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Trump Properties Aren
Trump Properties Aren
Trump Properties Aren https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-properties-aren/ (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) (THE CONVERSATION) On the lower tip of Manhattan there is a prime piece of real estate, the price of which is somewhat up for debate. To the owners, the Trump Organization, 40 Wall Street is worth an eye-watering US$735 million, or at least it was in 2015. Others disagree, pointing to an appraisal that year by a real estate firm that priced it at $540 million. But even that was inflated, according to the New York attorney general: An appraisal three years earlier suggested the worth of the property then was $220 million. The probe into the alleged fraudulent activities relating to Donald Trump’s property empire has many people wondering about the art and science of real estate valuations. Even when there are no claims of fraud involved, valuations can vary widely – and it is a longstanding problem. This likely sets the bar high for New York’s civil lawsuit to prove its charge, that at least some valuations were fraudulent as opposed to “business as usual.” In a 1987 experiment, experienced real estate agents were handed identical information regarding a typical house and asked to estimate its value, with the only difference being the listing price. The resulting valuations differed significantly. With commercial property, the large divergence in valuations has likewise long been recognized as a concern. So why do real estate values seem so subjective? As someone who researches real estate trends, I know the practice is more art than science. Valuations are educated opinions. They are based on some degree of factual information, but not facts in themselves. Expert valuations vary based on differing judgments of the same data. And when it comes to commercial real estate, experts even disagree over the methods involved. The 3 ways to value property Before delving deeper, some valuation basics: There are three overarching ways to value commercial real estate – the cost, the market and the income approaches. The cost and market approaches are both based on the economic principle of substitution, which equates the value of real estate to the cost to create or acquire a substitute property of comparable utility. For example, an office value estimate of $200 per square foot is reasonable if it costs this amount to purchase an existing comparable office or to newly construct one. The income approach is based on anticipation of future benefits, which equates the value of real estate to the income stream the property can generate. So a rented office that earns its owner $2 million a year in net income could reasonably be worth about twice the value of an office with $1 million a year in net income. Appraisers use all three approaches when possible to value a property. Though commercial properties by necessity lean heavily on the income approach to mimic investors, it is also the most prone to value differences because it requires a crystal ball to accurately estimate future income. Built on assumptions Even when appraisers use the same approach and methods, there is ample room for difference. All three valuation approaches require assumptions, which provide fertile ground for expert disagreement. The cost approach requires an estimation of depreciation and obsolescence and a way to value the land that the building sits on. Depreciation refers to the physical aging of the property. Obsolescence accounts for trends and market conditions that erode the property’s desirability, such as an outdated building design or an increase in neighborhood crime. The market approach is limited to past sales that require adjustments to reflect such factors, beyond timing, as any difference in the desirability of a location or the physical condition of a sale property relative to the appraised property. km: I edited to correct meaning here — suggested edits had changed meaning. Meanwhile, the income approach requires the appraiser to make assumptions on a property’s future income stream. Appraisers will typically consider market rents and, for property like hotels that operate as a business, historic income and expenses. The pandemic made these various assumptions much more speculative due to uncertainty over the future use of office space. Even a property’s location as an influence on real estate value is no longer straightforward. My research points to shifting perspectives on what is deemed a quality location, with real estate premiums associated with central business districts becoming dubious as more people work remotely. Experts also disagree over which aspects of real estate to include in a valuation. Real estate that generates income has components beyond the actual land and improvements to it. Elements that contribute to generating income but are not “real property” – things such as furnishings and a hotel’s brand recognition – need to be stripped out of the valuation for some purposes. Valuations for tax purposes generally focus on real property value, while valuations for lenders tend to include more of these other real estate components. Consider hotels as an example. It is generally accepted that the hotel’s brand and its furniture, fixtures and equipment are not real property, yet they have big implications for its value. Influencing assessments Commercial real estate does not offer the transparent pricing structure built into some assets like stocks. Real estate is less frequently traded and sales go through a number of intermediaries, and much of the information surrounding a sale is not publicly shared. As a result, buyers do not have an easy benchmark for price comparison – it is like trying to decipher the going price for a hip replacement or a piece of fine art. Furthermore, no two pieces of real estate are precisely the same. Commercial real estate assets vary in a multitude of attributes – such as location, condition, permitted uses and existing lease obligations – that affect potential income. Indeed, research shows many commercial properties are listed for sale with no stated asking price because of the difficulty in determining potential revenue, which can vary based on what a given buyer plans to do with the property. And sellers do not want to inadvertently underprice their asset. Take, for example, the 2014 sale of the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York. The buyer, a Chinese company, deliberately paid a higher price than local investors might because they thought they could reap higher income through converting some space into luxury condos for Chinese buyers. The plan ultimately hit some snags, but it nonetheless justified a larger purchase price. Rules and regulations The uncertainty inherent in real estate values also leaves appraisers vulnerable to client influence. A 2015 study in the U.K. examined appraisal values for institutional real estate funds and found that their valuation methods arbitrarily changed depending on what kinds of valuations the fund clients seemingly preferred. So what does this all mean for Trump’s properties? Clearly real estate valuations aren’t a science, but it’s not the Wild West either. Appraisers are expected to follow regulatory standards, certification and licensing requirements and professional norms in the valuation of real estate. The question for the courts hearing the case of Trump properties is whether someone failed to follow them. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here: https://theconversation.com/trump-properties-arent-the-only-ones-to-see-wild-valuations-putting-a-price-on-real-estate-isnt-straightforward-191228. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Properties Aren
What You Need To Know About Brazil's Presidential Election
What You Need To Know About Brazil's Presidential Election
What You Need To Know About Brazil's Presidential Election https://digitalalaskanews.com/what-you-need-to-know-about-brazils-presidential-election/ President Bolsonaro rides a motorbike with a supporter during a campaign rally in Santos on Wednesday. Alexandre Schneider / Getty Images RIO DE JANEIRO — This Sunday’s election in Brazil will be one of the most-watched in Latin America, as two polar ideological opposites fight for the presidency in the world’s fourth-largest democracy. On the right is current President Jair Bolsonaro, a brash nationalist widely criticized for escalating destruction of the Amazon, bungling Brazil’s COVID-19 response and casting doubts on the country’s electoral system in the run-up to election day. He faces a tough fight from a former president and one of Latin America’s most revered leftists, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Lula, as he is affectionately known, has led with more than 10 points ahead of Bolsonaro in many of the polls. But he has to overcome voter skepticism after major corruption scandals during his two terms in office landed him in jail. Who the main candidates are Eleven presidential candidates are on the ballot, but all eyes are on Bolsonaro and da Silva. While Bolsonaro’s numbers were rising recently, most polls show him stuck in the low 30th percentile of voter preference. Many Brazilians are unhappy with the 67-year-old incumbent’s governing. A survey in mid-September by Datafolha showed 44% of those polled said they disapprove of the job the president is doing. A win by da Silva would be a stunning political comeback. The 76-year-old former metalworker led Brazil from 2003 to 2010. He expanded social welfare programs that helped millions rise out of poverty, during a time of economic growth and a boom in commodity prices. Leaving office, da Silva was widely regarded as one of the most popular politicians in the world. But in 2017, he was caught up in a sweeping corruption investigation, dubbed Operation Car Wash, that led to his imprisonment the following year. Da Silva has always maintained his innocence, and was released in 2019 after spending 580 days in prison. His conviction was annulled. What’s at stake for Brazil Brazil has among the world’s highest confirmed coronavirus deaths per capita. It has struggled to emerge from global economic turmoil stoked by fallout from the pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Economic problems, high inflation and discontent over inequality and corruption have led to a shift to the left in other countries in the region, including Chile and Colombia. The economy will be the toughest post-election challenge. Bolsonaro boasted at the United Nations recently that Brazil’s economy is in full recovery. But economic growth is lackluster and inflation is hurting the poor. Political Scientist Guilherme Casarões says Brazil’s electorate is highly polarized now after four years of Bolsonaro’s presidency and hard-right rhetoric. The president insists he is the defender of family values, winning him support from a growing population of conservative evangelicals. He rejected lockdowns and mask mandates during the pandemic. And through executive orders, he not only loosened Brazil’s gun laws but severely eliminated environmental protections in the Amazon. What’s at stake for the region — and the rest of the world Bolsonaro’s support for agribusiness and disdain of environmental advocates have led to much weakening of Brazil’s protection of the Amazon. During his presidency, deforestation in the world’s most biodiverse forest reached a 15-year high, and forest fires have skyrocketed. The Amazon rainforest, one of the most important carbon absorbers for the planet, is now releasing more of that carbon into the atmosphere. Some scientists say without stiffer protections, the Amazon could reach a point of no return and irreversible environmental damage. Bolsonaro, who jokes about his moniker “Captain Chainsaw,” claims that many fires were deliberately set solely to discredit him. Under da Silva, deforestation rates declined, and the former president has promised to protect the forest again if elected. Bolsonaro’s assault on democratic institutions has escalated in the run-up to the election too. He has spent more than a year prepping his devout base for a possible vote steal, very similar to the false claims made by former President Donald Trump, a big hero of the Brazilian leader. Fears of violence if Bolsonaro doesn’t accept the results Despite trailing in the polls, Bolsonaro insists he’ll win outright on election day, and avoid a second round run-off. He has long claimed that if he doesn’t, it would only be because of widespread voter fraud — just as he alleged, without providing proof, in 2018. Like Trump, Bolsonaro falsely claims that his country’s electronic voting machines are easily susceptible to tampering. As a former army captain, he remains close to the military, which he has said should monitor the election. Recently, Bolsonaro appeared to cool his rhetoric, while also maneuvering a deal for the military to monitor a sampling of voting machines on election day. Brazil has used electronic voting machines in its elections since 1996 and has never registered any significant fraud. When it’s happening Polls will open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday Brasília time (7 a.m.-4 p.m. ET). Congressional and gubernatorial elections will also be taking place. Results could come out as early as 9 p.m. in Brasília, thanks to the speed of the electronic voting system. If no one wins more than 50% of the vote, the two top candidates will go to a second round on Oct. 30. Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org. CapRadio provides a trusted source of news because of you.  As a nonprofit organization, donations from people like you sustain the journalism that allows us to discover stories that are important to our audience. If you believe in what we do and support our mission, please donate today. Donate Today   Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
What You Need To Know About Brazil's Presidential Election
Sexism Racism And A Stabbing Inside Jair Bolsonaro
Sexism Racism And A Stabbing Inside Jair Bolsonaro
Sexism, Racism, And A Stabbing — Inside Jair Bolsonaro https://digitalalaskanews.com/sexism-racism-and-a-stabbing-inside-jair-bolsonaro/ Brazil’s president Jair Bolsonaro tests positive for COVID-19 Invalid email We use your sign-up to provide content in ways you’ve consented to and to improve our understanding of you. This may include adverts from us and 3rd parties based on our understanding. You can unsubscribe at any time. More info Brazil goes to the polls on Sunday in what will be a crucial election for the future of the country. Current president, Jair Bolsonaro, is a controversial far-right figure, and polls currently show he is behind the leftwing former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Many experts are branding this year’s Brazilian election as more divisive than any other before it. Why is Brazil’s president so polarising? And why do so many fear that democracy in the country could be under threat? Express.co.uk takes a look at the controversial figure that is Bolsonaro.  Born in a small village northwest of Sao Paolo, Bolsonaro’s formative experiences came when he went to the Preparatory School of the Brazilian Army before graduating from the military academy in 1977. He served as a paratrooper for 17 years and even rose to the rank of captain. His military background is one of the big drivers behind his political trajectory. In fact, it was during this time he first rose to prominence, criticising the Brazilian army’s pay in an article for a popular magazine in 1986. Bolsonaro left the army two years after the article was published and soon entered the world of politics, getting elected into a seat on the Rio de Janeiro city council in 1989. He made a name for himself for his extremely conservative views which he still holds today. Jair Bolsonaro: Brazil’s president has been compared to Trump (Image: Getty) Jair Bolsonaro: Lula, who was once imprisoned but later released, is running again (Image: Getty) Throughout his career, Bolsonaro has been accused of being prejudiced against different minority groups. He once said he “would be incapable of loving a homosexual son,” adding that he would prefer his son to die in an accident rather than “show up with a mustachioed man.” Another controversial moment came when Bolsonaro told a female Brazilian politician: “I wouldn’t rape you, you don’t deserve it.” He later said: “She doesn’t deserve to be raped because she’s very ugly. She’s not my type, I’d never rape her. I’m not a rapist, but if I was, I wouldn’t rape her because she doesn’t deserve it”. Bolsonaro was later ordered to pay compensation to the woman. He also attracted condemnation in 2017 when he said of the descendants of African slaves: “They do nothing! They are not even good for procreation.” These comments did not hurt Bolsonaro’s political ambitions, though. In 2018, he successfully stood to be president for the far-right social liberal party. But in the years building up to 2022’s vote, Brazil has been plunged into multiple crises. READ MORE: EU shame as VDL pushes forward with trade deal with Mercosur bloc Jair Bolsonaro: Bolsonaro moments after being stabbed in 2018 (Image: Getty) The country faced economic turmoil when it entered a recession in 2014. The economy only worsened, and a number of corruption scandals left much of Brazil furious with the government led by the Workers’ Party. Named Operation Car Wash, an investigation was launched in 2014 to look into allegations that executives at the state oil company, Petrobras, had received bribes from construction companies and awarded them contracts at inflated prices. The Workers’ Party was accused of funneling funds to pay off politicians and buy their votes. Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, the left-wing former president known as ‘Lula’ who will run for reelection this year, was among the accused. Lula was sentenced to 12 years in prison despite denying all the charges brought against him. He was later released from prison in 2019 after a Brazilian Supreme Court ruling. This came after revelations that the controversial judge who sentenced Lula had colluded with prosecutors who led the investigation. DON’T MISS Amazon horror as 26% of planet’s green lung ‘irreversibly destroyed’ [INSIGHT] France threatens to derail EU trade deal with South America [ANALYSIS] Brazil latest: Bolsonaro bets controversial drug will “cure” COVID-… [INSIGHT] Jair Bolsonaro: Brazil has seen 680,000 deaths from Covid (Image: Getty) But Lula’s imprisonment took him out of the 2018 presidential race, allowing Bolsonaro to capitalise and become president. He had engaged with the widespread disillusionment in the country due to rampant corruption, promising to clean up Brazilian politics. Bolsonaro also adopted a hard line on crime, and won over many within the Brazilian Evangelical Christian population after opposing abortion. But the campaign trail also led to a shocking moment which nearly saw Bolsonaro assassinated. While campaigning in Juiz de Fora, about 115 miles north of Rio de Janeiro, he was stabbed in the stomach by an attacker. Bolsonaro’s intestines were damaged, and he had to undergo a two-hour surgery to stop internal bleeding. In 2019, his attacker was acquitted by a judge because he was deemed was mentally ill, a decision which angered Bolsonaro. In reponse, the newly elected president said: “I will contact my lawyer. I will try to do whatever is possible. They tried to kill me. I am certain who they were. “This is a crime against a presidential candidate who now has the mandate and we must go to the final consequences of that situation.” Jair Bolsonaro: He has tried to cast doubt over electronic voting (Image: Getty) Bolsonaro may have secured victory in 2018, but it appears he could be voted out after just one term in office. His opponent, Lula, now enjoys a 13-percentage-point lead according to a Genial/Quaest poll released on Wednesday, despite his own murky past. The main criticisms against Bolsonaro’s presidency include the destruction of the Amazon rainforest, rising violence against indigenous people and Brazil’s stalling economy. But Bolsonaro’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic has been the issue that has attracted most international criticism. Brazil’s death toll from the virus currently stands at 680,000, the second highest in the world. He once branded the virus “a bit of a cold” and has even been accused of deliberately delaying the vaccine rollout while promoting dubious “cures” such as hydroxychloroquine. Last month, Brazil’s federal police called for Bolsonaro to be charged with spreading misinformation about the coronavirus outbreak. Bolsonaro has been described as a Donald Trump-like figure during his time in office. He appears to be living up to this reputation as he has already cast doubt over the validity of the upcoming election, as did Trump following his defeat in 2020. The votes cast this weekend will be done electronically, as has been the case in Brazil since 1996. But Bolsonaro says “the system is completely vulnerable”, with many arguing that he is attempting to sow doubt in the country’s electoral processes. He added: “We cannot have dubious elections in 2022. Public counting of votes is needed”. But experts and electoral officials alike have dismissed Bolsonaro’s claims. It is not the first time Bolsonaro has questioned the electoral processes. Even after winning the 2018 presidential election in a run-off, he claimed that he would have won an outright victory in the first round if it were not for “voting fraud.” Studies into the 2018 vote have since found no evidence of any voting irregularities. Many fear the Brazilian president could use this narrative to try and cling to power, even if he loses on Sunday. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Sexism Racism And A Stabbing Inside Jair Bolsonaro
European Markets Nudge Higher Looking For Relief Rally After Global Sell-Off
European Markets Nudge Higher Looking For Relief Rally After Global Sell-Off
European Markets Nudge Higher, Looking For Relief Rally After Global Sell-Off https://digitalalaskanews.com/european-markets-nudge-higher-looking-for-relief-rally-after-global-sell-off/ LONDON ― European markets nudged higher on Friday, gaining some respite from a torrid week as the third quarter drew to a close. The pan-European Stoxx 600 was up 0.6% by mid-afternoon, having more than halved its early gains. Media stocks added 1.7% while household goods fell 0.6%. Global stocks have struggled in recent sessions amid fears over slowing growth and aggressive monetary policy tightening. The widespread sell-off on Wall Street continued on Thursday, with all three major averages falling sharply as investors assessed the outlook for future rate-hiking decisions from the U.S. Federal Reserve and their impact on the markets. The S&P 500 hit a fresh low for the year. Stock futures were mixed in early premarket trade on Friday. Shares in Asia-Pacific also retreated on Friday following the overnight plunge stateside, though new data showed Chinese factory activity unexpectedly expanded in August. Volatility continues in U.K. markets after the Bank of England intervened in the bond market on Wednesday in order to shore up the country’s financial stability, after a historic sell-off in long-dated gilts. Sterling also hit an all-time low on Monday following the new government’s widely condemned fiscal policy announcements, but has staged a significant rally in recent days and hit a week-high on Friday. Stateside, several Fed officials are due to speak on Friday afternoon, and the markets will be watching closely for indications as to the pace of future rate hikes from the central bank. Stocks on the move: Clariant up 6%, Puma down 7% Clariant shares climbed 6% by mid-afternoon after Credit Suisse upgraded the Swiss chemicals company’s stock to “outperform” from neutral and upped its price target. French commercial real estate company Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield also added 6%. At the bottom of the European blue chip index, German sportswear brand Puma fell 7% after U.S. rival Nike flagged inventory concerns. Puma’s domestic peer Adidas also fell 5%. – Elliot Smith Euro zone inflation soars to record high of 10% in September Euro zone inflation hit a new record high of 10% in September, Eurostat data showed on Friday, up from 9.1% in August and above consensus projections of 9.7%. The reading, which also showed price increases broadening out from volatile food and energy prices into nearly all segments of the 19-member bloc’s economy, will exert more pressure on the European Central Bank to hike interest rates aggressively at its October meeting. – Elliot Smith Sterling recovers to pre-plunge levels as Bank of England and government act The British pound rose to fresh one-week highs on Friday against both the dollar and the euro, recovering from the steep losses that send it to an all-time low on Monday. Sterling gained 1% against the greenback on Friday morning to trade above $1.12 before moderating slightly. During Asian trading hours on Monday, the pound slid to just above $1.03 on the back of a widely-criticized set of fiscal policy announcements from the U.K. government. The Bank of England on Wednesday intervened in the U.K. long-dated bond market to secure the country’s financial stability after huge sell-offs in the currency and fixed income markets. Markets are also taking reassurance after news that British Prime Minister Liz Truss and Finance Minister Kwasi Kwarteng will meet with the U.K.’s independent finance watchdog for talks on Friday. – Elliot Smith UK economy unexpectedly grew in second-quarter, but remains below pre-Covid levels The U.K. economy expanded by 0.2% in the second quarter, according to revised data published Friday, up from an initial estimate of a 0.1% contraction. However, the Office for National Statistics reiterated that the economy continues to slow, and GDP remains below its pre-pandemic peak. The ONS revised down its estimate for Britain’s Covid-19 recovery, and now says U.K. GDP contracted by 11% in 2020, during the height of lockdowns, sharply lower than the previous estimate of a 9.3% fall. “The level of real quarterly GDP in the U.K. is now 0.2% below its pre-coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic level in Quarter 4 (Oct to Dec) 2019,” the ONS said. – Elliot Smith French inflation eases in September for second straight month French inflation cooled for a second consecutive month in September, diverging from neighboring Germany on the back of a deceleration of price increases in energy and services. National statistics agency INSEE said Friday that France’s EU-harmonized inflation rate dropped to 6.2% annually in September from 6.6% in August, defying market projections for a modest acceleration. – Elliot Smith British Prime Minister Liz Truss to have emergency talks with budget forecasters Stocks on the move: Clariant up 6%, Wise down 5% Clariant shares climbed 6.4% in early trade to lead the Stoxx 600 after Credit Suisse upgraded the Swiss chemicals company’s stock to “outperform” from neutral and upped its price target. At the bottom of the European blue chip index, London-based fintech company Wise slid 5% following the publication of its earnings report on Thursday. – Elliot Smith Here are the opening calls Britain’s FTSE 100 is expected to open around 13 points lower at 6,869, Germany’s DAX is set to gain around 9 points to 11,984 and France’s CAC 40 is seen around 6 points higher at 5,683. CNBC Pro: Is the Fed on the right track? Wall Street veteran Ed Yardeni says this is what it should do next The U.S Federal Reserve announced yet another 75 basis point hike earlier this month, sending the federal funds rate up to a range of 3% to 3.25%. The central bank also signaled it may raise interest rates up to as high as 4.6% in 2023 to control inflation. Ed Yardeni, the economist who coined the term “bond vigilantes,” gives his take as the Fed’s response to inflation comes under intense scrutiny. Pro subscribers can read more here. — Zavier Ong CNBC Pro: Here’s how to trade the UK’s political and market turmoil, fund managers say Markets in London have been in turmoil ever since the U.K. government announced its so-called “mini-budget.” The chaos driven by recent political events has seen the Sterling tank to new historic lows against the dollar as many overseas investors pulled out of the country. Three fund managers have named stocks and sectors that may benefit from the sell-off in the country’s currency. CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Ganesh Rao Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
European Markets Nudge Higher Looking For Relief Rally After Global Sell-Off
Putin Declares Four New Regions Of The Russian Federation; Ukraine Says Civilian Convoy Hit By Russian Strike
Putin Declares Four New Regions Of The Russian Federation; Ukraine Says Civilian Convoy Hit By Russian Strike
Putin Declares Four New Regions Of The Russian Federation; Ukraine Says Civilian Convoy Hit By Russian Strike https://digitalalaskanews.com/putin-declares-four-new-regions-of-the-russian-federation-ukraine-says-civilian-convoy-hit-by-russian-strike/ Ukrainian officials say a humanitarian convoy in the southern city of Zaporizhzhia was hit by a Russian strike, killing at least 23 people. Those in the convoy were heading into Russian-occupied territory to pick up their relatives, the city’s governor said. Moscow has issued a statement saying the attack was carried out by Ukraine. It comes just days after Russia announced the results of a widely-criticized sham referendum that Russian President Vladimir Putin is set to use as a justification to annex four occupied regions of Ukraine. Putin is expected to hold a ceremony announcing the official annexations today. Nord Stream gas leaks sees methane spewing into the atmosphere Climate scientists described the shocking images of gas spewing to the surface of the Baltic Sea as a “reckless release” of greenhouse gas emissions that, if deliberate, “amounts to an environmental crime.” Anadolu Agency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images Climate scientists described the shocking images of gas spewing to the surface of the Baltic Sea this week as a “reckless release” of greenhouse gas emissions that, if deliberate, “amounts to an environmental crime.” Researchers acknowledge that it is difficult to accurately quantify the size of the emissions and say the leaks are a “wee bubble in the ocean” compared to the massive amounts of methane emitted around the world every day. Nonetheless, environmental campaigners argue that the incident shows the risk of sabotage or an accident makes fossil infrastructure a “ticking time bomb.” Here’s the story. — Sam Meredith Putin says Russia is not aiming for the return of the Soviet Union Russia is not seeking the return of the Soviet Union, Vladimir Putin said during his speech to Russian lawmakers announcing the annexation of four of Ukraine’s territories. “People born after the tragedy of the end of the Soviet Union, they wanted unity in 1991,” Putin said. “There was a decision by representatives of the leading party to dissolve the USSR. And this has destroyed the connections between different parts of our country.” Putin has long held that the dissolution of the USSR was a mistake and the most catastrophic event in history. “The Soviet Union is no longer there, and cannot return to the past,” he said. “For Russia we don’t need this anymore, we are not aiming for that. But there is nothing stronger than the will of mission of people who decided they want to be part of Russia. For generations they lived in a single country and there is nothing stronger than the will of these people to return to their historic roots.” — Natasha Turak Putin declares four new regions of the Russian Federation Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting on agriculture issues via video link in Sochi, Russia September 27, 2022. Sputnik/Gavriil Grigorov/Pool via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS – THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. Gavriil Grigorov | Sputnik | Reuters Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the annexation of four regions of Ukraine under its occupation during a speech in front of lawmakers in Moscow. “People have made a definitive choice, today we are signing a decree on Luhansk People’s Republic, Donetsk People’s Republic, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson,” Putin said. “I am sure the Federal Assembly will support the laws of creating four new subjects of the Russian Federation because this is the will of millions of people.”  “It is the self determination of people, the right that is based on the historical unity which was defended by generations of our people, people who for generations protected Russia,” he said. The speech follows a widely-criticized sham referendum held by Russia in the occupied territories, which make up roughly 18% of Ukraine’s land, that resulted in what Moscow said were overwhelming votes to join the Russian Federation. — Natasha Turak Kremlin says attacks on any part of Ukraine that Russia is set to annex is an attack on Russia itself Attacks on any part of Ukraine that Russia is about to annex will be considered an attack on Russia itself, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters. Russian President Vladimir Putin is slated to officially declare the annexations of four Ukrainian regions during a ceremony today, for which celebrations at Red Square are planned. The classification raises the stakes for the conflict as Putin has threatened the use of nuclear weapons in the event of any attacks on Russian territory. And just as the annexations are to be announced, Ukrainian forces have surrounded thousands of Russian troops in the strategic town of Lyman in northern Donetsk, one of the territories set for annexation. The situation raises the question of exactly what parts of these territories — Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia — Russia can actually annex and control. Altogether, they constitute roughly 18% of Ukraine’s land. Peskov said that all of Donetsk would be under Ukrainian control, but did not specify whether all of Kherson of Zaporizhzhia would be. “We will clarify everything today,” he said. — Natasha Turak Russian forces face potential imminent defeat in Ukraine’s Lyman Ukrainian soldiers rest at their position near Lyman, eastern Ukraine, on April 28, 2022, amid Russian invasion of Ukraine. ( Yasuyoshi Chiba | AFP | Getty Images Ukrainian forces have almost fully surrounded Russian troops occupying Lyman, a town in the north of Ukraine’s Donetsk province, raising the possibility of another Russian loss just as President Vladimir Putin is set to announce the province’s annexation. “Ukrainian troops have likely nearly completed the encirclement of the Russian grouping in Lyman and cut critical ground lines of communication (GLOCS) that support Russian troops in the Drobysheve-Lyman area,” a tweet from the Institute for the Study of War read. Roughly 5,500 Russian troops are reported to be in the town, which has been occupied since May. The town is home to a strategic railway junction. Ukrainian forces have made rapid advances in the area in recent days and are now positioned to fire on the only route out of Lyman. This is part of the enormous swathe of eastern and southern Ukrainian territory, encompassing four regions, that Putin is set to annex after holding a sham referendum entirely controlled by Russia that concluded in majority votes to join the Russian Federation. Putin has warned that any threats to the territory of Russia would justify its use of nuclear weapons. — Natasha Turak Russian strikes hit civilian convoy multiple times outside Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine says Ukrainian servicemen walk by a crater left by a missile strike near Zaporizhzhia on September 30, 2022, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Genya Savilov | AFP | Getty Images Russian strikes hit a civilian convoy multiple times outside the city of Zaporizhzhia, Ukrainian officials said. The strikes, which hit a convoy of people who were heading to Russian-occupied territory to pick up their relatives, killed at least 23 people and wounded at least 28, Zaporizhzhia Regional Governor Oleksandr Starukh said in a post on Telegram. “There are dead and wounded. Rescuers, medics, and all relevant services are currently working at the site,” Starukh wrote. EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / Ukrainian policemen check cars damaged by a missile strike on a road near Zaporizhzhia on September 30, 2022, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.  Genya Savilov | Afp | Getty Images Ukraine’s Luhansk governor Serhiy Haidai wrote on Telegram, “Near Zaporizhzhia, the Russians fired rockets at a convoy heading to the occupied territory. It should be noted that the departure of 34 vehicles with residents of Luhansk region was planned. More detailed information about the victims is being clarified.” Members of the red cross checks bodies of people killed by a missile strike near Zaporizhzhia on September 30, 2022, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Genya Savilov | AFP | Getty Images CNBC has not been able to independently verify the details. Images posted by Starukh and others on social media show disturbing scenes of burnt cars and bodies on the road. A Russian-appointed leader of occupied Zaporizhzhia, Volodymyr Rogov, was quoted by Russian state news agency RIA as blaming Ukrainian forces for the attack, saying “Ukrainian militants hit a convoy with dozens of civilian cars queuing.” A couple hug each other near cars damaged by a missile strike on a road near Zaporizhzhia on September 30, 2022, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Genya Savilov | Afp | Getty Images Putin to officially announce Ukraine annexations during ceremony A view shows banners and constructions ahead of an expected event, dedicated to the results of referendums on the joining of four Ukrainian self-proclaimed regions to Russia, near the Kremlin Wall and the State Historical Museum in Red Square in central Moscow, Russia September 28, 2022. Banners read: “Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, Kherson. Together forever!”  Evgenia Novozhenina | Reuters Russian President Vladimir Putin is set to hold a ceremony today officially declaring the annexation of four regions of Ukraine, where sham referendums were held by Russian-appointed authorities over the last week. The referendum’s results, which have been rejected by much of the international community, showed large majorities of each territory — Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia — voting to join the Russian Federation. The regions, making up the country’s eastern and southern flanks, form roughly 18% of Ukraine’s territory. A municipal worker casts her ballot during a referendum on the secession of Zaporizhzhia region from Ukraine and its joining Russia, in the Russ...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Putin Declares Four New Regions Of The Russian Federation; Ukraine Says Civilian Convoy Hit By Russian Strike
Live Updates: Hurricane Ian Barrels Toward South Carolina After Slamming Florida
Live Updates: Hurricane Ian Barrels Toward South Carolina After Slamming Florida
Live Updates: Hurricane Ian Barrels Toward South Carolina After Slamming Florida https://digitalalaskanews.com/live-updates-hurricane-ian-barrels-toward-south-carolina-after-slamming-florida/ Fort Myers Mayor Kevin Anderson described the devastation wrought by Hurricane Ian. There are big boats on the ground and pieces of the river dock are strewn about. “Just look at the boats. These are some large boats. And they’ve been thrown around like they were toys,” he said, standing among the wreckage. The chunks of dock ripped by the storm surge and floated onto the ground “could weigh as much as a ton,” he added. “They were thrown around like they were nothing.” The destruction is horrific, he said, but it’s “good for people to see this to understand the power of a storm. So when future storms are approaching … they take our advisory seriously.” The city has no reported fatalities, and authorities, who have rescued more than 200 people, confident that they have gotten everybody, Anderson told CNN. Now, the biggest need in the city is for electricity and water. Resident can expect power back bit by bit each day, he said, adding that 80% of the city is still without power, even though crews are already working on restoration. At this time though, the mayor said residents should stay home. “Until we can get the roads cleared, the power lines secured, I would really love for people to stay home. It’s not safe out there. There are trees still ready to fall. A lot of times, there’s more deaths after the hurricane, from trees falling … people hitting power lines.” Watch here: Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Live Updates: Hurricane Ian Barrels Toward South Carolina After Slamming Florida
News Media Reacts To Trevor Noah Leaving The Daily Show
News Media Reacts To Trevor Noah Leaving The Daily Show
News Media Reacts To Trevor Noah Leaving ‘The Daily Show’ https://digitalalaskanews.com/news-media-reacts-to-trevor-noah-leaving-the-daily-show/ After seven years of hosting “The Daily Show” on Comedy Central, Trevor Noah is stepping away from the position. On Thursday’s edition of “The Daily Show,” Noah announced that his time is up hosting the comedy news show.  “I just found myself filled with gratitude for the journey,” Noah said told his audience. “It’s been absolutely amazing. It’s something that I never expected. And I found myself thinking throughout the time, everything we’ve gone through, the Trump presidency, the pandemic, just the journey of the more pandemic.” “And I realized that after the seven years, my time is up. Yeah. But in the most beautiful way. Honestly, I’ve loved hosting the show. It’s been one of my greatest challenges. It’s been one of my greatest joys.” Noah did state the reason for his decision which is wanting to be out on the road as a stand-up comedian and the travel that comes with performing shows in different cities and countries.  “But after seven years, I feel like it’s time,” Noah added. “I spent two years in my apartment, not on the road. Stand-up was done, and when I got back out there again, I realized there’s another part of my life that I want to carry on exploring.  “I miss learning other languages. I miss going to other countries and putting on shows. I miss being everywhere, doing everything.” It was not immediately apparent when his actual departure would occur or if the Paramount Global cable network had begun to consider a successor. “We are grateful to Trevor for our amazing partnership over the past seven years. With no timetable for his departure, we’re working together on next steps,” the network said in a statement (h/t Variety). “As we look ahead, we’re excited for the next chapter in the 25+ year history of ‘The Daily Show’ as it continues to redefine culture through sharp and hilarious social commentary, helping audiences make sense of the world around them.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
News Media Reacts To Trevor Noah Leaving The Daily Show
Kent Gluesenkamp Perez Spar Over Immigration Trump
Kent Gluesenkamp Perez Spar Over Immigration Trump
Kent, Gluesenkamp Perez Spar Over Immigration, Trump https://digitalalaskanews.com/kent-gluesenkamp-perez-spar-over-immigration-trump/ But the modest pomp of a longstanding and often rote democratic tradition – a campaign debate before the public – couldn’t disguise the bare-knuckled brawl between two relatively young and unorthodox candidates over the future of America. For the race to succeed U.S. Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler – a moderate Republican who was edged out in the August top-two primary after voting to impeach former President Donald Trump – is a race about many things. It’s a debate about how to use government power, how to tackle soaring inflation, and the rollback of federal abortion protections by a conservative U.S. Supreme Court. It’s about increased crime and drug abuse, American manufacturing and the country’s broader role in the world. It’s about the continuing efforts to delegitimize the presidential election of 2020. This race is also a contest over who should be allowed into this country to live and work, and who gets to be called an American. Kent, an outspoken America First candidate endorsed by Trump, has been dogged by media reports of affiliations or interactions with various groups of right-wing street brawlers and other extremist elements. He knows the issue will be raised. So when Gluesenkamp Perez brings it up in the debate – “Joe Kent wants to ban all immigration for 20 years to reestablish a white majority” – he is prepared. “This nonsense about me being a white nationalist is absolutely despicable,” Kent, who deployed in 11 combat tours, said at the debate. “I fought for this country for over 20 years, I placed my life in the hands of minorities and people of every single race and creed and sexuality, and they’ve placed their lives in my hands.” The 42-year-old Kent also isn’t apologetic for who he is: a former soldier and intelligence worker whose experience overseas and the death of his wife in the line of duty led to a deep disenchantment with and suspicion of the federal government, which led to a streak of isolationism. Kent’s aspirations are blunt: boost oil and gas production, defund the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Education, impose tariffs in an attempt to bring back manufacturing jobs, use the death penalty on drug dealers. And he would send the American military south, Kent said, to secure the border with Mexico and stop drug trafficking. “Look, I want to limit immigration into this country, cut off illegal immigration, and if a job has a visa tied to it that takes away a job from an American citizen,” Kent said during the debate, “I want to get rid of that.” Washington 3rd Congressional District Democratic candidate Marie Glusenkamp Perez and Republican candidate Joe Kent make their way to the stage in front of a full house at the RV Inn Style Resorts in Vancouver, Wash. on Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2022. (Kristina Barker for Crosscut) A stark choice For two decades, voters in southwest Washington’s 3rd Congressional District have elected moderate representatives. From 1999 through 2011 it was Brian Baird, a moderate Democrat who has endorsed Gluesenkamp Perez. And since 2011, it was Herrera Beutler. The district sweeps across Washington’s southwest, capturing all of Clark, Wahkiakum, Skamania, Pacific, Lewis and Cowlitz counties as well as a bite of Thurston County. It’s a mix of old and new Washington: paper and timber mills, shellfish and shipping ports. It’s home to Vancouver, pop. 197,000 and the fourth biggest city in the state, as well as booming bedroom communities for both it and Portland, which sits just across the river. Now, voters will choose between Kent and Gluesenkamp Perez, the 34-year-old daughter of a Mexican immigrant who lives with her husband in a rural Skamania County home they built themselves. They co-own an auto shop in Portland. She owns guns and caucused for Bernie Sanders, whom she described as an alternative to a Clinton dynasty, and touts herself as a pragmatist small business owner who wants to protect abortion rights. It was the Joe Kent signs popping up all over Skamania County that led Gluensenkamp Perez to run, and the rollback of abortion protections has only increased her determination. “People who should have had Jaime’s signs up in Skamania County, didn’t,” she said one day in a phone interview from her auto shop. “I looked at Joe Kent and thought, ‘Here’s a guy with nice hair and bad ideas.’” Democrats worked hard in recent years to unseat Herrera Beutler, especially during 2018’s blue wave — and still lost. Their challenges remain. As of mid-July, Kent had raised nine times as much money as Gluesenkamp Perez. He has a six-figure Twitter following and is a frequent presence on Fox News. Nonetheless, Democrats are hoping they can break through. Earlier this month, the Gluesenkamp Perez campaign released an internal poll conducted in late August showing a tight race. Speaking at a rally in a Vancouver brewery earlier this month, both Attorney General Bob Ferguson and Gluesenkamp Perez pointed to Kent’s affiliations with Trump and the Proud Boys – members of whom have been charged with felonies in connection with the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol – and to what she described as “Trump’s march toward fascism.” “Joe Kent is picking up that same banner of fascism,” Gluesenkamp Perez said. “And he has got to be stopped before it is too late.” The crowd at the 3rd Congressional District debate between Democratic candidate Marie Glusenkamp Perez and Republican candidate Joe Kent. The two debated over issues including gun control and vaccine mandates in front of a full house at the RV Inn Style Resorts in Vancouver, Wash. on Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2022. (Kristina Barker for Crosscut) On a mission from Trump A week before their debate, Kent bounded into the room of the Cowlitz County Republican Party office in Kelso, where about 60 people had settled into folding chairs to hear what he had to say. After a quick and jovial salute to the crowd, Kent plunged into his detailed vision of Republican victory. If he gets his way, Kent would shut down the government if President Joe Biden doesn’t start boosting domestic energy production immediately. Kent would use congressional authority to investigate Anthony Fauci over COVID-19, as well as Trump’s loss in the 2020 election, which Kent and others continue to question. He’d impeach Attorney General Merrick Garland and U.S. Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas. And in his biggest applause line of the night, Kent vowed on his first day in office to sign articles of impeachment against Biden – for, among other things, failing to secure America’s southern border. Kent acknowledged that even a Republican-controlled House doesn’t guarantee an impeachment. But he emphasized it as a powerful tactical tool to grind Biden’s agenda to a halt. “This country can’t live through two more years of Biden with his pedal to the metal,” Kent said, adding later: “We’re not going to win arguments with these guys. The only thing they respect is power.” He paints conservatives as persecuted by far-left progressives and Biden, pointing to the president’s speech where he declared supporters of Trump a threat to the foundations of the republic. “The Democrats know they have nothing to run on whatsoever, they can’t talk economy, they can’t talk crime, so all they’re going to do is turn around and attack us personally,” said Kent. “They’re going to say, ‘You’re racist, you’re sexist,’ all the things that conservatives get called on a daily basis.” The Democratic nominee for Washington’s 3rd District Marie Glusenkamp Perez photogaphed at Dean’s Car Care, the Portland auto body shop she owns with her husband Dean Glusenkamp, September 23, 2022. (Genna Martin/Crosscut) In an interview after the town hall, Kent – who grew up in Portland and now lives in Yacolt, a small town in Clark County –  credited his multiple deployments overseas with leading him to sharply question the workings and motivations of the federal government. After his military career, Kent worked for the Central Intelligence Agency. Kent said he began to question the government almost immediately after shipping out to Iraq in 2003. “I was a young sergeant, and I was like ‘OK, we’re over here to take out terrorists, these guys are linked to 9/11, they might get WMDs,” Kent said, referring to weapons of mass destruction. “I believed it.” But on the ground, Kent said he quickly came to believe the government had lied and that command staff wasn’t working to correct mistakes. Meanwhile, the United States government continued to pour troops and resources into the occupation. The disillusionment turned him against the Bush administration, Kent said, and led him to an interest in Ron Paul, and ultimately to Trump. The father of current U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Kentucky, Ron Paul was a longtime Republican congressman from Texas and three-time presidential aspirant who was known for his criticisms of America’s interventions around the globe. “I became a Trump Republican when Trump took apart the Republican national security establishment during the primary,” Kent said. “When he went after the Bushes and he went after the Cheneys, I was like, ‘Well that’s my guy.'” Then, his wife Shannon, a U.S. Navy cryptologist, was killed in Syria in 2019 while fighting ISIS. “Had my wife not gotten killed, I wouldn’t be here, I’d probably be overseas somewhere,” Kent said, adding later: “I thought I could influence it best from the inside. Be the guy, when it was my turn, to say ‘No, there are no weapons of mass destruction here, these guys are full of it.’” Republican candidate Joe Kent debates issues including gun control and vaccine mandates against Democratic candidate Marie Glusenkamp Perez in front of a full house at the RV Inn Style Resorts in Vancouver, Wash. on Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2022. (Kristina Barker for Crosscut...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Kent Gluesenkamp Perez Spar Over Immigration Trump
The Justice System Finally Flexes Its Power
The Justice System Finally Flexes Its Power
The Justice System Finally Flexes Its Power https://digitalalaskanews.com/the-justice-system-finally-flexes-its-power/ By David W. Marshall (Trice Edney Wire) – As a Republican presidential contender in 2016, Donald Trump knew something most of us may have totally missed. Most people took it as a joke when Trump addressed an audience during a rally in Sioux Center, Iowa and said, “I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, okay, and I wouldn’t lose any voters, okay?” He totally understood the depth of devotion and loyalty supporters had for him. Little did we know at the time, there was some truth in his bold statement. One of the strategies which propelled Trump’s popularity was to passionately defend “birtherism”, the long-held conspiracy theory that former President Barack Obama was born outside of the United States and hence should never have been elected. In doing so, it perpetuated a lie which had racial overtones while tapping into the hated-filled emotions of certain segments of the population. From the passion fueling his support, an embolden Trump actually believed he could literally break any rules and not suffer any major consequences from voters or those in authority, He came to power by way of a lie, and he governed by way of lies. Now, we are starting to see the lies and fraud catch up with the prideful former president. In multiple ways, the judicial system is starting to flex its muscle by showing while Trump is a former president, he is still a citizen who must be held accountable like all other citizens. Last week, New York Attorney General Letitia James announced a major lawsuit against Trump, the Trump Organization and his three adult children for a scheme to defraud banks and insurance companies. The state seeks to recover $250 million and severely restrict the defendants from conducting business in New York. The bully has met his match in the New York Attorney General who has proven to be no pushover. James also said at a news conference that she was referring the matter to the Internal Revenue Service and the Justice Department’s Southern District of New York for potential criminal prosecution. While James declined to say whether she expects Trump to be criminally charged, most likely if he were an average citizen he would already be behind bars. When a president inappropriately uses intimidation, it can make a difference in overriding the government’s system of checks and balances. What Trump sees as criticism and political attacks, it is often attempts at holding him accountable. Ted Cruz said Republicans don’t criticize Donald Trump because he “punches them in the face” for it. The twice impeached president has always been shielded from punishment for wrongdoing due to a lack of courage from members of his own party. Unfortunately, those with power and wealth can use their financial resources and political influence to escape or delay accountability. Trump’s “foot soldiers” are getting punished for their participation in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, but so far Trump and others with power have been free from any consequences. With judicial battles on multiple fronts, how long can Trump delay accountability? The former president faces potential criminal scrutiny from the federal government, the Manhattan district attorney and prosecutors in Fulton County, Ga, for a variety of issues –including his finances, the Jan. 6 insurrection and his retention of sensitive government documents at his Mar-a-Lago resort. It is obvious from the beginning Trump believed he was above the law. He still believes his devoted followers will ignore any lawlessness on his behalf and continue to promote his lies and bullying. He believes GOP lawmakers will continue to succumb to his intimidation while giving him political cover. He has confidence that judges who he has appointed to the federal courts will be blind to the law, and will also do his bidding. Trump’s governing blueprint of dishonesty and deceit should not be stamped with approval by an intimidated Justice Department who like many GOP lawmakers will hold back accountability due to politics. The lack of accountability to Trump will be the green light for future Trump clones such as the current governor of Florida who would be more than willing to accept and carry out the blueprint. Fortunately, we are seeing signs of hope and confidence in our judicial system. Where the Trump-nominated U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon seemed intent on giving the Trump lawyers what they want in the form of a special master, the delay tactic appears to have backfired due to true justice being ultimately being enacted. The Trump team was mistaken in believing that former federal judge Raymond Dearie, as special master, would be an ally on their side. Dearie did what any respectable judge would do, he quickly put an end to Trump’s stalling and nonsense. Meanwhile, a three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, consisting of two judges appointed by Trump and one by Barack Obama unanimously granted the Justice Department a reprieve from Cannon’s order barring them from reviewing the documents with classified markings seized from Mar-a-Lago. The judges not only rejected Trump’s lawyer’s lack of arguments, but also Cannon’s acceptance of them. Trump along with members of his legal team, his supporters, GOP lawmakers and the nation as a whole need to see to real justice at work. Let’s hope it continues. David W. Marshall is the founder of the faith-based organization, TRB: The Reconciled Body, and author of the book God Bless Our Divided America. He can be reached at www.davidwmarshallauthor.com. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
The Justice System Finally Flexes Its Power
Brazils Upcoming Presidential Elections Are The Most Hate-Filled In Recent Memory
Brazils Upcoming Presidential Elections Are The Most Hate-Filled In Recent Memory
Brazil’s Upcoming Presidential Elections Are The Most Hate-Filled In Recent Memory https://digitalalaskanews.com/brazils-upcoming-presidential-elections-are-the-most-hate-filled-in-recent-memory/ Vendor’s towels for sale featuring Brazilian presidential candidates.Eraldo Peres/AP Fight disinformation: Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily newsletter and follow the news that matters. Every other day, my WhatsApp bursts with messages from friends in Brazil and abroad expressing equal parts of excitement and apprehension as Sunday’s Brazilian presidential elections approach. On Wednesday, my best friend who lives in the country’s capital, Brasília, texted to say she was scared of wearing red clothes to go vote this weekend because red is the color associated with the Worker’s Party of former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Lula, the current front-runner, has a real, if slim, chance to beat far-right incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro in the first round by getting more than 50 percent of valid votes. “The mood is terrible,” she wrote, later adding that in the last 48 hours, four instances of political violence had been recorded across the country. “It’s very sinister this fear of expressing yourself.” My friend’s worries are justified. The upcoming presidential elections in my home country are the most fraught and hate-filled in recent memory. In July, one of the president’s followers fatally shot a local Worker’s Party treasurer at his Lula-themed birthday party. Even before the official kick-off of the campaign in August, pro-Lula protesters were bombarded with feces and urine. On September 7, the day Brazil commemorated 200 years of independence, in the midst of a political discussion, a Bolsonaro supporter killed a Lula supporter, stabbing him 70 times and attacking him with an axe. This month, a researcher with Datafolha, one of the main polling institutes in Brazil, was assaulted. In a Rio de Janeiro bar, a 19-year-old woman was struck in the head after a Bolsonaro fan threatened to hit her sister when she criticized the president. Almost 70 percent of Brazilians surveyed in a September poll said they fear being victims of politically motivated violence.  “Online and offline hate speech and harassment and serious political violence have made many Brazilians afraid to express political opinions and exercise their political rights,” Juanita Goebertus, Americas director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement. “Electoral and judicial authorities, police forces, and other authorities should do their utmost to protect freedom of speech and assembly, and ensure that Brazilians can vote safely.” Experts with the United Nations have also called for peaceful elections and condemned “continuing attacks against democratic institutions, the judiciary and the electoral system in Brazil.”  This is not the first time political violence has been part of a Brazilian election. In 2018, Marielle Franco, a Black, gay, feminist Rio de Janeiro councilmember and human rights advocate was killed along with her driver after leaving a Black women’s empowerment event. She has become an international icon as a symbol of resistance and activism, but her murder remains unsolved. That same year, while on the campaign trail, Bolsonaro was stabbed by a mentally ill man. Since then, the country’s Superior Electoral Court, which oversees elections, has recorded a spike in violence against candidates. When my American coworkers recently asked me what I thought the outcome of this election would be, I matter-of-factly stated I believed Lula would win, if only he didn’t get murdered first. (The leading candidate’s security apparatus has been reinforced, and he’s been wearing a bulletproof vest at public events.)  Bolsonaro himself has often incited hostility if not outright violence. A former army captain and a member of congress for 27 years, he was famous for his misogynistic and homophobic views. As president, he is notable for his disastrous handling of the Covid-19 pandemic and disregard for the Amazon and climate change. He has called for the Worker’s Party to be swept into the “trash bin of history” and talked about shooting the “petralhada,” a pejorative way of referring to those who vote for the left-leaning party. This authoritarian president, who received a full endorsement from former President Donald Trump, has loosened firearms laws, which has resulted in a three-digit surge in gun ownership registration and told his supporters to “prepare” for what is likely to be a negative outcome for the president. Before Independence Day rallies in September, Bolsonaro urged his supporters to “go to the streets one last time.”  In anticipation of his defeat in the polls, which show Lula leading by 14 points, Bolsonaro has borrowed from Trump’s playbook to repeatedly cast doubt on the integrity and security of the elections. He has attacked Brazil’s Superior Electoral Court and Supreme Court justices and spread baseless claims of voter fraud while insisting that the highly secure electronic voting machines be replaced with paper ballots. A few days before Brazilians head to the polls, Bolsonaro’s party even released a document outlining a plan to dispute the election results, including non-substantiated allegations that government employees and contractors have the “absolute power” to manipulate the voting system. In response, the Superior Electoral Court issued a statement calling the claims false lies “without any basis in reality.”  The president’s antidemocratic tendencies, flirtation with Brazil’s military dictatorship past, and the support he has from the armed forces and the military police have raised concerns domestically and abroad about a potential coup in case of a defeat—or, at the very least, a post-election scenario similar to what took place in the United States following the 2020 presidential election and culminating in the January 6 insurrection. On Wednesday, the US Senate unanimously passed a resolution urging the United States government to “immediately recognize the outcome of the election in Brazil, if that election is determined by international observers and organizations to have been free and fair.” In a video message shared by Lula’s campaign, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont), who introduced the resolution, said, “The world is watching this election and it’s imperative that the voices of the Brazilian people be heard and whatever the results respected by people of all political ideologies.”  In August, I spoke with Guilherme Casarões, a political scientist and professor at Getulio Vargas Foundation in São Paulo about Bolsonaro’s radicalization and the possibility of “social chaos” ahead and after the elections: Bolsonaro has been stating very clearly that he has no interest in accepting the outcome of the election if it’s not his own victory. There is a Trump-like element to his unwillingness to accept an unfavorable outcome on top of a fraud narrative. In the case of the United States, I think it didn’t get worse because there is still some institutional resistance. The military did not embark on Trump’s coup adventure, some Republican congressmen also did not accept it or wanted to distance themselves. Now January 6 is being investigated. You have a series of measures that show a certain democratic resistance that I don’t know we would have in Brazil, especially if civil society is unable to take a stand. Not because there are no democrats in Brazil, but because political institutions have already been dismantled or co-opted. In his desperation and urge to hold onto power that may echo Trump, Bolsonaro, who has said his only three options are prison, death, or victory, maintains that he’ll accept the result of the elections, but always with the caveat that the elections must be “clean.” Other times, again using similar tactics to the former US president, he rallies his base by saying it’s impossible for him not to win in the first round and that if he doesn’t get 60 percent of the votes, something “abnormal” will have taken place. Bolsonaro’s die-hard supporters are buying into that extremist, denialist rhetoric and then escalating it. On top of widespread disinformation around election fraud, researchers with ActiveFence, a tech company using artificial intelligence to monitor online harm, have detected online discourse promoting military intervention—including calls to misappropriate article 142 of the Brazilian Constitution, which states the armed forces are, under presidential authority, to guarantee “law and order”—and suggesting the military should play a more active role in the electoral process.  The stakes of the Brazilian presidential elections can’t be overstated. In some ways similar to the choices facing US voters ahead of the November midterm elections in the United States, Brazilians will be weighing whether or not to uphold democratic institutions and values, truth, and freedom of expression. As I write this article, a press release email arrived in my inbox promoting an op-ed with the headline: “Can democracy survive Brazil’s upcoming elections?” I find myself asking the same question.  Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Brazils Upcoming Presidential Elections Are The Most Hate-Filled In Recent Memory
Zarco Trumps Bagnaia To Go Fastest In Thai MotoGP Practice
Zarco Trumps Bagnaia To Go Fastest In Thai MotoGP Practice
Zarco Trumps Bagnaia To Go Fastest In Thai MotoGP Practice https://digitalalaskanews.com/zarco-trumps-bagnaia-to-go-fastest-in-thai-motogp-practice/ / Live news Issued on: 30/09/2022 – 12:06 Johann Zarco of France went fastest on Friday Toshifumi KITAMURA AFP Buriram (Thailand) (AFP) – France’s Johann Zarco was quickest in unexpectedly dry conditions for the opening practice sessions at the Thai MotoGP on Friday, pipping world championship title contender Francesco Bagnaia. Riders had one eye on the overcast sky over the international circuit at Buriram, about 400 kilometres (250 miles) from Bangkok. But the rain stayed away for both practice sessions as Zarco — a Ducati rider seeking his first MotoGP win — clocked a leading time of one minute and 30.281 seconds in the afternoon. Ducati dominated as Italian Bagnaia, who is trailing world champion Fabio Quartararo by 18 points in the standings with four races left, was second-fastest. He was just 0.018sec off Zarco. Spain’s Jorge Martin was third. Six-time MotoGP world champion Marc Marquez, who is working his way back to full fitness after surgery, was fourth-fastest across both sessions. Under-pressure Quartararo of France, who has seen his championship lead whittled away by Bagnaia in the second half of the season, came fifth on his Yamaha. The third of the serious title contenders, Aleix Espargaro from Spain, finished outside the top 10 for Aprilia along with Italy’s Enea Bastianini. Heavy rain and thunderstorms are forecast for qualifying on Saturday. MotoGP is returning to Thailand for the first time since 2019 because of coronavirus disruptions. Leading times from the first two practice sessions at the Thai Moto GP on Friday: 1. Johann Zarco (FRA/Ducati-Primac) 1min 30.281sec, 2. Francesco Bagnaia (ITA/Ducati) at 0.018sec, 3. Jorge Martin (ESP/Ducati-Primac) 0.190, 4. Marc Marquez (ESP/Honda) 0.242, 5. Fabio Quartararo (FRA/Yamaha) 0.274, 6. Jack Miller (AUS/Ducati) 0.307, 7. Luca Marini (ITA/Ducati-VR46) 0.313, 8. Miguel Oliveira (POR/KTM) 0.327, 9. Alex Rins (ESP/Suzuki) 0.360, 10. Franco Morbidelli (ITA/Yamaha) 0.484 © 2022 AFP Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Zarco Trumps Bagnaia To Go Fastest In Thai MotoGP Practice
Its Gotta Grow To Stay Alive: Inside Noah Shachtmans Raucous Reinvention Of Rolling Stone
Its Gotta Grow To Stay Alive: Inside Noah Shachtmans Raucous Reinvention Of Rolling Stone
“It’s Gotta Grow To Stay Alive”: Inside Noah Shachtman’s Raucous Reinvention Of Rolling Stone https://digitalalaskanews.com/its-gotta-grow-to-stay-alive-inside-noah-shachtmans-raucous-reinvention-of-rolling-stone/ Noah Shachtman was up in Vermont last year, “thinking about just quitting,” when Gus Wenner rang with an opportunity. “I was burnt out after seven-plus years of running the insane asylum—I mean that in the best possible way—that is the Daily Beast,” he told me. But the chance to take the reins of Rolling Stone quickly recharged him. “I couldn’t sleep that night,” he recalled. “I was so excited.” Such excitement was palpable on a recent visit to Rolling Stone’s Manhattan headquarters, as Shachtman invited me to stick around while he met rising pop star Tai Verdes, who was appearing on the magazine’s Twitch show. He practically bounced into the room and announced in a single breath: “I’m-Noah-Shachtman-I’m-the-editor-of-Rolling-Stone.” Verdes thanked Shachtman for being a fan as the editor rattled off his favorite songs, and assured Verdes he wasn’t like this with every Twitch guest. Shachtman, an extremely online, F-bomb-dropping Brooklyn dad who played CBGB before establishing himself on the national defense beat, has breathed new life into Rolling Stone since taking over as editor in chief one year ago. He’s increased the publication’s online metabolism in a way that’s reminiscent of how he led the Daily Beast, a site known for punching above its weight with scoops across politics, media, and pop culture. But the breakneck pace is also whiplashing staff at a legacy print magazine whose web presence seemed, until recently, like an afterthought. His hard-charging style in the newsroom and swagger on social media has chafed some staffers, prompting debate over whether Shachtman’s obsession with scoops and tabloid instincts are best suited for iconic music and culture magazine—or, perhaps, are just what it needs to stay relevant in the digital age. As he kicks into year two atop the masthead, Shachtman, 51, made clear he won’t be taking his foot off the gas. “Are we trying to reach a maximum audience? Fuck yes,” he said. “Are we gonna try and get into the biggest stories of the day across the board? Like, for sure. Do I like being scrappy? Of course I like being scrappy. Do I think that’s a virtue? I do. I do think it’s a virtue. This isn’t, you know, Town & Country,” he said. “This is fucking Rolling Stone here, and scrappy and edgy is part of the DNA.” You could see his fingerprints immediately, in the exclusives and edgy headlines, and if for some reason you couldn’t tell there was a new sheriff in town, he’d spend the next year telling you so on Twitter, welcoming people to the “new Rolling Stone” and vowing to call out “bad actors,” including past cover stars like Eric Clapton, who has come under fire for being a vaccine skeptic and giving money to a music group with similar views. “The new Rolling Stone is going to confront monsters, even—especially—if it means confronting monsters the magazine helped elevate,” Shachtman tweeted last November in promoting an investigation into sexual abuse allegations against Marilyn Manson, a project staffers tell me got under way prior to the new editor’s arrival—in other words, old Rolling Stone. (Manson has denied the allegations.) The magazine sparked controversy last spring for a piece exploring the “final days” of late Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins, with one interviewee, Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith, calling the piece “sensationalized and misleading.” Shachtman can be almost cartoonishly aggressive about journalism. “He once compared the Daily Beast to SEAL Team 6,” as one former staffer recalled. His focus on taking big swings could be limiting: Another former Daily Beast employee said Shachtman seemed more interested in music-related controversies than music itself. “It always seemed like he preferred scoops about artists who had done bad things, like sexual assault stories,” they said, “rather than pieces about their work.” Shachtman, once a staffer on Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential campaign, says he got into journalism to help pay rent in between gigs as a ska and reggae bassist. He tells a story—on a few podcasts, and in our interview—about how, in the early 2000s, he felt he had to choose between music and journalism and chose the latter. (Music journalism, a bridge between the two, didn’t work for him: “You know when something hits you so hard, and is so important, and is so emotional to you, that you almost can’t write about it?” he said.) Shachtman covered national security and technology, establishing himself among the earliest journalists doing so primarily for an online audience. “How digital news worked and how to take a wonky subject and make it accessible for a broad audience—he really got those things early,” said a journalist who worked with him at Danger Room, the award-winning Wired blog Shachtman founded in 2007. Noah Shachtman, left, and Rolling Stone’s chief executive, Gus Wenner in July 2021 in Brooklyn. By GUERIN BLASK/The New York Time​s/Redux. His intensity in the newsroom was already apparent. “Sometimes it was a bit much for me. But I get where it’s coming from,” the Danger Room journalist said. “The one thing that will absolutely kill a reporter is not getting attention or interest in their stories and that’s something Noah is certainly not guilty of. Even people who thought he was too demanding would talk about the excitement he brought to the newsroom,” they said. “And you kind of get one with the other.” As Shachtman acknowledges, “I know I’m a different cat and I know I’m intense.” Many people who’ve worked with Shachtman—I spoke to over a dozen—will tell you he excels at the journalism part of the job, and more than a few will say that, despite being well-intentioned, he fell short as a manager. “I think that he could be, if he took it seriously, but I don’t even think he thinks of that as part of the job,” said one former Daily Beast staffer, among those who described him as at times immature and lacking boundaries. “With certain reporters he’d treat them buddy-buddy, and then use that intimacy to kind of berate you in really personal terms,” said another. A third former Daily Beast staffer recalled how, when she told her exit interviewer that some top editors could work on their communication skills with women (without naming names), the exit interviewer correctly guessed that she was talking about Shachtman. (Shachtman declined to comment on this former staffer’s recollection.) Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Its Gotta Grow To Stay Alive: Inside Noah Shachtmans Raucous Reinvention Of Rolling Stone
Hurricane Ian To Make Landfall In South Carolina Today; Will Bring Rain Winds To Our Area
Hurricane Ian To Make Landfall In South Carolina Today; Will Bring Rain Winds To Our Area
Hurricane Ian To Make Landfall In South Carolina Today; Will Bring Rain, Winds To Our Area https://digitalalaskanews.com/hurricane-ian-to-make-landfall-in-south-carolina-today-will-bring-rain-winds-to-our-area/ (On this page, you will find the latest on where Ian is, what we can expect in our area, the latest track, radar, “spaghetti” models, hurricane alerts, storm surge alerts, tropical storm advisories and the latest video from the storm’s destruction.) Hurricane Ian will make landfall in South Carolina on Friday. The latest track shows the storm making landfall between Charleston and Myrtle Beach, then moving north.(Watch the latest video forecast above)South Carolina schools announce Friday changes due to Ian impacts Below is a timeline for impacts on the Upstate:Friday: Ian moves in for a second landfall in South Carolina as a Category 1 hurricane. Here in the Upstate, we will see wind gusts between 30 mph to 50 mph. The further east you travel in South Carolina, the higher the wind gusts. Rain begins in the Upstate mid morning and will get heavier through the day. The rain comes in waves, and temperatures will be cooler, with highs in the 60s.Saturday: Ian pulls north, leaving scattered showers through Sunday. Potential Severe Impacts: All said, 1 to 3 inches of rain is possible in the Upstate. Wind gusts of 30 to 50 mph could cause some downed trees, which could lead to power outages. Impacts for SC, Georgia coast and North Carolina: Strong winds will hammer South Carolina and Georgia’s coasts into Friday afternoon. Gusts of up to 90 mph will be possible as Ian makes its second landfall along the SC coast. North Carolina’s coast will have strong winds with a slight chance of severe weather, but the strongest winds stay south. Storm surge of 2-5 feet is possible Friday.Latest track, path, spaghetti models below: More maps, models and radar here.Latest video: (Newest video will be at the top)Charleston braces for Hurricane IanDrove video of Fort Myers destruction after Hurricane IanBradenton international airport damageRaw footage of Ian in downtown Sarasota, FloridaFlooded car rescue in NaplesHurricane Ian tears roof from Florida homeHurricane Hunter Describes His Flight Into the Eye of Hurricane IanTime-lapse of storm surge on Sanibel IslandWater recedes from Tampa Bay ahead of Hurricane IanRelated stories: GREENVILLE, S.C. — (On this page, you will find the latest on where Ian is, what we can expect in our area, the latest track, radar, “spaghetti” models, hurricane alerts, storm surge alerts, tropical storm advisories and the latest video from the storm’s destruction.) Hurricane Ian will make landfall in South Carolina on Friday. The latest track shows the storm making landfall between Charleston and Myrtle Beach, then moving north. (Watch the latest video forecast above) South Carolina schools announce Friday changes due to Ian impacts Below is a timeline for impacts on the Upstate: Friday: Ian moves in for a second landfall in South Carolina as a Category 1 hurricane. Here in the Upstate, we will see wind gusts between 30 mph to 50 mph. The further east you travel in South Carolina, the higher the wind gusts. Rain begins in the Upstate mid morning and will get heavier through the day. The rain comes in waves, and temperatures will be cooler, with highs in the 60s. Saturday: Ian pulls north, leaving scattered showers through Sunday. Potential Severe Impacts: All said, 1 to 3 inches of rain is possible in the Upstate. Wind gusts of 30 to 50 mph could cause some downed trees, which could lead to power outages. Impacts for SC, Georgia coast and North Carolina: Strong winds will hammer South Carolina and Georgia’s coasts into Friday afternoon. Gusts of up to 90 mph will be possible as Ian makes its second landfall along the SC coast. North Carolina’s coast will have strong winds with a slight chance of severe weather, but the strongest winds stay south. Storm surge of 2-5 feet is possible Friday. Latest track, path, spaghetti models below: More maps, models and radar here. Latest video: (Newest video will be at the top) Charleston braces for Hurricane Ian Drove video of Fort Myers destruction after Hurricane Ian Bradenton international airport damage Raw footage of Ian in downtown Sarasota, Florida Flooded car rescue in Naples Hurricane Ian tears roof from Florida home Hurricane Hunter Describes His Flight Into the Eye of Hurricane Ian Time-lapse of storm surge on Sanibel Island Water recedes from Tampa Bay ahead of Hurricane Ian Related stories: Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Hurricane Ian To Make Landfall In South Carolina Today; Will Bring Rain Winds To Our Area
Civilians Killed In Ukraine Convoy Attack As Putin To Proclaim Rule Over Seized Land
Civilians Killed In Ukraine Convoy Attack As Putin To Proclaim Rule Over Seized Land
Civilians Killed In Ukraine Convoy Attack As Putin To Proclaim Rule Over Seized Land https://digitalalaskanews.com/civilians-killed-in-ukraine-convoy-attack-as-putin-to-proclaim-rule-over-seized-land/ Russian annexation of four regions condemned worldwide Move is ‘dangerous escalation’ jeopardising peace – U.N. chief Ukraine’s Zelenskiy says for war to end Putin must be stopped Zelenskiy summons emergency meeting on security, defence ZAPORIZHZHIA, Ukraine, Sept 30 (Reuters) – A missile attack on a convoy of cars in southern Ukraine killed a number of civilians on Friday, hours before President Vladimir Putin was due to proclaim Moscow’s rule over lands it has seized in his invasion. The convoy was assembling in a car park near Zaporizhzhia city to carry people and supplies into Russian-held territory in Ukraine’s southern Zaporizhzhia province. The regional capital is still controlled by Ukraine. A missile had gouged a crater in the ground near two lines of vehicles. The impact had thrown chunks of dirt ino the air and sprayed the vehicles with shrapnel. The windows of the vehicles – mostly cars and three vans, were blown out. Reuters saw around a dozen bodies, four of them in cars. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com “So far, 23 dead and 28 wounded. All civilians,” Zaporizhzhia regional governor Oleksandr Starukh wrote on Telegram. The vehicles were packed with the occupants’ belongings, blankets and suitcases. A body leaned from the driver’s seat into the passenger seat of a yellow car, his left hand still clutching the steering wheel. The attack took place hours before President Vladimir Putin was due to stage a ceremony in an ornate Kremlin hall to proclaim Russia’s rule over around 15% of Ukraine, the biggest annexation in Europe since Hitler. It would be followed by a celebratory pop concert outside the Kremlin walls on Red Square. Russia’s annexation of the Russian-occupied areas of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia has been condemned in the West and beyond. U.N. chief Antonio Guterres called it was a “dangerous escalation” and a violation of the United Nations charter. “It can still be stopped. But to stop it we have to stop that person in Russia who wants war more than life. Your lives, citizens of Russia,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said in a Thursday evening address. The Russian annexation, held after what the West denounced as phoney referndums at gunpoint in occupied territory, followed weeks of defeats for Moscow’s forces on the battlefield in which they were routed from their positions in Ukraine’s northeast. Putin has ordered the call-up up of hundreds of thousands of Russian reservists, a move that prompted tens of thousands of Russian men to flee over borders to escape being shipped off to war. Military experts said Russia could soon be facing one of its biggest defeats of the war so far, with thousands of troops trapped in Lyman, the last major Russian stronghold in the north of Donetsk province. The town’s fall would pave the way for Ukraine to recapture swathes of land Russia is now claiming. Kyiv has so far kept silent about the situation there, but Russian military bloggers have described the Russian force as all but surrounded, with advancing Ukrainians having cut off the last possible routes of escape. “Possible that the pocket collapses tonight or tomorrow, which would overshadow the annexation announcement,” tweeted Rob Lee, an expert on the Russian military and senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute. A crater left by a Russian missile strike, that hit a convoy of civilian vehicles amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, is seen in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine September 30, 2022. REUTERS/Stringer NUCLEAR THREAT Since his troops were forced to flee from Ukraine’s Kharkiv province, Putin has chosen to escalate the war. Last week he endorsed the annexation, ordered the call-up of reservists, and threatened to use nuclear weapons if Russia is attacked. Russian officials, including Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, have explicitly said the threat of nuclear retaliation would apply to any attacks on the areas they plan to annex, despite the thousand km-long (600 mile) frontline through it. Ukraine has said it will take back all its territory. Zelenskiy promised a strong response to the annexations and summoned his defence and security chiefs for an emergency meeting on Friday where “fundamental decisions” will be taken, an official said. ‘NO LEGAL VALUE’ On the eve of the annexation ceremony in the Georgievsky Hall of the Great Kremlin Palace, Putin said that “all mistakes” made in a call-up announced last week should be corrected, his first public acknowledgment that it had not gone smoothly. Putin’s call-up order gave no details of who must be drafted. Russian officials have publicly said older men or those with no military experience should by exempt, but call-up notices have been given to men of all ages and background. Members of ethnic minorities say they have been particularly targetted, leading to unrest in southern Russia and Siberia. At Friday’s event, Putin will give a speech and meet Kremlin-backed leaders of the four regions. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov did not say whether Putin would attend the concert, as he did at similar event in 2014 after Russia proclaimed it had annexed Ukraine’s Crimea region. A stage has been set up in the Moscow square with giant video screens and billboards proclaiming the four areas part of Russia. U.S. President Joe Biden said the United States would never recognise Russia’s claims on Ukraine’s territory, denouncing the referendums. “The results were manufactured in Moscow,” Biden said at a conference of Pacific Island leaders on Thursday. U.N. Secretary General Guterres told reporters: “Any decision to proceed with the annexation … would have no legal value and deserves to be condemned.” Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Peter Graff; Editing by Robert Birsel and Angus MacSwan Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Civilians Killed In Ukraine Convoy Attack As Putin To Proclaim Rule Over Seized Land
European Markets Climb Looking For Relief Rally After Global Sell-Off; Stoxx 600 Up 1%
European Markets Climb Looking For Relief Rally After Global Sell-Off; Stoxx 600 Up 1%
European Markets Climb, Looking For Relief Rally After Global Sell-Off; Stoxx 600 Up 1% https://digitalalaskanews.com/european-markets-climb-looking-for-relief-rally-after-global-sell-off-stoxx-600-up-1/ LONDON ― European markets advanced on Friday, gaining some respite from a torrid week as the third quarter drew to a close. The pan-European Stoxx 600 added 1% in early trade, with oil and gas stocks climbing 2.2% to lead gains as all sectors and major bourses entered positive territory. Global stocks struggled in recent sessions amid fears over slowing growth and aggressive monetary policy tightening. The widespread sell-off on Wall Street continued on Thursday, with all three major averages falling sharply as investors assessed the outlook for future rate-hiking decisions from the U.S. Federal Reserve and their impact on the markets. The S&P 500 hit a fresh low for the year. Stock futures were mixed in early premarket trade on Friday. Shares in Asia-Pacific also retreated on Friday following the overnight plunge stateside, though new data showed Chinese factory activity unexpectedly expanded in August. Investor focus in Europe on Friday will shift to initial euro zone inflation figures for September, due at 10 a.m. London time, with economists expecting annual consumer prices to have increased by a fresh record high of 9.7%. Volatility continues in U.K. markets after the Bank of England intervened in the bond market on Wednesday in order to shore up the country’s financial stability, after a historic sell-off in long-dated gilts. Sterling also hit an all-time low on Monday following the new government’s widely condemned fiscal policy announcements, but has staged a significant rally in recent days. Stateside, several Fed officials are due to speak on Friday afternoon, and the markets will be watching closely for indications as to the pace of future rate hikes from the central bank. Euro zone inflation soars to record high of 10% in September Euro zone inflation hit a new record high of 10% in September, Eurostat data showed on Friday, up from 9.1% in August and above consensus projections of 9.7%. The reading, which also showed price increases broadening out from volatile food and energy prices into nearly all segments of the 19-member bloc’s economy, will exert more pressure on the European Central Bank to hike interest rates aggressively at its October meeting. – Elliot Smith Sterling recovers to pre-plunge levels as Bank of England and government act The British pound rose to fresh one-week highs on Friday against both the dollar and the euro, recovering from the steep losses that send it to an all-time low on Monday. Sterling gained 1% against the greenback on Friday morning to trade above $1.12 before moderating slightly. During Asian trading hours on Monday, the pound slid to just above $1.03 on the back of a widely-criticized set of fiscal policy announcements from the U.K. government. The Bank of England on Wednesday intervened in the U.K. long-dated bond market to secure the country’s financial stability after huge sell-offs in the currency and fixed income markets. Markets are also taking reassurance after news that British Prime Minister Liz Truss and Finance Minister Kwasi Kwarteng will meet with the U.K.’s independent finance watchdog for talks on Friday. – Elliot Smith UK economy unexpectedly grew in second-quarter, but remains below pre-Covid levels The U.K. economy expanded by 0.2% in the second quarter, according to revised data published Friday, up from an initial estimate of a 0.1% contraction. However, the Office for National Statistics reiterated that the economy continues to slow, and GDP remains below its pre-pandemic peak. The ONS revised down its estimate for Britain’s Covid-19 recovery, and now says U.K. GDP contracted by 11% in 2020, during the height of lockdowns, sharply lower than the previous estimate of a 9.3% fall. “The level of real quarterly GDP in the U.K. is now 0.2% below its pre-coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic level in Quarter 4 (Oct to Dec) 2019,” the ONS said. – Elliot Smith French inflation eases in September for second straight month French inflation cooled for a second consecutive month in September, diverging from neighboring Germany on the back of a deceleration of price increases in energy and services. National statistics agency INSEE said Friday that France’s EU-harmonized inflation rate dropped to 6.2% annually in September from 6.6% in August, defying market projections for a modest acceleration. – Elliot Smith British Prime Minister Liz Truss to have emergency talks with budget forecasters Stocks on the move: Clariant up 6%, Wise down 5% Clariant shares climbed 6.4% in early trade to lead the Stoxx 600 after Credit Suisse upgraded the Swiss chemicals company’s stock to “outperform” from neutral and upped its price target. At the bottom of the European blue chip index, London-based fintech company Wise slid 5% following the publication of its earnings report on Thursday. – Elliot Smith Here are the opening calls Britain’s FTSE 100 is expected to open around 13 points lower at 6,869, Germany’s DAX is set to gain around 9 points to 11,984 and France’s CAC 40 is seen around 6 points higher at 5,683. CNBC Pro: Is the Fed on the right track? Wall Street veteran Ed Yardeni says this is what it should do next The U.S Federal Reserve announced yet another 75 basis point hike earlier this month, sending the federal funds rate up to a range of 3% to 3.25%. The central bank also signaled it may raise interest rates up to as high as 4.6% in 2023 to control inflation. Ed Yardeni, the economist who coined the term “bond vigilantes,” gives his take as the Fed’s response to inflation comes under intense scrutiny. Pro subscribers can read more here. — Zavier Ong CNBC Pro: Here’s how to trade the UK’s political and market turmoil, fund managers say Markets in London have been in turmoil ever since the U.K. government announced its so-called “mini-budget.” The chaos driven by recent political events has seen the Sterling tank to new historic lows against the dollar as many overseas investors pulled out of the country. Three fund managers have named stocks and sectors that may benefit from the sell-off in the country’s currency. CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Ganesh Rao Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
European Markets Climb Looking For Relief Rally After Global Sell-Off; Stoxx 600 Up 1%
University Of New South Wales: Reusable Contact Lenses Increase Risk Of Rare Preventable Eye Infection States Study
University Of New South Wales: Reusable Contact Lenses Increase Risk Of Rare Preventable Eye Infection States Study
University Of New South Wales: Reusable Contact Lenses Increase Risk Of Rare Preventable Eye Infection, States Study https://digitalalaskanews.com/university-of-new-south-wales-reusable-contact-lenses-increase-risk-of-rare-preventable-eye-infection-states-study/ People who wear reusable contact lenses are nearly four times as likely as those wearing daily disposables to develop a rare sight-threatening eye infection, a study by UNSW Sydney, University College London (UCL) and Moorfields Eye Hospital researchers finds. The case control study, published in Ophthalmology, identifies multiple factors that increase the risk of Acanthamoeba keratitis (AK), including reusing lenses or wearing them overnight or in the shower. “Previous studies have linked AK to wearing contact lenses in hot tubs, swimming pools or lakes, and here we have added showers to that list, underlining that exposure to any water when wearing lenses should be avoided. Public pools and coastal authorities could help reduce this risk by advising against swimming in contact lenses,” said first author Scientia Associate Professor Nicole Carnt at UNSW Medicine & Health, UCL Institute of Ophthalmology and Moorfields Eye Hospital. “Contact lenses act as a vector to transport and retain the microbes close to the eye allowing a greater opportunity for infection to occur, compared to not wearing contact lenses,” Associate Professor Carnt said. In the developed world, contact lens use is now the leading cause of microbial keratitis – corneal infection – in patients with otherwise healthy eyes. Sight loss resulting from microbial keratitis is uncommon but Acanthamoeba, although a rare cause, is one of the most severe and is responsible for about half of those contact lens users who develop sight loss after keratitis. Ninety per cent of AK cases are associated with avoidable risks. AK causes the front surface of the eye, the cornea, to become painful and inflamed, due to infection by Acanthamoeba, a cyst-forming microorganism. The most severely affected patients – a quarter of the total – end up with less than 25 per cent of vision or become blind following the disease and face prolonged treatment. Overall, 25 per cent of people affected require corneal transplants to treat the disease or restore vision. The study conducted at Moorfields Eye Hospital For the study, the researchers recruited over 200 patients of Moorfields Eye Hospital who completed a survey. The researchers compared 83 people affected by AK with 122 other patients who came to eyecare clinics with other conditions, who acted as a control group. People who wore reusable soft contact lenses – such as monthlies – had 3.8 times the odds of developing AK, compared to people who wore daily disposable lenses. Among daily disposable wearers, showering with lenses in increased the odds of AK by 3.3 times, while wearing lenses overnight increased the odds by 3.9 times. Reusing daily disposable lenses increased the infection risk by 5.4 times. Having had a recent contact lens check with a health professional reduced the risk. With further analysis, the researchers estimated that 30-62 per cent of cases in the UK, and potentially in many other countries, could be prevented if people switched from reusable to daily disposable lenses. “Contact lens packaging should include information on lens safety and risk avoidance, even as simple as ‘no water’ stickers on each case, particularly given that many people buy their lenses online without speaking to a health professional,” said co-author Professor John Dart of UCL Institute of Ophthalmology and Moorfields Eye Hospital. “Basic contact lens hygiene measures can go a long way in avoiding infections, such as by thoroughly washing and drying your hands before putting in your lenses. “In recent years we have seen an increase of Acanthamoeba keratitis in the UK and Europe, and while the infection is still rare, it is preventable and warrants a public health response.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
University Of New South Wales: Reusable Contact Lenses Increase Risk Of Rare Preventable Eye Infection States Study
Your Opinion: Are We A Divided Country?
Your Opinion: Are We A Divided Country?
Your Opinion: Are We A Divided Country? https://digitalalaskanews.com/your-opinion-are-we-a-divided-country/ Hugh Odneal, Jefferson City Dear Editor, In Quixada Moore-Vissing’s commentary in the 9/26/2022 News Tribune, “US can learn from Northern Ireland,” is she really encouraging a divided states instead of the “United States?” While I agree on many of her points that need to be addressed and worked on, I strongly disagree that our nation is irreparably divided. Read in the Declaration of Independence the 27 grievances our founding fathers and the citizens had against King George. Twenty are not so unlike what our politicians are imposing on the citizens of America today. I make no apology stating I disagree with Quixada Moore-Vissing and people like her about remaking the United States into a divided America like Northern Ireland, North and South Korea, South Africa. She comments if we ask a white male Trump supporter and a Black liberal female to get together and listen to each other, they would likely decline. This is a nonsense question as there is no agenda to debate or discuss mentioned. It is racist, why not two Black people or two white people of opposite political opinions? It is also sexist; why not two males or two females of opposite political opinions? Americans are not so much divided over unjust laws as we are the unjust application of our laws. We don’t need more laws, just politicians and constitutional justices who will protect and defend the US Constitution interpreting it as written, in the context of the time it was written and amended, not mere opinions and desires of what people would like to enhance their own personal life and agenda! Being privileged is not so much ethnic groups as it is political and the elitist who are using ethnic differences to fuel their goal for privilege and power. When God’s truth is removed, all you are left with is mankind’s opinions and in the absence of God, they all have an equal right to their opinion. It is only with God that true equality is exposed; we are all sinners in need of a Savior and no one, no one, can do enough good acts or services to save themselves. We don’t so much need to rebuild America, as we need a true revival in the hearts of all Americans turning to God’s truth. We then can be united equally with each other and most importantly with God. God’s truth never changes, our hope never changes. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Your Opinion: Are We A Divided Country?
Ohio Republican Congressional Candidate Madison Gesiotto Gilbert Files Financial Disclosure Ohio Capital Journal
Ohio Republican Congressional Candidate Madison Gesiotto Gilbert Files Financial Disclosure Ohio Capital Journal
Ohio Republican Congressional Candidate Madison Gesiotto Gilbert Files Financial Disclosure – Ohio Capital Journal https://digitalalaskanews.com/ohio-republican-congressional-candidate-madison-gesiotto-gilbert-files-financial-disclosure-ohio-capital-journal/ Republican congressional candidate Madison Gesiotto Gilbert filed her required financial disclosure this week — more than six weeks after The Ohio Capital Journal first reported it was missing. Federal law requires office holders, candidates and even certain staffers to disclose details about their finances in order to serve. For candidates those requirements kick in once they’ve raised $5,000 and no later than May. Gilbert is running in Ohio’s 13th District covering Akron, Canton and Massillon. She’ll face Democrat Emilia Sykes on the ballot this November. The takeaways Madison Gesiotto Gilbert and her husband Marcus Gilbert made most of their money in the past two years through passive income. Financial disclosures group investments in buckets, so the reported amounts are inexact. Last year the couple cleared $50,000 in interest and dividends but could’ve made as much as $182,000. They supplemented that with capital gains of anywhere from $17,800 to $59,000. The biggest share of those gains came from selling bitcoin worth between $15,000 and $50,000. This year the couple didn’t realize any capital gains, but their income from interest and dividends grew enough to leave then in a similar financial position. According to the report they brought in between $66,000 and $220,000 in interest and dividends alone this year. The disclosure itself is a scanned, and often illegible, document. It appears, though, that that the couple hold numerous investments in municipal bonds and treasuries, both of which generally offer tax-free income. Their most substantial holdings are a handful of exchange traded index funds and an investment property. The report lists each of these assets as worth at least half a million dollars. Employment Madison is an attorney but her income from legal work is hazy. Under earned income, she discloses earning $24,000 last year as a contributor to conservative media outlet, The First. She lists her legal services under a separate section covering any compensation of more than $5,000. Gilbert’s describes herself as a small business owner and points to Seven Hills golf course. In an interview with Spectrum News, she described picking up shifts tending bar when they had trouble hiring. I hear long-awaited sale of Seven Hills Country Club is done or near done. New owner will be Dr. James Gesiotto, DDS and the father of Fox News contributor and former Miss Ohio Madison Gesiotto, who is married to former NFL lineman Marcus Gilbert. — Tim Rogers (@TimRogersCLE) September 30, 2020 Past news reports suggested her father purchased the course and the disclosure lists her corporate position as a member of Seven Hills Country Club, LLC. The disclosure describes Seven Hills Country Club, LLC as an asset worth $250,000-$500,000 that produced no income in the past two years. The PPP loan the company took out last year lists the couple’s home address. But whether Madison and Marcus own the golf course outright or with other family members is unclear. Gilbert reports holding several corporate positions but none of them produced income. A former Miss Ohio, she lists a seemingly defunct pageant consultancy called Pageant Precision. Its website is no longer up and social media accounts for the company haven’t posted updates since early 2017. The couple also heads up The Gesiotto Gilbert Foundation, which describes itself as “dedicated to cultivating the benevolent power of communities across Ohio and strengthening the state through innovative community initiatives, programs and services.” The foundation formed in October last year, less than a week before Gilbert first declared her candidacy. It has no website, and state business filings list Pageant Precision as its mailing address. One tantalizing liability Gilbert’s disclosure lists outstanding student loan debt of $100,000-$250,000. In an interview earlier this month with Fox News, Gilbert called President Biden’s decision to forgive a portion of student loan debt “pretty frustrating to see.” She voiced sympathy for borrowers upset about “flaws” in the system, but insisted “$500 billion is just something we cannot afford.” She previously applauded Donald Trump for canceling the student loan debt of wounded servicemembers. While the Gilberts are easily millionaires (according to overthecap.com Marcus earned north of $32 million in his ten-year career in the NFL) Madison may be eligible to have some of her student debt canceled. Because their income over the past two years appears to come primarily from investment proceeds, it’s conceivable they could come in below the $250,000 filing jointly. Gilbert’s campaign did not respond to an interview request for this story. Follow OCJ Reporter Nick Evans on Twitter. GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Our stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our web site. Please see our republishing guidelines for use of photos and graphics. Read More Here
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Ohio Republican Congressional Candidate Madison Gesiotto Gilbert Files Financial Disclosure Ohio Capital Journal
Hassan Vs. Bolduc: Why Democrats In NH Are Focused On Abortion. What Do Voters Think?
Hassan Vs. Bolduc: Why Democrats In NH Are Focused On Abortion. What Do Voters Think?
Hassan Vs. Bolduc: Why Democrats In NH Are Focused On Abortion. What Do Voters Think? https://digitalalaskanews.com/hassan-vs-bolduc-why-democrats-in-nh-are-focused-on-abortion-what-do-voters-think/ Steven Porter  |  Granite State News Collaborative PORTSMOUTH — The four Democratic leaders who spoke during a recent press conference at the Portsmouth Public Library delivered a singular warning.  New Hampshire’s current race for U.S. Senate could have dire implications for abortion rights nationwide, they said, if voters pick the Republican candidate, Don Bolduc, over incumbent Sen. Maggie Hassan, a Democrat.  The message will sound familiar to anyone who’s paid any attention at all to the central themes Democrats have been emphasizing ahead of the Nov. 8 general election, which is the first big vote since the U.S. Supreme Court overruled its decades-old precedents on abortion, giving state and federal lawmakers a greenlight to consider imposing new restrictions.  Polling suggests most Granite Staters will respond positively to messages in favor of abortion rights. What’s less clear is how voters with nuanced views on this topic will make sense of a partisan debate that directly involves shifting policies at both the state and federal levels.  While Democrats argue Republicans intend to clamp down on women’s access to reproductive health care, Republicans contend that Democrats have staked out a position that’s too extreme. Both parties agree on at least one thing: the stakes riding on this U.S. Senate race are high, as the GOP aims to reclaim its majority.  More: Here’s who Seacoast NH voters will see on ballots in November and UNH expert’s analysis Democrats, Bolduc spar over his stance on abortion The Democrats who spoke in Portsmouth last week said Hassan has consistently supported abortion rights, while her GOP challenger, Bolduc, a retired Army brigadier general, has consistently opposed those rights and would continue to do so if voters send him to Washington.  “Don Bolduc’s record makes it clear that not only does he have complete and utter disregard for Granite Staters’ reproductive rights, but he would be an unequivocal ‘yes’ vote to pass a national abortion ban,” said Portsmouth Democrats Chair Shanika Amarakoon.  State Sen. Rebecca Perkins Kwoka, D-Portsmouth, similarly said Bolduc’s stance has been unambiguous and uncompromising.  “We must all fear that he would be the vote that gives the Republicans the majority they need to pass a nationwide abortion ban,” she said.  Bolduc, however, has recently said he wouldn’t support an abortion ban at the federal level. To be sure, Bolduc campaigned against abortion ahead of the GOP primary. During a debate last month, he said he “will always fight for” the idea that human life begins at conception. Health care is designed to save and improve human life, not end it, he added. “Killing babies is unbelievably irresponsible,” so people need to step up and protect them, he said. But when Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., introduced a bill this month to restrict abortion rights nationwide after 15 weeks of pregnancy, Bolduc said the bill “doesn’t make sense.” What’s more, Congress should stay out of abortion policymaking and instead let state lawmakers decide how to handle this issue, he said.  The fact that Bolduc has said he wouldn’t vote for a nationwide abortion ban has led some of his supporters to accuse Democrats of lying when they claim he would. (A similar dynamic is playing out in the 1st Congressional District, where GOP nominee Karoline Leavitt is challenging Democratic incumbent Rep. Chris Pappas.)  When asked about the disconnect, the Democrats in Portsmouth said they don’t trust Bolduc to stick to his word if he wins. They argued he would reverse his stated stance on a nationwide abortion ban, just like he recently disavowed his past claims about the legitimacy of President Joe Biden’s electoral victory. Bolduc falsely claimed just last month that President Donald Trump won reelection in 2020, but now he admits the election “was not stolen.”  Stefany Shaheen, a member of the New Hampshire Democratic Party’s executive committee, said voters shouldn’t believe what Bolduc is telling them about abortion.  “You can’t say something when it’s convenient to help you get elected in a primary and then rewrite your record and want us as voters to believe that now what you’re saying is actually true,” Shaheen said. “That’s not how it works.” Bolduc campaign spokesperson Kate Constantini pushed back, saying Hassan and other elected Democrats have a record of promising one thing on the campaign trail then doing another in office. “Now Hassan’s hack allies are getting scared and resorting to lying about the record of General Bolduc rather than face the music that’s coming in six weeks,” Constantini said Tuesday.  More: NH Republican Don Bolduc pivots on 15-week abortion ban. Sen. Hassan seizes on issue. Polling and competing themes in NH elections As Hassan and the Democrats have made abortion a centerpiece of their political argument, Bolduc and the Republicans have emphasized issues related to the economy, as steep inflation and rising fuel costs put financial pressure on households across New Hampshire.  Those messaging priorities may make sense for candidates trying to motivate their base.  When asked about the top two issues making them more likely to vote this fall, 81% of Democrats, 24% of independents and 3% of Republicans cited abortion or women’s rights, according to a Granite State Poll conducted online this month by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center.  Meanwhile, 78% of Republicans, 73% of independents and 22% of Democrats cited the economy, inflation or the cost of living. “The responses to this question illustrate the campaign themes of both parties,” said Andrew Smith, Ph.D., director of the UNH Survey Center. A poll last month from the Saint Anselm College Survey Center took a closer look at what registered voters mean when they say they either support or oppose abortion rights. The poll concluded that 71% of respondents were “pro-choice,” while 25% were “pro-life.”  That 71% figure — which the Democrats in Portsmouth cited last week — included 29% who said abortion should be allowed “with no restrictions,” plus 42% who said abortion should be allowed “with some restrictions.”  That last group, the voters who favor abortion rights with some restrictions, may be who Republicans have in mind when they accuse Democrats of taking things too far.  Claims of abortion ‘extremism’ by Dems and GOP extend to NH governor’s race Republican Gov. Chris Sununu said this week Democrats are “absolute fools” to be talking about abortion the way that they are.   “The fact that the Democrats are tripling down on the abortion issue is actually highlighting their extremism,” Sununu said Tuesday on the radio show “Good Morning NH” with Jack Heath.  Sununu, who’s running for reelection, was responding to comments his Democratic challenger, state Sen. Dr. Tom Sherman had made on the show the day before.  Sherman said New Hampshire’s current 24-week abortion ban, which took effect this year, “puts women’s health care in the third trimester at extreme risk.” Doctors should be able to make judgments about appropriate medical care throughout a pregnancy without risking a felony charge for an abortion that officials might later conclude doesn’t fit within one of the exceptions outlined in state law, he said.  After all, Sherman said, anyone who’s getting an abortion in New Hampshire after 24 weeks has reasons that call for that abortion.  “There are no elective abortions performed in New Hampshire — and we know this from data and testimony — after 24 weeks,” Sherman said. “In fact, it’s rare that there’s anything after 14 weeks in New Hampshire.” When asked for more detail about the data and testimony Sherman was citing, campaign spokesperson Kelly Roberts pointed to records the New Hampshire Senate reviewed earlier this year while considering House Bill 1609, which broadened the list of exceptions to the state’s new abortion ban to include fatal fetal anomalies.  Those records included written testimony from more than 60 obstetricians, family doctors, midwives and nurse practitioners, who wrote that “no elective terminations at or after 24 weeks are performed in New Hampshire.” Nationwide, abortions after 21 weeks are rare. In 2016, 91% of abortions were performed at or before 13 weeks of gestation, according to data from 48 states compiled by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Just 1.2% of abortions were performed at or after 21 weeks. (New Hampshire wasn’t among the 48 states that contributed data for the CDC report.)  The Guttmacher Institute, which advocates for abortion rights, reported that a total of 2,050 abortions were performed in New Hampshire in 2020. If the state matches the nationwide trends outlined in the CDC report, then about 25 of those abortions would have happened at or after 21 weeks of gestation. Sununu’s claims called ‘inflammatory and false’ Sherman was asked repeatedly during Monday’s radio interview whether he supports any abortion restrictions at all. Each time, he said physicians should be the ones making medical decisions.  Sununu criticized Sherman’s answers and argued that the state’s 24-week ban is a reasonable restriction that Democrats should support. “The fact that they go so extreme and they’ve now owned that they’re OK with folks having abortion right up until the moment of birth, that’s extreme. … They have to own that extremism,” Sununu said on Tuesday.  That comment drew a sharp rebuke from Planned Parenthood New Hampshire Action Fund.  “This inflammatory and false rhetoric is used to try to distract voters from anti-abortion politicians’ abysmal reproductive health records by peddling falsehoods about abortion care later in pregnancy,” said Kayla Montgomery,...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Hassan Vs. Bolduc: Why Democrats In NH Are Focused On Abortion. What Do Voters Think?
Opinion: So 17-Year-Olds Can Legally Consent To Sex But They Cant Read About It?
Opinion: So 17-Year-Olds Can Legally Consent To Sex But They Cant Read About It?
Opinion: So 17-Year-Olds Can Legally Consent To Sex, But They Can’t Read About It? https://digitalalaskanews.com/opinion-so-17-year-olds-can-legally-consent-to-sex-but-they-cant-read-about-it/ Katy ISD School Board Members Rebecca Fox and Dawn Champagne talk about a proposed framework for evaluating books in the district during a school board meeting Monday, Aug. 22, 2022, at Katy ISD Educational Support Complex in Katy. Jon Shapley, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer Inconsistency Regarding “ Katy ISD now requires parent permission for secondary students to check out classroom library books ,” (Sept. 26): Let me get this straight. In Katy, with parental consent, students over 18 cannot serve on a committee to help determine whether challenged books should remain in school libraries. “I don’t want to be a part of any decision that puts those students at risk under what the penal code says,” said one board member. Well, I guess that person had better start a campaign to change the penal code. Without parental consent, they can legally serve their country and they can legally buy a Playboy magazineor an AR-15 rifle, but they would be harmed by reading a book. With the age of consent in Texas set at 17, they can legally have sex, but they just can’t read about it, even with their own parents’ approval? What kind of messed up logic is this? Are they legal adults or not? And it’s not parental rights if you are overruling another parent’s decision. Your parental rights only apply to your student, not anyone else’s. Jean Tanner, Houston So, it’s OK for anyone 18 and older to carry an AR-15, but these same 18-year-olds are too immature to be on a committee to determine if “challenged” books can remain in school libraries. Amazing, and yet not totally surprising. Willa White, Houston Alex Jones Regarding “ Families testify of confrontations with Sandy Hook deniers ,” (Sept. 27): Alex Jones is the epitome of the Trump/QAnon conspiracy axis. Only admitting fault when backed into a corner, yet still attacking those holding him responsible for his reckless and delusional acts. He shows no remorse, not even a realization of anything he’s done wrong, just a whining complaint that the liberals are picking on him.Meanwhile, he still makes money from his lunatic fringe broadcast, grifting the suckers who believe he’s telling the true story. The only fake news is that which comes from Jones. Bob Gayle, Houston Work Regarding “Split shown between managers, workers over productivity” (Sept. 25): The article discusses a Microsoft Corp. survey that found, “About 85 percent of managers worry they can’t tell if employees are getting enough done.” I am dumbfounded by that result. As a former manager, who had half of my team overseas, all I can say is that any manager who can’t tell if their employees are getting enough done by looking at the results of their work has no business being a manager. Frankly if one of my people could get all the work I needed them to do in one hour and took the next seven off, I would be perfectly fine with that. A worker’s productivity measurement should be about tangible results, not butt time in the office chair. Alan Jackson, Houston Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Opinion: So 17-Year-Olds Can Legally Consent To Sex But They Cant Read About It?
Predicting IVF Outcome In Poor Ovarian Responders BMC Women
Predicting IVF Outcome In Poor Ovarian Responders BMC Women
Predicting IVF Outcome In Poor Ovarian Responders – BMC Women https://digitalalaskanews.com/predicting-ivf-outcome-in-poor-ovarian-responders-bmc-women/ Oshrit Lebovitz   ORCID: orcid.org/0000-0003-1171-110X1,2, Jigal Haas1,2, Nitzan Mor1,2, Eran Zilberberg1,2, Adva Aizer1,2, Michal Kirshenbaum1,2, Raoul Orvieto1,2 na1 & … Ravit Nahum1,2 na1  BMC Women’s Health volume 22, Article number: 395 (2022) Cite this article Abstract Background Poor responders to ovarian stimulation are one of the most challenging populations to treat. As a failed cycle can cause a considerable emotional and economical loss, adequate fertility counseling addressing patients’ expectations are highly important when facing patients with poor ovarian response. The study aimed to evaluate reproductive outcomes and to identify factors associated with live birth (LB) after fresh autologous IVF/intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) cycles of patients fulfilling the Bologna criteria for poor ovarian response (POR). Methods A retrospective study included 751 IVF/ICSI treatment cycles which yielded up to three retrieved oocytes, at a tertiary referral hospital between January 2016 and February 2020. A logistic regression analysis was used to adjust for confounders. Results Clinical pregnancy and LB rate per cycle were significantly higher among women younger versus older than 40 years (9.8% and 6.8% vs 4.5% and 2.1%, p � 0.01, respectively). Patients who achieved LB were significantly younger, had higher number of oocytes retrieved, fertilization rate and top-quality embryos (p � 0.05). Multivariable regression analysis identified patient’s age (OR 0.90; 95% CI 0.845–0.97; p = 0.005) and mean number retrieved oocytes (OR 1.95; 95% CI 1.20–3.16; p = 0.007) as factors significantly associated with the probability of a LB. Conclusions The woman’s age and the number of retrieved oocytes are both independent predicting factors of live birth in poor ovarian responders. Considering the risks, the high financial investment and poor reproductive outcomes involved in IVF treatments, raises questions regarding the adequacy of providing treatments in these patients’ population. POR younger than 40 years may represent a possible exception due to acceptable probability for a LB. Peer Review reports Introduction Ovarian stimulation (OS) plays a central role in the success of in vitro fertilization (IVF) cycles. The goal of OS is to recruit and develop multiple dominant follicles. This may lead to the retrieval of many oocytes which allows many potential embryos for transfer [1]. Overall, between 10 and15 oocytes are considered to be the optimal ovarian response following OS [2]. Despite great advances in assisted reproductive technology (ART), treating patients with poor ovarian response (POR) is still considered a major challenge in reproductive medicine. POR patients are less likely to conceive and moreover, will have higher risk of cycle cancellation. The definition of POR has been standardized in the Bologna criteria established by the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) in 2011 [3]. Due to the heterogeneous risk factors for POR, there is a wide variability in the incidence, estimated to be between 9 and 24% of patients undergoing OS for IVF [4, 5]. However, with the persistent and pronounced trend towards delayed childbearing across the western world, the incidence may be slightly higher. Several OS protocols have been proposed for improving the ovarian response of poor responders [6,7,8], yet none have demonstrated their superiority. Most of the cycle treatments end with poor outcome of fewer pregnancies and livebirth rate. Overall, poor responders require longer stimulation duration, associated with high doses of gonadotropins and higher cost. Still cycle cancellation rates are increased [9] A cycle cancellation due to a failure of an oocyte retrieval or an available embryo to transfer is a very stressful event, given the significant emotional and financial investment involved in IVF treatment. Therefore, adequate fertility counselling addressing patients’ expectations, as well as adjusting the appropriate treatment strategy, is highly important when facing patient with POR. Most countries do not provide insurance coverage for IVF treatments, and even those who do, offer only partial financial coverage limiting the number of treatments provided. Consequently, the financial factor significantly hinders the number of cycles that can be carried out. The situation in Israel is unique as the national health insurance provides financial coverage for repeated IVF cycles for the first two children, or up to the age of 45 years, usually regardless of the ovarian reserve. Prompted by the aforementioned circumstances, we aimed to evaluate IVF cycle outcomes of patients with “genuine” POR defined according to the Bologna criteria and who had up to three retrieved oocytes in response to conventional control ovarian hyperstimulation, in a cost-free environment and with no restriction on the number of IVF treatment cycles. Furthermore, we sought to identify factors that are associated with a live birth in patients with POR. This may assist counselling by fertility specialists and the expectations of patients in adjusting the appropriate treatment strategy of POR patients. Our results might be of interest especially in countries in which egg donation is prohibited, or when multiple repeated IVF cycles attempts are financially affordable. Patients and methods This was a historical cohort study which evaluated all consecutive medical records of infertile women who attended the Sheba Medical Center IVF unit for IVF cycle attempt from January 2016 through February 2020. Inclusion criteria were infertile women aged 18 to younger than 45, fulfilling the Bologna criteria for POR [3], who underwent OS using autologous oocytes and yielded up to three oocytes. Excluded were patients with azoospermia or severe male factor, preimplantation genetic testing, women undergoing fertility preservation (freezing oocytes/ embryos), and patients using surrogacy. Basic clinical characteristics, infertility treatment related variables and cycle outcomes were abstracted from the patients’ medical records. The study was approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB) at Sheba Medical Center. Informed consent was not required. Ovarian stimulation was performed using one of the following protocols: the multiple-dose GnRH antagonist, the long GnRH agonist (GnRH-a) suppressive, the short GnRH agonist (Flare), and the modified natural cycle-IVF (MNC-IVF) protocol. The selection of OS protocol used, and gonadotrophin dose were decided by the treating physician. In all protocol’s gonadotrophin doses were administrated in variable doses (with a minimal daily dose of 300 IU), and further adjusted based on ultrasound scan and serum estradiol (E2) levels obtained every 2–3 days. Final follicular maturation was induced with one of the two trigger modes: (i) hCG (250 mcg Ovitrelle, Merck) 36 h before oocyte retrieval, (ii) hCG (250 mcg) and GnRH- agonist (Decapeptyl 0.2 mg), 36 h prior to oocyte retrieval, respectively (dual trigger), based on treating physician preference [10]. The trigger day was based on the lead follicular cohort, usually when leading follicle measures  17 mm for maximal size. A transvaginal, ultrasound-guided follicular aspiration was conducted 36 h after triggering administration. Retrieved oocytes were, according to sperm quality, either inseminated by conventional IVF or by intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), as previously described [11]. Fertilization was determined by the presence of two pronuclei (2PN) and two polar bodies. Each embryo was cultured separately and evaluated after 48/72 h. Cleavage embryos were defined as top quality embryos (TQE) if they had four to five blastomeres cells on day 2 and/ or 7 or 8 blastomeres on day 3, equally- sized blastomeres, contained � 15% fragmentation, and exhibited no apparent morphological abnormality [12]. Poor quality embryos consisted of all other embryos. Luteal support was initiated one day after oocyte pick up and consist of vaginal, P.O or I.M progesterone. In general, embryo transfer took place 2–3 days after oocyte retrieval. The remaining viable embryos were cryopreserved. Pregnancies were confirmed with beta-hCG levels, typically measured 14 days after embryo transfer. A Clinical pregnancy was confirmed when a gestational sac with fetal heartbeat was visible on ultrasound examination 6 weeks after embryo transfer. Delivery of a live infant was defined as any birth event where one or more live babies were born at ≥ 24 weeks’ gestation. Statistical analysis Statistical analysis was performed using the SPSS software package version 25 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL). Continuous variables were presented as means and standard deviation (SD). Categorical variables were presented as numbers and percentages. Differences in variables were statistically analyzed by Student’s t-test, Fisher exact test, and Pearson chi-square test, as appropriate. Normality of variables was assessed via Shapiro-Wilks test of normality. To further investigate predictors for a live birth, a multivariate logistic regression analysis was used controlling for confounding effects that included the patients’ age, protocol type, stimulation duration, peak E2 level, number of dominant follicles at trigger day, and number of retrieved oocytes. Two-sided p-values of � 0.05 were accepted as statistically significant. Results During the study period, 528 patients met the inclusion criteria. The analysis included the outcomes of 751 fresh IVF/ ICSI cycles which yielded up to three oocytes. Of these, 265 cycles occurred among women (le) 40 years, and 486 cycles in women  40 years. Baseline characteristics, IVF cycle outcomes and final reproductive outcomes stratified according to patient’s age are pr...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Predicting IVF Outcome In Poor Ovarian Responders BMC Women
Biden Declares South Carolina State Of Emergency Follow Hurricane Ian Updates
Biden Declares South Carolina State Of Emergency Follow Hurricane Ian Updates
Biden Declares South Carolina State Of Emergency – Follow Hurricane Ian Updates https://digitalalaskanews.com/biden-declares-south-carolina-state-of-emergency-follow-hurricane-ian-updates/ Hurricane Ian: Waves flood roads in Key West as storm strengthens to category 4 After spending most of Thursday as a tropical storm, Ian has now been upgraded to a hurricane again as it takes aim at the South Carolina coastline. President Joe Biden has issued an emergency declaration for the state. Ian is forecast to make landfall somewhere near Charleston, South Carolina, at about 2pm today. It will produce life-threatening flooding, storm surge and strong winds across parts of Florida, Georgia and North and South Carolina, according to the National Hurricane Center. “Ian could slightly strengthen before landfall, and is forecast to rapidly weaken over the southeastern United States late Friday into Saturday,” an advisory said. Meanwhile, dozens of rescue operations have been taking place across Florida after unprecedented flooding from one of the most powerful hurricanes ever recorded in the United States. Thousands of people are stranded across the state as coastguard helicopters were seen plucking people from roofs after several feet of water surged into neighbourhoods. Some 2.5 million people remain without power. The damage and economic losses caused by Hurricane Ian could amount to as much as $120bn, according to the latest estimate. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Biden Declares South Carolina State Of Emergency Follow Hurricane Ian Updates
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Upset With Fascist Label? Stop Doing Fascist Things
Upset With Fascist Label? Stop Doing Fascist Things
Upset With Fascist Label? Stop Doing Fascist Things https://digitalalaskanews.com/upset-with-fascist-label-stop-doing-fascist-things/ “They are fascists. Some of them, not all of them, but some of them.” This recent quote from President Biden … oh, sorry … that was then-President Trump describing Democrats in 2020. In fact, it was one of many times he called Democrats America-hating fascists or radical anarchists with hardly a shrug from the media. Yet, when President Biden recently stated that the philosophy of Make America Great Again Republicans is “like semi-fascism,” there was no end to the pearl clutching. Performative outrage aside, is Biden’s assessment accurate? There is no definitive definition of fascism, though professor of history Federico Finchelstein comes close: “a cult of personality designed to impose ideology onto reality.” What follows are some common elements of fascism with relevant examples from Trump and MAGA: Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Upset With Fascist Label? Stop Doing Fascist Things
Records Show Mills And LePages Nearly Opposite Views On Immigration
Records Show Mills And LePages Nearly Opposite Views On Immigration
Records Show Mills’ And LePage’s Nearly Opposite Views On Immigration https://digitalalaskanews.com/records-show-mills-and-lepages-nearly-opposite-views-on-immigration/ Former Gov. Paul LePage sought to limit the flow of immigrants to the state during his eight years in office, cutting public support for noncitizens seeking asylum and ending the state’s participation in refugee resettlement. Gov. Janet Mills reversed many of those policies over the past four years, supporting public assistance for legally present noncitizens and speaking out about the importance of welcoming immigrants, migrants and asylum seekers as both an economic and moral imperative. The two major party candidates running for governor have well-established, and nearly opposite, records when it comes to the emotionally charged topic of immigration. And it’s an issue that will be front and center again for whoever wins in November. Business leaders struggling with severe workforce shortages say asylum seekers, refugees, seasonal migrant workers and foreign student workers are crucial to the economy of an aging state that historically has recorded more deaths than births. At the same time, an influx of asylum seekers who must wait for permission to work is straining public resources and the availability of affordable housing in Portland and other communities, feeding opposition to taxpayer-funded assistance for noncitizens. The race between a sitting governor and former governor offers an unusual opportunity to compare records and not just rhetoric. The third candidate on the ballot, independent Sam Hunkler, has never held public office and described only a general philosophy that Maine should welcome immigrants who arrive legally and can help fill the demand for workers. The LePage campaign did not respond to a request to interview the former two-term governor for this story and did not respond specifically to questions sent by email. LePage’s political strategist, Brent Littlefield, provided a statement criticizing Mills for supporting public assistance to asylum seekers and saying LePage supports comprehensive immigration reform “to fix a broken system and allow vetted, law abiding, people into the United States and Maine. He also supports efforts to ensure that those here legally can get any required certifications quickly to become employed.” This summer, Republicans opened multicultural community centers in Portland and Lewiston as part of what the party said is a national outreach campaign to immigrant communities. And LePage has softened his rhetoric on the subject. “We are all immigrants in this country,” LePage said at a campaign event in Lewiston in June. “As long as we come here legally and do it right, we are one big happy family.” But LePage, who was governor from 2011 to 2019, also has continued to say he does not believe asylum seekers are here legally, even though they are allowed to remain in the country while pursuing their application for permanent status. In an interview with the Press Herald this month, Mills discussed the important role immigrants can and should play in the state’s economy, saying businesses are looking for ways to better integrate new Mainers in the workforce. And she’s been pushing for immigration reforms on the national level that include addressing the immigration court backlog and shortening the waiting period before asylum seekers can work. “Many of them come here with not only availability, but skill,” Mills said. “Some have advanced degrees. Some have experience in the trades. Many of them have skills we need in our workforce today and that’s what businesses are telling me and asking for.” COMMON GROUND A close look at their records in office shows there is one area of agreement between Mills and LePage. Both acknowledge the importance of both foreign students holding J-1 visas and seasonal migrants working under H2A and H2B visas. While supportive of most of former President Donald Trump’s immigration proposals, LePage did not agree with Trump’s efforts to end the seasonal migrant and foreign student worker visa programs. LePage expressed his opposition in two separate letters to the president in 2017. “This tight labor market, combined with our status as the oldest state in the nation, is creating a workforce shortage,” LePage wrote. “If Maine’s workforce supported these jobs, I assure you we would hire American workers first. We are working to solve the problem of our aging workforce, but we need to stay open for business in the interim.” He added, “the elimination of these programs would leave a gap in Maine’s tourism industry, the backbone of our economy, and would result in slowing our economic growth.” Mills also has written federal officials, requesting more worker visas, which were curtailed during the pandemic. In 2021, she wrote to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, requesting more H2B visa workers. In early January, she joined governors from seven other states in writing President Biden, calling for more J-1, H2A and H2B visa workers. “Again, we request your help to increase the flow of work-based visas as an additional tool to help address our workforce shortages and the cascading economic consequences of those shortages,” the governors wrote. LEPAGE’S HARD LINE Beyond worker and student visas, however, their records mostly show they implemented opposing policies when it comes to noncitizens hoping to start new lives in Maine. LePage staked out a hard line on immigration even before winning election as governor. As mayor of Waterville, LePage wrote Democratic Gov. John Baldacci in 2004, blasting his executive order that prohibited state employees from asking about immigration status when providing public benefits. One of LePage’s first actions as governor was rescinding that executive order and then eliminating the ability of noncitizens, including those in the country legally seeking asylum, to receive state-funded Temporary Assistance for Needy Families. They remained eligible for federal TANF funds. In 2016, LePage wrote to President Barack Obama, saying he was formally withdrawing Maine from participation in the federal refugee resettlement program because of concerns about screening immigrants and the burden on the state’s welfare programs, which supports immigrants who already have been processed and can immediately seek work and full citizenship status. The action did not stop the flow of refugees because the federal government can work directly with private resettlement agencies to do the work of placing and supporting refugees. LePage was a vocal supporter of Trump’s proposals to restrict entry into the United States of people from Muslim-majority nations and to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which allows the children of illegal immigrants to remain in the U.S. and apply for driver’s licenses, social security numbers and work permits. LePage strongly opposed public assistance for noncitizens, sometimes incorrectly arguing they are here illegally. Throughout his terms and while campaigning this summer, LePage has repeatedly described asylum seekers as being in the country illegally, even though federal law allows foreign nationals to remain in the country while their asylum applications are decided. Foreign nationals are eligible for asylum if they are fleeing persecution for reasons such as political or religious beliefs. LePage repeatedly criticized Portland for supporting noncitizens and falsely described it as a sanctuary city, which generally means the city does not allow law enforcement to help immigration authorities. Portland has no such prohibition. In 2014, he sought to punish Portland other municipalities that provided asylum seekers with General Assistance, a state-funded safety net program that provides vouchers for shelter, food and medicine for those in need. In court, he secured a partial victory in that effort. He successfully argued that the 1996 federal welfare reform act, signed by Democratic President Bill Clinton, prohibited noncitizens from receiving public benefits unless a state has enacted a law specifically making them eligible. LePage accurately noted that Maine had never enacted such a law, despite years of providing assistance. And the court ruled in his favor. The Republican-controlled Legislature responded by passing a law making asylum seekers eligible for assistance. It became law when LePage failed to veto that and 64 other bills before the statutory deadline. LePage, however, sought to restrict eligibility through rulemaking, prohibiting some asylum seekers who are legally present in the country from receiving benefits, including victims of human trafficking. MILLS  REVERSES COURSE Mills set herself apart from LePage well before she became governor. The pair clashed when Mills was attorney general and publicly opposed Trump’s travel ban from Muslim-majority countries and his effort to end DACA. Mills also engaged in a high-profile confrontation with LePage over General Assistance for asylum seekers. She sided with the Maine Municipal Association, Portland and other communities when LePage threatened to withhold funding. As governor, Mills rewrote the strict, LePage-era eligibility rules for asylum seekers to receive GA to ensure that all asylum seekers who had been excluded by LePage, including the victims of human trafficking, would be eligible for assistance. Mills has supported efforts to reduce the amount of time asylum seekers need to wait before they can work. Mills has not taken steps to unwind the state-funded TANF rule approved by the LePage administration, but she worked with the Legislature to restore MaineCare eligibility for noncitizen children under 21 and pregnant women who are not citizens. That came in response to the sudden arrival of hundreds of migrant families that entered the U.S. through the southern border to seek asylum and traveled to P...
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Records Show Mills And LePages Nearly Opposite Views On Immigration
Is The UK Now A Buy? Analysts Weigh In After Market Meltdown And Bank Of England Intervention
Is The UK Now A Buy? Analysts Weigh In After Market Meltdown And Bank Of England Intervention
Is The UK Now A Buy? Analysts Weigh In After Market Meltdown And Bank Of England Intervention https://digitalalaskanews.com/is-the-uk-now-a-buy-analysts-weigh-in-after-market-meltdown-and-bank-of-england-intervention/ A security guard stands outside the London Stock Exchange building on December 29, 2020. Tolga Akmen | AFP via Getty Images U.K. bond markets and the pound went into freefall this week as investors balked at the new government’s fiscal policy announcements, and some analysts believe opportunities are arising. The Bank of England on Wednesday was forced to intervene in the bond market with a temporary purchase program, as the capitulation of long-dated gilt prices threatened pension funds and mortgages, posing what the central bank deemed a material risk to financial stability. U.K. bond yields are on course for their sharpest monthly incline since at least 1957, while the pound fell to an all-time low against the dollar on Monday. Viraj Patel, senior strategist at Vanda Research, told CNBC on Wednesday ahead of the announcement that the next few weeks would be critical for investors assessing whether to go back into U.K. markets, but he would not consider it yet. “The pound six days ago was not an issue for me. I was looking at a range of other currencies as being more dislocated in markets right now,” Patel said. He added that the fall in the currency and British bonds represented a vote of no confidence in the government’s fiscal package, and concern about where sustainable growth is going to come from in an environment of high and rising short-term interest rates. “I think some of these doomsday fears are being somewhat overblown to some extent, but I don’t think anyone wants to step in right now and buy undervalued U.K. assets at this point,” he said. “We could have a different conversation in three months because the pound is extremely cheap, but I think that it’s just one of those things where it’s the storm before the calm.” The U.K. stock market has also sold off in recent sessions, though not to any deeper extent than other markets across Europe amid a broad global pullback for stocks, as fears of more aggressive monetary policy tightening from central banks and slowing growth force investors to the sidelines. Alan Custis, head of U.K. equities at Lazard Asset Management, told CNBC on Thursday that the general sale as a result of the country’s economic turmoil “does in a way throw up some opportunities” for British blue chips with overseas earnings who benefit from a falling pound. Stock analysts watching gilts closely British long-dated bonds – known as “gilts” – have seen historic levels of volatility in recent days, with prices rallying from their initial collapse on the back of the Bank of England’s announcement that it would buy long-dated bonds for two weeks and delay next week’s scheduled gilt sales until Oct. 31. Custis said stock analysts were closely watching the volatility in gilt markets for indications as to where interest rates are likely to go. “The market is now discounting interest rates going up towards 6%. Before this situation last week, we were probably thinking 3.75, maybe 3.5% would be the peak, inflation peaking maybe October or November this year at around 11%. Now clearly, that’s been thrown out, because we don’t know where sterling is going to go, how inflationary a weak sterling could be for the economy,” Custis said. “Stability in the gilt market is very important for those reasons, because it can give us some sense as to where interest rates may ultimately land, and obviously that will have a big impact on mortgage rates and consumer spending, so it’s all linked in, so yes, we watch the gilt market just as much as we watch the equity market.” Britain’s blue-chip FTSE 100 is renowned for its high dividend yields for investors, but with bond yields soaring, the attractiveness of these kinds of stocks is diminished, Custis acknowledged, but he highlighted that 45% of the dividends paid by companies on the index are paid in dollars, which insulates it to a certain extent. This would also help explain why Britain’s mid-cap FTSE 250 index has had a tougher run in light of the country’s economic chaos and currency collapse than its large-cap cousin. “When we saw it with the real estate companies over the first couple of days of this week, (capitalization) rates in real estate stocks are four and a half percent – if you’ve got interest rates at 6%, it’s very difficult for real estate stocks to look attractive.” Central to the outlook in the near future, analysts have suggested, is for Finance Minister Kwasi Kwarteng to re-establish credibility, after taking the rare step of omitting forecasts from Britain’s independent Office for Budget Responsibility prior to Friday’s controversial announcements. Kwarteng has promised a more detailed and costed implementation plan on Nov. 23, while the Bank of England meets on Nov. 3 to appraise the impact of the fiscal announcements and determine the scale of its next interest rate hike. “I think we need to see the OBR, the Bank of England and the Chancellor come together and again reinforce the financial prudence, the tramlines, the aim to reduce debt-to-GDP numbers – albeit we’re in quite a strong position at the moment,” Custis said, adding that a joint statement in November would be a positive signal for markets. Although some analysts have highlighted that the U.K. retains strong fiscal fundamentals and support barriers for bonds and the currency, many are reluctant to jump back in until the smoke clears. Seema Shah, senior global investment strategist at Principal Global Investors, said investors were assessing whether the U.K. still holds up as an attractive long-term investment destination alongside other developed economies. “Whereas for the U.S., I think it’s a resounding yes over the next 10 years – equities will be higher than where they are today,” she told CNBC on Wednesday. “For the U.K., it’s probably a bigger question of how much higher they’re going to be, and do we really believe in the U.K. going forward as somewhere we want to be placing our money?” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Is The UK Now A Buy? Analysts Weigh In After Market Meltdown And Bank Of England Intervention
Clergy Strive To Reconcile Politically Divided Congregations
Clergy Strive To Reconcile Politically Divided Congregations
Clergy Strive To Reconcile Politically Divided Congregations https://digitalalaskanews.com/clergy-strive-to-reconcile-politically-divided-congregations-3/ Rabbi David Wolpe speaks to congregants at Sinai Temple Friday, Sept. 23, 2022, in Los Angeles. One member of Rabbi David Wolpe’s diverse congregation left because Wolpe would not preach sermons criticizing Donald Trump. Scores of others left over resentment with the synagogue’s rules for combating COVID-19. But Wolpe remains steadfast in his resolve to avoid politics when he preaches. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez) One member of Rabbi David Wolpe’s diverse congregation left because Wolpe would not preach sermons criticizing Donald Trump. Scores of others left over resentment with the synagogue’s rules for combating COVID-19. But Wolpe remains steadfast in his resolve to avoid politics when he preaches at Sinai Temple in Los Angeles. “It is not easy to keep people comfortable with each other and as part of one community,” he said. “A great failing of modern American society is that people get to know each other’s politics before they get to know their humanity.” Wolpe — whose congregation includes liberal Democrats and hundreds of conservative Iranian Americans — is far from alone in facing such challenges. Though many congregations in the U.S. are relatively homogeneous, others are sharply divided. In some cases, divisions are becoming more pronounced as midterm election season heats up, leaving clergy to keep the peace while still meeting the spiritual needs of all of their members. A Black pastor in Columbus, Ohio — Bishop Timothy Clarke of the First Church of God — says there are “deep divides” in his predominantly African American congregation of more than 2,000. He cited abortion as a particularly divisive topic in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling in June allowing states to ban the procedure. “There are good people on both sides,” said Clarke, who addressed the congregation’s differences in a recent sermon. “I talked about the fact God loves everybody, even those you disagree with,” he said. The Rev. Paul Roberts, senior pastor of Eastminster Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh, said his congregation – like many others — is dealing with one contentious issue after another. “The whole thing with Trump, Black Lives Matter, the pandemic really has highlighted a sense of uneasiness when you’re covering all these different topics as a church,” he said. “It just seems there isn’t anything that doesn’t have tension over it.” His church has about 140 regular attendees, a politically and theologically diverse group that’s about half Black and half white. He said a few people left the church over its support for the Black Lives Matter movement, but for the most part it has stayed together. He attributes that in part to hours of patient dialogue over such issues as mask-wearing and vaccines, which some Black members were wary of because of the history of medical maltreatment of African Americans. Rabbi Judith Siegal is asking members of her politically divided congregation in Coral Gables, Florida, to sign a code of ethics pledging to respect those with different views. Newly displayed signs at the synagogue, Temple Judea, hammer home this message. “No matter who you vote for, your skin color, where you are from, your faith, or who you love, we will be there for one another,” one sign says. “That’s what a community means.” Siegal said she and her assistant rabbi, Jonathan Fisch, are often asked by members of the Reform congregation to address certain issues “We’re careful about doing that in a way that’s value-driven, preaching from our tradition and our Torah,” she said. “For example, we know that welcoming immigrants is something that’s important to us as Jews — but we’re never going to tell anyone how to vote.” The Rev. Sarah Wilson said her congregation at St. Barnabas Lutheran Church in Cary, Illinois, includes Republican business leaders and liberal nurses and teachers. There are partisan differences, as well as conflicting views on abortion, but she aspires to keep political debate out of the church and avoid partisan rhetoric of her own. “Politics are very important to me — I vote in every election,” she said. “But I’m not here to tell a person how to vote or who to vote for. If people ask me, even for city council, I don’t do that.” The congregation at the Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus and its connected Catholic school community is diverse ethnically, economically, and politically, said the Rev. David Boettner, rector of the cathedral and vicar general of the Diocese of Knoxville, Tennessee. Mass is celebrated in five languages, and parishioners and student families speak more than a dozen at home; some are financially well off while others struggle to get by, he said. “We’ve definitely got folks that belong to the Democratic Party and folks that belong to the Republican Party, and folks that probably don’t belong to either,” Boettner said. Political issues crop up in conversations at church, but Boettner suspects members are less likely to share polarizing views with him because he is their priest. They share more freely on social media, and he has noticed an increase in political posts as the midterm elections approach. Abortion and religious liberty, including the recent Supreme Court rulings, are prominent, he said. Boettner said he strives for consistency in preaching about the Catholic teachings on moral, social and economic justice issues, while steering clear of endorsing specific policies. Prayers are offered for all leaders, not just those from a particular party. “The church is not partisan,” Boettner said. “The Catholic Church is probably a great example of a church that offends both Democrats and Republicans alike.” In Bluefield, West Virginia, the Rev. Frederick Brown said he has sought “the middle of the road” during nearly three decades as pastor of a diverse but collegial congregation at Faith Center Church. “Staying in the middle of the road means God thinks it’s all important,” he said. “When you vote, you can vote your convictions — but don’t attack anyone else’s convictions because they’re different from yours.” At Sinai Temple, Rabbi Wolpe strives to encourage mutual respect within his congregation. He cites the men’s book club as a positive example: In a recent initiative, it alternated reading a book by a left-of-center author, then a book by a conservative. Yet Wolpe, 64, says political divisions have become deeply entrenched. “When I was born, people objected to their children marrying someone from another race but didn’t object to marrying someone from a different political party,” he said. “Now it’s the reverse.” Today’s breaking news and more in your inbox Read More Here
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Clergy Strive To Reconcile Politically Divided Congregations
1/6 Chairman: Ginni Thomas Reiterates False Election Claims
1/6 Chairman: Ginni Thomas Reiterates False Election Claims
1/6 Chairman: Ginni Thomas Reiterates False Election Claims https://digitalalaskanews.com/1-6-chairman-ginni-thomas-reiterates-false-election-claims/ Conservative activist Virginia “Ginni” Thomas, walks during a break in a voluntary interview with the House panel investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection, at Thomas P. O’Neill Jr. House Office Building, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, in Washington. The committee has for months sought an interview with Thomas in an effort to know more about her role in trying to help former President Donald Trump overturn his election defeat. She texted with White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and contacted lawmakers in Arizona and Wisconsin in the weeks after the election. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta) WASHINGTON (AP) — Virginia “Ginni” Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, stood by the false claim that the 2020 election was fraudulent during an interview Thursday with the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection, the panel’s chairman said. “It’s a work in progress,” Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., told reporters after the more than four-hour interview ended. “At this point, we’re glad she came.” The committee — comprised of seven Democrats and two Republicans — has for months sought an interview with Thomas in an effort to know more about her role in trying to help former President Donald Trump overturn his election defeat. The conservative activist texted with White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and contacted lawmakers in Arizona and Wisconsin in the weeks after the election. Thomas answered some of the questions from congressional investigators Thursday as she sought to portray herself as among the many Americans who still believe the baseless claim that the 2020 election was stolen, according to a person familiar with the investigation who was not authorized to discuss it publicly. But she did not provide any evidence or specific reasoning to back up her belief, the person said. “As she has said from the outset, Mrs. Thomas had significant concerns about fraud and irregularities in the 2020 election,” Mark Paoletta, her attorney, said in a statement. “And, as she told the Committee, her minimal and mainstream activity focused on ensuring that reports of fraud and irregularities were investigated.” “Beyond that, she played no role in any events after the 2020 election results,” he added. The testimony from Thomas was one of the last remaining for the panel as it eyes the completion of its work. The panel has already interviewed more than 1,000 witnesses and shown some of that video testimony in its eight hearings over the summer. The extent of her involvement in the Capitol attack is unclear. In the days after The Associated Press and other news organizations called the presidential election for Biden, Thomas emailed two lawmakers in Arizona to urge them to choose “a clean slate of Electors” and “stand strong in the face of political and media pressure.” The AP obtained the emails earlier this year under the state’s open records law. She has said in previous interviews that she attended the initial pro-Trump rally the morning of Jan. 6 but left before Trump spoke and the crowds headed for the Capitol. Thomas, a Trump supporter long active in conservative causes, has repeatedly maintained that her political activities posed no conflict of interest with the work of her husband. “Like so many married couples, we share many of the same ideals, principles, and aspirations for America. But we have our own separate careers, and our own ideas and opinions too. Clarence doesn’t discuss his work with me, and I don’t involve him in my work,” Thomas told the Washington Free Beacon in an interview published in March. Justice Thomas was the lone dissenting voice when the Supreme Court ruled in January to allow a congressional committee access to presidential diaries, visitor logs, speech drafts and handwritten notes relating to the events of Jan. 6. Ginni Thomas has been openly critical of the committee’s work, including signing onto a letter to House Republicans calling for the expulsion of Reps. Liz Cheney of Wyoming and Adam Kinzinger of Illinois from the GOP conference for joining the Jan. 6 congressional committee. ___ Associated Press writers Mary Clare Jalonick, Lisa Mascaro and Eric Tucker and video journalist Rick Gentilo contributed to this report. Today’s breaking news and more in your inbox Read More Here
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1/6 Chairman: Ginni Thomas Reiterates False Election Claims
Trevor Noah To Step Down As Daily Show Host Transcontinental Times
Trevor Noah To Step Down As Daily Show Host Transcontinental Times
Trevor Noah To Step Down As Daily Show Host — Transcontinental Times https://digitalalaskanews.com/trevor-noah-to-step-down-as-daily-show-host-transcontinental-times/ UNITED STATES: Comedian Trevor Noah has announced he is standing down as host of The Daily Show. However, Trevor Noah acknowledged that there was “another aspect of my life that I want to keep on exploring” even if he was “full with an appreciation for the adventure.” – Advertisement – Since replacing Jon Stewart as host of the satirical news and conversation programme in 2015, the 38-year-old has served as the host. He stated that he will continue to serve as host while the timing of his departure will be announced later. Trevor Noah’s journey – Advertisement – Before migrating to the US in 2011, Trevor Noah started his career in his native South Africa, where he produced a number of stand-up specials and hosted a late-night chat show. When he was chosen to take over The Daily Show on the Comedy Central network, he was still relatively unknown, but he has since gained international fame and won multiple television prizes. – Advertisement – After his show on Thursday, Trevor Noah made the surprise announcement, drawing shocked gasps from the studio audience. He expressed gratitude to the cast and the show’s devoted viewers for “an extraordinary seven years,” adding, “It’s been wild, truly wild.” “I remember when we first started… so many people didn’t believe in us. Appointing me as host was a crazy bet to make. “I still think it was a crazy choice, this random African,” Trevor Noah said. “I just find myself filled with gratitude for the journey. It’s been absolutely amazing. It’s something that I never expected,” he added. After all that has occurred during his tenure as the show’s host, such as Donald Trump’s election as president and the COVID pandemic, he claimed that he has decided that his time is over, but in the most beautiful way “I’ve loved hosting this show; it’s been one of my greatest challenges, and it’s been one of my greatest joys. But after seven years, I feel like it’s time,” he said. “I realised there’s another part of my life that I want to carry on exploring. I miss learning other languages. I miss going to other countries and putting on shows. I miss just being everywhere and doing everything.” Trevor Noah said that he never dreamt that he would be here. “I sort of felt like Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. I came in for a tour of what the previous show was, and then the next thing I knew I was handed the keys. All I can say is thank you very much.” Alsi Read: Goodbye: Amitabh Bachchan and Rashmika Mandanna Steal the Show in the Vibrant Poster Editor-in-Chief at Transcontinental Times, Computer Science Graduate, PG diploma in Journalism and Mass communication. Ishita is a youth activist for PETA India, President of Girlup IWO, and a linguaphile. She covers social issues, politics, UN initiatives, sports, and diversity. View all posts Read More Here
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Trevor Noah To Step Down As Daily Show Host Transcontinental Times
AP News Summary At 1:17 A.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 1:17 A.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 1:17 A.m. EDT https://digitalalaskanews.com/ap-news-summary-at-117-a-m-edt/ Hurricane Ian heads for Carolinas after pounding Florida CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — A revived Hurricane Ian is bearing down on South Carolina’s coast and the historic city of Charleston, with forecasters predicting a storm surge and floods. Earlier, the megastorm caused catastrophic damage in Florida, leaving people trapped in flooded homes and causing at least four deaths. With South Carolina’s coast under a hurricane warning, shopkeepers sandbagged storefronts in flood-prone areas and a steady stream of vehicles left Charleston for higher ground. In Florida, meanwhile, rescue crews piloted boats through inundated streets to save thousands from flooded homes and shattered buildings. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis says at least 700 rescues were conducted in his state already, mostly by air. After Ian, the effects in southwest Florida are everywhere Hurricane Ian was over southwest Florida for just a few hours. It’ll take months to clean up all the damage. Maybe longer. And local officials some of the destruction can’t be cleaned up at all. From trees getting ripped out of the ground to signs being ripped apart, traffic lights crashing onto roadways and some buildings simply being destroyed, the impact was everywhere and almost nothing was spared. The only difference between one place and the next was the severity of the problems. Russia to annex more of Ukraine on Friday at the Kremlin KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia is planning to annex more of Ukraine on Friday. The move represents an escalation of the seven-month war that is expected to isolate the Kremlin further, draw more international punishment and bring extra support to Ukraine. An annexation ceremony is planned in the Kremlin. The annexation would come just days after voters supposedly approved Moscow-managed “referendums” that Ukrainian and Western officials have denounced as illegal, forced and rigged. In an apparent response, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called an emergency meeting Friday of his National Security and Defense Council. S. Korea, US and Japan hold anti-N. Korean submarine drills SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea, U.S. and Japanese warships have launched their first anti-submarine drills in five years, after North Korea renewed ballistic missile tests this week. South Korea says Friday’s one-day trilateral training off the Korean Peninsula’s east coast is meant to cope with a North Korean push to advance its ability to fire missile from submarines. North Korea has been building bigger submarines including a nuclear-powered one and testing sophisticated missiles that can be fired from them in recent years. The North’s recent five missiles launches, the first such tests in a month, also came before and after U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris visited South Korea. At a Florida trailer park, survivors speak of Ian’s wrath NORTH FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) — Ian’s fierce winds howled through a Gulf coast trailer park with such force that residents felt they would be lifted off the ground, even blown away. Now many homes in North Fort Myers, Florida, are crumpled and splintered. Hurricane Ian bent their metal roofs and splintered wooden structures. James Burdette is a carpenter who moved to Florida from Virginia a few years back. He said he literally watched his house disappear. Burdette sat back on a brown leather chair Thursday surveying debris around him. Now he and his wife don’t know what they will do, and have no plans where to go next. Small protests appear in Havana over islandwide blackout HAVANA (AP) — A few hundred Cubans have taken to the streets in Havana demanding the restoration of electricity, protesting more than two days after a blackout hit the entire island following the passage of Hurricane Ian. An Associated Press journalist saw a total of about 400 people gathered in at least two spots Thursday night shouting, “We want light, we want light!” It was the first public outpouring of anger after electricity problems spread from western Cuba. Ian hit Tuesday night and knocked out all of the island’s power grid, leaving its 11 million people in the dark. Authorities have not said what percentage of the population remains without electricity. But the Electric Union says only 10% of Havana’s 2 million people had power Thursday. 1/6 chairman: Ginni Thomas reiterates false election claims WASHINGTON (AP) — Virginia “Ginni” Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, has stood by the false claim that the 2020 election was fraudulent during an interview with the House panel investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection. That is according to Rep. Bennie Thompson, the panel’s Democratic chairman. The committee has for months sought an interview with Thomas in an effort to know more about her role in trying to help former President Donald Trump overturn his election defeat. She texted with White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and contacted lawmakers in Arizona and Wisconsin after the election. Thomas’ attorney says his client was solely focused on ensuring reports of voter fraud and irregularities were investigated. Trump records probe: Tensions flare over special master WASHINGTON (AP) — The FBI search of Donald Trump’s Florida estate has spawned a parallel “special master” process that has slowed the Justice Department’s criminal investigation and exposed simmering tensions between department prosecutors and lawyers for the former president. The probe into the presence of top secret information at Mar-a-Lago continues. But barbed rhetoric in the past week’s court filings has laid bare deep disagreements related to the special master’s work and made clear that a process the Trump team initially sought has not been playing to the president’s advantage. The special master, Raymond Dearie, is a former federal prosecutor and served as a U.S. District judge in Brooklyn. Civil rights lawyer John Burris confronts police narratives OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Civil rights lawyer John Burris is Northern California’s go-to attorney when it comes to police brutality. At age 77, he continues to travel the state to appear with victims big and small to allege violations against law enforcement. Burris helped Rodney King win a $3.8 million jury verdict in 1994 for the brutal beating he received by four LAPD officers. The beating was captured on video and opened mainstream America to what was a common occurrence in Black America. The Oakland attorney marvels at the changes in the public’s attitude toward police but says people still need to press for reform. Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa stretchered off with head injury CINCINNATI (AP) — Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa sustained neck and head injuries after being slammed to the ground Thursday night against the Cincinnati Bengals, and was stretchered from the field. The Dolphins said Tagovailoa was conscious and had movement in all his extremities after being taken by stretcher from the field and to University of Cincinnati Medical Center. The Dolphins said after their 27-15 loss to the Bengals that Tagovailoa was expected to be released from the hospital and fly home with the team. Miami coach Mike McDaniel said Tagovailoa sustained a concussion when was chased down and sacked by Josh Tupou with about six minutes left in the first half. He remained down for more than seven minutes before being loaded on a backboard and removed via stretcher. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Read More Here
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AP News Summary At 1:17 A.m. EDT