Digital Alaska News

3531 bookmarks
Custom sorting
Woman Tells New York Times Herschel Walker Asked Her To Have Second Abortion | CNN Politics
Woman Tells New York Times Herschel Walker Asked Her To Have Second Abortion | CNN Politics
Woman Tells New York Times Herschel Walker Asked Her To Have Second Abortion | CNN Politics https://digitalalaskanews.com/woman-tells-new-york-times-herschel-walker-asked-her-to-have-second-abortion-cnn-politics/ CNN  —  The woman who said Georgia Senate hopeful Herschel Walker paid for her 2009 abortion, setting off a controversy that has rocked his campaign, told The New York Times that the Republican nominee asked her to terminate a second pregnancy two years later. She refused the request, and their relationship ended, she told the Times, which said it was withholding the name of the woman. Walker was unmarried at the time. Their son, she said, is now 10 years old. Walker, who said in May he supports a full ban on abortions, with no exceptions, has denied an earlier report from The Daily Beast, in which the woman first alleged that the former football star reimbursed her for an abortion she sought at his urging. Speaking to the Times, the woman said she decided to come forward with new details about her relationship with Walker after his Republican allies rallied around him in the aftermath of the first report. The Times said that interviews it conducted with the woman and documents provided to the newspaper “together corroborate and expand upon an account about her abortion first published on Monday in The Daily Beast. The Times also independently confirmed details with custody records filed in family court in New York and interviewed a friend of the woman to whom she had described the abortion and her eventual breakup with Mr. Walker as those events occurred.” CNN has not independently confirmed the woman’s allegation about the abortion or that Walker urged her to terminate a second pregnancy. CNN has reached out to the Walker campaign for comment. The Times left messages Friday afternoon with Walker’s spokesman and campaign manager. Walker vehemently denied the initial report about paying for the abortion in the Daily Beast, in the “strongest possible words” and said it was a “flat-out lie.” The Georgia race between Walker and Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock is among the most competitive Senate contests on the 2022 midterm slate and could be instrumental in deciding control of the evenly divided chamber. Walker, who was endorsed by former President Donald Trump, won the GOP nomination in May despite some Republicans’ concerns about past allegations that he threatened women with violence. Walker has denied at least one of those allegations and has spoken publicly and written about his struggles with mental illness. With the stakes set so high, Republican groups have vowed not to abandon Walker, even as the scandal sent his campaign scrambling. Campaign manager Scott Paradise, addressing staff earlier this week, acknowledged that the initial Daily Beast report was a setback, but pointed to Trump’s victory in 2016 – despite the initial backlash to the release of the “Access Hollywood” tape in which he spoke crudely about groping women – as evidence that Walker remained a viable candidate. Warnock has mostly refused to weigh in on the allegation, dodging a question about its implications earlier this week. “I’ll let the pundits decide how they think it will impact the race,” the senator said, before pivoting to his broader message on abortion rights. “But I have been consistent in my view that a patient’s room is too narrow and cramped a space for a woman, her doctor, and the government. … And my opponent, on the other hand, is talking about a nationwide ban with no exceptions.” The Times, like The Daily Beast, reported that Walker gave the woman a check for $700 for the procedure, which took place at a clinic in Atlanta. According to both outlets, Walker also sent the woman a “get well” card afterward. Earlier Friday, Walker’s campaign split from its political director, Taylor Crowe, over suspicions that he was leaking information to the media, two people familiar with the matter told CNN. Crowe did not respond to multiple requests for comment from CNN. It is unclear if there were other factors at play or if the move had any connection to the abortion allegations. Though Walker’s campaign remains otherwise intact and his support from national Republicans has stayed in place, one of his own sons, Christian Walker, 23, a conservative social media influencer, has turned on him. “Every family member of Herschel Walker asked him not to run for office, because we all knew (some of) his past. Every single one. He decided to give us the middle finger and air out all of his dirty laundry in public, while simultaneously lying about it,” Christian Walker tweeted shortly after the Daily Beast report was published on Monday, the first in a series of posts denouncing his father. “I’m done.” Walker has brushed off that criticism, saying at a Thursday news conference of his adult son, “He’s a great little man. I love him to death. And you know what, I will always love him, no matter what my son says.” Christian Walker has not responded to an email and social media messages from CNN seeking comment on his criticism of his father. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Woman Tells New York Times Herschel Walker Asked Her To Have Second Abortion | CNN Politics
N
N
N https://digitalalaskanews.com/n-81/ Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
N
Trump Super PAC Reserves Millions In Airtime In Key States
Trump Super PAC Reserves Millions In Airtime In Key States
Trump Super PAC Reserves Millions In Airtime In Key States https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-super-pac-reserves-millions-in-airtime-in-key-states-2/ NEW YORK (AP) — Former President Donald Trump is finally opening his checkbook, reserving millions of dollars in airtime for ads to bolster his endorsed candidates in key midterm races just one month before Election Day. Trump’s newly-formed MAGA Inc. super PAC will begin airing ads Saturday in Nevada, Georgia and Arizona, according to Medium Buying, an ad tracking firm. The group is already airing ads in Pennsylvania and Ohio, home to two of the most consequential and competitive Senate races in the country. The Georgia spending is particularly notable, coming as Trump’s hand-picked Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker’s campaign has been rocked by reports alleging he encouraged and paid for an ex-girlfriend’s 2009 abortion. Walker, a longtime football icon, backed a national ban on abortion during his primary, and has said he does not believe in exceptions even in cases of rape, incest or when the health of a pregnant woman is at risk. The Trump ad set to air in Georgia, which was shared with The Associated Press, does not include any mention of Walker. Instead it focuses on his rival, Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock, and tries to cast Warnock and his party as too extreme. “From D-Day to drag queen story time, America has lost its way,” its narrator says. “Chaos at the border. Crime in our neighborhoods. A collapsing economy. Biden and Warnock did that,” it claims. In total, the super PAC appears to have spent close to $5 million on its initial investment. That includes $954,000 in Georgia, $512,000 in Nevada and $1.16 million in Arizona, according to Medium Buying, in addition to $1.34 million in Ohio and $829,000 in Pennsylvania, according to AdImpact, another ad tracking firm. MAGA Inc. spokesman Steven Cheung declined to say how much additional spending Trump had planned beyond the initial reservations. “We’re not going to telegraph our spending but it’s a significant buy,” he said. The super PAC’s first wave of ads are all negative spots aimed at turning voters off the Democratic rivals of Trump-endorsed candidates. The first attacked Pennsylvania Democrat John Fetterman, who is running against Republican nominee Mehmet Oz, by portraying Fetterman as soft on crime. “John Fetterman wants ruthless killers, muggers and rapists back on our streets,” it charges, labeling the lieutenant governor “dangerous.” The second targeted Ohio Democratic Senate candidate Tim Ryan for voting with his party as a member of Congress, using footage from a speech in which he joked that he would “suck up a little bit” to Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, “his future boss.” Ryan, who is running against Trump-endorsed Republican JD Vance, has run as centrist trying to win back the Rust Belt voters who have soured on the party in recent years. The ads released so far notably do not feature or even mention Trump, who remains a deeply divisive figure, but one who is extremely popular with the Republican base. Trump had been under growing pressure to finally start spending on midterm races after playing an outsize role in the primaries and pushing his favored candidates. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, in particular, had urged candidates with Trump’s support to ask him to open his checkbook heading into the race’s final stretch. The notoriously thrifty former president’s Save America PAC, his main fundraising vehicle since leaving office, ended August with more than $90 million in the bank. Trump aides have discussed transferring a portion of that money to MAGA Inc., which could later be used to support a presidential campaign should Trump decide to run again, though campaign finance experts are divided on the legality of such a move. Trump has continued to tease another presidential run, telling supporters at a rally in Warren, Michigan, last weekend, “We’ll be talking about great things hopefully in the not so distant future.” “Oh I think you’re going to be happy,” he went on to say. “But first we have to win a historic victory for the Republican Party this November.” Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Super PAC Reserves Millions In Airtime In Key States
Herschel Walker Accuser Tells New York Times He Asked Her To Have Second Abortion | CNN Politics
Herschel Walker Accuser Tells New York Times He Asked Her To Have Second Abortion | CNN Politics
Herschel Walker Accuser Tells New York Times He Asked Her To Have Second Abortion | CNN Politics https://digitalalaskanews.com/herschel-walker-accuser-tells-new-york-times-he-asked-her-to-have-second-abortion-cnn-politics/ CNN  —  The woman who said Georgia Senate hopeful Herschel Walker paid for her 2009 abortion, setting off a controversy that has rocked his campaign, told The New York Times that the Republican nominee asked her to terminate a second pregnancy two years later. She refused the request, and their relationship ended, she told the Times, which said it was withholding the name of the woman. Walker was unmarried at the time. Their son, she said, is now 10 years old. Walker, who said in May he supports a full ban on abortions, with no exceptions, has denied an earlier report from The Daily Beast, in which the woman first alleged that the former football star reimbursed her for an abortion she sought at his urging. Speaking to the Times, the woman said she decided to come forward with new details about her relationship with Walker after his Republican allies rallied around him in the aftermath of the first report. The Times said that interviews it conducted with the woman and documents provided to the newspaper “together corroborate and expand upon an account about her abortion first published on Monday in The Daily Beast. The Times also independently confirmed details with custody records filed in family court in New York and interviewed a friend of the woman to whom she had described the abortion and her eventual breakup with Mr. Walker as those events occurred.” CNN has not independently confirmed the woman’s allegation about the abortion or that Walker urged her to terminate a second pregnancy. CNN has reached out to the Walker campaign for comment. The Times left messages Friday afternoon with Walker’s spokesman and campaign manager. Walker vehemently denied the initial report about paying for the abortion in the Daily Beast, in the “strongest possible words” and said it was a “flat-out lie.” The Georgia race between Walker and Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock is among the most competitive Senate contests on the 2022 midterm slate and could be instrumental in deciding control of the evenly divided chamber. Walker, who was endorsed by former President Donald Trump, won the GOP nomination in May despite some Republicans’ concerns about past allegations that he threatened women with violence. Walker has denied at least one of those allegations and has spoken publicly and written about his struggles with mental illness. With the stakes set so high, Republican groups have vowed not to abandon Walker, even as the scandal sent his campaign scrambling. Campaign manager Scott Paradise, addressing staff earlier this week, acknowledged that the initial Daily Beast report was a setback, but pointed to Trump’s victory in 2016 – despite the initial backlash to the release of the “Access Hollywood” tape in which he spoke crudely about groping women – as evidence that Walker remained a viable candidate. Warnock has mostly refused to weigh in on the allegation, dodging a question about its implications earlier this week. “I’ll let the pundits decide how they think it will impact the race,” the senator said, before pivoting to his broader message on abortion rights. “But I have been consistent in my view that a patient’s room is too narrow and cramped a space for a woman, her doctor, and the government. … And my opponent, on the other hand, is talking about a nationwide ban with no exceptions.” The Times, like The Daily Beast, reported that Walker gave the woman a check for $700 for the procedure, which took place at a clinic in Atlanta. According to both outlets, Walker also sent the woman a “get well” card afterward. Earlier Friday, Walker’s campaign split from its political director, Taylor Crowe, over suspicions that he was leaking information to the media, two people familiar with the matter told CNN. Crowe did not respond to multiple requests for comment from CNN. It is unclear if there were other factors at play or if the move had any connection to the abortion allegations. Though Walker’s campaign remains otherwise intact and his support from national Republicans has stayed in place, one of his own sons, Christian Walker, 23, a conservative social media influencer, has turned on him. “Every family member of Herschel Walker asked him not to run for office, because we all knew (some of) his past. Every single one. He decided to give us the middle finger and air out all of his dirty laundry in public, while simultaneously lying about it,” Christian Walker tweeted shortly after the Daily Beast report was published on Monday, the first in a series of posts denouncing his father. “I’m done.” Walker has brushed off that criticism, saying at a Thursday news conference of his adult son, “He’s a great little man. I love him to death. And you know what, I will always love him, no matter what my son says.” Christian Walker has not responded to an email and social media messages from CNN seeking comment on his criticism of his father. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Herschel Walker Accuser Tells New York Times He Asked Her To Have Second Abortion | CNN Politics
GA Prosecutor Seeks Testimony From Gingrich Flynn Other Trump Allies In 2020 Election Probe
GA Prosecutor Seeks Testimony From Gingrich Flynn Other Trump Allies In 2020 Election Probe
GA Prosecutor Seeks Testimony From Gingrich, Flynn, Other Trump Allies In 2020 Election Probe https://digitalalaskanews.com/ga-prosecutor-seeks-testimony-from-gingrich-flynn-other-trump-allies-in-2020-election-probe/ Associated Press/Ben Gray Fulton County, Ga., District Attorney Fani Willis filed petitions on Friday to compel testimony from a range of allies of former President Trump as part of her investigation into alleged efforts to interfere with the 2020 presidential election.  The Associated Press reported that Willis filed the petitions for former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.), former national security adviser Michael Flynn, former White House attorney Eric Herschmann and others to testify in the investigation.  Willis has been looking into a slew of steps that Trump and his allies took to try to overturn President Biden’s victory in the state.  Trump’s former personal lawyer Rudy Guiliani testified before a grand jury that Willis gathered in August, and she has been battling Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) to compel his testimony. The fight over his participation is pending in court. Willis began her investigation shortly after an audio recording of Trump’s phone call with Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensperger (R) was publicized. Trump called Raffensperger in January 2021, telling him to “find” the roughly 11,000 votes he needed to win the state.  Gingrich did not immediately return a request from The Hill for comment through his multimedia production company Gingrich360, where he serves as chairman. The Hill has reached out to Flynn’s lawyer for comment. The Hill was unable to reach Herschmann. Willis has said she plans to suspend her investigation’s public activities in the month before the November midterm elections.  At least 17 people have been notified that they are targets of a criminal investigation from Willis, including Guiliani. The other 16 are fake electors who created documents to declare Trump the winner in the state.  Willis has said she expects to make a decision about whether to seek Trump’s testimony in the fall. Tags Biden election fraud claims Eric Herschmann Fani Willis Fani Willis Fulton county probe Lindsey Graham Michael Flynn Michael Flynn Newt Gingrich Trump Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
GA Prosecutor Seeks Testimony From Gingrich Flynn Other Trump Allies In 2020 Election Probe
Murkowski Responds To New Biden Administration Strategy For The Arctic Region | U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski Of Alaska
Murkowski Responds To New Biden Administration Strategy For The Arctic Region | U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski Of Alaska
Murkowski Responds To New Biden Administration Strategy For The Arctic Region | U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski Of Alaska https://digitalalaskanews.com/murkowski-responds-to-new-biden-administration-strategy-for-the-arctic-region-u-s-senator-lisa-murkowski-of-alaska/ 10.07.22 U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski, (R-AK), today released the following statement after the Biden administration released an updated National Strategy for the Arctic Region: “On Monday, two Russian asylum seekers landed on St. Lawrence Island seeking freedom from conscription into a tyrant’s bloody, misbegotten war. The federal agencies responsible for processing these men were more than 700 miles away and it took them an entire day to respond. What this incident makes clear is that even as Putin undertakes rapid military and industrial development in Russia’s Arctic, the United States is behind in its arctic initiatives “While somewhat underwhelming in detail, this updated 10 year strategy from the Biden administration is an important message to the American people that the United States must continue to advance Arctic priorities. It contains does contain positive elements, many of which implement my priorities to drive greater federal attention and resources to the U.S. Arctic. For example, I’m pleased with the administration’s emphasis on security, infrastructure, climate adaptation and resilience, greater consultation with the State of Alaska and Alaska Native Tribes and Corporations, and its elevation of Arctic diplomacy through the creation of the Arctic Ambassador position – all of which I have called for.  “At the same time, this strategy very clearly falls short when it comes to our arctic resources. It gives very little attention to the opportunity and necessity of domestic production of the vast resources in our Arctic. There is no mention of responsible oil and gas development to help offset Russia and ensure reliable, affordable, and cleaner energy supplies for our nation and the world. The strategy suggests that critical minerals can be produced in the Arctic, but the administration’s obstruction of the Ambler Road project makes it impossible to take that seriously. The strategy even invokes the 30×30 initiative, suggesting it is ‘consistent’ with further conservation in the Arctic, in blatant disregard of ANILCA and its ‘no more’ wilderness clauses. “There is no question the administration and this country needs to pay greater attention to the Arctic. This strategy document has promising elements, but it is deliberately incomplete, and that will only work against the United States’ ability to assume a true global leadership role in this crucial region.” Background: Through her legislative efforts, Senator Murkowski has comprehensively developed Arctic leadership throughout the federal government. In just the last two years, she used her role on the Senate Appropriations Committee to establish the Ted Stevens Center for Arctic Security Studies – a Department of Defense Regional Center dedicated to the Arctic located in Anchorage, Alaska. The aim of the Ted Stevens Center is to support defense strategy objectives and policy priorities through a unique academic forum and to foster strong international networks of security leaders to support multilateralism and diplomacy in the region. Murkowski welcomed the news that Major General (Ret.) Randy “Church” Kee was selected by the Department of Defense to serve as the Senior Advisor for Arctic Security Affairs. Murkowski served as a distinguished guest during the grand opening of the Ted Stevens Center for Arctic Security Studies in Anchorage. At her urging, the U.S. State Department in August 2022 announced the establishment of an Ambassador-at-Large for the Arctic Region. Senator Murkowski worked through the Appropriations process and with former Secretary Dan Brouillette to re-establish the Department of Energy’s Arctic Energy Office in Fairbanks, Alaska. She also was behind the reactivation of the Arctic Executive Steering Committee within the Executive Office of the President to enhance coordination of federal Arctic policies. She led legislation that created the office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Arctic and Global Resilience, ensuring that the Arctic was properly represented in senior levels within the Pentagon. And finally, Senator Murkowski along with Senator Dan Sullivan have been the catalysts behind every military service crafting new Arctic strategies which has resulted in the reactivation of the 11th Airborne Division – the Arctic Angels – in Alaska.  Murkowski co-chair of the Arctic Caucus and is also heavily engaged in international mediums dedicated to sustaining the Arctic as a zone of peace. She is the U.S. Representative for the Standing Committee of Parliamentarians of the Arctic Region, where she serves as Vice Chair, and participates in international forums held by the Arctic Council. In 2021, Murkowski was presented with the Icelandic Order of the Falcon, the highest honor Iceland can bestow on individuals, in recognition of her efforts on Arctic diplomacy. Related Issues: Arctic Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Murkowski Responds To New Biden Administration Strategy For The Arctic Region | U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski Of Alaska
Biden's Inside Man In Trump Land
Biden's Inside Man In Trump Land
Biden's Inside Man In Trump Land https://digitalalaskanews.com/bidens-inside-man-in-trump-land/ Welcome to POLITICO’s West Wing Playbook, your guide to the people and power centers in the Biden administration. With help from Allie Bice.   Send tips | Subscribe here| Email Alex | Email Max  PROGRAMMING NOTE: We’ll be off on Monday, Oct. 10 for Indigenous Peoples Day but will be back in your inboxes on Tuesday, Oct. 11! We hope absence makes the heart grow fonder.  In the spring of 2020, JOE BIDEN’s transition team viewed CHRIS LIDDELL skeptically. As a deputy chief of staff to DONALD TRUMP, Liddell would be the one in charge of planning the government hand-off if Biden won. But, “no one thought that we’d get cooperation at the level that Liddell was,” former Sen. TED KAUFMAN, who led Biden’s transition, told West Wing Playbook. DAVID MARCHICK, the then-head of the Center for Presidential Transition at the Partnership of Public Service who was working closely with the Biden team, vouched for Liddell after having met him earlier that year. “Liddell wanted Trump to win,” Marchick recalled in an interview ahead of the release of his new book, “The Peaceful Transfer of Power.” But Liddell “also recognized that there was a responsibility to implement the law and to plan for the possibility that Trump lost,” he said. Marchick ultimately became a central backchannel for communication between the Trump White House and the Biden transition team throughout that year and helped establish communication between the senior officials after the General Services Administration recognized that Biden had won the 2020 election. He did so, Kaufman said, at some risk. “David deserves a lot of credit for it,” said Kaufman. “No one knew we were working with Liddell — like half a dozen people — as a protection to him. It was very closely held.” Most of the Biden team came to share Marchick’s assessment that Liddell was earnestly trying to prepare for a transition. Marchick disrupted that quiet communication in September of 2020, however, when he praised Liddell for “doing a good job” in preparing for a potential Biden handover. Longtime Biden confidante JEFF PECK huffed in an email to top Biden aides — with Marchick accidentally copied — that “Marchick knows better than this,” according to the new book. There was fear that Liddell’s cover had been blown. And, afterward, Liddell himself quipped to Marchick that he would “avoid the Oval Office for a few days.” Things came to a head on Jan. 6, 2021, when Liddell considered resigning after the riot at the Capitol. There was fear that if he did so, the transition of power would lose a key cog and be disrupted. “We had a text chain with Chris, [GEORGE W. BUSH chief of staff] JOSH BOLTEN and me. And then I called Josh, and said ‘We got to talk Chris off the ledge,’” Marchick recalled in his interview. Liddell, who declined to speak for this piece, decided to stay. Marchick later joined the Biden administration as chief operating officer of the International Development Finance Corporation, a role he left earlier this year. His book is full of praise for the Biden transition, which “by many measures we must regard as the most effective presidential transition yet.” He believes it will likely be studied by future campaigns as presidential transition efforts become bigger, start earlier, and grow more complicated. Marchick credits the Biden team with focusing on political appointee positions rather than Senate confirmable ones. As a result, the new administration was able to swear in about 1,100 political appointees on Day One — reflecting an unprecedented feat of vetting and organization for a presidential transition. The Senate confirmation process, however, hampered Biden’s first year. By day 100 of his presidency, only 44 top officials had been confirmed out of around 1,200 who require Senate approval. That created its own issues. “I think that one of the consequences of having a lot of non-Senate confirmed people in place is once the Senate confirmed people are in place, they don’t get the chance to bring their own people in,” he said. “There’s a trade off.” MESSAGE US — Are you Josh Bolten? Email us at [email protected]. This one is from Allie. Which president started riding a mechanical horse after the Secret Service made him give up riding real ones? (Answer at the bottom.) TGIF! It’s cartoon feature time! This one’s by DAVID HORSEY. Our very own MATT WUERKER also publishes a selection of cartoons from all over the country. View the cartoon carousel here. BOEHNER APPROVED: Former House Speaker JOHN BOEHNER (R-Ohio), who has become a weed advocate in his post-congressional life, offered his approval of Biden’s announcement Thursday that he would pardon those convicted of simple marijuana possession under federal law and push for an expeditious review how marijuana is scheduled under federal law. Boehner was not consulted on the announcements, his spokesman DAVE SCHNITTGER told our SAM STEIN. “But he welcomes the president’s action and believes it is a significant one for the country. His hope is that it helps clear a path for congressional action by the end of the year on other cannabis policy reforms such as the SAFE Banking Act and CLIMB Act that have bipartisan support and are very much needed.” RELATEDLY: We got this dispatch from the pool today, which followed Biden as he walked into the bookstore on the campus of University of Pennsylvania. “Many onlookers noticed the commotion and hung around to see what was up,” the report read. “A couple yelled in the direction of POTUS, ‘Yo Joe! Legalize that weed!’” WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU TO READ: The latest jobs numbers. AP’s PAUL WISEMAN reports that job growth has remained solid: “America’s employers slowed their hiring in September but still added 263,000 jobs, a solid figure that will likely keep the Federal Reserve on pace to keep raising interest rates aggressively to fight persistently high inflation. Friday’s government report showed that hiring fell from 315,000 in August to the weakest monthly gain since April 2021. The unemployment rate fell from 3.7% to 3.5%, matching a half-century low.” WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ: Anything about the investigation of the president’s son. Fox News’ BROOKE SINGMAN and DAVID SPUNT report that “Attorney General MERRICK GARLAND and Deputy Attorney General LISA MONACO are taking a hands-off approach in the HUNTER BIDEN investigation and leaving charging decisions up to DAVID WEISS, the U.S. Attorney for Delaware, tasked with leading the probe. … The investigation is now being conducted by Weiss, a prosecutor appointed by former President DONALD TRUMP.” WESTWARD BOUND: Biden heads to the other coast next week. He’ll be in California from Oct. 12-14, and then in Oregon through Oct. 15, the White House announced Friday. …AND THEN TO EGYPT: The president is also slated to go overseas next month to attend the United Nations Climate Change Conference, also known as the COP27, according to The Washington Post’s TYLER PAGER and MICHAEL BIRNBAUM. FIRST IN WEST WING PLAYBOOK: KRISTINA COSTA is now deputy assistant to the president for clean energy innovation and implementation, DANIEL LIPPMAN has learned. She most recently was senior adviser and speechwriter to Deputy Secretary of State WENDY SHERMAN and is an alum of the Obama White House and the Center for American Progress. ASJIA GARNER has been promoted to associate director of communications to JILL BIDEN, Lippman has also learned. She previously was communications coordinator for the first lady. COMMENT CLEANUP: The U.S. military did a bit of cleanup for Biden after he told a group of donors Thursday night in New York that the world was the closest it had been to “Armageddon” since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis. Our LARA SELIGMAN noted in a piece Friday that the Pentagon said it “still has seen no indications that VLADIMIR PUTIN is planning to launch nuclear weapons,” despite the president’s warning. Defense Department spokesperson J. TODD BREASSEALE told POLITICO that Biden’s comments reflect how seriously the administration was taking the Russian president’s nuclear threats. “However — and to be clear: we have not seen any reason to adjust our own strategic nuclear posture nor do we have indications that Russia is preparing to imminently use nuclear weapons,” he said. BIG DAY FOR DATA PRIVACY: Biden signed an executive order Friday intended to limit the ability of American national security agencies to access people’s personal information. It was part of a transatlantic data sharing agreement with the European Union. The move comes after lengthy negotiations about data privacy between the U.S. and the EU. Our ALFRED NG, VINCENT MANANCOURT and MARK SCOTT have more details. COVID BOOSTER SLUMP: WaPo’s DAN DIAMOND, MARY BETH GAHAN and MARK JOHNSON report that despite the administration’s best efforts to promote the Covid booster rollout, Americans aren’t getting them. About 105 million U.S. adults have received a third Covid shot and even less have received the bivalent booster doses that have been recently made available. The slump in Covid booster shots comes as the colder fall and winter months approach. White House Tightens Rules on Counterterrorism Drone Strikes (NYT’s Charlie Savage) Mayor Adams Declares State of Emergency to Respond to Migrant Crisis (NYT’s Emma G. Fitzsimmons) A bump and a miss: Saudi oil cut slaps down Biden’s outreach (AP’s Ellen Knickmeyer, Chris Megerian And Kevin Freking) LYNDA TRAN, the Department of Transportation’s director of public engagement and senior adviser, told POLITICO back in 2020 that she’s “terrified of the ocean.” But she found a way to work on her anxiety. She said she “got scuba certified and learned to surf to face my fears.” Congrats, Lynda! CALVIN COOLIDGE swapped in a mechanical horse for a real one while in office. According to a 2018 ...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Biden's Inside Man In Trump Land
Trump Rallies Drift To Fringe Ahead Of Potential 2024 Bid
Trump Rallies Drift To Fringe Ahead Of Potential 2024 Bid
Trump Rallies Drift To Fringe Ahead Of Potential 2024 Bid https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-rallies-drift-to-fringe-ahead-of-potential-2024-bid/ 1 of 7 Former President Donald Trump tosses caps to the crowd as he steps onstage during a rally at the Macomb Community College Sports & Expo Center in Warren, Mich., Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022. A man holds up his index finger during former President Donald Trump’s rally in Warren, Michigan on Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022. Paige Cole from Eastpointe Michigan holds up the flag she brough to former President Donald Trump’s rally in Warren, Michigan on Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022. Sharon Anderson, wearing donkey ears, traveled to Warren, Michigan from Tennessee for her 29th Trump rally on Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022. Mike Lindell heads to the podium at a Donald Trump rally at Macomb Community College Sports & Expo Center in Warren, Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022. U.S. Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene waves on her way to the podium at a Donald Trump rally at Macomb Community College Sports & Expo Center in Warren, Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022. Former President Donald Trump tosses caps to the crowd as he steps onstage during a rally at the Macomb Community College Sports & Expo Center in Warren, Mich., Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022. WARREN, Mich. (AP) — Paige Cole is one of the “Anons.” The mother of three from Eastpointe, Michigan, says Joe Biden is a sham president and believes Donald Trump will soon be reinstated to the White House to finish the remainder of Biden’s term. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Rallies Drift To Fringe Ahead Of Potential 2024 Bid
Brazil's Bonsonaro Says Trump Would Have Averted War In Ukraine
Brazil's Bonsonaro Says Trump Would Have Averted War In Ukraine
Brazil's Bonsonaro Says Trump Would Have Averted War In Ukraine https://digitalalaskanews.com/brazils-bonsonaro-says-trump-would-have-averted-war-in-ukraine/ Navigation for News Categories Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro hopes to be reelected. Photo: THIAGO RIBEIRO Far-right Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, a close ally of former US President Donald Trump, has claimed the war in Ukraine would not have happened if Trump were still in office. However, he offered no explanation for how Trump could have prevented the conflict. The comments were published on Friday as part of an interview in news magazine Veja, and could add to tensions in the country’s relationship with Washington as Bolsonaro is seeking to overtake leftist rival Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva ahead of a Brazilian presidential runoff vote on 30 October. Bolsonaro told Veja that he had a good in-person meeting with US President Joe Biden in June. But in remarks likely to rile the White House, he said many of the current issues and tensions the world faced would not be occurring if Trump were still president. “Some think that the war in Ukraine would not have happened if he were still in power,” Bolsonaro said. “I agree with that.” He did not give further details. Bolsonaro has long admired Trump, a fellow right-wing populist, and saw his international standing diminish after the 2020 US election. Bolsonaro was among the last world leaders to recognise Biden’s victory, after repeating Trump’s false allegations of US electoral fraud. Trump endorsed Bolsonaro ahead of last Sunday’s first round of the presidential election, and said Bolsonaro was “one of the great presidents of any country in the world … respected by everybody throughout the world.” Despite his better-than-expected performance in the first round, Bolsonaro raised fresh doubts in the interview about the security of Brazil’s voting system, without evidence, fanning fears that he could refuse to accept defeat. In the interview with Veja, he kept up his unfounded questioning of Brazil’s electronic voting system, and declined to say whether he would accept the result if he lost in the second round. “There’s a feeling in public opinion that there was something dodgy,” he said. “I’m always worried.” In the wide-ranging interview, Bolsonaro also committed to more privatisations if he was re-elected and said his regular sparring partner, Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, “has all the symptoms of a dictator.” He said he could look at a proposal to increase the number of Supreme Court justices after the election. Bolsonaro pledged to carry out more privatisations if he was re-elected, although he did not say which state-owned firms would be up for sale. –Reuters Get the RNZ app for ad-free news and current affairs Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Brazil's Bonsonaro Says Trump Would Have Averted War In Ukraine
N
N
N https://digitalalaskanews.com/n-80/ Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
N
Mass General Brigham's Dr. Anne Klibanski On Building The Academic Health System Of The Future
Mass General Brigham's Dr. Anne Klibanski On Building The Academic Health System Of The Future
Mass General Brigham's Dr. Anne Klibanski On Building The Academic Health System Of The Future https://digitalalaskanews.com/mass-general-brighams-dr-anne-klibanski-on-building-the-academic-health-system-of-the-future/ A continued commitment to patient care, research, teaching and innovation — while addressing existing challenges — will be part of the future of healthcare, according to Anne Klibanski, MD, president and CEO of Boston-based Mass General Brigham. Dr. Klibanski has served at the helm of Mass General Brigham since June 2019. In this role, she oversees an academic health system with 82,000 employees. Dr. Klibanski, who also previously served as chief academic officer of Mass General Brigham and chief of neuroendocrine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, told Becker’s her view of her organization, like healthcare, is one that keeps patients at the center. She shared more about this vision, as well as her greatest skill as a leader and the advice she remembers most clearly.   Editor’s note: Responses were lightly edited for clarity. Question: What’s one thing that really piqued your interest in healthcare? Dr. Anne Klibanski: When I was in college at Barnard, I became fascinated with the brain and its chemistry, and at the same time intrigued by how I might devote my life’s work to helping others.   I was an English major, and I wrote my senior thesis on the Irish poet William Butler Yeats. I think that the richness of such an interdisciplinary course of study laid the groundwork for my career in neuroendocrinology. It is a complex field; one that requires very specific scientific knowledge in multiple areas, coupled with cross-disciplinary work, in determining how to best care for patients.     Q: What do you enjoy most about Massachusetts? AK: I’m a New Yorker, and when I first came to Boston, I had the intention of going back. But once I spent some time here, I became so impressed with how many incredible physicians, researchers and innovators there are, all in one city, often working together, to advance science to improve the lives of patients. Personally, I’ve enjoyed the ease of living and proximity to the ocean and mountains. I’ve been here ever since.   Q: If you could eliminate one of the healthcare industry’s problems overnight, which would it be?  AK: Improving patient access to outstanding equitable healthcare, closer to home, at a lower cost. Making this happen is part of Mass General Brigham’s vision for the future.   Q: How do you view the future of healthcare? AK: First and foremost, it means staying committed to being at the forefront of patient care, research, teaching and innovation, while tackling the current challenges we are facing in healthcare and transforming the ways we do our work.  Our industry must move from a hospital-centered focus of healthcare to a patient-centered focus and make it easier for all our patients to access and navigate a full continuum of care. We must ensure equity in clinical access and best outcomes no matter where our patients live. We must work together to shape the treatments, procedures and delivery methods of the future, focusing deeply on collaboration, and sharing a strong commitment to invest in research. We must fully embrace digital and data — new platforms offer so much potential for better understanding disease, better serving patients, and for making the lives of our overburdened caregivers easier. We can, and should, bring high-quality care into the home to make it easier to access and more affordable for our patients. We must value and invest in scalable innovation and bring the incredible creativity and progress we have made in diagnostics and therapeutics to care delivery. Each of these imperatives are critical facets of our very mission at Mass General Brigham, which is to build the integrated academic healthcare system of the future, with patients at the center. Our patients rightfully expect more from our industry, and it is our collective responsibility to find ways to make it work better for them. Q: What do you see as your greatest skill as a leader? AK: Bringing our world-class physicians and colleagues together to try and solve our industry’s challenges as a forward-looking team, in service to our patients. What is most important to me is fostering strong working relationships with my colleagues, always providing value and driving a single-minded focus on patients — whether it’s through research, advances in complex care, scalable innovation, teaching and service to the communities around us.  Q: What’s one piece of advice you remember most clearly? AK: When I was a student at Barnard, Elizabeth Hardwick, who was a co-founder of The New York Review of Books, told me that “your profession is not your career.” To me, this means that your career can become so much greater than simply following through with the work you’ve trained to do. Don’t be afraid to do what you’re passionate about. Find what motivates you, take chances and let that be a guide for what you can accomplish and the impact you can have.  Q: What do you consider to be one of the most impactful initiatives at Mass General Brigham that has launched since you have been CEO?   AK: I’m very excited right now about the work we’re doing on the systemwide clinical integration of our emergency, radiology, anesthesiology and pathology services. I’m proud of this work because it is a significant step toward simplifying the patient journey, which gets at what that future of healthcare that you asked about can, and should, look like. Here’s an example of what we’re doing with radiology. Previously, a patient might have entered our system at a community hospital or health center, undergone an examination and found out that they needed to have a complex set of images taken. Sometimes, the hospital or center may not have had the technology or expertise in place to take this set of images and analyze them, which may have required the patient to make an additional appointment, probably at one of our academic medical centers in Boston, to have these images done and have a radiologist specialist read them. Often, this placed a heavy burden on the patient, who had to travel to another facility, perhaps many miles from where he or she lived, take a day off from work, lose pay, find childcare or eldercare, arrange transportation; all the while dealing with the stress of waiting to have images taken and read.   Today, this same patient has a very different experience with Mass General Brigham. Images can be taken at any one of our entry points, and when needed, shared with specialists at our AMCs who can seamlessly analyze the results and provide the necessary information to the physician working at the community hospital or health center where the patient was first seen.   Ultimately, the integration of these services puts patients first. This is what is most important.   Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Mass General Brigham's Dr. Anne Klibanski On Building The Academic Health System Of The Future
More Layoffs For Bay Area Plant-Based Food Company
More Layoffs For Bay Area Plant-Based Food Company
More Layoffs For Bay Area Plant-Based Food Company https://digitalalaskanews.com/more-layoffs-for-bay-area-plant-based-food-company/ Oct. 7, 2022 Impossible Foods said it will eliminate 6% of its staff in the company’s second round of layoffs so far this year. Courtesy of Impossible Foods Bay Area-based food company Impossible Foods announced another round of layoffs this week.  A pioneer in the plant-based meat space, it will eliminate 6% of its staff, amounting to approximately 50 employees, as it seeks to eliminate redundancies and positions “that are no longer aligned with our core business priorities,” CEO Peter McGuinness wrote to employees in a memo, according to Food Navigator. Headquartered in Redwood City, this is the food tech company’s second round of layoffs this year after 15 people exited in January. Impossible Foods did not respond to SFGATE’s request for comment as of publication. Pat Brown founded Impossible Foods in 2011, but the former CEO stepped down from his position in April and announced plans to head up a new research arm of the company just last month. Financial experts speculated the company might go public this year, but any possible plans appear to have been halted given the economic downturn. McGuinness told Food Navigator that the product was “consistently rated as best in the category, but awareness remained low.” In late 2021, Impossible Foods opened a ghost kitchen in Oakland dubbed “The Impossible Shop,” offering a variety of prepared faux meat products for delivery. There’s now another fulfillment center in SoMa, though the experience didn’t impress SFGATE’s Madeline Wells. Impossible Foods has 870 employees, according to LinkedIn, 538 of whom are in the Bay Area.  Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
More Layoffs For Bay Area Plant-Based Food Company
Russians Terrified As Putin Hunkers Down In Nuclear Bunker
Russians Terrified As Putin Hunkers Down In Nuclear Bunker
Russians Terrified As Putin Hunkers Down In Nuclear Bunker https://digitalalaskanews.com/russians-terrified-as-putin-hunkers-down-in-nuclear-bunker/ Only a handful of people know the exact location where President Vladimir Putin is celebrating his 70th birthday in St. Petersburg on Friday, but critics say he spends more and more of his time isolated deep inside nuclear bunkers. The Kremlin has announced that Putin will spend his birthday working. Mired, as he is, in the biggest self-made disaster of his presidency, that just raises more worrying questions about what kind of orders he’s going to issue on his big day. Backed into a corner, what is Putin considering next? People who’ve known Putin for many years claim the Russian leader is “nervous” and “tense” these days; online political groups speculate on Telegram that Putin is planning “to use tactical nuclear weapons out of a bunker, far from Moscow,” while Kremlinologists debate how to prevent a looming doomsday scenario. Putin himself has said he will respond to the grim daily news from Ukraine—where his army is suffering defeat after defeat—with “all the means at our disposal.” That, he added, “is not a bluff.” In an alarming symbolic gesture, he promoted one of his closest and most notorious allies on Wednesday, the leader of the Chechen republic, Ramzan Kadyrov, who is now a general. His elevation came just a couple of days after Kadyrov called for more drastic escalation in Ukraine, including the declaration of martial law in Russia’s border areas and “the use of low-yield nuclear weapons.” Russians are growing increasingly worried about their leader’s state of mind. In his most recent public appearance, Putin’s eyes looked sunk and foggy. He spoke to a group of teachers from a small office over Zoom. The idea was to celebrate Wednesday’s “Teachers’ Day”—but Putin couldn’t resist ranting about the so-called “neo-Nazis” in Ukraine. “That part looked really insane,” 17-year-old student Vitaly Shatrov from St. Petersburg, whose last name has been changed for privacy reasons, told The Daily Beast. “Putin, who many compare to Hitler for the violence against Ukrainian people, speaks with teachers from some bunker about Nazis.” Shatrov is so concerned about nuclear escalation that he is clinging to the idea of peace talks as suggested by Pope Francis and Tesla boss Elon Musk, who have been derided for suggesting Ukraine effectively accept defeat. “I am afraid of a nuclear war. There are no politicians in the world who could calm Putin down. Instead everybody mocks him, threatens him, so he goes even more insane in the upside-down world that he’s created.” One thing is clear: Putin has a wide choice of bunkers to retreat to. One of his favorite hideaways is in the Altai mountains. Any taxi driver in the remote region of Ongudaysky near the border with Mongolia will show you the way to “Putin’s bunker” or Altayskoye Podvorye. During the pandemic, residents told The Daily Beast about the presidential helicopter seen regularly in the air over the mountains. Locals talk of a giant underground bunker where all Putin’s family members, and Gazprom and Kremlin employees, could hide from radiation in case of a nuclear attack—but like much of the president’s security apparatus, that has never been officially confirmed. Another famous hiding place is almost 1,000 miles away from Moscow in the republic of Bashkortostan, in the southern Ural mountains. The construction of this immense network of bunkers began under Boris Yeltsin, but the project was frozen after the fall of the USSR. Western spies have suggested the huge underground complex could house between 100,000 and 300,000 people; others suggested it was a nuclear command post or a storage for secret weapons. Putin’s whereabouts is often a subject of fascination in Russia. When he holds his meetings on Zoom it is hard to figure out where he is, but during the pandemic it became obvious that he has at least two identical offices, one in Moscow and the other in his residence on the Black Sea, in the city of Sochi. Gennady Gudkov, an exiled former Russian parliamentarian, told The Daily Beast that the president was taking precautions as the war in Ukraine spirals out of control. “Putin is going to hide in a bunker in case of a nuclear war,” he said. “But he is not safe there either; he will be destroyed—that’s what Biden should tell Putin clearly now.” Allies of Putin say the president’s nuclear threats are being overinterpreted outside the country, but they blame the West for that. “Russia will strike only in response to an attack. The decision-making to use nuclear weapons is complicated, it involves many people and there is no Kadyrov among them,” pro-Putin political analyst Yuriy Krupnov told The Daily Beast. He said the average Russian—even in elite circles—knows they would have no protection if a nuclear conflict really did break out. “No bunker will help Moscow, of course. Maybe just the leadership has proper shelters.” Veteran human rights defender Valentina Melnikova, who has been helping Russian families avoid the draft, said she was not so confident that the world was safe from nuclear war. “I am sure our generals are capable of bombing Kyiv and Washington with nuclear torpedoes and bombs. I say that because I know the Russian military well—they will obey any of Putin’s orders and there is hardly anything that could stop this disaster at this point.” Many more Russians are beginning to think the unthinkable. Perceptions have changed so much over the last two decades. At the beginning of Putin’s rule, few Russians would have believed a female journalist like Anna Politkovskaya could be assassinated in the center of Moscow. And yet it happened—on Putin’s birthday—in 2006. People’s understanding of what Putin might do is changing faster and faster. A year ago, the majority of the public did not believe the Kremlin would launch a full-scale assault on a neighboring country, such as Ukraine. Even then, they were certain there would be no mass-mobilization—but, again, it is happening, right now. Russians were always afraid of nuclear war but most of them never imagined that their own motherland would start one. Now, they are not so sure. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Russians Terrified As Putin Hunkers Down In Nuclear Bunker
Trump Super PAC Reserves Millions In Airtime In Key States
Trump Super PAC Reserves Millions In Airtime In Key States
Trump Super PAC Reserves Millions In Airtime In Key States https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-super-pac-reserves-millions-in-airtime-in-key-states/ NEW YORK (AP) — Former President Donald Trump is finally opening his checkbook, reserving millions of dollars in airtime for ads to bolster his endorsed candidates in key midterm races just one month before Election Day. Trump’s newly-formed MAGA Inc. super PAC has so far placed reservations in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Arizona, according to the ad tracking firm AdImpact. Additional spending is planned in Nevada and Georgia, according to a person familiar with the effort who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the buys before they were made public. The Georgia spending is particularly notable, coming as Trump’s hand-picked Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker’s campaign has been rocked by reports alleging he encouraged and paid for a woman’s 2009 abortion. Walker, a longtime football icon, backed a national ban on abortion during his primary, and has said he does not believe in exceptions even in cases of rape, incest or when the health of a pregnant woman is at risk. On Friday, the super PAC booked $1 million worth of airtime in Arizona, with ads set to begin airing Saturday, according to AdImpact. That follows reservations of $1.34 million in Ohio and $829,000 in Pennsylvania placed Thursday, AdImpact said in a tweet. MAGA Inc. spokesman Steven Cheung declined to say how much additional spending Trump had planned beyond the initial reservations. “We’re not going to telegraph our spending but it’s a significant buy,” he said. The super PAC’s first two ads are negative spots aimed at turning voters off the Democratic rivals of Trump-endorsed candidates. The first attacks Pennsylvania Democrat John Fetterman, who is running against Republican nominee Mehmet Oz, by portraying Fetterman as soft on crime. “John Fetterman wants ruthless killers, muggers and rapists back on our streets,” it charges, labeling the lieutenant governor “dangerous.” The second targets Ohio Democratic Senate candidate Tim Ryan for voting with his party as a member of Congress, using footage from a speech in which he joked that he would “suck up a little bit” to Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, “his future boss.” Ryan, who is running against Trump-endorsed Republican JD Vance, has run as centrist trying to win back the Rust Belt voters who have soured on the party in recent years. The ads released so far notably do not feature or even mention Trump, who remains a deeply divisive figure, but one who is extremely popular with the Republican base. Trump had been under growing pressure to finally start spending on midterm races after playing an outsize role in the primaries and pushing his favored candidates. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, in particular, had urged candidates with Trump’s support to ask him to open his checkbook heading into the race’s final stretch. The notoriously thrifty former president’s Save America PAC, his main fundraising vehicle since leaving office, ended August with more than $90 million in the bank. Trump aides have discussed transferring a portion of that money to MAGA Inc., which could later be used to support a presidential campaign should Trump decide to run again, though campaign finance experts are divided on the legality of such a move. Trump has continued to tease another presidential run, telling supporters at a rally in Warren, Michigan, last weekend, “We’ll be talking about great things hopefully in the not so distant future.” “Oh I think you’re going to be happy,” he went on to say. “But first we have to win a historic victory for the Republican Party this November.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Super PAC Reserves Millions In Airtime In Key States
Numbers Don't Lie: Border Disaster Brought To You By Biden Democrats
Numbers Don't Lie: Border Disaster Brought To You By Biden Democrats
Numbers Don't Lie: Border Disaster Brought To You By Biden, Democrats https://digitalalaskanews.com/numbers-dont-lie-border-disaster-brought-to-you-by-biden-democrats/ Must Reads Big Tech Border Crisis China Critical Race Theory Election Integrity Letters Podcasts Imperial County, California, law enforcement and a coroner load the body of a deceased illegal immigrant recovered by a California Highway Patrol helicopter and U.S. Border Patrol agents from the Jacumba Mountains into a closed pickup truck on Thursday. (Photo: Allison Dinner/AFP/Getty Images) Democrats are napping peacefully through the U.S.-Mexico “border” crisis that they engineered. Perhaps these data will snap them from their slumber: The U.S. Department of Homeland Security reports that the Mexican cartels’ income from smuggling illegal aliens into America has soared from $500 million in 2018 to $13 billion this year—up 2,500%. If these criminals merged into a corporation, their 2022 gross revenues would rival that of—are you sitting down?—Fox Corporation. Fox News Channel’s parent company earned $12.91 billion in the year ended June 30, 2021, and gleaned $13.97 billion 12 months later. This fact might awaken “Sleepy Joe” Biden and the lazy Left: Mexico’s human-trafficking cartels are now as big as Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, and Laura Ingraham. If Democrats still are dozing through the havoc of their no-border strategy, these figures might rouse them: Border Patrol agents apprehended 951,568 illegal aliens during President Donald Trump’s final 19 months in office. In President Joe Biden’s first 19 months, the Border Patrol encountered a staggering 3,588,877 illegals—up a sickening 377%. In fiscal year 2020, the last one fully under Trump’s control, 69,000 illegal aliens were detected on the “border,” but got away into America’s interior. Fiscal 2021 (four months of Trump, eight of Biden) witnessed 389,155 got-aways—up 464%. In fisca 2022 (all of it Biden’s watch), got-aways hit 599,000—up 54% versus fiscal 2021 and 768% compared with fiscal 2020.   “At least 266,000 unaccompanied migrant children/minors have been encountered at the southern border since President Biden took office, per CBP data,” Fox News Channel’s invaluable southern-frontier correspondent Bill Melugin explained via Twitter on Sept. 26. “That’s enough to fill up approximately three Rose Bowls.” Fourteen House Republicans wrote Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on Sept. 23 to complain that “between October 2021 and July 2022, more than 130,000 Venezuelan nationals were encountered after entering the United States illegally.” The Marxist regime of Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela, they added, “is deliberately releasing violent prisoners early, including inmates convicted of ‘murder, rape, and extortion,’ and pushing them to join caravans heading to the United States.” Twelve U.S. senators contacted the U.S. Marshals Service about crooks cascading across the “border.” According to their Aug. 30 letter, “So far in FY22, [Customs and Border Protection] has apprehended over 9,000 criminal aliens, including 53 for homicide or manslaughter, 283 for sex crimes, and almost 900 for assault, battery, and domestic violence.” During Trump’s fiscal years 2017 through 2020, 11 terrorists on the watchlist were captured at the border—two, six, zero, and three, in those respective years. Under Biden, Border Patrol apprehended 15 in fiscal 2021 and a terrifying 78 in fiscal 2022, through Aug. 31. September’s figures will follow. How many terrorists got away? Who knows? According to data from the United Nations’ Missing Migrants Project, during Trump’s final 20 months in office, 712 illegal aliens died on or near the U.S.-Mexico border. For Biden’s first 20 months, that number is 862—up 21%. These fatalities range from drownings in the Rio Grande to the barbaric demise of 53 illegals whose four smugglers let them roast to death inside an abandoned truck. Officials discovered this carnage on June 27 in San Antonio, Texas. That day’s high temperature: 97º Fahrenheit. Fentanyl killed some 71,000 Americans in 2021, up 23% compared with 2020. For those aged 18 to 45, fentanyl leads COVID-19, car wrecks, suicides, and every other cause of death. It’s tragic enough when witting users fatally overdose on cocaine, heroin, or other fentanyl-laced contraband. Sadder still are those innocently poisoned via counterfeit, toxin-tainted “Adderall,” “Xanax,” and other phony pharmaceuticals.  Fentanyl is 100 times stronger than morphine. Two milligrams in one pill can kill. Under Trump, Border Patrol’s fentanyl seizures for fiscal years 2019 and ’20 (through Aug. 31) totaled 7,595 pounds. Under Biden’s equivalent dates in FY ’21 and ’22: 24,062 pounds—up 217%. Mexican cartels freely traverse the “border” to transport this venom. Biden Democrats couldn’t care less. The Daily Signal publishes a variety of perspectives. Nothing written here is to be construed as representing the views of The Heritage Foundation. Have an opinion about this article? To sound off, please email letters@DailySignal.com and we’ll consider publishing your edited remarks in our regular “We Hear You” feature. Remember to include the url or headline of the article plus your name and town and/or state.  Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Numbers Don't Lie: Border Disaster Brought To You By Biden Democrats
Judge Says Durham Can Keep His Witness List Secret For Danchenko Trial
Judge Says Durham Can Keep His Witness List Secret For Danchenko Trial
Judge Says Durham Can Keep His Witness List Secret For Danchenko Trial https://digitalalaskanews.com/judge-says-durham-can-keep-his-witness-list-secret-for-danchenko-trial/ A federal judge on Friday said special counsel John Durham can keep his list of witnesses under wraps ahead of the criminal trial against a Russian analyst who was a key source for a now-debunked 2016 linking former President Donald Trump to Russia. The one-page order from U.S. District Judge Anthony Trenga did not explain the reasoning behind his decision. It came just hours after Mr. Durham asked to keep his witness list under seal until Monday, one day before the trial of Igor Danchenko is scheduled to begin. “Given that this case has garnered significant media attention, the government is concerned about the potential harassment of its witnesses, should they be identified this far in advance of trial,” Mr. Durham wrote. Mr. Durham added that he had already disclosed the witness list to Mr. Danchenko’s legal team, which did not object to sealing it. Mr. Danchenko was a key source for the dossier of unverified and often salacious allegations against Mr. Trump that were compiled by British ex-spy Christopher Steele. Mr. Danchenko is facing five counts of lying to the FBI about how he compiled the information he turned over to Mr. Steele. Those unproven allegations ended up in the so-called Steele dossier and became part of the basis for the FBI’s surveillance warrants for Trump campaign associate Carter Page. Prosecutors say those allegations were based on exaggerations, rumors, and outright lies. Conversations that Mr. Danchenko purportedly had with sources that either did not happen or came from elsewhere, according to court documents. Some of the material compiled by Mr. Danchenko came from Charles Dolan, a public relations executive with longstanding ties with Hillary Clinton, prosecutors said. Instead, Mr. Danchenko told FBI officials that information came from high-level Russians with connections to the Kremlin, court documents say. Defense attorneys have said that the charges against Mr. Danchenko should be dropped because his answers were “literally true” in response to narrow questions from FBI agents. For example, Mr. Danchenko denied speaking with Mr. Dolan since he communicated through email exchanges with the Clinton operative. In another instance, prosecutors allege that Mr. Danchenko made up a phone call that he claimed came from Sergei Millian, a Russia-U.S. chamber of commerce leader. Defense attorneys say the information was relayed to Mr. Danchenko in an anonymous phone call from someone believed to be Mr. Millian. They say the government can’t prove that the defendant made a false statement if he believed it was true. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Judge Says Durham Can Keep His Witness List Secret For Danchenko Trial
Trump May Have More White House Documents Justice Dept. Suspects
Trump May Have More White House Documents Justice Dept. Suspects
Trump May Have More White House Documents, Justice Dept. Suspects https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-may-have-more-white-house-documents-justice-dept-suspects/ The department’s top counterintelligence official, Jay Bratt, recently communicated the concern to Trump’s lawyers, sources said The Department of Justice suspects former President Donald Trump still possesses documents that he took from the White House, people familiar with the matter told NBC News on Friday. The department’s top counterintelligence official, Jay Bratt, recently communicated that concern to Trump’s lawyers, the sources said. The New York Times reported Thursday that the department believed Trump had not returned all of the documents he took from the White House. This was also confirmed by The Wall Street Journal. For more on this story, go to NBC News. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump May Have More White House Documents Justice Dept. Suspects
U.S. FDA Approves GSK's Boostrix Vaccine For Use During Pregnancy
U.S. FDA Approves GSK's Boostrix Vaccine For Use During Pregnancy
U.S. FDA Approves GSK's Boostrix Vaccine For Use During Pregnancy https://digitalalaskanews.com/u-s-fda-approves-gsks-boostrix-vaccine-for-use-during-pregnancy/ The Daily Beast Putin’s Own Allies Turn On Him as Ukraine Unleashes Hell in Stolen Russian Tanks Sergei Karpukhin/ReutersHot on the heels of embarrassing reports of Russian recruits fighting each other and Moscow loyalists calling for Kremlin ministers to kill themselves, it seems the rage against Vladimir Putin’s handling of his invasion of Ukraine is now openly being conveyed to the man himself by members of his own inner circle.A report Friday—which is Putin’s 70th birthday—said that one of the despot’s closest allies had openly challenged the disastrous way the war was being conducted. AdPrime Is Now $139, But Few Know This Saving Trick Think you’re getting the best deal when you shop online? Don’t buy a single thing until you try this — you won’t regret it. AdI Laughed When My Neighbor Put It On His Gutters First I called him crazy, but after a week or two and a heavy storm I realized I need this thing too. The way it works is ingenious, check it out… AdA Regular Mistake For Cars Used Under 50 Miles/Day Florida drivers are surprised they never knew this new tip. If you live in Florida, you better read this. AdThis Happens Right After Eating Avocado Toast Board-certified internal medicine and obesity specialist reveals what happens after eating avocado toast. The Daily Beast Court Screwup Reveals Mar-a-Lago Judge’s Latest Legal Absurdity in Trump Case Photo Illustration by Erin O’Flynn/The Daily BeastFirst, she stopped FBI special agents from even glancing at the classified documents they recovered from Mar-a-Lago. Then she appointed a special court referee that former President Donald Trump wanted to slow down the investigation over his mishandling of classified documents.But now, it’s clear District Court Judge Aileen Cannon already knew the Department of Justice was ready to hand Trump back a ton of personal records six days before she cla AdCanceled TV Shows: Effective Immediately See if your favourite TV show will be cancelled or renewed for 2022 Bloomberg Judge to Trump Lawyers Over Deposition: ‘Stop Wasting Time’ (Bloomberg) — Former President Donald Trump’s lawyers were told by a federal judge to “stop wasting time” after they tried halting the deposition of former White House Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham in a defamation lawsuit minutes after it began, citing her painkiller medication. Most Read from BloombergBiden Says Putin Threats Real, Could Spark Nuclear ‘Armageddon’Kremlin Lets State Media Tell Some Truths About Putin’s Stalling WarBiden Should Hit Saudi Arabia Where It Really HurtsMusk’s Tw Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
U.S. FDA Approves GSK's Boostrix Vaccine For Use During Pregnancy
We Cant Give The Crazies An Inch: Fox News CEO Warned Against Trumps Election Claims
We Cant Give The Crazies An Inch: Fox News CEO Warned Against Trumps Election Claims
‘We Can’t Give The Crazies An Inch’: Fox News CEO Warned Against Trump’s Election Claims https://digitalalaskanews.com/we-cant-give-the-crazies-an-inch-fox-news-ceo-warned-against-trumps-election-claims/ Fox News CEO Suzanne Scott warned colleagues of “the crazies” pushing false election claims on behalf of then-president Donald Trump in the wake of the 2020 presidential race. NPR reported that a lawyer for Dominion Voting Systems, one of the voting technology companies suing Fox News for defamation over lies regarding the 2020 election, said in a court proceeding this week that Scott issued a warning on election night after the network was the first to call the crucial state of Arizona for Joe Biden. “We can’t give the crazies an inch,” Scott said, per Dominion lawyer Justin Nelson. NPR’s David Folkenflik reported Fox’s lawyer did not dispute the account of those remarks: Fox’s attorney, Justin Keller, did not dispute the remarks attributed by Nelson to Fox News CEO Scott. Nor did he deny that executives sought to intervene in the two programs’ efforts to book Powell and Giuliani even though their claims had been discredited. Instead, he made a broader argument against allowing scrutiny of the executives’ contracts, saying that was unnecessary given how many documents the network has already turned over to Dominion. Fox News declined to comment when reached by Mediaite. Nelson also alleged that senior Fox executives tried to stop Lou Dobbs and Maria Bartiromo from hosting Trump lawyers Sidney Powell and Rudy Giuliani on their shows to repeat false claims about the election. Those attempts were apparently in vain. Powell and Giuliani repeatedly appeared on Fox after the 2020 election, and made absurd claims that are now at the heart of the two multi-billion-dollar defamation suits plaguing Fox. As NPR notes, the argument being made by Dominion is that Fox executives knew stolen election claims from Trump and his allies were false, but they allowed them to be aired regardless. That’s a case Dominion needs to make convincingly if they want prove defamation. Fox, for its part, argues its coverage of the election is protected opinion, and that is was simply covering claims about the election being made by the president and others. “As we have maintained, FOX News, along with every single news organization across the country, vigorously covered the breaking news surrounding the unprecedented 2020 election, providing full context of every story with in-depth reporting and clear-cut analysis,” the network said in a prior statement. “We remain committed to defending against this baseless lawsuit and its all-out assault on the First Amendment.” Have a tip we should know? tips@mediaite.com Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
We Cant Give The Crazies An Inch: Fox News CEO Warned Against Trumps Election Claims
Target Deal Days Offers Massive Savings On Tech Toys Small Appliances And More
Target Deal Days Offers Massive Savings On Tech Toys Small Appliances And More
Target Deal Days Offers Massive Savings On Tech, Toys, Small Appliances And More https://digitalalaskanews.com/target-deal-days-offers-massive-savings-on-tech-toys-small-appliances-and-more/ Fall has arrived, and along with the drop in temperature, prices are falling, too. Target has just launched a three-day sale slashing prices on top tech like TVs, headphones, wearables and more, along with deals for the home on everything from vacuum cleaners and small kitchen appliances to mattresses, apparel and beyond. You can even take advantage of buy one, get one 50% off Halloween costumes and accessories for kids and pets to celebrate the spooky season. This sale ends Saturday, Oct. 8, so cash in on big early Black Friday savings while you can.  We’ve gone through the sale and have highlighted a few great offers for you to check out below, but with so many prices cut by as much as 50%, be sure to shop the entire sale selection at Target.  Tech deals n “,”topic”:””,”ttag”:””,”searchDim”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”variant”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”viewguid”:””,”event”:”listicle|image|1″,”correlationId”:””,”_destCat”:”https://www.target.com/p/microsoft-surface-pro-7-bundle-12-3-touch-screen-intel-core-i5-8gb-ram-128gb-ssd-platinum-with-black-surface-type-cover-11th-gen-i5-quad-core/-/A-86741164#lnk=sametab”,”productName”:”Microsoft Surface Pro 7 Plus bundle: $690″,”formatType”:”IMAGE”,”location”:”LIST”,”position”:1,”sku”:””,”dwLinkTag”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”selector”:”#article-body #listicle-8320d1e8-e857-4ed8-8cda-3bcbd9656e95 .itemImage”}}” data-omitnoreferrer=”http://news.google.com/” href=”https://shop-links.co/link/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.target.com%2Fp%2Fmicrosoft-surface-pro-7-bundle-12-3-touch-screen-intel-core-i5-8gb-ram-128gb-ssd-platinum-with-black-surface-type-cover-11th-gen-i5-quad-core%2F-%2FA-86741164%23lnk%3Dsametab&publisher_slug=cnet&article_name=target%20deal%20days%20offers%20massive%20savings%20on%20tech%2C%20toys%2C%20small%20appliances%20and%20more&article_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnet.com%2Fnews%2Ftarget-deal-days-kicks-off-massive-savings-on-tech-toys-small-appliances-and-more%2F&exclusive=1&u1=cn-___COM_CLICK_ID___-dtp___OPTOUT___” rel=”noopener nofollow” target=”_blank” Microsoft This versatile two-in-one is ultraportable and comes with what you need to have in a tablet when you want flexibility and a computer workstation for bigger projects. With a 12.3-inch touchscreen, an 11th-gen Intel Core i5 processor, 8GB of RAM, and 128GB of solid-state storage, this is a mighty machine. It comes with Windows 11 and gets up to 15 hours of battery life per charge, helping you stay productive and connected all day long. And because it comes with a Surface Type cover, you’ll be able to use it however you need to as soon as your bundle arrives. n “,”topic”:””,”ttag”:””,”searchDim”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”variant”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”viewguid”:””,”event”:”listicle|image|2″,”correlationId”:””,”_destCat”:”https://www.target.com/p/apple-watch-series-7-gps/-/A-84736576?preselect=77640209#lnk=sametab”,”productName”:”Apple Watch Series 7 (45mm): $310″,”formatType”:”IMAGE”,”location”:”LIST”,”position”:2,”sku”:””,”dwLinkTag”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”selector”:”#article-body #listicle-ac74bfc9-2d5d-4549-938c-7179f396fa25 .itemImage”}}” data-omitnoreferrer=”http://news.google.com/” href=”https://shop-links.co/link/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.target.com%2Fp%2Fapple-watch-series-7-gps%2F-%2FA-84736576%3Fpreselect%3D77640209%23lnk%3Dsametab&publisher_slug=cnet&article_name=target%20deal%20days%20offers%20massive%20savings%20on%20tech%2C%20toys%2C%20small%20appliances%20and%20more&article_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnet.com%2Fnews%2Ftarget-deal-days-kicks-off-massive-savings-on-tech-toys-small-appliances-and-more%2F&exclusive=1&u1=cn-___COM_CLICK_ID___-dtp___OPTOUT___” rel=”noopener nofollow” target=”_blank” Apple The Apple Watch Series 7 is a fantastic smartwatch that allows you to stay connected on the go and stream music, take calls and keep up with fitness and wellness tracking right from your wrist. It also topped our list of best smartwatches for this year, though the new Apple Watch Series 8 does have some cool upgrades for the health-conscious. Getting the newest model will run you a little more, with the Series 8 coming in at $430 at Target.  Other deals on electronics: JBL Go3 wireless speaker: $30 (save $20) Beats Solo3 Bluetooth on-ear headphones: $100 (save $100) Lenovo 14-inch Chromebook (64GB): $130 (save $200) Apple AirPods Pro (1st-gen): $170 (save $80) LG SLM5Y 2.1 channel soundbar: $170 (save $50) HP 14-inch Chromebook (128GB): $250 (save $120) Sony WF-1000XM4 true wireless earbuds: $250 (save $279) JBL PartyBox On-The-Go: $280 (save $70) 2021 iPad Mini (64GB): $400 (save $100) Samsung 50-inch 4K UHD smart TV: $450 (save $120) LG 65-inch 4K UHD smart TV: $480 (save $100 + $25 gift card) Small appliance and kitchen deals n “,”topic”:””,”ttag”:””,”searchDim”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”variant”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”viewguid”:””,”event”:”listicle|image|3″,”correlationId”:””,”_destCat”:”https://www.target.com/p/kitchenaid-professional-5qt-stand-mixer-ice-blue-kv25g0x/-/A-53676345″,”productName”:”KitchenAid Professional 5 Plus Series 5-quart bowl-lift stand mixer: $280″,”formatType”:”IMAGE”,”location”:”LIST”,”position”:3,”sku”:””,”dwLinkTag”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”selector”:”#article-body #listicle-c4581add-aea8-4fde-bee7-0bc47de90358 .itemImage”}}” data-omitnoreferrer=”http://news.google.com/” href=”https://shop-links.co/link/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.target.com%2Fp%2Fkitchenaid-professional-5qt-stand-mixer-ice-blue-kv25g0x%2F-%2FA-53676345&publisher_slug=cnet&article_name=target%20deal%20days%20offers%20massive%20savings%20on%20tech%2C%20toys%2C%20small%20appliances%20and%20more&article_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnet.com%2Fnews%2Ftarget-deal-days-kicks-off-massive-savings-on-tech-toys-small-appliances-and-more%2F&exclusive=1&u1=cn-___COM_CLICK_ID___-dtp___OPTOUT___” rel=”noopener nofollow” target=”_blank” KitchenAid This mixer has 10 speeds that tackle dough, batter and more so you can handle nearly any recipe. It kneads, whips and mixes with ease and handles pretty big quantities when you have a lot you want to bake. Plus, you can get even more creative at mealtime with over 10 optional attachments — though those accessories are sold separately. Other great kitchen deals worth checking out: Rubbermaid 28-piece storage set: $22 (save $15) Oster 800-watt blender: $25 (save $25) PowerXL Vortex Pro 4-quart air fryer: $55 (save $25) Keurig K-Classic single-serve coffee maker: $90 (save $50) BergHoff 10-inch 5.2-quart covered nonstick pot: $110 (save $110) Ninja DualBrew coffee maker: $120 (save $80) BergHoff 8-quart cast-iron dutch oven: $185 (save $185) Ninja Foodi smart XL 6-in-1 indoor grill: $200 (save $100) Deals on Amazon products n “,”topic”:””,”ttag”:””,”searchDim”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”variant”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”viewguid”:””,”event”:”listicle|image|4″,”correlationId”:””,”_destCat”:”https://www.target.com/p/amazon-fire-tv-stick-4k-max-streaming-devicefire-tv-stick-4k-max-streaming-device-wi-fi-6-alexa-voice-remote-includes-tv-controls/-/A-82801903#lnk=sametab”,”productName”:”Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max: $35″,”formatType”:”IMAGE”,”location”:”LIST”,”position”:4,”sku”:””,”dwLinkTag”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”selector”:”#article-body #listicle-35fc7aaf-75ea-4db8-905b-4b91fa6ff014 .itemImage”}}” data-omitnoreferrer=”http://news.google.com/” href=”https://shop-links.co/link/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.target.com%2Fp%2Famazon-fire-tv-stick-4k-max-streaming-devicefire-tv-stick-4k-max-streaming-device-wi-fi-6-alexa-voice-remote-includes-tv-controls%2F-%2FA-82801903%23lnk%3Dsametab&publisher_slug=cnet&article_name=target%20deal%20days%20offers%20massive%20savings%20on%20tech%2C%20toys%2C%20small%20appliances%20and%20more&article_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnet.com%2Fnews%2Ftarget-deal-days-kicks-off-massive-savings-on-tech-toys-small-appliances-and-more%2F&exclusive=1&u1=cn-___COM_CLICK_ID___-dtp___OPTOUT___” rel=”noopener nofollow” target=”_blank” Our favorite Fire TV Stick on the market right now is the Fire TV Stick 4K Max. It’s superfast and supports both Wi-Fi 6 and Dolby Vision, Dolby Atmos and more. While Roku and Google also have good options, if you’re integrating an entire Amazon-powered hub with multiple smart devices featuring Alexa, this is a solid choice to upgrade your TV. More deals on Amazon-brand products: Amazon Echo Dot (3rd-gen): $18 (save $22) Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K: $25 (save $25) Amazon Echo Show 5 (2nd-gen): $35 (save $50) Amazon Halo Band activity tracker: $40 (save $30) Amazon Fire HD 8 tablet (32GB): $45 (save $45) Amazon Echo (4th-gen): $60 (save $40) Ring wireless video doorbell: $70 (save $30) Amazon Echo Show 8 (2nd-gen): $70 (save $60) Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids tablet (32GB): $70 (save $70) Amazon Fire HD 10 tablet (32GB): $75 (save $75) Amazon Blink outdoor camera (2-pack): $110 (save $70) More great deals for the home n “,”topic”:””,”ttag”:””,”searchDim”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”variant”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”viewguid”:””,”event”:”listicle|image|5″,”correlationId”:””,”_destCat”:”https://www.target.com/p/irobot-roomba-j7-wi-fi-connected-self-emptying-robot-vacuum-with-obstacle-avoidance-black-7550/-/A-83601290?clkid=b8480ce2Ne0d811ecb3aeef40c05dcfb1&lnm=1036126&afid=Narrativ&ref=tgt_adv_xasd0002″,”productName”:”iRobot Roomba j7 Plus self-emptying robot vacuum: $600″,”formatType”:”IMAGE”,”location”:”LIST”,”position”:5,”sku”:””,”dwLinkTag”:”article-body|listicle|image”,”selector”:”#article-body #listicle-38d2337c-8261-4008-9614-7bc28a262187 .itemImage”}}” data-omitnoreferrer=”http://news.google.com/” href=”https://shop-links.co/link/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.target.com%2Fp%2Firobot-roomba-j7-wi-fi-connected-self-emptying-robot-vacuum-with-obstacle-avoidance...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Target Deal Days Offers Massive Savings On Tech Toys Small Appliances And More
N
N
N https://digitalalaskanews.com/n-79/ Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
N
N
N
N https://digitalalaskanews.com/n-78/ Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
N
From Halls Of US Senate To Gainesville Sasse Gets Dueling Advice For UF President Job
From Halls Of US Senate To Gainesville Sasse Gets Dueling Advice For UF President Job
From Halls Of US Senate To Gainesville, Sasse Gets Dueling Advice For UF President Job https://digitalalaskanews.com/from-halls-of-us-senate-to-gainesville-sasse-gets-dueling-advice-for-uf-president-job/ John Kennedy  |  Capital Bureau | USA TODAY NETWORK – FLORIDA TALLAHASSEE – John Thrasher was a Republican state senator when he was named president of Florida State University in 2014, drawing the ire of faculty and many alumni who condemned what they saw as a purely political appointment.  But by the time he retired last year as president, he’d won over many of his early critics. And Friday, Thrasher said he was willing to share his strategy with U.S. Sen. Ben Sasse, the Nebraska Republican positioned to become next president of the University of Florida.  “Leave the politics on the front steps,” Thrasher told the USA TODAY NETWORK – Florida. “Deal with what’s in the best interest of the university and the students.”  Sasse emerged Thursday as the sole finalist of the UF presidential search committee, drawing a range of responses. Like with Thrasher, many fear a further politicization of a university where the chair of the Board of Trustees, Mori Hosseini, is also a top donor to Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis.  UF IN THE SPOTLIGHT Live updates: US Sen. Ben Sasse positioned to become UF’s next president An investigative report: How a Florida university system ‘stacked’ with mega-donors became ‘blatantly political’ A changing campus: Accreditor: Did University of Florida violate academic freedom standards by blocking professors’ testimony? Rising in rank: ‘We’re doing sustained good work.’ UF remains a top five public university A second-term senator, Sasse has been demonized by former President Trump’s followers for being among seven Republican senators who voted to convict him on impeachment charges following the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.  Trump’s parting shot at Sasse Trump on his social media platform, Truth Social, called Sasse a “lightweight senator,” and predicted, “The University of Florida will soon regret their decision to hire him.”  Thrasher, though, said there’s a way for Sasse to cut through any controversy he’s leaving or which may greet him in Gainesville.  “I focused on the things I thought we needed to focus on: Our fund-raising, our faculty salaries, and a lot of the other programs that were kind of under the radar for Florida State,” Thrasher said. “And I’ve got to give the Legislature credit: They gave us the resources to hire more faculty.”  Politics, though, certainly plays a role in Florida’s sprawling university system. Other prominent political figures who’ve led Florida schools include Betty Castor at the University of South Florida, Frank Brogan at Florida Atlantic University and John Delaney at the University of North Florida. Nate Monroe: The plundering of the University of Florida DeSantis team helps shepherd Sasse through the process Thrasher was helped by unswerving support from then-Gov. Rick Scott and Sasse also has been courted to UF with the help of those close to Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis.  Politico reported that DeSantis’ chief-of-staff, James Uthmeier, helped guide Sasse through the selection process after he’d expressed interest in the UF job.   Sasse, a former president of small Midland University in Nebraska, has a doctorate in history from Yale, a master’s degree in liberal arts from St. John’s College in Maryland, and an undergraduate degree in government from Harvard.  Sasse has written about the need to more closely tie public spending on universities to student outcomes, opposes student-debt bailouts that benefit wealthier Americans, and has called for new models in education that allow students to move from classrooms to jobs and back to school again.  He undoubtedly has gotten this far in the UF process with DeSantis’ blessing. Sasse’s selection also may prove another point of separation between DeSantis and Trump, whose support in 2018 helped elevate him to the Governor’s Mansion.  “As a successful former university president, national leader and deep thinker on education policy, Ben Sasse has the qualifications and would be a good candidate,” DeSantis’ office said in a statement.  Another strike against ‘woke’? State Rep. Randy Fine, R-Palm Bay, who has been a leader on education issues in the Legislature, also praised Sasse’s emergence.  “To get a leading conservative thinker as the president of our premier university is fantastic,” Fine said.   He added that Sasse’s conservatism will be a welcome addition in Florida academia. DeSantis and the state’s Republican leaders have already advanced laws and policies that many see as aimed at limiting liberal speech, programs and organizations on college and university campuses.  Back story: Florida students ignore lawmakers’ free speech survey; expert calls response rate dismal What does it mean to be ‘woke’? And why does Gov. DeSantis want to stop it? “I think he’s going to upgrade things,” Fine said. “I suspect that the University of Florida will lead the charge to rid itself of some of the ‘wokeism’ that still exists on our campuses. All this diversity, equity and inclusion nonsense by all these administrative positions. I think under President Sasse, you’ll see the university focus on education and not wokeism.”  The university has said it reached out to more than 700 prospective candidates in and out of higher education, eventually narrowing the field until unanimously recommending Sasse, 50, as the lone finalist.   A new exemption to the state’s open government laws, approved earlier this year by the Republican-controlled Legislature with the help of a handful of Democrats, allowed the search process to take place behind closed doors.  Fine said that was a good thing, helping open the process beyond “education bureaucrats.”  “I don’t think somebody like (Sasse) is going to turn in a job application at Monster.com,” Fine said.  Sasse’s eventual appointment as UF president will still take time. He’s said he plans to leave the Senate by the end of the year.  Sasse to step down: Nebraska GOP Sen. Ben Sasse expected to resign to become University of Florida president Among early reaction, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, tweeted a welcome to Florida greeting to Sasse, saying he is “brilliant, a consensus builder and will be a great leader of a great University.”  But some Trump acolytes are miffed.   State Rep. Anthony Sabatini, R-Howey-in-the-Hills, who is leaving the Legislature after a failed bid for a congressional seat, tweeted that Sasse is an “empty suit,” attaching a Fox News Tucker Carlson segment about the economic demise of rural America.  John Kennedy is a reporter in the USA TODAY Network’s Florida Capital Bureau. He can be reached at jkennedy2@gannett.com, or on Twitter at @JKennedyReport Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
From Halls Of US Senate To Gainesville Sasse Gets Dueling Advice For UF President Job
Attorneys Phil Brewster Of Brewster Law Firm And Patrick Mincey And Stephen Bell Of Cranfill Sumner Issue Statement Regarding Investigation Involving Former President Donald Trumps Trump Media & Technology Group The Parent Company Of Truth Social
Attorneys Phil Brewster Of Brewster Law Firm And Patrick Mincey And Stephen Bell Of Cranfill Sumner Issue Statement Regarding Investigation Involving Former President Donald Trumps Trump Media & Technology Group The Parent Company Of Truth Social
Attorneys Phil Brewster Of Brewster Law Firm And Patrick Mincey And Stephen Bell Of Cranfill Sumner Issue Statement Regarding Investigation Involving Former President Donald Trump’s Trump Media & Technology Group, The Parent Company Of Truth Social https://digitalalaskanews.com/attorneys-phil-brewster-of-brewster-law-firm-and-patrick-mincey-and-stephen-bell-of-cranfill-sumner-issue-statement-regarding-investigation-involving-former-president-donald-trumps-trump-medi/ WINNETKA, Ill.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Attorneys Phil Brewster, Patrick Mincey and Stephen Bell were recently discussed in a Miami Herald article regarding their representation of a whistleblower who exposed alleged securities violations involving Trump Media & Technology Group Corporation (“Trump Media”). Former President Donald J. Trump is the majority owner of Trump Media, which is the parent company that operates the conservative social media platform Truth Social. As discussed in the Miami Herald article, the whistleblower was one of the original founders of Truth Social, which was founded shortly after former President Trump’s permanent suspension from Twitter (NYSE: TWTR) because of the events of January 6, 2021. The Miami Herald article describes how executives from both Trump Media and its merger partner Digital World Acquisition Corporation (NASDAQ: DWAC) allegedly violated SEC regulations in the still-pending merger transaction. The article describes how Trump Media and DWAC have acknowledged investigations into the merger transaction by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the U.S. Department of Justice. The proposed transaction is intended to take Trump Media public in a deal originally valued at over $1 billion. “Our client remains committed to assisting investigators with his referral to the SEC Office of the Whistleblower,” Brewster, Mincey and Bell jointly said. “He also looks forward to an opportunity to work with members of Congress in their oversight capacity.” Attorney Phil Brewster is the founding partner of Brewster Law Firm LLC in Winnetka, Illinois, a firm dedicated to whistleblower matters and government investigations. Attorney Patrick M. Mincey founded and leads the White Collar, Government Investigations & Special Matters Group at Cranfill Sumner LLP in North Carolina. Attorney Stephen J. Bell is partner in the White Collar, Government Investigations & Special Matters Group at Cranfill Sumner LLP in North Carolina. ABOUT BREWSTER LAW FIRM LLC Brewster Law Firm LLC is dedicated to whistleblower matters and government investigations. For more information, visit www.brewsteradvisory.com. ABOUT CRANFILL SUMNER LLP Cranfill Sumner LLP serves clients in 28 practice areas. For more information, visit www.cshlaw.com. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Attorneys Phil Brewster Of Brewster Law Firm And Patrick Mincey And Stephen Bell Of Cranfill Sumner Issue Statement Regarding Investigation Involving Former President Donald Trumps Trump Media & Technology Group The Parent Company Of Truth Social
Arizona Democrat Mark Kelly Distances Himself From Biden's Border 'mess' The Pulse Of NH
Arizona Democrat Mark Kelly Distances Himself From Biden's Border 'mess' The Pulse Of NH
Arizona Democrat Mark Kelly Distances Himself From Biden's Border 'mess' – The Pulse Of NH https://digitalalaskanews.com/arizona-democrat-mark-kelly-distances-himself-from-bidens-border-mess-the-pulse-of-nh/ Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images (PHOENIX) — In the first and likely only debate for the Arizona Senate race, Democrat Mark Kelly pitched himself to independent voters as someone who can stand up to President Joe Biden and his own party, particularly on border security. “When Democrats are wrong, like on the border, I call them out on it, because I’m always going to stick up for Arizona,” Kelly said in his opening remarks on stage at Arizona State University’s downtown campus on Thursday. “When the Biden administration refused to increase oil and gas production, I told him he was wrong,” he offered at another point. The debate between Kelly, his Republican challenger Blake Masters and Libertarian Marc Victor comes just one week before early ballots are sent out in a race that could determine which party has majority control of the Senate next year, as polls show the race is tightening. “Two years ago, Mark Kelly stood right there, and he promised to be independent,” Masters said in his opening. “But he broke that promise.” Kelly, who won a special election in 2020 by getting more votes in Arizona than Biden himself, has distanced himself from Democrats’ messaging on immigration amid a record number of arrests or detentions of migrants at the southern border. That includes the Biden administration’s decision to lift Title 42, a controversial Trump-era public health order which cut down opportunities for migrants to make legal claims to avoid deportation during the coronavirus pandemic. “When the president decided he was going to do something dumb on this and change the rules that would create a bigger crisis, you know, I’ve told him he was wrong,” Kelly said. “So I’ve pushed back on this administration multiple times, and I’ve got more money on the ground.” Kelly called the situation at the U.S.-Mexico border a “mess” and said he supports some physical barriers at the border. Meanwhile, Masters emphasized Kelly’s record of allegiance to Democrats, asking Kelly about a vote against a GOP amendment to the Inflation Reduction Act that would’ve funded additional 18,000 border patrol agents. “There are votes that happen in DC that have nothing to do with Border Patrol agents that have might have the title on it and nothing happens,” Kelly offered. Masters called on Kelly to “respectfully resign” if he has truly done everything he can to secure the border. During the hour-long debate, the candidates also sparred over the 2020 election, inflation, abortion rights and water security. Asked if Biden is the legitimately elected president, Masters at first sarcastically offered, “Joe Biden is absolutely the president. I mean, my gosh, have you seen the gas prices lately?” before acknowledging Biden as the “the legitimate president.” But the political newcomer then pivoted into a conspiracy theory about how the FBI pressured Facebook and other big tech companies to censor information about Hunter Biden’s alleged crimes in the weeks before the 2020 election. Masters, who said in a campaign ad last year, “I think Trump won in 2020,” has softened some stances since beating out four other candidates in the August primary and conceded under questioning from moderator Ted Simons of Arizona PBS that he hasn’t seen evidence of voter fraud in the 2020 race. “I haven’t seen evidence of that,” Masters said, breaking from former President Donald Trump, who endorsed him over the summer. Kelly warned that the “wheels” could “come off our democracy” if candidates like Masters, who he says continue to questioning the integrity of American elections, win this November. On abortion — a hot-button issue in Arizona after a federal judge last month upheld a 1901 law prohibiting all abortions other than those necessary to save the life of the mother and mandating jail time for providers — the two candidates offered vastly different views. Kelly answered “of course” when asked if he’d vote to codify Roe v. Wade, and attacked Masters for his past statements describing abortion as “demonic” and “religious sacrifice.” “You think you know better than women and doctors about abortion,” Kelly said. “You can think you know better than seniors about social security. And you think you know better than veterans about how to win a war. Folks, we all know guys like this, and we can’t be letting them make decisions about us because it’s just dangerous.” Masters said he’s “pro-life as a matter of conscience” with “exceptions” and falsely accused Kelly of supporting abortion “up until the moment of birth.” He said he would support a federal “personhood law” to ban all third-trimester abortions — which Kelly called “code for throwing women into jail” — as well as Sen. Lindsey Graham’s federal abortion ban after 15 weeks. With inflation highest in the country in the Phoenix-metro area, Masters appeared most comfortable when grouping in Kelly with spending in Washington. “Joe Biden is spending like a drunken sailor and at every single opportunity Mark Kelly just says yes. He can’t say no to Chuck Schumer. He can’t say no to Joe Biden,” Masters said. “You never have to wonder which way Senator Kelly is gonna vote.” Early voting starts in Arizona on Oct. 12. Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Arizona Democrat Mark Kelly Distances Himself From Biden's Border 'mess' The Pulse Of NH
Jan. 6 Committee Schedules Next Public Hearing For Oct. 13
Jan. 6 Committee Schedules Next Public Hearing For Oct. 13
Jan. 6 Committee Schedules Next Public Hearing For Oct. 13 https://digitalalaskanews.com/jan-6-committee-schedules-next-public-hearing-for-oct-13-2/ WASHINGTON (AP) — The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol has scheduled its next hearing for Oct. 13, pushing the investigation back into the limelight less than three weeks before the midterm election that will determine control of Congress. It will be the panel’s first public session since the summer, when lawmakers worked through a series of tightly scripted hearings that attracted millions of viewers and touched on nearly every aspect of the Capitol insurrection. The committee had planned to hold the hearing in late September, but postponed as Hurricane Ian made landfall in Florida. The panel — comprised of seven Democrats and two Republicans — has not yet provided an agenda, but Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., said recently that the hearing would “tell the story about a key element of Donald Trump’s plot to overturn the election.” Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson, the committee’s chairman, told reporters last week that the hearing would touch on recent revelations about Save America PAC, Trump’s chief fundraising vehicle. It is facing legal scrutiny after the Justice Department issued a round of grand jury subpoenas that sought information about the political action committee’s fundraising practices. The hearing is also expected to include never-before-seen interview footage of witnesses the committee has deposed since late July. That could include Virginia “Ginni” Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, who was interviewed last week behind closed doors. The committee probed Thomas about her role in trying to help Trump overturn his election defeat, including her correspondence with White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and lawmakers in Arizona and Wisconsin in the weeks after the 2020 presidential election. Throughout its initial eight hearings, the committee has sought to show the American public in expansive detail how Trump ignored many of his closest advisers to pursue false claims of election fraud after he lost the election to Democrat Joe Biden, then failed to act when his rhetoric spurred a mob assault on the Capitol. Some of the more than 1,000 witnesses interviewed by the panel — a number of them Trump’s closest allies — recounted in videotaped testimony how the former president sat idly when hundreds of his supporters violently attacked the Capitol as Congress certified Biden’s victory on Jan. 6, 2021. The committee is aiming to wrap up its work by the end of the year and issue a final report and legislative recommendations, but their investigative work is not yet complete as lawmakers explore several unanswered questions. Panel members still want to get to the bottom of missing Secret Service texts from Jan. 5-6, 2021, which could shed further light on Trump’s actions during the insurrection, particularly after earlier testimony about his confrontation with security as he tried to join supporters at the Capitol. Thompson said earlier this month that the committee has recently obtained “thousands” of documents from the Secret Service. Congressional investigators have also been interviewing several of Trump’s former Cabinet members, some of whom had discussed invoking the Constitution’s 25th Amendment to remove Trump from office in the aftermath of the insurrection. Another decision for the committee is how aggressively to pursue testimony from Trump and former Vice President Mike Pence. Some members have downplayed the value of taking that step and time is running short to request their testimony. The panel will have to wrap up the loose ends by the end of the year when the select committee status expires. If Republicans take the majority in November’s elections, they are expected to dissolve the committee in January. The panel plans to issue a final report by the end of December that will include legislative reforms it says would help prevent future attempts to subvert democracy. © 2022 Circle City Broadcasting I, LLC. | All Rights Reserved. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Jan. 6 Committee Schedules Next Public Hearing For Oct. 13
Kelly Criticizes Biden Masters Backtracks In Senate Debate
Kelly Criticizes Biden Masters Backtracks In Senate Debate
Kelly Criticizes Biden, Masters Backtracks In Senate Debate https://digitalalaskanews.com/kelly-criticizes-biden-masters-backtracks-in-senate-debate/ PHOENIX (AP) — Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly distanced himself from President Joe Biden on Thursday, calling the U.S.-Mexico border “a mess” and saying his party doesn’t understand border issues during his first and only debate against his Republican challenger Blake Masters. Masters, trying to back away from some of the hard-line positions he took during the bruising GOP primary, said there should be some limits on abortion but not a national ban, conceded after a few prompts that Biden was the legitimately elected president and acknowledged that he hadn’t seen evidence the 2020 vote count was rigged. For Masters, the debate was a chance for a reset in his first political campaign, with polls showing he’s trailing Kelly in a race that could help determine party control of the Senate. Kelly, seeking his first full term in office and cognizant of Biden’s faltering approval ratings, sought to portray himself as an effective senator who was working for solutions on the country’s immigration problem and Americans’ economic worries. On defense over an issue that Republicans have made a central plank of their bid to retake the Senate majority, Kelly said he’s stood up to his party when necessary to stem the flow of illegal immigration and drug trafficking. “When I got to Washington, D.C., one of the first things I realized was the Democrats don’t understand this issue,” Kelly said. “And Republicans just want to talk about it, complain about it but actually not do anything about it. They just want to politicize that.” He pointed to his opposition to Biden’s plans to end a pandemic-era program that allows for the speedy removal of immigrants in the name of public health. “When the president decided he’s going to do something dumb on this and change the rules, that would create a bigger crisis, I told him he was wrong,” Kelly said. The Arizona race is one of a handful of contests that Republicans targeted in their bid to take control of what is now a 50-50 Senate. Kelly, a retired astronaut and Navy pilot, first captured the seat in 2020, winning a special election to fill the remainder of the late Sen. John McCain’s term. Masters, a protégé of billionaire investor Peter Thiel, was endorsed by former President Donald Trump, who cited the candidate’s strident support of his lies about a stolen 2020 election. On Thursday night, Masters tried to pivot away from claims of a rigged election and instead blamed Trump’s loss on a conspiracy among powerful institutions. “I suspect President Trump would be in the White House today if big tech and big media and the FBI didn’t work together to put the thumb on the scale to get Joe Biden in there,” Masters said, claiming institutions conspired to bury news stories about material on a laptop owned by Hunter Biden, the president’s son. Ross D. Franklin/AP Republican Senate challenger Blake Masters smiles on stage prior to a televised debate with Arizona Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly and Libertarian candidate Marc Victor in Phoenix, Thursday, Oct. 6, 2022. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin) Under repeated questioning, he acknowledged that he hasn’t seen evidence that the vote count or election results were manipulated, as Trump has claimed. Numerous federal and local officials, a long list of courts, top former campaign staffers and even Trump’s own attorney general have all said there is no evidence of the fraud he alleges. Masters endeared himself to many GOP primary voters with his penchant for provocation and contrarian thinking. But since then, he has struggled to redefine his image for the more moderate swing voters he will need to win in November. Kelly drew from a pile of controversial statements Masters made during the primary to portray him as an extremist. He repeatedly hammered Masters’ earlier call to “cut the knot” and “privatize Social Security,” a plan that Kelly said would “send your savings to Wall Street.” Masters later scrubbed some controversial positions from his website. He now says he wants to protect Social Security for older and middle-aged workers while creating a private investment option for younger workers. On abortion, Masters said Thursday that he’s “pro-life as a matter of conscience” and believes states should be able to set their own laws on terminating pregnancies, but said he’d support federal legislation banning it after 15 weeks gestation. During the GOP primary, Masters said abortion was “demonic” and called for a federal personhood law that would give fetuses the rights of people. Ross D. Franklin/AP Arizona Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly, left, smiles as he stands on stage with Republican challenger Blake Masters, right, prior to a televised debate in Phoenix, Thursday, Oct. 6, 2022. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin) Kelly said abortion should be a personal decision and said he supports limits from Roe v. Wade, the U.S. Supreme Court decision overturned last summer that guaranteed a right to an abortion. “I think we all know guys like this, guys that think they know better than everyone about everything,” Kelly said, turning to Masters. “You think you know better than women and doctors about abortion.” Masters tried to pierce Kelly’s image as an independent moderate willing to work across the aisle. He said Kelly has failed to use his leverage to secure the border and is responsible for rising prices that are forcing families to make tough decisions. The Phoenix metro area has been the hardest hit nationally by inflation, according to an analysis by the personal finance website WalletHub. “Two years ago Mark Kelly stood right there and he promised to be independent,” Masters said in his opening statement, calling Kelly a reliable vote for Biden’s agenda. “But he broke that promise.” For Masters, the debate was a chance to go on the offensive against Kelly, whose popularity with independents helped him win two years ago in a state long dominated by Republicans. Thiel, who employed Masters for most of his adult life and bankrolled the candidate’s primary campaign, has not opened his wallet for the general election, though he has held fundraisers. A super political action committee controlled by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has pared back its own spending commitments. That has left Democrats an opening to define Masters on their terms. Masters met Thiel when Masters took a class that the billionaire taught at Stanford University. They wrote a book together, Thiel hired him and Masters eventually rose to senior positions in Thiel’s foundation and his investment firm. The debate came less than a week before early and mail voting begins in the state, the methods chosen by at least 80% of voters in Arizona in recent elections. Ross D. Franklin/AP Libertarian candidate for the U.S. Senate seat in Arizona, Marc Victor speaks to the media after a televised debate in Phoenix, Thursday, Oct. 6, 2022. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin) RELATED ELECTION COVERAGE: Arizona Senate debate gives Masters a chance to reset race Kelly, Hobbs face different prospects in crucial Ariz. races Sen. Kelly agrees to debate with GOP candidate Blake Masters on October 6 Democrats call Senate candidate Masters dangerous Masters hopeful for McConnell support in Arizona Senate race —- STAY IN TOUCH WITH US ANYTIME, ANYWHERE Download our free app for Roku, FireTV, AppleTV, Alexa, and mobile devices. Sign up for daily newsletters emailed to you Like us on Facebook Follow us on Instagram Follow us on Twitter Copyright 2022 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Sign up for the Headlines Newsletter and receive up to date information. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Kelly Criticizes Biden Masters Backtracks In Senate Debate
Is The Newspaper Endorsement Dying?
Is The Newspaper Endorsement Dying?
Is The Newspaper Endorsement Dying? https://digitalalaskanews.com/is-the-newspaper-endorsement-dying/ The Hartford Courant and Boston Herald had a similar message for readers on Friday morning, as publications owned by Alden Global Capital—the second-largest newspaper publisher in the country—began adopting a new endorsement policy. “Herald stands for the people, not pols,” read the headline of the Herald‘s editorial, which went on to announce that the paper would stop endorsing candidates in presidential, gubernatorial and Senate races, instead focusing its efforts on “more local contests, such as city councils, school boards, local initiatives, referendums and other such matters, which readers have told us continue to be of great value in their daily lives.” Earlier in the piece, the editorial staff offered some context for the decision. “As America’s political divide continues to deepen, the role of traditional news media as impartial providers of a common set of facts is more vital than ever,” the editorial began, citing the “increasingly acrimonious” nature of public discourse “with misinformation and disinformation on the rise.” At this particular moment, the Courant added in their editorial, the “partisan selection” inherent to endorsing political candidates “is counterproductive to achieving the essential goal of facilitating healthy public debate and building trust in our journalistic enterprise.” Alden’s new endorsement policy—and the planned editorial announcing it—was first reported Thursday by the New York Times, which noted that the editorial was “set to run in the newspapers that had traditionally endorsed candidates, not all newspapers in the Alden group.” Three Alden-owned newspapers—The Chicago Tribune, Baltimore Sun, and Denver Post—will proceed with endorsements this season “because of how far along in the process they are and because they are viewed as state newspapers of record,” per the Times; they’ll end the practice after this election cycle. The New York Daily News announced its new endorsement policy Thursday evening, shortly after the Times’ piece went up. Alden, a hedge fund that owns some 200 newspapers, isn’t the first major publisher to reevaluate its political endorsements amid in the public’s growing mistrust in media and an increasingly stark political divide.  Fellow local newspaper giant Gannett, for instance, has scaled back political endorsements as part of a broader downsizing and reimagining of their editorial and opinion pages, the Washington Post reported in June. A committee of editors from Gannett newsrooms nationwide reportedly recommended the company’s papers avoid making endorsements in presidential, House, and Senate races during an internal presentation to the company in April. “Readers don’t want us to tell them what to think” and “perceive us as having a biased agenda,” the committee said during the presentation, citing editorials and opinion columns as not only “among our least read content” but a “frequently cited” reason for canceled subscriptions. “Gannett-owned papers, apparently embracing the suggestions, have tweaked their daily opinion output. Others outlets broke with tradition in 2016 as they refused to endorse Donald Trump for president and instead supported Hillary Clinton—the first time the Arizona Republic supported a Democrat over a Republican in its 126-year history, and the first time Dallas Morning News backed a Democrat since World War II. In 2020, both papers said they would not endorse a candidate for president. This week, digital journalism professors Gregory Perreault and Volha Kananovich highlighted the ongoing debate around editorial endorsements in NiemanLab, pointing to their research findings that journalists see the practice as “somewhat archaic” and a “liability.” Back in 2020, one journalist told them, “Every four years we shoot ourselves in the foot.” Another noted that “political parties like to bash some news organizations, leading to viewers believing a news organization is biased,” and endorsements “can exacerbate those preconceived notions.” As of now, however, it doesn’t look like major national newspapers are switching gears. “The Times will indeed continue our longstanding editorial board practice of political endorsements at the national level, as well as New York state and city elections,” a spokesperson for the New York Times told Vanity Fair on Friday morning. “The Washington Post Editorial Board plans to continue endorsing candidates, providing readers with essential information about policies that align with our company values,” a spokesperson for the Post echoed, pointing V.F. to one of its most recent endorsements. A spokesperson for the Los Angeles Times said they were not aware of any plans to change its endorsement policies. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Is The Newspaper Endorsement Dying?
Dow Tumbles 500 Points As Rates Pop On The September Jobs Report
Dow Tumbles 500 Points As Rates Pop On The September Jobs Report
Dow Tumbles 500 Points As Rates Pop On The September Jobs Report https://digitalalaskanews.com/dow-tumbles-500-points-as-rates-pop-on-the-september-jobs-report/ Bitcoin falls with stocks after jobs report The crypto market fell with stocks after the highly anticipated jobs report showed the labor market is still tight and could keep the Federal Reserve on course to raise rates aggressively. Just after 1:00 p.m. ET the price of bitcoin fell 3.3% to $19,380.74, according to Coin Metrics. Ether fell 2.7% to $1,322.40. “The jobs report points to no change of tune on the horizon for the Fed, so we continue to expect firm interest rates which also adds pressure to crypto markets,” said Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment strategist at BMO Wealth Management.   Cryptocurrencies’ correlation with stocks has weakened in recent weeks but remains high. — Tanaya Macheel Oil rally continues Oil continued to pop Friday following OPEC+’s decision to cut supply. U.S. West Texas Intermediate, known in short as WTI, crude was up 4.3%. That translates to an increase of $3.80 to $92.24. Brent crude was up $3.63, or 3.8%, to $98.05 a barrel. Both remain on track to post another week of gains following last week’s performance. Those rallies are up from earlier in the trading day, when each was up below 2%. — Alex Harring FedEx shares fall on lower forecasts FedEx shares dropped nearly 3% after Reuters reported the shipping giant’s ground division expects to lower volume forecasts, citing an internal memo. Just last month, FedEx withdrew its financial forecast due to a global demand slowdown. — Yun Li The only bull market this week might just be in the energy complex Asset prices may feel soft everywhere this week, but not in the oil patch. Maybe it has to do with OPEC+ agreeing midweek to cut future crude oil production. Early Friday, before September’s nonfarm payrolls were reported, November West Texas Intermediate crude oil contracts had risen above $90 a barrel and were 13% higher on the week. That means WTI was on pace for the biggest weekly gain since early March, shortly after Russia attacked Ukraine on Feb. 24. Look at individual stocks early Friday. Premarket, Exxon Mobil was higher by 17.6% in just the first four days of this week, on pace for its best week since at least 1972. That was the same year Standard Oil of New Jersey changed its name to Exxon. Marathon Oil had soared 26.5% in the first four days of the week and Halliburton was higher by 22.5%. For both of them, it was the strongest weekly performance since June 2020, and there was still one more trading day to go. The Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF had gained 15% week-to-date, on track for its best week since November 2020. November heating oil futures contracts were up almost 17% week-to-date and were on pace for the strongest weekly gain since late April. — Scott Schnipper and Gina Francolla Path to soft landing looks more challenging after jobs report, Lazard’s Temple says The Federal Reserve’s goal of achieving a soft landing for the U.S. economy amid rate hikes to tame high inflation is looking less likely amid continued labor market strength, according to Ron Temple, head of U.S. equity strategy at Lazard Asset Management. “While job growth is slowing, the US economy remains far too hot for the Fed to achieve its inflation target,” Temple said in a Friday note. “The path to a soft landing keeps getting more challenging.” The Friday jobs report showed that employers added 263,000 jobs in September and that the unemployment rate fell to 3.5%. That’s a relatively strong labor market, even if job gains are slowing. It means the Fed will likely be aggressive with interest rate hikes going forward. “If there are any doves left on the FOMC, today’s report might have further thinned their ranks,” said Temple. —Carmen Reinicke Employment data unlikely to push Fed off course, economist says Friday’s employment data shows the job market is heading in the right direction, said Andrew Hunter, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics. But he doesn’t see it as convincing to the Federal Reserve to change course from its strategy of raising rates as a means to fight inflation. “The 263,000 gain in non-farm payrolls in September is another signal that labor market conditions are cooling,” Hunter said. “But with the unemployment rate dropping back to 3.5% the report is unlikely to significantly alter the Fed’s view that the labor market is ‘out of balance.'” — Alex Harring Oil hits $90 per barrel, heating oil also jumps Oil prices are surging following OPEC+ major production cut announced Wednesday. West Texas Intermediate crude for November delivery hit $90 per barrel, the highest level since Sept. 14. The commodity is up almost 13% this week and is on track for its best week since March 4. Brent crude is also higher today, up 1.35% at $95.69 per barrel. Heating oil has also jumped, hitting 3.9478, its highest level since Aug. 30. Heating oil is up nearly 17% this week, on pace for the biggest weekly gain since April 29. Shares of major energy companies also gained with the price of oil. The Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund is up 15% this week, on pace for its best week since Nov. 13, 2020. Exxon is up 17.62% this week, its best weekly performance since 1972. Marathon Oil is up more than 26% this week, and Halliburton is up more than 22% in the same timeframe. It’s both company’s best week since June 5, 2020. —Carmen Reinicke, Gina Francolla U.S. jobs growth slows in September to 263,000 The U.S. economy added 263,000 jobs in September, slightly below a Dow Jones estimate of 275,000. The unemployment rate came in at 3.5%, down from 3.7% in the previous month. Click here to read more. — Jeff Cox BMO Capital Markets still sees an up year for the S&P 500 Stocks’ decline starting in mid-August has been “more severe and longer lasting” than analysts at BMO Capital Markets anticipated, but investors should keep calm and carry on, the firm said in a note Friday. “We advise investors to stay calm and disciplined and refrain from going into panic mode amid this selloff,” chief investment strategist Brian Belski siad. “Yes, the market has been volatile, and the path of least resistance has largely been to the downside in recent weeks, but we continue to firmly believe that the S&P 500 will finish the year higher than current levels with Q3 earnings results potentially being a catalyst for a more sustained market rebound.” Last week the S&P 500 capped the September trading month, ending lower by about 9% and finding a new bear market low in the midst of the losses. That drop marked the index’s biggest monthly loss since March 2020 and its worst September since 2002.   — Tanaya Macheel Goldman Sachs shares rise on KBW upgrade Shares of Goldman Sachs rose slightly in Friday premarket trading after Keefe, Bruyette & Woods upgraded the stock to outperform from market perform. The firm said the Goldman Sachs’ valuation based on tangible book value (TBV) looks attractive. “We are upgrading Goldman Sachs to Outperform from Market Perform due to an attractive valuation of just under forward TBV, strong TBV growth, improved capital allocation and potential near-term benefits of strong FICC results over what could be a volatile next few quarters,” Konrad wrote. Read the full CNBC Pro story on the note here. — Sarah Min Credit Suisse climbs after announcing debt buyback The U.S. traded shares of Credit Suisse rose 6% in premarket trading after the investment bank offered to buy back roughly $3 billion of its debt. Credit Suisse is also selling the Savoy Hotel in Zurich. The bank’s share price and debt have fallen sharply in recent weeks amid concern about how fast rising interest rates around the world are hurting the European financial sector. Credit Suisse is expected to announce broader strategic plan later this month. — Jesse Pound, Elliot Smith DraftKings jumps on potential ESPN deal Shares of DraftKings jumped as much as 9% in premarket trading Friday on reports that ESPN is nearing a new partnership with the sports betting company. The potential deal would allow ESPN to capitalize on growing demand for sports betting. Disney, which owns ESPN, has been searching for a sports betting partnership for the network for about a year and has said it will spend as much as $3 billion in an extended deal. Shares of Disney were little changed Friday morning. —Carmen Reinicke European markets retreat slightly ahead of key U.S. jobs report European markets pulled back slightly on Friday to round out a volatile week, as global investors await a key monthly jobs report out of the United States. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index was down 0.2% in early trade, with tech stocks falling 1.6% while food and beverage stocks gained 0.4%. – Elliot Smith Inflation could resurge if the Fed pivots too early, former Fed president says Former Kansas City Federal Reserve President Thomas Hoenig said the Fed could “reignite” inflation if it stops raising interest rates “too soon.” The Fed should not enter a rate-cutting cycle immediately after reaching the terminal rate, Hoenig told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia.” Officials have signaled their intention to raise rates to 4.6% by 2023. Speaking of the Fed’s cycle of rate hikes, Hoenig said, “They need to stay there and not back off of that too soon to where they reignite inflation, say in the second quarter [of] 2023 or the third quarter.” “They have a very delicate and very difficult period ahead of them in terms of decision-making,” he said. — Jihye Lee CNBC Pro: Fund manager says oil is in a multi-year bull market – and names 3 stocks to cash in Oil is in a bull market that’s going to last for at least six years, according to fund manager Eric Nuttall. The partner and senior portfolio manager at Ninepoint Partners, which manages more than $8 billion in assets, named three stocks for investors to cash in...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Dow Tumbles 500 Points As Rates Pop On The September Jobs Report
In Rural Alaska Haines Finds Connection Through XC
In Rural Alaska Haines Finds Connection Through XC
In Rural Alaska, Haines Finds Connection Through XC https://digitalalaskanews.com/in-rural-alaska-haines-finds-connection-through-xc/ * The Haines High School (AK) cross country team celebrates its 2021 state titles with a community parade. Photo Courtesy: Jordan Baumgartner/Haines High School “Living in Alaska, it makes it even more fun because you get to go through all of these challenges with a team, and it just makes it that much better.” Ariel Godinez-Long, Haines High School, Class of 2025 By Ashley Tysiac — MileSplit – – – Tucked away in the panhandle of southeast Alaska, just west of the Canadian border, the area of Haines exists nearly in a world of its own. As a census-designated place, Haines technically isn’t even classified as a town but rather as one of six communities comprising the Haines Borough. Situated on the Chilkat Peninsula and largely isolated from the rest of Alaska, Haines is lucky enough to have a portion of road connecting it to the state’s main highway system. Without it, the area would only be accessible by an hours-long ferry ride or air travel. But at the heart of the nestled-away community with a population hovering just below 1,700 lies three crucial facets of everyday life — tourism, fishing and high school cross country. Thank the Haines High School cross country program for the latter designation. The local team has swept both the girls and boys Alaska Division III state cross country titles twice in the past three years. Nearly a third of the entire 80-person high school student body laces up their spikes each fall for the cross country season to compete under head coach Jordan Baumgartner.  Making a commitment to distance running in the fall here is not something that comes with glamor. Cold temperatures and heavy rains can turn Alaska cross country courses into chilly mud pits. Then there’s the exhausting hours — sometimes days — spent going to and from meets spread out all over the vast state. But through cross country, the nestled-away Haines community finds itself intimately connected with the rest of Alaska, even if that entails the team traveling by ferry or taking double-digit-hour van rides just to make it to a meet start line. “Living in Alaska, it makes it even more fun because you get to go through all of these challenges with a team, and it just makes it that much better,” said sophomore Ari’el Godinez-Long, the defending Division III girls individual state champion.  On Saturday, Haines will line up with the state’s best racers at the Alaska State Cross Country Championships following a 16-hour van trek to Anchorage with the hopes of defending their titles. Maybe more importantly, though, is this team, which embodies a close-knit charisma and charm, and its motivations, which pushes them to not only to success on the course but foster deeper connections among themselves and the rest of the Alaska cross country community. “You can see that in our team,” Baumgartner said. “The way our town behaves is pretty much how our kids behave.” WATCH LIVE: ALASKA STATE CHAMPIONSHIPS BEGINS AIRING AT 2 P.M. EST ON SATURDAY ◎ ◎ ◎ Embracing Unorthodox Obstacles Only a day removed from the long trip home from the 2021 state cross country championships, the whole Haines community lined Main Street, more than ready to start the party. Twenty-something athletes and coaches jumped into the backs of pickup trucks and on top of a fire truck as part of a parade of vehicles including a police car and ambulance rolling down the street. Dressed in forest green team gear, they hoisted their state championship plaques up in the air to the delight of cheering parents, friends and families. Students from the local Haines Elementary School held homemade, neon-green signs and chased after the fire truck as it made its parade rounds. All the pomp and circumstance came with good reason. Haines dominated the small school division team competition at the Alaska state meet last year, scoring just 34 points to win the girls race and a low 38 total for the boys title. The winning didn’t stop with the team race — Godinez-Long crossed the line first in 20:31.10 to win the girls individual championship in her first-ever high school cross country season.  It’s a Haines tradition now to celebrate state cross country championships with community-wide camaraderie. That began in 2019 with the team’s first title wins, with Baumgartner at the helm. All of that fanfare is central to the identity of the Haines community, he said. “Some places, it’s just a city. You’re just another number,” he said. “But here, you’re a somebody, you’re supported.” Even when you take away all of the cheers and parades and shift focus to the everyday routine of the Haines cross country athlete — full of its own unorthodox challenges — that backing from the community remains.  When the now-senior Avari Getchell first moved to Haines in middle school and joined the cross country team, she said she expected a utopia for distance running — perfect weather, surreal scenery, mountain peaks and short-but-fun weekend trips to meets with teammates. But that’s not the reality she and her Haines cross country runners have come to grapple with. “It’s a totally different experience than I think most people go through with athletics,” Getchell said. Weather is less-than-optimal for training and racing conditions. Especially in southeastern Alaska, consistent rain and chilly temperatures come as early as August and September and don’t always prove favorable — or enjoyable — for practices and fast racing. And then there’s the travel. Since Haines is so secluded, it makes for marathon-like trips across the state, and that includes events in the more immediate surrounding area. Just to make it to the Region V Championships last week in the town of Sitka, for instance, the team had to catch a four and a half-hour ferry ride south to Junaeu and then take another ferry from there. That’s just part of being a Haines cross country runner, Getchell said. High schoolers here don’t take those opportunities for granted. “On top of being on this team, you keep on track with all of your school work, and you just become a really well-seasoned traveler with our experiences,” Getchell said, “And you get that motivation and that determination to have a good race no matter what the weather is doing as well.” One would think a laundry list of obstacles would deter students from joining the program. But when you have a coach like Baumgartner eagerly walking down the school halls recruiting kids to join the program and preaching to his science classes the church of distance running, it’s harder for students to not sign up. Many of its athletes began in middle school, where Baumgartner’s persistence made lifelong runners out of teenagers just looking for something to do. “I didn’t know what cross country was,” said senior Grace Long. “Coach Baumgartner kind of did this thing where he was like, ‘Yep, you’re going to run.'” Most athletes on this past year’s state championship-winning team didn’t know exactly what they were getting into when they finally bought into their middle school teacher’s sales pitch. But the athletes can agree on one thing now — the combination of Alaska living and cross country running make for wild fall. “On top of being on this team, you keep on track with all of your school work, and you just become a really well-seasoned traveler with our experiences, and you get that motivation and that determination to have a good race no matter what the weather is doing as well.” ◎ ◎ ◎ Living And Training In Alaska  Getchell says she relishes trail running through the woods. Senior Luke Davis enjoys getting off the rooty dirt paths and running along the one highway, which connects Haines to the rest of the state. Long loves both track workouts at the school’s puddle-prone gravel track and training runs at Jones Point along the Chilkat River, despite having to clap and yell for bears along the way. But look no further than a weekend long run from earlier in the season to understand the truth of Haines cross country. In perfect Alaska fashion, the weather was dismal and rain pelted members of the team for entire long run run that took them through almost every trail in town. The trails suffered, and tree roots and mud trenches made for the sloppiest running conditions of the season. But the athletes couldn’t finish their long run without climbing to the top of what’s known as the “Sledding Hill” — a nearly 70-degree incline that marked the end of the run. Waiting at the top was Baumgartner, with rewards of Goldfish crackers, oranges and blaring music. After each runner crested to the top and was soaked in the sense of accomplishment, they turned to cheer on their teammates and munched on post-run snacks. That’s why cross country in Alaska can be so much fun, Baumgartner said. It’s about turning the most dismal moments into lasting memories. “They wait at the top and they cheer everybody on,” Baumgartner said. “It got louder and louder and louder for that last person that came in. Then we celebrate as a team, and that’s something our team does really well.” The bond extends beyond the run, too. Once or twice a year, Baumgartner and athletes take advantage of the beautiful scenery in their own backyard and go for team hikes. Long drives to meets turn into karaoke contests as teammates try to distract themselves from the exhausting trip, singing everything from Taylor Swift songs to the greatest hits of The Backstreet Boys. “Instead, we’re going to do karaoke together,” Godinez-Long said. “What else are we going to do for those 16 hours?” That work-and-play approach probably accounts for why so many students come out for the team year after year. That culture may be part of the reason for Haines’ consistent success at the state level. “It makes more kids join the team and stick with it, even w...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
In Rural Alaska Haines Finds Connection Through XC