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Ian Strengthens Into A Hurricane As Florida Begins Evacuations And Cuba Braces For Possible Floods
Ian Strengthens Into A Hurricane As Florida Begins Evacuations And Cuba Braces For Possible Floods
Ian Strengthens Into A Hurricane As Florida Begins Evacuations And Cuba Braces For Possible Floods https://digitalalaskanews.com/ian-strengthens-into-a-hurricane-as-florida-begins-evacuations-and-cuba-braces-for-possible-floods/ With Hurricane Ian growing stronger and marching northward, Florida on Monday began ordering evacuations and preparing for possible floods. Tornadoes are also possible late Monday and into Tuesday across the Florida Keys and the southern and central Florida Peninsula, according to the National Hurricane Center. A mandatory evacuation order was issued Monday for some residents in Hillsborough County, on the westernmost part of the Florida Peninsula. Emergency shelters were opened in the county, which includes Tampa. The latest on Hurricane Ian By late Monday afternoon, Ian was moving northwest at 13 mph and about 155 miles southeast of the western tip of Cuba, with top sustained winds increasing to 100 mph. Forecasters expect Hurricane Ian to hit Florida’s west coast as a major hurricane as early as Wednesday. Cuba said it was evacuating 50,000 people in Pinar del Río province, had sent in medical and emergency personnel and taking steps to protect food and other crops in warehouses. The center of the hurricane passed to the west of the Cayman Islands on Monday, but no major damage had been reported there. Follow along for NBC News’ live coverage of Hurricane Ian “We did not make this decision easily, but the storm poses a serious threat, and we must do everything we can to protect our residents,” County Administrator Bonnie Wise said. A major hurricane has not directly hit the Tampa Bay area since 1921, said Rick Davis, a senior meteorologist with the National Weather Service’s Tampa office. “The Tampa Bay area hasn’t seen this type of storm in decades, if not 100 years,” Davis said. “All the threats that hurricanes can have — we are definitely in the high-to-extreme category in all these threats.” In coordination with Hillsborough officials, MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, home to U.S. Central Command, has also announced a mandatory evacuation. The order is for “non-mission essential individuals” living in the westernmost part of the county, which includes uniformed service members, civilian employees and their dependents. This evacuation is set to be completed by Tuesday afternoon. Hernando County, about an hour north of Hillsborough, issued a voluntary evacuation order Monday for those living in low-lying areas and mobile homes. The order will become mandatory Tuesday morning. Shelters will also open Tuesday, and schools will be closed in the coastal county. Manatee County, south of Hillsborough, also announced a mandatory evacuation for some residents that will go into effect Tuesday morning, according to a news release. Tampa International Airport is bracing for “severe impacts” from the hurricane and could begin closing parts of its airfield and facilities as wind speeds increase. All airport operations will stop when sustained winds reach 50 mph. Cuba, Cayman Islands in Ian’s path Ian is expected to strengthen rapidly during the next day or so and become a major hurricane as it nears western Cuba, where it is expected to “produce significant wind and storm surge impacts.” The storm, which by late Monday afternoon was about 155 miles southeast of the western tip of Cuba, has maximum sustained winds of 100 mph, with higher gusts, the hurricane center said. A hurricane watch was issued along the west coast of Florida from north of Englewood to the Anclote River, including Tampa Bay, while a tropical storm warning is in place for the lower Florida Keys from Seven Mile Bridge to Key West, as well as Dry Tortugas Island. The center of Ian is expected to pass near or west of the Cayman Islands on Monday and near or over western Cuba on Monday evening and early Tuesday, the hurricane center said. “Ian will then emerge over the southeastern Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday, and pass west of the Florida Keys late Tuesday, and approach the west coast of Florida on Wednesday,” it said. Preparing for heavy rain, flooding, storm surge The hurricane is forecast to bring 8 to 15 inches of rain to central West Florida, 3 to 8 inches to the rest of the Florida Peninsula and 4 to 6 inches to the Keys. “Heavy rainfall is expected to affect North Florida, eastern portions of the Florida Panhandle, and portions of the Southeast, and Mid Atlantic regions Friday and Saturday,” the hurricane center said. The rain could cause flash and urban flooding mid-to-late week in central Florida, as well as across the Florida Keys and the peninsula, through midweek. Flooding and rising of streams and rivers over northern Florida and parts of the Southeast U.S. are also possible mid-to-late week. “Regardless of Ian’s exact track and intensity, there is a risk of dangerous storm surge, hurricane-force winds, and heavy rainfall along the west coast of Florida and the Florida Panhandle by the middle of this week, and residents in Florida should ensure they have their hurricane plan in place,” it said. In photos captured Sunday, residents in Tampa filled sandbags to help prevent against flooding ahead of the storm. People fill their allotted 10 free sandbags to prepare for the storm’s arrival in Tampa, Fla., on Sunday.Luis Santana / Tampa Bay Times via Zuma Press In Kissimmee, about an hour northeast of Tampa, a long line of shoppers waited outside a store in a race to stock up on supplies. A number of people carted several cases of water bottles out of the store. Before the hurricane reaches Florida, it is predicted to pass near or west of the Cayman Islands before it moves over to western Cuba. ‘Pray and hope for the best’ “Life-threatening” storm surge and hurricane-force winds are expected to hit parts of western Cuba starting late Monday, with Ian expected to be at or near major hurricane strength by the time it nears the region. Western Cuba could get anywhere from 6 to 16 inches of rain, the Cayman Islands might get 3 to 8 inches, and Jamaica could get an additional 1 to 3 inches, forecasters said. The rainfall may produce flash flooding and mudslides in higher-terrain areas over western Cuba. Water levels along the coast of western Cuba could rise to as much as 9 to 14 feet above normal tide levels Monday night and early Tuesday. A hurricane warning is in place for the Cuban provinces of Isla de la Juventud, Pinar del Río and Artemisa, while a tropical storm warning is in effect for the Cuban provinces of La Habana, Mayabeque and Matanzas. Authorities in Cuba suspended school classes in Pinar del Rio Province and said they would start evacuations Monday in preparation for the storm. The Cuban state media outlet Granma reported that authorities planned to start evacuating people from vulnerable areas early Monday in the far western province. “Efforts to protect life and property should be rushed to completion,” the hurricane center warned. Tropical storm warnings are in effect for Grand Cayman, while tropical storm watches are in place for Little Cayman and Cayman Brac. Cayman Islands Premier Wayne Panton urged residents to get ready for the storm and to check in on neighbors. He said that there was some uncertainty but that “history has taught us that we must prepare as best we can, and we must prepare for the worst and absolutely pray and hope for the best.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Ian Strengthens Into A Hurricane As Florida Begins Evacuations And Cuba Braces For Possible Floods
Florida State Plays Sweet Music At Schooner Fall Classic
Florida State Plays Sweet Music At Schooner Fall Classic
Florida State Plays Sweet Music At Schooner Fall Classic https://digitalalaskanews.com/florida-state-plays-sweet-music-at-schooner-fall-classic/ Florida State plays sweet music at Schooner Fall Classic Courtesy of Florida State Athletics For winning the Ninth Annual Schooner Fall Classic, Florida State head coach Amy Bond was presented with an autographed guitar by Trivia Covel and country music superstar Toby Keith – the tournament co-hosts. After their wire-to-wire victory at the Belmar Golf Club in Norman, Okla., no one would fault Bard and her Seminoles for riffing Keith’s breakthrough single, “How Do You Like Me Now?!” With Great Britain & Ireland Curtis Cup team members Charlotte Heath and Amelia Williamson headlining the roster along with freshman Lottie Woad, the reigning British Girls’ Amateur champion, rest assured there is a lot to like about this year’s edition of the Seminoles. Florida State shot a school-record 13 under par 267 in the first round and never looked back in Norman, winning the 54-hole event by three strokes over TCU. Oklahoma State (-7), Houston (-6) and Baylor (-4) rounded out the top-five. TCU’s Caitlyn Macnab claimed medalist honors with a 10 under-par score of 200, which was good for a one-stroke win over Karisa Chul-Ak-Sorn of Iowa State. Woad (-5; 8th) and Heath (-4; 9th) both finished in the top-10 of the individual standings. “From start to finish we played good golf,” said Bond. “We played well in a variety of weather conditions on a really good golf course. We didn’t get off the best of starts today but we finished well and that showed me that there’s a lot of heart within the girls on our team. “I’m happy for this group to get their first win. Congratulations to them for a great week of golf.” Florida State set the school record for a team score in a three-round tournament with its 828 team total, breaking the previous record of 829 when the Seminoles won the 2016 Schooner Fall Classic. As expected, Woad has had an immediate impact in Tallahassee and has been the ‘Noles top finisher in each of their first two events. She finished tied for fourth in the season-opener at the Cougar Classic held at the Yeamans Hall Club in Charleston, SC and then opened the Schooner Classic with a 5-under 65, tying a school record. She followed with rounds of 71 and 69 to notch her second consecutive top-10 finish. Heath’s 4-under 206 earned the two-time Curtis Cup team member her ninth career top-10 finish. The Seminoles also received strong play from promising freshman Jacqueline Putrino, who tied for 20th at even par 210 in her collegiate debut. Williamson finished in a tie for 27th place at 1-over 211 (71-70-70). — TCU Women’s Golf (@TCUWomensGolf) September 26, 2022 Macnab carded a final-round 64 (-6) on the way to a 54-hole TCU school record of 10-under 200 to capture medalist honors. The new mark surpasses the 54-hole mark of 203 she set last season at the Jim West Challenge. Macnab’s final round led the hard-charging Horned Frogs who shot 12-under on Monday to jump up into second place, just three shots back of the Seminoles. It was a good three days for TCU, which set a new program record with a score of 831 over 54 holes, besting last year’s record of 832 at the Jim West Challenge. About the Schooner Fall Classic The Schooner Fall Classic is held to benefit the OK Kids Korral, a nonprofit group that aids children with cancer and their families. The OK Kids Korral is a “home away from home” facility where children with cancer and their families can spend time either overnight or during the day, cost-free, while receiving treatment at nearby children’s hospitals. Amenities include overnight suites, daytime rooms, dining areas, game rooms, living rooms, a kitchen, a laundry room, and family resource rooms. It is designed as a relaxing, safe haven. ABOUT THE The Schooner Fall Classic 54-hole women’s college tournament hosted by the University of Oklahoma. Team (best four scores out of five players each round) and individual competitions. View Complete Tournament Information Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Florida State Plays Sweet Music At Schooner Fall Classic
17 Dead 24 Wounded In Russia School Shooting By Gunman With Converted Pistols And A Shirt With
17 Dead 24 Wounded In Russia School Shooting By Gunman With Converted Pistols And A Shirt With
17 Dead, 24 Wounded In Russia School Shooting By Gunman With Converted Pistols And A Shirt With https://digitalalaskanews.com/17-dead-24-wounded-in-russia-school-shooting-by-gunman-with-converted-pistols-and-a-shirt-with/ At least 17 killed in Russian school shooting At least 17 killed in Russian school shooting 00:18 A gunman killed at least 17 people and wounded 24 more after opening fire inside a school in the Russian city of Izhevsk, about 600 miles east of Moscow, on Monday, authorities said. The gunman took his own life. The government of Udmurtia said 17 people, including 11 children, were killed in the shooting. According to Russia’s Investigative Committee, 24 other people, including 22 children, were wounded in the attack. Russia’s Investigative Committee identified the gunman as 34-year-old Artyom Kazantsev, a graduate of the same school, and said he was wearing a black t-shirt bearing “Nazi symbols.” No details about his motives have been released. Kazantsev entered School No. 88, which teaches children from elementary age up to high school, armed with two “traumatic” pistols — non-lethal firearms often used by law enforcement — which had been converted to fire live ammunition. The weapons were obtained illegally, according to the regional office of the National Guard. Law enforcement officers inspect a classroom at School No. 88, in the city of Izhevsk, Russia, about 600 miles east of Moscow, on September 26, 2022, after a gunman opened fire in the school, in an image provided by Russia’s national Investigative Committee. Russian national Investigative Committee The governor of Udmurtia, Alexander Brechalov, said the gunman, who he said was registered as a patient at a psychiatric facility, killed himself after the attack. “Currently the investigators are conducting a search of his residence and studying the personality of the attacker as well as his views and surrounding milieu,” Russia’s Investigative Committee said in a statement earlier Monday. “Checks are being made into his adherence to neo-fascist views and Nazi ideology.” A short video released by police showed the gunman’s body, dressed in black, on the bloodstained floor of a classroom.  Law enforcement officers inspect an entrance to School No. 88, in the city of Izhevsk, Russia, about 600 miles east of Moscow, on September 26, 2022, after a gunman opened fire in the school, in an image provided by Russia’s national Investigative Committee. Russian national Investigative Committee Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said President Vladimir Putin “deeply mourns” the deaths and had ordered “doctors, psychologists, neurosurgeons and other specialists” to be sent to the scene. The regional governor, Aleksander Brechalov, declared three days of mourning. In: Shooting Breaking News School Shooting Russia Nazi Thanks for reading CBS NEWS. Create your free account or log in for more features. Please enter email address to continue Please enter valid email address to continue Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
17 Dead 24 Wounded In Russia School Shooting By Gunman With Converted Pistols And A Shirt With
Man Accused In 2016 Double Homicide Case Pleads Guilty
Man Accused In 2016 Double Homicide Case Pleads Guilty
Man Accused In 2016 Double Homicide Case Pleads Guilty https://digitalalaskanews.com/man-accused-in-2016-double-homicide-case-pleads-guilty/ ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – A man charged with killing a young man and woman in January 2016 pleaded guilty Monday to two counts of second-degree murder. Jamal Hall, 27, faced four counts of murder in total — two first-degree charges for “intent to cause death,” and two second-degree charges for “extreme indifference” — and pleaded guilty to the two second-degree charges. An official with the Alaska Department of Law told Alaska’s News Source Monday that Hall is scheduled to be sentenced for those charges on Jan. 12, 2023, once a presentencing report is finished. Hall is accused of killing Selena Annette Mullenax and Foriegnne Aubert-Morissette on Jan. 28, 2016. The two people — ages 19 and 20, respectively — were found dead at Point Woronzof in West Anchorage in the early morning hours. Hall was eventually arrested in connection to the killings in December 2016. His bail was set at the time at $1 million. Correction: This article has been corrected to reflect the accurate gender of one of the victims. Copyright 2022 KTUU. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Man Accused In 2016 Double Homicide Case Pleads Guilty
'Let's Get Right To The Violence': New Documentary Film Footage Shows Roger Stone Pre-Election Day | News Channel 3-12
'Let's Get Right To The Violence': New Documentary Film Footage Shows Roger Stone Pre-Election Day | News Channel 3-12
'Let's Get Right To The Violence': New Documentary Film Footage Shows Roger Stone Pre-Election Day | News Channel 3-12 https://digitalalaskanews.com/lets-get-right-to-the-violence-new-documentary-film-footage-shows-roger-stone-pre-election-day-news-channel-3-12/ By Zachary Cohen, Holmes Lybrand and Jackson Grigsby, CNN The day before the 2020 election, Roger Stone, the long-time Republican operative and ally of former President Donald Trump, said in front of a documentary film crew that he had no interest in waiting to tally actual votes before contesting the election results. “F**k the voting, let’s get right to the violence,” Stone can be heard saying, according to footage provided by a Danish documentary film crew and obtained by CNN. The clip is one of multiple pieces of footage obtained by CNN that the filmmakers also shared with the House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol. The filmmakers tell CNN they came to an agreement to share certain clips with the committee after a subpoena for the footage was signed by the panel’s chairman, Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, and delivered to the filmmakers in Copenhagen about two months ago. The filmmakers, Christoffer Guldbrandsen and Frederik Marbell, followed Stone for portions of about three years for their documentary film. The footage shared with the committee may be incorporated into its upcoming hearing this week. Committee member Rep. Jamie Raskin, a Maryland Democrat, suggested publicly over the weekend that the panel has more to reveal about the connection between Stone and domestic extremist groups, as well as efforts to keep Trump in power after the US Capitol attack and the ongoing threats to democracy. “Stay tuned,” Raskin said at the Texas Tribune festival when asked about Stone’s possible connections to the Capitol riot. “He’s someone who I think saw where things were going,” Raskin said. In an exclusive interview with CNN’s Don Lemon, the filmmakers said the committee appeared interested in footage that focused on Stone’s relationship with the White House, and also his alleged ties to the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys. The filmmakers said they were not able to establish a link between Stone, those groups and the White House. Members of the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys face multiple charges — including seditious conspiracy — for their actions during the Capitol riot. The trial for several Oath Keepers, including their leader Stewart Rhodes, will begin with jury selection on Tuesday. When committee investigators traveled to Denmark to review documentary footage related to Stone, they came to agreement with the filmmakers to share 8 minutes of video that were of interest to the panel and within the scope of its investigation. Politico first reported that trip in August. The film crew was also contacted by the FBI in March and has not shared footage with federal investigators, the filmmakers said. The FBI did not issue the crew a subpoena, they said. In a second clip of the documentary, also obtained by CNN, Stone said that Trump should prematurely claim victory on election night 2020. “I really do suspect it’ll still be up in the air. When that happens, the key thing to do is to claim victory. Possession is nine tenths of the law, no we won,” Stone said on November 1, 2020, according to the footage. In another clip, filmed a week after January 6, Stone is seen criticizing the White House Counsel’s Office for what he described as their argument that Trump could not provide preemptive pardons to Stone and others for their alleged involvement in efforts to overturn the election. “I believe the President is for it. The obstacles are these — are these lily livered, weak kneed, bureaucrats in the White House Counsel’s Office and now they must be crushed because they’ve told the President something that’s not true,” Stone says in the clip. Stone disputed the authenticity of the footage. “I challenge the accuracy and the authenticity of these videos and believe they have been manipulated and selectively edited. I also point out that the filmmakers do not have the legal right to use them. How ironic that Kim Kardashian and I are both subjected to computer manipulated videos on the same day,” Stone said in a statement to CNN. “The excerpts you provided below prove nothing, certainly they do not prove I had anything to do with the events of January 6th. That being said, it clearly shows I advocated for lawful congressional and judicial options,” he added. It’s unclear what the committee may have uncovered, but there are some basic details that are known of Stone’s whereabouts and involvement in the events surrounding January 6. On January 5, the day before the Capitol attack, members of the far-right militia group the Oath Keepers provided security for Stone during a rally that day, including driving him around on a golf cart. Stone also had contacts with the Proud Boys, a right-wing group known for street violence, and has been recorded reciting the group’s creed in a video released by the House select committee. According to former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson’s testimony to the committee this summer, the night before January 6, Trump told then-chief of staff Mark Meadows to ask Stone and former national security adviser Michael Flynn what was going to happen on January 6. Hutchinson testified that Meadows called Stone and Flynn that evening and tried to go to Washington’s Willard Hotel, where Trump supporters — including Stone — had set up a “war room.” Stone, who attended the “Stop the Steal” rally on January 6, has not been charged with a crime related to the Capitol attack. The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
'Let's Get Right To The Violence': New Documentary Film Footage Shows Roger Stone Pre-Election Day | News Channel 3-12
Top 8 Today
Top 8 Today
Top 8 Today https://digitalalaskanews.com/top-8-today-2/ Top eight stories for today including the war in Ukraine may be turning into a unifying cause for Russia’s 142 million inhabitants; Details from a leaked uncensored government report reveal a harrowing new account of the 2014 Ayotzinapa massacre in Mexico; An en banc Ninth Circuit declared California’s ban on private immigration detention facilities unconstitutional, and more. National Wisconsin Republican sues to avoid testifying in Jan. 6 probe The most powerful Republican in the Wisconsin Legislature on Sunday sued the U.S. House of Representatives’ committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by a mob of Donald Trump supporters to enjoin the committee from forcing him to testify regarding a conversation he had with Trump this summer about overturning the 2020 election results. Wisconsin Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, speaks at the Wisconsin State Capitol in Madison on Jan. 12, 2021. (Amber Arnold/Wisconsin State Journal via AP, File) Regional En banc Ninth Circuit guts California ban on for-profit detention facilities An en banc Ninth Circuit declared California’s ban on private immigration detention facilities unconstitutional Monday, finding it violates the supremacy clause which prohibits states from “interfering with or controlling the operations of the federal government.” ‘Horrible facts’: Experts weigh in on case of woman charged with burying body after late-term abortion A Nebraska judge on Monday scheduled a January trial for an 18-year-old woman accused of having a late-term medication abortion and burying the body of the fetus. International Mobilization, school shooting stir Russians into war mood The war in Ukraine may be turning into a unifying cause for Russia and its 142 million inhabitants with signs that thousands of Russian men are signing up for combat duty on the front lines following a mobilization order issued by Russian President Vladimir Putin last week. Leak details new horrors of Ayotzinapa massacre ahead of eighth anniversary Details from a leaked uncensored government report published Saturday reveal a harrowing new account of the 2014 Ayotzinapa massacre that resulted in the murders and disappearances of 43 students from a teachers’ college in rural Guerrero. Asylum deal with Rwanda sparks political unrest in Denmark In Denmark, stark political disagreements between the governing Social Democratic party and its main supporter, the Danish Social Liberal Party, have again sparked over plans to cooperate with Rwanda on a reception center for asylum seekers. Far-right Meloni wins Italian elections, set to be first female prime minister European Union politics took a huge lurch to the right on Sunday after an Italian neo-fascist party won parliamentary elections, an outcome showing Italians are ready to see if a new formula can turn around a country beaten down by economic stagnation, high unemployment and geopolitical frustrations. Central African Republic militia leader pleads not guilty to war crimes A senior militia leader charged with torturing political prisoners and keeping them in a hole under his office pleaded not guilty Monday to charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.  Read the Top 8 Sign up for the Top 8, a roundup of the day’s top stories delivered directly to your inbox Monday through Friday. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Top 8 Today
Right-Wing Victory In Italy Expected To Bring Swift Changes To Migration
Right-Wing Victory In Italy Expected To Bring Swift Changes To Migration
Right-Wing Victory In Italy Expected To Bring Swift Changes To Migration https://digitalalaskanews.com/right-wing-victory-in-italy-expected-to-bring-swift-changes-to-migration/ ROME — For years, Giorgia Meloni has railed against Italy’s migration policies, calling them overly lenient and saying they risk turning the country into the “refugee camp of Europe.” Now that she is Italy’s presumed next prime minister, migration is one of the areas where Meloni can most easily bring in sweeping change. “The smart approach is: You come to my house according to my rules,” Meloni, of the far-right Fratelli d’Italia party, said earlier this month in an interview with The Washington Post. Her ideas, taken together, figure to significantly tighten the doors to one of the European Union’s front-line destinations for undocumented immigrants. While in other areas — like spending and foreign policy — Meloni would be more constrained by Europe, E.U. countries have plenty of leeway to handle their external borders, and she has long made it clear that halting flows of people across the Mediterranean is one of her priorities. But that doesn’t mean it will be complication-free. Efforts to block humanitarian rescue vessels from docking at Italian ports could prompt legal challenges. And if Meloni chokes off pathways to Italy, the volume of crossings would probably increase to other Mediterranean countries such as Spain — as happened three years ago when Italy was briefly led by an anti-immigration, populist government. “You can do stuff relatively quickly [on migration] that is draconian, symbolic and sends a clear message: We’re here, we’re doing something. But there’s trouble in store,” said Andrew Geddes, director of the Migration Policy Center at the European University Institute in Florence. “When you stop the crossings and divert them [elsewhere], that is where you get into conflict with the E.U.,” he said. “It will breathe life into an old conflict.” Meloni’s party received more support than any other group in national elections on Sunday, obtaining a clear mandate to lead Italy’s next government and placing Meloni in position to become prime minister. During the short campaign, coming after the collapse of Mario Draghi’s unity government, immigration policy was low among the priorities, given soaring energy bills, a looming recession in Europe and other acute issues stemming from Russia’s war in Ukraine. But immigration still strikes a chord with many right-leaning voters in Italy, who feel their country has received scant help from Europe in handling the burden of accommodating and integrating new arrivals. A surge of asylum seekers and refugees in 2015 and 2016 turned migration for several years into a political touchstone and helped spark a nationalist movement across Europe. Though Meloni’s party didn’t immediately benefit from those sentiments, she later siphoned votes from a rival Italian far-right group, the League, that soared in part because of the immigration backlash. Although millions of Ukrainians have sought refuge in Europe this year, taking advantage of special residency and work rights, immigration across the Mediterranean is nowhere near the numbers from seven years ago. To the extent that it has ticked up, compared with the rates from just before and after the pandemic, politicians allied with Meloni blame lax policies under recent governments, including Draghi’s. Jude Sunderland, an Italy-based associate director at Human Rights Watch, said people were opting for the journey for other reasons, including rising food prices and deteriorating conditions in their own countries. Meloni’s and the two other parties in her coalition said in a jointly released platform that they want to block rescue vessels from Italian ports as a way to stop the “trafficking of human beings” from Africa. Such a move would be a throwback to the period of 2018 and 2019, when Italian politics were dominated by then-Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, who vowed to stop the “invasion.” Salvini’s first move was to close off ports to the slew of nongovernmental groups that sail around the Mediterranean and attempt to rescue immigrants from their flimsy boats. His move led to protracted and risky standoffs in which boats with hundreds of migrants on board could find nowhere to dock, and sometimes spent weeks at sea while European countries negotiated over how to divvy up passengers. The practice pulled Salvini into four court cases — one of which is still ongoing, where he faces a sentence of up to 15 years if found guilty of kidnapping through abuse of office. Two other cases were dismissed, and in one instance the Italian senate used its power to prevent a trial. Meanwhile, NGOs saw their boats impounded and faced Italian legal challenges. Some experts said crossing the Mediterranean became deadlier during Salvini’s time: The number of arrivals to Italy dropped, but the number of deaths didn’t dip commensurately. “We do know it will be more difficult [again]. We do know it will be tougher,” said Mattea Weihe, a spokeswoman for Berlin-based Sea-Watch, one of the NGOs that handles rescue work. Weihe said that her group, with an eye on the expected far-right victory in Italy, had purchased a new rescue vessel as a “way to bring a different game to the table.” Meloni has also called, repeatedly, for a “naval blockade” of the Mediterranean. A spokesman for Meloni said Monday that such a move could only be led by Europe, and in cooperation with North African countries. In her interview with The Post, Meloni said “migrant flows need to be managed,” because “nations only exist if there are borders, and if those are defended.” She said that Italy had been giving immigrants few legal pathways, while instead letting migration be dominated by “smugglers” and “slave drivers.” “Is it a smart approach? No,” she said. “Letting in hundreds of thousands of people, then keeping them pushing drugs or being forced to prostitute themselves at the margins of our society isn’t solidarity.” She has suggested that Italy in cooperation with Europe should set up so-called hot spots outside of the E.U. where would-be asylum seekers and refugees can be vetted, with only those who are approved being granted passage. Politicians on the left and right have long talked about such ideas, but the obstacles are manifold: Few countries want to host such centers, and the possibility for rights abuses are rife. Britain is pursuing a related plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda, but its rollout has been complicated by court challenges. Within the E.U., several countries over the years have taken major steps to make it harder for undocumented immigrants to reach the bloc. Greece has been accused of intercepting migrants crossing from Turkey and pushing them back into international waters — a violation of international law. And Italy, in a policy supported by both the left and right, has worked to build up and equip the Libyan coast guard to pull back immigrants seeking to cross the Mediterranean. Even under Draghi, rescue groups faced obstacles, including delays at sea. But it was rare for them to be denied port access. Rossella Miccio, the president of Emergency, an Italian NGO that plans to begin a Mediterranean search-and-rescue mission next month, said that “there’s been too much across-the-board homogeneity in Italian politics” that sets aside “the priority of human rights.” She thought the climate would deteriorate further. “We’re frankly worried, not for our activity, but for the lives of people at sea in need of being rescued, as opposed to being stopped in their tracks and sent back,” Miccio said. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Right-Wing Victory In Italy Expected To Bring Swift Changes To Migration
Meredith Tax Feminist Author And Activist Dead At Age 80
Meredith Tax Feminist Author And Activist Dead At Age 80
Meredith Tax, Feminist Author And Activist, Dead At Age 80 https://digitalalaskanews.com/meredith-tax-feminist-author-and-activist-dead-at-age-80/ NEW YORK (AP) — Meredith Tax, a prominent activist and writer of second-wave feminism who challenged herself, her peers and the world at large to rethink long-held ideas about gender, race and class, has died. She was 80. Tax died Sunday, according to her friend Frances Kissling, who did not immediately provide additional details. Her death had been announced on Facebook by the activist Ariane Brunet. “A true activist who could perceive the importance of a women’s struggle anywhere in the world and would make damn sure we would know about it and join the cause,” Brunet wrote. “We are blessed that such a companion lived and refused to give up on life till death said ‘Enough you did your best.’” The life of Tax, born into an upwardly mobile Jewish family in Milwaukee, was often a story of self-discovery. She was a graduate of Brandeis University and a fellowship student in London who had dreams of a gilded career in the arts, “a glass cage,” before the 1960s politicized her, then radicalized her into “studying the world instead of literature.” Contentious even within communities of activists, she confronted Planned Parenthood and other abortion rights supporters over the issue of sterilization abuse and was thrown out of the Leninist October League after criticizing their treatment of women. She faced her own reckoning in the 1970s when she worked in a Zenith TV factory in Chicago and was the only white person on the assembly line. “The first thing I had to learn how to do was hard physical labor; the second was to shut up,” she wrote in a mini-autobiography on her blog. “I had always been such a bright girl, in love with my own ideas. Now I had to learn how to listen very deeply, listen the way people do when they are in the minority, taking in not only what people said but what they didn’t say, the changes in their voices, their body language.” Earlier in 2022, Tax lamented what she regarded as the lack of a feminist equivalent to Black Lives Matter and Occupy Wall Street. Writing in The Nation, she alleged that “young feminists concentrate on social media, blogs, and campaigns — an emphasis that entails paying a lot of attention to personalities, branding, and celebrity.” “While #Me Too is unquestionably a powerful movement against job-related sexual harassment and assault, it is not a membership organization, so there is no way for people who support it to ensure its consistency or change its public face,” she wrote. Rachel Carmona, executive director of Women’s March, disputed Tax’s perspective. In a letter to The Nation, she cited the massive 2017 gatherings held soon after President Donald Trump’s inauguration as “an example of online activism transforming itself into activism in the streets, on the ground, where and when it was needed most.” Tax’s books included the nonfiction “The Rising of the Women” and the novels “Rivington Street” and its sequel “Union Square.” She wrote for The Nation, The Guardian and The Village Voice among other publications, and has been praised for her 1970 pamphlet “Woman and Her Mind,” a founding text of second-wave feminism, in which she explored how society conditioned the behavior of men and women. “Men are taught to be active, to go and seek what they need; not to look pretty and wait for it to come into their vicinity. Men don’t observe each passing cloud over human relations as if their whole future depended on it,” she wrote. “There’s a reason for that. It doesn’t. Women are hyper-aware of their surroundings. They have to be. Walk down a street without being tuned in and you’re in real danger; our society is one in which men rape, mug and murder women whom they don’t know every day.” Tax helped found the PEN American Center Women’s Committee, the Committee for Abortion Rights and Against Sterilization Abuse (CARASA) and the Women’s World Organization for Rights, Literature, and Democracy (Women’s WORLD). More recently, she chaired the board of The Center for Secular Space, founded in 2011 “to strengthen secular voices, oppose fundamentalism, and promote universality in human rights.” Tax was married twice, most recently to the author and philosopher Marshall Berman, and had a child with each husband. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Read More Here
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Meredith Tax Feminist Author And Activist Dead At Age 80
Putin Grants Russian Citizenship To U.S. Whistleblower Snowden
Putin Grants Russian Citizenship To U.S. Whistleblower Snowden
Putin Grants Russian Citizenship To U.S. Whistleblower Snowden https://digitalalaskanews.com/putin-grants-russian-citizenship-to-u-s-whistleblower-snowden/ Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Sept 26 (Reuters) – President Vladimir Putin on Monday granted Russian citizenship to former U.S. intelligence contractor Edward Snowden, nine years after he exposed the scale of secret surveillance operations by the National Security Agency (NSA). Snowden, 39, fled the United States and was given asylum in Russia after leaking secret files in 2013 that revealed vast domestic and international surveillance operations carried out by the NSA, where he worked. U.S. authorities have for years wanted him returned to the United States to face a criminal trial on espionage charges. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Snowden’s name appeared without Kremlin comment in a Putin decree conferring citizenship on 72 foreign-born individuals. Snowden later issued a message, essentially an updated version of a November 2020 tweet, saying he wanted his family to remain together and asking for privacy. “After years of separation from our parents, my wife and I have no desire to be separated from our SONS,” the tweet read. “After two years of waiting and nearly ten years of exile, a little stability will make a difference for my family. I pray for privacy for them – and for us all.” The new tweet made no reference to the Kremlin leader’s decree, but it was attached to a 2020 Twitter thread in which Snowden said he and his family were applying for dual U.S.-Russian citizenship. Former contractor of U.S. National Security Agency Edward Snowden is seen on a screen during his interview presented via video link at the New Knowledge educational online forum in Moscow, Russia September 2, 2021. REUTERS/Olesya Astakhova The news prompted some Russians to jokingly ask whether Snowden would be called up for military service, five days after Putin announced Russia’s first public mobilization since World War Two to shore up its faltering invasion of Ukraine. “Will Snowden be drafted?” Margarita Simonyan, editor-in-chief of the state media outlet RT and a vocal Putin supporter, wrote with dark humour on her Telegram channel. Snowden’s lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, told RIA news agency that his client could not be called up because he had not previously served in the Russian army. He said that Snowden’s wife Lindsay Mills, who gave birth to a son in 2020, would also apply for citizenship. U.S. State Department spokesperson Ned Price said he was unaware of any change to Snowden’s status as a U.S. citizen. “I am familiar with the fact that he has in some ways denounced his American citizenship. I don’t know that he’s renounced it,” Price said in a press briefing. Russia granted Snowden permanent residency rights in 2020, paving the way for him to obtain Russian citizenship. That year a U.S. appeals court found the program Snowden had exposed was unlawful and that the U.S. intelligence leaders who publicly defended it were not telling the truth. Putin, a former Russian spy chief, said in 2017 that Snowden, who keeps a low profile while living in Russia, was wrong to leak U.S. secrets but was not a traitor. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Mark Trevelyan, Grant McCool and Rosalba O’Brien Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
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Putin Grants Russian Citizenship To U.S. Whistleblower Snowden
Small Businesses Get Creative As They Still Struggle With Hiring
Small Businesses Get Creative As They Still Struggle With Hiring
Small Businesses Get Creative As They Still Struggle With Hiring https://digitalalaskanews.com/small-businesses-get-creative-as-they-still-struggle-with-hiring/ By Ruth Simon | Photographs by Kendrick Brinson for The Wall Street Journal Sept. 26, 2022 5:33 am ET The economy is weakening, big companies from Ford Motor to Facebook’s parent are cutting jobs or freezing hiring and inflation is eating into household budgets. Yet for many small-business owners, finding workers is as difficult as ever. The challenges are prompting some entrepreneurs to seek more creative ways to fill labor shortages at a time when they might have expected hiring to get easier. Continue reading your article with a WSJ membership View Membership Options Already a member? Sign In Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Small Businesses Get Creative As They Still Struggle With Hiring
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D https://digitalalaskanews.com/d-6/ MEMPHIS, TN — On a hot, sun-soaked day in the mid-south, in old Liberty Stadium, North Texas dropped a game to future AAC competition. To Seth Littrell, it was a sign of hope. In the post-game discussion, he mentioned feeling like NT proved it can compete with the AAC, something that we all hoped was self-evident and should not have to have been proven to anyone. Certainly, beating those teams is better than simply competing with them. I see James Madison hitting the Sun Belt running, steam rolling newly interesting Middle Tennessee on the way to doing so. MGN was not happy to hear “we can play with those guys”. Liberty Stadium Memphis, TN For new readers, the fuller context of this dispatch is that MGN HQ is in the Midwest as of 2022. Memphis is a do-able 6+ hour drive from Denton, but only a 4-hour drive from MGN HQ in St. Louis, MO. We were able to take the kids to practice in the morning and make it at kickoff. There were better seats, but as with all old stadiums, there wasn’t a bad seat to be had. Not a bad view North Texas’ defense had a great day. After the Events In Vegas, questioning the defense and the starters and recruiting decisions and basically everything associated with the defense was fair game. A mediocre UNLV looked unstoppable and were in the second half at Allegiant. In this one, NT bucked up, forced a turnover, stuck close to receivers, and forced Memphis’ very good punter to show his quality. All told, North Texas outplayed Memphis in two of three phases, and played to a stalemate in the other. The deciding factor was turnovers. Two interceptions from Austin Aune –both returned for six. Both were ridiculously bad poor throws that came from poor decisions and poor executions. It does not matter. The third turnover was late after Memphis pinned NT back on another of those amazing punts inside the ten. The snap was poor, or the communication was bad, or something. The ball looked like it was headed for the running back’s face instead of the QB. Aune looked like he was trying to catch the ball, so it smelled of a fudge-up. Bad teams make these kind of mistakes. UTEP, being a bad team, found ways in week one to throw away good positions on the NT side. They misfired passes, or missed field goals. We knew it would be that way because they are a bad team. Bad teams have good days, so you can keep your “But Boise!” comments packed away. Bad teams can beat other bad teams and sometimes they can jump up and beat good teams. I mean, consider that last year a very poor NT team jumped up and bit a good UTSA squad in Denton. College football is funny, and played by something like thirty college dudes so it will lack consistency week-to-week. We are unsurprised that NT played much better after breaking down last week. They got a week better, their pride helped them tackle better, and defend better, and own the line of scrimmage for a good portion of the game. Austin Aune looked comfortable finding his dudes, he was dotting guys and making plays until he wasn’t. We noted that he might have something like a pitch count. After a certain number of throws he looks like a different quarterback. After Memphis scored to make it 41-20, it was glaringly obvious that the difference was simply in the quarterback play. The good that Aune brought was outweighed by the bad. The defense was holding Memphis to just 334 yards total — even if 219 came on the ground, it was later as they were grinding the clock and NT was trying to get a turnover. They did not get a turnover beyond the early interception and the 4th-down stop. It was a case of NT losing the turnover battle and paying for it. This game was otherwise entertaining. It is fun to watch your favorite team score touchdowns, and get stops, and do good things. It is fun to hear the silence of the stadium as J’yaire Shorter bullies his defender. If we can find a way to consistently unlock Maclin, Ward, Shorter, and Roberts we have the makings of a very good offense. Memphis is a good town, with good food and a lot of culture to take in. It will make a nice biannual destination for those so-inclined and able. For MGN, this was something like a spur-of-the-moment decision, dealing with some other scheduling items. The family made it work and had a good time. We had barbecue, rested, and made it back on Sunday for previously scheduled obligations. Next time, we’ll do some of the civil rights museums and more of Beale Street. We saw some Mean Green fans under the influence and had some Littrell talk while out and about. Good times. From Rendezvous in Memphis Fun facts about Memphis and other things I learned or re-learned while traveling: Yellow fever decimated the population twice, and it was all but abandoned by the upper and middle classes and rebuilt by the lower (black, and Irish) populations. In a tale as old as America, black people were then disenfranchised from about 1900 to the 1960s. The Liberty Bowl started in Philly (the Liberty Bell, etc) and moved to Memphis because no one wanted to be in Philly during the cold. The mid-south arena nearby was where they did a lot of Wrasslin’ (Mid South Arena is also known as the house that Lawler built). The whole complex hosted fairs and things but now is mostly just the Memphis football team. They are planning a big redevelopment that would make it better/nicer. You can see the outlines of a nice mid-century fairground while there. Otherwise it is a sea of parking lots which is not good. The stadium steps are fairly steep I wanted nachos and asked for jalapeños. The staff was confused and asked if I meant ‘chili’. Then they asked if I meant ‘peppers’. “Sure,” I said. “I call them jalapeños but yeah.” We had a laugh. My wife said the stadium reminded her of DKR, Rice Stadium, the Cotton Bowl, Neyland, and even the Benito Villamarín in Seville. I thought the same, but it is clearly newer as it doesn’t have that old “just urinate into a gigantic concrete well” thinking the old ones have. I saw the trolleys in action on South Main. I was underwhelmed. I wanted to hop on, but like, I could just drive, also. Not nearly as fun-looking as the ones in San Francisco. I think I am a Texas BBQ snob. The ribs were good, but not a lot of meat on there, and it was just dry. The brisket was tasty, but it weren’t no Texas brisket. I have had better from my backyard, and the best ribs I have had are still from a brewery in Little Rock, AK. The place we went is highly rated, though, and it was good. Just not mind-blowing. Mind not blown. I heard a lot more talk about ‘the Delta’ and I learned that the Mississippi Delta and Mississippi River Delta are two different things. Fun times. I also learned that the river actually met up with the Red River (of Texas-Oklahoma border fame) in the 15th century and because of clearing of a logjam, the US Army Corps of Engineers spent a billion dollars building a system to keep the Mississippi, Red, and Atchafalaya rivers flowing as they are. Read More Here
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US Forecast
US Forecast
US Forecast https://digitalalaskanews.com/us-forecast-88/ City/Town, State;Yesterday’s High Temp (F);Yesterday’s Low Temp (F);Today’s High Temp (F);Today’s Low Temp (F);Weather Condition;Wind Direction;Wind Speed (MPH);Humidity (%);Chance of Precip. (%);UV Index Albany, NY;71;49;67;50;A shower in the p.m.;SSW;8;61%;67%;2 Albuquerque, NM;80;59;82;58;Partly sunny, nice;E;6;37%;9%;6 Anchorage, AK;49;42;51;42;Clouds and sun;E;7;73%;50%;1 Asheville, NC;73;45;66;42;Plenty of sunshine;NW;10;41%;10%;6 Atlanta, GA;79;53;75;50;Sunny and pleasant;N;9;32%;2%;6 Atlantic City, NJ;74;60;73;55;Mostly sunny, breezy;WNW;14;44%;18%;5 Austin, TX;93;63;92;62;Plenty of sunshine;NE;5;28%;3%;7 Baltimore, MD;78;59;73;53;Nice with some sun;WNW;10;39%;16%;5 Baton Rouge, LA;92;61;84;60;Sunshine and nice;NNE;9;39%;0%;7 Billings, MT;81;52;84;56;Sunny and very warm;S;7;38%;4%;4 Birmingham, AL;81;53;75;53;Sunny and pleasant;NNE;9;36%;2%;6 Bismarck, ND;72;41;69;46;Mostly sunny;ESE;10;56%;1%;4 Boise, ID;87;59;91;62;Very warm;ESE;8;20%;1%;4 Boston, MA;73;58;72;54;Clouds and sun;WSW;9;54%;31%;4 Bridgeport, CT;73;56;72;52;Partly sunny, nice;W;11;49%;23%;5 Buffalo, NY;58;55;59;52;A couple of showers;WNW;15;79%;98%;1 Burlington, VT;68;53;65;52;A shower in the p.m.;S;13;68%;92%;1 Caribou, ME;64;53;67;47;Sun and clouds;SSW;8;68%;44%;2 Casper, WY;78;40;81;45;Sunny;SSE;6;36%;5%;5 Charleston, SC;89;65;82;60;Partly sunny;N;7;41%;7%;6 Charleston, WV;74;48;64;43;Sunshine and cool;W;7;56%;20%;5 Charlotte, NC;81;52;75;49;Sunny and pleasant;NNW;6;37%;4%;6 Cheyenne, WY;77;46;75;48;Nice with sunshine;S;10;32%;3%;5 Chicago, IL;63;48;58;47;Breezy;NNW;15;53%;29%;4 Cleveland, OH;63;54;61;54;Heavy showers;NW;18;75%;99%;2 Columbia, SC;88;55;81;55;Sunshine and nice;N;6;32%;6%;6 Columbus, OH;66;47;60;45;An afternoon shower;WNW;9;61%;69%;3 Concord, NH;74;48;70;46;Partly sunny;W;7;59%;26%;4 Dallas-Ft. Worth, TX;88;64;88;65;Plenty of sunshine;ESE;6;29%;2%;6 Denver, CO;81;52;77;51;Partly sunny;S;6;33%;29%;5 Des Moines, IA;69;49;68;39;Plenty of sun;NE;8;47%;0%;5 Detroit, MI;65;49;59;48;Breezy with a shower;NW;15;71%;91%;2 Dodge City, KS;84;53;85;51;Mostly sunny;NE;9;41%;2%;5 Duluth, MN;57;40;54;38;Partly sunny;N;9;60%;0%;4 El Paso, TX;85;64;86;63;Mostly sunny;ESE;9;37%;1%;7 Fairbanks, AK;47;34;44;31;Mostly cloudy;NE;5;81%;29%;1 Fargo, ND;65;39;59;37;Mostly sunny;E;8;53%;0%;4 Grand Junction, CO;83;54;82;54;Sunshine, pleasant;SE;7;32%;1%;5 Grand Rapids, MI;58;47;54;45;Breezy with a shower;NNW;14;79%;66%;1 Hartford, CT;74;54;72;50;Mostly sunny;WSW;8;52%;25%;4 Helena, MT;82;49;83;49;Sunny and very warm;SW;4;41%;0%;4 Honolulu, HI;89;75;89;75;A morning shower;ENE;13;57%;44%;9 Houston, TX;94;67;88;66;Plenty of sunshine;NE;8;34%;4%;7 Indianapolis, IN;67;47;63;47;Mostly sunny;N;10;48%;29%;5 Jackson, MS;85;55;81;57;Sunny, low humidity;NE;8;38%;3%;6 Jacksonville, FL;91;71;85;73;A t-storm around;NE;9;59%;55%;7 Juneau, AK;60;50;54;49;Rain;SE;8;95%;98%;0 Kansas City, MO;74;50;77;49;Mostly sunny, nice;NE;5;44%;0%;5 Knoxville, TN;78;46;71;43;Sunny and nice;N;7;43%;10%;5 Las Vegas, NV;99;73;97;73;Partly sunny;WNW;6;22%;23%;5 Lexington, KY;70;46;66;43;Mostly sunny;NNW;11;46%;12%;5 Little Rock, AR;85;53;83;56;Sunny and beautiful;NE;6;35%;1%;6 Long Beach, CA;89;69;89;69;Some sun;S;6;55%;0%;5 Los Angeles, CA;90;69;95;70;Sunny and hot;SE;7;46%;0%;6 Louisville, KY;71;48;68;44;Mostly sunny;NNW;10;42%;6%;5 Madison, WI;59;41;55;37;Cool with some sun;N;9;57%;5%;4 Memphis, TN;83;55;83;56;Sunny and nice;E;7;34%;2%;6 Miami, FL;87;78;84;80;Some wind and rain;SE;10;84%;100%;2 Milwaukee, WI;62;46;58;44;Breezy and cool;N;15;58%;26%;3 Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN;63;44;59;40;Mostly sunny;N;10;46%;0%;4 Mobile, AL;91;63;85;61;Sunny and not as hot;NNE;10;36%;0%;7 Montgomery, AL;89;56;76;55;Sunny and pleasant;NNE;8;38%;2%;6 Mt. Washington, NH;43;32;39;33;Windy;W;29;90%;52%;1 Nashville, TN;77;47;75;46;Sunny and nice;N;8;37%;3%;5 New Orleans, LA;92;71;84;67;Sunny and not as hot;NE;12;37%;0%;7 New York, NY;74;58;72;54;Partly sunny;W;11;43%;20%;5 Newark, NJ;73;54;71;51;Clouds and sun, nice;W;9;45%;22%;4 Norfolk, VA;83;61;78;57;Sunshine;NW;8;36%;15%;5 Oklahoma City, OK;84;57;88;61;Partly sunny;SSE;11;32%;3%;6 Olympia, WA;84;49;74;52;Mostly sunny;SSW;6;68%;63%;4 Omaha, NE;74;47;73;41;Sunny and pleasant;ENE;8;46%;0%;5 Orlando, FL;92;75;83;75;A shower and t-storm;ENE;7;84%;100%;2 Philadelphia, PA;77;58;73;54;Clouds and sun;WNW;10;41%;20%;5 Phoenix, AZ;103;82;102;81;Sunshine and warm;E;8;24%;14%;6 Pittsburgh, PA;67;49;62;48;Mostly cloudy, cool;WSW;10;62%;43%;2 Portland, ME;71;54;66;50;Clouds and sun;SW;9;69%;34%;3 Portland, OR;85;55;80;56;Mostly sunny;SSW;7;54%;26%;4 Providence, RI;73;56;72;50;Some sun, pleasant;WSW;8;55%;28%;4 Raleigh, NC;82;56;77;51;Sunny and beautiful;NNW;7;34%;10%;5 Reno, NV;87;55;85;53;Breezy in the p.m.;WSW;11;28%;0%;5 Richmond, VA;80;54;75;48;Sunny and pleasant;WNW;8;40%;14%;5 Roswell, NM;85;58;89;58;Plenty of sun;S;7;35%;4%;6 Sacramento, CA;91;57;88;58;Abundant sunshine;S;6;49%;0%;5 Salt Lake City, UT;84;59;88;63;Mostly sunny;ESE;7;26%;0%;5 San Antonio, TX;95;65;92;64;Sunny and very warm;NE;9;29%;3%;7 San Diego, CA;79;68;80;68;Humid with sunshine;WNW;8;68%;0%;6 San Francisco, CA;68;58;69;59;Turning sunny;W;11;68%;0%;5 Savannah, GA;90;63;84;61;Not as hot;NNE;6;47%;8%;6 Seattle-Tacoma, WA;80;55;76;56;Mostly sunny;SSW;8;63%;63%;4 Sioux Falls, SD;71;43;69;38;Mostly sunny;ENE;6;47%;0%;4 Spokane, WA;85;49;89;52;Very warm;SE;2;37%;2%;4 Springfield, IL;67;42;67;37;Plenty of sunshine;N;10;47%;0%;5 St. Louis, MO;71;48;71;42;Mostly sunny;NNE;9;41%;2%;5 Tampa, FL;94;74;82;74;A shower and t-storm;ENE;10;86%;100%;2 Toledo, OH;63;47;59;46;A stray shower;NW;9;66%;90%;2 Tucson, AZ;98;76;96;73;Mostly sunny;ESE;11;31%;14%;7 Tulsa, OK;84;55;87;57;Plenty of sunshine;SE;7;32%;3%;5 Vero Beach, FL;89;75;82;76;Rain and a t-storm;ESE;10;90%;100%;2 Washington, DC;78;56;72;51;Partly sunny, nice;WNW;9;43%;14%;5 Wichita, KS;82;54;87;54;Mostly sunny;ENE;9;33%;2%;5 Wilmington, DE;78;56;72;52;Partly sunny, nice;WNW;11;45%;18%;5 _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
US Forecast
US Forecast
US Forecast
US Forecast https://digitalalaskanews.com/us-forecast-87/ City/Town, State;Yesterday’s High Temp (F);Yesterday’s Low Temp (F);Today’s High Temp (F);Today’s Low Temp (F);Weather Condition;Wind Direction;Wind Speed (MPH);Humidity (%);Chance of Precip. (%);UV Index Albany, NY;71;49;67;50;A shower in the p.m.;SSW;8;61%;67%;2 Albuquerque, NM;80;59;82;58;Partly sunny, nice;E;6;37%;9%;6 Anchorage, AK;49;42;51;42;Clouds and sun;E;7;73%;50%;1 Asheville, NC;73;45;66;42;Plenty of sunshine;NW;10;41%;10%;6 Atlanta, GA;79;53;75;50;Sunny and pleasant;N;9;32%;2%;6 Atlantic City, NJ;74;60;73;55;Mostly sunny, breezy;WNW;14;44%;18%;5 Austin, TX;93;63;92;62;Plenty of sunshine;NE;5;28%;3%;7 Baltimore, MD;78;59;73;53;Nice with some sun;WNW;10;39%;16%;5 Baton Rouge, LA;92;61;84;60;Sunshine and nice;NNE;9;39%;0%;7 Billings, MT;81;52;84;56;Sunny and very warm;S;7;38%;4%;4 Birmingham, AL;81;53;75;53;Sunny and pleasant;NNE;9;36%;2%;6 Bismarck, ND;72;41;69;46;Mostly sunny;ESE;10;56%;1%;4 Boise, ID;87;59;91;62;Very warm;ESE;8;20%;1%;4 Boston, MA;73;58;72;54;Clouds and sun;WSW;9;54%;31%;4 Bridgeport, CT;73;56;72;52;Partly sunny, nice;W;11;49%;23%;5 Buffalo, NY;58;55;59;52;A couple of showers;WNW;15;79%;98%;1 Burlington, VT;68;53;65;52;A shower in the p.m.;S;13;68%;92%;1 Caribou, ME;64;53;67;47;Sun and clouds;SSW;8;68%;44%;2 Casper, WY;78;40;81;45;Sunny;SSE;6;36%;5%;5 Charleston, SC;89;65;82;60;Partly sunny;N;7;41%;7%;6 Charleston, WV;74;48;64;43;Sunshine and cool;W;7;56%;20%;5 Charlotte, NC;81;52;75;49;Sunny and pleasant;NNW;6;37%;4%;6 Cheyenne, WY;77;46;75;48;Nice with sunshine;S;10;32%;3%;5 Chicago, IL;63;48;58;47;Breezy;NNW;15;53%;29%;4 Cleveland, OH;63;54;61;54;Heavy showers;NW;18;75%;99%;2 Columbia, SC;88;55;81;55;Sunshine and nice;N;6;32%;6%;6 Columbus, OH;66;47;60;45;An afternoon shower;WNW;9;61%;69%;3 Concord, NH;74;48;70;46;Partly sunny;W;7;59%;26%;4 Dallas-Ft. Worth, TX;88;64;88;65;Plenty of sunshine;ESE;6;29%;2%;6 Denver, CO;81;52;77;51;Partly sunny;S;6;33%;29%;5 Des Moines, IA;69;49;68;39;Plenty of sun;NE;8;47%;0%;5 Detroit, MI;65;49;59;48;Breezy with a shower;NW;15;71%;91%;2 Dodge City, KS;84;53;85;51;Mostly sunny;NE;9;41%;2%;5 Duluth, MN;57;40;54;38;Partly sunny;N;9;60%;0%;4 El Paso, TX;85;64;86;63;Mostly sunny;ESE;9;37%;1%;7 Fairbanks, AK;47;34;44;31;Mostly cloudy;NE;5;81%;29%;1 Fargo, ND;65;39;59;37;Mostly sunny;E;8;53%;0%;4 Grand Junction, CO;83;54;82;54;Sunshine, pleasant;SE;7;32%;1%;5 Grand Rapids, MI;58;47;54;45;Breezy with a shower;NNW;14;79%;66%;1 Hartford, CT;74;54;72;50;Mostly sunny;WSW;8;52%;25%;4 Helena, MT;82;49;83;49;Sunny and very warm;SW;4;41%;0%;4 Honolulu, HI;89;75;89;75;A morning shower;ENE;13;57%;44%;9 Houston, TX;94;67;88;66;Plenty of sunshine;NE;8;34%;4%;7 Indianapolis, IN;67;47;63;47;Mostly sunny;N;10;48%;29%;5 Jackson, MS;85;55;81;57;Sunny, low humidity;NE;8;38%;3%;6 Jacksonville, FL;91;71;85;73;A t-storm around;NE;9;59%;55%;7 Juneau, AK;60;50;54;49;Rain;SE;8;95%;98%;0 Kansas City, MO;74;50;77;49;Mostly sunny, nice;NE;5;44%;0%;5 Knoxville, TN;78;46;71;43;Sunny and nice;N;7;43%;10%;5 Las Vegas, NV;99;73;97;73;Partly sunny;WNW;6;22%;23%;5 Lexington, KY;70;46;66;43;Mostly sunny;NNW;11;46%;12%;5 Little Rock, AR;85;53;83;56;Sunny and beautiful;NE;6;35%;1%;6 Long Beach, CA;89;69;89;69;Some sun;S;6;55%;0%;5 Los Angeles, CA;90;69;95;70;Sunny and hot;SE;7;46%;0%;6 Louisville, KY;71;48;68;44;Mostly sunny;NNW;10;42%;6%;5 Madison, WI;59;41;55;37;Cool with some sun;N;9;57%;5%;4 Memphis, TN;83;55;83;56;Sunny and nice;E;7;34%;2%;6 Miami, FL;87;78;84;80;Some wind and rain;SE;10;84%;100%;2 Milwaukee, WI;62;46;58;44;Breezy and cool;N;15;58%;26%;3 Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN;63;44;59;40;Mostly sunny;N;10;46%;0%;4 Mobile, AL;91;63;85;61;Sunny and not as hot;NNE;10;36%;0%;7 Montgomery, AL;89;56;76;55;Sunny and pleasant;NNE;8;38%;2%;6 Mt. Washington, NH;43;32;39;33;Windy;W;29;90%;52%;1 Nashville, TN;77;47;75;46;Sunny and nice;N;8;37%;3%;5 New Orleans, LA;92;71;84;67;Sunny and not as hot;NE;12;37%;0%;7 New York, NY;74;58;72;54;Partly sunny;W;11;43%;20%;5 Newark, NJ;73;54;71;51;Clouds and sun, nice;W;9;45%;22%;4 Norfolk, VA;83;61;78;57;Sunshine;NW;8;36%;15%;5 Oklahoma City, OK;84;57;88;61;Partly sunny;SSE;11;32%;3%;6 Olympia, WA;84;49;74;52;Mostly sunny;SSW;6;68%;63%;4 Omaha, NE;74;47;73;41;Sunny and pleasant;ENE;8;46%;0%;5 Orlando, FL;92;75;83;75;A shower and t-storm;ENE;7;84%;100%;2 Philadelphia, PA;77;58;73;54;Clouds and sun;WNW;10;41%;20%;5 Phoenix, AZ;103;82;102;81;Sunshine and warm;E;8;24%;14%;6 Pittsburgh, PA;67;49;62;48;Mostly cloudy, cool;WSW;10;62%;43%;2 Portland, ME;71;54;66;50;Clouds and sun;SW;9;69%;34%;3 Portland, OR;85;55;80;56;Mostly sunny;SSW;7;54%;26%;4 Providence, RI;73;56;72;50;Some sun, pleasant;WSW;8;55%;28%;4 Raleigh, NC;82;56;77;51;Sunny and beautiful;NNW;7;34%;10%;5 Reno, NV;87;55;85;53;Breezy in the p.m.;WSW;11;28%;0%;5 Richmond, VA;80;54;75;48;Sunny and pleasant;WNW;8;40%;14%;5 Roswell, NM;85;58;89;58;Plenty of sun;S;7;35%;4%;6 Sacramento, CA;91;57;88;58;Abundant sunshine;S;6;49%;0%;5 Salt Lake City, UT;84;59;88;63;Mostly sunny;ESE;7;26%;0%;5 San Antonio, TX;95;65;92;64;Sunny and very warm;NE;9;29%;3%;7 San Diego, CA;79;68;80;68;Humid with sunshine;WNW;8;68%;0%;6 San Francisco, CA;68;58;69;59;Turning sunny;W;11;68%;0%;5 Savannah, GA;90;63;84;61;Not as hot;NNE;6;47%;8%;6 Seattle-Tacoma, WA;80;55;76;56;Mostly sunny;SSW;8;63%;63%;4 Sioux Falls, SD;71;43;69;38;Mostly sunny;ENE;6;47%;0%;4 Spokane, WA;85;49;89;52;Very warm;SE;2;37%;2%;4 Springfield, IL;67;42;67;37;Plenty of sunshine;N;10;47%;0%;5 St. Louis, MO;71;48;71;42;Mostly sunny;NNE;9;41%;2%;5 Tampa, FL;94;74;82;74;A shower and t-storm;ENE;10;86%;100%;2 Toledo, OH;63;47;59;46;A stray shower;NW;9;66%;90%;2 Tucson, AZ;98;76;96;73;Mostly sunny;ESE;11;31%;14%;7 Tulsa, OK;84;55;87;57;Plenty of sunshine;SE;7;32%;3%;5 Vero Beach, FL;89;75;82;76;Rain and a t-storm;ESE;10;90%;100%;2 Washington, DC;78;56;72;51;Partly sunny, nice;WNW;9;43%;14%;5 Wichita, KS;82;54;87;54;Mostly sunny;ENE;9;33%;2%;5 Wilmington, DE;78;56;72;52;Partly sunny, nice;WNW;11;45%;18%;5 _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
US Forecast
Analysis | Trump Can Win The 2024 Nomination The Way He Won In 2016: Barely
Analysis | Trump Can Win The 2024 Nomination The Way He Won In 2016: Barely
Analysis | Trump Can Win The 2024 Nomination The Way He Won In 2016: Barely https://digitalalaskanews.com/analysis-trump-can-win-the-2024-nomination-the-way-he-won-in-2016-barely/ When The Washington Post and our partners at ABC News asked Republicans whether they wanted to see Donald Trump nominated in 2024, the results were perhaps surprising: less than half of respondents said they did, about the same percentage as said they didn’t. This is certainly not the position in which Trump would like to find himself as speculation about the Republican field in two years’ time starts to take shape. Trump wants to box people out, for them to see him as so dominant that there’s no point in entering the race. He wants, in essence, for the 2024 primary to unfold the way the 2020 one did: a clear field that allowed him to glide toward the general election. Our poll indicates that this is not the path forward for Trump. Instead, head-to-head primary polling — the utility of which at this point is functionally equivalent to asking your cat what it thinks — has Trump leading the field but south of 50 percent of support. In other words, where he was when he won the nomination and the presidency in 2016. The grip that Trump has maintained on the GOP in the past six years obscures how loose it was back in 2016. People are very cognizant that he was elected that year with less than 50 percent of the vote; he famously got fewer raw votes than did Hillary Clinton in the November general election. But less remembered is that he also got less than 50 percent of the vote in the primaries, becoming the first elected president to get less than 50 percent of the vote in each contest in the modern presidential primary era. See the yellow area on the graph below (repurposed from December 2016)? That’s the under-50-percent zone. Trump’s the only winning presidential candidate embedded in it. President Biden, by contrast, won most of the primary and general election votes cast. How do you win a nomination without winning most of the votes? There’s one very important reason that you’ve already thought of and which we’ll get to in a second. But another reason is that the Republican nominating contest is designed to do exactly that. There were 21 days on which voting or nominating conventions occurred that year. Only on the last seven did Trump win a majority of votes cast. There were days on which he won a majority of the vote in one or two states, but most of the time he earned less votes than his competitors. But the system helped him in two ways. The first is that there’s a built-in advantage that goes to the winning candidate in a primary in many states. Nominations are won after candidates accrue a majority of delegates to the party convention. Often, the winner of a state, even if it’s with 45 percent of the votes cast, is given a bonus number of delegates, with the rest distributed by vote margin. So if you win the state, even with less than half of the vote, you can end up with most of the delegates. In some states, the pot is even larger: The winner just gets all the delegates. Notice the third set of results above, shown with a black bracket. That was the primary in South Carolina, which was winner-take-all. So Trump got 33 percent of the vote — and all of the delegates. Notice the dark bar below. On Super Tuesday (the tallest spikes above), Trump benefited mostly because he got a disproportionate number of delegates in each state. The system was weighted to winning, not to majority support. The result was that the percentage of votes won by Trump remained under 50 percent for the duration of the primary season. Until the last few primary contests, he was edging past opponents and adding to his delegate total. As the primaries moved forward, he continued to hold about half of the delegates that had been allocated even as he had won only about a third of the votes cast. Now the obvious caveat: Trump was able to prevail in the 2016 primaries because the field was so big for so long. He could snatch victory in South Carolina with 33 percent of the vote because there were still a half-dozen competitors vying against him. Had there been only two candidates after New Hampshire, it’s not clear that Trump would have won the nomination — which was why so many candidates hung around, hoping that they would be the last non-Trump candidate standing. Therefore, Trump continued to be able to leverage his fervent base of support well into the primary season. In other words, Trump sitting at 50 percent support as 2024 slowly nears isn’t necessarily bad … if no other candidate gets a majority of the vote. That he has a robust, energetic base that makes up less than half of the electorate is more helpful in a crowded field than a narrow one. If the GOP electorate is broken into thirds — Trump lovers, Trump haters and those who might look elsewhere — giving voters in those second two groups more choices to pick from means a lower likelihood any candidate will leapfrog the former president. What our poll suggests, then, is that if he wants to run again, Trump should encourage as many people to run as possible. Keep a big field and leverage that energetic base that others are unlikely to be able to match. He can win in 2024 the way he won in 2016: by the skin of his teeth. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Analysis | Trump Can Win The 2024 Nomination The Way He Won In 2016: Barely
Grassroots Group Pushing DeSantis Presidential Run Stuck In Legal Limbo
Grassroots Group Pushing DeSantis Presidential Run Stuck In Legal Limbo
Grassroots Group Pushing DeSantis Presidential Run Stuck In Legal Limbo https://digitalalaskanews.com/grassroots-group-pushing-desantis-presidential-run-stuck-in-legal-limbo/ A group laboring to draft Ron DeSantis for a presidential run is building a valuable contact list that the Florida governor could mine for donations if he runs in 2024. The only problem is it may not be legal. The Federal Election Commission is deadlocked on whether the Ready for Ron political action committee can provide the Florida governor a growing list of emails and phone numbers the group has been collecting since May in hopes of convincing Mr. DeSantis to launch a 2024 White House bid. The FEC left the matter in legal limbo when commissioners voted 3-3 this month on whether Ready for Ron can provide the list to Mr. DeSantis, either at any point before he was considering a run for president or after declaring his candidacy. The group likens itself to “Ready for Hillary,” a political action committee that raised money ahead of Hillary Clinton’s decision to run for president in 2016. Mrs. Clinton obtained access to the donor list “Ready for Hillary” compiled and, under the law, was supposed to pay fair market value. Politico reported at the time that an anonymous Democratic source said the Clinton campaign got the list “through a swap with another independent group.” But unlike the Clinton model, Ready For Ron wants to directly provide Mr. DeSantis with a free list of potential donors, which the group is describing as a petition urging Mr. DeSantis to run and not a mailing list. SEE ALSO: Psaki says Dems ‘will lose’ if midterm voters focus on Biden The group said they believe they can provide the list at no cost because Mr. DeSantis has not given any official indication he’s “testing the waters,” which is an FEC term describing preliminary steps a person takes when deciding whether to become a candidate.   The group is collecting about 1,000 new contacts each day and is on track to acquire 60,000 signatures, accompanied by emails and phone numbers, by the end of September, said Dan Backer, a legal adviser to Ready For Ron. The goal is to collect one million contacts and provide Mr. DeSantis with a list big enough to convince him to run for president, even while former President Trump’s own potential White House run looms over the political landscape. “We want to build a grassroots movement that is telling him, hey, we want you to run for president, you’re the guy to beat Biden,” Mr. Backer told the Washington Times. Mr. DeSantis has risen to become a national political figure by advancing a conservative agenda in the Sunshine State while bucking the far-left policies of the Biden administration and Democrats, most prominently COVID-related mandates and lockdowns.  A USA Today/Suffolk poll last week found Mr. DeSantis leading Mr. Trump among Florida voters 48% to 40% in a hypothetical primary matchup. That’s a massive swing in public opinion from January, when Mr. Trump led Mr. DeSantis among Florida voters, 47% to 40%. Mr. Trump also lives in Florida. For now, Mr. DeSantis is running for a second term as governor, leading his Democratic opponent, Rep. Charlie Crist, by about 7 points in recent polls. His campaign said that it is not affiliated with Ready for Ron and none of the money donated to the PAC is given to Mr. DeSantis.  Mr. Trump has not declared he’ll run a third time for the White House but hints regularly that he will be a candidate.  In a sign he considers Mr. DeSantis a threat, Mr. Trump has derided him privately from his Mar-a-Lago mansion in Palm Beach.  Democrats are worried about Mr. DeSantis and his 2024 ambitions. President Biden was scheduled to hold a rally in Florida this week, despite losing the state in 2020, where he planned to denounce Mr. DeSantis as an “extremist” Republican. The event has been postponed because a hurricane is forecast to hit the west coast of Florida later this week.  A YouGov poll released at the end of August found Mr. DeSantis tied with Mr. Biden in a hypothetical national matchup.  Mr. Backer says he believes the three Democrats on the FEC want to stand in the way of Ready for Ron because they want to block Mr. DeSantis from becoming a threat to Mr. Biden.  Lisa J. Stevenson, acting general counsel for the FEC, advised the commission that Ready for Ron “may not provide Gov. DeSantis with the list of over 58,000 signatories’ names and contact information because the value of the list would exceed the [$2,900] contribution limits of the act and commission regulations.” The FEC is expected to meet again in the coming weeks to consider more narrowly whether Ready for Ron can provide the list before Mr. DeSantis is officially “testing the waters” of a presidential run, through an exploratory committee or other means.  But as long as the FEC remains deadlocked, it cannot easily take action against Ready for Ron for turning over the list to Mr. DeSantis at some point before he becomes a presidential candidate.  Hans von Spakovsky, a former FEC commissioner who is now a senior legal fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, said the law remains vague when it comes to providing something of value to individuals who have not declared candidacy for office and who have not taken formal exploratory action. “I don’t fault the commissioners for not being able to decide on this because the law really is murky,” Mr. von Spakovsky said. “There are no hard and fast rules on this.” Mr. Backer said Ready for Ron will continue to build the list through television and online advertising and plans to roll out in the next few weeks a plan to build a national volunteer network of people for a campaign infrastructure in every state if Mr. DeSantis decides to run. “Look at Florida and how great things are here. Look at this guy’s record,” Mr. Backer said. “And you know what? This is the guy that’s going to be able to beat Biden. He is our guy.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Grassroots Group Pushing DeSantis Presidential Run Stuck In Legal Limbo
WFU In The News: Sept. 19-25
WFU In The News: Sept. 19-25
WFU In The News: Sept. 19-25 https://digitalalaskanews.com/wfu-in-the-news-sept-19-25/ September 26, 2022 by Office of Communications & External Relations  |   media@wfu.edu  |   336.758.5237 Amazon Rainforest severely impacted by gold mining By Cynthia McFadden | NBC Nightly News The Amazon Rainforest’s biodiversity impacts weather patterns, crop growth and carbon levels around the world. However, gold mining in the area is having a devastating ecological effect. Wake Forest’s Center for Energy, Environment and Sustainability (CEES) and Center for Amazonian Scientific Innovation (CINCIA) are featured in NBC’s report. Interviews with Andrew Sabin Presidential Chair in Conservation Biology Miles Silman and Director of CINCIA Luis Fernandez highlight the environmental and human challenges. – 9/20/2022 These maps show which parts of the US are already having a green energy jobs boom By Madison Hoff | Business Insider Economist Mark Curtis told Insider that one main result based on the job posting data he and his co-author used in their research is: “that the jobs that are being created are largely in areas that currently have high fossil fuel employment.” He added that this suggests “that this is going to make the transition from a fossil fuel-based energy economy to a renewables-based economy smoother than it otherwise would’ve been.” – 9/23/2022 Why some college students agree to endure hazing By Dr. Phil | Yahoo Entertainment: Dr. Phil Law professor Gregory Parks, a nationally known expert on the psychology of hazing, joins Dr. Phil on Wednesday’s episode, “Deadly Brotherhood: The Fight to Stop College Hazing,” and shares four factors that motivate college students to join fraternities and sororities. – 9/24/2022 Wake Forest School of Business launches hybrid MBA program Poets & Quants Wake Forest’s part-time MBA Charlotte Saturday program will transition to a hybrid option, providing a range of MBA format options, including in-person and online. “Incorporating this new format into our MBA program portfolio creates a flexible program option that allows working professionals to pursue a rigorous program while maintaining their professional and personal commitments,” said Dean of the School of Business Annette L. Ranft. – 9/21/2022 The announcement was also featured in the Triad Business Journal. 12 helpful things to say to a depressed friend By Georgina Berbari | MindBodyGreen Counseling professor and mental health expert Allison Forti’s expertise is featured in these suggestions. She advises to avoid suggesting to a person who is depressed that their thoughts, feelings and behaviors are not valid or can easily change. “They need empathy, compassion and support. Validating their experience by not sugar coating their pain and recognizing what is happening is a good first step.” – 9/24/2022 For woodpeckers, dropping beats could be the same as singing By Laura Baisas | Popular Science The steady tapping of a woodpecker as it drills into a tree for food or a nest site and drums to attract a mate is an unmistakable sound. A team of researchers led by Eric Schuppe at Wake Forest and Matthew Fuxjager at Brown University has found regions in the woodpecker forebrain which have previously only been associated with both vocal learning in animals and language in humans. – 9/20/2022 20% of Americans believe it’s worth going into debt to get the new iPhone 14 By Alex Luckey | KLUV-FM (Dallas, TX) Marketing professor Michelle D. Steward said, “During the pandemic, we saw that some consumers paused purchases given the uncertain times and, for many, reduced income. As we move out of the pandemic, those consumers are revisiting whether their current versions of products across categories may need to be upgraded or repaired.” – 9/23/2022 Heritage Auctions’ October event spans centuries of Black American history ArtDaily Newspaper As Wake Forest University’s ZSR Library notes in its thorough history of Phillis Wheatley’s collection, “Reviewers invariably remarked on the unusual circumstance of an African slave writing serious literature, and several specifically pointed out the implications for the slavery debate.” – 9/25/2022 The British monarchy is better for taxpayers than you might think By Emma Camp | Reason “Twenty-five percent, more or less, is withheld to finance the royal family’s expenses, but they also have other sources of revenue,” said politics professor Mark Vail. “But the lion’s share comes from those returns.” – 9/20/2022 The 53 Most Beautiful Colleges in America By Stefanie Waldek | Architectural Digest Wake Forest University is named to Architectural Digest’s list of the “53 Most Beautiful Colleges in America.” – 9/20/2022 Countries consider breaking from British crown now Elizabeth’s reign is over By Michael Collins | USA Today “Her absence, combined with recent developments in British politics, gives these countries certainly an opening, even perhaps an impetus, to start thinking about breaking away,” said British politics expert Mark Vail. “I think the noises that have been made by certain countries (to break from the crown) are just the beginning.” – 9/19/2022 Special hiring power boosts EPA infrastructure, regional teams By Kevin Bogardus | E&E News Stan Meiburg, who served 39 years at EPA, said it has been common practice at EPA to give the regional administrators each an AD hire. “They generally use them for a regional administrator or an assistant administrator to have someone in their immediate vicinity who meets their needs within the organization,” said Meiburg, now the executive director of Wake Forest’s Center for Energy, Environment and Sustainability at Wake Forest. – 9/22/2022 Teacher representation on TV in ‘Abbott Elementary’ Winston-Salem Journal The ABC mockumentary “Abbott Elementary” centers on the experience of teachers at the titular school – Willard R. Abbott Elementary. In this Q&A, communication professor Mary Dalton discusses teachers on “Abbott Elementary” and puts them in context with other shows representing teachers in past decades. – 9/22/2022 Biden, Trump loom over NC’s US Senate race By John Deem | Greensboro News & Record “Certainly, Budd has been much more willing to align himself with Trump than Beasley has been willing to align herself closely with Biden,” said politics professor John Dinan. “In view of Biden’s relatively low approval ratings for much of this year, it is understandable why Beasley would keep some distance from Biden.” – 9/25/2022 New program will place teachers in high-need schools Greensboro News & Record The Teacher Quality Partnership grant will involve graduate students at Winston-Salem State University, Wake Forest University and Salem College working with the school district in a program called Winston-Salem Teachers for Equity, Achievement, Community and Humanity or WS-TEACH. – 9/21/2022 This story was also covered by WFDD. Why was there no media coverage of Face to Face with George W. Bush By Melissa Leonard Hall | Winston-Salem Journal “Face to Face brings world-renowned, influential voices to Winston-Salem to discuss topics in a variety of areas including politics, arts and culture, business and social justice. Under the terms of President Bush’s speaker’s contract, media coverage was not permitted for the event,” said Cheryl Walker, the executive director of strategic communications at Wake Forest.  – 9/24/2022 Probe goes underground in search for contamination at site of fertilizer plant fire in Winston-Salem By John Deem | Winston-Salem Journal If city or county officials aren’t satisfied with the company’s cleanup efforts, they likely would recommend additional remediation at the site overseen by the EPA or N.C. Department of Environmental Quality, said Stan Meiburg. If the contamination is severe enough, the property could be designated as a Superfund priority site. “I don’t want to overstate my knowledge of the site, but my guess is that outcome is unlikely.” – 9/21/2022 Explosive from Weaver fire could destroy a community but EPA looks the other way By John Deem | Winston-Salem Journal Chronicling multiple events that threatened communities within a brief period of time is an effective way to make the case for more oversite of chemicals, said environmental expert Stan Meiburg. “It’s useful to see incidents such as the Weaver fire as not just a series of one-offs, but as an example of a more systemic set of risks from industrial operations close to where people live and work. Even if it is true that accidents will happen, that’s no reason not to take steps to minimize their occurrence and their consequences.” – 9/20/2022 Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
WFU In The News: Sept. 19-25
British Pound Falls To All-Time Low Against Dollar After Taxes Slashed
British Pound Falls To All-Time Low Against Dollar After Taxes Slashed
British Pound Falls To All-Time Low Against Dollar After Taxes Slashed https://digitalalaskanews.com/british-pound-falls-to-all-time-low-against-dollar-after-taxes-slashed/ LONDON — The pound hit an all-time low against the U.S. dollar on Monday, adding to global recession fears and reflecting a highly negative review of the new British government’s plan for big tax cuts funded by big borrowing. The pound sank to $1.03 in Asian trading early Monday, before regaining some ground and stabilizing around $1.08 — still well below where it was Friday morning before the government unveiled the details of its plan to cut taxes in an effort to boost growth. The slide may be good news for the many American tourists who visit here and suddenly find their dollars going much further. The U.S. dollar is in strong position, after a series of interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve. It is anxiety-producing, however, for many British households, which were already facing soaring energy bills and inflation running at 10 percent. They may soon confront higher costs for imported goods and services, including everything from fuel for vehicles to food on plates. Britain was able to put on a show for the world last week, with an elaborate state funeral for Queen Elizabeth II. But now financial and economic concerns are front-and-center once more. And the honeymoon for Prime Minister Liz Truss — just three weeks into the job — is decidedly over. While Truss had pledged tax cuts during her leadership campaign, the scale of the cuts still shocked many economic observers. “In the current economic environment it is a huge gamble,” wrote Thomas Pope, an economist with the Institute for Government. On Friday, Kwasi Kwarteng, the new chancellor of the exchequer, or finance minister, announced a package of cuts worth 45 billion pounds ($48 billion) — amounting the biggest shake-up to the British tax system in 50 years. It is also a major shift away from the policies of Truss’s predecessor, fellow Conservative Party member Boris Johnson, who last year announced tax increases to help cover the costs of the pandemic. Under Truss, the government has slashed the top income tax rate of 45 percent for those making more than 150,000 pounds ($160,000) a year and scrapped the cap for banker bonuses — moves that will predominantly help more-affluent citizens in hopes they will increase their spending. In a broader-reaching measure, the government will cap energy bills starting in October — at a cost of 60 billion pounds for six months. The pound slump raised the prospect that the Bank of England might intervene to shore up the currency. But the central bank declined to pursue an emergency interest rate hike on Monday. The Bank of England said it was “monitoring developments in financial markets very closely in light of the significant repricing of financial assets.” In a statement, the central bank said its monetary policy committee would make a “full assessment” of the impact of the government’s actions and the pound’s drop at its next meeting, which is scheduled for November. “The MPC will not hesitate to change interest rates as necessary to return inflation to the 2% target sustainably in the medium term, in line with its remit,” it said. The slump comes as global markets falter and recession fears grow in many geographies. In the United States, the Federal Reserve raised interest rates last week in its ongoing push to subdue high inflation. It was the fifth rate hike of the year and the third consecutive one of three-quarters of a percentage point. That roiled Wall Street, and by Friday the Dow Jones industrial average had closed below 30,0000, to its lowest point since 2020. “We have got to get inflation behind us,” Federal Reserve Chair Jerome H. Powell said last week. “I wish there were a painless way to do that. There isn’t.” The major U.S. indexes were down in early afternoon trading Monday, with the Dow falling about 275 points, or 0.9 percent and the S&P 500 down 0.9 percent. The tech-heavy Nasdaq was off 0.3 percent. The pound’s drop comes about two months after the euro reached parity with the dollar for the first time in nearly two decades. The war in Ukraine has disrupted food supplies and sent energy costs soaring around the world and especially in Europe. That, combined with the Fed’s raising interest rates, has made the dollar a comparatively safer bet for investors. Mike Riddell, a senior fixed-income portfolio manager at Allianz Global Investors, said the pound’s decline is not “necessarily a symptom of European recession.” Rather, investors are starting to become skeptical of Britain’s ’s ability to fight inflation. “The scary thing is that the global economy is yet to feel the impact of all the rates hikes we’ve seen around the world in the last few months, because it takes about a year for monetary policy changes to have an impact on the economy,” he said in an email. A weaker currency, of course, does not necessarily reflect a weak economy. In many cases, it may be advantageous, for example making British exports cheaper for consumers in the United States — and so a weak pound will boost overseas sales for companies that are export-oriented. But it means that anything denominated in dollars, such as energy costs, will soar for consumers. The new British government hopes that by slashing taxes and regulations, it will be able to generate growth that will help to fund public services and eventually pay down the debt. John Hardy, head of foreign exchange strategy at Saxo Bank, said the pound was sliding because the government’s math isn’t reassuring investors. “It’s a numbers game and their numbers don’t add up,” he said. Investors are looking at where inflation is going and at Britain’s balance sheet. “They are saying, ‘I don’t want to own U.K. paper because they are not playing responsibly,’” Hardy said. Truss, who is just three weeks into her new job, has defended the tax-cutting bonanza. In a recent interview, CNN’s Jake Tapper put it to Truss that British opposition parties are framing her plans as “recklessly running up the deficit” and that President Biden “is, in essence, saying your approach doesn’t work.” Last week, Biden tweeted: “I am sick and tired of trickle-down economics. It has never worked.” He was referring to the supply-side economics made famous by President Ronald Reagan, which Truss’s approach resembles. In the interview, Truss responded: “The U.K. has one of the lowest levels of debt in the G-7. But we have one of the highest levels of taxes. Currently, we have a 70-year high in our tax rates. And what I’m determined to do as prime minister, and what the chancellor is determined to do, is make sure we are incentivizing businesses to invest. And we’re also helping ordinary people with their taxes.” Truss continued: “That’s why I don’t feel it’s right to have higher national insurance and higher corporation tax, because that will make it harder for us to attract the investment we need in the U.K. It will be harder to generate those new jobs.” Rachel Lerman in Washington contributed to this report. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
British Pound Falls To All-Time Low Against Dollar After Taxes Slashed
Putin Grants Citizenship To Edward Snowden Who Disclosed U.S. Surveillance
Putin Grants Citizenship To Edward Snowden Who Disclosed U.S. Surveillance
Putin Grants Citizenship To Edward Snowden, Who Disclosed U.S. Surveillance https://digitalalaskanews.com/putin-grants-citizenship-to-edward-snowden-who-disclosed-u-s-surveillance/ Russian President Vladimir Putin granted citizenship on Monday to Edward Snowden, the former security consultant who leaked information about top-secret U.S. surveillance programs and is still wanted by Washington on espionage charges. Snowden, 39, was one of 72 foreigners granted citizenship in a decree signed by Putin. Snowden, who considers himself a whistleblower, fled the United States to avoid prosecution and has been living in Russia, which granted him asylum in 2013. Snowden was granted permanent residency in 2020, and his lawyers said at the time that he was applying to obtain a Russian passport without renouncing his U.S. citizenship. Snowden’s lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, told the state-run news agency RIA Novosti on Monday that Snowden’s wife, Lindsay Mills, is also now applying for Russian citizenship. Mills joined Snowden in Moscow in 2014. They were married in 2017 and have a son together. Kucherena also said that Snowden would not be subject to the partial military mobilization that Putin decreed last week to help Russia’s flagging war in Ukraine as Snowden never served in the Russian army. Putin said only those with previous experience would be called up in the partial mobilization though there have been widespread reports of summonses going to others, including men arrested at protests against mobilization. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre declined to comment on Snowden’s new passport, and instead referred questions to the prosecutors seeking his extradition. “So, since I believe there have been criminal charges brought against him, we would point you to the Department of Justice for any specifics on this,” Jean-Pierre said. Snowden’s revelations, published first in The Washington Post and the Guardian, were arguably the biggest security breach in U.S. history. The information he disclosed revealed top-secret NSA surveillance as part of a program known as PRISM and the extraction of a wide range of digital information. In 2017, Putin said in a documentary film made by U.S. director Oliver Stone that he did not consider Snowden “a traitor” for leaking government secrets. “As an ex-KGB agent, you must have hated what Snowden did with every fiber of your being,” Stone says in the clip. “Snowden is not a traitor,” Putin replied. “He did not betray the interests of his country. Nor did he transfer any information to any other country which would have been pernicious to his own country or to his own people. The only thing Snowden does, he does publicly.” In 2020, Snowden explained his decision to seek dual citizenship. “After years of separation from our parents, my wife and I have no desire to be separated from our son. That’s why, in this era of pandemics and closed borders, we’re applying for dual US-Russian citizenship,” Snowden wrote on Twitter at the time. “Lindsay and I will remain Americans, raising our son with all the values of the America we love — including the freedom to speak his mind. And I look forward to the day I can return to the States, so the whole family can be reunited,” Snowden added. War in Ukraine: What you need to know The latest: Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a “partial mobilization” of troops in an address to the nation on Sept. 21, framing the move as an attempt to defend Russian sovereignty against a West that seeks to use Ukraine as a tool to “divide and destroy Russia.” Follow our live updates here. The fight: A successful Ukrainian counteroffensive has forced a major Russian retreat in the northeastern Kharkiv region in recent days, as troops fled cities and villages they had occupied since the early days of the war and abandoned large amounts of military equipment. Annexation referendums: Staged referendums, which would be illegal under international law, are set to take place from Sept. 23 to 27 in the breakaway Luhansk and Donetsk regions of eastern Ukraine, according to Russian news agencies. Another staged referendum will be held by the Moscow-appointed administration in Kherson starting Friday. Photos: Washington Post photographers have been on the ground from the beginning of the war — here’s some of their most powerful work. How you can help: Here are ways those in the U.S. can help support the Ukrainian people as well as what people around the world have been donating. Read our full coverage of the Russia-Ukraine crisis. Are you on Telegram? Subscribe to our channel for updates and exclusive video. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Putin Grants Citizenship To Edward Snowden Who Disclosed U.S. Surveillance
Leading Economies Sliding Into Recession As Ukraine War Cuts Growth OECD Finds
Leading Economies Sliding Into Recession As Ukraine War Cuts Growth OECD Finds
Leading Economies Sliding Into Recession As Ukraine War Cuts Growth, OECD Finds https://digitalalaskanews.com/leading-economies-sliding-into-recession-as-ukraine-war-cuts-growth-oecd-finds/ The world’s leading economies are sliding into recession as the global energy and inflation crises sparked by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine cut growth by more than previously forecast, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). A dependency on expensive gas for heavy industry and home heating will plunge Germany, Italy and the UK into a long period of recession after global growth was projected by the OECD to slow to 2.2% in 2023 from a forecast in June of 2.8%. With the global economy needing to grow by about 4% to keep pace with rising populations, the OECD said incomes per head would be lower in many countries. OECD’s interim chief economist, Álvaro Pereira, said the world was paying a steep price for the Ukraine war and Russia’s decision to restrict access to gas supplies more tightly than was forecast in June. He said governments would need to encourage households and businesses to reduce their consumption of gas and oil to help weather a difficult winter. Pereira also supported the determination of central banks to reduce inflation by raising interest rates. “We need to reduce demand, there is no doubt about that. And monetary and fiscal authorities need to work hand in hand to achieve it,” he said. China’s growth rate is expected to drop this year to 3.2% – its lowest since the 1970s – causing a large decrease in trade with neighbours South Korea, Vietnam and Japan, dragging down their capacity to grow. A recovery in China next year to 4.7% will be weaker than expected, the OECD said, as Beijing wrestles with a property market and banking sector weighed down by huge debts. However, the Paris-based policy forum was most alarmed by the outlook across Europe, which is most directly exposed to the fallout from Russia’s war in Ukraine. The OECD forecast that UK GDP growth would be flat in 2023. However, this projection does not take into account the measures announced in the chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-budget on Friday. The OECD forecast a drop in growth in the eurozone from 3.1% this year to only 0.3% in 2023, meaning that many countries in the 19-member currency bloc will spend at least part of the year in recession. A recession is defined as two straight quarters of contraction. France could escape a recession if it grows by 0.8% next year as predicted by the OECD, but will suffer along with other European countries after the downgrade in GDP growth since June of 1.3 percentage points. Russia will shrink by at least 5.5% this year and 4.5% in 2023. Berlin’s dependence on Russian gas before the invasion means the German economy will shrink by 0.7% next year, down from a June estimate of 1.7% growth. The OECD warned that further disruptions to energy supplies would hit growth and boost inflation, especially in Europe, where they could knock activity back another 1.25 percentage points and increase inflation by 1.5 percentage points, pushing many countries into recession for the full year of 2023. Global output next year is projected to be $2.8tn (£2.6tn) lower than the OECD forecast before Russia attacked Ukraine – a loss of global income equivalent to the UK economy. “The global economy has lost momentum in the wake of Russia’s unprovoked, unjustifiable and illegal war of aggression against Ukraine. GDP growth has stalled in many economies and economic indicators point to an extended slowdown,” the organisation’s secretary-general, Mathias Cormann, said. A review of the outlook for the US found that while it is likely to grow slowly this year and be in recession for part of 2023, it was less dependent than other countries on energy from Russia or other sources, allowing for a strong recovery in 2024. The OECD forecast that the world’s biggest economy would slow from 1.5% growth this year to only 0.5% next year, down from June forecasts for 2.5% in 2022 and 1.2% in 2023. World Bank officials have called on central banks to refrain from competitive rate hikes that will push the global economy into recession and harm the economies of developing countries the most. Nevertheless, the OECD said further rate hikes were needed to fight inflation, forecasting that most major central banks’ policy rates would reach at least 4% next year. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Leading Economies Sliding Into Recession As Ukraine War Cuts Growth OECD Finds
William Anthon Pike
William Anthon Pike
William Anthon Pike https://digitalalaskanews.com/william-anthon-pike/ William Anthon Pike, 84, longtime resident of Fairbanks, Alaska, passed away on June 15th,  2022 from respiratory failure at Kaiser Westside Medical Center in Hillsboro, Oregon. Bill was born on April 14th, 1938 in Rochester, MN. He was the first of four children born to Roy Edwin  and Gladys Catherine (Flynn) Pike. Bill was raised in Brainerd, MN and graduated from Washington High  School with the Class of 1956. He spent many summers working for his dad at Pike Plumbing Company. Bill was in the Army Reserves. He graduated with his Bachelor of Mechanical Engineering Degree from  the University of Minnesota in 1963. After college, Bill became a member of the Plumbers and  Pipefitters Union. Bill married Mary Catherine Kemper from Perham, MN on June 23, 1962. Bill and Mary along with 3  year-old Cathy and 2-year-old Jeanne, moved to Fairbanks, Alaska in January 1967, where Bill  had a job with Chandler Plumbing & Heating. Sharon and Julie were born in Fairbanks. Bill and  Mary quickly embraced Fairbanks life, joining a curling club, supporting the arts, the Catholic  Church and schools as well as many community activities. Bill converted an old army bus to a  camper, with a folding boat on the side, and they explored as far as it would take them. Bill started his own Mechanical Engineer Consulting Company working on many projects and  mentoring young engineers before retiring after 35 years. Bill met his second wife, Marsha Hickman Wendt, at HIPOW where they both volunteered. They married  in Fairbanks, AK on August 8, 1992. Bill was an avid traveler and lifelong learner. He volunteered in his many passions, Catholic  Schools, soup kitchens for the homeless, Cancer awareness, Alzheimer’s awareness, music  ministry in the churches Bill and Marsha attended and the like. In his 60’s, he received his  Culinary Arts Degree from Arizona Western College. He always loved to enter his baked goods in the  Tanana Valley State Fair and received a multitude of blue ribbons annually and also Best of Show. He  regularly advised his grandchildren to enter things as well. Bill also loved teaching. He was a substitute  teacher at the Catholic Schools in AZ and AK. Baker Bill, as he was affectionately known, taught  baking at Arizona Western College. He enjoyed sharing a “bread baking” class for fundraising  endeavors as well. Bill made friends wherever he was, taking families from the communities under his wing.  Bill was generous with his time, talent and treasure. He loved sharing with family and friends  alike. He was preceded in death by his parents Roy E. and Gladys C. Pike and sister Patricia Ann “Patty” Pike of  MN, his 1st wife, Mary Kemper Pike of AK and sister-in-law Carol Pike of MN. He is survived by his loving wife, Marsha, her sister Judith Hickman Dean of AK, four daughters:  Catherine Hawkins (Morten Hansen) of WA; JeanneMarie (Patrick) Weis with grandchildren Kabrin  (Madeline), Kindi, Anyon, Rowan and Adonis of OR; Sharon (John) Chakuchin with grandchildren  David, Rachel (Royce) Montantes, Daniel and Rosey of AK; Julie (John) Ellis of AK with  grandchildren Tyler, Byron and Hunter of OR. His brothers; Robert Roy “Bob” Pike and Richard John  “Dick” (Judy) Pike of MN and great grandchildren Evelyn Lind-Carlson and Anthony Montantes. The Memorial Service will be held at the Monroe Chapel, 615 Monroe St., Fairbanks, AK on Saturday,  October 1st at 12:00 pm. While flowers are lovely, a donation to Catholic schools, Cancer research, or Alzheimer’s  research makes a lasting impact. Thank you. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
William Anthon Pike
Oath Keepers Founder Stewart Rhodes Path From Promising Yale Law Graduate To Trial On Charge Of Seditious Conspiracy
Oath Keepers Founder Stewart Rhodes Path From Promising Yale Law Graduate To Trial On Charge Of Seditious Conspiracy
Oath Keepers Founder Stewart Rhodes’ Path From Promising Yale Law Graduate To Trial On Charge Of Seditious Conspiracy https://digitalalaskanews.com/oath-keepers-founder-stewart-rhodes-path-from-promising-yale-law-graduate-to-trial-on-charge-of-seditious-conspiracy/ Stewart Rhodes, the founder of Oath Keepers, speaks during a gun rights rally at the Connecticut State Capitol in Hartford, Conn., April 20, 2013. (Jared Ramsdell/Journal Inquirer via AP) PHOENIX — Long before he assembled one of the largest far-right anti-government militia groups in U.S. history, before his Oath Keepers stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, Stewart Rhodes was a promising Yale Law School graduate. He secured a clerkship on the Arizona Supreme Court, in part thanks to his unusual life story: a stint as an Army paratrooper cut short by a training accident, followed by marriage, college and an Ivy League law degree. The clerkship was one more rung up from a hardscrabble beginning. But rather than fitting in, Rhodes came across as angry and aggrieved. He railed to colleagues about how the Patriot Act, which gave the government greater surveillance powers after the Sept. 11 attacks, would erase civil liberties. He referred to Vice President Dick Cheney as a fascist for supporting the Bush administration’s use of “enemy combatant” status to indefinitely detain prisoners. “He saw this titanic struggle between people like him who wanted individual liberty and the government that would try to take away that liberty,” said Matt Parry, who worked with Rhodes as a clerk for Arizona Supreme Court Justice Mike Ryan. Rhodes alienated his moderate Republican boss and eventually left the steppingstone job. Since then he has ordered his life around a thirst for greatness and deep distrust of government. He turned to forming a group rooted in anti-government sentiment, and his message resonated. He gained followers as he went down an increasingly extremist path that would lead to armed standoffs, including with federal authorities at Nevada’s Bundy Ranch. It culminated last year, prosecutors say, with Rhodes engineering a plot to violently stop Democrat Joe Biden from becoming president. Rhodes, 57, will be back in court Tuesday, but not as a lawyer. He and four others tied to the Oath Keepers are being tried on charges of seditious conspiracy, the most serious criminal allegation leveled by the Justice Department in its far-reaching prosecution of rioters who attacked the Capitol. The charge carries a potential sentence of up to 20 years in prison upon conviction. Rhodes, Jessica Watkins, Thomas Caldwell, Kenneth Harrelson and Kelly Meggs are the first Jan. 6 defendants to stand trial under a rarely used, Civil War-era law against attempting to overthrow the government or, in this case, block the transfer of presidential power. The trial will put a spotlight on the secretive group Rhodes founded in 2009 that has grown to include thousands of claimed members and loosely organized chapters across the country, according to Rachel Carroll Rivas, interim deputy director of research with the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Intelligence Project. [‘Fighting fit’: Trial to show Oath Keepers’ road to Jan. 6] For Rhodes, it will be a position at odds with the role of greatness that he has long envisioned for himself, said his estranged wife, Tasha Adams. “He was going to achieve something amazing,” Adams said. “He didn’t know what it was, but he was going to achieve something incredible and earth shattering.” Rhodes was born in Fresno, California. He shuttled between there and Nevada, sometimes living with his mother and other times with grandparents who were migrant farm workers, part of a multicultural extended family that included Mexican and Filipino relatives. His mother was a minister who had her own radio show in Las Vegas and went by the name Dusty Buckle, Adams said. Rhodes joined the Army fresh out of high school and served nearly three years before he was honorably discharged in January 1986 after breaking his back in a parachuting accident. He recovered and was working as a valet in Las Vegas when he met Adams in 1991. He was 25, she was 18. He had a sense of adventure that was attractive to a young woman brought up in a middle-class, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints family. A few months after the couple started dating, Rhodes accidentally dropped a gun and shot out his eye. He now wears an eye patch. Adams’ family had set aside money for her to go to college, but after their wedding Rhodes decided he should be the first to attend school. He told her she would need to quit her job teaching ballroom and country dancing and instead support them both by working full time as a stripper so he could focus on doing an excellent job in school, according to Adams. They married, but she found stripping degrading and it clashed with her conservative Mormon upbringing, she said. “Every night the drive was just so bad. I would just throw up every single night before I went in, it was just so awful,” Adams said. Rhodes would pressure her to go further, increase her exposure or contact with men to make more money, she said. “It was never enough … I felt like I had given up my soul.” She quit when she got pregnant with their first child, and the couple moved back in with her family. They worried about her but didn’t want to push too far for fear of losing her altogether. By then, Rhodes was the center of her orbit. Rhodes’ lawyer declined to make him available for an interview and Rhodes declined to answer a list of questions sent by The Associated Press. After finishing college at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Rhodes went to work in Washington as a staffer for Ron Paul, a libertarian-leaning Republican congressman, and later attended Yale, with stints in between as an artist and sculptor. Paul did not respond to a request for comment. Rhodes’ college transcripts earned him entry to several top schools, Adams said. While at Yale, Adams took care of their growing family in a small apartment while he distinguished himself with an award for a paper arguing that the George W. Bush administration’s use of enemy combatant status to hold people suspected of supporting terrorism indefinitely without charge was unconstitutional. After the Arizona clerkship, the family bounced to Montana and back to Nevada, where he worked on Paul’s presidential campaign in 2008. That’s when Rhodes also began to formulate his idea of starting the Oath Keepers. He put a short video and blog post on Blogspot and “it went viral overnight,” Adams said. Rhodes was interviewed by conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, but also more mainstream media figures such as Chris Matthews and Bill O’Reilly. He formally launched the Oath Keepers in Lexington, Massachusetts, on April 19, 2009, where the first shot in the American Revolution was fired. “We know that if a day should come in this country when a full-blown dictatorship would come or tyranny, from the left or from the right, we know that it can only happen if those men, our brothers in arms, go along and comply with unconstitutional, unlawful orders,” Rhodes said in his Lexington speech, which didn’t garner any news coverage. The group’s stated goal was to get past and present members of the military, first responders and police officers to honor the promise they made to defend the Constitution against enemies. The Oath Keepers issued a list of orders that its members wouldn’t obey, such as disarming citizens, carrying out warrantless searches and detaining Americans as enemy combatants in violation of their right to jury trials. Rhodes was a compelling speaker and especially in the early years framed the group as “just a pro-Constitution group made up of patriots,” said Sam Jackson, author of the book “Oath Keepers” about the group. With that benign-sounding framing and his political connections, Rhodes harnessed the growing power of social media to fuel the Oath Keepers’ growth during the presidency of Barack Obama. Membership rolls leaked last year included some 38,000 names, though many people on the list have said they are no longer members or were never active participants. One expert last year estimated membership to be a few thousand. The internal dialogue was much darker and more violent about what members perceived as imminent threats, especially to the Second Amendment, and the idea that members should be prepared to fight back and recruit their neighbors to fight back, too. “Time and time again, Oath Keepers lays the groundwork for individuals to decide for themselves, violent or otherwise criminal activity is warranted,” said Jackson, an assistant professor at the University at Albany. A membership fee was a requirement to access the website, where people could join discussion forums, read Rhodes’ writing and hear pitches to join militaristic trainings. Members willing to go armed to a standoff numbered in the low dozens, though, said Jason Van Tatenhove, a former spokesman for the group. Showdowns with the government began in 2011 in the small western Arizona desert town of Quartzsite, where local government was in turmoil as officials feuded among themselves, the police chief was accused of misconduct and several police employees had been suspended. A couple years later, Rhodes started calling on members to form “community preparedness teams,” which included military-style training. The Oath Keepers also showed up at a watershed event in anti-government circles: the standoff with federal agents at Nevada’s Bundy Ranch in 2014. Later that year, members stationed themselves along rooftops in Ferguson, Missouri, armed with AR-15-style weapons, to protect businesses from rioting after a grand jury declined to charge a police officer in the fatal shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown. The following year Oath Keepers guarded a southern Oregon gold mine whose mining claim owners were in...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Oath Keepers Founder Stewart Rhodes Path From Promising Yale Law Graduate To Trial On Charge Of Seditious Conspiracy
Trump-Linked SPAC Changes Address To UPS Store As Investments Pulled
Trump-Linked SPAC Changes Address To UPS Store As Investments Pulled
Trump-Linked SPAC Changes Address To UPS Store As Investments Pulled https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-linked-spac-changes-address-to-ups-store-as-investments-pulled/ The social media app will be developed by Trump Media and Technology Group (TMTG). Rafael Henrique | LightRocket | Getty Images Digital World Acquisition Corp., the blank-check company looking to take Trump Media and Technology Group public, has changed its listed address to a UPS store in Miami. The change from a Miami office building to a UPS address came with DWAC’s regulatory filing on Friday disclosing its financing losses. The company said it had lost $138.5 million of the $1 billion in financing from private investors in public equity, also known as PIPE, to fund Trump Media after the merger. The contractual obligation for those investors to contribute to former President Donald Trump’s media company after the deal had expired last Tuesday, allowing them to pull their funding. One of the former private investors told CNBC that it pulled financing from DWAC because of the many legal obstacles facing the company. The investor, who declined to be named due to the sensitive nature of the matter, was also underwhelmed by the popularity of Trump Media’s Truth Social app as measured by Donald Trump’s follower counts. Trump had more than 80 million followers on Twitter. On Truth Social, which he founded after he was banned from Twitter following the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol riot, he has 4.1 million. The app is also currently barred from the Google Play store. Representatives from DWAC did not immediately respond to a request for comment. After failing to garner enough shareholder support to extend its deal deadline earlier this month, DWAC CEO Patrick Orlando contributed $2.8 million from his company Arc Global Investments II to push back the deadline to December. The merger delay comes as Trump Media and DWAC are the subject of an Securities and Exchange Commission probe into whether alleged discussions between the two companies prior to the merger violated securities laws. Trump himself is also the subject of multiple investigations, including civil allegations of fraud from New York’s attorney general, as well as criminal investigations relating to the removal of sensitive documents from the White House, his involvement in the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol insurrection and attempts to influence the outcome of the 2020 presidential election. DWAC’s address change was first reported by the Financial Times. Shares of DWAC were trading around $16 Monday afternoon, down significantly from its $97 peak in March of this year. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump-Linked SPAC Changes Address To UPS Store As Investments Pulled
What To Expect From Next And Possibly Last Jan. 6 Committee Hearing
What To Expect From Next And Possibly Last Jan. 6 Committee Hearing
What To Expect From Next – And Possibly Last – Jan. 6 Committee Hearing https://digitalalaskanews.com/what-to-expect-from-next-and-possibly-last-jan-6-committee-hearing/ The House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection on Capitol Hill will hold its next hearing Wednesday at 1p.m. Eastern, the first public hearing since late July.  What You Need To Know The House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection on Capitol Hill will hold its next hearing Wednesday at 1p.m. Eastern, the first public hearing since late July Committee Chairman Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., told CNN that “unless something else develops,” Wednesday’s hearing will be the committee’s last before it issues a complete report on its investigation While lawmakers have not revealed any specifics ahead of Wednesday’s hearing, committee member Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., told CNN it will “be potentially more sweeping than some of the other hearings” The committee must shut down within a month after issuing a final report, per its rules – but lawmakers could issue some smaller reports before then, perhaps even before the November elections Committee Chairman Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., told CNN that “unless something else develops,” Wednesday’s hearing will be the committee’s last before it issues a complete report on its investigation. “We have substantial footage of what occurred that we haven’t used,” Thompson said of the upcoming hearing, adding that lawmakers have decided on a topic but not elaborating on what it might be. “We’ve had significant witness testimony that we haven’t used in other hearings. So this is an opportunity to use some of that material.” To date, the committee has held eight public hearings, where it featured witness testimony both from individuals who participated in the violent assault on the Capitol as well as from numerous administration officials who advised former President Donald Trump in the days and weeks leading up to the insurrection.  Here is a refresher on what the committee has already covered, and a preview of what to expect from the possible final hearing:  What happened in previous hearings The committee held its first public hearing June 9, and the prime-time broadcast gave the panel of seven Democrats and two Republicans its first opportunity to present evidence of its wide-ranging probe into the insurrection – the worst attack on the Capitol since the Civil War – directly to the American people. The first hearing featured both video and in-person testimony from U.S. Capitol Police Officer Caroline Edwards and Nick Quested, a British documentary filmmaker who was embedded with the far-right group the Proud Boys on Jan. 6 and the night before.  Edwards, who was one of the first law enforcement officers injured that day, described falling behind a line of Metropolitan Police Department officers, when she first saw the scale of the chaos unfolding around her.  “I can just remember my breath catching in my throat because what I saw was just a war scene. It was something like I’d seen out of the movies. I couldn’t believe my eyes,” she said. “There were officers on the ground. You know, they were bleeding. They were throwing up. … I saw friends with blood all over their faces. I was slipping in people’s blood.”  Subsequent hearings, while perhaps not offering the same gut-wrenching detail as the testimony provided by Edwards, have sought to better tie Trump’s actions – and failure to act – to the violence seen at the Capitol on Jan. 6.  The second hearing, held June 13, focused on Trump’s claims of voter fraud following the 2020 presidential election.  Despite his inner circle testifying that they pushed back against his false claims of a stolen election, Trump continued to promote the so-called “big lie,” which the panel has sought to connect to the mob of his supporters that stormed the U.S. Capitol in order to overturn the results of the election. “President Trump rejected the advice of his campaign experts on election night, and instead followed the course recommended by an apparently inebriated Rudy Giuliani to just claim he won and insist the vote-counting stop, to falsely claim everything was fraudulent,” Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., the panel’s vice chair, said at the hearing. In its third public hearing, the House Select Committee focused on efforts to pressure then-Vice President Mike Pence to overturn the 2020 election. The panel made its case that then-President Donald Trump knew that the effort to get Pence to reject the results of the election was unlawful, but he went through with it anyway – and when Pence refused, the president whipped up his supporters into a frenzy, putting the vice president in danger. “Mike Pence said no,” Thompson said. “He resisted the pressure. He knew it was illegal. He knew it was wrong. We were fortunate for Mr. Pence’s courage. On Jan. 6, our democracy came dangerously close to catastrophe.” Its fourth public hearing centered on Trump’s efforts to pressure state officials to overturn the 2020 election, either by pressuring election officials in battleground states to reject ballots or submit slates of fake electors to Congress.  Rusty Bowers, speaker of the Arizona state House of Representatives, said he was asked multiple times by Trump and his allies to engage in efforts to overturn the election results in his state but resisted. Wandrea ArShaye “Shaye” Moss, a former Georgia elections worker targeted by Trump and his allies in the wake of the election, recalled the ways in which Trump’s lies still impact her day-to-day life.  Moss had worked elections in Georgia for over a decade alongside her mother, Ruby Freeman, and told the committee she was taught by her grandmother “how important it is to vote and how people before me – a lot of people, older people, my family did not have that.”  In the weeks after the election, Giuliani, Trump’s personal attorney, shared a video of Moss and Freeman counting ballots on One America News Network, falsely alleging they tampered with the ballots. Giuliani and other allies mentioned both Moss and Freeman by name.  The fifth hearing focused on former Justice Department officials who faced down a relentless pressure campaign from Trump over the election results while suppressing a bizarre challenge from within their own ranks. Witnesses included Jeffrey Rosen, who was acting attorney general on Jan. 6, 2021. Three days earlier, Rosen was part of a tense Oval Office showdown in which Trump contemplated replacing him with a lower-level official, Jeffrey Clark, who wanted to champion Trump’s bogus election fraud claims. The sixth hearing heard explosive testimony from Cassidy Hutchinson, who worked as a special assistant and aide to Trump’s chief of staff, Mark Meadows.  Hutchinson testified that both Trump and Meadows were warned on the morning of Jan. 6 that supporters gathered on the National Mall brought weapons with them, yet they failed to take action to stop the ensuing violence. She also revealed that Meadows and Giuliani sought pardons from the former president before he left office.  The seventh hearing highlighted the way violent far-right extremists answered Trump’s “siren call” to come to Washington for a big rally on Jan. 6, particularly in how the former president utilized social media to address his supporters.  A former Twitter employee – whose identity was kept anonymous by the House committee – testified feeling growing dread that Trump was using the social media platform to galvanize dangerous extremists.  “​​My concern was that the former president, for seemingly the first time, was speaking directly to extremist organizations in giving them directives,” the employee said, referring specifically to Trump’s comments at a September 2020 presidential debate where he told the Proud Boys to “stand back and stand by.” The eighth and most recent hearing focused on the president’s time inside the White House as the mob raided the U.S. Capitol — where he was, what he was doing and his decision not to stop the violent mob and answer pleas from members of Congress. What’s happened since When the committee held its last hearing in July, Thompson said lawmakers would “reconvene in September to continue laying out our findings to the American people,” adding that the committee was still receiving “new information every day.”  And continue they did.  In early September, Thompson announced the committee was seeking information from former House Speaker Newt Gingrich about his communications with senior advisers to Trump in the days leading up to the attack on the Capitol. In a letter, Thompson wrote that the panel had obtained emails Gingrich exchanged with Trump’s associates about television advertisements that “repeated and relied upon false claims about fraud in the 2020 election” and were designed to cast doubt on the voting after it had already taken place. Several weeks later, a lawyer for conservative activist Virginia “Ginni” Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, said her client had agreed to participate in a voluntary interview with the House panel. Attorney Mark Paoletta said Thomas is “eager to answer the committee’s questions to clear up any misconceptions about her work relating to the 2020 election.” The committee had for months sought an interview with Thomas in an effort to know more about her role in trying to help Trump overturn his election defeat. She texted with Meadows and contacted lawmakers in Arizona and Wisconsin in the weeks after the election. And just this weekend, the committee subpoenaed Wisconsin Assembly Speaker Robin Vos over an alleged phone call he had with Trump in July 2022, in which Trump allegedly asked Vos to “take measures to change the result of the 2020 presidential election in Wisconsin.” What to expect in Wednesday’s hearing While lawmakers have not revealed any specifics...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
What To Expect From Next And Possibly Last Jan. 6 Committee Hearing
Why Does DWAC Stock Continue To Fall?
Why Does DWAC Stock Continue To Fall?
Why Does DWAC Stock Continue To Fall? https://digitalalaskanews.com/why-does-dwac-stock-continue-to-fall/ Source: mundissima / Shutterstock Digital World Acquisition Corp (NASDAQ:DWAC) has started another week in the red after receiving more bad news. Several private investment in public equity (PIPE) investors have issued their termination notices, effectively cutting ties with the controversial merger. This means a collective loss of $138.5 million in PIPE investment. According to an 8K form filed with the Securities and Exchange Committee (SEC), all investors gave notice of their termination decisions last week between Monday and Friday. Despite initially rising this morning, DWAC stock has since reversed direction and plunged back into the red. As of this writing, it is down 1% for the day. While that may not seem like a monumental decline, investors should be concerned with the bigger picture. Let’s take a closer look at the forces keeping DWAC stock in the red. The Point of No Return for DWAC Stock It’s been months since its ties to Donald Trump helped DWAC stock even slightly. The company on its own has been plagued by enough lawsuits and SEC probes to make any investor nervous. But since the former president’s legal troubles have continued to mount, so have the concerns regarding the stability of his company. Truth Social is the only holding of the Trump Media and Technology Group (TMTG) and its future remains highly questionable at best. Politico media expert Jack Shafer recently speculated that it “might reduce itself to the smoke and char of bankruptcy.” The fact that the app has been banned from the Google Play Store due to inappropriate content helps support that theory. That news is bad enough on its own but DWAC recently experienced another important failure. Earlier this month, the company voted on extending the merger deadline but could not gain the  65% “yes” votes it needed. Instead, it is pushing the deal back three months. While the book isn’t closed on the Trump trade yet, as InvestorPlace contributor David Moadel noted, this development certainly makes DWAC stock a “dangerous bet.” Now the withdrawal of multiple PIPE investors is poised to make things even more complicated. And there is likely more to come. As Reuters reports: More investors could pull out in the next few weeks, sources said, as they can terminate anytime after the deadline. Many are waiting for DWAC to propose more preferred terms to PIPE investors. The Bottom Line The writing is on the wall for DWAC stock. If more investors have the option to pull out of the troubled deal, they likely will. Given everything that has transpired in just September 20222 alone, people who rushed to back the deal during DWAC’s early rise to market prominence have more than enough incentive to withdraw their cash while they still can. As InvestorPlace contributor Dana Blankenhorn reports: Hedge funds that committed $1 billion to the venture now want terms that would shift risk from the PIPE to Trump and his backers. The PIPE would convert into preferred stock at $33.60 if DWAC traded above $56, but it’s nowhere near doing that. Blankenhorn is correct that DWAC stock is far below that price point and at $16 per share, it is unlikely to even get close. Even while the deal’s next deadline approaches, it is unlikely that the stock will see any significant momentum. On top of it all, fellow Trump trade Rumble (NASDAQ:RUM) has been performing well since going public recently. Investors now have a better option for betting on conservative political trends than DWAC. It may be the final nail in the company’s coffin. On the date of publication, Samuel O’Brient did not have (either directly or indirectly) any positions in the securities mentioned in this article. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the writer, subject to the InvestorPlace.com Publishing Guidelines. Samuel O’Brient has been covering financial markets and analyzing economic policy for three-plus years. His areas of expertise involve electric vehicle (EV) stocks, green energy and NFTs. O’Brient loves helping everyone understand the complexities of economics. He is ranked in the top 15% of stock pickers on TipRanks. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Why Does DWAC Stock Continue To Fall?
Bills Would Curtail Objections At Future Jan. 6 Vote Counts
Bills Would Curtail Objections At Future Jan. 6 Vote Counts
Bills Would Curtail Objections At Future Jan. 6 Vote Counts https://digitalalaskanews.com/bills-would-curtail-objections-at-future-jan-6-vote-counts/ FILE – The certification of Electoral College votes for the state of Arizona is unsealed during a joint session of the House and Senate convenes to confirm the electoral votes cast in November’s election, at the Capitol, Jan 6, 2021. Members of Congress have officially objected to the results in four of the last six presidential elections, a partisan practice that has been legal for over a century but became much more fraught after a violent mob of former President Donald Trump’s supporters attacked the Capitol last year. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File) WASHINGTON (AP) — Members of Congress have officially objected to the results in four of the last six presidential elections, a partisan practice that has been legal for over a century but became much more fraught after a violent mob of then-President Donald Trump’s supporters attacked the U.S. Capitol last year. In an effort to prevent another Jan. 6, 2021, bills moving through the House and the Senate would make it harder to lodge those objections when Congress counts the electoral votes in a joint session after every presidential election. The move to curtail the objections is part of a larger effort to overhaul the 1800s-era Electoral Count Act and safeguard the integrity of the vote after Trump tried to persuade his Republican allies in Congress to vote against Democrat Joe Biden’s victory and overturn his 2020 defeat. Under current law, only one member of the House and one member of the Senate has to challenge a state’s results to trigger votes on that state’s electors in each chamber. If a simple majority in each chamber votes to sustain the objection, that state’s votes can be thrown out. The House and Senate bills would each raise that threshold substantially, with the House bill requiring a third of each chamber to object and the Senate bill requiring a fifth of each chamber to object. The House legislation, passed last week, would also lay out new requirements for the grounds for an objection. “It is just too easy to trigger an objection when it only requires one person in each chamber,” says Maine Sen. Susan Collins, a Republican co-sponsor of the Senate version. Eleven GOP senators have signed on to the legislation, which is up for a vote in a Senate committee on Tuesday. If the bills are consolidated into one measure that becomes law, it will do away with a tradition that has become increasingly popular as Congress has become more polarized. Democrats have objected the last three times that Republicans were elected — twice against George W. Bush and once against Trump — but in each of those cases the Democratic candidate had already conceded the election. The stakes were raised considerably in 2021, when Trump and his allies were actively trying to thwart Biden’s win, with a strategy to throw out Biden electors in Congress and the support of a violent mob that broke into the Capitol, interrupted the joint session and threatened the lives of lawmakers and Vice President Mike Pence. House Administration Chairwoman Zoe Lofgren of California, the Democratic sponsor of the House bill with Republican Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, said the bill would protect the voters’ will from “frivolous” objections and more sinister efforts. “If you want to object to the vote, you better have your colleagues and the Constitution on your side,” Lofgren said just before the bill passed. “Don’t try to overturn our democracy.” At the 2021 joint session, two GOP senators — Ted Cruz of Texas and Josh Hawley of Missouri — joined a larger group of House Republicans in objecting to Biden’s electoral votes in Arizona and Pennsylvania, two swing states that Trump had won in the 2016 election but lost in 2020. Both the House and the Senate voted to certify Biden’s win in those states in the hours after the rioters had injured police officers, rampaged through the Capitol and sent lawmakers running for their lives. But eight senators and almost 140 members of the House voted to sustain the objections. Congress had only held such votes twice since the enactment of the Electoral Count Act 135 years ago. In 1969, two Democratic senators joined a member of the House to object to the vote of one elector in North Carolina during the certification of Republican Richard Nixon’s victory. In 2004, Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer of California and Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones, D-Ohio, objected to President George W. Bush’s electors in Ohio over what they said were voting irregularities. In both cases, the House and the Senate rejected the objections. In several other instances, members of the House have lodged objections without the support of a senator. In 2000, several members of the Congressional Black Caucus objected to Bush’s electors in Florida after the Supreme Court had forced a halt to vote-counting in that state and decided the election. Vice President Al Gore, whom Bush had defeated, gaveled the objections down as he presided over the session. In 2016, several Democrats stood and objected to Trump’s win over Democrat Hillary Clinton but no senator joined, and Vice President Joe Biden dismissed them. Like Gore, Clinton had already conceded defeat. Members on both sides of the Capitol have been working on the revisions to the Electoral Count Act since the 2021 insurrection, saying the law’s vague language was not robust enough protection against Trump’s overt attempts to subvert the will of the people. The bills would also clarify that the vice president’s role is solely ceremonial and try to prevent states from creating slates of illegitimate electors, as Trump’s allies tried to do. The House bill is more expansive than the Senate bill, and the two sides will eventually have to resolve their differences into a single measure. That includes the House language with new grounds for any objection, which would restrict the process even further. Under the House legislation, no member could make an objection unless it fell under a strict set of parameters that relate to the Constitution — that the state is not validly a state, if the state submits too many electoral votes or if a candidate is not eligible, for example. House Republicans argued against the legislation by saying it was a political attack on Trump, noting the frequent Democratic objections over the years. It only received nine Republican votes, all from members who are not returning to the House next year. Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., responded that if lawmakers believed there had been too many objections in the past, “you should absolutely be supporting this legislation.” Hawley, who was photographed raising a fist to pro-Trump protesters outside the Capitol ahead of last year’s joint session, said in an interview that he is “skeptical” of the effort to change a law that has been in place for so many years. “My concern is that it’s going to look like to Republican voters that Democrats can object as much as often as they want,” the Missouri Republican said, noting the objections in 2000, 2004 and 2016. “As soon as Republicans do, they change the law,” Hawley said. “I can promise you, that will be the perception.” Still, 11 Republican senators have signed on to the Senate bill, enough to break a filibuster and pass the bill in the 50-50 Senate. Pennsylvania Sen. Pat Toomey, who is retiring, was the latest GOP senator to sign on to the legislation last week. “The poor drafting of the 1887 Electoral Count Act endangered the transition of power from one Administration to the next,” Toomey said when he announced his support. “Unfortunately, in the over 100 intervening years, individual Democratic and Republican members of Congress have occasionally attempted to exploit the ambiguities in this law to cast doubt on the validity of our elections, culminating in the debacle of January 6, 2021,” he said. “It is past time Congress act.” Newsletter Join thousands already receiving our daily newsletter. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Bills Would Curtail Objections At Future Jan. 6 Vote Counts
Trump Admits Taking Kim Jong-Un Letters From White House In Maggie Habermans New Book
Trump Admits Taking Kim Jong-Un Letters From White House In Maggie Habermans New Book
Trump Admits Taking Kim Jong-Un Letters From White House In Maggie Haberman’s New Book https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-admits-taking-kim-jong-un-letters-from-white-house-in-maggie-habermans-new-book/ Former President Donald Trump has reportedly admitted grabbing his letters with Kim Jong-un and other “tremendous stuff” when he left the White House on Jan. 20, 2021. Journalist Maggie Haberman revealed that the twice-impeached president took letters from the North Korean dictator when he jetted to Mar-a-Lago, his Palm Beach, Florida resort, on the day President Biden was inaugurated. “Most of it is in the archives, but the Kim Jong-un letters … we have incredible things,” he told Haberman, according to an article she penned in The Atlantic promoting her forthcoming book, “Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America.” Then U.S. President Donald Trump (left) meets with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at the North Korean side of the border at the village of Panmunjom in the Demilitarized Zone, on June 30, 2019. (Susan Walsh/AP) The interview with Trump was conducted before the FBI search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago on Aug. 8, which turned up some 10,000 government documents and more than 100 classified documents. [ Trump’s troubles worsen: 6 legal landmines facing the ex-president ] Despite improperly making off with the cache of documents, Trump insisted to Haberman that he didn’t really remove anything important. ”Nothing of great urgency, no,” he told the scribe, who usually writes for the New York Times. Maggie Haberman speaks onstage at The New York Times DealBook DC policy forum on June 9, 2022, in Washington, DC. (Leigh Vogel/Getty Images) Federal prosecutors are investigating possible violations of the Espionage Act, mishandling classified documents and obstruction of justice in the Mar-a-Lago document search. Although Trump scored a temporary victory by having a special master appointed to review the seized documents, Raymond Dearie, a veteran federal judge, said Trump’s team was trying to “have its cake and eat it” too, and that he was inclined to regard the records the way the government does: Classified. Dearie followed up with his own order, giving the Justice Department until Monday, Sept. 26, to submit an affidavit asserting that the FBI’s detailed inventory of items taken in the search is accurate. Trump’s team will have until Sept. 30 to identify errors or mistakes in the inventory. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Admits Taking Kim Jong-Un Letters From White House In Maggie Habermans New Book
Pound Sterling: Bank Of England Says It Won't Hesitate To Raise Interest Rates BBC News
Pound Sterling: Bank Of England Says It Won't Hesitate To Raise Interest Rates BBC News
Pound Sterling: Bank Of England Says It Won't Hesitate To Raise Interest Rates – BBC News https://digitalalaskanews.com/pound-sterling-bank-of-england-says-it-wont-hesitate-to-raise-interest-rates-bbc-news/ BBC News Channel (UK Only) 38,25238,252 viewing this page Related Video and Audio Video 47 seconds Video 47 seconds0:47 Video 1 minute 31 seconds Video 1 minute 31 seconds1:31 Video 52 seconds Video 52 seconds0:52 RTL Got a TV Licence? You need one to watch live TV on any channel or device, and BBC programmes on iPlayer. It’s the law. Find out more Live Reporting Edited by Nathan Williams and Emma Owen All times stated are UK Markets ‘frightened’ by government policy, former Bank economist says The pound’s value has dropped so precipitously because the markets have become “frightened by the government’s policies”, according to a former member of the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee. Prof Martin Weale, an economist at King’s College London, told BBC Radio 4’s PM programme he believes market traders became further scared “by the sense over the weekend that this was only the first instalment of some tax cuts”. He said interest rates and long term government debt rising were not so much a concern when rates were low (between 1 and 2%), because it was arguable the economy “would grow faster than the national debt and you didn’t really have to worry” about government interest payments. But Prof Weale argues that now this is “no longer true”, the decision to cut taxes means taxes are “going to be higher” in the future. “We do have to pay for it at one time or another,” he said. Quote Message: People are concerned that the government has no plan for bringing the national debt under control.” People are concerned that the government has no plan for bringing the national debt under control.” ‘Fall in pound is great for me’ ContributorCopyright: Contributor Becky, a teacher working in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), says the fall in the pound is “great” for her as the money she is sending back to the UK is now worth more. “It has certainly helped me save money,” the 28-year-old from Dorset says. “I’m trying to put money towards a house deposit and this has helped me to do that.” She says it has made her feel “less stressed” about the money she’s spending in the UK. Is the pound really struggling – or is the dollar just doing well? Still with the News Channel panel, and there’s a question on the struggling pound now, with Russ asking whether sterling is really struggling or if the American dollar – which it’s being compared with – is doing very well. Our economics correspondent, Dharshini David, says this is a very important point. She goes on to respond: What we’ve seen in recent weeks is dollar strength – that’s been a theme that’s impacted currencies around the world because that economy looks relatively better off than many others in terms of growth. Also, their interest rates are rising at a faster rate, so far, so it is dollar strength. But if you look at the league table, the pound is one of the most impacted currencies, and that’s because of what’s going on in our home shores. Why aren’t interest rates on my savings increasing? More on the questions that were put to our colleagues on the News Channel now. This one’s from Micah. She says: Can anybody explain how the interest rate on savings at the major banks isn’t increasing despite the rates rising? Why don’t savers benefit? Tom Selby, a consumer finance and pensions expert at the investment firm AJ Bell, takes this one. He says savers should benefit – and if your bank isn’t passing on the interest rate increase… you need to change your bank. It’s as easy as it’s ever been now to switch banks – there are loads of great websites out there that can help you compare rates. It may be difficult to switch – because inflation is running so hot at the moment so realistically you’re still going to be getting a negative return on your money – but shop around and switch banks. If you’re able to do so. Five ways the falling pound could affect your money Lora Jones Business reporter, BBC News Getty ImagesCopyright: Getty Images Higher prices: A fall in the value of the pound against other currencies will increase the price of goods and services we import. Firms could pass on higher prices to customers. Fuel bills: Oil prices are based on the dollar means that petrol and diesel could be more expensive. Although oil prices have been falling in recent weeks, drivers are not likely to see the benefit at the pump due to the slide in the value of the pound. Stronger sales for UK firms who sell goods abroad: A cheaper pound makes it less expensive for people from around the globe to buy goods and services from British firms, making them more competitive. Higher repayments for some mortgages: Some two million people in the UK on a tracker or variable rate mortgage could see their monthly costs going up even further as a result. More expensive trips abroad: The plunge in the pound means that holiday money won’t stretch as far on things such as hotels and meals out – especially in the US. Want to know more? Here’s a closer look at how a slide in the value of the pound could affect people and businesses in the UK day-to-day. Bank tries to soothe the markets Dharshini David Economics Correspondent A statement that aims to reassure the markets is the traditional first step in these circumstances. Buried within was a strong hint that faster, bigger interest rate rises are on the way. The Bank talks of ensuring that demand and supply are balanced. Boost the former too quickly, that’s when inflation rises. And that’s what most economists fear – and why they’re bracing for interest rates to maybe top 6% next summer, to bring inflation down. But this statement has done little to soothe the markets; there may be more to come. BreakingLenders suspend offering new mortgages Getty ImagesCopyright: Getty Images Some UK lenders have taken new mortgages off the table in response to turmoil in British funding markets. Halifax, the UK’s largest mortgage lender, says it will temporarily withdraw all mortgage products that come with a fee. “As a result of significant changes in the cost of funding, we’re making some changes to our product range,” a Halifax spokesperson said in a statement. Halifax, part of Lloyds Banking Group, says there will be no change to its product rates and that it continues to offer fee-free options at all product terms and loan-to-value levels. Virgin Money says it is temporarily withdrawing all mortgage products for new customers at 20:00 BST, according to an email sent to brokers. Skipton Building Society has taken its new mortgage business product range off the market with immediate effect, it told brokers in an email. Would scrapping mini-budget help increase pound? We reported earlier that our colleagues on the News Channel were going to host a ‘Your Questions Answered’ – well, that’s happening now. One of the questions is from Rory, who asks why the government isn’t going back on its tax-cutting mini-budget if the markets don’t like it. We wouldn’t need to borrow as much then, so wouldn’t that able to stabilise the pound, he asks. Patrick Reid, an expert in global currency markets, says simply that the answer is no. The damage is already done – “in a market sense”. The trust – between the markets and government – isn’t there at the moment, he adds. Double dose of attempted reassurance Chris Mason Political editor A late afternoon double dose of attempted reassurance – firstly from the Treasury, and then from the Bank of England. What’s new from the Treasury is a timeline with dates attached. So there’ll be a series of statements from various cabinet ministers about ideas we heard about on Friday. For instance, the Levelling Up Secretary Simon Clarke will have something to say about planning in England. At some point next month there’ll be details about regulatory reforms for financial services. Expect a document, and perhaps a visit by the chancellor. And then, in just under two months, a parliamentary moment – what’s being described as the ‘Medium Term Fiscal Plan’ – and the Office for Budget Responsibility’s number crunching. And finally, a Budget in the Spring. In short, what the Treasury is attempting to say is this: don’t panic, we know what we’re doing. Well, let’s see what the markets do next. Pound falls back to $1.06 after Bank announcement The pound has fallen back to $1.06 after the Bank of England’s statement. Before the Bank’s statement, the pound was valued at $1.07 – a rise from early this morning, when sterling had fallen to a record low at close to $1.03. Bank’s statement in full Here’s the full statement from the governor of the Bank of England: Quote Message: The Bank is monitoring developments in financial markets very closely in light of the significant repricing of financial assets. The Bank is monitoring developments in financial markets very closely in light of the significant repricing of financial assets. Quote Message: In recent weeks, the government has made a number of important announcements. The government’s Energy Price Guarantee will reduce the near-term peak in inflation. Last Friday the Government announced its Growth Plan, on which the Chancellor has provided further detail in his statement today. I welcome the government’s commitment to sustainable economic growth, and to the role of the Office for Budget Responsibility in its assessment of prospects for the economy and public finances. In recent weeks, the government has made a number of important announcements. The government’s Energy Price Guarantee will reduce the near-term peak in inflation. Last Friday the Government announced its Growth Plan, on which the Chancellor has provided further detail in his statement today. I welcome the government’s commitment to sustainable e...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Pound Sterling: Bank Of England Says It Won't Hesitate To Raise Interest Rates BBC News
Dall Sheep Management Consideration Meeting
Dall Sheep Management Consideration Meeting
Dall Sheep Management Consideration Meeting https://digitalalaskanews.com/dall-sheep-management-consideration-meeting/ The Alaska Board of Game will hold an informative meeting via web-conference on Wednesday, October 19 to hear reports form the Department of Fish & Game on recent survey and harvest data future management considerations for Dall sheep. The meeting is open to the public via live audio stream at www.boardofgame.adfg.alaska.gov, but no oral testimony will be taken. The Board will accept written public comment until Thursday, October 13. Written comments may be submitted on the Board’s website at www.boardofgame.adfg.alaska.gov; faxed to 907-465-6094; or mailed to Boards Support Section, P.O. Box 115526, Juneau, AK 99811-5526. The meeting agenda, reports, and other meeting materials will available online at https://www.adfg.alaska.gov/index.cfm?adfg=gameboard.meetinginfo&date=10-19-2022&meeting=webconference. For more information about the meeting, contact the Department of Fish and Game, Boards Support Section at 907-465-6098. Michael Paschall is the publisher of the Delta Wind and covers general news topics. He can be reached at news@deltawindonline.com. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Dall Sheep Management Consideration Meeting
White House Switchboard Called Phone Linked To January 6 Rioter After Attack
White House Switchboard Called Phone Linked To January 6 Rioter After Attack
White House Switchboard Called Phone Linked To January 6 Rioter After Attack https://digitalalaskanews.com/white-house-switchboard-called-phone-linked-to-january-6-rioter-after-attack/ The White House switchboard dialled a phone associated with a January 6 rioter after it was clear the deadly Capitol attack had failed to prevent the congressional certification of Joe Biden’s victory over Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election, according to a new book. The book from former Republican congressman and House January 6 select committee adviser Denver Riggleman says the connection was an outgoing call routed through the switchboard at 4.34pm, and it was answered by an unnamed rioter who allegedly has since been charged by the justice department with a role in the storming of the Capitol. Riggleman’s book, titled The Breach, was reviewed by the Guardian in advance of its scheduled publication on Tuesday, and it has already become controversial after the select committee decried the work as an incomplete account that lacked information to which he was not privy once he left the panel’s inquiry in April. But in describing his work for the investigation and how he led a team analyzing call detail records, Riggleman offers previously unreported details about the White House calls around January 6 as well as the contacts around Trump’s political operatives, including Roger Stone and Alex Jones. The White House switchboard call was identified because call detail records give information about “seizure times” that indicate whether a call is answered, the book explains. In this case, the book says, there was a seizure time, indicating the call was completed. Riggleman also details other instances of connections between the White House and people connected to the Capitol attack, writing that before January 6, the president of an organization known as Latinos for Trump – closely connected to the Proud Boys group – also received a call from the White House. The Latinos for Trump president, Bianca Gracia, had a total of five connections with White House root numbers starting 202-881 or 202-456, the book said: she placed four outgoing calls and received one incoming call. The significance of the calls was not immediately clear. Sources close to the select committee have insisted that investigators chased down the leads uncovered by Riggleman and his team, but the panel could not conclusively determine the calls’ content or whether their nature was nefarious. Despite being close with the former Proud Boys national chairman Enrique Tarrio, and meeting with him in an underground parking garage near the Capitol the evening before the insurrection, Gracia was also chief of staff for Latinos for Trump. Therefore, Gracia’s calls may have been innocuous. Among other possible explanations, the sources said, was that she may have been in touch with a person on the Trump campaign or a person helping organize the Ellipse rally, or perhaps the White House may have reached Gracia when she had a tour of the complex around Christmas. The book also describes some of the sources and methods that Riggleman used to create phone link maps of “persons of interest” in the investigation, including the extensive effort to try to unravel who Stone was speaking with in the post-2020 election period. Stone was one of more than 20 “high-priority targets” but the panel faced an uphill battle identifying his contacts after he refused to voluntarily allow the select committee to obtain his call detail records, forcing investigators to work backwards through associates, the book says. The select committee was able to construct a detailed map of Stone’s contacts after obtaining the call detail records of Kristin Davis, also known as the Manhattan Madam, who was with Stone at the Willard hotel in Washington DC on the day before and the day of the Capitol attack. And after investigators identified Stone’s number, the book says, they compiled an intriguing map: Stone called Tarrio both before and after January 6, and he called the former Oath Keepers chief Stewart Rhodes nine days after the riot. Both have since been charged with seditious conspiracy. The number for Stone also connected to a number of prominent Republicans who each played different roles in Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election results, including the Texas attorney general, Ken Paxton, and Arthur Schwartz, an aide to Donald Trump Jr, Trump’s eldest son. Riggleman, co-authoring the book with journalist Hunter Walker for the publisher Macmillan, also uses the book to characterize the former Trump White House chief of staff Mark Meadows as being at the center of the efforts to stop the certification of Biden’s electoral college win through the thousands of texts he provided to the select committee. Though most of the texts sent to and from Meadows that the book includes have previously been reported by CNN and others, the book fills in some gaps about the effort to object to the certification as well as the additional role played by Republican members of Congress. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
White House Switchboard Called Phone Linked To January 6 Rioter After Attack
Gunman Attacks Russian Military Recruiter As Thousands Flee Mobilization
Gunman Attacks Russian Military Recruiter As Thousands Flee Mobilization
Gunman Attacks Russian Military Recruiter As Thousands Flee Mobilization https://digitalalaskanews.com/gunman-attacks-russian-military-recruiter-as-thousands-flee-mobilization/ A young man shot and wounded the chief recruitment officer at a military enlistment station in Russia’s Irkutsk region on Monday, local authorities said, as thousands of fighting-age men continued to flee the country to escape being summoned to duty in President Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine. The alleged shooter in the attack on the recruitment chief, at a military commissariat in Ust-Ilimsk, a small town in Irkutsk, apparently was distraught that his close friend had been called for duty despite having no prior military service. Putin, announcing the partial mobilization, had said only experienced servicemen would be summoned. “We are talking about partial mobilization,” the president said in a national address. “In other words, only military reservists, primarily those who served in the armed forces and have specific military occupational specialties and corresponding experience, will be called up.” But there has been a torrent of reports all across Russia, including from ardent supporters of the war, of people being summoned for duty despite having no prior military service, or being too old or otherwise physically incapable of going to war. Those reports, along with the government’s acknowledgment that thousands of fighting-age men have fled the country to avoid conscription, suggest that the chaotic mobilization is becoming the latest debacle in Putin’s war. A video clip of Monday’s shooting showed the man, identified as 25-year-old Ruslan Zinin, firing at least one shot inside the office. “The shooter was immediately arrested, and he will definitely be punished,” Irkutsk regional governor Igor Kobzev wrote in his Telegram blog. “I can’t wrap my head around what happened, and I am ashamed that this is happening at a time when, on the contrary, we should be united.” According to Kobzev, the recruiter, Alexander Eliseev, has been hospitalized in critical condition. Zinin’s mother, Marina Zinina, told Russian outlet ASTRA that her son was distraught because his best friend got a mobilization summons despite never serving in the army. “They said that there would be partial mobilization, but it turns out that they take everyone,” she was quoted as saying. As local commissariats rushed to fulfill quotas, mobilization notices were sent to men who should be legally exempt from service because of their age, health or lack of military experience. Some were sent home after a public uproar. Others, such as 59-year-old Viktor Dyachok, who has Stage 1 skin cancer and is blind in one eye, were called to duty, independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta reported. Amid swirling confusion over who could be summoned, thousands of Russians continued to flee the country on Monday, fearing that the Kremlin would soon move to shut the borders for men running away. Meanwhile, resistance to the call-up for war duty has resulted in a spate of other violent incidents. In Ryazan, a city in western Russia, a man reportedly set himself on fire at a bus station to protest the war in Ukraine. Local outlet YA62.ru reported that the man, whom the authorities did not immediately identify, “started laughing and shouting that he did not want to participate in the special operation in Ukraine,” using the Kremlin-preferred euphemism for the war. A video posted by the outlet showed the man, who was not severely injured, being led outside the bus terminal by police and ambulance workers. Sporadic protests have broken out, including in Russian regions populated mainly by ethnic minorities such as Dagestan, where the majority of residents are Muslim, or the indigenous lands of Buryatia and Yakutia. Local activists say these areas are being disproportionately affected by the mobilization. More than 2,300 protesters have been detained across dozens of Russian cities since Putin announced the partial mobilization Wednesday morning, according to rights group OVD-Info, which monitors protest activity in the country. Traffic jams stretching for miles have formed at the border crossings with Georgia and Kazakhstan as the departure of Russians continued through the weekend and on Monday. “The jam at the Russian-Georgian border continues to be about 20 kilometers long” — roughly 12.5 miles — “and the wait time to cross into Georgia is now up to three days,” Nikolai Levshitz, a Russian-speaking blogger who helps expatriates assimilate in Georgia, wrote in his daily Telegram update. With air tickets to virtually all visa-free destinations long sold-out, Russians are crossing by foot, by car or even by bicycle in hopes of reducing the waiting time to leave. Photos and video clips posted on social media have shown piles of abandoned bicycles near the border posts. One Russian man who arrived at Istanbul airport on Monday morning said he took a charter flight from Moscow because commercial flights were sold out. He said he paid about $5,000 for his seat. Weekend reports from Russian independent outlets said that authorities could close the country’s borders to military-age men as soon as Wednesday. The outlets Meduza and Khodorkovsky Live, citing Russia government sources, each reported that Moscow will halt departures just as soon the results are announced of the staged referendums now being carried out in parts of four Ukrainian regions occupied by Russian troops. There is no doubt that the results of the referendums, which are illegal under Ukrainian and international law, will be reported by the Kremlin as showing overwhelming support for Russian annexation of the occupied territories. Western countries slammed the referendums as a “sham,” and Britain announced Monday a new round of sanctions against 90 individuals and companies involved in organizing the process, which is expected to conclude on Tuesday. “Sham referendums held at the barrel of a gun cannot be free or fair and we will never recognize their results,” British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said in a statement. “They follow a clear pattern of violence, intimidation, torture, and forced deportations in the areas of Ukraine Russia has seized.” Putin and his supporters have signaled that once Russia annexes the Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions, the Kremlin would consider any Ukrainian attacks on those areas as direct strikes against Russia, potentially creating the justification for stronger reprisals, including the use of nuclear weapons, and providing a basis for declaring partial or full-fledged martial law. On Monday, Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov deflected those rumors, saying that “no decisions have been made in this regard.” Meanwhile, hundreds of miles away from Moscow, Putin met with his Belarusian counterpart, Alexander Lukashenko, in the sunny Black Sea resort town of Sochi. Lukashenko allowed Putin to use Belarus as a staging ground for the invasion of Ukraine in February, including Putin’s failed effort to seize Kyiv and topple the government of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. In 2020, Lukashenko claimed he was reelected in an election widely derided as fraudulent. He then cracked down on protests, subjecting thousands of Belarusians to beatings and harsh prison sentences. In the two years since, 100,000 to 200,000 people have left Belarus. In their meeting on Monday, Lukashenko told Putin not to “worry” about Russians now doing the same. “Let’s say 30,000, even 50,000 left,” Lukashenko told Putin about the recent departures of Russian men. “So what? If they had stayed here, would they have been our people? Let them run,” Lukashenko said in opening remarks. “I don’t know how you feel about it, but I wasn’t too worried,” Lukashenko said, referring to the thousands who departed in 2020. “Most are begging to come back,” he told Putin. “And yours will come back, too.” Robyn Dixon and Natalia Abbakumova in Riga, Latvia, and Kareem Fahim in Istanbul contributed to this report. War in Ukraine: What you need to know The latest: Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a “partial mobilization” of troops in an address to the nation on Sept. 21, framing the move as an attempt to defend Russian sovereignty against a West that seeks to use Ukraine as a tool to “divide and destroy Russia.” Follow our live updates here. The fight: A successful Ukrainian counteroffensive has forced a major Russian retreat in the northeastern Kharkiv region in recent days, as troops fled cities and villages they had occupied since the early days of the war and abandoned large amounts of military equipment. Annexation referendums: Staged referendums, which would be illegal under international law, are set to take place from Sept. 23 to 27 in the breakaway Luhansk and Donetsk regions of eastern Ukraine, according to Russian news agencies. Another staged referendum will be held by the Moscow-appointed administration in Kherson starting Friday. Photos: Washington Post photographers have been on the ground from the beginning of the war — here’s some of their most powerful work. How you can help: Here are ways those in the U.S. can help support the Ukrainian people as well as what people around the world have been donating. Read our full coverage of the Russia-Ukraine crisis. Are you on Telegram? Subscribe to our channel for updates and exclusive video. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Gunman Attacks Russian Military Recruiter As Thousands Flee Mobilization