps. Sometimes the challenges come after election conspiracists go door-to-door, often in heavily minority neighborhoods, seeking evidence that votes were cast improperly in 2020. Texas’ heavily Democratic Harris County, which includes Houston, received nearly 5,000 challenges from a conservative group that went door-to-door checking voter addresses. The election office said it dismissed the challenges it legally had to review before the election and will finish the remainder after Nov. 8. Activists in Gwinnett County, which stretches across the increasingly Democratic northern Atlanta suburbs, spent 10 months comparing change-of-address and other databases with the county’s voter rolls. They submitted eight boxes of challenges last month. About 15,000, they said, were complaints that specific voters improperly received mail ballots in 2020. Another 22,000 were for voters they contend are no longer at their registered address. There are so many challenges that election officials have yet to even count them all. But Zach Manifold, Gwinnett’s election supervisor, said that, in every single mail ballot complaint the office has sampled, the voter properly received a mailed ballot. But if any of the address-challenged voters do try to cast a ballot in November, the county’s elections board will need to decide whether that vote should count. They’ll only have six days to make a decision, as they have to certify their vote total by the Monday after Election Day under Georgia law. Manifold estimated his office has a month to log and research the challenges, before mail ballots go out for the November elections: “It is a tight window to get everything done,” he said. Many of the large counties facing voter roll challenges are places where President Joe Biden beat Trump in 2020, including Gwinnett and Harris. Yet those behind the effort dispute the notion that they are targeting Democratic-leaning counties and say they’re working on behalf of all voters. In Florida’s Nassau County, for example, Trump won with more than 72% of the vote. “They should be glad that the voter rolls are being cleaned up so they can make sure their votes count,” said Garland Favorito, a conservative activist who has teamed up with supporters of Trump’s election lies and is helping with voter challenges in Georgia. Favorito said more challenges are coming in other Georgia counties. Under legislation passed last year by the Republican-controlled Legislature, there are no limits on the number of voter challenges that can be filed in Georgia. Most states implicitly set restraints on challenges, said Morales-Doyle of the Brennan Center. They require a complainant to have specific, personal information about the voters they target and establish penalties for making frivolous challenges. Florida is an example. Its voter challenge law only permits the filing of challenges 30 days before an election, requiring election officials to contact each voter challenged before Election Day. It is a misdemeanor to file a “frivolous” challenge. But voter challenges almost derailed Florida’s primary last month in heavily-Republican Nassau County, in the northeastern part of the state. Two women who belonged to a conservative group, County Citizens Defending Freedom, dropped off the nearly 2,000 challenges at the county elections office six days before the Aug. 23 primary. Luckily for the office, the challenges were filed in an incorrect format. Elections Supervisor Janet Adkins told the activists they would review them, anyway — after the primary. “To take away a person’s right to vote is a very serious thing,” Adkins said. Holly Ramer in Concord, New Hampshire, contributed to this report. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Voter Challenges Records Requests Swamp Election Offices
Iran President Demands US 'guarantees' On Nuclear Deal
Iran President Demands US 'guarantees' On Nuclear Deal
Iran President Demands US 'guarantees' On Nuclear Deal https://digitalalabamanews.com/iran-president-demands-us-guarantees-on-nuclear-deal/ / Live news Issued on: 19/09/2022 – 07:40Modified: 19/09/2022 – 07:38 Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi attends the Shanghai Cooperation Organization leaders’ summit in Samarkand, Uzbekistan on September 16, 2022 Sergei BOBYLYOV SPUTNIK/AFP/File New York (AFP) – Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi demanded US “guarantees” it will not withdraw again from a nuclear deal if it is revived ahead of his debut visit to the United Nations. With Western hopes fading for restoration of the landmark 2015 agreement with world powers, the hardline cleric said in a US television interview that he would still back a “good deal and a fair deal” But he said: “It needs to be lasting. There needs to be guarantees.” “We cannot trust the Americans because of the behavior that we have already seen from them. That is why if there is no guarantee, there is no trust,” he told CBS News’ “60 Minutes” program. Former president Barack Obama negotiated the agreement under which Iran drastically scaled back nuclear work in return for promises of sanctions relief. Three years later, Donald Trump pulled out and reimposed sweeping sanctions. President Joe Biden supports a return but Iran’s call for guarantees has become a sticking point, with the Democratic administration saying it is impossible in the US system to say what a future president would do. But Raisi said Trump’s pullout showed that US promises are “meaningless.” The parties to the 2015 deal — which also included Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia — saw it as the best way to stop the Islamic republic from building a nuclear bomb -– a goal Tehran has always denied. Raisi last year succeeded Hassan Rouhani, a relative moderate who spoke to Obama by telephone while visiting New York for the United Nations. EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell told AFP last week that negotiations to bring Iran back into the deal are stalemated, after proposals from the parties “were converging”. In early August a senior European Union official had said progress was being made on obstacles, including guarantees the US would not again scupper a deal. Three days later Borrell presented a “final” text of an agreement. A report from the UN’s nuclear watchdog earlier this month that it was unable to certify Iran’s nuclear program as “exclusively peaceful” has complicated diplomatic efforts to revive the deal. Iran is sticking to a demand that, to revive the 2015 deal, the International Atomic Energy Agency must conclude a probe launched when the agency found traces of nuclear material at three undeclared sites. © 2022 AFP Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Iran President Demands US 'guarantees' On Nuclear Deal
Auburn NFL Roundup: Bucs Jamel Dean Posts 2 Picks
Auburn NFL Roundup: Bucs Jamel Dean Posts 2 Picks
Auburn NFL Roundup: Bucs’ Jamel Dean Posts 2 Picks https://digitalalabamanews.com/auburn-nfl-roundup-bucs-jamel-dean-posts-2-picks/ Cornerback Jamel Dean intercepted two passes in the fourth quarter to spark the Tampa Bay Buccaneers to a 20-10 victory over the New Orleans Saints on Sunday. The Buccaneers intercepted Saints quarterback Jameis Winston on three consecutive possessions, starting with Dean’s two picks. “We always knew it was going to be a defensive game,” Dean said, “so it was which defense was going to create the most turnovers. Apparently, we got the edge on their defense, so that’s like the biggest thing – creating turnovers, giving our offense another opportunity to score points.” With the score tied 3-3, Dean intercepted a pass intended for wide receiver Chris Olave in the end zone on a second-down snap at the New Orleans 47-yard line with 11:48 to play. Tampa Bay’s offense followed with a nine-play touchdown drive to take the lead. On the Saints’ next possession, Dean intercepted another deep second-down throw from the New Orleans 28-yard line intended for tight end Juwan Johnson. Dean returned the interception 24 yards to the Saints 29 with 6:45 to play. Tampa Bay turned the takeaway into a field goal to take a 13-3 lead with 5:50 remaining. “I kind of recognized the formation,” Dean said of his first interception, “and then I was just anticipating. Then once I seen Jameis look where he was going, I just took off over there to get to where he was trying to go. … “The second one, I just broke to the ball and realized it was an overthrown ball, so I’m like, ‘Well, here’s another opportunity. I can’t mess this up.’” Dean became the 13th Auburn alumnus to intercept two passes in the same game and the first since linebacker Karlos Dansby did so for the Cleveland Browns in a 26-23 overtime loss to the Denver Broncos on Oct. 18, 2015. A former Auburn player has had least two interceptions in one game 34 times, with Bobby Hunt doing so 11 times. Seventeen of the 34 games occurred in the AFL before its merger with the NFL. Hunt’s four interceptions for the Kansas City Chiefs in a 28-7 AFL victory over the Houston Oilers on Oct. 4, 1964, are the most in one game by a former Tiger. In the Super Bowl era, no Auburn alumnus has intercepted more than two passes in an NFL game. Dean has seven interceptions in his 44 NFL regular-season games. Dean was among the 17 former Auburn players who got on the field on the second Sunday of the NFL’s 103rd season. Three other former Auburn players were involved in the Tampa Bay-New Orleans game: · Buccaneers inside linebacker K.J. Britt (Oxford) played but did not record any stats. · Carlton Davis started at cornerback for the Buccaneers. Davis made eight tackles, broke up a pass and recovered a fumble on defense and made a tackle on special teams. The nine tackles tied Davis’ career high, which he accomplished once in each of the previous two seasons. Davis’ fumble recovery came with 2:27 left in the game at the Tampa Bay 34-yard line at the end of a 51-yard gain by Olave. · Saints safety Smoke Monday is on injured reserve and not eligible to play. In the other Sunday games: Miami Dolphins 42, Baltimore Ravens 38 · Dolphins defensive lineman Big Kat Bryant is on the practice squad and not eligible to play. · Josh Bynes started at middle linebacker for the Ravens. Bynes made one tackle. · Dolphins cornerback Noah Igbinoghene (Hewitt-Trussville) played but did not record any stats. New York Jets 31, Cleveland Browns 30 · Carl Lawson started at outside linebacker for the Jets. Lawson made two tackles and shared a sack. · Browns wide receiver Anthony Schwartz played but did not record any stats. · Jets linebacker Jamien Sherwood played but did not record any stats. · Jets tight end C.J. Uzomah was designated as a game-day inactive. Uzomah sustained a hamstring injury in practice last week. Jacksonville Jaguars 24, Indianapolis Colts 0 · Colts defensive tackle Byron Cowart recorded a tackle for loss. · Braden Smith started at right offensive tackle for the Colts. · Jaguars safety Daniel Thomas (Lee-Montgomery) was designated as a game-day inactive. · Jaguars wide receiver Seth Williams (Paul Bryant) is on the practice squad and not eligible to play. New York Giants 19, Carolina Panthers 16 · Derrick Brown started at defensive tackle for the Panthers. Brown made four tackles, registered a quarterback hit and broke up a pass. · Giants wide receiver Darius Slayton played but did not record any stats. New England Patriots 17, Pittsburgh Steelers 14 · Steelers defensive tackle Montravius Adams made one tackle. · Jonathan Jones started at left cornerback for the Patriots. Jones made two tackles. Los Angeles Rams 31, Atlanta Falcons 27 · Falcons defensive lineman Marlon Davidson (Greenville) is on injured reserve and not eligible to play. Arizona Cardinals 29, Las Vegas Raiders 23, OT · Raiders kicker Daniel Carlson made his five kicks – field goals of 32, 55 and 25 yards and two extra points. The 55-yarder is tied for the second-longest of Carlson’s career. He also made a 55-yarder in last week’s season-opening game. Carlson connected on a 56-yard field goal last season. · Jarrett Stidham dressed for the game but did not play. · Cardinals linebacker Chandler Wooten is on the practice squad and not eligible to play. Green Bay Packers 27, Chicago Bears 10 · Angelo Blackson started at defensive tackle for the Bears. Blackson made two tackles, including one behind the line of scrimmage. · Packers safety Rudy Ford (New Hope) played but did not record any stats. Week 2 started on Thursday night, when the Kansas City Chiefs defeated the Los Angeles Chargers 27-24. Week 2 concludes with two games on Monday. The Tennessee Titans visit the Buffalo Bills at 6:15 p.m. CDT, and the Minnesota Vikings visit the Philadelphia Eagles at 7:30 p.m. ESPN will televise the Titans-Buffalo game, and ABC will televise the Vikings-Eagles game. FOR MORE OF AL.COM’S COVERAGE OF THE NFL, GO TO OUR NFL PAGE Mark Inabinett is a sports reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter at @AMarkG1. Note to readers: if you purchase something through one of our affiliate links we may earn a commission. Read More…
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Auburn NFL Roundup: Bucs Jamel Dean Posts 2 Picks
Biden Says pandemic Is Over
Biden Says pandemic Is Over
Biden Says ‘pandemic Is Over’ https://digitalalabamanews.com/biden-says-pandemic-is-over/ President Biden declared the coronavirus pandemic “over,” in apparently off-the-cuff remarks that reflect the growing sentiment that the threat of the virus has receded, even as hundreds of Americans continue to die of covid each day. “We still have a problem with covid,” Biden said on “60 Minutes,” which aired Sunday night. “We’re still doing a lot of work on it … but the pandemic is over.” Biden made the remarks Wednesday during an interview at the auto show in Detroit, referencing the crowds at the event. The annual auto show had not been held since 2019. “If you notice, no one’s wearing masks,” Biden said to CBS News reporter Scott Pelley. “Everybody seems to be in pretty good shape. And so I think it’s changing. And I think this is a perfect example of it.” While Biden’s comments were extemporaneous, they may complicate his administration’s so far unsuccessful efforts to secure additional funding from Congress for more coronavirus vaccines and treatments and to take other steps intended to combat the virus. Republicans on Sunday night raised questions about why the administration would renew its ongoing public health emergency if the pandemic is over. That emergency declaration, which is set to expire next month, has allowed federal officials to pursue flexible solutions amid the crisis, including rapidly authorizing new covid treatments and keeping many Americans covered by Medicaid, the safety-net health program. The Urban Institute, a think tank that conducts economic and social policy research, has estimated that as many as 15.8 million Americans could lose Medicaid coverage after the government ends its emergency declaration. Biden’s comment that the pandemic is over came as a surprise to administration officials, according to two senior health officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment. The White House on Sunday night did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The administration for months has maintained that the virus is on the retreat, citing the growing availability of vaccines, tests and treatments to fight it and the population’s expanding immunity. Biden’s remarks came at a moment when new daily infections are down to just over 57,000 — the lowest they have been since late April — although that is probably a dramatic undercount since most people test themselves at home and do not report their infections to local and state health officials. Nevertheless, the disease continues to exact a toll, with more than 30,000 people hospitalized and more than 400 dying each day, according to seven-day averages compiled by The Washington Post. “We have a virus out there that’s still circulating, still killing hundreds of Americans every day,” Ashish Jha, the White House coronavirus coordinator, said at a news briefing Sept. 6, warning that the emergence of new variants could pose additional risks. “I think we all as Americans have to pull together to try to protect Americans … and do what we can to get our health-care system through what might be a difficult fall and winter ahead.” The head of the World Health Organization on Wednesday warned that the pandemic was not over and that important work remains to combat it around the world. “We are not there yet but the end is in sight,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director general of the WHO. “We can see the finish line. but now is the worst time to stop running.” We’ve never been in a better place to end the #COVID19 pandemic, but only if all countries, manufacturers, communities and individuals step up and seize this opportunity. Otherwise, we run the risk of more variants, more deaths, disruption and uncertainty. Let’s finish the job! pic.twitter.com/wzNaQ5kF3P — Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (@DrTedros) September 15, 2022 In the “60 Minutes” interview, Biden said the pandemic continues to exact a deep psychological toll. “I think you’d agree that the impact on the psyche of the American people as a consequence of the pandemic is profound,” the president said. “Think of how that has changed everything … people’s attitudes about themselves, their families, about the state of the nation, about the state of their communities.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Biden Says pandemic Is Over
Trump Thumps Ryan During Youngstown Rally
Trump Thumps Ryan During Youngstown Rally
Trump Thumps Ryan During Youngstown Rally https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-thumps-ryan-during-youngstown-rally/ YOUNGSTOWN — Former President Donald Trump took aim at U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan, the Democratic nominee for the U.S. Senate, calling him a “militant left-winger who is lying to your faces” during a Youngstown rally for J.D. Vance, the Republican candidate for the seat. Ryan is “pretending to be a moderate so he can get elected and betray everything that you believe in,” Trump said Saturday at the Covelli Centre. “He is not a moderate. He’s radical left.” Trump spent most of his speech airing past grievances, including falsely claiming the 2020 presidential election was “stolen” from him. Trump was in Youngstown primarily as part of a rally to support Vance while also backing Republicans running for House seats throughout Ohio. Trump said when he was president, “I was always fighting (Ryan). I never liked him that much.” Trump said Ryan’s moderate approach during this Senate campaign is a lie as the congressman has voted 100 percent of the time with President Joe Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Trump said when he was president, Ryan voted with him only 16 percent of the time. Trump urged those in attendance to back Vance, calling him a “tough cookie.” Trump said of Vance: “This is a very important race. This is a great person who’ve I’ve really gotten to know. Yeah, he said some bad things about me, but that was before he knew me and then he fell in love.” He criticized Ryan for saying he’d end the filibuster, for supporting abortions and for “being an energy extremist.” Trump spent much of his speech complaining about the 2020 election falsely contending he didn’t lose to Biden and that the election was “rigged and stolen.” He also went after Biden, saying he was a terrible president who doesn’t know what he’s doing and if Trump was running the country, there wouldn’t have been a Russian invasion of Ukraine, high gas prices and inflation. The only reason gas prices are going down, Trump said, is that Biden and other Democrats are doing that to win the Nov. 8 election and that those prices will rise after that. There were about 5,500 people at Saturday’s rally with most of the back section of the Covelli Centre empty though there was a full crowd at the front of the facility. The last time Trump campaigned at the arena, on July 25, 2017, there were about 7,000 people in attendance. During his Saturday speech, Vance said: “We need to get back to the policies of the real Donald Trump, not fake Tim Ryan pretending he’s someone he’s not.” Vance said Ryan tries to come across as a moderate in his “nonstop fraudulent television commercials,” but it’s a lie. Vance said are two Tims out there. A D.C. Tim that votes 100 percent of the time with Joe Biden, and there’s campaign Tim who pretends he’s a moderate.” He added: “We need to kick D.C. Tim to the curb, make him go back home and get a real job for once.” Polls indicate a close race between Vance, a venture capitalist and author of “Hillbilly Elegy” and Ryan, a 10-term House member who represents much of Mahoning and Trumbull counties. In a campaign fundraising email after the rally, Ryan wrote: “Republicans are panicking about losing here. And Trump knows how important winning Ohio is. Him wading into our race means more attack ads, more dark money and a tougher environment in an already competitive race.” At a Youngstown event Friday, Ryan criticized Vance for having a rally Saturday at the same time as the Ohio State-University of Toledo football game, saying it shows his opponent is out of touch with Ohioans. As for the rally in the heart of his congressional district, Ryan said: “They’re trying to cut into my vote, which is a political tactic. The fact is J.D. Vance can’t carry his own political message.” In addition to the Saturday rally with Trump, Vance had Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a leading potential 2024 Republican presidential candidate, campaign Aug. 19 at the Metroplex Expo Center in Liberty, also in Ryan’s district. “He needs Ron DeSantis, he needs Donald Trump and he needs everybody else to come in and make the case for him because he can’t make the case for himself,” Ryan said. Ryan added: “Ohioans don’t want someone who’s got to rely on someone else to carry their message for him or to buttress or support them in some way I’m out here. I’m scrapping. I’m clearly the underdog here with all this money coming at us.” Asked to comment after Saturday’s rally, Jordan Fuja, a campaign spokeswoman, said: “I was too busy watching football, but I’m sure whatever San Francisco phony J.D. Vance and his out-of-state allies tried to talk about in a half-empty stadium would’ve rang hollow with all the Ohioans who were also busy turning into the Ohio State-Toledo game.” Though Trump failed to win re-election in 2020, he was only the third Republican presidential candidate since 1936 to win Mahoning County. He beat Democrat Joe Biden by 1.9 percent. Trump did even better in Trumbull County. He was the first Republican candidate to win that county in two consecutive presidential elections since Herbert Hoover in 1928 and 1932 before Trumbull and Mahoning counties started consistently voting for Democrats in 1936. He beat Biden by 10.56 percent in Trumbull two years ago and beat Democrat Hillary Clinton by 6.22 percent. Trump’s victories were key parts of a changing political trend in Mahoning and Trumbull counties. His success helped some Valley Republicans win elections and made a number of other races a lot more competitive than they had been in previous years. Today’s breaking news and more in your inbox Read More…
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Trump Thumps Ryan During Youngstown Rally
Monday Letters: Vote Local No Solutions Immigration And Religion
Monday Letters: Vote Local No Solutions Immigration And Religion
Monday Letters: Vote Local, No Solutions, Immigration And Religion https://digitalalabamanews.com/monday-letters-vote-local-no-solutions-immigration-and-religion/ Let’s focus more on local elections It’s time we put more focus on local elections. We’ve all heard about what happened in neighboring Mesa County with county clerk Tina Peters, but it’s important people know that we have the same type of alt-right, MAGA candidates right here in Garfield County. It goes beyond having to worry about safe, fair elections. Tom Jankovsky has been a county commissioner for 12 years. Many people know him from his days at Sunlight Ski Resort. What people do not realize is just how radicalized he has become over his time in office. Tom recently gave a standing ovation to a Christian Nationalist pastor named David Barton who does not believe in the separation of church and state. In fact, the speech that Tom was so thrilled to hear stated that the church is supposed to direct the government — not the other way around.  That means restrictions on a woman’s right to choose. A county commissioner has almost as much power as your local Sheriff. They levy and appropriate all taxes and approve any and all developments in a community. Do we really want another four years of MAGA touting Tom? He’s already said COVID is no worse than the flu and refuses to expand our energy needs beyond oil and gas, even as market prices show the need for more diversity. We can maintain what matters to us here in Garfield County by investing in renewable energy for the future, but not with him.  When Tom was asked about the rising cost of living here in Garfield County and the impact it is having on small businesses to retain employees, his answer was if small businesses want to stay open, they need to provide their own employee housing. No, Tom, that is actually your job. He has had 12 years to prepare for the rising cost of living and housing crisis in the county. He has failed, and, yet, he stays defiant in his choice of inaction. Tom is the housing crisis here in Garfield, and, if he’s not voted out, things will only get worse. Westley J. Crouch, Glenwood Springs All sour grapes and no solutions I read a letter writer in this newspaper by Bruno Kirchenwitz. He was alluding to a well-thought-out letter from Laurie Lawrence, who wrote in on Sept. 9. One thing about Mr. Kirchenwitz that defines the current MAGA segment of the GOP  is he has a long list of grievances but no solutions offered. I am what Kirchenwitz would call a “RINO,” but all I am is a Republican who thinks Donald Trump is nothing more than a con man, posing as a politician. That is my right to say so, too.   I never took a loyalty oath to Trump or anyone else in my party — and never will. MAGA has finally been outed by mainstream media, including Fox News. Just this past weekend, Fox News ran a commercial from the Lincoln Project called “Suckers.” Trump begged for donations beginning in December 2020 up to October 2021 for his “legal defense fund.” Now, we know he pocketed all of that money. Another US Justice Dept. investigation and another grand jury is hearing evidence of that right now. With classified stolen documents at Mar a Lago to “fake electors” in 4 states?  Trump is indeed one strange man. Afghanistan? The US military spent billions training and outfitting the Afghan army to defend their own country against the Taliban, and, when they advanced on Kabul, they turned and ran! Trump’s administration was responsible for the US leaving that dismal country, and I for one am glad they did. The evacuation of Afghans was terrible no doubt, but why is it when a population outnumbers the Taliban by over 1,000:1, they allow themselves to be bullied by them? If they want freedom, they have to fight for it. What about Hunter Biden? The newest villain since Hillary Clinton. Today, according to Fox News, John Durham, the leftover prosecutor from the Trump administration who is handling the Hunter Biden investigation, came up empty on him. Wonder who the new villain in Trump land will be?   Climate change? Trillons of dollars will not be enough to fight it. Pakistan is still 1/3rd under water. The “doomsday glacier” is about to break off in Antartica, and, when it does, sea levels could rise 10 feet. If it does, say goodbye to Miami and New Orleans. In 20 years, gasoline-powered vehicles will be in museums. Dear Mr. Kirchenwitz, is the glass have empty or half full? Just wondering. Steven Gluckman, Glenwood Springs ‘Love your enemy with all your heart’ Love the AP article about pastors and immigration. Pastor Jefferees from First Baptist in Dallas hits the nail on the head but smashes his thumb in the process. He has his Biblical principals all mixed up with his politics. There is no Biblical command to protect state interest or the resulting artificial borders demarcating these. The actual command from Jesus (in several variations, tailored to the level of willful ignorance of the audience spoken to) is: Love your enemy with all your heart, all your mind and body and soul; same as you do your God in Heaven; for they are also made in the image of God and are in fact the body of Christ.  The Biblical fact is that, if the Churchly Right were actually following the actual Biblical principles and extended the necessary hospitality to these could-be angels — rather than ratcheting up division and controversy for their true gods of the Seven Deadly Sins — we would not have an immigration problem nor would they be political pawns used to keep the enmity in their hearts in full control of their hell bent souls. The very sad truth, Jesus laments, is 99.9% of Christians know Him not. They are tares pretending to be the wheat. And He truly weeps because your days are numbered, and He is grooming the white pony to ride. Eric Olander, Rifle Read More…
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Monday Letters: Vote Local No Solutions Immigration And Religion
AP News Summary At 12:18 A.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 12:18 A.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 12:18 A.m. EDT https://digitalalabamanews.com/ap-news-summary-at-1218-a-m-edt/ Fiona nears Dominican Republic after pounding Puerto Rico HAVANA (AP) — Hurricane Fiona is bearing down on the Dominican Republic after knocking out the power grid and unleashing floods and landslides in Puerto Rico, where the governor said the damage was “catastrophic.” No deaths have been reported, but authorities in the U.S. territory said it was too early to estimate the damage from a storm that was still forecast to unleash torrential rain across Puerto Rico on Monday. Up to 30 inches was forecast for the island’s eastern and southern regions. Ernesto Morales, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in San Juan, said: “It’s important people understand that this is not over.” He said flooding has reached “historic levels.” Biden, VIPs lay low as spotlight stays on late Queen LONDON (AP) — American presidents usually make a splash when they travel abroad, holding the spotlight and quickly becoming the center of attention. Not this time. For U.S. President Joe Biden and other presidents, prime ministers, and dignitaries, there were no red-carpet arrivals, no big speeches and no news conference as they gathered for Monday’s state funeral for Queen Elizabeth II. Instead, world leaders used to people hanging on their every word checked their egos in the service of honoring the queen. Britain’s longest-serving monarch died earlier this month after 70 years on the throne. 2022 could be a political watershed for Massachusetts women BOSTON (AP) — The year 2022 is shaping up to be a watershed for women seeking political power in Massachusetts. While liberal state has lagged others when it comes to electing women to top offices. But this year Democratic women have won five of six statewide primary contests. They include Democratic Attorney General Maura Healey, who is favored to flip the Republican-held governor’s office in November. If she does, she’ll be the first woman and first openly gay candidate elected governor in Massachusetts. Andrea Campbell is hoping to succeed Healey as attorney general, and she would be the first Black woman to hold that post in the state. Bidens among thousands paying respects to Queen Elizabeth II LONDON (AP) — U.S. President Joe Biden paid his respects at Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin as thousands of police, hundreds of British troops and an army of officials made final preparations for the queen’s state funeral. The funeral on Monday at Westminster Abbey will be a spectacular display of national mourning that will also be the biggest gathering of world leaders for years. People across Britain paused for a minute of silence at 8 p.m. to honor the queen. Also late Sunday, authorities closed a miles-long queue for people to see the queen lying in state. New arrivals were turned away, so that everyone in the line can file past the coffin before Monday morning, when it will be taken to Westminster Abbey for the queen’s funeral. Zelenskyy promises no ‘lull’ in taking back Ukrainian towns KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy promised his country Sunday there would be no letup after a series of Ukrainian victories taking cities and towns back from Russian troops. He said there would be no lull until all of Ukraine is freed. Russian shelling hit cities and towns across a wide stretch of Ukraine over the weekend. The British defense ministry warned that Russia is likely to increase attacks on civilian targets as it suffers battlefield defeats. A Vatican envoy distributing humanitarian aid was among those who came under fire. There were no injuries. And prosecutors in Kharkiv are accusing Russia of torturing civilians in one village that was recently freed. Biden: Classified documents at Mar-a-Lago raise concerns WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden says the discovery of top-secret documents at former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate raised concerns that sensitive data was compromised and calls it “irresponsible.” In an interview with CBS’ “60 Minutes” that aired Sunday, Biden says he has not asked for any specifics “because I don’t want to get myself in the middle of whether or not the Justice Department should move or not move on certain actions they could take.” The FBI served a court-authorized search warrant at Trump’s Florida home on Aug. 8. Agents took about 11,000 documents, including roughly 100 with classification markings found in a storage room and an office. Biden: US would defend Taiwan against Chinese invasion BEIJING (AP) — President Joe Biden says U.S. forces would defend Taiwan if China tries to invade the self-ruled island claimed by Beijing as part of its territory. Biden’s comment adds to displays of official U.S. support for the island democracy in the face of intimidation by the mainland’s ruling Communist Party. Biden said “yes” when asked in an interview on CBS News’s “60 Minutes” program whether “U.S. men and women would defend Taiwan” in the event of a Chinese invasion. CBS News said it was told by the White House after the interview that U.S. policy hasn’t changed. Washington doesn’t say whether it would send forces to defend the island. In world beset by turbulence, nations’ leaders gather at UN UNITED NATIONS (AP) — World leaders are gathering at the United Nations this week under the shadow of Europe’s first major conflict since World War II. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the fighting it produced has sparked a global food crisis and a division among major powers not seen since the Cold War at a time of increasing international turbulence. The many facets of the war in Ukraine are expected to dominate the annual General Assembly meeting. It is taking place as many countries across the globe are also confronting inequality, an escalating climate crisis, the threat of multiple famines and increasing misinformation and hate speech. EXPLAINER: How the strong U.S. dollar can affect everyone NEW YORK (AP) — The value of the U.S. dollar has been on a tear for more than a year against everything from the British pound across the Atlantic to the South Korean won across the Pacific. The dollar is hovering close to its highest level in more than two decades against a key index measuring six major currencies. Many professional investors don’t expect the dollar to ease off anytime soon. Its rise makes an impact on nearly everyone, even those who will never travel beyond U.S. borders. The strength helps to limit inflation, but it can also hurt profits for many U.S. companies. First public global database of fossil fuels launches On Monday, the world’s first public database of fossil fuel production, reserves and emissions launches. Called The Global Registry of Fossil Fuels, it was developed by the groups Carbon Tracker and the Global Energy Monitor, and contains data on over 50,000 oil, gas and coal fields in 89 countries, covering 75% of global production. It shows that the United States and Russia have enough fossil fuel reserves to exhaust the world’s remaining carbon budget to stay under 1.5 degrees Celsius warming. And it shows that if burned, the world’s reserves would generate 3.5 trillion tons of greenhouse gas emissions, which is more than all that’s been produced since the Industrial Revolution. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Read More…
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AP News Summary At 12:18 A.m. EDT