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Appeals Court Upholds Texas Law Regulating Social Media Moderation
Appeals Court Upholds Texas Law Regulating Social Media Moderation
Appeals Court Upholds Texas Law Regulating Social Media Moderation https://digitalalaskanews.com/appeals-court-upholds-texas-law-regulating-social-media-moderation/ The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit on Friday upheld a controversial Texas social media law that bars companies from removing posts based on a person’s political ideology, overturning a lower court’s decision to block the law and likely setting up a Supreme Court showdown over the future of online speech. The ruling could have wide-ranging effects on the future of tech regulation, giving fresh ammunition to conservative politicians who have alleged that major tech companies are silencing their political speech. But the decision diverges from precedent and recent rulings from the 11th Circuit and lower courts, and tech industry groups are likely to appeal. Friday’s opinion was written by Judge Andrew Stephen Oldham, who was nominated to the 5th Circuit by former president Trump. He was joined by Judge Edith Jones, a Reagan appointee. Judge Leslie H. Southwick, a George W. Bush appointee, concurred in part and dissented in part. In the opinion, Oldham wrote that while the First Amendment guarantees every person’s right to free speech, it doesn’t guarantee corporations the right to “muzzle speech.” The Texas law, he wrote, “does not chill speech; if anything, it chills censorship.” The ruling criticized the tech industry’s arguments against the law, saying that under the companies’ logic, “email providers, mobile phone companies, and banks could cancel the accounts of anyone who sends an email, makes a phone call, or spends money in support of a disfavored political party, candidate, or business.” An appeal of the decision could force the Supreme Court, where conservatives have a majority, to weigh in on internet regulation, which has become an increasingly politicized issue since the 2016 election. Liberals have called for new limits on the companies that would block the proliferation of harmful content and misinformation on the platforms, and conservatives have argued that the companies have gone too far in policing their sites, especially after the companies’ 2021 decision to ban Trump following the Jan. 6 attacks on the Capitol. In an analysis shared with The Washington Post in July, the industry group Computer & Communications Industry Association, one of the groups that challenged the Texas law, identified more than 100 bills in state legislatures aimed at regulating social media content moderation policies. Many state legislatures have adjourned for the year, so tech lobbyists are bracing for more activity in 2023. Earlier this week, California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) signed a bill into law that forces large social networks to make public their policies for how posts are treated, responding to criticism that posts glorifying violence and hatred are being amplified by the platforms. “If the Supreme Court doesn’t weigh in, it’s going to be increasingly difficult to operate a nationwide social media company because it could be navigating state rules that differ or even conflict,” said Jeff Kosseff, a cybersecurity law professor at the United States Naval Academy. Earlier this year, the Supreme Court stopped the Texas law from taking effect in a 5-4 decision, responding to an emergency request from tech industry trade groups. However, the judges did not explain the reasoning for their decision, which is common in such requests. In their ruling, the 5th Circuit judges agreed with Texas that social media companies are “common carriers,” like phone companies, that are subject to government regulations because they provide essential services. Conservatives have long made this argument, which has resonated with at least one Supreme Court justice, Clarence Thomas, who has written that there are parallels between social media companies and phone companies. Tech industry groups and legal experts warned that the 5th Circuit’s decision runs counter to First Amendment precedent and warned that it could result in harmful posts staying on social networks. “Little could be more Orwellian than the government purporting to protect speech by dictating what businesses must say,” said Matt Schruers, president of the Computer & Communications Industry Association. “The Texas law compels private enterprises to distribute dangerous content ranging from foreign propaganda to terrorist incitement, and places Americans at risk.” NetChoice, another industry group that has challenged the Texas and Florida laws alongside CCIA, echoed those concerns about “awful and offensive content” remaining online. “We remain convinced that when the U.S. Supreme Court hears one of our cases, it will uphold the First Amendment rights of websites, platforms and apps,” Carl Szabo, NetChoice vice president and general counsel, said. Constitutional law experts also largely criticized Oldham’s opinion. Eric Goldman, a law professor at Santa Clara University, said it is a “terrible opinion” riddled with factual errors. “It’s a gross misunderstanding of the word ‘censorship,’” he said. “Censorship is something that governments do.” Earlier this year, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals blocked major provisions of a social media law that had been passed by Florida’s Republican-led legislature, saying they infringed on corporations’ First Amendment rights. The state of Florida is widely expected to appeal that decision. In the 5th Circuit opinion, Oldham wrote that the Texas and Florida laws differ in key ways because the Florida law narrowly targets speech by political figures and journalistic businesses while the Texas law targets actions against anyone over their political viewpoints. He wrote that he disagreed with the way that the 11th Circuit interpreted previous Supreme Court rulings related to “editorial discretion,” or the right of media companies to decide what content they carry, and whether that applies to social networks. “I don’t see how you could have both of these rulings out there without having resolution from the Supreme Court,” Kosseff said. Meanwhile, conservative regulators took a victory lap. Republican Federal Communications Commissioner Brendan Carr, who has emerged as a major critic of big social media companies, called the decision a “Big court win in the effort to end Big Tech’s unchecked censorship.” And Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) called the court’s decision a “MASSIVE VICTORY” for free speech on Twitter. BREAKING: I just secured a MASSIVE VICTORY for the Constitution & Free Speech in fed court: #BigTech CANNOT censor the political voices of ANY Texan! The 5th Circuit “reject[s] the idea that corporations have a freewheeling First Amendment right to censor what people say. pic.twitter.com/UijlzYcv7r — Attorney General Ken Paxton (@KenPaxtonTX) September 16, 2022 Jameel Jaffer, the director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, said there are difficult questions for the courts to grapple with. “It is not obvious exactly how analog-era First Amendment law applies, or should apply, to digital-era communications platforms,” he said. “Unfortunately, this opinion doesn’t present those questions clearly, let alone answer them.” Naomi Nix and Will Oremus contributed to this report. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Appeals Court Upholds Texas Law Regulating Social Media Moderation
Queen Elizabeth's Children Hold Vigil Beside Her Coffin | CNN
Queen Elizabeth's Children Hold Vigil Beside Her Coffin | CNN
Queen Elizabeth's Children Hold Vigil Beside Her Coffin | CNN https://digitalalaskanews.com/queen-elizabeths-children-hold-vigil-beside-her-coffin-cnn/ The Royal Family Over four days, queues could reach up to nine miles long in London as people pay their last respects to Queen Elizabeth II in Westminster Hall. CNN spoke to those who have waited for hours to understand why. ” data-duration=”03:38″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”Hear why people in London are queuing to see the Queen one last time” data-index=”idx-0″ data-show-name=”” data-show-url=”” data-source=”CNN” data-uri=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_4148185cc1ab8332c83c6a4ad5e31c57-h_aab9b132ca759c557d5135192a708eb5@published” data-video-id=”world/2022/09/15/lying-in-state-queues-london-queen-lon-orig.cnn” data-video-instance=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_4148185cc1ab8332c83c6a4ad5e31c57-h_aab9b132ca759c557d5135192a708eb5@published” Now playing Hear why people in London are queuing to see the Queen one last time While standing guard by the Queen’s coffin as it lies in state inside Westminster Hall at the Palace of Westminster, a member of the royal guard collapsed and police rushed to his side. ” data-duration=”00:51″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”Royal guard member collapsed by Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin” data-index=”idx-1″ data-show-name=”New Day” data-show-url=”https://www.cnn.com/shows/new-day” data-source=”CNN” data-uri=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_d41e9723a8a974bfadc3812153228175″ data-video-id=”world/2022/09/15/queen-elizabeth-ii-royal-guard-faint-casket-vpx.cnn” data-video-instance=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_d41e9723a8a974bfadc3812153228175″ Reuters Now playing Royal guard member collapsed by Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin was greeted by an applauding crowd at Buckingham Palace after making its way from Edinburgh, Scotland. The coffin was received at the palace by the royal family. ” data-duration=”01:48″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”See moment Queen Elizabeth’s coffin arrives at Buckingham Palace” data-index=”idx-2″ data-show-name=”Newsroom” data-show-url=”https://www.cnn.com/shows/newsroom” data-source=”CNN” data-uri=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_c800846f5997b197c1dfa239b7a4a76a” data-video-id=”world/2022/09/14/queens-coffin-arrives-buckingham-palace-vo-newsroom-intl-ldn-vpx.cnn” data-video-instance=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_c800846f5997b197c1dfa239b7a4a76a” Reuters Now playing See moment Queen Elizabeth’s coffin arrives at Buckingham Palace CNN’s Anna Stewart breaks down King Charles’ royal inheritance – more than $21 billion. ” data-duration=”02:29″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”King Charles III is now one of the richest people in the world. Here’s how” data-index=”idx-3″ data-show-name=”Erin Burnett Out Front” data-show-url=”https://www.cnn.com/shows/erin-burnett-out-front” data-source=”CNN” data-uri=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_0dad70454631cc848442219d0ec565f8″ data-video-id=”world/2022/09/14/king-charles-royal-fortune-stewart-ebof-pkg-vpx.cnn” data-video-instance=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_0dad70454631cc848442219d0ec565f8″ Now playing King Charles III is now one of the richest people in the world. Here’s how When King Charles III ascended to the throne, he announced his son William will be given the title of Prince of Wales. CNN’s Max Foster shows us the evolution of the first in line to the British throne. ” data-duration=”02:25″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”Prince William: From ‘heartthrob’ to first in line to the throne” data-index=”idx-4″ data-show-name=”Anderson Cooper 360″ data-show-url=”https://www.cnn.com/shows/ac-360″ data-source=”CNN” data-uri=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_db2bacdf87fae38f1ad98eee48be0012″ data-video-id=”world/2022/09/14/prince-william-wales-throne-kate-middleton-journey-ac360-foster-pkg-vpx.cnn” data-video-instance=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_db2bacdf87fae38f1ad98eee48be0012″ Now playing Prince William: From ‘heartthrob’ to first in line to the throne For some in former British colonies, Queen Elizabeth II’s death has sparked powerful emotions, ranging from sadness to anger. ” data-duration=”02:19″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”Queen’s death revives painful memories of British colonialism” data-index=”idx-5″ data-show-name=”” data-show-url=”” data-source=”CNN” data-uri=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_0a6fb3475339e601b48327606e81c639″ data-video-id=”world/2022/09/13/queen-british-colonialism-lon-orig-mrg.cnn” data-video-instance=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_0a6fb3475339e601b48327606e81c639″ Now playing Queen’s death revives painful memories of British colonialism With the passing of Queen Elizabeth II, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, assumed her new role as Queen Consort. CNN’s Randi Kaye explains Camilla’s troubled past and how she became appointed to the position. ” data-duration=”02:53″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”A look into how Camilla became Queen Consort” data-index=”idx-6″ data-show-name=”Anderson Cooper 360″ data-show-url=”https://www.cnn.com/shows/ac-360″ data-source=”CNN” data-uri=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_d9b4bfaa4a3f1b370d6c2757ea5373aa” data-video-id=”world/2022/09/13/uk-camilla-queen-consort-new-role-kaye-pkg-ac360-vpx.cnn” data-video-instance=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_d9b4bfaa4a3f1b370d6c2757ea5373aa” Now playing A look into how Camilla became Queen Consort King Charles III vowed to continue the Queen’s “dedicated service” to the British people in his first address to the UK Parliament on Monday, September 12. ” data-duration=”04:01″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”King Charles III says he feels ‘the weight of history’ in first Parliament address” data-index=”idx-7″ data-show-name=”New Day” data-show-url=”https://www.cnn.com/shows/new-day” data-source=”CNN” data-uri=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_721941d0768c0aa1101c74e6722e34b0″ data-video-id=”world/2022/09/12/king-charles-iii-first-parliament-address-newday-vpx.cnn” data-video-instance=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_721941d0768c0aa1101c74e6722e34b0″ Now playing King Charles III says he feels ‘the weight of history’ in first Parliament address CNN’s Isa Soares breaks down the final journey of Queen Elizabeth’s coffin as it is driven from Balmoral Castle and through Scottish towns so the public can pay their respects. ” data-duration=”04:54″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”Follow Queen Elizabeth’s coffin as it begins final journey” data-index=”idx-8″ data-show-name=”” data-show-url=”” data-source=”CNN” data-uri=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_3aa956931359f6fa2337b9b171829af3″ data-video-id=”world/2022/09/11/final-journey-queen-elizabeth-coffin-scotland-soares-ndwknd-vpx.cnn” data-video-instance=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_3aa956931359f6fa2337b9b171829af3″ CNN Now playing Follow Queen Elizabeth’s coffin as it begins final journey Queen Elizabeth II’s former personal chef Darren McGrady shares some of his memories cooking for the royal family and reveals some of the Queen’s favorite foods. ” data-duration=”03:29″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”Queen’s former chef reveals which meal was higher pressure than state dinners” data-index=”idx-9″ data-show-name=”Newsroom” data-show-url=”https://www.cnn.com/shows/newsroom” data-source=”CNN” data-uri=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_52f3a10cf1b57a7abaacf224dc436112″ data-video-id=”world/2022/09/11/queen-elizabeth-ii-darren-mcgrady-chef-nr-vpx.cnn” data-video-instance=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_52f3a10cf1b57a7abaacf224dc436112″ Now playing Queen’s former chef reveals which meal was higher pressure than state dinners The “Principal Proclamation” of King Charles III is read by Garter King of Arms on the balcony overlooking Friars’ Court at St. James’s Palace in London. ” data-duration=”05:44″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”Watch: King Charles III publicly proclaimed as King” data-index=”idx-10″ data-show-name=”” data-show-url=”” data-source=”CNN” data-uri=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_9649f7945da4e26bf1e87ad09f6ab171″ data-video-id=”world/2022/09/10/king-charles-iii-principal-proclamation-garter-king-of-arms-newday-vpx.cnn” data-video-instance=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_9649f7945da4e26bf1e87ad09f6ab171″ CNN Now playing Watch: King Charles III publicly proclaimed as King The Accession Council ceremony in London’s St. James’s Palace officially proclaimed King Charles III as the UK’s new monarch. The ceremony is being televised for the first time in history. ” data-duration=”06:05″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”Watch the moment King Charles III was formally proclaimed king” data-index=”idx-11″ data-show-name=”” data-show-url=”” data-source=”CNN” data-uri=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_1122ca138f67788c9435ebeff43276a2″ data-video-id=”world/2022/09/10/king-charles-iii-proclamation-oath-accession-council-vpx.cnn” data-video-instance=”archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/video-resource/instances/h_1122ca138f67788c9435ebeff43276a2″ Now playing Watch the moment King Charles III was formally proclaimed king King Charles III is a more divisive character than his mother Queen Elizabeth II but one thing about him stands out above all else: his tireless energy. ” data-duration=”05:17″ data-editable=”settings” data-headline=”Who is Brita...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Queen Elizabeth's Children Hold Vigil Beside Her Coffin | CNN
Your Weekend Plans: September 16 21 2022
Your Weekend Plans: September 16 21 2022
Your Weekend Plans: September 16 – 21, 2022 https://digitalalaskanews.com/your-weekend-plans-september-16-21-2022/ Hyperlinks to event details in our newsletter and at AKconcerts.com Or read below if you just want to know the time & place. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Your Weekend Plans: September 16 21 2022
Trump Judge Judges Trump A Very Special Boy Gives Him The Kid Glove Treatment
Trump Judge Judges Trump A Very Special Boy Gives Him The Kid Glove Treatment
Trump Judge Judges Trump A Very Special Boy, Gives Him The Kid Glove Treatment https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-judge-judges-trump-a-very-special-boy-gives-him-the-kid-glove-treatment/ (Permanent Musical Accompaniment To The Last Post Of The Week From The Blog’s Favorite Living Canadian) OK, Judge Aileen Cannon. Mission accomplished. On Thursday, the judge completed the assignment for which she was chosen, namely, mucking up the very straightforward investigation into the Pool Shed Papers down at Mar-a-Lago, what they were and how they got there, and especially why they ended up there. From Vox: The Constitution provides several safeguards against unreasonable searches and seizures by law enforcement. The FBI must have probable cause to justify a search of a private residence, and it must obtain a warrant issued by a neutral magistrate. Although DOJ complied with these constitutional requirements, Cannon issued an order earlier this month arguing that Trump is entitled to special protections that are rarely afforded to any criminal suspect, in large part because of Trump’s “former position as President of the United States.” Specifically, Cannon ordered the Justice Department to halt its criminal investigation into Trump until a court-appointed official known as a “special master” reviews the seized documents. Ever since Cannon first came tramping into this case as the result of clever forum-shopping by the Trump side, the Department of Justice had been conducting an examination of 103 classified documents found at Mar-a-Lago. On Thursday, Cannon ordered that examination to cease, appointed a senior judge named Raymond Dearie as the “special master” whom nobody except Cannon considered necessary. Further, Cannon seemed to indicate that the former president* had a right to possess some of the documents, and that she didn’t trust the FBI and the DOJ to be honest in their representations to her court. “The Court does not find it appropriate to accept the Government’s conclusions[…]all of the approximately 100 documents isolated by the Government (and “papers physically attached to them”) are classified government records.” From the start, Cannon has evinced little or no comprehension of the law regarding government records, let alone the law regarding the possession and storage of classified material. And her entire argument seems founded on the constitutional heresy that a former president* has some legal immunity not possessed by any other citizen. This is bizarre; the Nixon people tried this gambit with the Watergate tapes and history never has stopped laughing about that. The Trump people have a gift for shopping, I’ll give them that. A tip from an aging journo: For everyone covering the human-trafficking activities of Southern governors like Greg Abbott of Texas and Florida’s Ron DeSantis, make one brief reference to the political utility of their actions and then get on to reporting on the deeply inhumane nature of the policy itself. This is not a political “stunt,” no matter how loudly the scurvy pack of bastards supporting these two cackle at their own cleverness. This is stochastic human trafficking and, arguably, stochastic kidnapping, actions that have as their historical antecedents the actions of the White Citizens Council in the 1960s when some local racists lured black families onto buses with promises of jobs and housing and dispatched them northward. One bus from Arkansas deposited its passengers in front of the Kennedy compound in Hyannis. They called these “Reverse Freedom Rides” to mock the protests against segregation that had met with savage racist violence in Alabama. A proud American tradition that Abbott and DeSantis seem unashamed to uphold. Weekly WWOZ Pick To Click: “Fifty Cents,” Charlie Halloran and the Tropicales. Yeah, I pretty much still love New Orleans. Weekly Visit To The Pathé Archives: Here, from 1936, is the funeral of King George V of England. Pathé really went whole hog on the opening credits on this one. And the narrator turns the rhetorical purple up to 11. And I have to say, this ceremony has the same strong headgear game as the funeral of Pope John Paul II back in 2005. George V came through the 1910s a lot better than did his cousin Nicholas in Russia or his cousin Wilhelm in Germany. His granddaughter, Elizabeth, used to call him “Grandpa England.” History is so cool. There’s a scandal in the world of high-level chess, and it is one I am just as glad I am not covering, truth be told. From euronews: Indeed, 19-year old chess grandmaster Hans Niemann is currently at the heart of a scandal that is rocking the chess world. Or should that be, making the chess world vibrate. Oh, for the love of god, get to it, will you? Niemann has been hit with accusations on social media which state that the only reason he won against the world’s top grandmaster Magnus Carlsen earlier this month is that the young player cheated using wireless vibrating anal beads. Of course, they’re wireless; would you wear wired anal beads? (Would you believe that I just typed “anal beads,” again?) I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking, “But how does Elon Musk fit into this story?” Glad you asked. The issue was already proving to be one of the biggest chess scandals in years, especially because it concerns Niemann, who is notorious in the chess community for his difficult behaviour. Then, somewhat predictably when it comes to rumour mongering and drama stirring, Tesla CEO Elon Musk waded in. Musk shared a video on Twitter of an influencer discussing the rumour that Niemann used a vibrating sex toy during the competition in order to cheat. All of these people are terrible, awful bastard people and I never want to think about them ever again. Last seen in the details. CSA Images//Getty Images Speaking of awful bastard people that I never wanted to think about ever again, guess what’s allegedly back in the news (at least according the NBC)? Satanic ritual child abuse! Yes, that blockbuster hit of a moral panic that raced up the charts in the 1980s, ruining hundreds of lives and traumatizing almost everyone who got sucked into its insatiable media maw, is coming around again, thanks to wingnut politicians and the Q-cult on the Intertoobz. While the current obsession with Satan was boosted in part by the QAnon community, partisan media and conservative politicians have been instrumental in spreading newfound fears over the so-called ritualistic abuse of children that the devil supposedly inspires, sometimes weaving the allegations together with other culture war issues such as LGBTQ rights. Those fears are powering fresh accusations of ritual abuse online, which are amplified on social media and by partisan media, and can mobilize mobs to seek vigilante justice. Lovely. Just what the country needs: another arena for violent paranoia. This kind of participatory ferreting out of Satan from the popular culture and “raising awareness” of myriad threats to children — real and imagined — were a hallmark of the 1980s’ panic, said Sarah Hughes, author of “American Tabloid Media and the Satanic Panic.” The public service announcements, after-school programs, sitcoms, round-the-clock news networks, courtroom coverage and new “infotainment” specials hosted by news-adjacent hosts like Geraldo Rivera and Oprah Winfrey all fueled the hysteria, Hughes said. As issues surrounding children gained national attention, an emerging section of 1980’s media obsessed over child safety issues, including kidnapping, pedophilia, child abuse and cult membership. We just never learn. Hey, USA Today, is it a good day for dinosaur news? It’s always a good day for dinosaur news! The two exposed fossils, a foot and part of a tail clad in fossilized skin, are believed to belong to a juvenile duck-billed Hadrosaur dinosaur that died somewhere between 77 million to 75 million years ago, roughly 10 million years before dinosaurs went extinct, researchers said. Scientists began excavation of the site to remove the entire remains from the hill. “It’s so well preserved you can see the individual scales, we can see some tendons and it looks like there’s going to be skin over the entire animal,” Brian Pickles, a paleontologist and ecology professor at the University of Reading, told USA TODAY. “Which means, if we’re really lucky, then some of the other internal organs might have preserved as well.” “Lucky,” I guess is a word that means different things to different occupations. For me, it means somebody left their change behind in the soda machine. To these guys, it means finding intact 75-million-year-old dinosaur guts, which makes them happy now because the dinosaur lived back then. I’ll be back in Monday to see whether the former president*’s lifeboats are taking on any water. (Row, Judge Cannon! Bail!) Be well and play nice, ya bastions. Stay above the snake-line. Wear the damn mask, get the damn shots, especially the damn boosters, and most especially the newest one. Spare a moment to think about the people of Ukraine, of Jackson, Mississippi, and of East Africa. And of Pakistan, too. Damn, this list gets longer every week. Charles P Pierce is the author of four books, most recently Idiot America, and has been a working journalist since 1976. He lives near Boston and has his three children. This content is imported from OpenWeb. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Judge Judges Trump A Very Special Boy Gives Him The Kid Glove Treatment
Fast Start: New Special Master In Trump Documents Case Orders Tuesday Hearing
Fast Start: New Special Master In Trump Documents Case Orders Tuesday Hearing
Fast Start: New Special Master In Trump Documents Case Orders Tuesday Hearing https://digitalalaskanews.com/fast-start-new-special-master-in-trump-documents-case-orders-tuesday-hearing/ The newly appointed special master reviewing the records seized by the Justice Department last month from former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate, wasted no time Friday evening by quickly scheduling a hearing between Mr. Trump’s legal team and lawyers from the Justice Department. U.S. District Court Judge Raymond J. Dearie, who was appointed Thursday night by a Florida federal judge, ordered both sides to appear in a Brooklyn federal courthouse at 2 p.m. on Tuesday. Judge Dearie also requested the lawyers submit proposed agenda items for the meeting by the close of business Monday. U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon, who appointed Judge Dearie, gave him until Nov. 30 to complete his review of the documents for materials that may be covered by attorney-client privilege or executive privilege granted to presidents. Any materials deemed privileged will be off-limits to Justice Department investigators probing whether Mr. Trump illegally mishandled classified government documents. Judge Cannon also ordered Mr. Trump to pay for the review’s full cost. Mr. Trump’s legal team last month asked Judge Cannon to appoint a special master to review the records seized in the Aug. 8 raid and return any materials that may be covered by executive privilege or attorney-client privilege. The Justice Department fought the appointment of a special master, arguing that it had already done its own review and Mr. Trump couldn’t raise executive privilege claims that ordinarily permit a president to withhold information because he was no longer commander-in-chief. The department is expected to appeal the appointment of a special master to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Atlanta. Judge Cannon sided with Mr. Trump and ordered both sides to name a candidate for the role. The Trump team put forth two candidates, including Judge Dearie, while the Justice Department suggested three potential special masters. Judge Dearie was the only candidate both sides agreed on. He serves on the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Brooklyn, where he has taken senior status, meaning he still works, but his caseload is significantly less than other judges. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Fast Start: New Special Master In Trump Documents Case Orders Tuesday Hearing
Cortez Masto Announces That DOE Has Completed The Agreement She Secured To Remove Plutonium Secretly Shipped To Nevada Four Years Ahead Of Schedule | U.S. Senator Catherine Cortez Masto Of Nevada
Cortez Masto Announces That DOE Has Completed The Agreement She Secured To Remove Plutonium Secretly Shipped To Nevada Four Years Ahead Of Schedule | U.S. Senator Catherine Cortez Masto Of Nevada
Cortez Masto Announces That DOE Has Completed The Agreement She Secured To Remove Plutonium Secretly Shipped To Nevada, Four Years Ahead Of Schedule | U.S. Senator Catherine Cortez Masto Of Nevada https://digitalalaskanews.com/cortez-masto-announces-that-doe-has-completed-the-agreement-she-secured-to-remove-plutonium-secretly-shipped-to-nevada-four-years-ahead-of-schedule-u-s-senator-catherine-cortez-masto-of-nevada/ September 16, 2022 Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) announced that the Department of Energy (DOE) and the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) have completed the removal of all weapons-grade plutonium that was secretly shipped to Nevada under the Trump administration. In 2019, Senator Cortez Masto negotiated a deal with the DOE to remove this from the state starting in 2021. Following continued advocacy from the Senator, the NNSA completed the removal four years ahead of schedule. “When I heard that the Trump Administration secretly shipped weapons-grade plutonium to our state, I acted immediately to ensure it was removed. I have not stopped pushing to get this done, and I’m proud to announce the removal has been completed four years ahead of schedule.” ### Previous Release Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Cortez Masto Announces That DOE Has Completed The Agreement She Secured To Remove Plutonium Secretly Shipped To Nevada Four Years Ahead Of Schedule | U.S. Senator Catherine Cortez Masto Of Nevada
Top 8 Today
Top 8 Today
Top 8 Today https://digitalalaskanews.com/top-8-today/ Top eight stories for today including there is a growing recognition that the British monarchy’s global reach is likely to reduce after Queen Elizabeth II’s death; California Governor Gavin Newsom signed an expansive package of bills earmarking billions to tackle climate change; Wall Street was unable to recover after its worst sell-off in two years, and more. National Special master for seized Trump records seen as minor setback for feds A federal judge in Florida has appointed a semi-retired New York federal judge as special master to review records seized from former President Donald Trump’s home and denied the government’s request to keep using them in its investigation, causing a delay that one legal expert sees as only a minor setback. This image contained in a court filing by the Department of Justice on Aug. 30, 2022, and redacted by in part by the FBI, shows a photo of documents seized during the Aug. 8 search by the FBI of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. (Department of Justice via AP) Wall Street suffers one of its worst weeks in years as recession worries loom Wall Street saw its worst sell-off since June 2020 earlier this week, and with growth slowing and another interest rate hike almost assured, markets were unable to recover even a little of the lost value in equities. Regional Dispatches from the road: Look the other way In his latest dispatch, Courthouse News’ western bureau chief enjoys less renowned aspects of two famous national parks. Basketball player’s case against Adidas tips off at Fourth Circuit A lawyer for a former top-ranked college basketball prospect whose NCAA eligibility was stripped after a pay-for-play scandal told a Fourth Circuit panel Friday that his client should be able to bring racketeering claims against Adidas.  Most aggressive climate change action in nation now law in California California Governor Gavin Newsom signed an expansive package of bills Friday earmarking billions to tackle climate change. International Queen’s death leaves Commonwealth with uncertain future The death of Queen Elizabeth II, after 70 years on the throne, is likely to spark profound questions for the global reach and reputation of the British monarchy. Inflation tops 10% in European Union Inflation is rising faster in Europe than in the U.S., driven by the cost of energy, food and services. Meanwhile, excess mortality in the EU remains high but is lower than the worst periods of the pandemic. Mexico holds annual Independence Day military parade amid National Guard controversy A wary optimism prevailed among attendees of Mexico’s annual Independence Day military parade Friday. Read the Top 8 Sign up for the Top 8, a roundup of the day’s top stories delivered directly to your inbox Monday through Friday. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Top 8 Today
Fulham's 3 Goals In 6 Minutes Trump Forest 3-2 In EPL
Fulham's 3 Goals In 6 Minutes Trump Forest 3-2 In EPL
Fulham's 3 Goals In 6 Minutes Trump Forest 3-2 In EPL https://digitalalaskanews.com/fulhams-3-goals-in-6-minutes-trump-forest-3-2-in-epl/ Fulham’s Carlos Vinicius, left, goalkeeper Bernd Leno and Aleksandar Mitrovic celebrate after the final whistle of the English Premier League soccer match between Nottingham Forest and Fulham, at The City Ground, Nottingham, England, Friday Sept. 16, 2022. (Tim Good/PA via AP)[ASSOCIATED PRESS/Tim Goode] NOTTINGHAM, England (AP) — Fulham has scored three goals in a six-minute passage of play to earn a 3-2 win at Nottingham Forest in an entertaining match between two teams having contrasting fortunes since promotion to the English Premier League. Tosin Adarabioyo, Joao Palhinha and Harrison Reed scored in a whirlwind spell from the 54th minute at City Ground to help Fulham move up to sixth place. Nigeria forward Taiwo Awoniyi marked his return to Forest’s starting lineup with an 11th-minute opener and Lewis O’Brien set up a grandstand finish in the 77th. Fulham held on to condemn Forest to a fourth consecutive defeat, keeping the team in next-to-last place. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Nottingham Forest’s Neco Williams tackles Fulham’s Willian during the English Premier League soccer match between Nottingham Forest and Fulham, at The City Ground, Nottingham, England, Friday Sept. 16, 2022. (Tim Good/PA via AP) Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS/Tim Goode Nottingham Forest’s Taiwo Awoniyi, left, celebrates scoring his side’s first goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Nottingham Forest and Fulham, at The City Ground, Nottingham, England, Friday Sept. 16, 2022. (Tim Good/PA via AP) Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS/Tim Goode PreviousNext Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Fulham's 3 Goals In 6 Minutes Trump Forest 3-2 In EPL
Forum Sept. 9: Beware Of Experts
Forum Sept. 9: Beware Of Experts
Forum, Sept. 9: Beware Of Experts https://digitalalaskanews.com/forum-sept-9-beware-of-experts/ Does President Biden’s highlighting of a public education system that produces graduates who cant comprehend a simple loan amortization table, along with a higher education system that awards them degrees — not to mention advanced degrees — indicate the existence of a plan to remedy the situation? Never mind. We all know the answer. A problem that parallels the above is our society’s unquestioning faith in experts, or rather in it’s preferred experts — there being few, if any, fields where the experts are in universal agreement. And don’t forget that disagreement only signifies that someone, if not everyone, is wrong — not that anyone is right. Also bear in mind that nearly all expertise is expended in attempts to mitigate the consequences of previous expertise, which are often owed to the erroneous belief that expertise in one sphere confers significant insight into unrelated ones. It would be far more prudent (and better reflect humanity as it is) to view expertise not as a greater degree of knowledge, but as a lesser degree of ignorance and misperception. And prudent as well to remember that the consequences of knowledge or intelligence applied without wisdom are indistinguishable from those of malevolence or stupidity. Anthony Stimson Lebanon To all those candidates who have placed their signs on the public way in Lebanon, surrounding the gardens created this year, I recognize your right to do so but might also add, just because you can doesn’t mean you should. Perhaps a good lesson to learn for those who aspire to public office. Douglas E Johnson Lebanon They support climate change, gun control, racial equality, womens rights, religious freedom, gender diversity. Most support student loan forgiveness( young republicans like forgiveness if they had a loan) . The children of Conservative evangelicals and other parents who tried to shield them from all of the above mentioned freedoms and causes will likely feel differently when they enter the real world. Racial and gender diversity become the norm as well as new friends and new ideas. So today I have hope for the youth and future of America. They are the adults who will save our inherent values and our democracy. May everyone have growth in their new environment and a great college experience! Sally Prince New London When it comes to choosing our Executive Councilor, there is no question that Cinde Warmington is the strongest candidate in the upcoming primary. As the only Democrat on the Council of 5, she has taken seriously her role as the representative for all of us, and she has quickly become a significant leader on the Council. Unlike any of her predecessors, she was determined to work closely with the press so they would pay more attention to the work of the Executive Council. Not only does she review upcoming agendas with reporters, she makes herself available to discuss strategy and policy. Not content with simply acknowledging that Democrats had to take back the majority, she recruited candidates for the other four seats, and she raised funds for, and hired staff to support, all 5 candidates. No other Executive Councilor, regardless of party, has demonstrated this kind of leadership. Cinde has not hesitated to challenge the Governor, and because of her insistence, he brought a proposal to fund health care clinics back to the Council four times. Her hard work and leadership are recognized by the fact that the entire Federal delegation: Shaheen, Hassan, Pappas, and Kuster, has endorsed her in the primary. In fact, Cinde is the candidate who all the leaders in the House and the Senate have endorsed. Cinde has won endorsements from future-Governor Tom Sherman, every Democrat in the State Senate, the entire House Democratic Leadership and the entire Hanover/Lyme delegation. Because Cinde has put public health over politics, pushed back against the Commissioner of Education, advocated for greener policies, called out the hypocrisy of the Governor, and insisted on reproductive justice, she has won endorsements from Planned Parenthood, the State Employees Union, teachers, ironworkers, electrical workers, and postal workers. She is clearly the choice of working people because her policies improve our lives. I encourage you to vote for Cinde Warmington in the primary on September 13 as she is the leader who your leaders all support. NH Rep. Sharon Nordgren Hanover The epitome of a sore loser used to be the boy who stops a game by taking his ball and going home. Apparently, the new definition is the man who, losing an election, takes top secret documents and goes home. Barry Wenig Lebanon The FBI planted them! Bullfeathers. I declassified them! In your dreams. They’re mine! No, they aren’t. I gave them all back! Not quite. Obama did it! The old tried and true, one size fits all excuse. Who are we to believe? Based on a history of 30,000 lies during his presidency and a continuing torrent of the same since, the smart money is not on the former president. So, what do we know? We know that hundreds of (still) classified documents made their way to Florida and ended up in a resort owned by Trump. We know at a minimum these documents described human intelligence sources, intelligence gathering methods and nuclear secrets. We know they were not secured appropriately. Some were in a room with a single padlock on the door. Some were in desk drawers (locked, unlocked?) in an office visited by uncounted numbers of people including foreign nationals and cleaning personnel. We know that numerous people, probably including his lawyers, and certainly people without security clearances moved boxes of classified documents into and out of the now infamous padlocked storage room for unknown reasons to unknown places. If that doesn’t make you break out in a cold sweat what would? Who did he show these trophies to? Who were those cleaners in there by themselves? Who cares? We all should. The unlawful possession and handling of these documents containing intelligence secrets so sensitive they must be viewed only in secure rooms may well have put the lives of intelligence agents and this country’s security at risk. It may have seriously impaired our intelligence gathering capabilities. And while we’re pondering what Trump planned to do with these documents let’s remember that all living former presidents can, if they choose, continue to receive security briefings. Not Trump. President Biden withdrew that privilege. None of us know where this saga will lead but if Donald Trump is not indicted and tried for serious crimes against the United States then the justice system in this country is broken beyond repair. Lloyd Bunten Canaan As a psychodynamic psychotherapist with over four decades of practical experience, there is a principle in human psychology called projection. It is defined as “the mental process by which people attribute to others what is in their own minds.” This often shows up when people blame others for the things they subconsciously don’t like in themselves. The other evening, a speech was given to our Nation which was a perfect example of this psychological pitfall, claiming that a political rival’s policies and supporters were a threat to our democracy. The foundation of democracy is the opportunity for people to freely decide representatives to govern or lead them based on an exchange of ideas and principles embraced by those representatives. Competition of ideas is how democracy works. Trying to delegitimize the opposition may unfortunately be part of the political process, but it needs to be accurate and substantive to be an effective way to win my support. Dr. Paul MacVittie Newbury, N.H. Leonid Bershidsky’s attempt to inter the daring cosmopolitan vision of Mikhail Gorbachev with his flawed bones brings to mind the old Russian proverb that it was not the devil who created hell but hell which gave rise to the devil (“Mikhail Gorbachev’s failures did not go deep enough,” Sept. 2). No world leader of my septugenarian lifetime braved more daunting obstacles in an internationalist campaign to break out of the hellish action-reaction cycle of cold war arms-racing driving humanity towards an omnicidal abyss. That Gorbachev ultimately failed in his generous quest is far less a slur on his memory than a testament to how many high places across the world including our own precinct of an imperialized hell are still occupied by collaborative satanic figures who could not survive and prosper outside of the militaristic and chauvinist furnace of perpetual war. PATRICK FLAHERTY Hanover Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Forum Sept. 9: Beware Of Experts
The Migrants Sent To Martha's Vineyard Have Been Voluntarily Taken To A Military Base For Support Officials Say
The Migrants Sent To Martha's Vineyard Have Been Voluntarily Taken To A Military Base For Support Officials Say
The Migrants Sent To Martha's Vineyard Have Been Voluntarily Taken To A Military Base For Support, Officials Say https://digitalalaskanews.com/the-migrants-sent-to-marthas-vineyard-have-been-voluntarily-taken-to-a-military-base-for-support-officials-say/ (CNN)The roughly 50 migrants who were sent by plane to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts by Florida’s governor this week were transported to a military base Friday to receive shelter and humanitarian support, officials said. The migrants, after two days of uncertainty on the small island and a large local effort to provide for them, cheered Friday morning when they were told they’d be taken to Joint Base Cape Cod. The migrants had been flown from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard on Wednesday in arrangements made by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — part of a series of moves by Republican governors to transport migrants to liberal enclaves to protest what they say are inadequate federal efforts on southern border security. Martha’s Vineyard had not been expecting the group, and DeSantis’ move was sharply denounced by the White House, migrants’ advocates and Democratic officials. At a church where they had been staying on Martha’s Vineyard, migrants cheered Friday morning when they heard the Massachusetts government would shelter them at the Cape Cod military base. They boarded government-arranged buses willingly, officials said, and they arrived at the military installation Friday afternoon. Joint Base Cape Cod — already an emergency shelter designated by the state emergency management agency — is set up to provide “a safe temporary accommodation appropriate for the needs of families and individuals,” Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker’s office said in a news release. The migrants “will be housed in dormitory-style spaces at JBCC, with separate spaces accommodating both individuals and families,” and families will not be separated, it said. They will have access to services including legal, health care, food, hygiene kits, and crisis counseling, according to Baker’s office. A group of civil rights attorneys working with the migrants said their stories are “heartbreaking — and infuriating.” Many of the migrants went to a hospital in need of care upon their arrival at the island Wednesday. Some of these migrants were sent to Martha’s Vineyard even though they have immigration hearings scheduled nowhere near Massachusetts, the group said. Migrants released from government custody often move to other cities in the US as they go through their immigration proceedings. “This cowardly political stunt has placed our clients in peril,” the Lawyers for Civil Rights group said in a news release Friday. “Some now have immigration hearings as early as Monday thousands of miles away.” Some attorneys from the group accompanied the migrants on the buses to the Cape Cod base. Flights came from Texas, though Florida governor says he arranged them Though Florida’s governor says he arranged for the flights, the migrants had been in Texas — not Florida. Wednesday’s flights originated in San Antonio, Texas, according to the director of Martha Vineyard’s airport, Geoffrey Freeman. For months, DeSantis has been talking about his plans to get Florida involved in redirecting migrants from the southern border in a way to maximize heartburn for Democratic leaders. And last month, DeSantis telegraphed Florida might help move migrants from the US-Mexico border — not from his state. “We do have money to be able to do (that), but that’s from people from the southern border, that’s not going in the interior of Florida,” DeSantis said at an August press conference. His administration secured $12 million in the state budget to pay for migrant relocation, and he has repeatedly threatened to use the money to send them to liberal strongholds. When he laid out his immigration plans at a December news conference, DeSantis teased Martha’s Vineyard as a potential destination, saying, “It’s somewhat tongue-in-cheek, but it is true, if you sent (them) to Delaware or Martha’s Vineyard or some of these places, the border would be secure the next day.” In a Friday news conference in Daytona Beach, DeSantis said he intends to use “every penny” of the $12 million and set the expectation for more buses and “likely more” flights with migrants paid for by Florida. “These are just the beginning efforts,” he said. The governor defended using taxpayer dollars to send the migrants to Martha’s Vineyard because he said many of the people who cross the border end up in his state. State budget records show six days before the migrants were flown to Massachusetts, Florida’s Department of Transportation paid $615,000 to Destin, Florida-based aviation company Vertol Systems as part of the governor’s program to relocate migrants. Budget records do not detail what kind of “contracted services” Vertol provided the department, nor is it clear whether the $615,000 was for two flights to Martha’s Vineyard. Additional budget records obtained by CNN also show the state first requested the payment on September 7. CNN reached out to Vertol Systems, the Department of Transportation and DeSantis’ office but did not immediately receive a response. Civil rights attorneys: Migrants didn’t know they were going to Martha’s Vineyard The migrants on Wednesday’s planes did not know they were being taken to Martha’s Vineyard specifically, according to the legal group helping them. They were induced to board the planes with “representations of work assistance and immigration relief in Boston,” the Lawyers for Civil Rights group said in a news release. “Mid-flight, they were informed they were not going to Boston after all, but to Martha’s Vineyard. They were dropped on the island without notice to anyone in the community,” the news release reads. In his Friday news conference, Florida’s governor disputed the migrants did not know where they were going, because he said they had signed a waiver and had been provided with a packet including a map of Martha’s Vineyard adding, “It’s obvious that’s where they were going,” and it was all “voluntary.” Two of the migrants told CNN, while they were in San Antonio, they decided to go on the trip after two women and a man approached them on the streets near a migrant resource center. One of the migrants, Wilmer Villazana, said he was put up in a hotel for five days before the flights and was well taken care of. The women told him they were from Orlando and worked for private organizations that raise funds to help migrants, Villazana said. One of the women told Villazana and the other migrant, Yang Pablo Mora, they would get help with shelter and jobs once they arrived at their destination, Villazana and Mora said. Villazana and Mora did not know the flights were headed to Martha’s Vineyard, they said. Villazana thought they were going to Boston, he said. White House denounces DeSantis’ move DeSantis’ decision to arrange the migrants’ flight to Massachusetts was one of two high-profile transports sent north by southern Republican governors this week. On Thursday, two buses of migrants sent from Texas by Gov. Greg Abbott arrived outside Vice President Kamala Harris’ residence in the nation’s capital. Texas started busing migrants to Washington this spring. Arizona’s Republican Gov. Doug Ducey followed suit, and the two states have since sent thousands of migrants to Washington. Abbott has expanded Texas’ effort to include New York City and Chicago. The White House on Thursday denounced this week’s moves by DeSantis and Abbott. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre accused the governors of using migrants as “political pawns” and said their actions amounted to a “cruel, premeditated political stunt.” US Attorney for Massachusetts Rachael Rollins will speak with members of the Department of Justice about DeSantis sending the migrants to Martha’s Vineyard, though she did not yet have enough information to say whether he broke any laws in doing so, she told reporters on Thursday. Despite Wednesday’s unannounced arrivals on Martha’s Vineyard, some residents of the island worked quickly to provide some key services. The island is known for being a summer haven for the affluent. “Our island jumped into action putting together 50 beds, giving everyone a good meal, providing a play area for the children, making sure people have the healthcare and support they need,” Massachusetts state Rep. Dylan Fernandes, a Democrat who represents the island, wrote on Twitter. “We are a community that comes together to support immigrants.” CNN’s Steve Contorno, Paul P. Murphy, Bob Crowley, Leyla Santiago, Chuck Johnston, Maria Santana and Priscilla Alvarez contributed to this report. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
The Migrants Sent To Martha's Vineyard Have Been Voluntarily Taken To A Military Base For Support Officials Say
Kyrgyzstan Reports Heavy Fighting With Tajikistan 24 People Killed
Kyrgyzstan Reports Heavy Fighting With Tajikistan 24 People Killed
Kyrgyzstan Reports Heavy Fighting With Tajikistan, 24 People Killed https://digitalalaskanews.com/kyrgyzstan-reports-heavy-fighting-with-tajikistan-24-people-killed/ A still image from video, released by the Kyrgyz border guard service, shows what it said to be active military confrontation on Kyrgyz-Tajik border as seen from an unidentified location in the Batken region, Kyrgyzstan, in this still image taken from handout footage released September 16, 2022. Kyrgyz Border Guard Service/Handout via REUTERS Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Kyrgyz, Tajik leaders meet, agree on ceasefire Fighting escalated from shootouts to tanks and rocket artillery Kyrgyzstan says Tajik troops entered Kyrgyz village Conflict stems from disputed border BISHKEK, Sept 16 (Reuters) – Kyrgyzstan reported “intense battles” with Central Asian neighbour Tajikistan on Friday and said 24 people had been killed in the latest outbreak of violence to hit the former Soviet Union. Both of the small impoverished landlocked nations have accused each other of restarting fighting in a disputed area, despite a ceasefire deal. In a statement, the Kyrgyz border service said its forces were continuing to repel Tajik attacks. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com “From the Tajik side, shelling of the positions of the Kyrgyz side continues, and in some areas intense battles are going on,” it said. The Kyrgyz health ministry later said 24 citizens had been killed and 87 wounded, Russia’s Interfax news agency said. It did not say how many of the victims were from the military. Kamchybek Tashiev, the head of the Kyrgyz state committee on national security, was quoted by Russia’s RIA news agency as saying military casualties had been high. “The situation is difficult and as for what will happen tomorrow – no one can give any guarantees,” he said. The Kyrgyz ministry of emergency situations said more than 136,000 civilians had been evacuated from the conflict zone, Interfax said. Earlier in the day Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov and his Tajik counterpart Emomali Rakhmon agreed to order a ceasefire and troop pullback at a regional summit in Uzbekistan, Japarov’s office said. Kyrgyzstan reported fighting in its southern Batken province which borders Tajikistan’s northern Sughd region and features a Tajik exclave, Vorukh. The same area is famous for its jigsaw-puzzle political and ethnic geography and became the site of similar hostilities last year, also nearly leading to a war. Clashes over the poorly demarcated border are frequent, but usually de-escalate quickly. SOVIET LEGACY Central Asian border issues largely stem from the Soviet era when Moscow tried to divide the region between groups whose settlements were often located amidst those of other ethnicities. Both countries host Russian military bases. Earlier on Friday, Moscow urged a cessation of hostilities. The clashes come at a time when Russian troops are fighting in Ukraine and a new ceasefire appears to be holding between former Soviet states Armenia and Azerbaijan. Kyrgyzstan has said that Tajik forces using tanks, armoured personnel carriers and mortars entered at least one Kyrgyz village and shelled the airport of the Kyrgyz town of Batken and adjacent areas. In turn, Tajikistan accused Kyrgyz forces of shelling an outpost and seven villages with “heavy weaponry”. Temur Umarov, a fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said the remote villages at the centre of the dispute were not economically significant, but that both sides had given it an exaggerated political importance. Umarov said both governments had come to rely on what he called “populist, nationalist rhetoric” that made an exchange of territory aimed at ending the conflict impossible. Another Central Asia analyst, Alexander Knyazev, said the sides showed no will to resolve the conflict peacefully and the mutual territorial claims provoked aggressive attitudes on all levels. He said only third-party peacekeepers could prevent further conflicts by establishing a demilitarised zone. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Olga Dzyubenko; Additional reporting by Nazarali Pirnazarov in Dushanbe and David Ljunggren in Ottawa; Writing by Olzhas Auyezov; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge, Frank Jack Daniel, Raju Gopalakrishnan, William Maclean, Jonathan Oatis and Daniel Wallis Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Kyrgyzstan Reports Heavy Fighting With Tajikistan 24 People Killed
Crispr Gene-Editing Drugs Show Promise In Preliminary Study
Crispr Gene-Editing Drugs Show Promise In Preliminary Study
Crispr Gene-Editing Drugs Show Promise In Preliminary Study https://digitalalaskanews.com/crispr-gene-editing-drugs-show-promise-in-preliminary-study/ Trained in the labs of Crispr inventors and pioneers, Janice Chen, Nicole Gaudelli, Omar Abudayyeh and Jonathan Gootenberg discuss the gene-editing trials they are working on, with the goal of drastically changing our understanding of disease. Updated Sept. 16, 2022 5:03 pm ET Intellia Therapeutics Inc. reported encouraging early-stage study results for its Crispr gene-editing treatments, the latest sign that the pathbreaking technology could result in commercially available drugs in the coming years. Intellia said Friday that one of its treatments, code-named NTLA-2002, significantly reduced levels of a protein that causes periodic attacks of swelling in six patients with a rare genetic disease called hereditary angioedema, or HAE. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Crispr Gene-Editing Drugs Show Promise In Preliminary Study
US Forecast
US Forecast
US Forecast https://digitalalaskanews.com/us-forecast-49/ City/Town, State;Yesterday’s High Temp (F);Yesterday’s Low Temp (F);Today’s High Temp (F);Today’s Low Temp (F);Weather Condition;Wind Direction;Wind Speed (MPH);Humidity (%);Chance of Precip. (%);UV Index Albany, NY;71;51;72;60;Partly sunny, nice;SSE;6;63%;8%;4 Albuquerque, NM;85;60;87;63;Breezy in the p.m.;S;10;26%;2%;7 Anchorage, AK;54;50;57;47;Windy with clearing;S;18;74%;36%;1 Asheville, NC;79;54;79;54;Sunshine, pleasant;SE;5;67%;3%;7 Atlanta, GA;82;61;84;63;Sunny and nice;ESE;6;59%;7%;7 Atlantic City, NJ;79;63;78;68;Partly sunny, nice;SSW;8;51%;1%;5 Austin, TX;93;74;93;74;Partly sunny;SE;5;65%;44%;8 Baltimore, MD;83;65;84;66;Partly sunny;SSW;5;52%;2%;5 Baton Rouge, LA;91;69;91;72;Partly sunny;E;7;63%;9%;8 Billings, MT;76;52;74;53;Clouds and sun;ESE;8;54%;14%;4 Birmingham, AL;84;63;86;67;Sunshine, pleasant;ESE;6;55%;4%;7 Bismarck, ND;64;49;62;46;Periods of rain;W;6;96%;96%;1 Boise, ID;77;54;79;58;A stray t-shower;SE;8;36%;47%;5 Boston, MA;74;53;69;63;Partly sunny;SW;6;47%;1%;5 Bridgeport, CT;75;59;73;64;Partly sunny, nice;SSW;7;55%;1%;5 Buffalo, NY;75;59;78;68;Clouds and sun, nice;S;8;65%;4%;5 Burlington, VT;66;44;70;62;Turning cloudy;S;5;58%;59%;5 Caribou, ME;59;38;64;46;Mostly sunny;WSW;9;51%;59%;4 Casper, WY;69;42;72;44;A t-storm around;S;9;52%;55%;5 Charleston, SC;82;70;83;71;Variable clouds;NE;8;61%;45%;6 Charleston, WV;83;59;86;61;Fog in the morning;SE;4;66%;5%;6 Charlotte, NC;85;61;84;59;Mostly sunny;ESE;6;58%;5%;7 Cheyenne, WY;71;49;73;48;A stray p.m. t-storm;S;10;44%;54%;6 Chicago, IL;83;67;84;70;Partly sunny, warm;SSW;11;52%;43%;5 Cleveland, OH;79;66;83;70;Partly sunny, warm;S;8;64%;6%;5 Columbia, SC;85;63;86;64;Mostly sunny, nice;E;6;58%;7%;7 Columbus, OH;83;58;84;60;Partly sunny, warm;S;7;62%;5%;5 Concord, NH;70;41;71;55;Partly sunny;SSW;4;54%;6%;5 Dallas-Ft. Worth, TX;91;74;93;76;Mostly sunny, warm;SSE;11;58%;4%;7 Denver, CO;82;54;80;54;Nice with sunshine;W;7;33%;28%;6 Des Moines, IA;81;66;81;66;A shower and t-storm;SW;15;73%;93%;4 Detroit, MI;83;63;85;67;Warm with some sun;SSW;9;60%;7%;5 Dodge City, KS;91;70;97;70;Hot;S;17;39%;7%;6 Duluth, MN;63;59;70;61;A stray a.m. t-storm;NE;7;80%;94%;3 El Paso, TX;94;69;95;69;Sunny and very warm;SE;8;29%;1%;8 Fairbanks, AK;60;46;55;44;Cloudy with a shower;SSW;5;66%;85%;1 Fargo, ND;64;52;70;54;A shower and t-storm;NNW;6;90%;92%;2 Grand Junction, CO;74;54;80;55;Lots of sun, nice;ENE;10;46%;25%;6 Grand Rapids, MI;82;63;82;68;Clouds and sun, warm;S;11;63%;81%;5 Hartford, CT;75;54;73;62;Partly sunny;S;5;58%;1%;5 Helena, MT;68;45;74;46;Periods of sun;SW;4;46%;26%;4 Honolulu, HI;87;75;88;75;Mostly sunny, nice;E;8;57%;45%;10 Houston, TX;88;75;88;75;A stray thunderstorm;SE;8;75%;49%;4 Indianapolis, IN;85;64;85;64;Warm with some sun;S;7;56%;7%;5 Jackson, MS;88;65;90;70;Sunny and pleasant;SE;4;55%;4%;7 Jacksonville, FL;87;75;85;73;Cloudy, a t-storm;ENE;9;71%;88%;2 Juneau, AK;59;41;59;47;Sun, some clouds;SSW;5;63%;75%;3 Kansas City, MO;83;70;88;73;A t-storm in spots;S;15;63%;89%;6 Knoxville, TN;86;60;86;61;Nice with sunshine;SSW;3;62%;4%;6 Las Vegas, NV;92;70;94;68;Sunny;S;9;20%;0%;6 Lexington, KY;85;62;85;62;Partly sunny, warm;SSW;7;62%;8%;6 Little Rock, AR;89;64;91;69;Mostly sunny and hot;SSE;7;53%;3%;7 Long Beach, CA;80;67;79;68;Turning sunny;SSE;8;60%;44%;5 Los Angeles, CA;82;65;81;65;Partly sunny;SSE;7;57%;26%;6 Louisville, KY;84;65;87;65;Partly sunny, warm;SSW;7;55%;9%;6 Madison, WI;80;65;80;66;A t-storm in spots;SSW;10;65%;88%;4 Memphis, TN;90;69;91;70;Sunny and hot;SE;7;47%;6%;7 Miami, FL;87;79;85;79;A thunderstorm;ENE;9;81%;95%;5 Milwaukee, WI;82;66;85;68;A stray thunderstorm;SSW;13;60%;66%;4 Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN;76;65;79;64;A stray a.m. t-storm;SSE;8;78%;89%;4 Mobile, AL;90;71;90;74;A passing shower;ESE;9;67%;83%;6 Montgomery, AL;86;65;85;67;Sunny and pleasant;ESE;7;59%;4%;7 Mt. Washington, NH;36;30;45;42;Increasingly windy;WSW;24;62%;80%;5 Nashville, TN;87;62;87;63;Sunshine and warm;SSE;7;53%;6%;6 New Orleans, LA;89;75;88;77;Humid;ESE;10;67%;36%;8 New York, NY;76;63;78;66;Partly sunny;S;8;48%;0%;5 Newark, NJ;78;61;77;63;Partly sunny, nice;S;7;51%;1%;5 Norfolk, VA;80;60;81;64;Mostly sunny;SE;7;52%;4%;6 Oklahoma City, OK;91;71;93;73;Breezy and hot;S;15;57%;6%;7 Olympia, WA;67;46;67;47;Clouds and sun;NE;6;62%;6%;3 Omaha, NE;84;68;84;65;A heavy thunderstorm;S;14;72%;82%;4 Orlando, FL;90;74;85;73;Heavy p.m. t-storms;E;7;82%;89%;5 Philadelphia, PA;80;62;83;65;Partly sunny;S;6;44%;2%;5 Phoenix, AZ;98;78;101;77;Sunny and warm;WSW;7;18%;2%;7 Pittsburgh, PA;81;59;84;64;Fog in the morning;SSW;6;63%;5%;5 Portland, ME;69;48;66;58;Increasing clouds;SSW;8;51%;25%;5 Portland, OR;68;51;71;55;Partly sunny;NNW;7;56%;30%;3 Providence, RI;73;50;72;61;Partly sunny;SSW;6;49%;0%;4 Raleigh, NC;84;57;84;58;Mostly sunny;SE;6;51%;4%;6 Reno, NV;79;46;76;50;Breezy in the p.m.;WSW;10;30%;7%;6 Richmond, VA;82;56;84;59;Plenty of sunshine;SE;4;55%;3%;6 Roswell, NM;96;65;94;65;Very warm;SSE;12;38%;6%;7 Sacramento, CA;84;57;79;60;Partly sunny;SSW;10;50%;27%;6 Salt Lake City, UT;76;57;79;61;A stray p.m. t-storm;N;8;46%;56%;5 San Antonio, TX;93;75;93;75;Partly sunny, humid;SE;8;62%;44%;8 San Diego, CA;74;65;75;66;Turning sunny;SSW;8;62%;25%;5 San Francisco, CA;70;57;69;61;Breezy in the p.m.;SW;15;61%;81%;5 Savannah, GA;84;68;85;69;An afternoon shower;ENE;10;66%;51%;7 Seattle-Tacoma, WA;64;52;66;54;Clouds and sunshine;NNE;9;57%;4%;3 Sioux Falls, SD;78;62;82;58;Humid;W;8;75%;44%;4 Spokane, WA;72;44;72;47;Clouds and sun;NNE;2;45%;4%;4 Springfield, IL;83;63;86;66;Mostly sunny, warm;S;9;55%;28%;5 St. Louis, MO;86;62;88;67;Sunny and warm;S;8;55%;11%;6 Tampa, FL;86;73;85;73;A drenching t-storm;ENE;6;80%;93%;3 Toledo, OH;83;59;84;63;Partly sunny, warm;SSW;5;63%;9%;5 Tucson, AZ;98;70;100;72;Plenty of sunshine;SE;9;24%;0%;8 Tulsa, OK;91;70;94;75;Partly sunny and hot;S;11;52%;9%;6 Vero Beach, FL;87;73;85;72;Heavy p.m. t-storms;E;8;86%;84%;3 Washington, DC;81;62;84;64;Partly sunny;SSE;6;50%;2%;6 Wichita, KS;92;70;94;73;Increasingly windy;S;18;55%;37%;6 Wilmington, DE;79;60;83;64;Partly sunny, nice;S;7;48%;0%;5 _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
US Forecast
US Forecast
US Forecast
US Forecast https://digitalalaskanews.com/us-forecast-50/ City/Town, State;Yesterday’s High Temp (F);Yesterday’s Low Temp (F);Today’s High Temp (F);Today’s Low Temp (F);Weather Condition;Wind Direction;Wind Speed (MPH);Humidity (%);Chance of Precip. (%);UV Index Albany, NY;71;51;72;60;Partly sunny, nice;SSE;6;63%;8%;4 Albuquerque, NM;85;60;87;63;Breezy in the p.m.;S;10;26%;2%;7 Anchorage, AK;54;50;57;47;Windy with clearing;S;18;74%;36%;1 Asheville, NC;79;54;79;54;Sunshine, pleasant;SE;5;67%;3%;7 Atlanta, GA;82;61;84;63;Sunny and nice;ESE;6;59%;7%;7 Atlantic City, NJ;79;63;78;68;Partly sunny, nice;SSW;8;51%;1%;5 Austin, TX;93;74;93;74;Partly sunny;SE;5;65%;44%;8 Baltimore, MD;83;65;84;66;Partly sunny;SSW;5;52%;2%;5 Baton Rouge, LA;91;69;91;72;Partly sunny;E;7;63%;9%;8 Billings, MT;76;52;74;53;Clouds and sun;ESE;8;54%;14%;4 Birmingham, AL;84;63;86;67;Sunshine, pleasant;ESE;6;55%;4%;7 Bismarck, ND;64;49;62;46;Periods of rain;W;6;96%;96%;1 Boise, ID;77;54;79;58;A stray t-shower;SE;8;36%;47%;5 Boston, MA;74;53;69;63;Partly sunny;SW;6;47%;1%;5 Bridgeport, CT;75;59;73;64;Partly sunny, nice;SSW;7;55%;1%;5 Buffalo, NY;75;59;78;68;Clouds and sun, nice;S;8;65%;4%;5 Burlington, VT;66;44;70;62;Turning cloudy;S;5;58%;59%;5 Caribou, ME;59;38;64;46;Mostly sunny;WSW;9;51%;59%;4 Casper, WY;69;42;72;44;A t-storm around;S;9;52%;55%;5 Charleston, SC;82;70;83;71;Variable clouds;NE;8;61%;45%;6 Charleston, WV;83;59;86;61;Fog in the morning;SE;4;66%;5%;6 Charlotte, NC;85;61;84;59;Mostly sunny;ESE;6;58%;5%;7 Cheyenne, WY;71;49;73;48;A stray p.m. t-storm;S;10;44%;54%;6 Chicago, IL;83;67;84;70;Partly sunny, warm;SSW;11;52%;43%;5 Cleveland, OH;79;66;83;70;Partly sunny, warm;S;8;64%;6%;5 Columbia, SC;85;63;86;64;Mostly sunny, nice;E;6;58%;7%;7 Columbus, OH;83;58;84;60;Partly sunny, warm;S;7;62%;5%;5 Concord, NH;70;41;71;55;Partly sunny;SSW;4;54%;6%;5 Dallas-Ft. Worth, TX;91;74;93;76;Mostly sunny, warm;SSE;11;58%;4%;7 Denver, CO;82;54;80;54;Nice with sunshine;W;7;33%;28%;6 Des Moines, IA;81;66;81;66;A shower and t-storm;SW;15;73%;93%;4 Detroit, MI;83;63;85;67;Warm with some sun;SSW;9;60%;7%;5 Dodge City, KS;91;70;97;70;Hot;S;17;39%;7%;6 Duluth, MN;63;59;70;61;A stray a.m. t-storm;NE;7;80%;94%;3 El Paso, TX;94;69;95;69;Sunny and very warm;SE;8;29%;1%;8 Fairbanks, AK;60;46;55;44;Cloudy with a shower;SSW;5;66%;85%;1 Fargo, ND;64;52;70;54;A shower and t-storm;NNW;6;90%;92%;2 Grand Junction, CO;74;54;80;55;Lots of sun, nice;ENE;10;46%;25%;6 Grand Rapids, MI;82;63;82;68;Clouds and sun, warm;S;11;63%;81%;5 Hartford, CT;75;54;73;62;Partly sunny;S;5;58%;1%;5 Helena, MT;68;45;74;46;Periods of sun;SW;4;46%;26%;4 Honolulu, HI;87;75;88;75;Mostly sunny, nice;E;8;57%;45%;10 Houston, TX;88;75;88;75;A stray thunderstorm;SE;8;75%;49%;4 Indianapolis, IN;85;64;85;64;Warm with some sun;S;7;56%;7%;5 Jackson, MS;88;65;90;70;Sunny and pleasant;SE;4;55%;4%;7 Jacksonville, FL;87;75;85;73;Cloudy, a t-storm;ENE;9;71%;88%;2 Juneau, AK;59;41;59;47;Sun, some clouds;SSW;5;63%;75%;3 Kansas City, MO;83;70;88;73;A t-storm in spots;S;15;63%;89%;6 Knoxville, TN;86;60;86;61;Nice with sunshine;SSW;3;62%;4%;6 Las Vegas, NV;92;70;94;68;Sunny;S;9;20%;0%;6 Lexington, KY;85;62;85;62;Partly sunny, warm;SSW;7;62%;8%;6 Little Rock, AR;89;64;91;69;Mostly sunny and hot;SSE;7;53%;3%;7 Long Beach, CA;80;67;79;68;Turning sunny;SSE;8;60%;44%;5 Los Angeles, CA;82;65;81;65;Partly sunny;SSE;7;57%;26%;6 Louisville, KY;84;65;87;65;Partly sunny, warm;SSW;7;55%;9%;6 Madison, WI;80;65;80;66;A t-storm in spots;SSW;10;65%;88%;4 Memphis, TN;90;69;91;70;Sunny and hot;SE;7;47%;6%;7 Miami, FL;87;79;85;79;A thunderstorm;ENE;9;81%;95%;5 Milwaukee, WI;82;66;85;68;A stray thunderstorm;SSW;13;60%;66%;4 Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN;76;65;79;64;A stray a.m. t-storm;SSE;8;78%;89%;4 Mobile, AL;90;71;90;74;A passing shower;ESE;9;67%;83%;6 Montgomery, AL;86;65;85;67;Sunny and pleasant;ESE;7;59%;4%;7 Mt. Washington, NH;36;30;45;42;Increasingly windy;WSW;24;62%;80%;5 Nashville, TN;87;62;87;63;Sunshine and warm;SSE;7;53%;6%;6 New Orleans, LA;89;75;88;77;Humid;ESE;10;67%;36%;8 New York, NY;76;63;78;66;Partly sunny;S;8;48%;0%;5 Newark, NJ;78;61;77;63;Partly sunny, nice;S;7;51%;1%;5 Norfolk, VA;80;60;81;64;Mostly sunny;SE;7;52%;4%;6 Oklahoma City, OK;91;71;93;73;Breezy and hot;S;15;57%;6%;7 Olympia, WA;67;46;67;47;Clouds and sun;NE;6;62%;6%;3 Omaha, NE;84;68;84;65;A heavy thunderstorm;S;14;72%;82%;4 Orlando, FL;90;74;85;73;Heavy p.m. t-storms;E;7;82%;89%;5 Philadelphia, PA;80;62;83;65;Partly sunny;S;6;44%;2%;5 Phoenix, AZ;98;78;101;77;Sunny and warm;WSW;7;18%;2%;7 Pittsburgh, PA;81;59;84;64;Fog in the morning;SSW;6;63%;5%;5 Portland, ME;69;48;66;58;Increasing clouds;SSW;8;51%;25%;5 Portland, OR;68;51;71;55;Partly sunny;NNW;7;56%;30%;3 Providence, RI;73;50;72;61;Partly sunny;SSW;6;49%;0%;4 Raleigh, NC;84;57;84;58;Mostly sunny;SE;6;51%;4%;6 Reno, NV;79;46;76;50;Breezy in the p.m.;WSW;10;30%;7%;6 Richmond, VA;82;56;84;59;Plenty of sunshine;SE;4;55%;3%;6 Roswell, NM;96;65;94;65;Very warm;SSE;12;38%;6%;7 Sacramento, CA;84;57;79;60;Partly sunny;SSW;10;50%;27%;6 Salt Lake City, UT;76;57;79;61;A stray p.m. t-storm;N;8;46%;56%;5 San Antonio, TX;93;75;93;75;Partly sunny, humid;SE;8;62%;44%;8 San Diego, CA;74;65;75;66;Turning sunny;SSW;8;62%;25%;5 San Francisco, CA;70;57;69;61;Breezy in the p.m.;SW;15;61%;81%;5 Savannah, GA;84;68;85;69;An afternoon shower;ENE;10;66%;51%;7 Seattle-Tacoma, WA;64;52;66;54;Clouds and sunshine;NNE;9;57%;4%;3 Sioux Falls, SD;78;62;82;58;Humid;W;8;75%;44%;4 Spokane, WA;72;44;72;47;Clouds and sun;NNE;2;45%;4%;4 Springfield, IL;83;63;86;66;Mostly sunny, warm;S;9;55%;28%;5 St. Louis, MO;86;62;88;67;Sunny and warm;S;8;55%;11%;6 Tampa, FL;86;73;85;73;A drenching t-storm;ENE;6;80%;93%;3 Toledo, OH;83;59;84;63;Partly sunny, warm;SSW;5;63%;9%;5 Tucson, AZ;98;70;100;72;Plenty of sunshine;SE;9;24%;0%;8 Tulsa, OK;91;70;94;75;Partly sunny and hot;S;11;52%;9%;6 Vero Beach, FL;87;73;85;72;Heavy p.m. t-storms;E;8;86%;84%;3 Washington, DC;81;62;84;64;Partly sunny;SSE;6;50%;2%;6 Wichita, KS;92;70;94;73;Increasingly windy;S;18;55%;37%;6 Wilmington, DE;79;60;83;64;Partly sunny, nice;S;7;48%;0%;5 _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
US Forecast
Trump Roasts Once Close Friend Chris Christie With Crass Fat Joke
Trump Roasts Once Close Friend Chris Christie With Crass Fat Joke
Trump Roasts Once Close Friend Chris Christie With Crass Fat Joke https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-roasts-once-close-friend-chris-christie-with-crass-fat-joke/ Mario Tama/Getty Images Former President Donald Trump shared a crass post on his Truth Social account Friday poking fun at the weight of his one-time close friend and political ally former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R). “Chris Christie at a Roy Rogers at 11 PM in the evening trying to console himself,” Trump wrote on his struggling Twitter knock-off above a photo of Christie at what appears to be a buffet. While it’s unclear what exactly prompted Trump’s childish attack on his supposed friend of over 20 years, Christie has recently been critical of Trump’s taking of classified materials from the White House to his private residence. On ABC News’ This Week on Sunday, Christie defended the Department of Justice and the FBI for executing a search warrant at Mar-a-Lago, arguing law enforcement “had no choice” but to seize the documents from an uncooperative Trump. “It’s not only the nature of the documents. We now have a good idea of the timeline. This has been 16 months that the Department of Justice has been saying please, asking nicely, negotiating with his attorneys, taking up partial production, seeing a non-response to a subpoena,” Christie said. “They had no choice, in my view, but to go in and take them, because of the nature of the documents,” he argued. “He had that in the top drawer at Mar-a-Lago in his desk,” Christie said of Trump’s handling of the top-secret documents. “That’s a problem. I don’t think he’ll be prosecuted for it, but we ought to get those documents back.” Trump and Christie have traded barbs before when they ran against each other for the GOP presidential nomination in 2016. “He shouldn’t be talking like that, I’m surprised that he would be talking like that,” Trump said in response to Christie saying Trump’s candidacy would burn out. “I know him and I guess he used to be a friend until this all happened.” The two made up after Christie dropped out of the race and endorsed Trump. Christie briefly led Trump’s transition team in 2016, but was not given a role in the new presidential administration. Christie, who is believed to be eyeing a 2024 presidential bid, told Axios in November 2021 he had not spoke with Trump since Jan. 6 when he frantically tried to call Trump to urge him to stop the attack on the U.S. Capitol – calls he claims Trump ignored. Mike Allen wrote at the time, “The two were once so close Christie called him “Donald,” even when he was in the White House. Right after Christie appeared on a Sunday show, the president would call him in the car and critique his appearance.” “I was desperate to try to get in touch with him,” Christie told Allen about Jan. 6, “because I felt like what was happening was awful and was going to be a stain on his presidency, and I wanted him to be the guy to stand up and stop it. But he didn’t take the call, and so I said what I would have said to him privately on the air on ABC.” Have a tip we should know? tips@mediaite.com Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Roasts Once Close Friend Chris Christie With Crass Fat Joke
Durham Wants To Use FBI Instant Messages From Analyst Embroiled In Hunter Biden Saga
Durham Wants To Use FBI Instant Messages From Analyst Embroiled In Hunter Biden Saga
Durham Wants To Use FBI Instant Messages From Analyst Embroiled In Hunter Biden Saga https://digitalalaskanews.com/durham-wants-to-use-fbi-instant-messages-from-analyst-embroiled-in-hunter-biden-saga/ September 16, 2022 04:11 PM John Durham wants to use internal instant messages from an FBI analyst embroiled in the Hunter Biden saga in his trial against Christopher Steele’s main dossier source, Igor Danchenko. Danchenko, a Russian-born, U.S.-based lawyer, was charged by Durham last year with five counts tied to alleged lies he told the bureau about the Trump dossier, and he has pleaded not guilty. His lawyers revealed Thursday some of what Durham plans to use in the October trial, including Microsoft Lync chats from a bureau analyst who interviewed the Russian national in 2017 and went on to get mixed up in the investigation into President Joe Biden’s son. FBI supervisory intelligence analyst Brian Auten, whom whistleblowers say opened an August 2020 assessment used by the FBI to wrongly label accurate information about Hunter Biden as false, was among those who interviewed Danchenko in January 2017, and the Department of Justice’s watchdog criticized him for a February 2017 intelligence memo to senior FBI officials that “failed to advise them of the inconsistencies between Steele and his Primary Sub-source.” After Danchenko first lied to the FBI in January 2017 when talking with Auten, the FBI made him a paid confidential informant just two months later, lasting through October 2020. Auten was deeply involved in the FBI’s Crossfire Hurricane investigation into unfounded claims of Trump-Russia collusion, and he also played a role in the bureau’s efforts to obtain flawed surveillance against Trump campaign associate Carter Page. Auten circulated a February 2017 intelligence memo to FBI officials about the Danchenko interview, but DOJ Inspector General Michael Horowitz said it “did not describe the inconsistencies” from the FBI discussion. The memo was sent to then-Director James Comey and then-Deputy Director Andrew McCabe in March 2017. FBI MADE DANCHENKO A PAID INFORMANT AFTER HE LIED TO BUREAU The FBI analyst told Horowitz he did not have any “pains or heartburn” about the accuracy of Steele’s claims based on what Danchenko had said. Auten told Horowitz “he believed that there were instances” in which Danchenko was “minimizing” certain facts but did not believe he was “completely fabricating” events. Auten had been referred by FBI Director Christopher Wray to the Office of Professional Responsibility for possible disciplinary action following the release of Horowitz’s 2019 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act abuse report, though Wray said those proceedings were slowed down to cooperate with Durham’s investigation. The referral came shortly before Auten’s assessment tied to Hunter Biden the next year. The bureau analyst “opened an assessment which was used by an FBI headquarters team to improperly discredit negative Hunter Biden information as disinformation and caused investigative activity to cease,” according to disclosures made public by Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA). Wray said he found the allegations “deeply troubling” when asked about them in early August. Documents also show the FBI had previously investigated Danchenko as a possible “threat to national security” due to his alleged connections with Russian intelligence. According to Durham’s indictment, Danchenko anonymously sourced a fabricated claim about Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort to Clinton ally Chuck Dolan, who spent years, including 2016, doing work for Russian businesses and the Russian government. Durham’s indictment also says Danchenko lied to the FBI about a phone call he claims he received from Sergei Millian, an American citizen born in Belarus, who the Steele source had said told him about a conspiracy of cooperation between former President Donald Trump and the Russians. Auten met with Steele in early October 2016. Horowitz said Auten’s notes “indicate that Steele explained that the information he obtained about Page resulted from research he had been retained to conduct related to a litigation matter concerning debts allegedly owed by Paul Manafort.” Steele had been conducting that work on behalf of Putin-allied Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska. Auten’s connections to Durham cases don’t end with Danchenko. Danchenko’s trial comes after Democratic lawyer Michael Sussmann was found not guilty in May on a false statements charge of concealing his representation of Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign from the FBI when he pushed debunked Trump-Russia collusion claims about Alfa-Bank to the bureau in 2016. Testimony during the trial revealed Clinton personally signed off on her campaign sharing the Alfa-Bank claims with the media. Horowitz said in 2019 that Auten “told us that he factored the Alfa Bank/Trump server allegations into his assessment of Steele’s reporting.” CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER Durham has obtained one guilty plea from former FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith, who admitted he falsified a document during the bureau’s efforts to renew FISA surveillance authority against Page. Clinesmith wrote in 2017 that Page was “not a source” for the CIA when Page was indeed an operational contact for them. An FBI attorney told Horowitz he recalled Auten “had raised a concern that Page may have had a prior relationship with the other U.S. government agency,” but Auten told the watchdog that he didn’t remember raising this concern, though he had been aware Page had been a “type of source” with the CIA. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Durham Wants To Use FBI Instant Messages From Analyst Embroiled In Hunter Biden Saga
Ex-Trump Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders Reveals Cancer Treatment
Ex-Trump Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders Reveals Cancer Treatment
Ex-Trump Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders Reveals Cancer Treatment https://digitalalaskanews.com/ex-trump-press-secretary-sarah-huckabee-sanders-reveals-cancer-treatment/ Former Trump White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders revealed Friday that she had undergone surgery to treat thyroid cancer. “During a check-up earlier this month, my doctor ordered a biopsy on an area of concern in my neck and the test revealed that I had thyroid cancer,” the 40-year-old Sanders, the Republican candidate for governor of Arkansas, said in a statement. “Today, I underwent a successful surgery to remove my thyroid and surrounding lymph nodes and by the grace of God I am now cancer-free,” she added. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Ex-Trump Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders Reveals Cancer Treatment
Stock Market Today: Dow Closes 100 Points Lower; FedEx Stock Drops Over 20%
Stock Market Today: Dow Closes 100 Points Lower; FedEx Stock Drops Over 20%
Stock Market Today: Dow Closes 100 Points Lower; FedEx Stock Drops Over 20% https://digitalalaskanews.com/stock-market-today-dow-closes-100-points-lower-fedex-stock-drops-over-20/ About this page Last Updated: Sep 16, 2022 at 4:08 pm ET Follow The Wall Street Journal’s full markets coverage. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Stock Market Today: Dow Closes 100 Points Lower; FedEx Stock Drops Over 20%
Nine Dead In Flooding After Italy Is Hit By Unprecedented Rains
Nine Dead In Flooding After Italy Is Hit By Unprecedented Rains
Nine Dead In Flooding After Italy Is Hit By Unprecedented Rains https://digitalalaskanews.com/nine-dead-in-flooding-after-italy-is-hit-by-unprecedented-rains/ ROME — Several hours of extraordinary rainfall triggered flooding across a stretch of central Italy early Friday and left at least nine dead, with several others missing, according to authorities. As the rainfall stopped, rescue crews scrambled through mud and around fallen trees to look for survivors. Some people had taken refuge on rooftops or held onto branches amid the flooding. Italian media reported several searing accounts, including a mother and daughter who were believed to have been swept away while getting out of their car. “All citizens are ordered to not leave their homes and go to higher floors,” one hard-hit town wrote in an all-caps bulletin on Facebook as the high water surged. While Italy has had deadlier floods over the decades, the event marked yet another example of extreme weather, following a record drought that had sapped lakes and rivers and devastated crops. Fabrizio Curcio, the head of Italy’s civil protection department, said the flooded area over a matter of hours saw “about one-third of the rainfall you’d usually get in a year.” “There were moments of terror with truly extraordinary levels of water,” Curcio said. A spokesman for the civil protection department said the area had been hit with 400 millimeters, or about 15.75 inches, of rain. While it is difficult to connect any single event to climate change, experts say moments of extreme weather are becoming more common — including in Italy, which has seen melting Alpine glaciers, summer wildfires and rising seas that are chipping away at coastal cities. In a visit to the flooded region, Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi said flooding risks had become an “emergency with climate change” and would require steps for prevention, including infrastructure investment. “It also means tackling climate change,” Draghi said. The flooding Friday stretched across the Marche region, from the inland hills to the Adriatic coast. Some mayors of the hard-hit towns noted that there had been no indication that such an extreme event might be coming. “[There was] only a yellow alert from the civil protection for wind and rain,” Maurizio Greci, the mayor of Sassoferrato, told Italian radio. “Nothing could foretell such a disaster.” In a news release, government authorities said that among the nine dead, two people had yet to be identified and could be among the four people who were officially missing. Photos from Friday showed people beginning the cleanup work, trudging through mud, holding shovels, drying off belongings. The head of the Marche region, Francesco Acquaroli, wrote on his verified Facebook page that he’d spoken with Italian President Sergio Mattarella as well as Draghi, who offered support for “every necessary need.” “The pain over what happened is deep,” Acquaroli wrote. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Nine Dead In Flooding After Italy Is Hit By Unprecedented Rains
Judge Raymond Dearie Takes On Fraught Role In Trump Documents Case
Judge Raymond Dearie Takes On Fraught Role In Trump Documents Case
Judge Raymond Dearie Takes On Fraught Role In Trump Documents Case https://digitalalaskanews.com/judge-raymond-dearie-takes-on-fraught-role-in-trump-documents-case/ The long-serving federal judge was named as the special master with responsibility for sifting through the materials seized from the former president. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. The special master will have the power to sift through the records the F.B.I. seized from former President Donald J. Trump’s Florida estate.Credit…Joe Raedle/Getty Images Sept. 16, 2022, 3:13 p.m. ET He has prosecuted drug dealers, overseen corruption cases and authorized warrants in highly classified investigations. Now Judge Raymond J. Dearie will take on one of the highest profile — and politically fraught — jobs of his long career: serving as a so-called special master, with a mandate to review a trove of documents seized last month by the F.B.I. during a search of former President Donald J. Trump’s residence in Florida. Judge Dearie, 78, was officially appointed to the post on Thursday night by Judge Aileen M. Cannon, the Florida jurist who is handling the matter, after emerging as the sole consensus choice between Mr. Trump’s lawyers, who had requested a special master, and the Justice Department, which had opposed the move. The task ahead of him — sifting through about 11,000 documents and deciding if any are protected by executive privilege or attorney-client privilege or are Mr. Trump’s property — will require both a firm grasp of the law and an innate ability to navigate disputes between opponents. But Judge Dearie is up for the job, said many of those who know him. “He’s an ideal choice,” said Alan Vinegrad, a former federal prosecutor who appeared before Judge Dearie in Federal District Court in Brooklyn several times over the years. “He’s fair,” Mr. Vinegrad said. “He’s thoughtful. He’s measured. He’s careful. And he’s obviously got vast experience. Frankly, it says everything you need to know that both sides of this hotly contested case agreed that he would be a suitable choice.” Judge Dearie’s role as special master in the case grants him considerable authority over whether, or how quickly, the Justice Department will be able to use classified materials seized from Mr. Trump in its investigation into his handling of the documents and whether the government’s attempts to reclaim them were obstructed. Under Judge Cannon’s ruling, federal investigators are barred from using the seized materials in their investigation unless or until the special master decides they are not subject to claims of privilege. The Justice Department has argued that Judge Cannon’s ruling also impedes a review of the national security risks by the intelligence agencies. Image Judge Raymond J. Dearie was officially appointed as special master on Thursday night by Judge Aileen M. Cannon. Judge Cannon’s appointment order gave Judge Dearie broad powers to review materials seized from Mar-a-Lago, Mr. Trump’s residence and private club in Palm Beach, Fla. While examining them for attorney-client privilege is a fairly routine measure, separating out those that may be shielded by executive privilege is a far more unusual move in criminal cases. Judge Dearie is also authorized to decide which of the records belong to the government and which are Mr. Trump’s personal property — as well to offer his assessment of the documents that the government claims are classified. Moreover, he has been asked to evaluate any claims by Mr. Trump and his lawyers that the government overstepped the boundaries of the Fourth Amendment and improperly took materials away from Mar-a-Lago during the search. If there is one criticism made of Judge Dearie, it is that he sometimes takes his time making tough decisions. Judge Cannon has given him a deadline of Nov. 30 to complete his review. How Times reporters cover politics. We rely on our journalists to be independent observers. So while Times staff members may vote, they are not allowed to endorse or campaign for candidates or political causes. This includes participating in marches or rallies in support of a movement or giving money to, or raising money for, any political candidate or election cause. Judge Dearie has been asked to first look at the classified documents taken from Mar-a-Lago and to “thereafter consider prompt adjustments to the court’s orders as necessary.” That seemed to suggest that Judge Cannon would consider allowing the Justice Department to quickly regain unrestricted access to the material for its criminal investigation if Judge Dearie decides that Mr. Trump does not have any valid privilege claims. Now semiretired as what it is known as a senior status judge, Judge Dearie, a native of Long Island, got his start in the law in 1969 with the Wall Street firm Shearman & Sterling. Two years later, he left private practice and joined the U.S. attorney’s office in Brooklyn, rising through the ranks until he was appointed to the top job in the office by President Ronald Reagan in 1982. As Brooklyn’s chief federal prosecutor, he made cases against gangsters from New York’s five Mafia families and international drug dealers while earning a reputation as a by-the-book law enforcement official with a measured manner and an affable human touch. In 1986, Alphonse D’Amato, a Republican then representing New York in the Senate, put his name forward for a job on the federal bench. Judge Dearie has now held that position for 36 years. During his long career, Judge Dearie has overseen prominent criminal cases such as the corruption trials of officials at FIFA, the agency that governs international soccer. He has also handled politically sensitive matters, among them a court battle over who was allowed to participate in televised debates during the 2017 New York City mayor’s race. Having served on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court from 2012 to 2017, Judge Dearie also has extensive experience with classified proceedings. That experience will likely prove crucial given that Judge Cannon has asked him to begin his review with about 100 highly classified documents seized from Mar-a-Lago. While sitting on the intelligence surveillance court, Judge Dearie signed off on warrants that the F.B.I. used to surveil Carter Page, a former campaign aide to Mr. Trump, during the bureau’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. Investigators later discovered that a lawyer for the F.B.I. had altered an email that was used to support the application for the warrant, a development that Mr. Trump and his allies have often used to discredit the larger inquiry. Many lawyers who know Judge Dearie were surprised last week when Mr. Trump’s legal team suggested him as a candidate for the special master post, wondering if the former president’s lawyers really knew who they were proposing. “Dearie is a fair-minded, smart judge who has a ton of common sense and has been on the bench for a long time,” said Andrew Weissmann, a former lead prosecutor in the Russia investigation who got his start in the Brooklyn federal courts. “If that’s not what the Trump people wanted, that’s definitely what they got.” Everything about the search of Mar-a-Lago has taken place in an atmosphere of partisan politics and extreme public scrutiny. As Mr. Trump and his allies have lashed out at the F.B.I. and the Justice Department, federal officials have often felt the need to be more transparent in court filings than usual, agreeing last month to release a redacted version of the affidavit that had been used to apply for the search warrant. In this hothouse environment, Judge Dearie’s easy manner and natural sense of fairness could prove beneficial, said Jim Walden, a former federal prosecutor who appeared before the judge several times in Brooklyn. “He’s not going to let the politics affect him,” Mr. Walden said, “and will make decisions without fear or favor for either side.” Mr. Weissmann said that Judge Dearie’s humility and decency — as well as his ability to read people well — would likely prove useful not only in calming the tempers of the parties in the case, but also in dealing with Judge Cannon, a younger and much less experienced jurist. When Mr. Weissman was a novice prosecutor, he recalled, Judge Dearie once showed up extremely late for court. A few days later, Mr. Weissman said, he received a handwritten note from the judge apologizing for his tardiness — and soon found out that the defense lawyer in the case had gotten one too. “He didn’t have to do that, but that’s just who Judge Dearie is,” Mr. Weissmann said. “He’s a mensch.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Judge Raymond Dearie Takes On Fraught Role In Trump Documents Case
Trump Ignites Frenzy With New Interview Says Indictment Won
Trump Ignites Frenzy With New Interview Says Indictment Won
Trump Ignites Frenzy With New Interview, Says Indictment Won https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-ignites-frenzy-with-new-interview-says-indictment-won/ Trump ignites frenzy with new interview, says indictment won’t stop 2024 presidential run  Fox11online.com Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Ignites Frenzy With New Interview Says Indictment Won
Election Reform Bill From Liz Cheney Democrats May Get House Vote Next Week
Election Reform Bill From Liz Cheney Democrats May Get House Vote Next Week
Election Reform Bill From Liz Cheney, Democrats May Get House Vote Next Week https://digitalalaskanews.com/election-reform-bill-from-liz-cheney-democrats-may-get-house-vote-next-week/ NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! The House may consider legislation as early as next week from Reps. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., and Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., to reform the way electoral votes are counted in presidential elections, a bill that’s meant to respond to former President Donald Trump’s challenge of the 2020 election that led to violent protests at the Capitol. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said Thursday on the House floor that the bill could get a vote as early as next week. The two lawmakers had not introduced the bill as of Friday afternoon, but it’s been clear for some time that a bill is in the works. Both Cheney, who lost her primary election in August and won’t return to Congress next year, and Lofgren sit on the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. In July, the two lawmakers indicated that legislation to amend the Electoral Count Act of 1887 was on the way. TRUMP BLASTS LIZ CHENEY AFTER PRIMARY LOSS TO HARRIET HAGEMAN: ‘SHE CAN FINALLY DISAPPEAR’ Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., who lost her primary election in August and won’t return to Congress next year, sits on the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite) “The Select Committee has been considering legislative recommendations based on its findings concerning the January 6 attack and will share those soon,” the two lawmakers said. “These will include a bipartisan approach to the Electoral Count Act.” Lofgren also chairs the Committee on House Administration, and in January, that committee issued a report that made a series of recommendations that could make it into the bill. One of those recommendations was to make it harder for members of Congress to raise objections to the electoral votes of a given state when it meets in a joint session to count the votes. Under current law, only one lawmaker from the House and one from the Senate is needed to object, and Lofgren’s report recommended that one third of all members of both the House and Senate would be needed to object. Vice President Mike Pence speaks during a “Save the Majority” rally in Augusta, Georgia, on Dec. 10, 2020. (AP Photo/John Bazemore) MARK MEADOWS COMPLYING WITH DOJ SUBPOENA, TURNING OVER DOCUMENTS PREVIOUSLY SHARED WITH HOUSE JAN. 6 COMMITTEE Lofgren’s report also called for language to narrow the role the vice president plays when electoral votes are counted. It said the vice president should not preside over the joint session of Congress, and should have no procedural say in the process. That language reflects complaints from Democrats and some Republicans that former President Trump urged then-Vice President Mike Pence to challenge the electoral count. The report added that the role of Congress should generally be to accept the electoral results of each state, and substantive problems that arise should be raised and settled by a supermajority vote. Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., speaks during a business meeting on Capitol Hill  in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 13, 2021. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images) CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP Some of these reforms were included in legislation introduced by Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Joe Manchin , D-W.Va., in July. That bill clarified that the role of the vice president is “solely ministerial,” and sought to raise the objection threshold during the joint session of Congress. This week, a House version of that bill was introduced by Reps. Fred Upton, R-Mich., and Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J. But Hoyer’s comments on the floor this week indicate that House leaders are waiting for the bill from Cheney and Lofgren. Pete Kasperowicz is a politics editor at Fox News Digital. He can be reached at Peter.Kasperowicz@Fox.com and his Twitter handle is @PeteKDCNews. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Election Reform Bill From Liz Cheney Democrats May Get House Vote Next Week
Democrats Will Continue To Play The 'Not Trump' Card Intensively In Midterms And Beyond: Strategists
Democrats Will Continue To Play The 'Not Trump' Card Intensively In Midterms And Beyond: Strategists
Democrats Will Continue To Play The 'Not Trump' Card Intensively In Midterms And Beyond: Strategists https://digitalalaskanews.com/democrats-will-continue-to-play-the-not-trump-card-intensively-in-midterms-and-beyond-strategists/ News Analysis In the coming midterms, Democrats believe their best hope is to position themselves as the only alternative to Trump and his brand of Republicanism, according to political strategists. Democrat candidates and their supporters, they say, are hoping that the furor around former President Donald Trump’s alleged storing of sensitive documents in Mar-a-Lago, as well as his alleged role in the events of Jan. 6 will not abate even slightly between now and the November midterm elections, and will distract voters from the Democrats’ shortcomings, particularly with regard to the economy. Even in battleground states where a variety of Republican candidates competed in this week’s primary elections, Democrats are acting as if their best bet is to paint all Republicans as nascent or actual extremists and to capitalize on some voters’ dissatisfaction with the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the strategists argue. President Joe Biden and his party have come in for severe criticism for their handling of the economy and for an inflation report credited with bringing about the stock market’s worst day of 2022 on Sept. 13, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down nearly 1,300 points. Some economists view the highest inflation in four decades as a function of the Biden administration’s expansionist monetary policy, which they argue has led to too much money chasing too few goods. For fiscal year 2022 as a whole, the federal budget deficit is projected to be $1 trillion. These dismal figures may motivate GOP voters as much as, or more than the court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization will drive Democrat turnout, strategists predict. In this context, Democrats are quick to seize on any potentially bad news for Trump as good news for their embattled party. Indeed, for some Democrats, the ongoing investigation of Trump’s alleged legal and financial violations may help cast the midterms as a referendum not only on the current president and his economic performance, but on Trump and those Republicans who, they claim, fit the same mold. Given the severity of Biden’s problems, Democrats will do their best to exploit charges and allegations against Trump to their fullest political advantage whether or not the attacks have merit, strategists say. “Every day brings the risk of more bad news about Trump, which splashes mud on every Republican. The Dobbs ruling is known and GOP candidates either get on the right side of the issue or shift to the economy, which is a bigger deal for most voters,” Keith Naughton, a political consultant and the director of Germantown, Maryland-based Silent Majority Strategies, told The Epoch Times. Donald Trump arrives at Trump Tower in N.Y. on Aug. 9, 2022, the day after FBI agents raided his Mar-a-Lago Palm Beach home, in Fla. (David ‘Dee’ Delgado/Reuters) A Double-Edged Sword? Mark C. Smith, a professor of political science and Director of the Center for Political Studies at Cedarville University in Ohio, acknowledges Trump’s continuing prominence within the GOP and his popularity with many Republican voters. This has helped make the coming elections, in large part, what some voters in either party would like it to be: a Trump-Biden rematch as much as a spate of House, Senate, and gubernatorial races. “Unlike other losing presidential candidates, Trump has maintained a strong presence within his party. He is endorsing candidates, raising funds, and holding rallies. This changes the dynamic of the midterm,” Smith told The Epoch Times. “Interestingly, the Democrats are happy if Trump continues to headline for Republicans. While popular within the GOP, Trump is toxic for independent voters, and he runs poorly with college-educated white voters, as well as suburban women. In light of his recent legal troubles, Democrats are fine with Trump’s expanded role,” Smith said. But given the severity of the economic problems and other factors, Smith does not believe that the Democrats’ strategy of decrying Trump’s alleged extremism, and that of “Trump-y” candidates in local issues, will succeed. “If we consider the political climate, this should be a huge election for Republicans. A relatively unpopular president and a struggling economy, in addition to foreign affairs instability, should put the GOP in a strong position,” said Smith. While the electoral math of midterm contests varies, it is possible to identify a statistical mean when looking at long-term trends, Smith argued. “On average, the party out of power picks up around 26 House seats, and five or six Senate seats. To the degree this election is normal, it will be good for Republicans and they will take both houses of Congress,” he said. While turnout in midterm elections is often low compared to presidential elections, Lonny Leitner, vice president of the government affairs firm LS2 Group, which has offices in Iowa and Minnesota, believes that the Mar-a-Lago raid has backfired and that its findings will not dissuade GOP voters. “I spent a few days out at the Minnesota State Fair, and I can count on one hand how many times someone brought up the fact that they were concerned about the FBI raid, which tells me it is yet another failed attempt by the Democrats to end Trump once and for all. When will they learn?” Leitner told The Epoch Times. It was far more common for people he encountered at the fair to voice serious concerns over inflation, fuel prices, out-of-control crime, and the crisis at the border with Mexico, Leitner said. The Case of New Hampshire To understand the Democrats’ approach, it is useful to look at one state in particular that has been fiercely contested in recent election years, namely New Hampshire, believes Andrew Smith, Director of the University of New Hampshire Survey Center and an expert on elections and electoral methodology. Smith believes that New Hampshire is not as politically conservative as its reputation and famous license plate motto (“Live Free or Die”) might lead some people to believe. “New Hampshire’s electorate is divided between Republicans and Democrats. Democrats generally have a little bit of an advantage in presidential elections, but it’s not that big an advantage in midterm elections with a Democrat president,” Smith told The Epoch Times. “It’s also a state with higher levels of education and income than most states, and it’s a suburban state,” he said, noting a large proportion of its population lives in the suburbs surrounding Boston. “In that sense, it’s similar to other suburban areas of the northeast that lean Democrat. It’s not a Republican state, that’s a myth,” he added. Generalizations In the GOP primary elections held in New Hampshire on Sept. 13, Karoline Leavitt won the race for the first congressional district against a field of rivals including Matt Mowers, Gail Huff Brown, and Russell Prescott, with 34 percent of the vote compared to 25 percent, 17 percent, and 10 percent respectively. In the second congressional district race, Robert Burns scored a victory with 33 percent of the vote versus 29 percent for George Hansel, 25 percent for Lily Tang Williams, and smaller numbers for other competitors. In the Senate primary, former military officer Donald Bolduc, who hopes to unseat Democrat Senator Maggie Hassan in November, barely edged out his GOP rival Chuck Morse, winning 37.1 percent of the vote to Morse’s 35.8 percent. In the GOP gubernatorial primary, incumbent Chris Sununu easily trounced all his rivals, winning 78 percent of the vote. The winning candidates come from a wide variety of backgrounds and have diverse views and ideologies. Leavitt is a former assistant press secretary in the Trump administration, Burns is an entrepreneur and former treasurer of a New Hampshire county, while Sununu has a reputation as a moderate Republican who helped secure funding for a cause championed by Democrats, namely state funding for full-day kindergarten. While some in the media may wish to associate Bolduc with Trump, it is important to remember that he lost New Hampshire’s 2020 Senate primary to Trump-endorsed candidate Corky Messner, Smith said. In spite of the eclecticism of these candidates and the impossibility of categorizing them all as strictly “Trump-y” figures, Smith argued, Democrats will treat the candidates in New Hampshire and other states as Republicans in the Trump mode in the hope of wooing the roughly 42 percent of voters in the state who register as independents. Smith said that the tactic put to use in New Hampshire is a microcosm of a broad political strategy. “Democrats are going to use all these candidates’ connection with Trump—whether it’s there or not—as arguments to vote against them. But that’s true across the country. Democrats are running as if Trump is still in office,” he commented. With the tricky position in which Democrats find themselves amid so much bad economic news, they place their hopes in controversies around a figure who remains powerful and influential within the GOP. “All the Mar-a-Lago stuff, they’re praying that will go on until after the midterm elections, because they’re running at a moment when the president is not very popular, and that’s a difficult place to be, as we saw in 2010 and 2014,” Smith continued. In the New Hampshire races in November 2010, Republican candidates won both the congressional districts contested in this week’s primaries, though they did not win the governorship, Smith noted. Looking at the 2010 midterm elections nationally, Republicans won a majority in the House of Representatives, which they held onto in 2014 in addition to winning majority control of the Senate. The ‘Extremism’ Charge Since the spring, when predictions widely fa...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Democrats Will Continue To Play The 'Not Trump' Card Intensively In Midterms And Beyond: Strategists
Pro-Trump Judge Orders Trump To Pay For Special MasterAnd Everyone's Making The Same Joke
Pro-Trump Judge Orders Trump To Pay For Special MasterAnd Everyone's Making The Same Joke
Pro-Trump Judge Orders Trump To Pay For Special Master–And Everyone's Making The Same Joke https://digitalalaskanews.com/pro-trump-judge-orders-trump-to-pay-for-special-master-and-everyones-making-the-same-joke/ United States District Court Judge Aileen Cannon has appointed a special master to review documents seized by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) from former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate last month, rejecting a Justice Department (DOJ) request to let federal prosecutors continue their review of classified documents. Judge Cannon appointed Raymond Dearie, a former Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, to act as special master and ordered the review be completed by November 30th. She stressed the importance of appointing “a neutral third party” to conduct the review “in an expedited and orderly fashion.” But there’s a catch: Trump’s legal team must cover the costs. u201cCANNON is also urging Dearie to complete his review by Nov. 30 u2014 more than a month longer than DOJ urged. nnBut, in one consession to DOJ, she says Trump has to pay the full cost of the special master. https://t.co/ADuRMisLV2u201d — Kyle Cheney (@Kyle Cheney) 1663282871 The news that Trump will have to pay for the costs of the special master’s review is especially significant because Trump has for decades typically avoided or flat out refused to pay his debts. Over the years, hundreds of people have alleged that Trump doesn’t pay his bills. In 2016, at the height of the election cycle, USA TODAYreported that its team had reviewed “at least 60 lawsuits, along with hundreds of liens, judgments, and other government filings” from people who’ve accused Trump and his businesses of not paying them for their work. Trump’s penchant for not paying his bills has made him so infamous that he has had trouble securing legal services and had to scramble to find representation after the FBI raided his home. The news that Trump—whose legal troubles have only continued to mount—is on the hook for fees related to the special master’s review prompted many to make the same joke. u201cJudge Cannon has ordered Trump to pay for 100% of the costs of the special master review. nnCareful what you wish for, #BrokeBoyu201d — Aunt Eva (@Aunt Eva) 1663341492 u201cTrump has to pay? Huh. Dearie better get his money up front.u201d — Michael Richie (@Michael Richie) 1663287182 u201cThey better get that up front and in cash. Otherwise, itu2019s malfeasance. TFG wonu2019t pay. Even if he milks or extorts it from his flock, he wonu2019t pay.u201d — MAJKongSAC ud83cuddfaud83cuddf8 u0421u043bu0430u0432u0430 u0423u043au0440u0430u0457u043du0456! ud83cuddfaud83cudde6 (@MAJKongSAC ud83cuddfaud83cuddf8 u0421u043bu0430u0432u0430 u0423u043au0440u0430u0457u043du0456! ud83cuddfaud83cudde6) 1663286138 u201cLulz. As if Trump would pay. ud83eudd23u201d — rotophonic ud83cuddfaud83cudde6 ud83cudf3b ud83dudc89ud83dudc89ud83dudc89 (@rotophonic ud83cuddfaud83cudde6 ud83cudf3b ud83dudc89ud83dudc89ud83dudc89) 1663292990 u201cDearie will be waiting for Hell to freeze over before he gets paid by Trump.u201d — My Info (@My Info) 1663288297 The schadenfreude is real. u201cTrump the cheapskate is asking the DOJ to split the bill for the Special MasternnIt doesnu2019t work like thatnnYOU requested the Special Master that no one else wantednnThis was YOUR delay tacticnnThe days of you forcing us taxpayers to pay for your endless BS are coming to an endu201d — Lindy Li (@Lindy Li) 1662787438 u201cJudge Cannon has assigned former chief federal Judge Raymond Dearie as special master in Trump’s case. nnThe DOJ has accepted Dearie because of his experience in national security cases.nnCannon ordered Trump to pay 100% of the costs for the review. ud83eudd23ud83eudd23Cough itud83dudcb0 up, Trump.u201d — Aunt Eva (@Aunt Eva) 1663340906 u201cThat means MAGAts will pay and the dolts will pay it gladly.u201d — carolynsudduth01 (@carolynsudduth01) 1663327110 Dearie was the only candidate Trump’s legal team and the DOJ could agree on; Trump had previously rejected all of the DOJ’s picks and has suggested that the investigation is politically motivated. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate was searched last month by FBI agents who were hunting for classified documents Trump had spirited away from the Oval Office. They are still searching for others after recovering empty folders with classified markings on the premises. The DOJ sought a search warrant after “obtaining evidence that highly classified documents were likely concealed and that Mr. Trump’s representatives had falsely claimed all sensitive material had been returned,” according to The New York Times, which broke the news about the court filing. The filing came after Trump requested an independent review of materials seized from Mar-a-Lago following a search that found three classified documents in desks in Trump’s office as well as more than 100 documents in 13 boxes or containers with classification markings, some with the highest restrictions. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Pro-Trump Judge Orders Trump To Pay For Special MasterAnd Everyone's Making The Same Joke
Migrants Arrive At Cape Cod Shelter After DeSantis stunt Live
Migrants Arrive At Cape Cod Shelter After DeSantis stunt Live
Migrants Arrive At Cape Cod Shelter After DeSantis ‘stunt’ – Live https://digitalalaskanews.com/migrants-arrive-at-cape-cod-shelter-after-desantis-stunt-live/ Migrants arrive at Joint Base Cape Cod After tears, cheers and goodbyes during their departure from Martha’s Vineyard off the coast of Massachusetts, a group of migrants sent to the island by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis arrived at a larger shelter facility on the mainland at Cape Cod shortly after noon on Friday. Alex Woodward16 September 2022 18:01 Migrants voluntarily moved into shelter on Cape Cod, according to officials, despite GOP narrative The group of migrants who departed from Martha’s Vineyard were voluntarily moved to a large shelter operation on Cape Cod, advocates and officials have stressed. Right-wing media and members of the DeSantis administration have sought to characterise their departure from the island as hypocritical. Migrants were provided with clothing, bedding and toys for children, as well as cell phones couresy of Martha’s Vineyard Community Services, according to the Martha’s Vineyard Gazette. Immigration attorneys also accompanied migrants to Cape Cod from the island. The Joint Base Cape Cod facility is much larger than shelter offered on the island, with wraparound health services, separate rooms for families, and existing infrastructure to support people in need, including legal aid and counseling, according to Governor Charlie Baker’s office. Alex Woodward16 September 2022 17:45 Scenes from migrants departure from Martha’s Vineyard to Cape Cod “Tears, cheers, high fives, hugs and photos” were shared on Martha’s Vineyard on Friday morning as the group of 50 migrants who arrived on the island said goodbye to volunteers and residents who helped shelter them after their surprise arrival this week. The Martha’s Vineyard Gazette reports that the group boarded Vineyard Transit Authority buses to a ferry that brought them to Joint Base Cape Code on the Massachusetts mainland, where a large shelter operation is underway. The group spent two nights at St Andrew’s Episcopal Church on the island. “Get together everyone – I want to know everyone who helped!” a man named Rafael called out to volunteers as they departed. “Thank you everyone! Blessings to everyone!” Alex Woodward16 September 2022 16:59 Migrant families are being offered move to Cape Code shelter, state lawmaker reports State Rep Dylan Fernandes, who represents Martha’s Vineyard at the state House, reports that families are being offered a move to the newly announced shelter at Cape Code. Alex Woodward16 September 2022 16:30 ‘Playing politics with human beings’: Biden slams GOP governors’ migrant flights Speaking at the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute’s annual gala on Thursday night, Joe Biden slammed GOP governors less than a day after Greg Abbott sent two busloads of South and Central American asylum seekers to Washington and Ron DeSantis funded a planeload of migrants’ transportation from Texas to Massachusetts. “Republicans are playing politics with human beings, using them as props,” Biden said. The Independent’s Andrew Feinberg on White House reaction: Biden slams GOP governors’ migrant flights: ‘Playing politics with human beings’ ‘The children … deserve better than being left on the streets of DC or being left in Martha’s Vineyard’ Alex Woodward16 September 2022 16:15 Republicans sent migrants to Martha’s Vineyard to stoke panic. Instead, residents reacted with kindness The arrival of 50 migrants on Martha’s Vineyard – known as a summer getaway for wealthier Americans with a relatively small, tight-knit community of permanent residents – has galvanised communities across the island off the coast of Massachusetts, providing immediate shelter and relief for a group of people and families deceptively collected into planes out of Texas, more than 2,000 miles away, at taxpayers’ expense. The effort, of course, intends to paint the perceived liberal elitism on the nation’s East Coast as hypocritical, in protest of what the American right characterises as an “open border” that facilities “illegal” immigration into the US, while casting President Biden as responsible for the cruelty on the southern side of the US-Mexico border because he has invited migrants to it. But advocacy groups and attorneys have criticised the administration not because it allegedly invites migrants into the US but because of a byzantine process to seek aslyum or legal entry, with thousands of people denied from having their cases heard. Republican governors “manufacture chaos” and ignore asylum seekers in a broken immigration system, advocates tell The Independent’s Alex Woodward: A ‘depraved’ stunt reveals the GOP’s self-created migrant crisis, advocates say The arrival of 50 migrants galvanised communities on the island while Republican governors ‘manufacture chaos’ and ignore asylum seekers in a broken immigration system, advocates tell Alex Woodward Alex Woodward16 September 2022 15:45 Massachusetts governor to activate National Guard Governor Charlie Baker announced plans to activate the National Guard among relief efforts his administration is supplying to support 50 migrants who were flown into Martha’s Vineyard by Florida’s Governor Ron DeSantis. “The island communities are not equipped to provide sustainable accommodation, and state officials developed a plan to deliver a comprehensive humanitarian response,” Mr Baker’s office said in a statement released Friday. The response includes the opening of a shelter with meals, medical and counseling services at Joint Base Cape Code, located on the mainland north of the island. The Independent’s Johanna Chisholm reports: National Guard activated to assist migrants flown to Martha’s Vineyard by DeSantis Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker said his administration plans to activate up to 125 members of the state’s National Guard as part of a relief effort Alex Woodward16 September 2022 15:34 DeSantis could be charged with kidnap after moving migrants to Martha’s Vineyard The Department of Justice has been tapped by California Governor Gavin Newsom to investigate whether Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’s controversial decision to send two flights of migrants north would amount to “kidnapping”. “I strongly urge the U.S. Department of Justice (US DOJ) to open an investigation into possible criminal or civil violations of federal law based on this alleged fraudulent scheme,” Gov Newsom wrote in a 15 September letter addressed to US Attorney General Merrick Garland. The Democratic governor, who many speculate could make a run for president in 2024, quickly turned his emotional response to the new story into a political one by flagging his concerns to the Department of Justice that the Republican governor’s actions might be not just “morally reprehensible” but “illegal”. “Several of the individuals who were transported to Martha’s Vineyard have alleged that a recruiter induced them to accept the offer of travel based on false representations that they would be transported to Boston and would receive expedited access to work authorization,” wrote Mr Newsom. Read the full report from The Independent’s Johanna Chisholm here: DeSantis could be charged with kidnap after moving migrants to Martha’s Vineyard California Governor Gavin Newsom asks DoJ to ‘investigate whether the alleged fraudulent inducement would support charges of kidnapping under relevant state laws’ Johanna Chisholm16 September 2022 15:15 Massachusetts to open new shelter at Joint Base Cape Cod Massachusetts will open a new shelter with additional humanitarian aid at Joint Base Cape Cod to help house the group of migrants who were sent by Ron DeSantis to Martha’s Vineyard this week. The Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency “is coordinating efforts among state and local officials to ensure access to food, shelter and essential services for these men, women and children,” according to a statement from Governor Charlie Baker’s office. The governor also plans to activate up to 125 members of the Massachusetts National Guard. Individuals and families will be housed in dormitory-style spaces at the base, which has historically served as an emergency response shelter. Families will not be separated, according to the governor’s office. “Wrapound” services will include “accommodation, clothing and hygiene kits, nutrition, needs assessment, and access to health care, mental health, and crisis counseling services,” and “all services will be available in the recipient’s native language through interpreters,” the office announced. Alex Woodward16 September 2022 15:03 Hispanic Republicans say DeSantis migrant flights exposes US border issues House Republican Tony Gonzales said while appearing on Fox Business that he believes Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’ decision to send two flights of migrants north to Martha’s Vineyard is helping to highlight the issues at the US southern border. “I will tell you, House Republicans have highlighted all the problems, and I think America knows these problems,” said Rep Gonzales, a Hispanic House Republican who represents Texas’s 23rd Congressional District. “I say now it’s time for House Republicans to show action. We’re going to win back the majority here in November.” “You’re gonna see us roll out this commitment to America on the 23rd, part of that commitment to America is gonna have in there what we are going to do to secure the border, and that starts with ending catch and release,” the congressman, who is up for reelection, added. Republican Marío Elvira Salazar, who represents Florida, saw the pushback from Democrats about the migrants arriving in sanctuary cities as evidence of their so-called “hypocrisy”. “He’s flying and he’s busing people to some of the states. So it’s the same thing,” said the Republican congressman in an interview with The Hill. “What is the problem?” he t...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Migrants Arrive At Cape Cod Shelter After DeSantis stunt Live
Jonathan Swan: There Isn't Another Politician In The Country That Can Fill A 10000 Seat Arena Like Donald Trump
Jonathan Swan: There Isn't Another Politician In The Country That Can Fill A 10000 Seat Arena Like Donald Trump
Jonathan Swan: There Isn't Another Politician In The Country That Can Fill A 10,000 Seat Arena Like Donald Trump https://digitalalaskanews.com/jonathan-swan-there-isnt-another-politician-in-the-country-that-can-fill-a-10000-seat-arena-like-donald-trump/ Jonathan Swan, National Political Correspondent at Axios, spoke to Brian Kilmeade about why he believes the Special Master will only be a small delay in the DOJ investigation into President Trump’s handling of classified information. Swan also detailed his firsthand account of the huge enthusiasm for President Trump at a rally in Pennsylvania for Dr. Oz and Doug Mastriano. Swan says there is nobody else who can fill a 10,000-seat arena like Donald Trump and is why he is far ahead of any potential primary opponent. As far as potential primary opponents for President Trump, Swan thinks there is a very good chance Ron DeSantis and Mike Pence will run and a decent chance Mike Pompeo decides to run. Swan also believes Chris Christie might run and would not be shocked if Liz Cheney runs. One person Swan is confident will not run if Trump runs is Ted Cruz. Swan also looked at the mid-term odds and said history says the Republicans should pick up an average of 25 seats in the House because the party out of power tends to do well in midterms. In the Senate, Swan says it is a jump ball but there is a clear path for the Republicans to take over the Senate. You May Be Interested In… Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Jonathan Swan: There Isn't Another Politician In The Country That Can Fill A 10000 Seat Arena Like Donald Trump
Analysis: Ron DeSantis Is Getting exactly What He Wanted
Analysis: Ron DeSantis Is Getting exactly What He Wanted
Analysis: Ron DeSantis Is Getting *exactly* What He Wanted https://digitalalaskanews.com/analysis-ron-desantis-is-getting-exactly-what-he-wanted/ (CNN)In the 24 hours or so since Ron DeSantis sent two planes carrying migrants to Martha’s Vineyard, the move has dominated the political world. Every newspaper and cable channel is filled with thoughts about the move, with much of that opinion tilting toward outrage over the Florida Republican governor treating people like political pawns. “It’s outrageous,” New Jersey Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez said of the move. “They lure people, like human traffickers lure people, onto buses and unknowing where they’re going to. They have no concern for — they supposedly are the advocates for human life. They have no concern for the lives of these people.” DeSantis couldn’t have scripted it any better politically. The simple fact is that DeSantis made this Martha’s Vineyard gambit solely to draw attention to himself and his opposition to the border policies of the Biden administration. It was, to be frank, a stunt. And it’s not the first time he’s done something like this. Consider: * In the spring of 2022, DeSantis’ administration rejected 41% of proposed math textbooks because they were allegedly “indoctrinating” kids. “Some publishers attempted to slap a coat of paint on an old house built on the foundation of Common Core, and indoctrinating concepts like race essentialism, especially, bizarrely, for elementary school students,” DeSantis said in a statement explaining the move. * At a press conference at the University of South Florida earlier this year, DeSantis scolded students for wearing masks while indoors. “You do not have to wear those masks,” he said. “I mean, please take them off. Honestly, it’s not doing anything. We’ve got to stop with this Covid theater. So if you want to wear it, fine, but this is ridiculous.” * DeSantis revoked Disney’s special self-governance status in Florida following the company’s criticism of the state’s passage of legislation that bans the discussion of gender and sexuality among young people in public schools. “You’re a corporation based in Burbank, California, and you’re going to marshal your economic might to attack the parents of my state,” said DeSantis. “We view that as a provocation, and we’re going to fight back against that.” Each of these incidents drew national headlines. Each of them drew intense criticism from the left. And each of them drew equal amounts of praise from the conservative right. Which is exactly how the Martha Vineyard’s stunt has played out. While DeSantis was blasted by Democrats, the right ran to defend him. “DeSantis was right to send migrants to Martha’s Vineyard. We need to bring border crisis to Democrats,” read an op-ed on Fox News’ website. For DeSantis, the outrage — on both sides — is the point. He has built a political brand on the idea of standing up to what he views as political correctness and wokeness. (DeSantis signed a bill into law earlier this year designed to “protect Floridians from discrimination and woke indoctrination.”) In order to maintain and burnish that image, he has to do even more outrageous things — like the Martha’s Vineyard move. The fact of the matter — whether you like DeSantis or not — is that his outrage machine is humming along. Largely riding his knack for stirring controversy, he has emerged by many measures as the second-most popular Republican in the country — behind only Donald Trump. He is regarded as a heavy favorite to win a second term over his Democratic opponent, former Gov. Charlie Crist, in November. And he is widely regarded as the only candidate who could credibly challenge Trump in a 2024 Republican primary. Which is somewhat ironic. Because, as Trump likes to remind anyone who asks, he helped make DeSantis by endorsing him in a primary fight in 2018. And DeSantis has quite clearly modeled his approach to politics off of the ripped-from-the-headlines strategy employed by Trump. In fact, what DeSantis is offering Republican voters amounts to Trumpism without Trump. In DeSantis, you get all the anti-wokeness that Trump built a presidential campaign and presidency on, but just without some of the more embarrassing personal foibles and tics that the former President brings with him. And, just like Trump, covering DeSantis provides a significant challenge for the media as well. DeSantis wants — and even courts — the scorn of the mainstream media for gambits like the one in Martha’s Vineyard. He knows that the more negative attention he gets, the better liked he is among the Republican base and the more money he can raise for his future political endeavors. Not covering someone like DeSantis — the governor of a major state and someone with national ambitions — is out of the question. But how DeSantis — and his stunts — are covered is something that the media needs to think seriously on as we move closer to 2024. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Analysis: Ron DeSantis Is Getting exactly What He Wanted
Putin Vows To Press Attack On Ukraine Courts India's Modi
Putin Vows To Press Attack On Ukraine Courts India's Modi
Putin Vows To Press Attack On Ukraine, Courts India's Modi https://digitalalaskanews.com/putin-vows-to-press-attack-on-ukraine-courts-indias-modi/ SAMARKAND, Uzbekistan (AP) — Russian President Vladimir Putin vowed Friday to press his attack on Ukraine despite its latest counteroffensive and warned that Moscow could ramp up its strikes if Ukrainian forces target power plants and other infrastructure in Russia. Speaking to reporters Friday after attending a summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization in Uzbekistan, Putin said the “liberation” of Ukraine’s entire eastern Donbas region remained Russia’s main military goal and that he sees no need to revise it. “We aren’t in a rush,” the Russian leader said, adding that Russia has only deployed volunteer soldiers to fight in Ukraine. Russia was forced to pull back its forces from large swaths of northeastern Ukraine last week after a swift Ukrainian counteroffensive. Ukraine’s move to reclaim control of several Russian-occupied cities and villages marked the largest military setback for Moscow since its forces had to retreat from areas near the capital early in the war. Asked about the Ukrainian counteroffensive, Putin replied: “Let’s how it develops and how it ends.” He alleged that Ukraine has attempted to launch attacks “near our nuclear facilities, nuclear power plants” in Russia and vowed to do “everything to prevent any negative turn of events.” “We will retaliate if they fail to understand that such methods are unacceptable, they don’t differ from terrorism,” Putin said. Putin also sought Friday to assuage India’s concern about the conflict in Ukraine, telling Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi that Moscow wants to see a quick end to the fighting and alleging Ukrainian officials won’t negotiate. “I know your stand on the conflict in Ukraine and the concerns that you have repeatedly voiced,” the Russian leader told Modi. “We will do all we can to end that as quickly as possible. Regrettably, the other side, the leadership of Ukraine, has rejected the negotiations process and stated that it wants to achieve its goals by military means, on the battlefield.” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said it is Russia that allegedly doesn’t want to negotiate in earnest. He also has insisted on the withdrawal of Russian troops from occupied areas of Ukraine as a precondition for talks. Putin’s remarks during the talks with Modi echoed similar comments he made during a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping the previous day. China and India have refused to join Western sanctions against Russia over its war in Ukraine while increasing their purchases of Russian oil and gas, helping Moscow offset the financial restrictions imposed by the U.S. and its allies. Putin also met Friday with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to discuss bolstering economic cooperation and regional issues, including a July deal brokered by Turkey and the U.N. that allowed Ukrainian grain exports to resume from the country’s Black Sea ports. Speaking at the Uzbekistan summit on Friday, Xi warned his Central Asian neighbors not to allow outsiders to destabilize them. The warning reflects Beijing’s anxiety that Western support for pro-democracy and human rights activists is a plot to undermine Xi’s ruling Communist Party and other authoritarian governments. “We should prevent external forces from instigating a color revolution,” Xi said in a speech to leaders of Shanghai Cooperation Organization member nations, referring to protests that toppled unpopular regimes in the former Soviet Union and the Middle East. Xi offered to train 2,000 police officers, to set up a regional counterterrorism training center and to “strengthen law enforcement capacity building.” He gave no details. His comments echoed longtime Russian grievances about the color-coded uprisings in several ex-Soviet nations that the Kremlin viewed as instigated by the U.S. and its allies. Xi is promoting a “Global Security Initiative” announced in April following the formation of the Quad by the U.S., Japan, Australia and India in response to Beijing’s more assertive foreign policy. Xi has given few details, but U.S. officials complain it echoes Russian arguments in support of Moscow’s actions in Ukraine. China’s relations with Washington, Europe, Japan and India have been strained by disputes about technology, security, human rights and territory. Central Asia is part of China’s multibillion-dollar Belt and Road Initiative to expand trade by building ports, railways and other infrastructure across an arc of dozens of countries from the South Pacific through Asia to the Middle East, Europe and Africa. The Shanghai Cooperation Organization was formed by Russia and China as a counterweight to U.S. influence. The group also includes India, Pakistan and four ex-Soviet Central Asian nations of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Iran is on track to receive full membership. On Thursday, Putin held a one-on-one meeting with Xi and thanked the Chinese leader for his government’s “balanced position” on the Ukraine war, while adding that he was ready to discuss unspecified China’s “concerns” about Ukraine. Xi, in a statement released by his government, expressed support for Russia’s “core interests” but also interest in working together to “inject stability” into world affairs. Li Xin, director of the Institute of European and Asian Studies of Shanghai University of Political Science and Law, noted that Beijing wants a negotiated end to the Ukraine war, adding that “China will not judge whether the special military operation of Russia is just or not.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Putin Vows To Press Attack On Ukraine Courts India's Modi
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Strongest Storm In Decades Set To Barrel Into Alaska
Strongest Storm In Decades Set To Barrel Into Alaska
Strongest Storm In Decades Set To Barrel Into Alaska https://digitalalaskanews.com/strongest-storm-in-decades-set-to-barrel-into-alaska/ A powerful extratropical cyclone is expected to blast the western coast of Alaska starting Friday night — bringing potential perils from a storm surge that threatens to top out at 18 feet and gusts that will reach up to 90 mph. “This is a dangerous storm that will produce widespread coastal flooding south of the Bering Strait with water levels above those seen in nearly 50 years,” the National Weather Service’s Fairbanks office wrote in its Friday morning forecast discussion. In advance of the dangerous storm, the National Weather Service has issued several warnings to account for a multitude of hurricane-like threats. Threats of high winds and coastal flooding As the powerhouse system approaches Alaska late Friday, roaring south-to-southwesterly winds will slam the state’s west coast. Massive amounts of water, shoved north by the high winds, will slosh ashore, raising the ocean as much as a dozen feet and battering vulnerable coastal communities with severe erosion. The storm will probably stall just offshore the Seward Peninsula over the weekend, continuing to push the Pacific toward Alaska’s vulnerable coastline. “The duration of the high water is quite a bit longer than we often see, so that will lead to a longer duration of high impact surge and waves pounding the coastline,” Ed Plumb, a senior service hydrologist at the National Weather Service’s Fairbanks office, told The Washington Post. Coastal flood warnings and high wind warnings have been issued, both remaining in effect until late Saturday evening, while storm warnings have been hoisted at sea to warn mariners of extremely dangerous conditions. The strongest storm in over a decade is moving into the Bering Sea. Impacts may exceed the 2011 Bering Sea Superstorm, and some locations may experience their worst coastal flooding in nearly 50 years. Peak water levels will persist for 10 to 14 hours before water recedes. #akwx pic.twitter.com/l1Ik4iXYBG — NWS Fairbanks (@NWSFairbanks) September 15, 2022 Gusts will top out around 90 mph in some spots, with hurricane-force gusts up to 80 mph expected in and around Nome, which is known for being the end point of the famed Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. Water levels in the coastal town of 4,000 are likely to top out at 8 to 11 feet above high tide. In nearby Golovin, water levels will be even higher, pushing 9 to 13 feet above their normal high tide level, according to the Weather Service. In Nome and other villages along the northern Bering Sea, Plumb worries that water pushed into communities by powerful southwesterly winds will inundate structures, wash out key roads and damage important infrastructure. Strong gusts of up to 90 mph could also easily take down power lines and cause other damage. The massive storm surge and gigantic waves that may crest at over 50 feet would cause heavy beach erosion at any time of year, but the fact that the storm is striking in September heightens the erosion risk. In addition to the storm surge, this storm will also bring very strong winds to the West Coast. Winds may gust up to 90 mph in areas such as Savoonga, Diomede, and the Bering Strait. Other areas can expect gusts in the 70s, with gusts as high as 80 mph possible. #akwx pic.twitter.com/gG95I6XyOb — NWS Fairbanks (@NWSFairbanks) September 15, 2022 The perils of a September storm When massive, extratropical storms track through the Bering Sea, it is usually later in the year — particularly into November and December. By that time, sea ice has built up along the coast, buffering significant wave action. But with this major storm striking in September, the coastline is without its icy barrier, making it particularly vulnerable. “This will be the deepest low we’ve ever seen in the northern Bering Sea in September,” Plumb said, adding that this would be a strong storm at any time of year. “It’s taking the classic textbook perfect track for causing significant storm surge in the northern Bering Sea.” A September strike is also concerning because it is still hunting season in September, meaning hundreds of people may be hunting in the remote Alaskan wilderness and not getting updates about the storm. The road that many hunters and Alaskans use to travel inland, the Nome-Council Road, might end up washed away by the storm, leaving off-the-grid hunters stranded in the wilderness. The system is similar to a disastrous storm from November 2011, when a comparably intense nontropical low pivoted through far eastern Russia, just inland of the Bering Strait. That month, too, the Pacific was forced inland; in Nome, roads and a sewer plant were swamped, while a number of low-lying coastal communities saw significant erosion wrought by the pounding waves. “In the Nome area, or that part of the southern Seward Peninsula, everything is on track and it looks like [this storm] will be as bad or worse than the 2011 superstorm,” Plumb said. In the Fourth National Climate Assessment, a comprehensive climate change report looking at impacts in the United States published in 2018 — scientists expressed concern that climate change has set the stage for greater impacts from large nontropical cyclones in Alaska. Warmer summers and oceans have caused a greater-than-normal seasonal loss of sea ice, which makes the region more vulnerable to ocean inundation. “For coastal areas, the damage from late-fall or winter storms is likely to be compounded by a lack of sea ice cover, high tides, and rising sea levels, which can increase structural damage to tank farms, homes, and buildings and can threaten loss of life from flooding,” the report reads. The report adds that coastal erosion rates have been hastening, with some spots on the coastline losing up to 100 feet of land to the sea each year. “Longer sea ice-free seasons, higher ground temperatures, and relative sea level rise are expected to worsen flooding and accelerate erosion in many regions, leading to the loss of terrestrial habitat and cultural resources, and requiring entire communities, such as Kivalina in northwestern Alaska, to relocate to safer terrain.” A meteorologically perfect storm The powerful weather system set to blast Alaska is, atmospherically, something of a perfect storm. The remnants of Merbok, once a Category 1-intensity Pacific typhoon, will merge with a pair of nontropical storms as it veers toward the Bering Strait, the thin strip of water between Russia and Alaska. Typhoons — the Western Pacific equivalent to hurricanes — run on energy from the hot oceanic water common near the equator in late summer. This contrasts with extratropical cyclones, which run on the energy held in atmospheric temperature gradients. When the two types of systems merge, the combination can result in an immensely powerful storm that forms in a short time. This system is forecast to explosively strengthen as it approaches the Alaskan coastline. The system’s pressure is expected to drop 24 millibars in 24 hours, meaning that the storm will have met the criteria for what’s known as a meteorological bomb or “bomb cyclone” due to its rate of intensification. Such a process strengthened Sandy considerably as it approached the Mid-Atlantic in 2012, and it will dramatically intensify the Pacific storm as it lurches toward Alaska. By Friday evening, the atmospheric pressure in the center of the storm — set to be over the ocean, a few hundred miles southwest of the Russian/Alaskan border — is modeled to bottom out at around 940 millibars. Low pressure draws air rapidly inward, like a vacuum, and values below 950 millibars are typically seen only in Category 3 or Category 4 hurricanes. But because the storm, at this point, will be something of a hybrid between a tropical and nontropical low, the wind field will not mimic that of a Category 4 hurricane. Instead, all of that energy will be spread out over a larger area, with a lower maximum sustained wind speed — likely around 90 mph — but with a far greater reach. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Strongest Storm In Decades Set To Barrel Into Alaska