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Bolsonaro Or Lula? As Brazil Prepares To Vote Here's What To Know KVIA
Bolsonaro Or Lula? As Brazil Prepares To Vote Here's What To Know KVIA
Bolsonaro Or Lula? As Brazil Prepares To Vote, Here's What To Know – KVIA https://digitalarizonanews.com/bolsonaro-or-lula-as-brazil-prepares-to-vote-heres-what-to-know-kvia/ By Camilo Rocha As election day approaches in Brazil, the two leading presidential candidates — former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and current leader Jair Bolsonaro — have stepped up efforts to woo voters. But this is an arduous task in a country where 85% of voters say they have already made up their minds, according to a Datafolha poll released Thursday. For Lula, more votes could mean victory in the first round of voting, with no need for a runoff. Meanwhile, Bolsonaro needs to catch up, as he slips 14 points behind his rival, according to the same survey. When is Brazil’s election? Brazilians will vote for their next president on Sunday, Oct. 2, in the first round of the elections. On the same date, governors, senators, federal and state deputies for the country’s 26 states plus the federal district will also be chosen. Voting is scheduled to start at 8 a.m. in Brasilia (7 a.m. ET) and concludes at 5 p.m. local (4 p.m. ET). In the Brazilian electoral system, a winning candidate must gain more than 50% fo the vote. If no candidate crosses that threshold, a second round of voting will be organized, in which the options will be narrowed down to the two frontrunners from the first round. In Brazil, opinion polls always estimate candidates’ potential performance in the first round (competing against with all other candidates) and in the second round (with just two top candidates). Over 156 million Brazilians are eligible to vote. Who are the candidates? Bolsonaro and da Silva — more commonly referred to as Lula — are by far the candidates to watch. Though other candidates are also in the race, they’re polling with one-digit percentages and are unlikely to pose much competition. Lula, 76, was Brazil’s President for two terms, from 2003 to 2006 and 2007 to 2011). A household name, he first came into the political scene in the 1970s as a leader of worker strikes which defied the military regime. In 1980, he was one of the founders of the Workers’ Party (PT), which went on to become Brazil’s main lef-twing political force. Lula’s presidential terms were marked by programs aimed at reducing poverty and inequality in the country but also rocked by revelations of a corruption scheme involving the payment of congressional representatives to support government proposals. Due to lack of evidence of his involvement, Lula himself was never included in the investigation of this scheme. Lula’s campaign for the presidency now promises a new tax regime that will allow for higher public spending. He has vowed to end hunger in the country, which has returned during the Bolsonaro government. Lula also promises to work to reduce carbon emissions and deforestation in the Amazon. Bolsonaro is a former army captain who was a federal deputy for 27 years before running for President in 2018. A marginal figure in politics during much of this time, he emerged in the mid-2010s as a leading figure of a more radically right-wing movement, which perceived the PT as its main enemy. As a President, Bolsonaro has pursued a conservative agenda, supported by important evangelical leaders. His government also became known for its support for ruthless exploitation of land in the Amazon, leading to record deforestation figures. Environmentalists have warned that the future of the rainforest could be at stake in this election. In his program, Bolsonaro promises to increase mining, privatize public companies and generate more sustainable energy to bring down energy prices. He has vowed to continue paying a R$ 600 (roughly US$110) monthly benefit known as Auxilio Brasil. When will we know the results? Vote counting begins right after ballots (mostly electronic) close on Sunday. Brazil’s electoral authorities say they expect final results from the first round to be officially announced that evening, on Oct. 2. They will be published on the electoral court’s website. In the last few elections, results were officially declared two to three hours after voting finished. If the leading candidate does not manage to muster more than half of all valid votes, a second round will take place on October 30. Observers will be watching closely to see if all candidates accept the vote result publicly. Bolsonaro, who has been accused of firing up supporters with violent rhetoric, has sought to sow doubts about the result and said that the results should be considered suspicious if he doesn’t gain “at least 60%”. Both he and his conservative Liberal Party claimed that Brazil’s electronic ballot system is susceptible to fraud — an entirely unfounded allegation that has drawn comparisons to the false election claims of former US President Donald Trump. There have been no proven instances of voter fraud in the electronic ballot in Brazil. The Supreme Electoral Court has also rejected claims of flaws in the system, as “false and untruthful, with no base in reality”. The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Bolsonaro Or Lula? As Brazil Prepares To Vote Here's What To Know KVIA
Arizona Soccer Cant Contain No. 19 Stanford In Their 2-0 Loss
Arizona Soccer Cant Contain No. 19 Stanford In Their 2-0 Loss
Arizona Soccer Can’t Contain No. 19 Stanford In Their 2-0 Loss https://digitalarizonanews.com/arizona-soccer-cant-contain-no-19-stanford-in-their-2-0-loss/ LECCE, ITALY – SEPTEMBER 11: Soccer balls on the grass before the start of the match during the Serie A match between US Lecce and AC Monza at Stadio Via del Mare on September 11, 2022 in Lecce, Italy. (Photo by Donato Fasano/Getty Images) TUCSON, AZ – Hoping to rebound from their loss to Utah, Arizona Soccer (3-4-2) battled but came up short against No. 19 Stanford (8-2-1).  Resuming action in the 2022 season, Arizona Soccer returned to Murphey Field at Mulcahy Soccer Stadium on Friday evening as they continued Pac-12 play. This time taking on Conference foe No. 19 Stanford, Arizona returned to the pitch with a significant challenge on their hands against the Cardinal. Hoping to get things back on track after a tough loss to Utah, the Wildcats had another competitive matchup on their hands on Thursday evening! Despite a competitive first half by Arizona Soccer, the Wildcats were unable to hold on, falling short in their 2-0 loss to Stanford. Both teams started slowly in this one, but it was Arizona that put forth a competitive effort in the first half. Despite the Cardinal out-shooting the Cats 9-4, Arizona’s defense held strong as they keep Stanford scoreless. Unfortunately, the Wildcats’ offensive attack would be for naught as both teams entered the half knotted at 0-0. Beginning the second half right where they left off, Arizona held Stanford scoreless for a little while, but the Cardinal would finally find the back of the net at the 50th minute when Lumi Kostmayer put one past the Cats’ keeper to gain the 1-0 lead. Still holding fairly strong on defense, unfortunately, Stanford would score again. This time at the 62nd minute, Stanford’s Maya Doms would find the back of the net after a pass from Allie Montoya would put Doms in the right position. Unfortunately, the lead would hold steady for the Cardinal as Stanford went on to ultimately win by a 2-0 final. With the loss, the Wildcats fall to 3-4-2 and will return to action on Sunday when they take on Pac-12 foe, Cal at home. Don’t forget to follow us at @ZonaZealots on Twitter and like our fan page on Facebook for continued coverage of Arizona news, opinions, and recruiting updates! Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Arizona Soccer Cant Contain No. 19 Stanford In Their 2-0 Loss
Ian Arrives In North Carolina After Bringing Flooding Damage To South Carolina; Death Toll Rises In Florida
Ian Arrives In North Carolina After Bringing Flooding Damage To South Carolina; Death Toll Rises In Florida
Ian Arrives In North Carolina After Bringing Flooding, Damage To South Carolina; Death Toll Rises In Florida https://digitalarizonanews.com/ian-arrives-in-north-carolina-after-bringing-flooding-damage-to-south-carolina-death-toll-rises-in-florida/   11:43 PM Ian pounds South Carolina; washes away piers and floods streets Rain from Hurricane Ian floods a street on Sept. 30, 2022, in Charleston, South Carolina.  Getty Images Ian slammed coastal South Carolina as a hurricane on Friday, ripping apart piers and flooding streets after the ferocious storm caused catastrophic damage in Florida. As Ian moved across South Carolina on its way to North Carolina Friday evening, it dropped from a hurricane to a post-tropical cyclone. While Ian’s center came ashore near Georgetown, South Carolina, on Friday with much weaker winds than when it crossed Florida’s Gulf Coast earlier in the week, the storm left many areas of Charleston’s downtown peninsula under water. It also washed away parts of four piers along the coast, including two at Myrtle Beach. Online cameras showed seawater filling neighborhoods in Garden City to calf level. After the heaviest of the rainfall blew through Charleston, Will Shalosky examined a large elm tree in front of his house that had fallen across his downtown street. He noted the damage could have been much worse. “If this tree has fallen a different way, it would be in our house,” Shalosky said. “It’s pretty scary, pretty jarring.” Ian’s heavy rains and winds crossed into North Carolina on Friday evening. Gov. Roy Cooper warned residents to be vigilant, given that up to 8 inches of rain could fall in some areas. “Hurricane Ian is at our door. Expect drenching rain and sustained heavy winds over most of our state,” Cooper said. “Our message today is simple: Be smart and be safe.”   10:16 PM Florida’s DeSantis warns against looting amid hurricane recovery: “We’re a Second Amendment state” In a press conference addressing Hurricane Ian damage and recovery efforts, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis Friday expressed concern over looting and robberies in impacted areas. “The other thing we’re concerned about, particularly in those areas that were really hard hit, is we want to make sure we’re maintaining law and order,” DeSantis said. “You can have people bringing boats into some of these islands and trying to ransack people’s homes.” The governor warned the community against looting, implying that law enforcement would be watching for it. He also referenced the Second Amendment. “Don’t even think about looting. Don’t even think about taking advantage of people in this vulnerable situation,”  DeSantis said. “I can tell you, in the state of Florida, you never know what may be lurking behind somebody’s home. And I would not want to chance that, if I were you, given that we’re a Second Amendment state.” DeSantis said that law enforcement was monitoring potential robberies. He also offered local jurisdictions state assistance in controlling crime, if necessary. Lee County, on Florida’s Gulf Coast, includes the cities of Fort Myers and Cape Coral, both of which were hard hit by the hurricane. Lee County Sheriff Carmine Marceno warned against looting in a press conference Thursday, threatening jail time.  “Don’t do it in this county. Don’t make that mistake,” Marceno said. “Because one thing we do have is vacancy at the jail. And I guarantee you if you try to prey on one of our great residents, you will find yourself in that jail.”   7:47 PM / September 30, 2022 Ian knocks out power in Carolinas, Virginia More than 60,000 residents are without power in Virginia as Ian moves further north, poweroutage.us reported Friday night. To the south, over 270,000 people in North Carolina and 164,000 in South Carolina are in the dark. Meanwhile, 1.5 million people still do not have power in Florida, several days after Ian swept across the peninsula.   7:25 PM / September 30, 2022 Ports in Tampa Bay, Canaveral reopening The ports of Tampa Bay and Canaveral both reopened on Friday, two days after Hurricane Ian forced them to close. In Tampa Bay, cargo ships are moving in and out of the port. However, cruises have not yet resumed — the first will be the Carnival Paradise, which is scheduled to arrive on Saturday. Across the peninsula, in Canaveral, vessels weighing 500 gross tons and less were welcomed back beginning at 4 p.m. The port said it would reopen to all traffic beginning at midnight.   6:46 PM / September 30, 2022 “We’ve never seen anything like this”: Severe floods swamp Orlando Many houses and apartment complexes in Orlando, Florida, are still completely surrounded by water. Lidianys de Dios stayed up all night as hurricane Ian hit, watching the rising water creep up to her front door, knowing that she has no flood insurance. She said she’s never had flooding like this in her neighborhood. “We’ve been in this house for like 16 years and then in the country for like 20-something years and we’ve never seen anything like this before,” she said. Across Orlando, airboats made their way through flooded neighborhoods all day Friday, rescuing residents who had no way out. Some braved the flooded streets by car, others used kayaks to get around. “This is definitely the worst hurricane I’ve been through,” said Orlando resident Juan Ceballos, who was evacuated by the National Guard. “We just packed like a quick tub full of stuff and walked out.” Harrowing rescues after severe floods swamp Orlando 02:03   6:27 PM / September 30, 2022 U.S. Army shares video of rescue mission in Sanibel Soldiers with the Florida National Guard flew to Sanibel Island to “assist with medical evacuations and search and rescue operations,” the U.S. Army tweeted Friday. It shared a video of the soldiers looking out over the devastation from a helicopter. — U.S. Army (@USArmy) September 30, 2022   5:08 PM / September 30, 2022 16 still missing after migrant boat sank off Florida coast as Ian arrived Two people were found dead, the U.S. Coast Guard said Friday, and 16 are still missing after a migrant boat sank off the southern coast of Florida several days ago. A total of 27 people were on the boat when it took on water off Stock Island on Wednesday, the Coast Guard said. Four people, identified by authorities as Cuban migrants, made it to shore in the immediate aftermath.  The Coast Guard said the next day that three people were located 2 miles off Boca Chica and taken to area hospitals for exhaustion and dehydration. Later that same day, the Coast Guard said nine people had been safely located and rescued. The boat sank as Hurricane Ian approached Florida’s west coast, bringing storm surges, roaring wind and punishing rain to much of the state. Read more here   4:43 PM / September 30, 2022 NFL Foundation to donate $1 million, auction off game jerseys for relief efforts The NFL Foundation said Friday it is donating $1 million to Hurricane Ian relief efforts. It comes after the Glazer family, who owns the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, announced they were donating $1 million Thursday. The foundation will also auction off “a limited number of game-worn jerseys and other unique items” from this weekend’s Tampa Bay-Kansas City game to benefit the American Red Cross’ hurricane relief efforts. Fans will be able to bid on the items at NFL.com/auction. “The NFL family’s thoughts are with the various communities affected by Hurricane Ian during this difficult time and we will continue to find additional ways to provide help and support to those in Florida who need it now and in the months ahead,” the foundation said in a statement.   4:11 PM / September 30, 2022 Hundreds of thousands without power in Florida and Carolinas As of 3:45 p.m. ET on Friday, more than 1.7 million customers in Florida, 210,000 in South Carolina and 82,000 in North Carolina were without power, according to poweroutage.us.   4:02 PM / September 30, 2022 Florida sheriff’s office shares photos of devastation The Lee County Sheriff’s Office was surveying damage Friday on Pine Island and Matlacha, two islands located very close to where Hurricane Ian made landfall in Florida. Officials shared stunning photos of the destruction left there: a buckled road, flooded streets, a trapped car, a leveled home and downed palm trees. “The devastation is heartbreaking,” a Facebook post said. Destruction left by Hurricane Ian in Pine Island and Matlacha, Florida. “The devastation is heartbreaking,” the Lee County Sheriff’s Office wrote on its Facebook page on Friday, Sept. 30, 2022. Lee County Sheriff’s Office Several homes are destroyed on the Florida island. Lee County Sheriff’s Office Debris is seen scattered outside of a restaurant on Matlacha. Lee County Sheriff’s Office   3:32 PM / September 30, 2022 U.S. officials warn of hurricane-related scams The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency is warning people about “malicious cyber activity targeting potential disaster victims and charitable donors following a hurricane.” In an alert on Friday, the agency told people to be on the lookout for fraudulent emails with “hurricane-related subject lines, attachments, or hyperlinks.” “In addition, be wary of social media pleas, texts, or door-to-door solicitations relating to severe weather events,” the bulletin said.   2:46 PM / September 30, 2022 Biden says it’ll take “months, years” for many to rebuild in Florida Speaking from the White House’s Roosevelt Room, President Biden gave an update on Hurricane Ian as it continues to thrash the South. The president reiterated that the federal government will handle 100% of the cost to clear debris in Florida’s hardest-hit counties.  “We’re just beginning to see the scale of that destruction,” Mr. Biden said. “It’s likely to rank among the worst … in the nation’s history. You’ve all seen on television homes and property wiped out. It’s going to take months, years to rebuild. And our hearts go...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Ian Arrives In North Carolina After Bringing Flooding Damage To South Carolina; Death Toll Rises In Florida
Japan Spent Record Of Nearly $20.0 Bln On Intervention To Support The Yen
Japan Spent Record Of Nearly $20.0 Bln On Intervention To Support The Yen
Japan Spent Record Of Nearly $20.0 Bln On Intervention To Support The Yen https://digitalarizonanews.com/japan-spent-record-of-nearly-20-0-bln-on-intervention-to-support-the-yen/ Intervention drains nearly 15% of readily available funds Japan can avoid selling U.S. Treasury bills for now – analysts Impact of further intervention may diminish – analysts TOKYO, Sept 30 (Reuters) – Japan spent up to a record 2.8 trillion yen ($19.7 billion) intervening in the foreign exchange market last week to prop up the yen, Ministry of Finance data showed on Friday, draining nearly 15% of funds it has readily available for intervention. The figure was less than the 3.6 trillion yen estimated by Tokyo money market brokers for Japan’s first dollar-selling, yen-buying intervention in 24 years to stem the currency’s sharp weakening. The ministry’s figure, indicating total spending on currency intervention from Aug. 30 to Sept. 28, is widely believed to have been used entirely for the Sept. 22 intervention. It would surpass the previous record for dollar-selling, yen-buying intervention in 1998 of 2.62 trillion yen. Confirmation on the dates of the spending will be released in November. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com “This was a big burst of intervention, if it had happened on a single day, underscoring Japanese authorities’ determination to defend the yen,” said Daisaku Ueno, chief forex strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities. “But the impact of further intervention will diminish as long as Japan continues to intervene solo,” he said. The intervention, conducted after the yen slumped to a 24-year low of nearly 146 to the dollar, triggered a sharp bounce of more than 5 yen per dollar from that low, although the currency has since drifted down again to around 144.25. “Recent sharp, one-sided yen declines heighten uncertainty by making it difficult for companies to set business plans. It’s therefore undesirable and bad for the economy,” Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda was quoted as saying at a meeting with cabinet ministers on Friday. Japan held roughly $1.3 trillion in reserves, the second biggest after China, of which $135.5 billion was held as deposits parked with foreign central banks and the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), according to foreign reserves data released on Sept. 7. Those deposits can easily be tapped to finance further dollar-selling, yen-buying intervention. “Even if it were to intervene again, Japan likely won’t have to sell U.S. Treasury bills and instead tap this deposit for the time being,” said Izuru Kato, chief economist at Totan Research, a think-tank arm of a major money market brokerage firm in Tokyo. If the deposits dry up, Japan would need to dip into its securities holdings sized around $1.04 trillion. Of the main types of foreign assets Japan holds, deposits and securities are the most liquid and can be converted into cash immediately. Other holdings include gold, reserves at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and IMF special drawing rights (SDRs), although procuring dollar funds from these assets would take time, analysts say. ($1 = 144.4000 yen) (This story corrects to add dropped word ‘to’ in first paragraph) Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Sam Holmes, Edmund Klamann & Shri Navaratnam Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Japan Spent Record Of Nearly $20.0 Bln On Intervention To Support The Yen
Winning Numbers Drawn In
Winning Numbers Drawn In
Winning Numbers Drawn In https://digitalarizonanews.com/winning-numbers-drawn-in-4/ By The Associated Press Sep 30, 2022 1 hr ago 0 PHOENIX (AP) _ The winning numbers in Friday evening’s drawing of the Arizona Lottery’s “Fantasy 5” game were: 01-02-05-08-18 (one, two, five, eight, eighteen) Estimated jackpot: $50,000 ¶ Players with all five numbers win all or share a prize that starts at $50,000. Tickets with four winning numbers are worth $500, while those who guess three numbers get $5 and those who choose two win $1. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! On Saturday, nearly all of the bills signed into law by Gov. Doug Ducey earlier this year went into effect. Some of them impact Arizonans in their daily lives, classrooms and voting booths.  GOP legislators waved through a number of laws targeting pandemic safety measures that many found stifling. Some of them might handicap the […] The post New AZ laws are now in effect: Here are some of the most controversial appeared first on Arizona Mirror. The percentage of adolescents in Arizona with obesity has steadily risen to 13%. Here’s what’s being done to fight the chronic health issue. Authorities have identified a woman’s body found in a suitcase in a desert area north of Phoenix. According to Phoenix police, the victim was 39-year-old Jennifer Beede. They say the cause and manner of death will be determined by the Maricopa County medical examiner’s office. Police were called to the scene around 6:45 a.m. Saturday after a bicyclist reported seeing adult human remains in a container on a trail. Police say the container was a suitcase and a body was inside it, but didn’t immediately release any other details. Phoenix TV station KPHO reported that someone saw a head and knee sticking out of a suitcase. Police say detectives are trying to determine what led to the woman’s death and locate any possible suspects. PHOENIX — Arizona can enforce a near-total ban on abortions that has been blocked for nearly 50 years, a judge ruled Friday, meaning clinics s… Hundreds of Arizona high school students walked out of their schools into the glaring afternoon sun on Thursday to protest the record number of anti-LGBTQ bills passed by the GOP-controlled state Legislature this year.  “Dear (Gov. Doug) Ducey and Arizona representatives, these bills are killing us,” walkout organizer Dawn Shim told a crowd of students […] The post Arizona students walkout in protest of new anti-LGBTQ laws appeared first on Arizona Mirror. PHOENIX (AP) _ The winning numbers in Sunday evening’s drawing of the Arizona Lottery’s “Fantasy 5” game were: U.S. Sen. Mark Kelly holds a double-digit lead over his Republican challenger, venture capitalist Blake Masters, in a poll released Wednesday by Marist College.  The poll of 1,260 registered Arizona voters found that Kelly, a Democrat, is favored by 51% of respondents to only 41% who said they plan to vote for Masters. Among those […] The post New AZ poll: Voters lean Republican but Kelly still leads Masters appeared first on Arizona Mirror. Phoenix police say they have made the largest fentanyl bust in the department’s history. Authorities said Friday that more than 1 million fentanyl pills were discovered during a police search of a home and a car in the Phoenix suburb of Avondale. According to detectives, two men connected to the seized drugs have been arrested. The car belonged to one of them. They have both been booked into Maricopa County Jail on several felony charges. Their names were not released. Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Winning Numbers Drawn In
Why DOJ Wants A Faster Ruling In Appeal Of Trump Special Master Review
Why DOJ Wants A Faster Ruling In Appeal Of Trump Special Master Review
Why DOJ Wants A Faster Ruling In Appeal Of Trump Special Master Review https://digitalarizonanews.com/why-doj-wants-a-faster-ruling-in-appeal-of-trump-special-master-review/ The Department of Justice filed a request to expedite its appeal of a judge’s order to allow a special master to review classified documents taken from former President Donald Trump‘s Mar-a-Lago residency. The request, filed on Friday to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, proposed an expedited schedule that would wrap up the written briefs by November 11 instead of the current deadline scheduled for a month later. The DOJ said that the independent special master review has hampered the department’s own criminal investigation of the documents seized from the former president’s Florida residence in August. “An expedited appeal would serve the interests of justice,” read the filing. “Based on the district court’s orders thus far, the government is barred from accessing all of the materials except those with classification markings recovered in August pursuant to a lawful search warrant—and it may continue to be barred from doing so until mid-December or later.” Former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate is seen on September 14, 2022, in Palm Beach, Florida. The Department of Justice filed a request on September 30 to expedite its appeal of having a special master review documents that were seized in August from Mar-a-Lago. Joe Raedle/Getty Images The DOJ was granted an appeal from the court earlier in September for more than 100 documents marked as classified to be exempted from the special master review. Expediting the appeal of the broader review—and winning the appeal—would give the DOJ access to all 11,000 documents as part of its investigation into how they were transferred, stored and who has accessed them. Legal experts took to Twitter in light of the news to explain why the DOJ would be motivated to speed up the appeal process, and weighed in on why they think the department’s arguments might be granted by the court. Former appellate defender Teri Kanefield posted a thread to Twitter explaining why she believes the circuit court would be inclined to grant the request. Among Kanefield’s arguments she noted that the court already gave a “shellacking” to Judge Aileen Cannon by blocking the special master review of specific classified documents. The DOJ is moving to expedite the appeal. (Their answer to Judge Cannon’s shenanigans.) Procedural history: First they filed a notice of appeal, then asked for a stay pending the appeal of the 100 documents marked classified. . .https://t.co/XX293Gt5j2 h/t @kyledcheney 1/ — Teri Kanefield (@Teri_Kanefield) September 30, 2022 The DOJ references in Friday’s filing that the court had granted its order earlier in the month on the basis that the “injunction against the government’s review” posed “real and significant harm on the United States and the public.” “Even if not to the same degree,” continued the DOJ, “such harm persists with respect to the district court’s injunction against the government’s review and use of thousands of remaining documents and other material….” The DOJ also argued in its filing that there is “good cause” to expedite the appeal, including that the request does not ask the court to “analyze an extensive factual record.” “Instead, this appeal presents two questions of law,” wrote the DOJ. “Whether the district court erred by exercising equitable jurisdiction over [Trump’s] motion, and whether the district court erred by granting a preliminary injunction barring the government from reviewing or using evidence seized… in an ongoing criminal investigation.” Kanefield added that if the DOJ is granted its request to expedite the process and goes on to win the appeal, “It was all a waste of Trump’s money and the DOJ’s time.” Former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti also weighed in on Twitter, saying that he believes Judge Cannon’s recent decision to side with Trump in an argument between the former president and the special master played a role in the DOJ’s decision to request an expedited appeal. Cannon’s recent order certainly played a role in DOJ’s decision to request an expedited appeal. We don’t know how the appellate court will decide the broader issues raised by DOJ. But its decision on the motion to stay is a good sign, and DOJ is right to prefer them to Cannon. https://t.co/vBmAZrjatL — Renato Mariotti (@renato_mariotti) October 1, 2022 Mariotti added that it’s hard to say if the appeals court will grant the request from the DOJ, but that the department’s decision on the motion is “a good sign, and the DOJ is right to prefer them to Cannon.” The DOJ noted in its request that it had conferred with Trump’s lawyer, Chris Kise, who said that Trump is opposed to the motion to expedite the process. “It will be interesting to see what reasons Trump comes up with for needing more time, particularly because the DOJ is truncating its own timeframe,” Kanefield noted on Twitter. On his Truth Social account Friday, the former president referred to the “Document Hoax Lawsuit” as another “scam” from the DOJ and the FBI. “Much like Russia, Russia, Russia, Impeachment hoax #1, Impeachment hoax #2, the Mueller Report, spying on my campaign, lying to the FISA Court, lying to Congress, illegally breaking into my home in Florida in violation of the Fourth Amendment and also violating the Presidential Records Act,” Trump said in the post. Newsweek reached out to Trump’s team for comment. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Why DOJ Wants A Faster Ruling In Appeal Of Trump Special Master Review
Trump Intensifies Attacks On McConnell With 'death Wish' Remark On His Social Media Platform
Trump Intensifies Attacks On McConnell With 'death Wish' Remark On His Social Media Platform
Trump Intensifies Attacks On McConnell With 'death Wish' Remark On His Social Media Platform https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-intensifies-attacks-on-mcconnell-with-death-wish-remark-on-his-social-media-platform/ Former President Donald Trump raised the specter of political violence Friday with a fresh attack on Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, suggesting that the GOP leader had “a death wish” because he had voted to approve legislation sponsored by Democrats. In a post on his Truth Social website, Trump asked if McConnell had supported the unspecified bills “because he hates Donald J. Trump, and he knows I am opposed to them.” “He has a DEATH WISH,” Trump added. While Trump did not specify which Democratic-sponsored bills McConnell supported, the Senate on Thursday passed a bill to keep the government funded in a 72-25 vote that included support from McConnell and other Republicans. Earlier in the week, McConnell said he would back a bipartisan legislation aimed at protecting against election subversion — putting him at loggerheads with Trump. When asked about Trump’s comments on Friday, Trump spokesperson Taylor Budowich said it was “absurd” to suggest the former president’s post could be construed as dangerous. “Mitch McConnell is killing the Republican Party through weakness and cowardice. He obviously has a political death wish for himself and Republican Party, but President Trump and the America First champions in Congress will save the Republican Party and our nation,” Budowich said in a email to NBC News. Trump has frequently lambasted McConnell, with the attacks intensifying after the Senate Republican leader rebuked Trump following the Capitol riot. More recent attacks have included derogatory comments about McConnell’s wife, Elaine Chao, who served as transportation secretary during the Trump administration. On Truth Social last month, Trump called Chao “crazy,” while referring to McConnell as a “broken down hack politician.” Chao resigned a day after the attack on the Capitol, when a pro-Trump mob chanted “hang Mike Pence” while storming the building. She later sat for a videotaped interview with the House Jan. 6 committee. On Friday, Trump said McConnell must “immediately seek help and advise from his China loving wife, Coco Chow!” Chao was born in Taipei. NBC News has reached out to McConnell’s office for comment. Zoë Richards is the evening politics reporter for NBC News. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Intensifies Attacks On McConnell With 'death Wish' Remark On His Social Media Platform
Trump Fraud Lawsuit Goes To Judge Who Held Him In Contempt
Trump Fraud Lawsuit Goes To Judge Who Held Him In Contempt
Trump Fraud Lawsuit Goes To Judge Who Held Him In Contempt https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-fraud-lawsuit-goes-to-judge-who-held-him-in-contempt-2/ In a letter Thursday to the court’s administrative judge, Trump lawyer Alina Habba argued that the lawsuit should instead be assigned to the court’s Commercial Division, which is set up to handle complex corporate litigation. Associated Press October 01, 2022 / 08:53 AM IST Donald Trump (Image Courtesy: Reuters) The New York attorney general’s lawsuit accusing Donald Trump and his company of fraud has been assigned to a state court judge who repeatedly ruled against the former president in related subpoena disputes — including holding him in contempt, fining him $110,000 and forcing him to sit for a deposition. Trump’s lawyers are objecting to Manhattan Judge Arthur Engoron’s continued involvement and accused Attorney General Letitia James’ office of attempting to “judge shop” because, in paperwork seeking assignment of a judge, it noted Engoron’s knowledge of the case and linked the lawsuit and subpoena disputes as “related” matters. In a letter Thursday to the court’s administrative judge, Trump lawyer Alina Habba argued that the lawsuit should instead be assigned to the court’s Commercial Division, which is set up to handle complex corporate litigation. James’ office, which filed the lawsuit last week, is angling to get the case to trial by the end of next year — before the first primaries in the 2024 presidential election. In a response, it said the case should remain with Engoron in part because of “the level of familiarity” he’s developed in handling discovery and subpoena issues in the underlying investigation. “Given the fact that this action involves allegations of an ongoing scheme and conspiracy to obtain millions of dollars through fraudulent activity, and that defendants repeatedly have sought to delay the conclusion of (James’ investigation), it is imperative that this case proceed quickly,” Wallace wrote. A court spokesperson said Engoron had no comment. James’ lawsuit alleges Trump and the Trump Organization inflated his net worth by billions of dollars and misled banks and others for years about the value of prized assets like golf courses, hotels and his Mar-a-Lago estate. She is seeking $250 million and a permanent ban on Trump doing business in the state. Trump’s three eldest children, Donald Jr., Ivanka and Eric Trump, were also named as defendants, along with two longtime company executives. A lawyer for Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump sent a letter Thursday to the administrative judge echoing Habba’s call to move the case to the court’s Commercial Division. Engoron, a Democrat, has been involved in Trump-related cases since 2020, when he was assigned to intervene in quarrels among Trump’s lawyers and James’ office over demands for evidence and the direction of her investigation. Trump, a Republican who’s been laying groundwork for a potential comeback campaign for president, claimed bias after several of Engoron’s rulings went against him, saying in a statement: “I can’t get a fair hearing in New York because of the hatred of me by Judges and the judiciary. It is not possible.” In February, Engoron enforced a subpoena for Trump and two of his children, Ivanka and Donald Jr., to give deposition testimony under oath. They testified in August after a state appeals court rejected attempts to overturn the ruling. Trump invoked his Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination more than 400 times. In April, Engoron held the former president in contempt of court and fined him for being slow to respond to a subpoena requiring him to turn over certain documents. Engoron lifted the contempt finding in June after Trump paid the $110,000 fine and complied with other demands. Engoron has also issued rulings ordering the Trump Organization and its appraiser, Cushman & Wakefield to hand over evidence, and requiring another son, Eric Trump, to testify at a deposition. Trump has decried James’ lawsuit as “Another Witch Hunt” and noted that his company’s financial disclosures warned banks not to trust the information provided. Habba said the allegations in the lawsuit are “meritless.” Read More Here
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Trump Fraud Lawsuit Goes To Judge Who Held Him In Contempt
Trump Says Mitch McConnell Has A 'Death Wish' In Racist Meltdown
Trump Says Mitch McConnell Has A 'Death Wish' In Racist Meltdown
Trump Says Mitch McConnell Has A 'Death Wish' In Racist Meltdown   https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-says-mitch-mcconnell-has-a-death-wish-in-racist-meltdown/ The former president howled about the Senate Minority Leader and made a racist remark about former Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao Ah, Friday night. Time to kick back, watch a little TV, and casually threaten the Senate Minority Leader on your website.  “He has a DEATH WISH,” Donald Trump wrote on Truth Social of Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell, while also adding a racist dig at McConnell’s wife Elaine Chao, who is Asian American and a former member of Trump’s own cabinet. “Must immediately seek help and advise from his China loving wife, Coco Chow!” Chao was born in Taiwan. “Is McConnell approving all of these trillions of dollars worth of Democrat-sponsored bills, without even the slightest bit of negotiation, because he hates Donald J. Trump, and he knows I am strongly opposed to them,” Trump angrily mused, “or is he doing it because he believes in the Fake and Highly Destructive Green New Deal, and is willing to take the country down with him?”  The screed came after President Joe Biden signed into law a bill to fund the US government until Dec. 16 to avoid a shut down at midnight. It also provides $12.4 billion in military and diplomatic aid to Ukraine, the Washington Post reports.    The former president spent hours on Friday afternoon engaged in an extended posting barrage on his personal social media platform Truth Social, leveling attacks against McConnell at least three separate times. In 2017 Trump lambasted McConnell after the senate failed to secure passage of a bill that would partially repeal the Affordable Care Act, and the relationship between the two giants of the Republican Party has remained tenuous. In recent weeks, Trump has vented to some confidants that if Republicans fail to take back both the House and Senate in the 2022 midterms, the ex-president expects “all these fucking RINOs” to blame him for any GOP high-profile losses, according to a person with direct knowledge of this grievance. In these complaints, Trump has repeatedly singled out McConnell — who the former president regularly calls a “son of a bitch” — as someone who Trump claims is actively working to sabotage Republicans’ odds of winning the Senate in this year’s critical elections. “Blame Mitch,” Trump has recently said, if Republicans fail to retake the Senate this cycle, this source relayed.  Read More Here
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Trump Says Mitch McConnell Has A 'Death Wish' In Racist Meltdown
Greg Abbott Beto ORourke Clash On Immigration Guns And Abortion
Greg Abbott Beto ORourke Clash On Immigration Guns And Abortion
Greg Abbott, Beto O’Rourke Clash On Immigration, Guns And Abortion https://digitalarizonanews.com/greg-abbott-beto-orourke-clash-on-immigration-guns-and-abortion/ By Seth McLaughlin – The Washington Times Updated: 10:15 p.m. on Friday, September 30, 2022 Gov. Greg Abbott on Friday said his Democratic rival Beto O’Rourke supports the “open border” policies of the Biden administration that have forced Texas to spend billions to combat the surge of illegal immigrants coming across its border and violent drug cartels flooding the nation with fentanyl. In the first and only debate of their gubernatorial race, Mr. Abbott, who is seeking his third term, said Mr. O’Rourke, if elected, will not lift a finger to stop the Biden administration from steering the nation further away from the Trump-era policies that strengthened border security and curtailed illegal immigration. Mr. O’Rourke, in response, said Mr. Abbott is always looking for someone else to blame for his shortcomings, including on the border, and said the Republican’s approach has failed. “Remember this — two years ago we had one of the safest borders in decades, but under the Biden administration we have more people coming across the border than ever in the history of our country,” Mr. Abbott said at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley in Edinburg. “Texas has responded by making sure we have the National Guard and [Texas Department of Public Safety] deployed where they are making arrests and turning back illegal immigrants.” Mr. Abbott said they are helping localities by busing illegal immigrants to “sanctuary cities in northeastern parts of the country.”  Mr. Abbott’s Operation Lone Star, which pushes National Guard troops and state and local law enforcement into the border battle, has bused 8,100 migrants to Washington, 2,900 to New York City, and 870 to Chicago. It has also brought state charges against smugglers and some illegal immigrants, taking cases the feds decline to pursue. “What we’re doing is making sure that we are keeping our communities safe, and this is completely different than the way things would be under Beto,” he said. Mr. O’Rourke said no more taxpayer money should be allocated for the program, arguing it has proven to be “political theater” aimed to advance Mr. Abbott’s political fortunes, and arguing “it clearly has failed.” “He promised that it would deter people from coming to this country,” Mr. O’Rourke said. “We’ve only seen more people come. Now they get a bus ride to Chicago or Washington, D.C., or New York. We don’t need any more stunts. We need solutions.” “What we need is a safe, legal, orderly path for anyone who wants to come here to work with family or to seek asylum,” he said. “If you’ve come to this country, we expect you to follow the law, but on our side, we’re going to make sure that our laws reflect our values and our interests.”  Mr. O’Rourke said he supports a “Texas-based guest worker program” that he said would help alleviate worker shortages and ease supply chain issues. Mr. Abbott hit back, saying Mr. O’Rourke could have pressed for that sort of program if he won his 2018 bid for Senate or 2020 bid for president, but said a governor has other duties. “The job of governor is to have to deal with the chaos caused by the Biden administration and its open border policies that Beto would replicate,” Mr. Abbott said. For Mr. O’Rourke, the debate offered an opportunity to seize momentum in the race and fulfill the dreams of Democrats and liberal activists who loathe Mr. Abbott and have relished the idea that the Texas electorate has become less conservative. The debate featured no audience. Both men sat at tables and fielded questions from reporters. Mr. O’Rourke said Mr. Abbott blames “everyone else” when the state falls short. Mr. Abbott, meanwhile, said Mr. O’Rourke has flip-flopped on a series of issues. Both men accused each other of misrepresenting their records. Mr. O’Rourke criticized Mr. Abbott’s response to the mass shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde and the energy grid failure in 2021, and chided him for supporting legislation that banned abortion as early as six weeks of pregnancy and did not include exceptions for rape and incest. “He signed the most extreme abortion ban in America,” Mr. O’Rourke said of the Texas law that took effect after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the 1973 ruling that established a constitutional right to abortion. “This election is about reproductive freedom,” the Democrat said. “If you care about this, you need to turn out and vote. I will fight to make sure that every woman in Texas can make her own decisions about her own body and own future and our own health care.” Mr. Abbott stood his ground, saying Mr. O’Rourke has the “most extreme” stance on abortion. “He not only supports the abortion of a fully developed child to the very last second before birth, he’s even against providing medical care for a baby who survives an abortion,” he said. “He is for unlimited abortion at taxpayer expense.” Mr. O’Rourke and Democrats are praying he can flip the governor’s mansion.  But he has struggled to build upon the success he had in 2018 when he came within 3 points of defeating Sen. Ted Cruz, the polarizing conservative firebrand. Mr. Abbott entered the head-to-head showdown Friday in the driver’s seat.  The Real Clear Politics average of polls showed Mr. Abbott with an 8-point lead in the race, with five weeks to go before Election Day.  Indeed, survey after survey this year has shown Mr. Abbott ahead. Mr. O’Rourke is navigating a challenging political landscape this go-around in Texas, where President Biden’s approval rating is in the tank.  Mr. Biden’s approach to immigration, energy, and inflation has proven deeply unpopular in the deep-red border state, creating headaches for Mr. O’Rourke and other Democrats. A Quinnipiac University poll released this week showed the biggest issues on the minds of Texas voters are the Texas-Mexico border (38 percent), abortion (17 percent), and inflation (11 percent). The issues cut across partisan lines.  The top concerns for Republicans are the border (66 percent) and inflation (20 percent), and the top concerns for Democrats are abortion (36 percent), gun policy (16 percent) and election laws (12 percent). Among independents, the Texas-Mexico border ranked first (37 percent), followed by abortion (16 percent). Looking to wrest away the momentum, Mr. O’Rourke launched a pre-emptive strike against Mr. Abbott before the debate. The Democrats and parents and families of the victims in the Uvalde school shooting held a press conference to demand the governor call a special legislative session to pass new law raising the minimum age to purchase an assault weapon from 18 to 21. The Uvalde shooter used two AR-15-style rifles that he bought days after he turned 18 to kill 19 students and two teachers at Robb Elementary. Mr. O’Rourke, in the debate, said a majority of Texans support the proposal.  “It has been 18 weeks since their kids have been killed, and not a thing has changed in the state to make it any less likely than any other child will meet the same thing,” he said. “All we need is action, and the only person standing in our way is the governor of the state of Texas.” “After all of these mass shootings, this governor has done nothing except make it easier for people who should not have to carry them publicly,” he said. Mr. Abbott brushed off the attack.  Citing court rulings, Mr. Abbott said raising the age to purchase an assault weapon has proven to be “unconstitutional.” “We want to end school shootings, but we cannot do that by making false promises,” Mr. Abbott said in the debate.  “Any attempt to try to raise the age is going to be met with that being overturned,” he said. “So we need to get to the bottom of what is really ailing our communities. And that is the mental health that is leading people to engage in school shootings and Texas is already addressing that.” Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC. Read More Here
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Greg Abbott Beto ORourke Clash On Immigration Guns And Abortion
Scientists Discover Massive Ocean Near Earth's Core
Scientists Discover Massive Ocean Near Earth's Core
Scientists Discover Massive “Ocean” Near Earth's Core https://digitalarizonanews.com/scientists-discover-massive-ocean-near-earths-core/ The transition zone’s high water content has far-reaching consequences (Representational Image) Scientists have discovered a reservoir of water three times the volume of all the oceans beneath the Earth’s surface, according to an international study. The water has been found between the transition zone of the Earth’s upper and lower mantle. The research team analyzed a rate diamond formed 660 meters below the Earth’s surface using techniques including Raman spectroscopy and FTIR spectrometry, ANI reported. The study confirmed something that for a long time it was just a theory, namely that ocean water accompanies subducting slabs and thus enters the transition zone. This means that our planet’s water cycle includes the Earth’s interior. “These mineral transformations greatly hinder the movements of rock in the mantle,” explains Prof. Frank Brenker from the Institute for Geosciences at Goethe University in Frankfurt. For example, mantle plumes — rising columns of hot rock from the deep mantle — sometimes stop directly below the transition zone. The movement of mass in the opposite direction also comes to standstill. Brenker says, “Subducting plates often have difficulty in breaking through the entire transition zone. So there is a whole graveyard of such plates in this zone underneath Europe.” However, until now it was not known what the long-term effects of “sucking” material into the transition zone were on its geochemical composition and whether larger quantities of water existed there. Brenker explains: “The subducting slabs also carry deep-sea sediments piggyback into the Earth’s interior. These sediments can hold large quantities of water and CO2. But until now it was unclear just how much enters the transition zone in the form of more stable, hydrous minerals and carbonates — and it was therefore also unclear whether large quantities of water really are stored there.” The prevailing conditions would certainly be conducive to that. The dense minerals wadsleyite and ringwoodite can (unlike the olivine at lesser depths) store large quantities of water- in fact so large that the transition zone would theoretically be able to absorb six times the amount of water in our oceans. “So we knew that the boundary layer has an enormous capacity for storing water,” Brenker says. “However, we didn’t know whether it actually did so.” An international study in which the Frankfurt geoscientist was involved has now supplied the answer. The research team analysed a diamond from Botswana, Africa. It was formed at a depth of 660 kilometres, right at the interface between the transition zone and the lower mantle, where ringwoodite is the prevailing mineral. Diamonds from this region are very rare, even among the rare diamonds of super-deep origin, which account for only one per cent of diamonds. The analyses revealed that the stone contains numerous ringwoodite inclusions — which exhibit a high water content. Furthermore, the research group was able to determine the chemical composition of the stone. It was almost exactly the same as that of virtually every fragment of mantle rock found in basalts anywhere in the world. This showed that the diamond definitely came from a normal piece of the Earth’s mantle. “In this study, we have demonstrated that the transition zone is not a dry sponge, but holds considerable quantities of water,” Brenker says, adding: “This also brings us one step closer to Jules Verne’s idea of an ocean inside the Earth.” The difference is that there is no ocean down there, but hydrous rock which, according to Brenker, would neither feel wet nor drip water.   Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Scientists Discover Massive Ocean Near Earth's Core
Biden Signs Bill To Avert Government Shutdown Aid Ukraine
Biden Signs Bill To Avert Government Shutdown Aid Ukraine
Biden Signs Bill To Avert Government Shutdown, Aid Ukraine https://digitalarizonanews.com/biden-signs-bill-to-avert-government-shutdown-aid-ukraine/ WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden signed into law Friday a bill that finances the federal government through mid-December and provides another infusion of military and economic aid to Ukraine after lawmakers acted to avert a partial government shutdown set to begin after midnight. The bill passed the House by a vote of 230-201 earlier in the day. Republicans overwhelmingly opposed the measure. Some wanted to extend government funding into January when, based on the results of the midterm elections, it’s possible they’ll have more leverage over setting federal spending for the full fiscal year. Others argued the measure needed to do more to address border security. Democrats said passing the bill was important to helping Ukraine as well as victims of recent natural disasters in the U.S., including Hurricane Ian, as it provides a Federal Emergency Management Agency disaster fund with a year’s worth of money up front rather than for two-and-a-half months. “Turn on the news. Look what’s happening in Florida right now. Look at what happened to Puerto Rico. Look at what’s happening in Alaska. I mean, people need help,” said Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass. “And look at what’s happening in Ukraine. Do we support helping preserve democracy in Ukraine or not? That’s what’s at stake here.” But Republicans complained the bill brought to the floor was not subject to bipartisan negotiations in the House and didn’t reflect their priorities. “We know we have a crisis on the southern border. You can turn on the television every night. You can look at the fentanyl pouring into the country, You can see the tragedy of human trafficking. Is there anything in this bill that asks us to do anything different, anything new?” said Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla. “No, you just ask, ‘please allow us to continue the current state of affairs on the southern border.’ That is a travesty.” In the end, support for the bill was unanimous among Democratic lawmakers. Only 10 Republican lawmakers joined them in voting yes. Later Friday, former President Donald Trump responded to the bill’s passage with a racist message on his social media platform attacking Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell and his Asian American wife, who also served in Trump’s administration as a Cabinet secretary. Trump ominously wrote that McConnell has a “death wish.” The bill finances the federal government through Dec. 16 and buys lawmakers more time to agree on legislation setting spending levels for the 2023 fiscal year. The bill generally keeps spending at current levels, though it does provide more than $12.3 billion in Ukraine-related aid. The money will go to provide training, equipment and logistics support for the Ukraine military, help Ukraine’s government provide basic services to its citizens and replenish U.S. weapons systems and munitions. “This contribution ensures we continue upholding our moral responsibility to support the people of Ukraine in the face of a vicious invasion that continues to demand decisive action by us,” said Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the Democratic chair of the House Appropriations Committee. Disaster assistance was also attached to the stopgap bill, including $2.5 billion to help New Mexico communities recover from the Hermit’s Peak/Calf Canyon Fire, the largest wildfire in the state’s history; $2 billion for a block grant program that aids the economic recovery of communities impacted by recent disasters; and $20 million for water and wastewater infrastructure improvements previously authorized for Jackson, Mississippi. “We cannot leave communities behind that are still picking up the pieces from disastrous floods, wildfires and hurricane, and even basic water system failures,” said Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla. The bill would provide an additional $1 billion for a program that helps low-income households heat their homes. And it would transfer $3 billion from a Pentagon aid program to the State Department for continued Afghan resettlement operations. Lawmakers also included a reauthorization of the Food and Drug Administration’s user fee agreements for five years, which ensures the agency can continue critical product safety reviews and won’t need to issue pink slips for thousands of employees working on drug and medical device applications. One thing missing from the bill is the billions of dollars in additional funding that Biden sought to aid the response to COVID-19 and monkeypox. Republicans criticized the health spending as unnecessary. The White House said the money would have been used to accelerate the research and development of vaccines and therapeutics, prepare for future COVID variants and support the global response. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Read More Here
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Biden Signs Bill To Avert Government Shutdown Aid Ukraine
After Slamming Florida Hurricane Ian Barrels Into South Carolina | CNN
After Slamming Florida Hurricane Ian Barrels Into South Carolina | CNN
After Slamming Florida, Hurricane Ian Barrels Into South Carolina | CNN https://digitalarizonanews.com/after-slamming-florida-hurricane-ian-barrels-into-south-carolina-cnn/ Drone video shows catastrophic damage in Florida 01:36 The latest: Hurricane Ian made landfall near Georgetown, South Carolina, as a Category 1 hurricane on Friday, two days after it slammed into the southwestern coast of Florida as a Category 4 hurricane. Ian is now a post-tropical cyclone that is tracking into North Carolina and Virginia. Fatal impact: At least 45 people have been reported dead so far due to the storm. Search and rescue efforts are underway in the worst-hit areas of Florida. Tracking Ian: You can track the storm’s path here or sign up for email alerts from CNN meteorologists here. In the storm’s path? Bookmark CNN’s lite site for fast connectivity. Sigue nuestra cobertura en vivo en español aquí. Our live coverage has ended. Read more about the storm system and its impact in the posts below. Nurse Tonya McCullough was on her way to work for an overnight shift at a Downtown Orlando hospital when her car got stuck in the floodwaters as Hurricane Ian passed through early Thursday morning. WESH reporter Tony Atkins and his camera operator who were nearby jumped into action, picking up McCullough, carrying her from the car and helping her escape. “The fact that he was there — I know that was God because it was dark. There were no police cars or ambulances or fire trucks. There was no one else around to help me at that moment and he was available immediately,” McCullough told CNN’s Erin Burnett on Friday night. After the rescue, McCullough still worked a 16-hour shift and was able to meet up with Atkins on Friday morning. “It was so emotional to see him because I did not get the opportunity to express my thanks and gratefulness and let him know he was my hero, my champion, my knight in shining armor,” she said. Watch the rescue caught on camera: Charlotte County is in desperate need of help despite the assistance it has already received following the destruction caused by Hurricane Ian, according to Claudette Smith, public information officer for the sheriff’s office. The county in southwest Florida is home to the city of Punta Gorda. Smith described the situation as a national disaster with many people without homes or surviving without electricity or water supplies. “We are facing a tragedy,” she told CNN’s Jake Tapper on Friday. “We need everything, to put it plain and simple. We need everything. We need all hands on deck,” Smith said. “The people who have come to our assistance have been tremendously helpful, but we do need everything.” The only operating hospital in the county is overwhelmed and not accepting new patients, — something Smith said was “devastating” for the area. The county sheriff’s information officer said residents should still call 911 if there is an emergency. “Our medical professionals in Charlotte County are going to be able to find those services. They’re not going to turn you away,” she said. “If they have to triage you in the ambulance, they’re going to do so, and they’re also transporting people out of the county to those medical facilities.” The death toll from Hurricane Ian has climbed to at least 45 after the Medical Examiners Commission of Florida identified three additional deaths in three counties.   This brings CNN’s count to at least 45 storm-related deaths attributable to the storm system that crashed ashore on Wednesday, based on a combination of state and county reporting.   Friday morning Gov. Ron DeSantis listed 21 deaths in various counties. A number of counties have since updated their numbers. Damage to homes on Fort Myers Beach seen on September 29. (Greg Lovett/The Palm Beach Post/USA Today Network) Kevin Behen, a resident of Fort Myers Beach, described on Friday the nightmare experience for him and many his friends when the storm surge propelled by Hurricane Ian crashed ashore on the community in southwest Florida. “I saw it all happen. Houses are floating in the back bay, people are on their roofs,” Behen told CNN, estimating the storm surge on Wednesday got up to 25 feet high. He noted “Everybody is going through a real bad time now. But it’s unimaginable to see 25 feet of water come rushing through. It was like a dam broke. It was taking everything.” Behan said he was able to get out of his home and into a solid building because he “knew something was going to go wrong” — but he said many other people were not as lucky. “What I saw is just heart-breaking, and all the friends I lost and everybody else — the stories are horrific. It’s a nightmare. This island is destroyed,” Behen said. At least 45 people have been reported dead so far due to the storm across the state. Search and rescue efforts are underway in the worst-hit areas of Florida. Port Tampa Bay has reopened and is returning to normal operation, according to a statement from the port, saying it has been “cleared to resume all vessel operations.” The docks, wharfs and terminals have been fully assessed, the statement said, and commercial vessel traffic is being queued for a return to full operation.  “Few people understand the full impact a seaport has on their daily lives until a crisis hits,” said Paul Anderson, Port Tampa Bay President and CEO. Anderson said the port provides more than $17 billion in economic impact and “touches some 85,000 jobs in our community.” “Additionally, our port serves as a major energy gateway, providing nearly half of Florida with its fuel supply,” according to Anderson. Residents of Sanibel Island are moved to a waiting US Coast Guard helicopter on Friday, September 30. (Steve Helber/AP) The US Coast Guard has rescued more than 275 people in Florida, according to Rear Admiral Brendan McPherson, but the post-storm conditions remain a huge challenge. He noted that hundreds of other rescues were being performed by urban search and rescue teams from FEMA and local and state agencies. “We’re flying and we’re operating in areas that are unrecognizable. There’s no street signs. They don’t look like they used to look like. Buildings that were once benchmarks in the community are no longer there,” he told CNN on Friday. McPherson said the Coast Guard is treating the storm aftermath like a military operation by searching block by block to make sure those who need assistance are helped. “What we are finding is that many of the people are not critically injured and they’re not in immediate distress, but they’re stranded,” he said. “They’re stuck on islands, either man-made islands that have been there for some time that are surrounded by water, but more importantly, those areas that weren’t islands before and now they are surrounded by water,” he said.  A US Coast Guard helicopter is seen amid stranded shrimp boats in a marina in Fort Myers Beach, Florida on Friday. (Marco Bello/Reuters) An aerial view of damaged properties after Hurricane Ian caused widespread destruction in Fort Myers Beach, Florida. (Shannon Stapleton/Reuters) The mayor of Fort Myers Beach said residents may be allowed reentry on Monday. “So that’s a date we can shoot for. We don’t want to keep anybody off any longer than we have to,” Mayor Ray Murphy said in a Facebook post.   The mayor said the community — located on Estero Island in Lee County, Florida — took a hard hit from Hurricane Ian.  “There’s a lot of devastation down here,” he said. “The good news is, is that the island is crawling with emergency people right now.” Crews are working to clear roadways, and search and rescue teams are searching neighborhoods, the mayor said. “There is no way to sugar coat it – there’s just a hell of a lot to do down here. But we’re up to the task,” Murphy added.  Elections officials in portions of Florida hard hit by Hurricane Ian are scrambling to meet a fast-approaching deadline to begin sending out absentee ballots and are working to develop contingency plans for November’s general election. In Lee County, Florida – home to Fort Myers, which saw homes and businesses torn apart and flooded this week by the powerful storm – Elections Supervisor Tommy Doyle said the county’s election equipment and voting material survived Ian, but his facilities lack power.  An immediate priority, he told CNN on Friday, was ensuring that the county would meet the Oct. 6 deadline under state law to mail out about 180,000 absentee ballots to Florida residents who already have requested them. The Bonita Springs, Florida, vendor handling the work already had completed about half the project when the storm hit, Doyle said, but currently lacks electrical power to finish the job. If the power is not restored by Sunday, Doyle said he plans to shift the work to the East Coast of the state in an effort to meet the deadline. Leon County Elections Supervisor Mark Earley, who is president of the state association for Florida’s 67 election supervisors, said counties affected by the hurricane are still “assessing the situation,” but said their main offices and warehouses “survived intact and remarkably well.”  Officials, however, will have to come up with contingency plans, especially in Lee County, for in-person voting later this fall, following the likely destruction of polling places, he said. Earley said those options include establishing consolidated voting centers and encouraging Floridians displaced by the storm to vote by mail. Oct. 29 is the deadline to request a vote-by-mail ballot in Florida.  The Federal Emergency Management Agency will be expanding the number of Florida counties where residents will be eligible for federal help, the top administrator said Friday. “We will add more counties for assistance,” Deanne Criswell said at a news conference in St. Augustine following a storm damage tour. The work to identify which counties need help is ongoing, she said. Gov. Ron DeSantis, who was a...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
After Slamming Florida Hurricane Ian Barrels Into South Carolina | CNN
Wichita Co. Deputies Arrest Man For Human Smuggling
Wichita Co. Deputies Arrest Man For Human Smuggling
Wichita Co. Deputies Arrest Man For Human Smuggling https://digitalarizonanews.com/wichita-co-deputies-arrest-man-for-human-smuggling/ WICHITA FALLS, Texas (KAUZ) – The Wichita County Sheriff’s Office arrested a man during a traffic stop on Thursday on a human smuggling charge. A deputy stopped a vehicle around 12:54 p.m. on U.S. 287 south that was traveling behind a semi-truck at an unsafe distance, according to court documents. The driver was identified as Jose Angel Estrada-Garcia. Court documents list eight passengers who were traveling with Estrada-Garcia at the time of his arrest. Estrada-Garcia reportedly told deputies they were traveling from Mesa, AZ to Fort Worth, TX, and they had finished several jobs in Arizona about four days prior. He also allegedly said he knew his passengers well and they all lived in the same house in Arizona. Court documents state the passengers all gave deputies stories that were “all over the place.” They allegedly could not provide an address or location close to their home, and they told deputies they did not know the driver and were only getting a ride from him. When asked where they were going, the passengers reportedly did not seem sure, and later stated Fort Worth, with an unknown address. Deputies then talked with Estrada-Garcia again, and told him of the conflicting stories. Court documents state Estrada-Garcia he had picked up his passengers at a Hispanic market in Arizona and was going to drop them off at an Exxon gas station in Fort Worth. He allegedly said he would receive payment for $250 per passenger after dropping them off. Estrada-Garcia was then arrested on a human smuggling charge, while the passengers were arrested on Border Patrol detainers. Estrada-Garcia remains jailed in Wichita County on a $10,000 bond, as well as Border Patrol and ICE detainers. Copyright 2022 KAUZ. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Wichita Co. Deputies Arrest Man For Human Smuggling
Arizona Judge Wont Suspend Ruling That Halted All Abortions
Arizona Judge Wont Suspend Ruling That Halted All Abortions
Arizona Judge Won’t Suspend Ruling That Halted All Abortions https://digitalarizonanews.com/arizona-judge-wont-suspend-ruling-that-halted-all-abortions/ By BOB CHRISTIE – Associated Press PHOENIX (AP) — An Arizona judge on Friday declined to put her order that allowed enforcement of a pre-statehood law making it a crime to provide an abortion on hold, saying abortion right groups that asked her to block the order are not likely to prevail on appeal. The ruling from Pima County Superior Court Judge Kellie Johnson means the state’s abortion providers will not be able to restart procedures. Abortions were halted on Sept. 23 when Johnson ruled that a 1973 injunction must be lifted so that the Civil War-era law could be enforced. Republican Attorney General Mark Brnovich sought the order lifting the injunction. Attorneys with his office told the judge that, since the U.S. Supreme Court’s June 24 decision said women do not have a constitutional right to obtain an abortion, there was no legal reason to block the old law. Planned Parenthood and its Arizona affiliate had urged Johnson to keep the injunction issued shortly after Roe v. Wade was decided in 1973. They argued that laws enacted by the state Legislature in the ensuing 50 years should take precedence. Planned Parenthood’s lawyers on Monday asked Johnson to put her ruling on hold to allow an appeal. Before last Friday’s ruling allowing enforcement of the old law, abortions were legal in Arizona until the fetus was viable, usually at about 24 weeks of pregnancy. But on Saturday, a law enacted by the state Legislature last spring banning abortion at 15 weeks took effect. Gov. Doug Ducey has said that law takes precedence, but his lawyers did not seek to argue that position in court. Brnovich and some Republican lawmakers insist the old law is in force. Brittany Fonteno, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Arizona, said she was “outraged” by the ruling. “It is impermissible that Arizonans are waking up each morning to their elected officials making conflicting statements about which laws are in effect or claiming that they do not know, and yet the court has refused to provide any clarity or relief,” Fonteno said. Some clinics in Arizona have been referring patients to providers in California and New Mexico since Johnson lifted the injunction on the old law, and they were prepared to restart abortions. The pre-statehood law carries a sentence of two to five years in prison for doctors or anyone else who assists in an abortion. Last year, the Legislature repealed a law allowing charges against women who seek abortions Ashleigh Feiring, a nurse at abortion provider Camelback Family Planning in Phoenix, said her office will keep looking for ways to serve patients. “We’re trying to think of everything we can to get loopholes in the law,” Feiring said Friday, adding that the facility would be willing to once again provide the procedure. Feiring said her office continues to do post-miscarriage care and provide patients with ultrasounds so they know how many weeks pregnant they may be. That’s important, because abortion pills can only be used in the first 10-12 weeks of a pregnancy. Feiring said some patients are able to get an abortion pill prescription from a provider in Sweden and get it filled through the mail by a pharmacy in India, but that takes about three weeks. Arizona law bans delivery of the abortion pill through the mail, and U.S. providers generally will not take that risk. Since Roe was overturned, Arizona and 13 other states have banned abortions at any stage of pregnancy. About 13,000 people in Arizona get an abortion each year, according to Arizona Department of Health Services reports. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Read More…
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Arizona Judge Wont Suspend Ruling That Halted All Abortions
Raskin: Remarkable That Ginni Thomas Still Believes Election Was Stolen
Raskin: Remarkable That Ginni Thomas Still Believes Election Was Stolen
Raskin: ‘Remarkable’ That Ginni Thomas Still Believes Election Was Stolen https://digitalarizonanews.com/raskin-remarkable-that-ginni-thomas-still-believes-election-was-stolen/ NextShark Trump’s self-described ‘love letters’ to Kim Jong-un seized from Mar-a-lago have been published Letters exchanged between North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and former U.S. President Donald Trump between April 2018 and August 2019 have recently been published. “I am ready to work with your excellency with all my heart and devotion,” Kim said in a letter dated April 1, 2018, nearly six weeks before he first met Trump at the Singapore Summit. On the same day, Trump responded that he was “happy to meet” Kim to “drastically” improve relations between their respective governments. Good Morning America Ex-Trump adviser Tom Barrack’s emails to Paul Manafort, Jared Kushner, Ivanka Trump read aloud during trial Government prosecutors in the case of Tom Barrack on Thursday read aloud hundreds of emails and texts sent by the former Trump fundraiser, who is on trial at a federal courthouse in Brooklyn, New York, for allegedly illegally lobbying on behalf of the United Arab Emirates. The hours-long recitation included messages to Donald Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump, her husband Jared Kushner, and Trump’s 2016 campaign manager, Paul Manafort. Barrack, a billionaire California-based businessman and longtime Trump associate, has pleaded not guilty to charges that he acted as a foreign agent for the UAE from 2016 to 2018 and failed to register with Justice Department, which prosecutors say constitutes a crime. The Hill Schmitt holds double-digit lead in Missouri Senate race: poll Missouri Senate candidate Eric Schmitt (R) is leading Democratic challenger Trudy Busch Valentine by 11 percentage points, according to a new Emerson College Polling-The Hill survey released Friday. The poll of likely Missouri voters showed 49 percent of respondents saying they would support Schmitt if the Senate election were held today compared to Busch Valentine… The Daily Beast Judge Warns of Justice Department’s Gift to Trump That Could Keep on Giving Photo Illustration by Thomas Levinson/The Daily Beast/GettyA judge has warned that former President Donald Trump is building a legal shield that could block him from being held accountable for inciting the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, pointing to the bizarre move by the Department of Justice to side with Trump in a rape defamation case last year.The DOJ’s legal stance—that anything a president does is part of his official duties, and therefore makes him a federal employee immune to lawsuits—was w Reuters Ukraine tells Russia to appeal if it wants imperilled troops freed KYIV (Reuters) -Ukraine said on Friday it had all the supply routes to the Russian stronghold of Lyman in the crosshairs of its artillery in the east, and told Moscow it would have to appeal to Kyiv if it wanted its forces to be allowed out. Fighting was still raging, but an encirclement operation was under way, a military spokesperson said. “All the approaches and logistic routes of the enemy, through which they delivered ammunition and manpower, are in fact under fire control (of Ukraine),” Serhii Cherevatyi, a military spokesperson told public broadcaster Suspilne. The Hill The Memo: Michigan appears set to deliver a blow to Trump Former President Trump is headed to Michigan on Saturday for the latest in a series of campaign rallies. But the event, to be held in Warren, will only sharpen questions about whether Trump’s influence is backfiring against the GOP in general election campaigns. The most prominent candidate Trump has backed in the Wolverine State, conservative… Ukrayinska Pravda Putin claims he wants to resume negotiations with Ukraine “UKRAINSKA PRAVDA” – FRIDAY, 30 SEPTEMBER 2022, 15:33 Russian president Vladimir Putin has claimed that he wants to stop military action and for “Ukraine to return to the negotiating table”. Source: Putin, during the sham and legally invalid procedure of “Signing the agreements of accession to Russia” on 30 September Quote: “We are calling upon the Kyiv regime to cease fire immediately, to stop all military action, stop the war it started back in 2014 and return to the negotiating table. Read More Here
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Raskin: Remarkable That Ginni Thomas Still Believes Election Was Stolen
A Survivor Of The Holocaust And The Tree Of Life Massacre Has Died. He Never Lost Hope In Humanity KRDO
A Survivor Of The Holocaust And The Tree Of Life Massacre Has Died. He Never Lost Hope In Humanity KRDO
A Survivor Of The Holocaust And The Tree Of Life Massacre Has Died. He Never Lost Hope In Humanity – KRDO https://digitalarizonanews.com/a-survivor-of-the-holocaust-and-the-tree-of-life-massacre-has-died-he-never-lost-hope-in-humanity-krdo/ By Catherine E. Shoichet and Nicki Brown, CNN Judah Samet survived two unthinkable tragedies: imprisonment in a Nazi concentration camp and the 2018 massacre at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue. But still he held onto his faith in humanity — and made a point of sharing what he’d witnessed. Samet died on Tuesday of complications from stomach cancer, according to his family. He was 84. “I have the right to believe that the world is a rotten place, but I don’t,” he said in a 2019 interview with the USC Shoah Foundation, which shared a video of his remarks and praised Samet’s “tireless efforts to document the past and secure a better future.” “He went through his life with an unrelenting optimism and just saw the good in everybody and every situation,” said his daughter, Elizabeth H. Samet. Surviving both the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where more than 50,000 people died, and the Tree of Life shooting, where 11 people were gunned down in the deadliest attack on Jews in American history, was a responsibility Samet took seriously. “I was supposed to be dead at 6 and a half . … So why did I survive everything? I believe I survived to tell the story to as many people (as possible),” Samet told the Shoah Foundation. An opportunity to share his experience changed him For much of his life, Samet avoided speaking about what had happened to him and his family during the Holocaust. Because of the concentration camp uniforms he and others were made to wear, he’d forbid his daughter from wearing stripes. And growing up, when she’d ask for more details, he changed the subject. “He’d say, ‘Why should we talk about such unpleasant things?’” Elizabeth H. Samet recalled. But community leaders urged him to speak with the Shoah Foundation in the 1990s as the organization began collecting survivors’ stories. The experience transformed him. “Once he told it, it was like it unlocked some part of his conscious,” his daughter said. And from that point forward, he kept speaking out. Lauren Bairnsfather, director of the Holocaust Center of Pittsburgh, said she watched Samet win over rooms full of students and adults alike with his story. “He really had a way of connecting with people. … They just loved him. They loved his strength, his strength of character,” she said. He watched a Nazi soldier put a gun to his mother’s head Abraham Judah Samet was born in Hungary on February 5, 1938. When he was 6, Nazis forced Samet and his family from their home. They were initially put on a train headed to the Auschwitz concentration camp, he told CNN in 2018. But instead they were rerouted to Bergen-Belsen in Northern Germany. On the train, Samet said he watched a Nazi soldier put a gun to his mother’s head. She’d spoken without being spoken to, Samet recalled, and she could have been executed that day. But her knowledge of the German language saved her. A commandant intervened, Samet said, because his mother spoke both Hungarian and German and could be used as an interpreter: “He said, ‘You idiot, you kill her you will have nobody to talk to them.’” He credited his mother with helping the family endure 10 months at Bergen-Belsen. “My mother saved us all,” Samet told CNN. “She divided the rock-hard bread, she broke it down into little pieces and she fed us six times a day.” In April 1945, the family was placed on a train out of the camp. They feared they were heading to their execution. “The train stopped in the middle of a forest. And everybody panicked. They felt this was going to be the place where they’re going to come and kill us all,” Samet recalled in a 2019 interview for a documentary film project. “And sure enough we heard the rumble of a tank, and then the turret opens, and a soldier popped out, and my father yelled, ‘Americans!’” American soldiers liberated the train’s more than 2,000 passengers. After surviving the Holocaust, Samet was present for the founding of Israel in 1948 and served as a paratrooper and radio man in the Israeli Defense Forces. He went on to manage a kibbutz, according to a family obituary, “where he developed a profound distaste for socialism and emigrated to the U.S.” He was late to synagogue and narrowly missed the Tree of Life massacre In the US, he met and married his wife, the late Barbara Lee Schiffman, after two dates. They were married for 50 years. Living in Pittsburgh, Samet became a jeweler and a father. He attended the Tree of Life Synagogue for decades, usually arriving early to services. But Samet arrived four minutes late on the morning a gunman ambushed the congregation on October 27, 2018. When he got there, Samet could hear bullets flying, he told CNN in an interview after the shooting. He moved into the passenger seat of his car to get a better view of what was going on. And from the parking lot, he saw the gunman shooting. The family obituary for Samet notes that somehow he escaped unharmed, “unlike 11 of his dear friends.” “It just never ends. It’s never completely safe for Jews. It’s in the DNA. Not just America’s DNA but the world’s,” Samet told CNN in 2018. After the shooting, a devastated fellow congregant came to him for help coping with what had happened. “They said, ‘Judah, I don’t know what to do.’ He said, ‘You get dressed and you go out and you move forward.’ And he really did do that,” Elizabeth H. Samet said. But even as he moved forward, Samet never forgot what he saw that day. In March, he told The New York Post he hoped to testify at the alleged gunman’s trial, adding that he was worried that if the trial continued to be delayed, he might not have the chance. “If I don’t testify, and nobody else testifies, he may walk,” Samet told the Post. “Justice delayed is justice denied. The man did a crime and he should pay.” Last week a federal judge set April 24, 2023, as the start of jury selection in the trial. Bairnsfather, of the Holocaust Center of Pittsburgh, told CNN that she’d also heard Samet say how much he wanted to testify in the case. “I really equate this with how he felt about telling his Holocaust story. He really believed it was important to bear witness,” Bairnsfather said. “He really believed in his duty.” As a State of the Union guest, he brought people together Samet made headlines again when he attended President Trump’s 2019 State of the Union address — one of 13 guests that the White House described at the time as representing “the very best of America.” As part of his remarks, Trump introduced Samet and noted it was his 81st birthday. Republicans and Democrats alike erupted into a rendition of “Happy Birthday” — something Trump quipped they’d never do for him. The touching moment on a night known for partisan pageantry moved Samet’s family, even though many of them didn’t agree with the devoted Trump supporter’s politics. “He is the only person in history to have the entire United States Congress sing Happy Birthday publicly and in Unison,” nephew Larry Barasch said in a Facebook post. “Judah always had a way of bringing all sides together.” He took pride in his family’s accomplishments Through all he endured, Samet found strength and took pride in his family. He told the Shoah Foundation in 2019 that his family members were the reason he didn’t think the world was a rotten place, despite everything he’d experienced. “After my daughter was born, it completely shaped my life. My wife used to say that I was a workaholic. But once my daughter was born, I couldn’t wait for 5 o’clock so I could get home. … It changed a lot of my beliefs,” he said. Resisting hate was one of the core beliefs he espoused in numerous interviews. Asked by CNN’s Anderson Cooper in 2018 whether he hated the gunman who’d attacked his temple, Samet responded, “I don’t know him.” “Whatever you do, don’t hate,” Samet told the Shoah Foundation, “because it’s going to consume you, too, eventually. …. Just cling to your family. Hug your children. Make sure that they know that they’re loved.” The middle name he gave his daughter: Hope. The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. CNN’s Sara Sidner, Kiely Westhoff and Sarah Boxer contributed to this report. Read More Here
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A Survivor Of The Holocaust And The Tree Of Life Massacre Has Died. He Never Lost Hope In Humanity KRDO
'A Country Is Not A House' Art Exhibit Aims To Change Viewpoints About The Border
'A Country Is Not A House' Art Exhibit Aims To Change Viewpoints About The Border
'A Country Is Not A House' Art Exhibit Aims To Change Viewpoints About The Border https://digitalarizonanews.com/a-country-is-not-a-house-art-exhibit-aims-to-change-viewpoints-about-the-border/ An exhibition at ASU’s Art Museum this October uses art to reframe conversations about the border. PHOENIX — Two artists are using their talents to reframe conversations about the border through an exhibition at ASU’s Art Museum. The exhibition, which runs through October 30, is called “A Country is Not a House“. It features the work of architect and professor Ronald Rael of the University of California-Berkeley and his creative partner, professor Virginia San Fratello of San Jose University. The exhibition includes drawings, prints, models, videos and sculptural installations inspired by the Southwest. “There’s a beautiful saying in Mexico, ‘Las Fronteras nos dividend pero las tierras nos unen.’ That means borders divide us but the land unites us and I think it’s very important to think about how we share our common landscape,” Rael told 12News. The exhibition features two large, stunning structures. One is a shelter built with material taken from the southern border. It was intended to be used to extend the border wall under former President Donald Trump. The extension was abandoned when Trump left office. “The structure is intended to imagine a place where people can come together. And to use it after the exhibition, as an actual place where people can come together,” Rael said. He envisions the structure to be a “spiritual” gathering place at the border. Another structure features a bedroom and kitchen that someone might see in a typical house. Both rooms are perfectly divided in half and connected to each other. “One side looks like a house you might find in Mexico. A kitchen, dining space and bedroom, so you see these two worlds that are very close together, The United States and Mexico,” Rael said. “You see how that’s reflected not only in the architecture, the building itself, the way it’s constructed, the thickness of the walls, and the artifacts that are in this structure.” Rael garnered publicity in 2019 when he installed teeter-totters at the border wall meant to show the border is a place where families and children live on both sides. The art pieces at ASU are intended to add depth and complexity to what is often a tense political debate. “The borderlands aren’t two sides divided by a wall, but in fact, this is just one landscape,” Rael said. Admission to the exhibit at the ASU Art Museum is free. Up to Speed Catch up on the latest news and stories on the 12News YouTube channel. Subscribe today. Read More Here
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'A Country Is Not A House' Art Exhibit Aims To Change Viewpoints About The Border
September 30 2022 Newscast Cronkite News Arizona PBS
September 30 2022 Newscast Cronkite News Arizona PBS
September 30, 2022 Newscast – Cronkite News – Arizona PBS https://digitalarizonanews.com/september-30-2022-newscast-cronkite-news-arizona-pbs/ Diamondbacks organist a favorite, AZ’s expanded school vouchers takes effect Staff News Reporter, Phoenix Read More…
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September 30 2022 Newscast Cronkite News Arizona PBS
Jan. 6 And Mar-A-Lago Inquiries Converge In Fights Over Executive Privilege
Jan. 6 And Mar-A-Lago Inquiries Converge In Fights Over Executive Privilege
Jan. 6 And Mar-A-Lago Inquiries Converge In Fights Over Executive Privilege https://digitalarizonanews.com/jan-6-and-mar-a-lago-inquiries-converge-in-fights-over-executive-privilege/ In both cases, former President Donald J. Trump is claiming a novel power to keep White House information from his time in office secret from the Justice Department. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. Former President Donald J. Trump has claimed a broad interpretation of executive privilege in his legal battles since leaving the White House.Credit…Oliver Contreras for The New York Times Sept. 30, 2022Updated 8:28 p.m. ET WASHINGTON — Two high-profile criminal investigations involving Donald J. Trump are converging on a single, highly consequential question: How much residual executive privilege can a former president invoke after leaving office? As the Justice Department investigates both Mr. Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election and his retention of sensitive documents at his Florida residence, his legal team has repeatedly claimed that he has retained power to keep information secret, allowing him to block prosecutors from obtaining evidence about his confidential Oval Office communications. President Biden is not backing Mr. Trump’s attempt to use that power, and many legal scholars and the Justice Department have argued that he is stretching the narrow executive privilege rights the Supreme Court has said former presidents may invoke. But there are few definitive legal guideposts in this area, and the fights could have significant ramifications. In the short term, the disputes could determine whether Mr. Trump is able to use the slow pace of litigation to delay or impede the inquiries. They could also establish new precedents clarifying executive secrecy powers in ways that will shape unforeseen clashes involving future presidents and ex-presidents. “This is tricky stuff,” said Mark J. Rozell, a George Mason University professor and author of “Executive Privilege: Presidential Power, Secrecy and Accountability.” “That gets to the point where the Trump era changed things and raised these kinds of questions that before were unthinkable to us.” Executive privilege can protect the confidentiality of internal executive branch information from disclosure. The Supreme Court first recognized it as a presidential power implied by the Constitution during the Watergate era, and only a handful of opinions have sketched out its parameters over the decades, in part because current and former presidents typically work out such issues in private. The issue under debate in the two Trump cases, presidential communications privilege, can protect a president’s discussions with White House aides — or their interactions with each other — that relate to presidential decision-making. Image Mr. Trump’s lawyers have instructed several former aides not to answer questions in the Jan. 6 investigation, based on a sweeping conception of executive privilege.Credit…Pete Marovich for The New York Times Such communications may be vital evidence in determining Mr. Trump’s actions in the period between the 2020 election and the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. In the Jan. 6 investigation, the Justice Department has obtained grand jury subpoenas for several former aides to Mr. Trump seeking testimony about his conversations. Mr. Trump’s lawyers have instructed them not to answer questions, based on a broad conception of his residual powers of executive privilege, even though Mr. Biden has rejected the idea as not in the best interests of the United States. A dispute over whether those witnesses may lawfully decline to answer certain questions is now playing out before Beryl Howell, the chief judge of the Federal District Court for the District of Columbia, behind closed doors, according to people familiar with the matter. In the documents investigation, Mr. Trump’s lawyers have convinced a judge he appointed in November 2020, Aileen M. Cannon of the Southern District of Florida, to name a special master to oversee the vetting of some 11,000 documents and records the F.B.I. seized from his Florida residence, Mar-a-Lago, in August. Over the Justice Department’s objections, Judge Cannon ruled that Mr. Trump can make the case to the special master — and, ultimately, to her — that some of the documents should be withheld from investigators under executive privilege. She rejected the department’s argument that Mr. Trump was entirely foreclosed from raising the privilege in these circumstances. But Judge Cannon has also hedged, writing that Mr. Trump should have the ability to invoke the privilege “as an initial matter” but also suggesting that any assertion in this context might ultimately fail. For its part, the Trump legal team has shied away from explaining why material covered by executive privilege would be off limits to investigators with the Justice Department, a component of the executive branch. “Trump’s team has not been entirely clear in asserting their executive privilege claims in their early briefs,” said Michael Stern, a former counsel with the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence who writes on issues involving investigations, national security and the law. “They have laid out a broad argument, but it remains to be seen how, exactly, they are going to make their case as these issues move up to appellate courts.” The special master Judge Cannon appointed, Judge Raymond J. Dearie, had instructed Mr. Trump’s lawyers to go through the seized records and distinguish between those they think are merely shielded from disclosure to people outside the executive branch, which is not unusual, and those they think the executive branch itself supposedly cannot review, a much more radical proposition. He also wanted them to explain why for each document. Mr. Trump’s legal team chafed against articulating any such distinction. And on Thursday, Judge Cannon relieved his lawyers from fulfilling Judge Dearie’s request, saying in an order that they need only categorize something as subject to executive privilege in general. On Friday night, the Justice Department asked a federal appeals court in Atlanta to expedite its request that the court overrule Judge Cannon and shut down the special master process or at least remove consideration of executive privilege claims from it. A panel on the court had already granted the department’s request to exempt about 100 documents marked classified from the review, while criticizing Judge Cannon’s legal reasoning in appointing a special master. Citing that ruling, the department asked the court to hasten the remaining proceedings in the appeal, wrapping them up as early as mid-November. “If this court agrees that the district court lacked jurisdiction, further proceedings before the special master and district court would end,” the Justice Department wrote. “Alternatively, if this court upholds the district court’s exercise of jurisdiction but concludes that plaintiff cannot assert executive privilege against the executive branch in these circumstances, as the government maintains, such a ruling would substantially narrow the special master proceedings.” No president has ever successfully invoked executive privilege to hide information from members of the executive branch, like Justice Department investigators, as opposed to outsiders, like members of Congress. And no former president has ever successfully invoked executive privilege when the current president opposes it. But such questions rarely arise, and the handful of cases on the topic have left many questions unresolved. Few of those rulings define the limits of the privilege in the context of a criminal investigation, and even fewer address the issue of a former president’s powers. Mr. Trump’s power play also arguably challenges a philosophical tenet of the conservative legal movement that worked closely with his administration to appoint jurists associated with the Federalist Society, including Judge Cannon, to the bench. Many connected to the conservative legal movement embrace an ideology, known as the unitary executive theory, that the Constitution vests all federal executive power in a single person: the president. Allowing a private citizen who used to be in the White House to successfully invoke executive privilege against the president would fracture that control. “There is a decent argument that it does” infringe upon the current president’s rightful powers, William P. Barr, the former attorney general under Mr. Trump, said in a text. Image William P. Barr, Mr. Trump’s former attorney general, has criticized the former president’s request for a special master in the documents case.Credit…Anna Moneymaker for The New York Times (Mr. Barr used his authority to shield Mr. Trump in office, but after the 2020 election, he refused to back Mr. Trump’s false claims of a stolen election. The two have since traded criticisms, with Mr. Barr disparaging Mr. Trump’s request for a special master.) From the other end of the political spectrum, Bob Bauer, a former Obama White House counsel who is now Mr. Biden’s personal lawyer, also dismissed Mr. Trump’s privilege argument. “Trump’s legal team is facing very long odds, to say the least,” Mr. Bauer said. “But they may see strategic value in slowing things down by litigating every last strained argument. So it is more ploy than law.” The Supreme Court first said that the Constitution implicitly gives presidents some power to keep their confidential communications secret in President Richard M. Nixon’s legal fights during and after the Watergate scandal. The purpose of executive privilege, the justices have said, is to benefit the country as a whole — not to benefit presidents as individuals. The idea is that presidents will make better decisions if they receive full and candid advice, wi...
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Jan. 6 And Mar-A-Lago Inquiries Converge In Fights Over Executive Privilege
The Readers
The Readers
The Readers https://digitalarizonanews.com/the-readers/ The recent changes I have had a subscription to the Journal for 42 years. When my current one expires, I’m not sure I will renew, which will result in a loss of income to the Journal and my terrific carrier. After reading through local and international mostly gloom and doom (Scott Sexton is the exception), I enjoyed lightening things up and having a laugh through strips in the comics section. The recent changes to that section are a problem — apparently not just to me, but to others as well, based on letters in The Readers’ Forum. Where are “Hagar the Horrible,” “Curtis,” “Beetle Bailey,” “Blondie,” etc.? Have you asked readers if they like the strips you now have substituted? Apparently you have to get an e-edition (too bad for those who buy the paper daily) to get the additional page of comic strips, but even on that page many are missing from your old format. The final straw was the Sunday comics. Many of us enjoyed the last page, which provided the word search (and the educational information that prompted those words), Slylock Fox and “Spot six differences between these panels.” Bill Michielutte Winston-Salem Sexual sin The Sept. 28 article “Church OK with getting Southern Baptist boot,” is quite interesting — not because a religious congregation doesn’t have the right to do as it pleases, but when they declare that they are a Christian congregation and ignore God’s word. Yes, God is love! But, God is just. No person, formal gathering or anything can stop one person from loving another regardless of sex. But that’s where God draws the line with sexual relations — the marriage bed. He defined it as a covenant relationship with Him between a “man and a woman” (that would be a male and female defined by Him and the majority of people). And that’s where sex is acceptable … to God. He has been quite clear providing His revelation to man that fornication (sex outside of marriage), adultery (married people having sex with others outside of marriage) and homosexuality (any type of sex between people of the same sex) is sin. College Park Baptist in Greensboro made the decision many years ago to accept everyone (which every church should do), but has evidently ignored preaching the entire gospel. If the open homosexual lifestyle is accepted, then I can only assume they have no problem with open adultery being practiced among their congregation and their youth program promoting fornication. But, I bet they don’t. That would make this church and any of like mind both unscriptural and hypocritical. Joe Eskridge Sr. Lewisville Biden criticism The writer of the Aug. 14 letter “Nitpicky criticism” wrote, “President Biden has been working hard for the American people and I am of proud of him.” High gas prices are affecting all Americans. High food prices are affecting all Americans. High electric and natural gas prices are affecting all Americans. Inflation and possible recession are affecting all Americans. High interest rates are affecting Americans. They have doubled and are still rising. Student loans are being forgiven at the cost of $1 trillion. The open border is a disaster since Biden became president. Two million illegal immigrants have been apprehended at the Southern border so far this year. Biden continues to spend, spend and spend while our national debt is $30 trillion. Is America’s future to be bankrupt? Biden ignores talking about immigration, crime, drugs, inflation, the stock market, high gas prices, high food prices, high energy costs and high interest rates. Biden tells Americans how Trump MAGA are fascists and will destroy democracy. If Trump wanted to destroy democracy, why didn’t he do it while he was president? It is wrong and hateful for the president to call Americans fascists. Ron Kirkpatrick Kernersville Biased Millions of Americans lost their jobs and homes when President George W. Bush’s administration crashed the American economy in 2008. More than a million Americans lost their lives when former President Trump let COVID ravage the country. Millions of businesses have closed because of his incompetence. It’s only thanks to the late Sen. John McCain that Trump didn’t succeed in ripping access to health care away from millions of Americans. The current financial distress is the direct result of Trump’s incompetent handling of COVID, thus the economy. Anyone who thinks this bankruptcy king is a genius is living with their head buried in the sand. One must be very privileged, very biased or very brain-washed to imagine that President Biden is the “worst thing ever” to have happened to the country. Smith Reaves Winston-Salem Journal changes Like many other subscribers, I am upset with the reduction of the Journal’s content after having my subscription costs almost doubled. You have removed a full page of comics, one of the enjoyable parts of the paper. What other product would you pay for to then have that product reduced? I will now consider other options for my daily news. Paul Rapcienski Winston-Salem Flammable materials Electric sparks are useful in igniting gasoline in our cars, but can be triggers for disasters in other settings. Explosively flammable materials can have catastrophic potential for disasters as we fortunately avoided at a fertilizer plant. Static electricity is known to be a starter for combustion. When water vapor amounts in the air get lower, static electricity is more readily discharged and enhances the likelihood of an unintended explosion. An industrial fire can happen any time of year and have many types of triggers. Very dry air just “loads the dice” for better chances of a really bad chemical reaction. Journal reporter John Deem’s series on the Winston Weaver fire will likely be an award winner. He rightly has made us more aware of potential hazards that can affect the quality of life in Winston-Salem. Although the fertilizer plant fire brought sensational headlines about awful effects in disadvantaged neighborhoods, smaller scale explosive situations are present in every ZIP code. Stored hazardous materials in garages, basements and other inappropriate locations need an improved way of disposal other than carrying materials to the 3RC EnviroStation. Many residents do not know of this service, have no internet way of getting help, possess no way to haul sometimes large amounts of materials and are afraid to transport hazardous materials. Our city utilities need to expand the bulky-item program to include things that now have to be taken to 3RC. This could not only keep our environment cleaner but also save some lives. Phil Wood Winston-Salem Loan repayment It’s amusing to hear the self-righteous harangue about President Biden’s proposal to forgive some student loans. “Those irresponsible millennials knew what they were getting into,” they say. “Why should the government bail them out?” I’m sure these complainers responsibly returned their stimulus checks after the pandemic. After all, if “knowing what you are getting into” is the criteria for loan forgiveness, don’t we all know when we take jobs and mortgages, finance cars, etc., that there are unforeseen risks that can derail our plans? Likewise, I have no doubt that they also refused the increased child tax deduction because they knew what the credit was when they decided to conceive. Not to mention those GOP legislators and their phony pontification about how people “who take loans should repay them,” while they scurry, palms up, for the government handout forgiving their own PPP loans. So, spare us the sanctimonious John Galt routine. Speaking of fiction, remember when Hillary Clinton called former President Trump “temperamentally unfit” to be president? While not untrue, the description must be the most “under” of all understatements. Compared to who Trump really is, it’s a fawning compliment. A possible runner-up is her “basket of deplorables” comment. “Deplorable” doesn’t quite capture armed insurrectionists and trolls who torment parents of murdered children. And another thing, albeit less amusing: Is there a ring deep enough in the stinking sewage of Dante’s Inferno for the likes of Alex Jones? J. Kevin Bokeno Boone Catch the latest in Opinion Get opinion pieces, letters and editorials sent directly to your inbox weekly! Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
The Readers
DOJ Requests Expedited Appeal Of Trump Special Master Appointment
DOJ Requests Expedited Appeal Of Trump Special Master Appointment
DOJ Requests Expedited Appeal Of Trump Special Master Appointment https://digitalarizonanews.com/doj-requests-expedited-appeal-of-trump-special-master-appointment/ AP Photo/Steve Helber This is an aerial view of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Fla., Wednesday Aug. 31, 2022. The Justice Department says classified documents were “likely concealed and removed” from former President Donald Trump’s Florida estate as part of an effort to obstruct the federal investigation into the discovery of the government records. (AP Photo/Steve Helber) The Justice Department (DOJ) filed a motion to expedite its appeal of the appointment of a special master to review the documents it obtained from former President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago property in Palm Beach, Fla., last month.  The filing comes after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit sided with the Justice Department, ruling that U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon made a mistake by failing to remove classified documents from the special master so that the DOJ could continue its review. This is a developing story. Tags Donald Trump expedited appeal Justice Department special master Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
DOJ Requests Expedited Appeal Of Trump Special Master Appointment
Live Updates: Greg Abbott Beto O
Live Updates: Greg Abbott Beto O
Live Updates: Greg Abbott, Beto O https://digitalarizonanews.com/live-updates-greg-abbott-beto-o/ Republican Gov. Greg Abbott and Democratic challenger Beto O’Rourke are gearing up for the live televised debate on Friday, September 30 at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley in Edinburg near the United States-Mexico border. 7:37 p.m. O’Rourke: Texas cut $211 million in mental health care Fact check: Gov. Abbott has been pushing the need for mental health care as the reason behind the 18-year-old gunman shooting and killing students in Uvalde.  But Texas has cut nearly $211 million in funding for the state department that is responsible for mental health care, Health and Human Services. In 2021, the state cut $173.3 million from HHS and $93.4 million in 2022.  7:34 p.m. Senator Roland Gutierrez slams Abbott’s comments on Uvalde Senator Roland Gutierrez, who represents Uvalde, tweeted Abbott hasn’t done anything for the families in Uvalde after the mass shooting. He stated, “They are struggling.” Abbott says he feels the pain of the parents from #Uvalde. Yet, he hasn’t done ANYTHING to help the families. They are struggling. THEY WANT ANSWERS AND ACTIONS. They are tired of Abbott’s excuses and so am I. #TXGovDebate pic.twitter.com/WX1yimK0iA — Senator Roland Gutierrez (@RolandForTexas) October 1, 2022 7:33 p.m. Abbott: O’Rourke said ‘There is no problem in the border’  Fact check: Beto O’Rourke has avoided calling the immigrants coming across the Texas-Mexico border a “crisis” but has not said that it is not a problem.  In April, O’Rourke told the Tribune that he is in favor of the border and wants to support Border Patrol. 7:30  p.m. Abbott: Can’t raise age to buy assault-style rifles Fact check: Gov. Abbott has made this claim multiple times after the Uvalde mass shooting that killed 19 elementary school students and two teachers. He said that raising the age is “unconstitutional” due to recent court rulings.  While there are cases circulating the courts, legal experts say the Supreme Court has yet to rule on the legal age to buy an assault-style rifle or other firearms.  7:24 p.m. More migrant encounters Fact check: O’Rourke noted there are more migrant encounters at TX border since Abbott began Operation Lonestar. Texas Tribune reported the state has seen a slower rate of growth than other states but still more encounters. In #TXGovDebate, O’Rourke noted there are more migrant encounters at the TX border since Abbott began Operation Lonestar. Here’s more from @James_Barragan, who reported TX saw a a slower rate of growth than other states but still more encounters: https://t.co/XhY1foBbpQ — María Méndez (@anxious_maria) October 1, 2022 7:17 p.m. Abbott fumbling over words  Texas Representative Julie Johnson tweeted she believes Abbott is nervous and fumling over his words.  Is it me or does Abbott seem nervous and fumbling all over his words? #TXGovDebate — Julie Johnson (@juliejohnsonTX) October 1, 2022 7:15 p.m. Social reactions to immigration question Texas activist Olivia Julianna tweeted how she thinks Abbott believes he’s debating Biden not O’Rourke.  Does Greg Abbott realize he’s debating Beto O’Rourke and NOT Joe Biden? We’re like 6 minutes in if I took a shot every time Abbott said the word “Biden” id be in the ER for alcohol poisoning. — Olivia Julianna ?—? (@0liviajulianna) October 1, 2022 Reporter Scott Braddock tweeted, “And look at that: Beto way sharper on immigration than many would expect. And look at that: Beto way sharper on immigration than many would expect #TxLege #TxGovDebate — Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) October 1, 2022 Supporters of Texas Democratic gubernatorial candidate Beto O’Rourke cheer outside the site of his debate with Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, Friday, Sept. 30, 2022, in Edinburg, Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) Eric Gay/AP 6:25 p.m. The last time O’Rourke was in a room with Abbott… The last time O’Rourke and Abbott were in a room together was at a news conference in the Uvalde High School auditorium a day after the May 24 mass shooting at Robb Elementary. An 18-year-old gunman had just killed 19 students and two teachers.  O’Rourke confronted Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, and Sen. Ted Cruz saying their lack of inaction on gun control reform led to the mass shooting.  “This is on you until you choose to do something,” O’Rourke yelled. 6:11 p.m. O’Rourke shares behind-the-scenes look at empty debate theater O’Rourke tweeted an hour before the debate on how empty the building feels, blaming Abbott on the reason for having no audience.  Beto tweets on empty theater O’Rourke tweeted an hour before the debate on how empty the building feels, blaming Abbott on the reason for having no audience. Embed: If you think it’s crazy that there won’t be any voters in the audience for tonight’s debate, just wait until you hear that it’s taking place in a theater that seats 1,000 people. It’ll be empty—no seats filled—because Abbott refuses to face those he’s failed these last 8 years. pic.twitter.com/1Ri0tKUJ5L — Beto O’Rourke (@BetoORourke) September 30, 2022 Debate attendance is one thing, viewer interest is another. One Texas leader isn’t interested in tonight’s event.  Texas Representative Tony Gonzales (R-TX District 23) tweeted he’s more excited for UTSA football than the “boring” debate. UTSA Football boring political debate. #BirdsUp — Tony Gonzales (@TonyGonzales4TX) September 30, 2022 5:41 p.m. Beto’s most recent turn on the debate stage Beto O’Rourke is no stranger to debates, or failed campaigns for that matter. In March 2019, he announced his run as a Democratic candidate for president after he fell short of beating out Republican Sen. Ted Cruz in a 2018 senate race. In 2019, he was up against Julian Castro, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar, Andrew Yang, and current President Joe Biden. In June 2019, he participated in the Democratic presidential debate in Miami. He was known for making fiery statements during that debate, saying that the now former president Donald J. Trump inspired the El Paso mass shooting and made the viral statement, “Hell yes, we are going to take your AR-15!” O’Rourke bowed out of the presidential running in November 2019. 5:20 p.m. A return to Edinburg for Abbott Friday’s gubernatorial debate will be a return to Edinburg, Texas, for Gov. Greg Abbott, who previously debated there against then-Democratic senator Wendy Davis in 2014. Abbott was the attorney general at the time.  They debated over topics of border security, abortion, education, and economic incentives for developments such as SpaceX, which had just announced its plans for the Rio Grande Valley.  The debate grew heated as both accused each other of taking money from the Texas Enterprise Fund for personal profit. Abbott was elected and became governor that year.  His most recent debate was in 2018 against former Democratic Dallas sheriff Lupe Valdez, who was at the time considered to be an underdog and received LGBTQ+ support for being openly lesbian. The debate was less contentious than his Davis debate, even though they tackled issues like the proposed Texas bathroom bill.  5:07 p.m. Who’s arriving? KSAT’s Steve Spriester, one of the panel of journalist’s moderating the debate, tweeted a few picture ahead of the event. He wrote, “The calm before the debate!” The calm before the debate! I had to get out of the building for awhile, and enjoyed walking around the beautiful UT Rio Grande Valley Campus! Go Vaqueros!! #SpreeThoughts #TXGovDebate pic.twitter.com/ygJuHTUnLN — Steve Spriester (@stevespriester) September 30, 2022 Gerald Harris with KHOU tweeted how more Uvalde families have arrived at the debate. He noted how they won’t be allowed into the event but are showing support. Uvalde families have arrived here at @utrgv for the debate. They won’t be allowed in but are showing support for @BetoORourke @KHOU pic.twitter.com/Tk3Kv0ORbZ — Gerald Harris (@GeraldHarrisTV) September 30, 2022 Texas Tribune reporter James Barragan tweeted that more signs outside the gubernatorial debate arrived just before 5 p.m. One sign reads, “Stand with Uvalde.” Another reads, “Women For Beto!” Some more signs outside the gubernatorial debate at UTRGV in Edinburg. Stand with Uvalde and Women for Beto signs. pic.twitter.com/78koSTmsED — James Barragán (@James_Barragan) September 30, 2022 4:38 p.m. What can we expect tonight? Senior reporter with WFAA Jason Whitely tweeted a sneak peek of what the debate stage looks like before the Texas leaders arrive. He noted how there will be no live audience, per Abbott’s request.  — Jason Whitely (@JasonWhitely) September 30, 2022 O’Rourke is already firing barbs. Greg Abbott let more people into the room to watch him ban abortion in cases of rape and incest than he’s letting into the room to watch tonight’s debate. pic.twitter.com/lhFb2qbY5n — Beto O’Rourke (@BetoORourke) September 30, 2022 Otherwise the panel will pose questions to each candidate, including several submitted by voters in advance, focused on such topics as immigration, gun violence and abortion rights.  Based on the tweets from the officials today, it’s likely they will discuss the Uvalde mass shooting, the migrant busses and abortion in Texas.  O’Rourke tweeted how Abbott can’t keep Texas students safe after holding his press conference with victim’s families from the Uvalde mass shooting. In his campaign account Texans for Abbott, the governor mentioned how O’Rourke’s agenda is for open borders, defunding the police and destroying energy jobs.  Tarrant County Young Democrats also tweeted signs outside the debate that show how its a private event. The public isn’t allowed inside. Greg Abbot declined having an audience for the debate tonight he has against Beto. Our current Governor doesn’t want anything to do with the common folk. I think these signs sums up Abbot’s governorship. pic.twitte...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Live Updates: Greg Abbott Beto O
Burkina Faso Military Officials Announce Dissolution Of Government And Leader's Removal | CNN
Burkina Faso Military Officials Announce Dissolution Of Government And Leader's Removal | CNN
Burkina Faso Military Officials Announce Dissolution Of Government And Leader's Removal | CNN https://digitalarizonanews.com/burkina-faso-military-officials-announce-dissolution-of-government-and-leaders-removal-cnn/ A new military takeover has been declared in Burkina Faso, after a day marked by gunfire and confusion in the capital city of Ouagadougou. The country’s land and aerial borders have been closed, and its constitution suspended. In an announcement on state television late Friday, a Burkina Faso military official announced the dissolution of the current government and the dismissal of the junta leader, President Lieutenant-Colonel Paul-Henri Damiba. Army Captain Ibrahim Traore will now take the reins as the President of the country’s ruling junta, the Patriotic Movement for Safeguard and Restoration (MPSR), which first seized power earlier this year, said military official Kiswendsida Farouk Azaria Sorgho. With the suspension of the constitution and government, this is Burkina Faso’s second military takeover in a year. Accompanied by more than a dozen members of the military, Sorgho read a communiqué from Traore declaring the changes. He also accused Damiba of “betraying” the military’s aim to restore security to the country. “People of Burkina Faso, faced with the degradation of the security situation, we have attempted several times to refocus the transition on the issue of security,” Sorgho said. “The risky choices of Lieutenant-Colonel Damiba have increasingly weakened our security apparatus,” he also said. Prior efforts to calm the insurrection appear to have been in vain. Earlier on Friday, after residents of the capital city of Ouagadougou awoke to the sounds of gunfire, the junta’s then-leaders explained the situation as the result of “a mood swing” among some military members, and said talks were underway. “The enemy that is attacking our country only wants to create division among Burkinabes to accomplish its destabilization,” Damiba said in a Facebook statement at the time. Though normal activity was seen on the streets on Friday, heavy gunfire was heard coming from the main military camp and some residential areas of Ouagadougou. Several armed soldiers were seen taking positions along the main avenue leading to the presidency, as well as blocking access to administrative buildings and national television. Damiba took power after a military coup on Jan. 24 ousted former President Roch Kabore and dissolved the government. He vowed to restore security after years of violence carried out by Islamist militants linked to al Qaeda and the Islamic State. But his government struggled to deliver. Attacks persist and the army is in disarray. This week, unknown assailants killed eleven soldiers during an attack on a 150-vehicle convoy taking supplies to a town in northern Burkina Faso. Fifty civilians are missing. Large areas of the north and east have become ungovernable since 2018. Millions have fled their homes, fearing further raids by gunmen who frequently descend on rural communities on motorbikes. Thousands have been killed in attacks. The West African country, one of the world’s poorest, has become the epicenter of the violence that began in neighboring Mali in 2012 but has since spread across the arid expanse of the Sahel region south of the Sahara Desert. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Burkina Faso Military Officials Announce Dissolution Of Government And Leader's Removal | CNN
Azul At Spectrum And Borrego At Spectrum Sell For $238.2 Million AZ Big Media
Azul At Spectrum And Borrego At Spectrum Sell For $238.2 Million AZ Big Media
Azul At Spectrum And Borrego At Spectrum Sell For $238.2 Million – AZ Big Media https://digitalarizonanews.com/azul-at-spectrum-and-borrego-at-spectrum-sell-for-238-2-million-az-big-media/ CBRE negotiated the sale of Azul at Spectrum and Borrego at Spectrum, a combined 624-unit multifamily community in Gilbert, Ariz. The Ezralow Company acquired the asset from San Diego-based The Premiere Residential. According to Vizzda, Azul at Spectrum sold for $138,221,000 and Borrego at Spectrum sold for $99,944,000. CBRE’s Sean Cunningham, Asher Gunter, Matt Pesch and Austin Groen of Phoenix Multifamily Institutional Properties represented the seller. READ ALSO: Most Influential Women of 2022: Nancy McClure, CBRE READ ALSO: The Most Influential Women in Commercial Real Estate for 2022 Completed in 2007, Azul at Spectrum (360 units) and Borrego at Spectrum (264 units) feature nine-foot ceilings, resident-centric amenities, and a low-density garden site plan with one-, two-, and three-bedroom units in all three-story buildings. Community amenities include two swimming pools and spa areas with cabanas, grilling stations, two fitness centers, two resident clubhouses and leasing centers, two playgrounds and a dog park. “Gilbert is one of the top-performing multifamily submarkets in Metro Phoenix and the community provides tremendous upside potential,” said CBRE’s Sean Cunningham. “All of the units are in original condition and are perfectly positioned for a value-add renovation.” Through the first half of 2022, Gilbert led all Metro Phoenix multifamily submarkets with 880 units of positive net absorption. Average submarket rent in Gilbert increased 19.1 percent in Q2 2022 outperforming the Metro Phoenix increase of 18.8 percent, according to CBRE Econometric Advisors. Borrego at Spectrum. “With the abundant retail, dining and entertainment options nearby, there’s no question that these properties are a top-tier location in Gilbert. We are excited about the opportunity to invest in another dynamic submarket in the Phoenix MSA,” said Bryan Ezralow, CEO of The Ezralow Company. The Ezralow Company is a diversified real estate development and investment firm based in Southern California. With projects throughout the U.S., The Ezralow Company specializes in land acquisition, development and construction; property management; and strategic investment. Since 2021, The Ezralow Company has acquired 1,548 multifamily units in the region including Cactus Forty-2 Apartments, a 200-unit community in Paradise Valley and Elite North Scottsdale and Ascend at Kierland, a 724-unit luxury multifamily community in Scottsdale. The Premiere Residential has developed and managed over 1,500 apartment units in Southern California since its inception in 1983. The Premiere Residential currently manages over 750 Class A apartments in San Diego and more than 2,800 Class A units in Phoenix. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Azul At Spectrum And Borrego At Spectrum Sell For $238.2 Million AZ Big Media
Charts Suggest Its way Too Early To Expect The Stock Market To Rebound Jim Cramer Says
Charts Suggest Its way Too Early To Expect The Stock Market To Rebound Jim Cramer Says
Charts Suggest It’s ‘way Too Early’ To Expect The Stock Market To Rebound, Jim Cramer Says https://digitalarizonanews.com/charts-suggest-its-way-too-early-to-expect-the-stock-market-to-rebound-jim-cramer-says/ CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday warned investors that the stock market is unlikely to recover anytime soon. “The charts, as interpreted by Mark Sebastian … suggest that this market’s got more downside, and it’s way too early to go really bullish,” he said.  related investing news “Unlike him, I also believe we could get a sharp spike up, but, for our Charitable Trust, if that happens we’re going to have to do some selling,” he added. The S&P 500 closed out its worst month since March 2020 on Friday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled 8.8% for the month, while the Nasdaq Composite dropped 10.5%. Before getting into Sebastian’s analysis, Cramer first explained that when the S&P 500 goes lower, the CBOE Volatility Index, also known as the VIX or fear gauge, typically moves higher. And when the S&P moves higher, the VIX typically goes lower.  He then examined a pair of charts showing the daily action in the S&P and the VIX: While the S&P and VIX moved at the same pace in June, things took a turn in August. Sebastian notes that when the S&P started falling in late August, the VIX had a “slow-rolling rally” instead of roaring like it typically would, according to Cramer. This mismatch in movement between the S&P and VIX’s movements continued through early September but only really exploded this week, Cramer said, adding that the market still is a long way from recovering. “Sebastian’s waiting for the S&P to go down while the VIX also goes down — that’s a classic tell that a sell-off’s coming to an end,” he said. “That is not happening right now.” For more analysis, watch Cramer’s full explanation below. Jim Cramer’s Guide to Investing Click here to download Jim Cramer’s Guide to Investing at no cost to help you build long-term wealth and invest smarter. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Charts Suggest Its way Too Early To Expect The Stock Market To Rebound Jim Cramer Says
Hurricane Ian Live Updates: 2 Million Still Without Power DeSantis To Speak
Hurricane Ian Live Updates: 2 Million Still Without Power DeSantis To Speak
Hurricane Ian Live Updates: 2 Million Still Without Power, DeSantis To Speak https://digitalarizonanews.com/hurricane-ian-live-updates-2-million-still-without-power-desantis-to-speak/ Live updates will be posted here regarding the impacts of Hurricane Ian on our region. Orange, Osceola, Polk and Seminole counties are now eligible for FEMA assistance after Hurricane Ian. Individuals and households in Orange, Osceola, Polk and Seminole counties can apply for FEMA Individual Assistance, which may include temporary housing assistance, basic home repairs and certain other uninsured disaster-related needs. These counties join Charlotte, Collier, DeSoto, Hardee, Hillsborough, Lee, Manatee, Pinellas and Sarasota counties, which were previously approved for Individual Assistance. Survivors can apply for disaster assistance at disasterassistance.gov, by calling 800-621-3362 from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Eastern Time, or by using the FEMA mobile app. If you use a relay service such as video relay service (VRS), captioned telephone service or others, give FEMA the number for that service. For an accessible video on how to apply for assistance go to, youtube.com/watch?v=WZGpWI2RCNw. For information on Florida’s recovery from Hurricane Ian, visit fema.gov/disaster/hurricane-ian. Follow FEMA on Twitter at FEMA Region 4 (@femaregion4) / Twitter and at facebook.com/fema. Gov. Ron DeSantis will give an update on the efforts made in the wake of Hurricane Ian’s devastation in Florida from the state Emergency Operations Center in Tallahassee on Friday morning with the press conference slated to begin at 8:45 a.m. In attendance will be Florida Division of Emergency Management Director Kevin Guthrie, the Florida National Guard’s Major General James O. Eifert and FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell. The press conference will be streamed at thefloridachannel.org. Richard Tribou More than 2 million homes and businesses in the state remain without power as of 7:30 a.m. Friday, according to poweroutage.us. More than 2.6 million had been out on Thursday with the hardest hit counties in Southwest Florida still reeling. “Lee and Charlotte are basically off the grid at this point,” Gov. Ron DeSantis said noting power restoration will take time. “Charlotte and Lee reconnects are really going to likely have to be rebuilding of that infrastructure.” The state has 42,000 linemen responding to the power outages. Richard Tribou Passenger flights at OIA will resume Friday afternoon | 9:45 p.m. Greater Orlando Aviation Authority’s CEO Kevin Thibault said the Orlando International Airport will resume passenger flights Friday afternoon after an assessment of the property found little to minor damage. GOAA ceased commercial operations on Wednesday out of an abundance of caution pending the arrival of Hurricane Ian. Thibault said airport crew members inspected the area and are working to remove water buildup in order to resume operations by tomorrow afternoon. They inspected the airfield, airside property, gate and terminal links (trams), landside facilities and roads to ensure safe passage for buses and cars, an announcement said. Travelers are being advised to arrive at the airport for their departure after 10 a.m. to give enough time for airport workers and partners to prepare. Those wishing to adjust their flight should check with their individual airlines and rental car companies as many are adjusting their schedules and adding relief flights over the weekend. Amanda Rabines Disney, the first to announce its reopening plan around 2:45 p.m. Thursday, also unveiled its reopening times for Friday. At Magic Kingdom, early entry time is at 8 a.m. with general admission at 10 a.m. Early opening time at Epcot is at 9 a.m. with the park opening to all guests at 11 a.m. Early entry times at Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom are at 10 a.m. and 11 a.m., respectively, with general admission open two hours later. Reservations are needed. Disney Springs will be open from 10 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. First responders have conducted about 700 confirmed rescues of people put in peril by Hurricane Ian, Gov. Ron DeSantis said Thursday evening. The majority of those rescues were done in areas hit hardest by the storm including Fort Myers Beach and Sanibel Island. The rescues were conducted by air, sea and via high water vehicles, DeSantis said. Still, DeSantis said he expected more deaths from the storm. He declined to give a number of deaths so far, saying the figure was still being tallied. Unofficially, at least 11 deaths have been reported. Emergency management chief Kevin Guthrie said further deaths can be avoided if residents steer clear of power lines and using equipment such as chainsaws if they don’t know how to use them. David Harris The barricaded perimeter around Cranes Roost Park in Altamonte Springs wasn’t the only thing stopping curious neighbors from entering after Hurricane Ian dropped a massive amount of rain over Central Florida Wednesday evening. The lake was overflowing by Thursday covering most of the park and its paved one-mile-long walkway with a layer of floodwater that stretched all the way to the corner entrance on East Central Parkway and Festival Drive. By Thursday evening as Hurricane Ian moved off Florida’s East Coast and strengthened again, the park was left with the wreckage it caused the night before. Massive amounts of debris covered the upland areas. Cranes Roost Lake’s water levels reached above the boardwalks that hover over the lake and connect pedestrians to the walkways on land. Water covered most of the stadium-style seating that fronts the Eddie Rose Amphitheater – making it look more like the floating amphitheater it was originally designed to be. Altamonte Springs City Manager Frank Martz was not immediately available to respond to questions about drainage procedure. Earlier Thursday morning an emergency executive order in Altamonte Springs enforced a strict 5 mph speed limit on certain roads, including Central Parkway and Cranes Roost Boulevard, due to severe flooding. Amanda Rabines Rainfall levels along Ian’s trajectory reached from 14 to nearly 17 inches as the storm moved from coastal counties such as Sarasota inland to Orange, Osceola, and Polk Counties, even leaving more than 14 inches on the east coast’s Brevard and Volusia Counties. About 20 miles north of the storm’s landfall, the seaside town of Nokomis in Sarasota County was slammed with 14.20 inches of rain. In Polk County, just inland, Ian’s fury left 16.99 inches on Lake Wales, about midway between Sebring and Orlando. Osceola County’s town of Campbell as inundated with 15.65 inches, and in Orange County, Orlando was hit with 14.37 inches and Union Park, about 10 miles east of Orlando, received 14.88 inches. As the storm progressed northeast, it dumped 16.14 inches on Seminole County’s Lake Mary and 15.11 inches in Winter Springs. Ian maintained wind up to 81 mph as it reached the east coast’s Brevard County, where Titusville was hit with 14.07 inches of rain and the Nasa Shuttle Facility received 14.45 inches. In Volusia County just to the south, New Smyrna Beach got slammed with 15.42 inches. Bill Kearney Universal Orlando will begin reopening in phases to hotel guests only Friday, according to the resort. “We continue to conduct assessment and recovery efforts across our entire destination with the safety of guests and team members being our top priority,” the resort said in a statement. Universal began recalling employees to work Thursday night, according to its employee website. Before publicly announcing the phased resort reopening Thursday, Universal told employees scheduled for Friday they should be prepared to work. Katie Rice As Hurricane Ian leaves the state, 2.6 million people were without power as of Thursday evening, according to poweroutage.us. The majority of those outages were in southwest Florida where the storm made landfall Wednesday afternoon. Gov. Ron DeSantis earlier Thursday described the area, particularly Charlotte and Lee counties, as “off the grid.” Charlotte has 112,000 of 127,000 customers out while Lee has 412,000 customers out of the 471,000. In Collier County, 196,000 out of out of the 262,000 customers are out. As far as Central Florida: Orange: About 209,000 out of 603,000 customers are without power. Osceola: 19,000 out of 200,000 Polk: 162,000 out of 305,000 Seminole: 131,000 out of 225,000. Lake: 30,000 out of 169,000 Volusia: 247,000 out of 312,000 Brevard: 92,000 out of 330,000 David Harris Hurricane Ian has regained its strength over the Atlantic as the storm was once again upgraded to Category 1 hurricane during the National Hurricane Center’s 5 p.m. update. Although the storm has moved offshore from Central Florida, the NHC advised that major-to-record river flooding will continue across portions of central Florida, including the Little Wekiva River, which is already causing substantial area flooding and isn’t expected to crest until Sunday. A storm surge warning remains in effect for the St. Johns River and the NHC advises that hurricane conditions may continue into tonight for northeastern Florida. Hurricane Ian is currently located 240 miles south of Charleston, S.C., with maximum sustained winds of 75 MPH. Hurricane Ian is again a Category 1 storm as it heads for the coasts of North and South Carolina. Gatorland’s parking lot is flooded and an alarm is going off at the front entrance. Gatorland’s parking lot is flooded and an alarm is going off at the front entrance after Hurricane Ian. Legoland Florida in Winter Haven will also remain closed through Friday because of Hurricane Ian, the resort said Thursday. The resort will allow guests with tickets dated Wednesday, Sept. 28 through Sunday, Oct. 2 to redeem the tickets on another date through the end of the year. Legoland noted that its call center offices are temporarily closed as staff shelters from...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Hurricane Ian Live Updates: 2 Million Still Without Power DeSantis To Speak
Obama Privately Warned Reporters Trump Would Destroy America In 8 Years In Last Days In Office
Obama Privately Warned Reporters Trump Would Destroy America In 8 Years In Last Days In Office
Obama Privately Warned Reporters Trump Would Destroy America In 8 Years In Last Days In Office https://digitalarizonanews.com/obama-privately-warned-reporters-trump-would-destroy-america-in-8-years-in-last-days-in-office/ As we’ve previously noted around these parts, the biggest criticism of Barack Obama between the years of 2016 and 2020 related to his decision not to voice the opinions you know he absolutely had about Donald Trump. Indeed, it was not even until the end of 2018 that the 44th president uttered his successor’s name in public, despite the fact that most of the world was regularly referring to him with terms like “certified moron,” “an idiot surrounded by clowns,” “Adolf Twitler,” and, we assume, “a malignant tumor on the colon of society.” While Obama did choose to start talking toward the end of 2020—warning that August that Trump would “tear our democracy down” if given the chance—the remarks that he reportedly made in private were the ones people probably would have appreciated hearing the most, wherein he described the 45th president as “a madman,” “a racist, sexist pig,” a “corrupt motherfucker,” and a “fucking lunatic.” And apparently, he had other things to say about the guy too. Bloomberg News reports that in his final days as president, Obama warned reporters, in an off-the-record conversation, that while America would be “okay” from four years of Trump, “eight years would be a problem. I would be concerned about a sustained period in which some of these norms have broken down and started to corrode.” (The remarks were revealed in a transcript that was released in response to a Freedom of Information Act request filed in 2017 by reporter Jason Leopold.) Trump has, of course, been threatening to make another bid for office for some time now, which, if successful, would give him those eight years Obama warned against. While that would obviously be extremely bad for humanity, one might argue that the country is already quite worse for wear after just the first four, and that Obama was a little too optimistic about how Trump’s first term would shake out. Elsewhere in the conversation, Obama told reporters that he didn’t believe Trump was keen on starting any wars, though he would probably be into “bombing the heck out of terrorists.” (In early January 2020, the Trump administration assassinated Iranian military leader Qasem Soleimani; Trump would later complain that he didn’t get enough credit for this, and that he should have because Soleimani was a much “bigger” terrorist than Osama bin Laden, whose 9/11 attacks he bizarrely attempted to downplay.) “I think his basic view—his formative view of foreign policy is shaped by his interactions with Malaysian developers and Saudi princes, and I think his view is, ‘I’m going to go around the world making deals and maybe suing people,’” Obama said during the chat. “But it’s not, ‘let me launch big wars that tie me up.’ And that’s not what his base is looking [for] from him anyway.” According to Bloomberg, Obama said his biggest fear about his successor was the politicization of the nation’s top law enforcement agency. “I would be like white on rice on the Justice Department,” Obama told reporters. “I’d be paying a lot of attention to that. And if there is even a hint of politically motivated investigations, prosecutions, et cetera, I think you guys have to really be on top of that.” Trump, of course, spent much of his time in office demanding the DOJ investigate his political rivals, including Obama, Joe Biden, and Hillary Clinton. As Bloomberg notes, “Geoffrey Berman, the former US attorney for the Southern District of New York, recently accused Trump’s Justice Department of meddling in prosecutions and pressuring his office to launch politically motivated probes into Trump’s adversaries.” In addition to opining on Trump, Obama reportedly offered his thoughts on the GOP, saying that “the Republican Party now is ideologically completely incoherent. You don’t know what they stand for. So what’s bound them together is opposition to me, opposition to a fantastical creature called the liberal who looks down on them and just feeds all that regional resentment. And there are a handful of issues, like guns, that trigger that sense of ‘these folks aren’t like us and they don’t like us and act like us.’ And there’s obviously some racial elements that get put out into that stew.” Ginni Thomas swears she never once discussed her attempt to overturn the 2020 election with her husband, Supreme Court justice Clarence Thomas And if you believe that, we’ve got a bridge to sell you. Per The New York Times: During her interview, Ms. Thomas, who goes by Ginni, repeated her assertion that the 2020 election was stolen from President Donald J. Trump, [Rep. Bennie] Thompson said, a belief she insisted upon in late 2020 as she pressured state legislators and the White House chief of staff to do more to try to invalidate the results. In a statement she read at the beginning of her testimony, Ms. Thomas denied having discussed her postelection activities with her husband. In her statement, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times, Ms. Thomas called it “an ironclad rule” that she and Justice Thomas never speak about cases pending before the Supreme Court. “It is laughable for anyone who knows my husband to think I could influence his jurisprudence—the man is independent and stubborn, with strong character traits of independence and integrity,” she added. Read More Here
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Obama Privately Warned Reporters Trump Would Destroy America In 8 Years In Last Days In Office
Border Patrol Arrests 11 Migrants Near Nogales
Border Patrol Arrests 11 Migrants Near Nogales
Border Patrol Arrests 11 Migrants Near Nogales https://digitalarizonanews.com/border-patrol-arrests-11-migrants-near-nogales/ Twitter: @USBPChiefTCA Posted at 3:30 PM, Sep 30, 2022 and last updated 2022-09-30 18:30:55-04 TUCSON, Ariz. (KGUN) — On Sept. 23, a Guatemalan man began to lose consciousness near Nogales, Ariz. The 31-year-old man was accompanied by 11 migrants and were all detained by Nogales Station agents. The man was flown to Tucson in cooperation with MRT agents, the Arizona Department of Public Safety, and an air ambulance. After Nogales Station agents apprehended 11 migrants near Nogales, AZ, last Friday, a Guatemalan citizen in the group began to lose consciousness. In a collaborative effort with MRT agents, @Arizona_DPS, and an air ambulance, the 31-year-old male was flown to Tucson. #HonorFirst pic.twitter.com/lmUMVfyQh8 — John R. Modlin (@USBPChiefTCA) September 30, 2022 ——- Bivian Contreras is a real-time editor for KGUN 9. Bivian graduated from the University of Arizona School of Journalism with a Bachelor’s degree in Journalism with an emphasis in Broadcast and is currently pursuing a degree in Broadcast Operational Meteorology. Share your story ideas and important issues with Bivian by emailing bivian.contreras@kgun9.com or by connecting on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. Copyright 2022 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Sign up for the Headlines Newsletter and receive up to date information. Read More Here
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Border Patrol Arrests 11 Migrants Near Nogales
Obituaries In Phoenix AZ | The Arizona Republic
Obituaries In Phoenix AZ | The Arizona Republic
Obituaries In Phoenix, AZ | The Arizona Republic https://digitalarizonanews.com/obituaries-in-phoenix-az-the-arizona-republic-41/ Jonathan (John) Ray Grover (67) passed away on Tuesday, September 27, 2022. John was born in Idaho Falls, ID and moved to Phoenix, AZ when he was close to six months old. He graduated from Arcadia High School (Phoenix, AZ) where he met his high school sweetheart and future wife, Joan (Joni) Sieswerda Grover. John worked at Grover’s Supplies for Self-Reliant Living in Mesa, AZ with his brother, Rande for approximately 40 years and later worked at A to Z Equipment Rental in the East Valley until his retirement. He is preceded by his parents H. Jack and Geniel Grover. He is survived by his wife Joni; son Blaine; son Daniel and daughter-in-law, Taylor, who have four children. John is also survived by siblings Rande Grover, Tom Grover, Jean Akers, Joel Grover and Marlinda Troxel, as well as many nieces, nephews, grand nieces and grand nephews. John loved cats and volunteered with a pet rescue group called We’re the Cats Meow. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made directly to: http://werethecatsmeow.com. A Celebration of Life will be scheduled for a later date. Arrangements entrusted to Lakeshore Mortuary. Posted online on September 30, 2022 Published in The Arizona Republic Read More Here
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Obituaries In Phoenix AZ | The Arizona Republic