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Is A Beer Shortage On Tap? Inflation And Supply Chain Pressures On Brewers Are Intensifying
Is A Beer Shortage On Tap? Inflation And Supply Chain Pressures On Brewers Are Intensifying
Is A Beer Shortage On Tap? Inflation And Supply Chain Pressures On Brewers Are Intensifying https://digitalalaskanews.com/is-a-beer-shortage-on-tap-inflation-and-supply-chain-pressures-on-brewers-are-intensifying-2/ Beer makers are facing many challenges as inflation and supply chain issues raise cost of brewing and shipping. Shortages in aluminum cans and carbon dioxide, used in brewing, have hampered some brewers. For consumers, beer prices are rising – up 5% so far this year – but not as fast as on other goods including food, which rose about 11%. We have endured no shortage of shortages recently. There was toilet paper and computer chips, followed by tampons and baby formula. Could the next shortage involve beer? The potential arises as beer makers, big and small, are under pressure from a confluence of inflation and several supply chain issues. Some breweries have found it challenging to get carbon dioxide (CO2), which is used to clean tanks and carbonate beer. When they do get it, the price is often higher, sometimes twice what they used to pay. Also rising: the price of other ingredients such as malted barley and the cost to ship that and other products. All this could lead to higher beer prices. And, it could result in some of your favorite beers being out of stock or not on tap. “I don’t know if I can think of a scenario where there’d be no beer from a brewery, but I can understand a scenario where there would be a limited or smaller offering, as beer has a short shelf life,” said Chuck Aaron, owner and founder of Jersey Girl Brewing in Hackettstown, N.J. The environment is challenging enough that it could force some breweries to close. “This could certainly be a factor in closures,” Bart Watson, chief economist for the Brewers Association, told USA TODAY.  In a mid-year survey of the association’s membership – about 5,600 U.S. small and independent breweries – some brewers’ sentiments amounted to, “we’re selling as much beer as we were pre-pandemic, but making far less on that beer, and we’re unsure how long that is sustainable,” Watson said. Gas prices go up after declines: Here’s where gas is cheapest and most expensive What’s it mean for you?: Fed hikes interest rate 0.75 percentage point to tame inflation Why could there be a beer shortage? Because breweries, which are accustomed to some supply chain struggles, face a growing list of headaches. The price and availability of aluminum cans became increasingly volatile as cans became critical to breweries’ survival. Many had pivoted to curbside pickup and offsite distribution during the national shutdown brought on by COVID-19. Similarly, the supply of CO2 has “remained tight since the shortages in the Spring of 2020,” Watson said in a recent report. Breweries have often got less than they ordered – or worse, not had promised amounts delivered at all. Now, inflation has driven up the entire cost of breweries’ shopping list, just as it has for all Americans.  That means breweries are likely paying more for CO2, cans, paper goods, malt (grains needed for making beer), and hops. “What’s unprecedented is the number of areas where we are seeing challenges,” Watson told USA TODAY. Inflation: No more steak. Ordering out less. Here’s how inflation is squeezing American diets. Settle Down Easy Brewing Co. in Falls Church, Virginia hasn’t been hit hard by CO2 price increases, but is paying an additional two cents per can for its canning line, purchased during the pandemic, said co-owner Frank Kuhns. But other price increases have hit harder including $150-$300 “gas travel” fees for each delivery from suppliers, and labor and equipment costs of 30% to 40% more than originally budgeted, for the construction of a second Northern Virginia location a few miles away in Oakton, Virginia. So far, “we have made the decision to hold and not pass these increases onto the customer and instead look for new suppliers or cutting costs without sacrificing quality,” Kuhns said. Despite the dilemma, the nation’s beer taps won’t likely run dry. But they could be tempered, he said. “I’m not sure I’d go so far as to say there will be shortages. Individual producers may have issues, but this isn’t so widespread that you’re going to see empty beer shelves,” Watson said. “I think the beer brand that consumers want occasionally being out of stock is closer to accurate. And brewers might make different or fewer beers.” Why is carbon dioxide needed to make beer? Most beer lovers know that brewers use CO2 to carbonate beer. But CO2 also is used to clean fermentation tanks and keep oxygen out before they are refilled. “Oxygen is the devil of beer and will kill a beer if you have oxygen in it,” Aaron said. But many breweries have had a devil of a time getting the CO2 they need. A main contributor is that a natural source of CO2, the Jackson Dome, an extinct volcano in Mississippi, “is facing a contamination issue with the raw gas from the mine creating a significant decrease in available food grade CO,” Watson told brewers in a July report. High demand and some shutdowns at ammonia plants, which create and capture CO2 to sell to other industries, has compounded the shortage. So have rail disputes, which have disrupted deliveries, wrote Forbes columnist Richard Howells, a supply chain executive. “Yes, you heard right,” Howells wrote. “In this era, of trying to reduce emissions of CO2 into the atmosphere, we are actually going to have a shortage of the CO2 that provides the carbonation so loved by millions of concerned beer drinkers.” How are breweries coping with the CO2 shortage? Most have had to pay more for CO2, while many have had to find alternate suppliers. And if a brewer cannot get enough, that could lead to some beers not getting made, said Tomme Arthur, co-founder and chief operating owner of Port Brewing and The Lost Abbey in San Diego County, California. “I don’t expect the grocery aisles to be missing 18 packs of lager,” he said. “But your local craft brewer is certainly at risk for having to adjust brewing schedules and deliverables based on this lack of CO2 and the need for it in so many of the brewing practices.” At Jersey Girl Brewing, the cost has doubled over the the past year, from about 20 cents a pound to 44 cents. Aaron said he has been “watching the invoice price creep up and up and up as we fill” the brewery’s bulk tanks capable of holding 1,500 pounds of the gas. Aaron has also had to decide not to make some beers, such as a Helles lager, because the German grains needed were too costly with increased shipping prices. And some beers needing New Zealand International hops have not been produced.  “Hopefully once the prices come back in line, we’ll be able to reintroduce those into the market,” he said. Earlier this week, Axios reported that a “U.S. beer shortage looms with gap in carbon dioxide supply.” It also noted that some breweries have equipment to capture the CO2 emitted in the brewing process, but it is very expensive. Also vying for CO2: Other industries including carbonated beverage makers and food manufacturers.  “As we have learned, brewers are a relatively small user of CO2 in the grand scheme of things,” Watson said. What’s everyone talking about?: Sign up for our trending newsletter to get the latest news of the day Could beer become more expensive? It already has. The makers of Miller Lite and Coors Light, and Bud Light – as well as Stella Artois – have all raised prices recently. But beer prices are up far less than the cost of production. The price of beer purchased to drink at home had risen about 5% as of August 2022, compared to August 2021, according to the Consumer Price Index. That’s higher than whiskey (3%), wine (2.5%), and other spirits (1.2%).  Another barometer of pricing: The average cost to consumers for beer has risen 3.4%, over the past year for the equivalent of a 24-pack of 12 oz. cans, based on prices for the week ending Sept. 10, 2022, according to Nielsen IQ. Beer price increases have also remained below that of other consumer goods – overall, prices increased 8.3% compared to a year ago, and food rose 11.4%. Price hikes have not “stopped consumers from trading up to” craft beers, imported beers or canned cocktails and seltzers, said Bump Williams, a beverage industry consultant. Consumers have also been buying more 12-packs and single-serving cans as they have been “changing their purchase behavior with inflation going up, interest rates going up, gas prices going up, and a declining stock market turning 401k’s into 201k’s,” Williams said. “So folks are managing their affordable luxury expenditures a bit differently today.” Could the price of cans also affect beer supply? Probably indirectly, since aluminum prices are just one of several costs brewers see increasing. Costs of cans “are still much higher than they were and I believe once prices go up the way we’ve experienced them, you tend not to see them come back down,” Aaron said. While there has been less volatility recently, some breweries had to find a new supplier when Ball Corp., one of the nation’s largest can manufacturers, earlier this year raised its minimum requirements for customers, citing unprecedented demand.  “We were sent scrambling to find an alternative supplier,” which charges 1.5 cents more per unit, Arthur said. “A truck load of cans is approximately 156,000 units so the pennies add up,”  he said. “I have never seen this level of inflationary pressures combined with outright shortages. It’s bonkers to put it mildly,” Arthur said. “I suspect that nearly every brewery in town is being jammed on the same fronts.” Follow Mike Snider on Twitter: @mikesnider. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Is A Beer Shortage On Tap? Inflation And Supply Chain Pressures On Brewers Are Intensifying
Schiff Hits Trump Claim That Presidents Can Declassify Materials
Schiff Hits Trump Claim That Presidents Can Declassify Materials
Schiff Hits Trump Claim That Presidents Can Declassify Materials https://digitalalaskanews.com/schiff-hits-trump-claim-that-presidents-can-declassify-materials/ Greg Nash Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) is seen after a House Jan. 6 committee hearing on Thursday, July 21, 2022 to focus on former President Trump’s actions during the insurrection. Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) on Sunday knocked claims from former President Trump that a president can declassify materials at will.   “No, people work hard to get that information. People put their lives at risk to get that information. That information protects American lives. And for him to treat it so cavalierly shows both what a continuing danger the man is, but also how very little regard he has for anything but himself,” Schiff told host Jake Tapper on CNN’s “State of the Union.”  Trump told Fox News host Sean Hannity in an interview last week that declassification “doesn’t have to be a process” and argued that “if you’re the president of the United States, you can declassify just by saying it’s declassified, even by thinking about it.”  The former president’s comments came in the wake of last month’s FBI search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida, where agents executing a search warrant found over 100 classified documents kept past the end of Trump’s time in office.  Trump’s defenses for how the materials made their way to Mar-a-Lago have varied, but he’s argued that the documents had been declassified.   “That’s not how it works. Those comments don’t demonstrate much intelligence of any kind. If you could simply declassify by thinking about it, then frankly, if that’s his view, he’s even more dangerous than we may have thought,” Schiff said Sunday.  “He could simply spout off on anything he read in a presidential daily brief or anything that he was briefed on by the CIA director to a visiting Russian delegation or any other delegation and simply say, ‘Well, I thought about it and therefore, when the words came out of my mouth, they were declassified.’”  Schiff is a member of the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol, which has been probing the former president’s role in challenging the 2020 election results and inciting the attacks. The Justice Department has been running its own Jan. 6 investigation, but Schiff on Sunday called the probe “very slow” and said there are “areas the Justice Department hasn’t fully investigated.”  The committee is now considering a criminal referral to the DOJ based on the collected evidence against the former president. “I do agree… there have been several laws broke and it is, I think, apparent that there is evidence that Donald Trump was involved in breaking several of those laws,” Schiff said. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Schiff Hits Trump Claim That Presidents Can Declassify Materials
Newsom In Texas: More Worried About Carlson Than Trump Desantis A
Newsom In Texas: More Worried About Carlson Than Trump Desantis A
Newsom In Texas: More Worried About Carlson Than Trump, Desantis A https://digitalalaskanews.com/newsom-in-texas-more-worried-about-carlson-than-trump-desantis-a/ September 25, 2022 11:07 AM California Gov. Gavin Newsom tore into Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Saturday, calling him a “bully,” and said he is more worried about Fox News host Tucker Carlson than he is former President Donald Trump. The comments in deep-red Texas mark an escalating feud between the two governors, both of whom who are seen as 2024 presidential contenders if they choose to run, and take aim at the most-watched cable news host in the United States. “I worry about Trump. I worry about Trumpism,” Newsom said at the Texas Tribune Festival in Austin. “I worry more about Tucker Carlson. I worry about Ron DeSantis.” DESANTIS ADMINISTRATION FACES LAWSUIT FROM FLORIDA LAWMAKER OVER MIGRANT FLIGHTS “He’s a bully,” Newsom said of DeSantis. “He threatened the Special Olympics with $27 million in fines. Who does that?” DeSantis made the threat after the 2022 Special Olympics attempted to enact a vaccine mandate for its games in Florida. The organization eventually withdrew the requirement. “Abbott is light years ahead in policy than DeSantis, but DeSantis has weaponized it to the next level,” Newsom added, referring to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R). The California governor would go on to comment on how “remarkable” it was that Trump made democracy “partisan,” but that voters’ focus should be on local and state elections. Both Newsom and DeSantis are up for reelection in 2022, following Newsom surviving a recall election in 2021. Meanwhile DeSantis has broken national fund raising records. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER Neither governor has declared a candidacy for president, but both have been making national headlines in as their clashes heat up. Newsom sent a letter to the Department of Justice seeking an investigation into the flight of migrants to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts. DeSantis dismissed the letter, joking that Newsom’s “hair gel was interfering with his brain function.” Newsom would go on to challenge DeSantis to a debate on Twitter. Carlson has also been talked about as a possible presidential contender, but he has said he does not plan to run in 2024. Other speakers at this year’s Texas Tribune Festival included Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY), former Secretary of State Hilary Clinton, and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Newsom In Texas: More Worried About Carlson Than Trump Desantis A
GMs Commitment To Electric Cars Still Has Skeptics
GMs Commitment To Electric Cars Still Has Skeptics
GM’s Commitment To Electric Cars Still Has Skeptics https://digitalalaskanews.com/gms-commitment-to-electric-cars-still-has-skeptics/ General Motors joined forces with the Environmental Defense Fund to recommend tougher emissions rules for passenger vehicles. In a surprise move, General Motors Co. this week joined forces with the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) to recommend tougher emissions rules for passenger vehicles. But skeptics remain unconvinced by the company’s professed commitment to going green, citing GM’s history of battling tougher fuel economy rules. GM and the EDF are recommending that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) establish standards ensuring at least 50% of new vehicles sold by 2030 are zero-emitting while achieving a 60% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, a roadmap that matches up nicely with GM’s plan to make all of its own models electric by 2035. But the automaker has made promises before only to later move away from them, says Dan Becker, director of the Safe Climate Transport Campaign at the Center for Biological Diversity. Becker cites GM’s commitment to backing California’s right to set its own clean-air rules, which it later walked back by supporting former President Donald Trump’s lawsuit to end the state’s exemption. “They have reneged in really big ways,” Becker says. “I think they want to be seen as making clean cars, but they don’t really do it.” Kristen Siemen, GM’s chief sustainability officer, says the electric push is real: The EVs are coming, and GM wants government rules that give all automakers a clear path to get there. The company’s Chevy Bolt EV has been on the market for six years, and GM has already spent a chunk of its $35 billion budget to bring 30 electric vehicles to market by 2025. “We’re committed,” Siemen says. “The plans are very much aligned with our product plan.” While GM’s biggest push to reduce greenhouse gas emissions comes from its electrification plan, Siemen says the automaker will also improve fuel economy for its internal-combustion vehicles. Government data show that the fuel economy of GM’s pickups and large SUVs has been stable since 2018, but it hasn’t improved much for the largest engines. GM isn’t alone in its balancing act — legacy carmakers are in a pickle. On one hand, they need to push into electrification to meet future regulations and because, as Tesla Inc. has proven, EVs are growing in popularity. But to fund that conversion, they have to build roomy gasoline-fueled vehicles that often get the poorest fuel economy. For now, automakers are mostly selling electric luxury vehicles with price tags of $42,000 and above. GM has the Bolt EV for under $30,000 and will build a bigger, roomier Cheverolet Equinox starting at $30,000 next year. “Going forward, if you look at our EV portfolio, it covers every price point and every segment,” Siemen says. But GM’s flip-flop on California has Becker dubious about the automaker’s desire to follow through. In 2011, the company committed “not to contest” California’s waiver that allows the state to set its own fuel economy and emissions rules. Former GM CEO Dan Akerson said so in a signed letter to the US Department of Transportation. GM later joined Trump’s lawsuit to eliminate the waiver. Then, with Joe Biden in office in 2021, GM withdrew from the litigation. “Because of GM’s track record, I am really skeptical,” Becker says. The Union of Concerned Scientists takes a similar view. “GM, like many other automakers, has been an opponent of strong standards in the past, so we’ll be watching closely to see the substance of their promises,” Dan Anair, director of the Clean Transportation Program at UCS, said in an email. “EPA needs to quickly move ahead with the next round of standards so we can cut emissions in the years to come. Strong standards are the one thing that will ensure GM and all automakers make the emission reductions that are needed.” GM proposed just that. Now the company needs to deliver. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
GMs Commitment To Electric Cars Still Has Skeptics
Russian Military Escalation And 'bogus Threats' Show Putin Has Been 'outsmarted' By The Ukrainians Says UK PM Local News 8
Russian Military Escalation And 'bogus Threats' Show Putin Has Been 'outsmarted' By The Ukrainians Says UK PM Local News 8
Russian Military Escalation And 'bogus Threats' Show Putin Has Been 'outsmarted' By The Ukrainians, Says UK PM – Local News 8 https://digitalalaskanews.com/russian-military-escalation-and-bogus-threats-show-putin-has-been-outsmarted-by-the-ukrainians-says-uk-pm-local-news-8/ By Sana Noor Haq, CNN Vladimir Putin’s announcement of increased military conscription to bolster Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine shows that the Russian President “has been outsmarted” by Kyiv, UK Prime Minister Liz Truss told CNN in an exclusive interview, as she set out her stall on foreign policy. The new British leader, who takes power at a time of historic upheaval, told CNN’s Jake Tapper on “State of the Union” that Putin had ordered an immediate military escalation “because he isn’t winning.” “He made a strategic mistake, invading Ukraine,” Truss said in her first interview with a US network, which aired Sunday. “I think he has been outsmarted by the Ukrainians. We’ve seen the Ukrainians continue to push back against the Russian offensive. And I think he didn’t anticipate the strength of reaction from the free world.” Truss, who faces perhaps the biggest set of challenges of any incoming British prime minister since Winston Churchill, met with US President Joe Biden on Wednesday. In a subsequent interview at 10 Downing Street, she told CNN that Washington “is an incredibly close partner” but did not roll back controversial comments she made last year, while UK Foreign Secretary, in which she described the US-UK relationship as “special but not exclusive.” “I do think our relationship is special and it’s increasingly important at a time when we’re facing threats from Russia, increased assertiveness from China. You know, we are both freedom-loving democracies. We have such a strong connection,” she told Tapper. “I had a great meeting with the president. We talked about many, many issues. But the core of it, the core of it, is our belief in freedom, our belief in democracy. And that’s what we need to continue to work on because we do face an increasingly insecure world.” ‘Don’t listen to the saber-rattling’ When asked how Western leaders should respond if Putin ramps up military activity in Ukraine, Truss said they “should not be listening to his saber-rattling and his bogus threats.” “Instead, what we need to do is continue to put sanctions on Russia and continue to support the Ukrainians.” Earlier this week Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said the country would summon 300,000 reservists, following a sweeping offensive from Kyiv this month that has spurred Ukraine’s Western allies and provoked anger in Russia. The momentum of the war has recently swung in Ukraine’s favor, in a marked shift that US officials broadly view as evidence that the types of weapons and intelligence the West has provided to Kyiv in recent months have been effective. The UK has been one of the most vehement opponents of Russia’s war and one of the biggest supporters of Ukraine, supplying money, weapons and aid. In response to Russia’s flailing military campaign, Putin made a speech declaring the “partial mobilization” of citizens, and said that he would use “all the means at our disposal” — even raising the specter of nuclear weapons — to maintain the “territorial integrity” of Russia. “If Putin is allowed to succeed, this wouldn’t just send a terrible message in Europe, and of course huge threats to the Ukrainian population themselves, but it also would send a message to other authoritarian regimes around the world that it’s somehow acceptable… to invade a sovereign nation,” Truss said. “This is why it’s so important that we continue to be resolute, we don’t listen to the saber- rattling that we’re hearing from Putin, and we continue to back the Ukrainians to the hilt. And that’s what I’m determined the United Kingdom will do. “I know President Biden is absolutely committed from the US point of view. We’ve worked closely with our American allies, with the G7, and we will continue to do so until Ukraine prevails.” ‘What I want to do is find a way forward’ From the rising cost of living at home, to the post-Brexit morass domestically and overseas, Truss inherited a country on the brink of crisis when she assumed her post in September. She told CNN that by cutting taxes — which critics warn will be more beneficial for the wealthy than the majority of British society — her government was “incentivizing businesses to invest and we’re also helping ordinary people with their taxes.” On top of that, she faced pressure to stabilize ties between the White House and Downing Street following Boris Johnson’s political downfall and subsequent resignation. Even though Biden and Johnson were ideologically split — the former once described his UK counterpart as the “physical and emotional clone” of Trump — both were deeply aligned in their approach to Russia, the climate crisis, and vaccine distribution during the coronavirus pandemic. However, the Northern Ireland Protocol — a post-Brexit measure that requires extra checks on goods moving between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK following its departure from the European Union — has remained a residual thorn in both parties’ sides. The rules were designed to maintain the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland open and prevent a return to sectarian violence. But Truss intends to rewrite those rules, prompting deep anxiety in both Brussels and Washington. Biden, who makes frequent references to his Irish ancestry, has made his views clear on the issue, even though it does not directly involve the United States. In their first phone call as counterparts earlier this month, he raised the matter with Truss, according to the White House. When asked about her conversation with Biden, Truss told CNN: “President Biden and I both agree that what is vital is to protect the Belfast Good Friday Agreement. And we are celebrating 25 years of that agreement next year. “But what’s important is that we protect and respect the positions of both the nationalist community in Northern Ireland as well as the unionist community in Northern Ireland. “So what I want to do is find a way forward, and my preference is a negotiated solution with the EU, that protects that North-South relationship, but also protects the East-West relationship. And that is absolutely core to the Belfast Good Friday Agreement.” French relationship The UK government’s approach to post-Brexit negotiations has also created rifts with other Western allies, including France. During her leadership bid in August, the then-UK Foreign Secretary said “the jury’s out” on whether French President Emmanuel Macron should be considered a “friend or foe.” Macron shrugged his shoulders when asked about Truss’ comments during a wide-ranging interview with Tapper this week. While Truss declined to call Macron a “friend,” she told CNN she had “a very good meeting” with Macron at the UN General Assembly in New York on Tuesday. “We, again, talked about the values we share with France and how we’re working very, very closely together in all kinds of areas, for example, tackling illegal migration, standing up to Russia, backing the Ukrainians and working together on energy.” ‘We need to learn lessons from Ukraine’ Most recently, Biden said US military personnel would defend Taiwan if the Chinese military were to launch an invasion of the democratically ruled island. Truss has not been as direct as Biden in pledging the UK’s military support, but told CNN: “We are determined to work with our allies to make sure that Taiwan is able to defend itself.” She added that her government was working with its G7 allies including the US, Japan and Canada, to reduce “strategic dependency” on China, and ensure they have a “common response” to the threat of military aggression from Beijing. “Well, what I’ve been clear about is that all of our allies need to make sure Taiwan is able to defend itself. And that is very, very important. And we need to learn the lessons from Ukraine. “The fact is the free world didn’t do enough to counter Russian aggression early enough. And Putin was emboldened to start this appalling war. And we can’t see that situation happen in other parts of the world.” ‘The Commonwealth is a force for good’ Within the first week of her premiership, Truss was also faced with the death of Queen Elizabeth II. After Britain’s longest-reigning monarch died on September 8 at the age of 96, world leaders gathered at Westminster Abbey for an elaborate state funeral steeped in pageantry. However, the Queen’s death also cast into the spotlight the brutal period of British colonial history during her long reign. Some members of the Commonwealth — a 56-member organization of mostly former British territories — have started reassessing their relationship with the monarchy. After confirming King Charles III as the King of Antigua and Barbuda on Saturday, Prime Minister Gaston Browne told ITV News that he planned on holding a referendum on whether the country becomes a republic in the next three years. When asked about the stability of the Commonwealth following the Queen’s death, Truss said there had been “huge warmth” toward King Charles III since his accession, as well as a huge outpouring of affection for his mother. “I am very, very supportive of the Commonwealth. I think it’s been a hugely important organization. The Commonwealth believes in freedom and democracy, which are important principles that we were — we were discussing earlier in this interview,” she said. “Now, of course, it’s a decision for any country about how they decide to organize themselves. And King Charles has been very clear about that himself. He was clear about that at the Kigali Commonwealth Summit earlier this year. “But I think the Commonwealth is a force for good. It’s a belief in freedom and democracy, and we need more of that in a world wher...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Russian Military Escalation And 'bogus Threats' Show Putin Has Been 'outsmarted' By The Ukrainians Says UK PM Local News 8
Democrats In Florida Seek To Win Over Latinos On Gun Control
Democrats In Florida Seek To Win Over Latinos On Gun Control
Democrats In Florida Seek To Win Over Latinos On Gun Control https://digitalalaskanews.com/democrats-in-florida-seek-to-win-over-latinos-on-gun-control/ MIAMI (AP) — Annette Taddeo walked to a podium overlooking Miami’s Biscayne Bay and described to her audience how she had fled terrorism as a teenager in Colombia and now feared for the safety of her 16-year-old daughter at an American public school. A blue and bright orange bus behind the Democratic congressional candidate carried this message in Spanish: “A future without violence.” “Latinos are here because of the American dream, and it is really hard to do that when you are worried about your kids’ safety,” said Taddeo, a state senator who is challenging a Republican congresswoman, María Elvira Salazar. Few places disappointed Democrats in 2020 as deeply as South Florida. A shift among Latinos toward the GOP contributed to several unexpected losses in House races and helped then-President Donald Trump carry Florida by more than 3 percentage points. Democrats are campaigning differently this year as they aim to connect the party’s priorities to the personal experiences of a group that often feels overlooked in national politics. The effort comes at a volatile moment for Latinos in Florida. Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis has attracted national attention to immigration after arranging to fly a group of Venezuelans from Texas to Massachusetts’ Martha’s Vineyard as part of a state-funded relocation program for migrants who are in the country illegally. While some Venezuelans and Latinos affiliated with the Democratic party have condemned it as a “cruel stunt,” some exiles applauded DeSantis’ actions. Republican Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, a Cuban American, wrote a column in Spanish for a conservative online platform seemingly taking DeSantis’ side by raising concerns that migrants crossing into the United States from Mexico could be criminals freed by Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro. Gun violence, meantime, is a particularly powerful issue in Florida, where two of the deadliest mass shootings in recent years have occurred. Spanish-language media have given wide coverage both to the elementary school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, a predominantly Hispanic area, and to the penalty trial of the shooter who attacked a high school in Parkland, Florida, in 2018. In an Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll conducted in June, 35% of Latinos named gun issues in an open-ended question allowing people to identify up to five issues for the government to be working on in the next year. That compared with 18% in late 2021 and 10% in 2020. “This topic has risen in the consciousness of the Latino community,” said Stephen Nuño-Perez, a pollster analyst at BSP Research firm who researches concerns among Latino voters for the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials (NALEO) Education Fund. A gun control group founded by former Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, who survived a 2011 shooting in Tucson that killed six and injured more than a dozen, chose Florida for a state-specific initiative and selected a slate of candidates to support. The Giffords political committee gave $15,500 to more than three dozen Latino candidates around the country, and the group has so far invested $1 million in Florida this cycle. In Texas, ads and billboards have taken on Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, using remarks he made at one of the news conferences after the Robb Elementary school shooting in his state, when he said it “could have been worse” while initially praising the law enforcement response to the shooting. Later it was revealed that nearly 400 law enforcement officers on the scene waited outside more than an hour before the 18-year-old gunman was shot to death inside a classroom. “It’s a kitchen-table issue,” said Peter Ambler, executive director of Giffords, the gun control group. “We think we have a real opportunity, specifically in Florida, where there have been so many high-profile, tragic acts of gun violence, where there is such an epidemic of gun violence, to really shift votes.” Gun violence is killing an increasing number of children in the United States, with 1,562 deaths among those 17 or younger in 2021, according to the website Gun Violence Archive, which tracks shootings from more than 7,500 law enforcement, media, government and commercial sources. Even though Latin American countries have tough gun restrictions, gun death rates are high as a result of gang violence, which is fueled by illegal firearm trafficking. For some Cubans, though, gun control is off the table. Isabel Caballero, a 96-year-old Cuban woman, said she would not support any gun restrictions. In the years after Fidel Castro and his rebels toppled dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1959, Cubans were encouraged to register weapons and later authorities used a list to go door-to-door encouraging people to turn over the firearms. “‘Guns, What for?’ That’s what he used to say. People turned them over, and then the only people who had guns were them,” Caballero said of Castro and his allies. “Lesson? Do not let them go.” But other Cubans who had arrived later in Miami said they were more willing to support a change, saying they thought it was not right for children to be afraid at school. “You can find guns everywhere, any place. You have $400 and you can get it. It shouldn’t be like this,” said Amauris Puebla, who came from Cuba in 1994. Puebla was playing a game at the Domino Park on a recent morning in Little Havana when Taddeo and Rep. Val Demings, the Democrat challenging Rubio for the Senate, made a stop on the gun safety tour bus. Demings asked him if she could play. She won. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Join our Newsletter for the latest news right to your inbox Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Democrats In Florida Seek To Win Over Latinos On Gun Control
'Multilateral'? Global South's Leaders Question Solidarity
'Multilateral'? Global South's Leaders Question Solidarity
'Multilateral'? Global South's Leaders Question Solidarity https://digitalalaskanews.com/multilateral-global-souths-leaders-question-solidarity/ DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — The United Nations was established on one simple notion above all others: Working together is better than going it alone. But while the term “multilateralism” might be trending at this year’s U.N. General Assembly, some leaders are calling out the heads of richer nations. Whether it’s the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic or climate change, developing countries say it seems that richer nations are thinking of themselves first and not the world’s most vulnerable. “The global economy is now a house on fire, yet we continue to use evacuation methods that rush some nations out to safety while leaving the rest of us behind to fend for ourselves in the burning building,” said Malawi’s president, Lazarus Chakwera. “But if we are truly one U.N. family, then leaving no one behind has to be practiced, not just preached.” Tanzania’s Vice President Philip Isdor Mpango was even more blunt. He said that “unilateralism driven by greed is leading us — rich and poor, strong and weak — to a catastrophe.” When the United Nations was established in 1945, world leaders hoped it would make sure that something like World War II never happened again. Over the years its mandate has tackled everything from nuclear proliferation to protecting refugees. But that high-minded notion of multilateralism has never wavered — even if the reality sometimes has. Vice President of Tanzania Philip Mpango addresses the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly, at U.N. headquarters, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022. (AP Photo/Jason DeCrow) Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS/Jason DeCrow President of Kiribati Taneti Maamau addresses the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 at U.N. headquarters. (AP Photo/Julia Nikhinson) Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS/Julia Nikhinson PreviousNext Kiribati President Taneti Maamau Beretitenti reminded member states last week that the United Nations’ founders wanted to not only prevent future wars but also “improve the standard of living for all.” “Today, we take stock of the progress made towards those goals along with new commitments and to reflect and assess if we have truly lived up those values,” he said. Regionalism and solidarity, he said, “are at risk of being increasingly used to serve specific national interests” rather than for the common benefit. “Broken humanity cannot be fixed by wonderful speeches, meetings, resolutions, nor international instruments, but by an interplay of greater compassion and solidarity,” he added. Mohammad Niamat Elahee, an international business professor at Quinnipiac University in Connecticut, said most rich countries are giving lip service to multilateralism but are, in reality, acting otherwise. “When we try to solve it ourselves, maybe in the short term we gain some benefits only for a limited number of people. But in the long run, it becomes worse for everyone,” he said, pointing to the COVID-19 variants that emerged in developing countries after rich countries initially hoarded vaccine supplies. “For multilateralism to work, we need cooperation across the board. If some countries follow multilateralism and some countries don’t, then it doesn’t work,” Elahee said. “Big countries have a disproportionately high influence in the world,” he said. “When they abandon multilateralism, everybody else abandons it and it becomes a dog-eat-dog world. And that’s the challenge.” Multilateralism has taken a steady stream of hits over the past 20 years, from U.S. military interventions to the backlash against globalization. Former U.S. President Donald Trump’s tenure reintroduced an “America First” approach to foreign policy. His administration eschewed the United Nations as an “unelected, unaccountable global bureaucracy.” Then came the COVID-19 pandemic — a shared global disaster, but also one that exposed how there was enough oxygen for some countries, but untold patients elsewhere would die without. “The richer nations immediately received vaccines at the expense of the have-nots,” Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said last week, echoing the anger of a number of other countries. Even issues that many countries have rallied around, like condemning the war in Ukraine, feel different to nations whose armed conflicts have not garnered the same international solidarity. “They should pause for a moment to reflect on the glaring contrast in their response to the wars elsewhere where women and children have died by the thousands from wars and starvation,” East Timor President José Ramos-Horta told the Assembly. “The response to our beloved Secretary-General’s cries for help in these situations have not met with equal compassion,” he said. “As countries in the Global South, we see double standards.” Countries like Ghana say they need more international solidarity, too, when it comes to the inequities in how economies have weathered the impact of the pandemic and global inflation. The resulting currency devaluations have made it even harder for countries to pay back their U.S. dollar loans. The consequences are also more dire for developing countries when it comes to climate change, leaders say. Presidents from Africa and island nations have been asking richer countries to take more financial responsibility for the fact they’ve contributed the most carbon emissions. The fear lies, too, in what will happen once this annual flurry of promise-making ends, says Pakistani Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif, whose country has seen apocalypse-like flooding. “My real worry is about the next stage of this challenge — when the cameras leave and the story just shifts away to conflicts like Ukraine,” he said. “My question is: Will be left alone to cope with a crisis we did not create?” Ultimately, the “united” in United Nations means interdependence. It’s a notion that the past three years have taught many nations in substantial ways. Bangladesh’s Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina summoned that as she told world leaders that “the greatest lesson we learned from the COVID-19 pandemic is that ‘no one is safe until everyone is safe’.” “Mutual solidarity must be shown more than ever,” she said. “We need to prove that in times of crisis, the United Nations remains the cornerstone of the multilateral system.” ___ West Africa Bureau Chief Krista Larson has covered news across the continent for The Associated Press since 2008. For more AP coverage of the U.N. General Assembly, visit https://apnews.com/hub/united-nations-general-assembly Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
'Multilateral'? Global South's Leaders Question Solidarity
North Korea Fires Ballistic Missile Ahead Of U.S. VP Harris Visit
North Korea Fires Ballistic Missile Ahead Of U.S. VP Harris Visit
North Korea Fires Ballistic Missile Ahead Of U.S. VP Harris Visit https://digitalalaskanews.com/north-korea-fires-ballistic-missile-ahead-of-u-s-vp-harris-visit/ Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com SEOUL, Sept 25 (Reuters) – North Korea fired a ballistic missile towards the sea off its east coast on Sunday, ahead of planned military drills by South Korean and U.S. forces involving an aircraft carrier and a visit to the region by U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris. South Korea’s military said it was a single, short-range ballistic missile fired from near the Taechon area of North Pyongyan Province just before 7 a.m. local time and flew about 600 km (373 miles) at an altitude of 60 km and a speed of Mach 5. “North Korea’s launch of a ballistic missile is an act of grave provocation that threatens the peace and security of the Korean peninsula and international community,” South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com After the launch, the Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Kim Seung-kyum and the U.S. Forces Korea Commander Paul LaCamera discussed the situation and reaffirmed their readiness to respond to any threat or provocation from North Korea, it added. South Korea’s National Security Council held an emergency meeting to discuss response measures and condemned the launch as an apparent violation of the U.N. Security Council Resolutions and an unjustifiable act of provocation. South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol, who arrived in Seoul late on Saturday from a trip to Britain, the United States and Canada, was briefed on the launch, the presidential office said. Japan’s Defence Minister Yasukazu Hamada said Japan estimated the missile reached maximum altitude at 50 km and may have flown on an irregular trajectory. Hamada said it fell outside Japan’s exclusive economic zone and there were no reports of problems with shipping or air traffic. Many of the short-range missiles tested by North Korea in recent years have been designed to evade missile defences by manoeuvring during flight and flying on a lower, “depressed” trajectory, experts have said. “If you include launches of cruise missiles this is the nineteenth launch, which is an unprecedented pace,” Hamada said. “North Korea’s action represents a threat to the peace and security of our country, the region and the international community and to do this as the Ukraine invasion unfolds is unforgivable,” he said, adding that Japan had delivered a protest through North Korea’s embassy in Beijing. U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris departs for travel to Japan and South Korea from Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, U.S. September 25, 2022. REUTERS/Leah Millis The U.S. Indo-pacific Command said it was aware of the launch and consulting closely with allies, in a statement released after the launch, while reaffirming U.S. commitment to the defence of South Korea and Japan. “While we have assessed that this event does not pose an immediate threat to U.S. personnel or territory, or to our allies, the missile launch highlights the destabilising impact of the DPRK’s unlawful Weapons of Mass Destruction and ballistic missile programs.” JOINT DRILLS The launch comes after the arrival of the nuclear-powered American aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan in South Korea to participate in joint drills with South Korean forces for four days from Sept. 26 to 29, and ahead of a planned visit to Seoul this week by Harris. read more It was the first time the North carried out such a launch after firing eight short-range ballistic missiles in one day in early June, which led the United States to call for more sanctions for violating U.N. Security Council resolutions. North Korea rejects U.N. resolutions as an infringement of its sovereign right to self defence and space exploration, and has criticized previous joint drills by the United States and South Korea as proof of their hostile policies. The drills have also been criticised by Russia and China, which have called on all sides not to take steps that raise tensions in the region, and have called for an easing of sanctions. After North Korea conducted an unprecedented number of missile tests this year, including its intercontinental ballistic missiles for the first time since 2017, the United States and South Korea said they would boost joint drills and military displays of power to deter Pyongyang. “Defense exercises are not going to prevent North Korean missile tests,” said Leif-Eric Easley, an international affairs professor at Ewha University in Seoul. But U.S.-South Korea security cooperation helps to deter a North Korean attack and counter Pyongyang’s coercion, and the allies should not let provocations stop them from conducting military training and exchanges needed to maintain the alliance, he added. South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported on Saturday that North Korea may also be preparing to test a submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM), citing the South’s military. read more Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Jihoon Lee; Additional reporting by Josh Smith and Tim Kelly; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Himani Sarkar Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
North Korea Fires Ballistic Missile Ahead Of U.S. VP Harris Visit
3 People Including 15-Year-Old Shot At Kennywood
3 People Including 15-Year-Old Shot At Kennywood
3 People, Including 15-Year-Old, Shot At Kennywood https://digitalalaskanews.com/3-people-including-15-year-old-shot-at-kennywood-2/ Three people were shot, including a 15-year-old, Saturday night at Kennywood Park in West Mifflin, Allegheny County police said.The shooting was the result of an altercation between two groups inside the park in front of the Musik Express ride, police said.Multiple agencies responded to the park around 10:49 p.m. Saturday after initial reports of shots fired.Police are now searching for a suspect. Officials describe him as a black male wearing a black hoodie and a COVID-19-style mask at the time of the shooting. Officers recovered a handgun inside the park.The three victims include a 15-year-old who was shot in the thigh, a 39-year-old who was shot in the leg, and, officials said, a second juvenile who arrived at a hospital with a graze wound. Several other people were treated for “trampling style” injuries, police said.Saturday was the park’s first public Phantom Fall Fest day of the season. The Halloween-themed event was scheduled to run from noon to 11 p.m. Saturday. The park was scheduled to open Sunday, but Kennywood’s website indicates that the park will now be closed and will reopen Sept. 30.In a series of tweets Saturday night on Twitter, park officials wrote: “The park is closed for the night and all guests have exited. We are aware of a situation that occurred this evening and are working with local law enforcement. The safety of our guests and Team Members are our top priority. Members of the park’s security, Allegheny County, and West Mifflin police departments were already on site and immediately responded.”A WTAE photojournalist saw multiple police markers in front of the Musik Express, near the entrance to the Phantom’s Revenge.While police said a handgun was recovered inside the park, all guests and employees to Kennywood “must pass through metal detectors at the entrance gate, and all bags, purses and coolers are subject to search,” the park’s website says. By 1:50 a.m. Sunday, Kennywood Boulevard reopened to traffic.This is a developing story. Stay with Pittsburgh’s Action News 4 for updates. Download the WTAE mobile app to stay connected with breaking news. WEST MIFFLIN, Pa. — Three people were shot, including a 15-year-old, Saturday night at Kennywood Park in West Mifflin, Allegheny County police said. The shooting was the result of an altercation between two groups inside the park in front of the Musik Express ride, police said. Multiple agencies responded to the park around 10:49 p.m. Saturday after initial reports of shots fired. Police are now searching for a suspect. Officials describe him as a black male wearing a black hoodie and a COVID-19-style mask at the time of the shooting. Officers recovered a handgun inside the park. The three victims include a 15-year-old who was shot in the thigh, a 39-year-old who was shot in the leg, and, officials said, a second juvenile who arrived at a hospital with a graze wound. Several other people were treated for “trampling style” injuries, police said. Saturday was the park’s first public Phantom Fall Fest day of the season. The Halloween-themed event was scheduled to run from noon to 11 p.m. Saturday. The park was scheduled to open Sunday, but Kennywood’s website indicates that the park will now be closed and will reopen Sept. 30. In a series of tweets Saturday night on Twitter, park officials wrote: “The park is closed for the night and all guests have exited. We are aware of a situation that occurred this evening and are working with local law enforcement. The safety of our guests and Team Members are our top priority. Members of the park’s security, Allegheny County, and West Mifflin police departments were already on site and immediately responded.” This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. The park is closed for the night and all guests have exited. We are aware of a situation that occurred this evening and are working with local law enforcement. (1/2) — Kennywood (@Kenny_Kangaroo) September 25, 2022 A WTAE photojournalist saw multiple police markers in front of the Musik Express, near the entrance to the Phantom’s Revenge. While police said a handgun was recovered inside the park, all guests and employees to Kennywood “must pass through metal detectors at the entrance gate, and all bags, purses and coolers are subject to search,” the park’s website says. This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. More: 15 year old shot in thigh, 39 year old shot in leg, another juvenile showed up at hospital with graze wound. Police say shooting was preceded by altercation between two groups. @WTAE — Mike Valente (@ValenteWTAE) September 25, 2022 This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. Suspect is described as teenage male, with black hoodie and “COVID style” mask. @WTAE — Mike Valente (@ValenteWTAE) September 25, 2022 By 1:50 a.m. Sunday, Kennywood Boulevard reopened to traffic. This is a developing story. Stay with Pittsburgh’s Action News 4 for updates. Download the WTAE mobile app to stay connected with breaking news. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
3 People Including 15-Year-Old Shot At Kennywood
Reusing Contact Lenses Raises Odds For Rare Eye Infection
Reusing Contact Lenses Raises Odds For Rare Eye Infection
Reusing Contact Lenses Raises Odds For Rare Eye Infection https://digitalalaskanews.com/reusing-contact-lenses-raises-odds-for-rare-eye-infection/ SUNDAY, Sept. 25, 2022 (HealthDay News) — Although wearing reusable contact lenses is generally safe, it can be associated with a greater risk of a rare eye infection, new British research shows. In the study, people who wore reusable contact lenses were nearly four times more likely to develop the infection called Acanthamoeba keratitis (AK) than those who wore daily disposable lenses. Risks increased for those wearing them overnight or leaving them in while in the shower. “In recent years, we have seen an increase of Acanthamoeba keratitis in the [United Kingdom] and Europe, and while the infection is still rare, it is preventable and warrants a public health response,” said lead author Dr. John Dart, of University College London’s (UCL) Institute of Ophthalmology and Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. “Contact lenses are generally very safe but are associated with a small risk of microbial keratitis, most commonly caused by bacteria, and which is the only sight threatening complication of their use,” Dart said in a college news release. “Given that an estimated 300 million people across the globe wear contact lenses, it is important that people know how to minimize their risks for developing keratitis.” To study the issue, researchers recruited more than 200 patients of Moorfields Eye Hospital in London. This included 83 people with AK and 122 participants who came to eye clinics with other conditions. The researchers found that people who wore reusable soft contact lenses had 3.8 times the odds of developing AK compared to people who wore daily disposable lenses. Certain behaviors increased the odds. Showering with lenses in increased the odds of AK by 3.3 times, while wearing lenses overnight increased the odds by 3.9 times. “Previous studies have linked AK to wearing contact lenses in hot tubs, swimming pools or lakes, and here we have added showers to that list, underlining that exposure to any water when wearing lenses should be avoided,” said study first author and associate professor Nicole Carnt. She’s an associate professor of University of New South Wales, Sydney, UCL’s Institute of Ophthalmology and Moorfields Eye Hospital. “Public pools and coastal authorities could help reduce this risk by advising against swimming in contact lenses,” Carnt said in the release. Somewhere between 30% and 62% of cases of AK in the United Kingdom, and potentially in many other countries, could be prevented if people switched from reusable lenses to daily disposables, researchers found. Sight loss is uncommon from microbial keratitis. However, Acanthamoeba is one of the most severe types of keratitis and is responsible for about half of those contact lens users who lose their sight after such an infection. About a quarter of total patients lose more than 75% of vision or become blind after the disease. About 25% of people affected require corneal transplants to treat the disease or restore vision. “Contact lens packaging should include information on lens safety and risk avoidance, even as simple as ‘no water’ stickers on each case, particularly given that many people buy their lenses online without speaking to a health professional,” Dart said. “Basic contact lens hygiene measures can go a long way in avoiding infections, such as by thoroughly washing and drying your hands before putting in your lenses.” The study findings were published Sept. 23 in Ophthalmology. More information The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on Acanthamoeba keratitis. SOURCE: University College London, news release, Sept. 22, 2022 Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Reusing Contact Lenses Raises Odds For Rare Eye Infection
Gold: Should Investors Hold It In A Bear Market? Experts Weigh In
Gold: Should Investors Hold It In A Bear Market? Experts Weigh In
Gold: Should Investors Hold It In A Bear Market? Experts Weigh In https://digitalalaskanews.com/gold-should-investors-hold-it-in-a-bear-market-experts-weigh-in/ The precious metal often labeled a ‘hedge against inflation’ and commonly known as a ‘safe haven’, is looking dull. Gold (GC=F) is 23% off from its peak in March, and 10% down year-to-date. In our series, ‘What to do in a bear market’, we asked the experts to tell us if there is value to holding gold in this environment. Why hasn’t gold performed better this year? “First, with major central banks around the world tightening their policies, this has helped to send bond yields to multi-year highs. Yield-seeking investors have been better off to hold government bonds to get some guaranteed return rather than holding zero-yielding assets like gold,” Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst at City Index and FOREX.com told Yahoo Finance. “Second, the strengthening US dollar has weighed heavily on nearly all major buck-denominated assets, including gold. Would-be buyers earning in foreign currencies are having to pay more, and so they are being discouraged to invest in gold,” he continued. Should investors hold gold in their portfolios, and if so, how much? This is where fund managers and strategists really differ. “We do not recommend a fixed allocation to gold unless investors want to speculate on currency rates or have some other short-term bull thesis that could cause gold to appreciate,” Jay Hatfield, portfolio manager of the InfraCap Equity Income Fund (ICAP) ETF told Yahoo Finance. Rob Haworth, senior investment strategist at U.S. bank wealth management generally recommends “little to no permanent gold or metals exposure for portfolios given the price volatility and no consistent income stream.” “Investors may consider very modest exposures if they are particularly concerned about trend in the value of the U.S. dollar reversing, which could unhinge inflation pressures further and support gold prices,” said Haworth. Others support a small exposure in a portfolio. “In general, although each investor’s situation is unique, we believe a 3-5% allocation to gold products would seem adequately sized to capture the benefits of holding gold as an asset class,” says Imaru Casanova, deputy portfolio manager/senior gold analyst at VanEck Mohit Bajaj of WallachBech Capital tells Yahoo Finance he’s a “big proponent of always allocating across the board in all sorts of asset classes. Anywhere from 5-10%… should be more than sufficient.” For investors who want to hold the yellow metal, which is better: Physical gold or paper gold (investments that cover gold ETFs) ? Some experts bring up safety and storage concerns when it comes to physical gold. Louis Navellier, founder, and chief investment officer of Navellier & Associates tells Yahoo Finance he doesn’t recommend physical gold, but he does have a tip for those who insist on holding it: “There is a big markup on coins, so Credit Suisse bars are typically sold with a smaller markup.” As for ETFs, Navellier says, “I do not recommend gold ETFs, since I do not like to pay the ETF spreads.” But Bajaj of WallachBech recommends the SPDR Gold Shares (GLD), “if you want to get access to gold without having to physically buy the metal.” GraniteShares Gold Trust (BAR) “is another one that we’ve seen a lot of strong demand in,” said Bajaj. “From a price standpoint, it’s only like $16 or $17, so for those who are novice investors who want to put their foot into the space, they can buy that without having to expend as much capital,” he added. Ines is a markets reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter @ines_ferre Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Gold: Should Investors Hold It In A Bear Market? Experts Weigh In
Cheney Will Do whatever It Takes To Prevent A Trump 2024 Nomination Including Leaving The GOP
Cheney Will Do whatever It Takes To Prevent A Trump 2024 Nomination Including Leaving The GOP
Cheney Will Do “whatever It Takes” To Prevent A Trump 2024 Nomination — Including Leaving The GOP https://digitalalaskanews.com/cheney-will-do-whatever-it-takes-to-prevent-a-trump-2024-nomination-including-leaving-the-gop/ Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) vowed this weekend to do “whatever it takes” to prevent former President Trump from securing the GOP nomination in 2024. Why it matters: Cheney, whose outward criticism of the former president has made her a pariah in the Republican Party, said during the Texas Tribune Festival that she will leave the GOP if Trump wins the nomination. Driving the news: “I certainly will do whatever it takes to make sure Donald Trump isn’t anywhere close to the Oval Office,” Cheney told Texas Tribune CEO Evan Smith. “I’m going to make sure Donald Trump, make sure he’s not the nominee,” Cheney said. “And if he is the nominee, I won’t be a Republican.” State of play: Cheney lost an August primary for her reelection to a Trump-backed candidate, but is continuing as the vice chair of the Jan. 6 select committee. “One of the things that has surprised me the most about my work on this committee is how sophisticated the plan was that Donald Trump was involved in and oversaw every step of the way,” Cheney said during the festival. “It was a multipart plan that he oversaw, he was involved in personally and directly.” “While leaders in Congress were begging him, ‘Please, tell the mob to go home,’ Donald Trump wouldn’t,” she said. “And just set the politics aside for a minute and think to yourself, ‘What kind of human being does that?’” The big picture: Cheney, who reiterated her commitment to conservative policies, said that people should “not doubt” her ability to fight Trump even after leaving office. She did not answer whether she will run for president in 2024. “It’s really important not to just immediately jump to the horse race and to think about what we need as a country,” Cheney said. Go deeper… Liz Cheney’s role in electoral count bill fuels GOP distrust Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Cheney Will Do whatever It Takes To Prevent A Trump 2024 Nomination Including Leaving The GOP
Sunday Summary: Rate Hikes Related's Next Thing And Trump's Bad Week
Sunday Summary: Rate Hikes Related's Next Thing And Trump's Bad Week
Sunday Summary: Rate Hikes, Related's Next Thing And Trump's Bad Week https://digitalalaskanews.com/sunday-summary-rate-hikes-relateds-next-thing-and-trumps-bad-week/ “We’re not even close” to being in a recession. So declared Moody’s economic prognosticator Mark Zandi earlier this month at the National Multifamily Housing Council’s 2022 fall meeting in the nation’s capital. Hopefully that should put us all somewhat at ease, because we’re still in uncertain economic waters. To wit, this week the Fed announced a 75 basis point increase in benchmark interest rates. (It’s the third hike since June and the fifth since the beginning of the year.) “Borrowing essentially has become two times as expensive since the beginning of the year,” Lisa Knee, partner at EisnerAmper, told CO. And these borrowing costs have been doing predictable damage to the single-family market, according to a report from the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which found that permits to build single-family homes were up only 3.5 percent in August. In comparison, the number of permits for multifamily dwellings increased 28 percent. “Buyer traffic is weak in many markets as more consumers remain on the sidelines due to high mortgage rates and home prices that are putting a new home purchase out of financial reach for many households,” National Association of Home Builders Chairman Jerry Konter said. (The NAHB had its own dire report earlier in the week.) “In another indicator of a weakening market, 24 percent of builders reported reducing home prices, up from 19 percent last month.” But this is kind of what the Fed is shooting for. “Housing prices were going up at an unsustainably fast level,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said when announcing the rate hike. “For the longer term what we need is supply and demand to get better aligned so housing prices go up at a reasonable level, at a reasonable pace, and people can afford houses again. We probably in the housing market have to go through a correction to get back to that place.” But, pain of dealing with a correction aside, there are reasons to be optimistic about the long-term future. One indicator is in the land market. In Manhattan, it had been going crazy over the summer. While price per square foot is not what it was at the top of the market (circa 2015 and 2016) dollar volume for land sales are on pace to be 103 percent of what they were last year, according to JLL’s Robert Knakal. “The activity has been precipitated by the consensus that inflation and higher rates are a shorter-term dynamic, and three to four years from today, when what is being purchased for construction will be coming online, broader economic indicators will be back to relatively normal levels,” Knakal wrote in his CO column. In Related news… You know what region needs more housing? Southern California. And do you know who’s been answering this call without any misgivings or second thoughts? Related Companies. The mega-developer just announced plans to turn the 41-acre Metro Town Square in Santa Ana, Calif., into 4,000 units of housing that they’re planning on calling Related Bristol. California was bursting with plans last week; the New York-based East End Capital filed plans for a project with 10 new soundstages, three flex spaces, offices, a four-level garage and more in Glendale. The Sullivan family (best known for the Toyota of Hollywood dealership) proposed a major redevelopment of 6000 Hollywood Boulevard that would include a new 35-story multifamily tower, a six-story office building and multiple low-rise residential townhomes for a total of 350 units. And a retail center in Lancaster (more than 60 miles from Downtown L.A.) also changed hands last week. Merlone Geier Partners traded the 35-acre, 715,000-square-foot Valley Central mall to Bridge33 Capital for $45.3 million. Speaking of retail Along with Valley Central there was interesting mall activity this week. A joint venture between The Meridian Group and Martin-Diamond Properties acquired five J.C. Penney stores in Virginia, Maryland and Delaware comprising some 900,000 square feet for $53 million. Investindustrial, a private equity firm, put down $200 million for a majority stake in Italian food hall chain Eataly, with plans to open new flagship Eatalys around the world. And there were interesting retail leases as well. The indoor golf company Five Iron Golf scored a 30,000-square-foot, 15-year lease at H.J. Kalikow & Company’s 101 Park Avenue. (It’s the golf company’s sixth location in New York.) Grimoire Group signed a 10-year lease for a 6,721-square-foot Asian fusion restaurant at 31 Penn Plaza. A few blocks west we learned that Wild Ink is out and sushi bar BondST is in at Hudson Yards. (It’s BondST’s second location.) And (maybe it’s not retail but it’s certainly retail adjacent) e-commerce marketing firm Yotpo subleased 30,688 square feet from Flatiron Health at One SoHo Square, aka 233 Spring Street. Not everybody had a great week In case you didn’t hear, ex-President Trump has legal problems. In addition to the unfavorable ruling he got from the court-appointed special master on the top-secret documents he was hoarding at Mar-a-Lago, the former president’s real estate business was hit hard by New York Attorney General Letitia James. In a 214-page civil suit, Trump, his organization and three of his children were accused of fraudulently manipulating property valuations for tax and loan purposes. The suit is asking the Trump Organization to repay $250 million and would bar Trump, Eric Trump, Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump from making commercial real estate acquisitions in New York for five years, and from serving on the boards of any New York firms. Of course, Trump wasn’t the only one to have a bad week. The remaining $126.8 million balance of Citigroup’s commercial mortgage-backed securities loan to Cohen Brothers Realty for its Midtown skyscraper at 750 Lexington Avenue — aka International Plaza — has been put into special servicing. And Tishman Speyer is swatting away a lawsuit, launched by the watchdog group Housing Rights Initiative and a current tenant at Jackson Park in Long Island City, claiming Tishman Speyer skirted the rent stabilization laws. (The tenant in question claims that their rent went up 58 percent from 2021 to 2022.) We’ll always have Florida Florida had a pretty good week, real estate-wise. Related Companies — again with Related Companies?! — is proposing a 25-story, 456,000-square-foot office building in Downtown Miami that they’re calling 515 Fern, a block from the Brightline train station and featuring some 15,000 square feet for retail. They’re not the only big New York-based real estate company to broaden their South Florida plans. Jim Zboril, previously of Tavistock Development Company, was tapped last week to be CEO of the West Palm Beach-located L&L Development Group with plans to expand the firm’s presence across the Sun Belt. Heck, the Magic City is even doing flex office leases. Quest Workspaces just grabbed more than 26,000 square feet at CP Group’s One Biscayne Tower. And now for some quiet Sunday reading Another developer who has seen his future in multifamily has been William Macklowe (better known as Billy). Macklowe is in the midst of developing one of the most exciting (and excoriated) Park Slope projects in years at 120 Fifth Avenue. Macklowe sat with CO to discuss Brooklyn, multifamily and the future of the five-day workweek. To those who observe, have a sweet new year. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Sunday Summary: Rate Hikes Related's Next Thing And Trump's Bad Week
Letter: DeSantis Stunt Is Selfish
Letter: DeSantis Stunt Is Selfish
Letter: DeSantis’ Stunt Is Selfish https://digitalalaskanews.com/letter-desantis-stunt-is-selfish/ By Ted Gathe, Vancouver Published: September 25, 2022, 6:00am It’s hard to imagine a worse, more sadistic political stunt than what the Trump administration did in separating immigrant children from their parents. But Ron DeSantis, Florida governor, and before him Greg Abbot of Texas managed to exceed the boundaries of political acceptability by sending immigrants to destinations in the U.S. that would supposedly embarrass the so-called Democratic elite. DeSantis, who aspires to be our next president, sent immigrants to Martha’s Vineyard, an island off the New England coast, in some kind of perverted political show that would demonstrate his Trump-esque credentials. All it really showed was a deeply flawed politician who would treat innocent people as political pawns for his own selfish purposes. So let me ask Gov. DeSantis of Florida this question: would you have done the same with the people fleeing Cuba who illegally entered the U.S. for so many years? I think not. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Letter: DeSantis Stunt Is Selfish
Tributes Paid To Former SNP MSP Chic Brodie
Tributes Paid To Former SNP MSP Chic Brodie
Tributes Paid To Former SNP MSP Chic Brodie https://digitalalaskanews.com/tributes-paid-to-former-snp-msp-chic-brodie/ TRIBUTES have been paid to the former SNP MSP Chic Brodie, who has died at the age of 78. He was described as a “lovely colleague and friend” by Deputy First Minister John Swinney, while Alex Salmond remembered the South Scotland MSP as someone who had made an “engaging and positive contribution to Scottish politics over many years.” News of Mr Brodie’s death was shared on Twitter by Allan Dorans, the SNP MP for Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock. “Sad to report that Chic Brodie, former SNP MSP for South of Scotland, passed away today after a short illness. Thoughts and prayers with Mary and his family,” he tweeted.  Mr Brodie was first elected to Holyrood in 2011, becoming a list MSP for the SNP little more than a year after he joined up.  He had previously been an active member of the Liberal Democrats, standing as a candidate at every general election between 1974 and 2001. He very nearly became an MP in 1983 when he was selected as the Liberal candidate in Glasgow’s Hillhead constituency.  However, when in 1982, the sitting MP Tam Galbraith died, sparking a by-election, he moved aside to allow the SDP’s Roy Jenkins to contest the seat Mr Brodie found success at the 1995 local elections in England when he was elected as a councillor in Surrey Heath, a seat he held until 1999. He was the SNP’s candidate in Ayr for both the 2010 Westminster and 2011 Holyrood votes. However, he was returned on the South of Scotland regional list in 2011.  Despite a high profile, he lost out in a fierce selection battle for the next Scottish Parliament election, with Glasgow councillor Jennifer Dunn picked by members to contest the constituency.  And though he was still on the list, he was placed seventh, signalling the end of his SNP parliamentary career.  That effective deselection followed questions over the payment of tens of thousands of pounds of taxpayers’ money to a fellow SNP politician’s company for staffing services. During his time in parliament he had paid almost £88,000 from his Holyrood expenses to Caledonii Resources for contract staff.  The company, set up in 2010, was 90 per cent owned by his SNP colleague Corri Wilson, who later went on to become the MP for Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock. In January 2017, Mr Brodie resigned from the party and announced that he would stand as an Independent candidate in the Ayr West ward of South Ayrshire as part of the 2017 Council election. He secured 506 first preference votes, finishing last behind six other candidates. In 2020, Mr Brodie announced that he would be founding a new party, Scotia Future, and would stand at the 2021 Scottish Parliament election. It was unsuccessful, winning only 267 votes.  Michael Russell, the president of the SNP, tweeted: “Sorry to hear this – Chic was always engaging & good company.  His own political journey to independence reflected how Scotland itself has changed over the last thirty years. Condolences to his family.” Former Falkirk East MSP Angus MacDonald said: “Chic was a colleague and friend at Holyrood for five years serving with me on a number of committees. Always well-intentioned and sometimes a bit of a maverick. “Many an entertaining conversation we had. His wealth of business knowledge was second to none.” Tory MSP Murdo Fraser added: “Very sad news. I worked closely with Chic on the Economy, Energy and Tourism Committee at Holyrood and always appreciated his insights and good humour. “His famous exchange with Donald Trump became the stuff of legend.” Mr Brodie was part of the committee when Trump appeared before it in 2012 and claimed the Scottish public hated windfarms. Asked by Mr Brodie if he had any evidence for that claim, the future president replied: “I am the evidence.” The politician – who had an Elvis-like quiff – later recalled: “I challenged him head on and it became known as the Battle of the Barnets.” Nevertheless, the politician would soon become something of a supporter of the tycoon.  When Mr Trump flew over to Scotland in the middle of the 2016 election campaign to open Turnberry, Mr Brodie was the only MSP in attendance.  “To be fair, there was a mutual respect after that and we built up something of a relationship when he bought Turnberry,” he said. “His investment in this area and its young people has been nothing short of superb.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Tributes Paid To Former SNP MSP Chic Brodie
Names And Faces
Names And Faces
Names And Faces https://digitalalaskanews.com/names-and-faces-2/ Elton John performs on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. John is calling the show “A Night When Hope and History Rhyme,” a reference to a poem by Irishman Seamus Heaney that President Joe Biden often quotes. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) • “God bless you, let’s have some music,” said Elton John. With that, the White House South Lawn was transformed into a musical lovefest Friday night as John played a farewell gig to honor everyday heroes like teachers, nurses and AIDS activists. But as it turns out, the event was also to honor the 75-year-old British songwriter, as President Joe Biden surprised him with the National Humanities Medal for helping people rise up for justice. John seemed almost overcome by the accolade, telling the audience of 2,000 people: “I don’t know what to say. … I don’t know how to take a compliment very well, but it’s wonderful to be here amongst so many people who have helped my AIDS foundation and my heroes, the ones that work day to day on the front line.” He said he’d played some beautiful venues before, but the stage in front of the White House, beneath a massive open-air tent on a perfect autumn night, was “probably the icing on the cake.” He kicked off the show with “Your Song,” his first big international hit. The intimate guest list included teachers, nurses, front-line workers and LGBTQ advocates, plus former first lady Laura Bush, civil-rights advocate Ruby Bridges, education activist Malala Yousafzai and Jeanne White-Ginder, an AIDS activist and the mother of Ryan White, who died from AIDS-related complications in 1990. Despite the presence of plenty of lawmakers, the political speak was kept to a minimum, except for when John said, “I just wish America would be more bipartisan on everything.” Biden and first lady Jill Biden talked about the singer’s activism, the power of his music and his all-around goodness. The event was dreamed up and paid for by A+E and the History Channel. “Seamus Heaney once wrote, and I quote, ‘Once in a lifetime, the longed-for tidal wave of justice can rise up, and hope and history rhyme,” Biden said. “Throughout his incredible career, Sir Elton John has been that tidal wave, a tidal wave to help people rise up and make hope and history rhyme.” John punctuated the hits with emotional tidbits of his history, including a shout-out to Laura Bush and former President George W. Bush for his administration’s emergency plan for AIDS relief, and a story of how a dying Ryan White and his mother pushed him into advocacy in the first place, and helped him get sober. “I wouldn’t be here talking tonight,” he said. “They saved my life.” He then dedicated “Don’t Let The Sun Go Down On Me” to Ryan. • Rudolph Giuliani is looking at jail time if he fails to pay ex-wife Judith Nathan $235,000 next month, a Manhattan judge ordered Friday. Judge Michael Katz’s order came after Giuliani, the ex-mayor of New York and current Donald Trump adviser, skipped a court hearing in a lawsuit Nathan filed over his failure to heed the terms of their 2019 divorce settlement, court officials said. Katz issued the order orally during the hearing Giuliani missed, a court official said. At a previous hearing, Giuliani said he would pay Nathan what she’s owed — but specified a much lower amount and complained she didn’t file her paperwork properly.     President Joe Biden greets David Furnish, husband of Elton John, after Biden presented him with a National Humanities Medal after a concert on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)        David Furnish, husband of Elton John, left, Elton John, President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden pose for a photo after Biden presented Elton John with a National Humanities Medal after a concert on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)        Elton John performs on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. John is calling the show “A Night When Hope and History Rhyme,” a reference to a poem by Irishman Seamus Heaney that President Joe Biden often quotes. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)        Elton John performs on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. John is calling the show “A Night When Hope and History Rhyme,” a reference to a poem by Irishman Seamus Heaney that President Joe Biden often quotes. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)        Elton John performs on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. John is calling the show “A Night When Hope and History Rhyme,” a reference to a poem by Irishman Seamus Heaney that President Joe Biden often quotes. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)        President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden watch as Elton John performs on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. John is calling the show “A Night When Hope and History Rhyme,” a reference to a poem by Irishman Seamus Heaney that President Joe Biden often quotes. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)        Elton John performs on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. John is calling the show “A Night When Hope and History Rhyme,” a reference to a poem by Irishman Seamus Heaney that President Joe Biden often quotes. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)        President Joe Biden speaks as David Furnish, husband of Elton John, left, Elton John and first lady Jill Biden listen after Biden presented him with a National Humanities Medal after a concert on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)        Elton John performs on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. John is calling the show “A Night When Hope and History Rhyme,” a reference to a poem by Irishman Seamus Heaney that President Joe Biden often quotes. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)    Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Names And Faces
Plea Guilty In China-Related NASA Case
Plea Guilty In China-Related NASA Case
Plea Guilty In China-Related NASA Case https://digitalalaskanews.com/plea-guilty-in-china-related-nasa-case/ HOUSTON — A NASA researcher and Texas A&M University professor has pleaded guilty to charges related to hiding his ties to a university created by the Chinese government while accepting federal grant money. Zhengdong Cheng pleaded guilty to two counts — violation of NASA regulations and falsifying official documents — during a hearing Thursday in Houston federal court. Cheng’s conviction was part of a program called the China Initiative, which was first started under the Trump administration. But in February, the Justice Department abandoned the program after complaints it chilled academic collaboration and contributed to anti-Asian bias. The department had also endured high-profile setbacks in individual prosecutions, resulting in the dismissal of multiple criminal cases against academic researchers in the last year. The Justice Department said it planned to impose a higher bar for such prosecutions. Cheng had originally been charged with wire fraud, conspiracy and false statements when he was arrested in August 2020. But he pleaded guilty to the new charges as part of an agreement with federal prosecutors. U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen sentenced Cheng to the time he had already served during his pretrial incarceration — about 13 months. Cheng also agreed to pay restitution of $86,876 and pay a fine of $20,000. Philip Hilder, Cheng’s attorney, said the professor was “relieved that this unfortunate chapter of his life is behind.” “The China Initiative … has now been phased out as a Justice Department priority. The overall mission stays the same, to ferret out economic espionage, but the focus is to target wrongdoers by their deeds and not by their ethnicity,” Hilder said. Prosecutors accused Cheng, who was hired by Texas A&M in 2004, of concealing his work in China even as his team of researchers received nearly $750,000 in grant money for space research. NASA is restricted from using funds for any collaboration or coordination with China, Chinese institutions or any Chinese-owned company. But, prosecutors say, Cheng violated those restrictions by maintaining multiple undisclosed associations with China, including serving as director of a soft matter institute at a technology university in Guangdong, China, that was established by China’s Ministry of Education. Cheng was fired from Texas A&M shortly after his arrest. In a tweet Friday, FBI Houston Special Agent in Charge James Smith said his agency “prioritizes investigating threats to academia as part of our commitment to preventing intellectual property theft at U.S. research institutions and companies.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Plea Guilty In China-Related NASA Case
Tropical Storm Ian About To Have rapid Intensification Florida Track Is Uncertain
Tropical Storm Ian About To Have rapid Intensification Florida Track Is Uncertain
Tropical Storm Ian About To Have ‘rapid Intensification,’ Florida Track Is Uncertain https://digitalalaskanews.com/tropical-storm-ian-about-to-have-rapid-intensification-florida-track-is-uncertain/ Tropical Storm Ian is expected to have “rapid intensification” today, grow into a major hurricane in the next 48 hours and eventually hit Florida – but many questions remain including when, where and how strong the storm will be at the time of landfall. In its 5 a.m. Sunday update, the National Hurricane Center said Tropical Storm Ian had maximum-sustained winds of 50 mph. The storm was located about 345 miles south-southeast of Grand Cayman and moving to the west-northwest at 12 mph. A hurricane warning is in effect for Grand Cayman and a hurricane watch is in effect for parts of Cuba. “The NHC intensity forecast calls for rapid intensification to begin later today, and forecasts Ian to be a major hurricane when it nears western Cuba in about 48 hours,” the NHC said in its early Sunday update. By Tuesday, the storm is expected to become a Category 3 hurricane with winds of 120 mph and a Category 4 on Wednesday with winds of 140 mph. Computer forecast models agree Ian will hit Florida, but don’t agree on where. “There are still significant differences regarding the exact track of the storm, especially after 72 hours,” the NHC cautioned. Two models, the UKMET and ECMWF, show the storm will make landfall in west-central Florida. Two other models, the GFS and HWRF, show the storm moving more west and take Ian into the central or western Florida panhandle. This early Sunday morning satellite image shows Tropical Storm Ian spinning south of Cuba. (NOAAA/National Hurricane Center) The hurricane center’s current forecast track for the storm basically splits the difference between the different models with the NHC’s best guess. “It cannot be overstated that significant uncertainty remains in Ian’s long-range prediction,” the NHC cautioned. “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 the week, and residents in Florida should ensure they have their hurricane plan in place, follow any advice given by local officials, and closely monitor updates to the forecast,” the hurricane center said. Across Central Florida, residents were spending part of the weekend preparing for Ian’s possible arrival. A Target store near Millenia had very few gallon bottles of water left on Saturday, as signs on the shelves limited purchases to four cases or bottles per customer. 5AM Update | Uncertainty in the long-term track & intensity forecast of TS Ian is higher than usual. Direct impacts to E central FL remain uncertain, but windy conditions & heavy rainfall will be possible into the middle of next week. Continue to monitor the forecast for updates. pic.twitter.com/e9uA7j42D9 — NWS Melbourne (@NWSMelbourne) September 25, 2022 “This is the third store I visited today,” said Maritza Osorio, who was leaving Target for a fourth location. “If not, we’ll have to try again tomorrow.” There was fewer foot traffic through a Home Depot in the same plaza, with many people carrying water in their carts as others shopped for slabs of plywood to be used as shutters, along with other items. The National Hurricane Center’s key messages for Tropical Storm Ian and its impact on Florida and elsewhere. (NOAA/National Hurricane Center) Though it’s not yet clear whether, or how strongly, Ian will hit if it strikes Central Florida, people like Gary Wilson aren’t taking any chances. He’s had his hurricane kit ready with supplies weeks into the beginning of the season and was at Home Depot for final preparations, just in case. [ What supplies should you have in your hurricane prep kit? ] “If anything happens, I’m ready,” Wilson said. On Saturday, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis issued a state of emergency order for all of the Sunshine State – expanding an order he issued Friday that declared in an emergency in two dozen counties. DeSantis also mobilized the National Guard to assist with storm prep and recovery. The earliest reasonable arrival of tropical-storm-force winds from Ian. (NOAA/National Hurricane Center.) “This storm has the potential to strengthen into a major hurricane and we encourage all Floridians to make their preparations,” DeSantis said in a statement. “We are coordinating with all state and local government partners to track potential impacts of this storm.” President Joe Biden also declared an emergency for the state, authorizing the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, to coordinate disaster relief efforts and provide assistance to protect lives and property. The president postponed a scheduled Sept. 27 trip to Orlando due to the storm. Cristóbal Reyes of the Sentinel staff and the Associated Press contributed to this report Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Tropical Storm Ian About To Have rapid Intensification Florida Track Is Uncertain
Lavrov Pledges 'full Protection' For Any Territory Annexed By Russia
Lavrov Pledges 'full Protection' For Any Territory Annexed By Russia
Lavrov Pledges 'full Protection' For Any Territory Annexed By Russia https://digitalalaskanews.com/lavrov-pledges-full-protection-for-any-territory-annexed-by-russia/ Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com UNITED NATIONS, Sept 24 (Reuters) – Russia’s top diplomat on Saturday said regions of Ukraine where widely-derided referendums are being held would be under Russia’s “full protection” if they are annexed by Moscow, amid fears Russia could further escalate the conflict and even use nuclear weapons. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, addressing the U.N. General Assembly and the world’s media in New York, attempted to justify Russia’s February invasion of its neighbor, repeating Moscow’s false claims that the elected government in Kyiv was illegitimately installed, filled with neo-Nazis and oppressed Russian speakers in the country’s east. Russia on Friday launched referendums in four eastern ukrainian regions aimed at annexing territory it has taken by force. Kyiv said residents were being coerced into voting and were not allowed to leave the regions during the four-day vote, which Western nations dismissed as a sham designed to justify an escalation of the seven-month old war. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com “Following those referendums, Russia of course will respect the expression of the will of those people who for many long years have been suffering from the abuses of the neo-Nazi regime,” Lavrov said at a news conference after he addressed the assembly. Asked if Russia would have grounds for using nuclear weapons to defend annexed regions of Ukraine, Lavrov said Russian territory, including territory “further enshrined” in Russia’s constitution in the future, “is under the full protection of the state.” “All of the laws, doctrines, concepts and strategies of the Russian Federation apply to all of its territory,” he said, also referring specifically to Russia’s doctrine on the use of nuclear weapons. The comments came after an explicit warning on Thursday by former President Dmitry Medvedev, an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, that any weapons in Moscow’s arsenal, including strategic nuclear weapons, could be used to defend territories incorporated into Russia. Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said Lavrov’s comments, and Putin’s earlier statement when he said he was not bluffing about using nuclear weapons, were “irresponsible” and “absolutely unacceptable.” “Ukraine won’t give in. We call on all nuclear powers to speak out now and make it clear to Russia that such rhetorics put the world at risk and will not be tolerated,” Kuleba wrote on Twitter. Russia accuses the United States and others of being parties to the conflict because they are sending weapons to help Ukraine defend itself. The likely annexation of Ukrainian territory raises the question of how Russia might respond to the use of Western weapons in those regions. FILE PHOTO: Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov attends the 77th Session of the United Nations General Assembly at U.N. Headquarters in New York City, U.S., September 24, 2022. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File Photo/File Photo Ukraine also requested an urgent U.N. Security Council meeting over the referendums, calling for Russia to be “held accountable for its further attempts to change Ukraine’s internationally recognized borders in a violation of the UN Charter,” foreign affairs ministry spokesperson Oleg Nikolenko said on Twitter. MOBILIZATION Putin on Wednesday ordered the country’s first mobilization since World War Two, an announcement that saw some Russian men headed swiftly to the borders, with traffic at frontier crossings with Finland and Georgia surging and prices for air tickets from Moscow rocketing. read more When asked on Saturday why so many Russians were leaving the country, Lavrov pointed to the right of freedom of movement. Putin launched the full-scale invasion after complaining that the expansion of the U.S.-led NATO alliance since the collapse of the Soviet Union was a threat to Russia. Asked whether he could foresee future talks with the United States to make Russia feel more secure about what it calls NATO encroachment, Lavrov said it was the West that had broken off previous discussions. His U.S. counterpart Secretary of State Antony Blinken cut off talks on the eve of the invasion, saying Russia’s movement of forces on Ukraine’s border was a “wholesale rejection of diplomacy.” “We’re not saying no to contacts. And when proposals to that effect come in, we agree. If our partners want to meet quietly so nobody finds out about it that’s fine because it’s always better to talk than not to talk,” Lavrov said. “But in the present situation, Russia is quite simply not going to make the first step.” Lavrov sought to portray opposition to Russia’s war in Ukraine as limited to Washington and countries under its influence. Russia has been trying to overcome its international isolation since nearly three-quarters of the General Assembly voted to reprimand Moscow in March. Russia’s strategic partner China has been firmly on the fence, criticizing Western sanctions against Russia but stopping short of endorsing or assisting in the military campaign. In a surprise acknowledgement, Putin last week said China’s leader Xi Jinping had concerns about Ukraine. When asked if Russia was coming under any pressure from China to end the war, Lavrov said: “You may tell your readers, listeners, viewers that I avoided to answer your question.” Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Michelle Nichols, Humeyra Pamuk and Daphne Psaledakis at the United Nations; Additional reporting by David Ljunggren; writing by Simon Lewis; Editing by Chris Reese and Daniel Wallis Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Lavrov Pledges 'full Protection' For Any Territory Annexed By Russia
GM Shifts Course Will Call Workers Back To Office
GM Shifts Course Will Call Workers Back To Office
GM Shifts Course, Will Call Workers Back To Office https://digitalalaskanews.com/gm-shifts-course-will-call-workers-back-to-office/ GM employees who have been working remotely due to the pandemic will be required to return to the office at least three days a week, starting later this year, the automaker confirmed Friday. An internal message to employees, first obtained by Automotive News and confirmed by GM on Friday, attributed the shift in GM’s Work Appropriately policy to the progress made against the pandemic, saying “the COVID-19 situation has dramatically improved.” “As the COVID landscape has dramatically improved, and as we accelerate our transformation and enter a rapid launch cycle, we are evolving Work Appropriately to drive the best collaboration, enterprise mindset and impact. Effective later this year, employees who transitioned to working remotely some or all of the time during the pandemic will pivot to a more regular in-person work cycle, and they will now be expected to work three days on-campus each week,” GM spokesperson Maria Raynal said in a statement via email Friday. “We’re committed to maintaining flexibility to ensure our employees can attend to personal commitments, and we will share details with them in the coming weeks.” More:GM to reinstate a dividend and start stock buybacks, signaling confidence More:GM’s joint venture considers location near Michigan border for 4th battery plant According to an article in Crain’s Detroit business, GM’s message to employees was attributed to “the senior leadership team,” listing CEO Mary Barra, President Mark Reuss and 12 other top executives. The message, which also cited the desire to encourage more collaboration moving forward did not say specifically when the new policy would take effect. On April 20, 2021, GM laid forth a new philosophy that signaled a culture shift for the 113-year-old automaker called Work Appropriately. Work Appropriately gave many salaried employees flexibility to work wherever they could best do their job. GM viewed it as a hiring and retention tool because GM has more access to talent by not requiring all its employees to move to Michigan or make daily commutes. GM’s new return-to-office plan couldn’t come fast enough for the Renaissance Center. The site of GM’s headquarters effectively became a ghost town when COVID-19 sent office workers packing to work from home. Among them: roughly 5,000 GM employees. GM has been unable to provide any figures on how many employees show up to RenCen offices daily because Work Appropriately means the number fluctuates daily. Without them, it was quite quiet. Back in June, it was questioned about what was going to happen to the RenCen because of how empty it became, plus GM owns part of the building. Since the pandemic, RenCen lost Deloitte LLP as a tenant, and Blue Cross Blue Shield moved about 50 of its 2,000 workers to a smaller office in Detroit. Free Press staff writer Jamie Lareau contributed. Free Press staff writer JC Reindl contributed. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
GM Shifts Course Will Call Workers Back To Office
Irans Ferocious Return To The Belligerent Policies Of The Revolutions Early Days
Irans Ferocious Return To The Belligerent Policies Of The Revolutions Early Days
Iran’s Ferocious Return To The Belligerent Policies Of The Revolution’s Early Days https://digitalalaskanews.com/irans-ferocious-return-to-the-belligerent-policies-of-the-revolutions-early-days/ Mahsa Amini, a twenty-two-year-old Kurd who was visiting relatives in Tehran this month, had raven hair that draped over her shoulders and ran long down her back. A music lover who worked in a clothing store, she liked taking pictures blowing the wispy seeds off a dandelion clock. Like so many Iranian women four decades after the Revolution, she was wearing the compulsory hijab, or head scarf, loosely over her head as she emerged from the subway with her younger brother, Kiarash, on September 13th. Some of her hair showed. With no warning, Iran’s morality police nabbed her for wearing “unsuitable attire.” She was bundled off to a reëducation center that instructs women how to comply with the Islamic Republic’s strict dress code. The police told her brother that she would be released later that night. She wasn’t. The next picture of Amini, released via social media, showed her on a ventilator in a Tehran hospital. She was in a coma; her head was bloodied. Three days after her arrest, she was declared brain-dead. At first, the government claimed that she had died of a heart attack. Then it released a video showing her in the reëducation classroom, walking across the aisle, beginning to faint, then collapsing onto the ground. Her family claimed that she had been healthy; they charged that she suffered head injuries from being beaten by the police. “The cause of the accident is clear as day,” Amini’s uncle told an Iranian media outlet. “What happens when they grab girls and stick them in the car with such ferocity and terror? Do they have the right? They know nothing about Islam, nor humanity.” News of Amini’s death lit the fuse of long-smoldering dissent in Iran. Protests ignited in Tehran and Saqez, her home town in the Kurdish northwest, then spread across eighty cities during the next week. Women burned their hijabs in public bonfires. Others—in groups and alone—posted videos showing themselves cutting their hair almost to the scalp. In major cities and small towns, thousands of women and men gathered to wave posters with Amini’s photo and to demand change—over more than hijab. “Death to the oppressor!” crowds roared. Some dared to call for the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has been Iran’s Supreme Leader since 1989. Police tried to contain the crowds with tear gas and pellet guns. Ten days after Amini’s death, at least thirty protesters had been killed—some accounts put the number much higher—in the worst protests in Iran since 2019. One of them was a sixteen-year-old boy, the BBC reported. Protests spread across the Middle East, then to Europe and North America. A candlelight vigil was held in Los Angeles, and demonstrators demanding the resignation of President Ebrahim Raisi rallied outside the U.N. in New York. Four topless members of Femen—with “Women, Life, Freedom” painted in big black letters across their chests—raised their fists outside the Iranian Embassy in Madrid. Women cut off their hair, in sympathy, in a Berlin protest. Police scuffled with protesters outside the Iranian Embassy in Athens. Amid the growing international outcry, Raisi arrived at the U.N. General Assembly in New York—his first trip to the United States, and his début at the world body—full of his own fury. During a fiery address to the U.N., he angrily waved a large photograph of General Qasem Soleimani, the commander of the Revolutionary Guards’ notorious Quds Force, who was assassinated in a drone strike ordered by President Donald Trump in 2020. Raisi called for Trump to be tried for the murder as “a service to humanity, so that from now on, cruelty will be silenced, and justice will prevail.” In his speech, at meetings with think-tank experts and with media executives, and at a press conference, he angrily claimed that American police were responsible for far more civilian deaths compared to the one death in Iran. “How many times in the United States, men and women are killed every day at the hands of law-enforcement personnel,” he told me and a small group of journalists on Thursday. His voice rose so loudly and so often that it was frequently hard to hear the English translation through our headsets. Raisi, ranting, also accused the U.S. of “trampling” on nuclear talks, which have stalled after seventeen months of meetings in Vienna and Doha between the world’s six major powers and Iran. He blamed the U.S. for “choking the life” out of the historic 2015 nuclear deal after Trump withdrew from it in 2018. Iran has since breached the limitations imposed on its controversial nuclear program, most notably by enriching more uranium at levels closer and closer to the amounts needed to produce a bomb. Today, Iran is just a few weeks, or even days, away from the ability to fuel a bomb. In reality, the European Union says that new demands by Iran this month had caused the deadlock. On multiple fronts, Raisi has ferociously swung the pendulum back to the kind of xenophobic policies and tone-deaf rhetoric witnessed during the Revolution’s early days. The overtures by other Iranian leaders—President Akbar Rafsanjani’s back-channel diplomacy with Washington, President Mohammad Khatami’s overtures to bring down the “wall of mistrust,” President Hassan Rouhani’s willingness to take a cell-phone call from the White House—are long gone. On Saturday, the hard-line paper Kayhan, whose long-standing editor was appointed by the Supreme Leader, boasted that Raisi had “stunned the world” in his U.N. speech. “Time to punish America’s bastards,” it wrote. On the international stage, Iran has tightened its ties with Russia’s Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping. I asked Raisi about the kamikaze Iranian drones that his government has sold to Russia that have started to make a difference on the Ukrainian battlefield. The delta-wing aircraft—repainted in Russian national colors—have taken out howitzers and other key equipment around Kharkiv. “I do believe that any help that can be given, that can be constructively used in bringing the war to an end,” Raisi responded. “During the meeting that we had with Mr. Putin in Tehran or the Shanghai meetings, we have expressed as much directly to him that we wish to do everything possible to help bring the war to a close.” He insisted that NATO’s expansion, which began fourteen years ago, had triggered the war and since dragged it out. He declined to say whether Iran would provide any other matériel or intelligence and insisted that Tehran had offered to negotiate an end to the conflict. Meanwhile, China has become the largest importer of Iranian oil, helping Tehran to circumvent U.S. sanctions. Ironically, Iran and Russia, both sanctioned by Washington, are now offering discounts as they compete to sell oil to Beijing. But Amini’s death drew outrage at Iran from many other nations during the opening of the U.N. General Assembly. In his address on Wednesday, President Joe Biden expressed solidarity with the protesters. “Today we stand with the brave citizens and the brave women of Iran who right now are demonstrating to secure their basic rights,” he told more than a hundred and fifty world leaders. Last week, the U.S. imposed new sanctions on Iran’s morality police and authorized American companies to bypass sanctions and provide Internet service so Iranians would freely have access to information online. Iran had shut down the Internet as the protests raged. Elon Musk’s SpaceX immediately deployed its Starlink satellite service—as it did for Ukraine after Russia’s invasion—to facilitate access to the Internet. The German Foreign Minister, Annalena Baerbock, condemned Iran’s crackdown on the protests as “an attack on humanity,” while Chilean President Gabriel Boric called on the world to “mobilize efforts to stop violence against women whether it be in Iran, in memory of Mahsa Amini, who died at the hands of the police this week, or anywhere in the world.” Amini would almost certainly have been stunned by the global reaction. As Iran takes a hard turn at home and abroad, the government on Friday orchestrated its own demonstrations—against the protesters—to exert its will. Women wrapped in all-enveloping black chadors took to the streets to demand that the protesters face the death penalty. Kayhan, the state-controlled news outlet, boasted that tens of millions had turned out to support the regime—with scant evidence that the numbers were accurate. “We are the defenders of a fight against injustice,” Raisi claimed at the U.N. His intransigence was frighteningly reminiscent of his role in the first decade of the Revolution. In 1988, Raisi was one of four prosecutors on a “death commission” who sentenced an estimated five thousand political prisoners to execution by hanging. Many were in their teens or early twenties. The danger is that it is beginning to happen all over again. On Saturday, as the protests spread to most of Iran’s thirty-one provinces, Raisi vowed to “deal decisively” with what he called “riots.”  Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Irans Ferocious Return To The Belligerent Policies Of The Revolutions Early Days
Ex-Staffers Unauthorized Book About Jan. 6 Committee Rankles Members
Ex-Staffers Unauthorized Book About Jan. 6 Committee Rankles Members
Ex-Staffer’s Unauthorized Book About Jan. 6 Committee Rankles Members https://digitalalaskanews.com/ex-staffers-unauthorized-book-about-jan-6-committee-rankles-members/ News that a former adviser to the committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection is publishing a book billed as a “behind-the-scenes” look at the committee’s work came as a shock to most lawmakers and committee staff when it was announced last week. Denver Riggleman, a former Republican congressman, is set to publish “The Breach” on Tuesday, just one day before the final public hearing of the Jan. 6 panel, which has gone to extraordinary lengths to prevent unauthorized leaks, as well as keep its sources and methods of investigation under wraps. Riggleman’s book announcement came in the form of a tweet touting his upcoming appearance Sunday on “60 Minutes” as his first time speaking publicly about the book. Lawmakers and committee staff were largely unaware that the former staffer had spent the months since leaving the committee writing a book about his limited work on staff — or that it would be published before the conclusion of the committee’s investigation, according to people familiar with the matter who, like others interviewed by The Washington Post, spoke on the condition of anonymity to detail private conversations. Senior staff previously confronted Riggleman after rumors circulated that he was working on a book about his work for the committee, according to a person close to the panel. In one exchange, Riggleman told colleagues he was writing a book on a topic unrelated to his committee work. In a later conversation, before his departure from the committee staff, Riggleman said he had been approached about writing a book related to the committee but that it would not be published before the end of this year. The ex-congressman gave notice in April after assisting the panel for eight months, saying he was leaving to work at an unspecified nonprofit related to Ukraine. Riggleman and his book agent did not respond to requests for comment. Riggleman also bragged about the committee’s work publicly and gave interviews — an unusual move for a congressional staffer. Earlier this year, he told a crowd of “Never Trump” Republicans at the National Press Club that he would show through his committee work that the effort to overturn the election was “all about money,” and mocked several of the people under investigation. He stood outside with a range of Trump critics and told them he had just gotten new phone records and that they would be “explosive.” He declined to say what they were, but his comments tantalized those around him. “I wish I could tell you about it,” he said of the data he was reviewing for the committee. “If I did, you’d be more shocked than you could imagine.” “It’s all about the money,” he said. “I’m going to rip apart their ecosystem.” The appearances rattled others who worked with the committee, and Riggleman eventually drew some anger from Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who had initially pushed for his hiring, according to people familiar with the matter. Riggleman, who split his time between Washington and rural Virginia, where he owned a distillery, has described himself as being in charge of the committee’s work analyzing call records, texts and online activities of those involved in the attack on the U.S. Capitol. But people familiar with his role note that the phone records were just one small piece of the sprawling and comprehensive investigation. “The work of the committee is not built on the bedrock of Denver’s efforts,” said a person familiar with his role. Committee staff members were infuriated by Riggleman’s cable news tour earlier this summer during which he revealed private details about the staff’s work, according to people involved with the investigation. In a committee-wide email, staff director David Buckley wrote that he was “deeply disappointed” in Riggleman’s decision to publicly discuss their work and that his appearance was “in direct contravention to his employment agreement.” “His specific discussion about the content of subpoenaed records, our contracts, contractors and methodologies, and your hard work is unnerving,” Buckley wrote at the time. In one of his appearances on CNN, Riggleman detailed his team’s work to link names and numbers after receiving a cache of text messages from former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows. Calling the messages “a road map,” he contended the data obtained from the messages allowed the committee to “structure the investigation.” The cache of Meadows’s texts was obtained by CNN earlier this spring. Macmillan Publishers’ description of his forthcoming book, which Riggleman co-authored with journalist Hunter Walker, teases “previously unpublished texts from key political leaders,” along with “shocking details about the Trump White House’s links to militant extremist groups.” In an excerpt released ahead of his interview on “60 Minutes,” Riggleman revealed that the White House switchboard connected a phone call to a Capitol rioter on Jan. 6, 2021. “You get a real aha moment when you see that the White House switchboard had connected to a rioter’s phone while it’s happening,” Riggleman told “60 Minutes.” “That’s a big, pretty big aha moment.” Riggleman also addressed claims he made in the book that he pleaded with the committee to push harder to obtain specific White House phone numbers. “I was one of those individuals, sadly, at the beginning, you know, where I was very, very aggressive about these linked connections, getting those White House phone numbers,” said Riggleman. A statement from the committee underscored Riggleman’s “limited knowledge” of the investigation and threw cold water on Riggleman’s suggestion that the committee was not pursuing evidence aggressively enough. “He departed from the staff in April prior to our hearings and much of our most important investigative work,” wrote committee spokesman Tim Mulvey. “Since his departure, the Committee has run down all the leads and digested and analyzed all the information that arose from his work. We will be presenting additional evidence to the public in our next hearing this coming Wednesday, and a thorough report will be published by the end of the year.” The committee has yet to reveal the topic of its final hearing but is expected to reveal new information after resuming investigative efforts during August recess. The upcoming proceeding follows eight hearings held over June and July that laid out a gripping and detailed account of efforts by Trump and his allies to overturn the results of the 2020 election. Lawmakers on the panel had previously said they hoped to unearth more information around the Secret Service and Defense Department’s response to the Jan. 6 attack after the committee learned that the two agencies wiped communications from phones of former and current officials. Investigators also interviewed some of Trump’s Cabinet secretaries — including Mike Pompeo, Steven Mnuchin, Robert O’Brien and Elaine Chao — regarding internal conversations following the insurrection about invoking the 25th Amendment, which provides for the removal of a president on grounds of incapacitation, mental health or physical fitness. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Ex-Staffers Unauthorized Book About Jan. 6 Committee Rankles Members
When Migrants Become Political Pawns
When Migrants Become Political Pawns
When Migrants Become Political Pawns https://digitalalaskanews.com/when-migrants-become-political-pawns/ The calcified cruelty, malignant politics, and questionable legality of the decisions by Governors Greg Abbott, of Texas, and Ron DeSantis, of Florida, to transport dozens of migrants in Texas to unsuspecting locales in Massachusetts and Washington, D.C., reiterate the point—often made in recent years—that the only check on the behavior of the current Republican Party is the limits of its own imagination. Most of the migrants reportedly came from Venezuela, a country so racked with discord that an estimated twenty per cent of its population has been displaced. One man said that he arrived after having spent three months trekking across several countries. Many people recounted being offered free accommodations and flights to cities where they thought they would be guaranteed work. Instead, they were dispatched on two chartered planes, arranged at DeSantis’s behest, and unceremoniously released on Martha’s Vineyard, the resort island just off the coast of Massachusetts which DeSantis called a “sanctuary jurisdiction.” Others were bused to Washington, D.C., and left outside the grounds of the U.S. Naval Observatory, where Vice-President Kamala Harris lives, as part of a program that Abbott, who is running for a third term, enacted this spring. Texas has bused more than eight thousand migrants to Washington, New York City, and Chicago, at a cost to the state of more than twelve million dollars. Arizona, under the Republican governor Doug Ducey, has also sent more than a thousand migrants to the nation’s capital. All three governors plan to continue the transportations. Implicit in their actions is the idea that Northern, liberal attitudes regarding immigration are undergirded by the fact that the places where Northern liberals live aren’t being inundated with people who enter the country without documentation. Governor DeSantis appeared to be attempting to troll people whose magnanimity, he seemed to believe, is inversely proportional to the extent to which a given problem has an impact on their own lives. Indeed, much of the discussion on the right about the immigration crisis tends to frame it as a “border crisis,” erroneously suggesting both that the sole driver of the number of people arriving is the porousness of the Southern border and that this issue falls squarely on the shoulders of the states in the South and the Southwest. DeSantis has frequently complained about an undue burden on the border states, and expressed concern that migrants arriving in those states really want to move to his. As reported on NPR, he said, “What we’re trying to do is profile: ‘O.K., who do you think is trying to get to Florida?’ ” What seems not to have been factored into this thinking is that, before the most recent crackdowns, Florida, though not a border state, nevertheless had a long tradition of welcoming certain migrants—provided that they were fleeing Fidel Castro’s Cuba. Buoyed by the audacity of the recent stunts, some commentators played up the nimby message. A headline in the New York Post ran: “WITH MARTHA’S VINEYARD MELTDOWN, MAYBE DEMS WILL FINALLY UNDERSTAND ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION PROBLEMS.” On Fox News, Tucker Carlson ridiculed Martha’s Vineyard as a white haven full of people hyperventilating about the sudden presence of so many brown people. (A conservative online meme showed a woman calling the police to report a Hispanic man who was not holding a leaf blower.) Carlson’s colleague Jesse Watters asked Mike Pompeo, “I mean, everybody basically that you know on the left has a home there. Do you think they’re going to be embracing their new neighbors?” Pompeo, who served as Donald Trump’s Secretary of State, said, “You know, these are all sanctuary cities until they’re in their sanctuary.” The island is not, of course, the monochromatic enclave it’s being made out to be. There was a Black presence there for more than a century before the Obamas arrived. There has been a local chapter of the N.A.A.C.P. on Martha’s Vineyard since 1963. Edward Brooke, who, in 1966, became the first Black U.S. senator since Reconstruction (and the first elected by popular vote) lived part time on the island, which he called his “spiritual home.” Martin Luther King, Jr., Harry Belafonte, Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., and the novelist Dorothy West all vacationed there. DeSantis could have sent the migrants to any community in the country that was large enough to sustain an airstrip. He chose Martha’s Vineyard because of its reputation both for prosperity and for left-leaning politics. The whole line of attack recalled Irving Kristol’s adage that a neoconservative is simply a liberal who has been mugged by reality. Yet it is important to note that the generally liberal sanctuary cities being targeted didn’t adopt their policies in a vacuum. According to the Migration Policy Institute, there are more than two hundred thousand undocumented migrants living in Massachusetts. The other traditionally liberal strongholds of New York and California have undocumented populations of roughly eight hundred and thirty-five thousand and more than two million, respectively. Sanctuary cities like Boston, New York, and Los Angeles came to those positions not in the absence of migrants but in their presence. The cynical expectations were contrasted by what actually happened on Martha’s Vineyard once the migrants were discovered. Restaurants provided free food, cots were set up in a church, and a Spanish-language Mass was organized. Residents gave bedding, toiletries, and candy. Lawyers for Civil Rights Boston filed a class-action suit against DeSantis and other Florida state officials, alleging that the migrants had been victimized by a “fraudulent and discriminatory scheme.” (A county sheriff in Texas is also investigating whether the migrants might be considered victims of crimes, and last week Jason Pizzo, a Democratic state senator representing part of Miami-Dade County, sued to block further flights.) This outpouring of support has, predictably, been underplayed among immigration hawks. It’s worth recalling that, not long ago, voices on the reactionary right were mouthing brittle defenses of the Trump-era decision to take children from their parents at the Southern border and detain them, with no clear plan for reuniting the families. That situation also resulted in migrants being surreptitiously flown to distant locales around the country without knowing where they were being taken. The cruelty is consistent, but it also highlights, unintentionally, another fact: DeSantis, Abbott, and those who endorse their actions believe that liberals will see things differently once they’ve metaphorically walked in others’ shoes. But, to make that point, they are fine with further abusing people who have already walked miles—hundreds of them—in their own.  Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
When Migrants Become Political Pawns
Russia-Ukraine War Latest: What We Know On Day 214 Of The Invasion
Russia-Ukraine War Latest: What We Know On Day 214 Of The Invasion
Russia-Ukraine War Latest: What We Know On Day 214 Of The Invasion https://digitalalaskanews.com/russia-ukraine-war-latest-what-we-know-on-day-214-of-the-invasion/ More than 730 people were detained across Russia at the latest protests against the country’s mobilisation decree, a rights group said, three days after president Vladimir Putin ordered the country’s first military draft since the second world war. The independent OVD-Info protest monitoring group said it was aware of detentions in 32 cities, from St Petersburg to Siberia. Unsanctioned rallies are illegal under Russian law, which also forbids any activity considered to defame the armed forces. A new law signed by Putin says Russian troops who refuse to fight, desert, disobey or surrender to the enemy could now face a jail sentence of up to 10 years, according to Russian media reports. The law was approved by the parliament during the week. Russia’s deputy defence minister, Dmitry Bulgakov, has been dismissed from his post. Bulgakov, who has been in charge of military logistics since the beginning of the Ukraine invasion, has been replaced by Col Gen Mikhail Mizintsev, the head of the National Defence Management Centre, who oversaw Russia’s siege of Mariupol. Russia’s foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, addressed the UN general assembly on Saturday, casting opposition to Russia’s assault on its neighbour as limited to Washington and countries under its sway. “The official Russophobia in the west is unprecedented. Now the scope is grotesque,” Lavrov told the general assembly. He criticised the west for not engaging with Russia, saying: “We have never stepped away from maintaining contact.” Lavrov, in a news conference following his speech to the assembly in New York, said the Ukrainian regions where votes were under way would be under Moscow’s “full protection” if they were annexed by Russia, including with nuclear weapons. The so-called referendums are under way in in Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia provinces, areas of Ukraine occupied by Russian troops, with residents told to vote on proposals to declare independence and then join Russia. The polls are due to run until Tuesday. China’s foreign minister says it supports all efforts conducive to the peaceful resolution of the “crisis” in Ukraine. Wang Yi told the United Nations general assembly on Saturday that the pressing priority was to facilitate talks for peace, Reuters reported. Iran regrets Ukraine’s decision to downgrade diplomatic ties, its foreign ministry says. A statement said Iran’s ministry spokesperson, Nasser Kanaani, had “advised” Ukraine to “refrain from being influenced by third parties who seek to destroy relations between the two countries”. It came after Ukraine stripped Iran’s ambassador of his accreditation over what it called Tehran’s “unfriendly” decision to supply Russian forces with drones. The queue at the border between Russia and Georgia is about 10km (six miles) long, where people have reportedly been waiting more than 20 hours to cross. The number of border crossings from Russia into Finland has doubled in recent days compared with last week. Kyiv and Moscow traded blame for shelling in Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region on Saturday. Regional governor Oleksandr Starukh said on Telegram that Russian forces launched “a massive missile strike” on the region from about 10 planes, wounding at least three people. Russia’s RIA state news agency, citing unnamed sources, said Ukrainian forces shelled a granary and fertiliser warehouses in the region. Reuters was unable to verify either side’s claims. Two civilians were killed in attacks in Ukraine’s Donetsk region on Friday and three were injured, according to Pavlo Kyrylenko, governor of the Donetsk oblast. Russian forces also shelled settlements near the Russian border. In the Kupyan district, five people were injured from shelling, including two children, aged 10 and 17. Russian authorities in the occupied regions of Zaporizhzhia and Kherson have allegedly started handing out draft notices and mobilising men of conscription age who “renounced Ukrainian citizenship and received passports of the Russian federation”, according to Ukraine’s ministry of defence. President Volodymyr Zelenskiy told Ukrainians in occupied territory to hide from Russian mobilisation, avoid conscription letters and get to Ukraine-held territory. However, if they ended up in the Russian military, Zelenskiy asked people to save their lives and help liberate Ukraine. Russian forces are probably trying to attack dams in Ukraine in order to flood Ukrainian military crossing points amid Russian concerns about battlefield setbacks, the latest UK Ministry of Defence briefing said. The strikes were “unlikely to have caused significant disruption to Ukrainian operations due to the distance between the damaged dams and the combat areas”, it said. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Russia-Ukraine War Latest: What We Know On Day 214 Of The Invasion
3 People Including 15-Year-Old Shot At Kennywood
3 People Including 15-Year-Old Shot At Kennywood
3 People, Including 15-Year-Old, Shot At Kennywood https://digitalalaskanews.com/3-people-including-15-year-old-shot-at-kennywood/ Allegheny County police said three people were shot, including a 15-year-old, at Kennywood in West Mifflin Saturday evening. According to police, the shooting was the result of an altercation between two groups inside the park in front of the Musik Express ride.Police are now searching for a suspect. Officials describe him as a teenage male wearing a black hoodie and a COVID-style mask at the time of the shooting. Officers recovered a handgun inside the Park.The three victims include a 15-year-old who was shot in the thigh, a 39-year-old who was shot in the leg, and officials say a second juvenile arrived at a hospital with a graze wound. Several other people were treated for “trampling style” injuries, police said.Kennywood will be closed on Sunday, September 25th, according to the park’s website. “The park is closed Sunday, Sept. 25. Any dated tickets for today will be valid any other Phantom Fall Fest date. We will reopen on Friday, Sept. 30.” the website said.In a statement on Twitter Saturday night, Kennywood said “The park is closed for the night and all guests have exited. We are aware of a situation that occurred this evening and are working with local law enforcement. The safety of our guests and Team Members are our top priority. Members of the park’s security, Allegheny County, and West Mifflin police departments were already on site and immediately responded.” A WTAE photojournalist saw multiple police markers in front of the Musik Express, near the entrance to the Phantom’s Revenge.Multiple agencies responded to the park around 10:49pm Saturday evening after initial reports of shots fired. By 1:50 a.m. Sunday, Kennywood Boulevard had reopened to traffic.This is a developing story. Stay with Pittsburgh’s Action News 4 for updates. Download the WTAE mobile app to stay connected with breaking news. WEST MIFFLIN, Pa. — Allegheny County police said three people were shot, including a 15-year-old, at Kennywood in West Mifflin Saturday evening. According to police, the shooting was the result of an altercation between two groups inside the park in front of the Musik Express ride. Police are now searching for a suspect. Officials describe him as a teenage male wearing a black hoodie and a COVID-style mask at the time of the shooting. Officers recovered a handgun inside the Park. The three victims include a 15-year-old who was shot in the thigh, a 39-year-old who was shot in the leg, and officials say a second juvenile arrived at a hospital with a graze wound. Several other people were treated for “trampling style” injuries, police said. Kennywood will be closed on Sunday, September 25th, according to the park’s website. “The park is closed Sunday, Sept. 25. Any dated tickets for today will be valid any other Phantom Fall Fest date. We will reopen on Friday, Sept. 30.” the website said. In a statement on Twitter Saturday night, Kennywood said “The park is closed for the night and all guests have exited. We are aware of a situation that occurred this evening and are working with local law enforcement. The safety of our guests and Team Members are our top priority. Members of the park’s security, Allegheny County, and West Mifflin police departments were already on site and immediately responded.” A WTAE photojournalist saw multiple police markers in front of the Musik Express, near the entrance to the Phantom’s Revenge. Multiple agencies responded to the park around 10:49pm Saturday evening after initial reports of shots fired. This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. More: 15 year old shot in thigh, 39 year old shot in leg, another juvenile showed up at hospital with graze wound. Police say shooting was preceded by altercation between two groups. @WTAE — Mike Valente (@ValenteWTAE) September 25, 2022 This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. Suspect is described as teenage male, with black hoodie and “COVID style” mask. @WTAE — Mike Valente (@ValenteWTAE) September 25, 2022 By 1:50 a.m. Sunday, Kennywood Boulevard had reopened to traffic. This is a developing story. Stay with Pittsburgh’s Action News 4 for updates. Download the WTAE mobile app to stay connected with breaking news. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
3 People Including 15-Year-Old Shot At Kennywood
And Of Course Wives Are Always Right
And Of Course Wives Are Always Right
And, Of Course, Wives Are Always Right https://digitalalaskanews.com/and-of-course-wives-are-always-right/ It all started in a joking way … I carried two glasses of iced tea outside to a table, then my husband came up a minute later and asked, “Which one is mine?” (I add a little sugar to mine, he likes his tea plain.) I flippantly replied, wives are always right — so my tea is on the right.” Now I often jokingly add this expression as we are ending a “discussion.” But this is what happened one late-August morning as we were finishing an early breakfast. He looked out the glass door and exclaimed, “There’s a bloom on that Clematis vine by the deck!” I looked where he was pointing, but did not see any bloom and said, “You must be looking at a funny-shaped leaf because that particular Clematis blooms in April — the dark purple ones on the other side of the yard are the only ones that bloom all summer. “ He insisted — so I opened the door, walked out on the deck and looked carefully  — and I came back in and announced, “No blooms. Wives are always right.” Then … we both marched out — and he pointed out one actual, but almost-invisible bloom. Now, why did I miss it? It was quite understandable — and could easily happen to anyone. I even took photos from several different angles to indicate how easy it was to be deceived. I listed the reasons I was fooled: Early morning light on an overcast morning was very dim.
2. The flower was “pointed” away from me, so that I was looking at the underneath side of the petals, which were a pale green like the leaves, rather than being a light purple like the upper side. “Everyone knows” that this Clematis (which looks almost exactly like the wild variety so common around here) blooms in early spring, and the label on this plant from Moose Valley even said, “blooms in early spring.” Now it was late August. 4. And, of course, wives are always right. OK, so I was mistaken. Now … have you ever been fooled? Take a deep breath, sit down and think hard before asking yourself the next question: “Who won the 2020 presidential election?” Note that this question has nothing to do with motives as to why President Trump claimed victory. Was he given bad information? Was it wishful thinking? Etc.?  We can almost never determine another person’s thinking — but that is not the question here. So just look at the two entities most likely to know all the intricate workings of an election, to see what actually happened. We, the on-the-ground voters in rural Idaho, were not there to oversee the tabulating of votes — but first our Department of Justice, and second, our court system, both have the ability to investigate any irregularities in the system — which both groups repeatedly did. Both United States Attorney General William Barr (appointed by President Trump) and over 60 court cases (many of them tried before federal judges appointed by President Trump) determined that the election was legitimate. Surely Attorney General William Barr and the federal courts knew what was really happening? I also checked the well-known information-organization — Snopes.com — to make sure those last statements are accurate — but please check out any non-biased sources for yourself, on your own, and let me know if you find anything different. So, how did so many people in our country get fooled? Stated in a generalized way, I was fooled about the clematis blossom because of: Various factors can make it very difficult to discern reality (in my specific case: dim light, plus leaves and underneath-side of petals being similar in color, etc.) Looking at situation from only one angle, from a distance. Relying on everyone’s “common knowledge.” Seeing with my own eyes, but already convinced I was 100% right. Some of the above four generalized factors which led me to be deceived about the clematis can perhaps also affect decisions which others make when answering the question of “Who won the 2020 Presidential election?” It took me three “looks” to see the clematis bloom — so others may want to take more “looks” at the 2020 Presidential election. As Mark Twain reportedly said, “It’s a lot easier to fool people —than it is to convince them that they have been fooled.” But take heart, all of us are fooled some of the time. The important thing is to pick ourselves up … and to check out the facts … and to keep on “looking.” (Personally, I think that President Trump legitimately lost the 2020 presidential election because there is no evidence to the contrary.) 
JO LEN EVERHART Boundary County Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
And Of Course Wives Are Always Right
Hochuls Inner Cuomo: Shes Agreeing To Just One Debate Just Days Before The Election
Hochuls Inner Cuomo: Shes Agreeing To Just One Debate Just Days Before The Election
Hochul’s Inner Cuomo: She’s Agreeing To Just One Debate Just Days Before The Election https://digitalalaskanews.com/hochuls-inner-cuomo-shes-agreeing-to-just-one-debate-just-days-before-the-election/ The headline in another newspaper last August, days after she’d taken over as governor, read: “Kathy Hochul Wants to Make One Thing Clear: She Is Not Cuomo.” The even-keeled, collaborative woman who succeeded the domineering, sometimes vindictive man promised to run New York differently. Unfortunately, in at least one key area, Hochul seems to have taken close notes from her predecessor. Like Andrew Cuomo four and eight years ago — who was also guarding a large lead in the polls and a huge fundraising advantage — she’s rebuffed her opponent’s attempts to debate more than once before the election. While politically understandable, that deprives many voters of the close-up compare-and-contrast that’s crucial to their final decision. Wednesday, Hochul finally agreed to debate GOP Rep. Lee Zeldin on Oct. 25, which is four days before early voting begins and two weeks before Election Day. Better late than never, but late — and set for cable’s NY1 rather than broadcast. Zeldin, holding out for multiple debates across the state, has yet to agree. Hochul should give Zeldin more than one debate. (AP) In 2014, Cuomo assented to just one one-on-one debate with Rob Astorino — on radio — and in 2018 played more games, trying to put as many candidates as possible on stage before participating in a broadcast debate against Marc Molinaro two weeks before the election. We understand that no incumbent who’s the odds-on favorite is going to commit to a half-dozen debates, but voters deserve better than one measly opportunity to see the two contenders for our state’s top job compare their visions and resumes in an unscripted forum. Indeed, Hochul should jump at the chance to contrast her views on gun safety, reproductive rights and immigration to Zeldin’s, which are retrograde. For 35 years, the U.S. Commission on Presidential Debates has overseen a series of informative faceoffs between general election foes. Donald Trump whined and complained, as he always does, but even he participated. Instead of returning to square one every four years, why can’t New York figure out something similar? Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Hochuls Inner Cuomo: Shes Agreeing To Just One Debate Just Days Before The Election
Head Of World Bank Under Pressure After White House Condemns His climate Denial Comments
Head Of World Bank Under Pressure After White House Condemns His climate Denial Comments
Head Of World Bank Under Pressure After White House Condemns His ‘climate Denial’ Comments https://digitalalaskanews.com/head-of-world-bank-under-pressure-after-white-house-condemns-his-climate-denial-comments/ David Malpass, president of the World Bank, faces an uncertain future this week, after the White House joined a chorus of influential figures in condemning his apparent climate denialism. Malpass remains in post for now but under severe pressure, despite issuing an apology and trying to explain his refusal last week to publicly acknowledge the human role in the climate crisis. The Biden administration stepped into the row on Friday evening, when the press secretary for the US president told journalists: “We disagree with the comments made by president Malpass. We expect the World Bank to be a global leader of climate ambition and mobilisation, as well as significantly more finance for developing countries… We condemn the words of the president.” Such strong words from the White House come as a major blow to Malpass, who was appointed to the role in 2019 by Donald Trump, under a longstanding convention by which the World Bank chief is chosen by the US president. Biden’s spokesperson left open the possibility that Malpass could be removed, if other countries agree. Joe Biden’s press secretary said: ‘We disagree with the comments made by president Malpass.’ Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP Mark Malloch-Brown, president of the Open Society Foundations, former administrator of the UN Development Programme and deputy secretary-general of the UN, told the Observer: “We are relieved to see World Bank president David Malpass apologise for his statements. But a real apology would be much greater action by the World Bank to tackle climate change. The Bank is being far too conservative in its approach to financing, and far too unambitious in its leadership in addressing this existential crisis.” The World Bank holds its annual meetings in three weeks, where Malpass can expect a further barrage of criticism, if he is still in post. Talk had circulated for years that Malpass, like many Trump supporters, was a dismisser of climate science. He had already lost the confidence of many key figures in climate diplomacy, because of the World Bank’s failure in the last few years to mobilise the billions of dollars needed to help developing countries cut their greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to the impacts of global heating. The open row began on Tuesday, when former US vice-president Al Gore publicly complained at a New York Times event on the fringes of the UN General Assembly in New York that it was “ridiculous to have a climate denier as head of the World Bank”. Malpass was then confronted at a later event that day by New York Times journalist David Gelles, who asked him whether he accepted climate science. Malpass tried to bat away Gelles’ questions, but eventually answered: “I don’t even know, I am not a scientist and that is not a question.” Concerns over the direction of the World Bank have sprung from its repeated failures to adopt a strong action plan on the climate crisis, despite pleas from the UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres for the Bank to lead on climate finance. Hundreds of billions of dollars in investment are needed to shift the world to a low-carbon footing, but these investments could also transform the fortunes of developing countries by improving their infrastructure and economies, as well as people’s health and wellbeing. Most development economists and developing nations see the World Bank as the prime institution for leading such investment, a position embraced by the previous president Jim Yong Kim, appointed by Barack Obama. Under Malpass, many felt the Bank seemed to step back from this role, and continued to fund fossil fuels. Privately, staff at the Bank are understood to be dismayed at the distraction, and the lack of support and leadership they feel from the top. A spokesperson for the World Bank told the Observer: “The World Bank Group is the largest multilateral funder of climate investments in developing countries. Under the leadership of David Malpass, the World Bank Group more than doubled its climate finance, published an ambitious Climate Change Action Plan, and initiated country level diagnostics to support countries’ climate and development goals.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Head Of World Bank Under Pressure After White House Condemns His climate Denial Comments
Treat Iran Like Pariah: Haley Hits Biden Team For Relentless Pursuit Of Nuclear Deal J-Wire
Treat Iran Like Pariah: Haley Hits Biden Team For Relentless Pursuit Of Nuclear Deal J-Wire
‘Treat Iran Like Pariah:’ Haley Hits Biden Team For Relentless Pursuit Of Nuclear Deal – J-Wire https://digitalalaskanews.com/treat-iran-like-pariah-haley-hits-biden-team-for-relentless-pursuit-of-nuclear-deal-j-wire/ Browse Home / Featured Articles / ‘Treat Iran like pariah:’ Haley hits Biden team for relentless pursuit of nuclear deal – J-Wire September 25, 2022 by David Isaac Read on for article Former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley sharply criticised the Biden administration for its failure to confront the Iranian regime during a special press conference held Wednesday in New York City on the sidelines of the 77th U.N. General Assembly. Nikki Haley, former ambassador to the U.N., speaking at the United Against Iran (UANI) conference in New York City, Sept. 21, 2022. Photo: Courtesy of Stand for America. Speaking to the media at the sixth annual conference of United Against Iran (UANI), an organisation dedicated to educating the public and policymakers about the dangers posed by the Islamic Republic, Haley lamented the Biden administration’s continued efforts to revive the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), or 2015 Iran deal. Haley was one of the key officials in the Trump administration who urged then-President Donald Trump to exit the JCPOA. She travelled to Vienna to visit the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in 2017, which was monitoring Iran’s nuclear program. “Let me ask them the questions about the deal. And let me come back and make the case for why you should get out of the deal,” she told Trump. When she visited the IAEA, she asked if they inspected universities, where nuclear research took place, or military installations. The IAEA said it inspected neither. “So I said, ‘OK, what is it exactly that you inspect?’” They told her that they inspect a site if there’s suspicious activity after giving the Iranians 90 days warning. “You can clear out a warehouse in 90 days, no problem. That’s when I came back, and I told President Trump, ‘We have to get out of the Iran deal,’” Haley said. Trump abandoned the deal in May 2018. Haley deplored the White House’s decision to issue a visa to let Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi into the U.S. to address the U.N. given Iran’s continued “bad behaviour,” including calls of “Death to America,” ongoing violations of U.N. resolutions, and missile strikes against military bases housing U.S. soldiers. Raisi addressed the General Assembly on Wednesday. Haley spoke of the Sept. 16 death of Mahsa Amini, 22, beaten to death by Iran’s “morality police” for the incorrect wearing of a hijab, a Muslim head covering. Amini’s death has sparked widespread protests throughout Iran in which at least nine have been killed by the authorities. Haley said that instead of letting Iran’s president deliver a speech at the U.N., the U.S. should be publicising the stories of the anti-regime protesters. “The protests we’re seeing from the Iranian people are heroic. We need to get their stories out. They don’t want a regime that treats them like this.” Referring to Raisi’s insistence at the U.N. that Iran wasn’t seeking a nuclear bomb and its nuclear program was “peaceful,” Haley said, “When in Iran’s history, have we ever seen them do anything in the name of peace? They don’t. So it’s time for everyone to stop being naïve.” Asked by JNS why the Biden administration insists on reviving the Iran deal despite the Islamic Republic’s flagrant violations of the agreement’s provisions, Haley said, “That the Biden administration is falling all over itself to get back into the Iran deal shows this is nothing more than ego.” The Biden team, made up of many Obama administration holdovers, “can’t accept that they got it wrong … They look at it as a political win, instead of looking at it as a national security risk that we’ve got to get right for the American people,” she said. “You can’t stop a corrupt regime from being corrupt. You can’t stop a terrorist regime, the number one state sponsor of terror, from wanting to destroy anyone that comes in its way who doesn’t agree with it. You can’t change that culture,” she said. In the weeks leading up to the General Assembly, Haley took to media channels to warn against letting Raisi into the country, particularly in light of Iran’s attempted assassinations of high-level American officials, including John Bolton, former national security advisor in the Trump administration. U.S. officials say Bolton was likely targeted in retaliation for the killing of Islamic Revolutionary Guards Commander Qassem Soleimani in January 2020. Haley said Iran’s leaders have “done nothing to show that they want to be good actors. It’s time for us to walk away from that deal and start dealing with them like the enemy that they are. We should isolate them. We should treat them like the pariah that they are.” Visit J-Wire’s main page for all the latest breaking news, gossip and what’s on in your community. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Treat Iran Like Pariah: Haley Hits Biden Team For Relentless Pursuit Of Nuclear Deal J-Wire
AP News Summary At 2:12 A.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 2:12 A.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 2:12 A.m. EDT https://digitalalaskanews.com/ap-news-summary-at-212-a-m-edt/ Kremlin stages votes in Ukraine, sees protests in Russia KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russian forces launched new strikes on Ukrainian cities as Kremlin-orchestrated votes took place in occupied regions of Ukraine to create a pretext for their annexation by Moscow. In Russia, hundreds were arrested on Saturday while trying to protest President Vladimir Putin’s order to mobilize more troops to fight in Ukraine. Kyiv and its Western allies say the votes underway in four regions of Ukraine are a sham with no legal force. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged residents to undermine “this farce.” He also encouraged people called up to fight to desert or sabotage the Russian military. Ukraine’s presidential office said the latest Russian shelling killed at least three people and wounded 19. Florida emergency declared as Tropical Storm Ian strengthens TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has declared a state of emergency across his entire state as Tropical Storm Ian gains strength over the Caribbean and is forecast to become a major hurricane in coming days. An emergency order DeSantis initially issued for two dozen counties was expanded to a statewide warning on Saturday. The governor is encouraging residents and localities to prepare for the storm, which could lash large swaths of Florida. The National Hurricane Center said Ian is forecast to rapidly power up to a hurricane by Sunday and a major hurricane as soon as late Monday. It’s expected to move over western Cuba before approaching Florida in the middle of next week. Flashes of bold UN talk on feminism, masculinity, patriarchy Few men in power have delved deeply into gender equality on the main stage of the United Nations this month. But the ones who did went there boldly. They claimed feminist credibility, sold “positive masculinity” and resolutely demanded an end to The Patriarchy. Gender equality is as one of the U.N.’s primary goals. It has long been a safe talking point for world leaders, and there were many brief and polite mentions of progress made toward female empowerment. There were also some leaders who did not say the words “women” or “girls” at all during their time on stage. At other times, a a word considered a dirty word by many for generations was used proudly. Feminism. Canadian military to help clean up Fiona’s devastation TORONTO (AP) — Canadian troops are being sent to assist the recovery from the devastation of storm Fiona, which swept away houses, stripped off roofs and knocked out power across the country’s Atlantic provinces. After surging north from the Caribbean as a hurricane, Fiona came ashore before dawn Saturday as a post-tropical cyclone, battering Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Quebec with hurricane-strength winds, heavy rains and huge waves. Defense Minister Anita Anand says troops will help remove fallen trees and other debris, restore transportation links and do whatever else is required for as long as it takes. She hasn’t specified how many troops will be deployed. No fatalities or serious injuries have been confirmed, though police say a woman is listed as missing. Poverty, inflation, fear: Egypt’s economy pushed to brink DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — For decades, millions of Egyptians have depended on the government to keep basic goods affordable. But a series of shocks to the global economy and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have endangered the social contract in the Middle East’s most populous country, which is also the world’s biggest importer of wheat. It is now grappling with double-digit inflation and a steep devaluation of its currency, prompting oil-rich Gulf Arab countries to once again step in with financial support as talks with the International Monetary Fund drag on. The possibility of food insecurity has raised concerns of instability. Italians vote in election that could take far-right to power ROME (AP) — Italians are voting in a national election coming at a critical time for Europe. Soaring energy bills, largely caused by the war in Ukraine, have households and businesses fearful they can’t keep the heat or lights on this winter. Sunday’s balloting for Italy’s Parliament might yield the nation’s first government led by the far-right since the end of World War II. Opinion polls had indicated Giorgia Meloni and her Brothers of Italy party, with its neo-fascist roots, would be the top vote-getter. Polls opened at 7 a.m. (0500GMT). The counting of paper ballots was expected to begin shortly after they close at 11 p.m. (2100 GMT), with projections based on partial results coming early Monday morning. ‘Fighting fit’: Trial to show Oath Keepers’ road to Jan. 6 It’s been a long road to the upcoming Capitol riot trial of the the leader of the extremist group Oath Keepers. But the prosecution’s case against Stewart Rhodes covers a lot more than just the insurrection of Jan. 6, 2021. Rhodes and four co-defendants are facing the difficult-to-prove charge of seditious conspiracy. Prosecutors will try to show that for the Oath Keepers, the siege wasn’t a spur-of-the-moment protest but that it was part of a weekslong plot to stop the peaceful transfer of presidential power from election-denier Donald Trump to Joe Biden. Jury selection begins Tuesday in federal court in the nation’s capital. The trial is expected to last several weeks. West works to deepen sanctions after Putin heightens threats WASHINGTON (AP) — How will American leaders and their allies respond if President Vladimir Putin seeks to escalate his way out of his bad situation on Ukraine’s battlefields? Putin this week renewed threats of claiming more Ukrainian territory, and even using nuclear weapons. U.S. and European leaders have made clear they will try to double down on the same tactics that have helped put Russia in a corner in Ukraine. That means more financial penalties and international isolation for Russia, more arms and other backing for Ukraine. There’s no sign of the United States and NATO matching Putin’s intensified nuclear threats with the same bluster, which could raise the risks of escalating the conflict. GOP quiet as Arizona Democrats condemn abortion ruling PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona Democrats are vowing to fight for women’s rights after a court reinstated a law first enacted during the Civil War that bans abortion in nearly all circumstances. Democrats on Saturday looked to capitalize on an issue they hope will have a major impact on the midterm elections. Top Democrats implored women not to sit on the sidelines this year, saying the ruling sets women back  to an era when only men had the right to vote. Republican candidates have been silent since the ruling, which said the state can prosecute doctors and others who assist with an abortion unless it’s necessary to save the mother’s life. Saudi Arabia’s triumphant week reclaims the West’s embrace NEW YORK (AP) — Saudi Arabia appears to be leaving behind the stream of negative coverage the killing of Jamal Khashoggi elicited since 2018. Once again enthusiastically welcomed back into polite and powerful society, it is no longer as frowned upon to seek their investments and accept their favor. Saudi Arabia’s busy week of triumphs included brokering a prisoner swap between Ukraine and Russia, holding a highbrow summit on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly, marking the country’s national day, hosting the German chancellor and discussing energy supply with top White House officials. The pivot is drawing focus back to the crown prince’s ambitious re-branding of Saudi Arabia and its place in the world. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
AP News Summary At 2:12 A.m. EDT