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Inside Steve Bannons disturbing Quest To Radically Rewrite The US Constitution
Inside Steve Bannons disturbing Quest To Radically Rewrite The US Constitution
Inside Steve Bannon’s ‘disturbing’ Quest To Radically Rewrite The US Constitution https://digitalarizonanews.com/inside-steve-bannons-disturbing-quest-to-radically-rewrite-the-us-constitution/ Steve Bannon, the former chief strategist in the Trump White House who is at the forefront of the Republican march toward hard-right populism, is throwing his weight behind a movement to radically rewrite the US constitution. Bannon has devoted recent episodes of his online show the War Room to a well-funded operation which has stealthily gained ground over the past two years. Backed by billionaire donors and corporate interests, it aims to persuade state legislatures to call a constitutional convention in the hope of baking far-right conservative values into the supreme law of the land. The goal is, in essence, to turn the country into a permanent conservative nation irrespective of the will of the American people. The convention would promote policies that would limit the size and scope of the federal government, set ceilings on or even abolish taxes, free corporations from regulations, and impose restrictions on government action in areas such as abortion, guns and immigration. “This is another line of attack strategically,” Bannon told his viewers last month. “You now have a political movement that understands we need to go after the administrative state.” By “administrative state”, Bannon was referring to the involvement of the federal government and Congress in central aspects of modern American life. That includes combating the climate crisis, setting educational standards and fighting health inequities. Former White House strategist Steve Bannon is looking to take a movement to rewrite the US constitution nationwide. Photograph: John Minchillo/AP Mark Meckler, a founder of the Tea Party who now leads one of the largest groups advocating for the tactic, the Convention of States Action (Cosa), spelled out some of the prime objectives on Bannon’s show. “We need to say constitutionally, ‘No, the federal government cannot be involved in education, or healthcare, or energy, or the environment’,” he said. Meckler went on to divulge the anti-democratic nature of the state convention movement when he said a main aim was to prevent progressive policies being advanced through presidential elections. “The problem is, any time the administration swings back to Democrat – or radical progressive, or Marxist which is what they are – we are going to lose the gains. So you do the structural fix.” The “structural fix” involves Republican state legislatures pushing conservative amendments to America’s foundational document. By cementing the policies into the US constitution, they would become largely immune to electoral challenge. Were a convention achieved, it would mark the zenith of conservative state power in American politics. Over the past 12 years, since the eruption of the Tea Party, Republicans have extended their grip to more than half of the states in the country, imposing an increasingly far-right agenda on the heartlands. Now the plan is to take that dominance nationwide. Article V of the constitution lays out two distinct ways in which America’s core document, ratified in 1788, can be revised. In practice, all 27 amendments that have been added over the past 244 years have come through the first route – a Congress-led process whereby two-thirds of both the US House and Senate have to approve changes followed by ratification by three-quarters of the states. Meckler, working alongside other powerful interest groups and wealthy rightwing megadonors, is gunning for Article V’s second route – one that has never been tried before. It gives state legislatures the power to call a constitutional convention of their own, should two-thirds of all 50 states agree. A bar chart of party control of state legislatures since 1978. A bar chart of party control of state legislatures since 1978. The state-based model for rewriting the US constitution is perhaps the most audacious attempt yet by hard-right Republicans to secure what amounts to conservative minority rule in which a minority of lawmakers representing less-populated rural states dictate terms to the majority of Americans. Russ Feingold, a former Democratic US senator from Wisconsin, told the Guardian that “they want to rewrite the constitution in a fundamental way that is not just conservative, it is minoritarian. It will prevent the will of ‘we the people’ being heard.” Feingold has co-authored with Peter Prindiville of the Stanford constitutional law center The Constitution in Jeopardy, a new book that sounds the alarm on the states-based convention movement. “Our goal is not to scare people, but to alert them that there is a movement on the far right that is quietly getting itself to a point where it will be almost impossible to stop a convention being called,” he said. His urgency is underlined by how active the movement has become. A convention resolution framed by Cosa has passed so far this year in four states – Wisconsin, Nebraska, West Virginia and South Carolina. The group has also been busy around November’s midterm elections, using its muscle and some $600,000 (£528,252) of its reserves to support candidates amenable to the idea. “We have built the largest grassroots activist army in American history,” Meckler told Bannon, probably hyperbolically. Bannon’s other guest on the War Room, Rick Santorum, a former Republican US senator from Pennsylvania who advises Cosa, told Bannon: “This is something that can happen very quickly. We are a lot further along than people think.” They are also much better funded than people might think. The Center for Media and Democracy (CMD), which monitors the constitutional convention movement, estimates that it pulled in $25m (£22m) in 2020, the last year for which figures are known. The funds were split between Cosa and other influential groups on the right. They include the American Legislative Exchange Council (Alec), a network of state politicians and corporate lobbyists which has taken up the cry for a constitutional amendment to force balanced budget restrictions on Washington. Much of the income is dark money, with the origins hidden. CMD has managed to identify some key donors – among them the Mercer Family Foundation set up by reclusive hedge fund manager Robert Mercer, and a couple of groups run by Leonard Leo, the mastermind behind the rightwing land grab in the federal courts. More than $1m (£880,265) has also been donated in the form of Bitcoin. The attraction to these groups and donors of pursuing a states route to rewriting the US constitution is easily explained. Over the past 12 years, since the eruption of the Tea Party in 2010, Republican activists have deployed extreme partisan gerrymandering to pull off an extraordinary takeover of state legislatures. In 2010, Republicans controlled both chambers of just 14 state legislatures. Today, that number stands at 31. “Republicans are near the high watermark in terms of their political control in the states, and that’s why the pro-Trump rightwing of the party is increasingly embracing the constitutional convention strategy,” said Arn Pearson, CMD’s executive director. Should a convention be achieved, the plan would be to give states one vote each. There is no legal or historical basis for such an arrangement but its appeal is self-evident. One vote per state would give small rural conservative states like Wyoming (population 580,000) equal leverage to large urbanized progressive states like California (39.5 million). Collectively, small states would be in the majority and control would tip to the Republicans. Last December Santorum spelled out this minoritarian vision at a private ALEC meeting. In an audio recording obtained by CMD, Santorum said: “We have the opportunity, as a result, to have a supermajority, even though we may not even be in an absolute majority when it comes to the people who agree with us.” Pearson decried such thinking as “a profoundly anti-majoritarian and anti-democratic strategy that gives small rural states most control”. With the counting system skewed towards the conservative heartlands, the list of amendments that might be pursued is disconcertingly large. Though Meckler and his allies largely avoid talking about culture war issues, it is quite conceivable that a nationwide ban on abortion and a rescinding of gay marriage would be on the table. Bannon is hoping Republican legislatures will reach the two-thirds requirement to override supreme court rulings. Photograph: Peter Foley/EPA More openly, advocates have talked about imposing balanced budget requirements on the US government that would dramatically shrink federal resources. Some have even proposed making income tax unconstitutional. One of the more popular ideas circulating within rightwing constitutional convention circles, initially floated by the talk show host Mark Levin, is that states should grant themselves the ability to override federal statutes and supreme court rulings. It is hard to see how the federal rule of law could be sustained under such an arrangement with its unmistakable civil war undertones. Under Article V, 34 states would have to call for a constitutional convention to reach the two-thirds requirement. Cosa has so far succeeded in getting 19 states to sign up, with a further six in active consideration. ALEC, which sets a narrower remit for a convention focused on its balanced budget amendment, has gone further with 28 states on board. Either way, there is a shortfall. To address it, constitutional convention leaders have invented increasingly exotic mathematical formulas for attaining the magic number, 34. “We used to call it fuzzy math, now we call it wacky math,” Pearson said. Advocates filed a lawsuit in Texas in February that tried to get the courts to force a constitutional convention on grounds that they had rea...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Inside Steve Bannons disturbing Quest To Radically Rewrite The US Constitution
Trump Faces Deposition In E Jean Carroll Lawsuit Today Latest
Trump Faces Deposition In E Jean Carroll Lawsuit Today Latest
Trump Faces Deposition In E Jean Carroll Lawsuit Today – Latest https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-faces-deposition-in-e-jean-carroll-lawsuit-today-latest/ Related video: Trump blasts Jan. 6 committee subpoena in 14-page letter Donald Trump will today give a deposition in a defamation case brought by writer E Jean Carroll, who claims the former president raped her in a New York department store in the 1990s. Mr Trump denies the allegation and has been trying for years to fight off the lawsuit, in which Ms Carroll claims he defamed her by accusing her of lying about the alleged incident. When a judge decided last week that Mr Trump could not avoid being deposed, he restated his claim on Truth Social, thus repeating the behaviour she is suing him for. Meanwhile, a key source of the infamous Steele dossier on the 2016 Trump campaign’s alleged links to Russia has been cleared of lying to the FBI. The acquittal of Igor Danchenko means the inquiry into the origins of the Trump-Russia investigation has failed to secure a single significant conviction, with a Fox News host suggesting the probe was “imploding”. On another front, audio has been released revealing that Mr Trump allowed veteran journalist Bob Woodward access to letters between him and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. The then-president can be heard saying: “Don’t say I gave them to you, okay?” Registration is a free and easy way to support our truly independent journalism By registering, you will also enjoy limited access to Premium articles, exclusive newsletters, commenting, and virtual events with our leading journalists Email Please enter a valid email Please enter a valid email Password Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number First name Please enter your first name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters Last name Please enter your last name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters You must be over 18 years old to register You must be over 18 years old to register Year of birth I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent.  Read our Privacy notice You can opt-out at any time by signing in to your account to manage your preferences. Each email has a link to unsubscribe. Already have an account? sign in Registration is a free and easy way to support our truly independent journalism By registering, you will also enjoy limited access to Premium articles, exclusive newsletters, commenting, and virtual events with our leading journalists Email Please enter a valid email Please enter a valid email Password Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number First name Please enter your first name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters Last name Please enter your last name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters You must be over 18 years old to register You must be over 18 years old to register Year of birth I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent.  Read our Privacy notice You can opt-out at any time by signing in to your account to manage your preferences. Each email has a link to unsubscribe. Already have an account? sign in Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Faces Deposition In E Jean Carroll Lawsuit Today Latest
Why The Left Cant Stop Trying To Link Trump To Anti-Semitism
Why The Left Cant Stop Trying To Link Trump To Anti-Semitism
Why The Left Can’t Stop Trying To Link Trump To Anti-Semitism https://digitalarizonanews.com/why-the-left-cant-stop-trying-to-link-trump-to-anti-semitism/ (October 19, 2022 / JNS) You would think they would have figured out by now that they’re playing his game. It’s been more than seven years since Donald Trump came down the escalator at Trump Tower to begin living full-time in the minds of his many detractors. Yet, in all that time, his political opponents and their allies in the mainstream media and organized Jewish world still leap to take the bait every time he says or posts anything on social media. But the reason that his recent comment on U.S. Jews and Israel was seized upon by Democrats and liberals had little to do with its intrinsic importance or with the dubious notion that they were taking a stand against anti-Semitism. Their motivation was purely political. The left in general, and the Jewish left in particular, is addicted to trying to link Trump to anti-Semitism because they think it is a useful issue for them. This is truer now more than ever. Democrats are flailing in the weeks before the midterm elections, with polls—even from liberal publications like The New York Times—showing they’re in deep trouble. While in the past, the media feeding frenzy about a Trump quote was done in the genuine hope that publicizing his hot takes or gaffes would do him in, now it’s merely a device to try to distract the voting public from the disastrous record of his successor, Joe Biden. Subscribe to The JNS Daily Syndicate by email and never miss our top stories The pattern is predictable. Every controversial comment from Trump is hyped by the liberal media as new proof that he is as horrible as they have always believed him to have been. It has long been obvious that Trump deliberately goads them. He hopes to provoke exactly the kind of over-the-top reactions that, far from undermining him, actually delight his followers. They regard the rage he arouses among the chattering classes as evidence that he is on their side against an establishment that is indifferent or hostile to their concerns. This doesn’t seem to enter into the calculations of those rushing to jump on his comments. Journalist Salena Zito’s Atlantic article provided the best insight on Trump to date: “The press takes him literally, not seriously; his supporters take him seriously, but not literally.” Her observation is still spot on. The latest illustration of this tedious piece of political theater came from a Trump post on his Truth Social site, a pale imitation of the ubiquitous Twitter, one of the platforms from which the former president was banned after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. In it, he boasted of his historic support for Israel and noted that Evangelicals are more ardent backers of the Jewish state than American Jews. He then spoke of his popularity in Israel and, clearly joking, said he could be elected prime minister there. He concluded with the line: “U.S. Jews have to get their act together and appreciate what they have in Israel—[b]efore it is too late!” The post was blasted as anti-Semitic by the White House, leftist pundits and open anti-Semites like Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), and then denounced by the Anti-Defamation League and American Jewish Committee as an example of the dual loyalty trope and threats against Jews. As Ruthie Blum  aptly noted, all this hysteria was absurd. What he said about his own record, evangelical support for Israel exceeding that of most Jews and his popularity in Israel was all true. And the concluding warning phrase was no different from many exhortations to Jews from Jewish leaders and others urging them to get behind the Jewish state lest it be overwhelmed by its many foes. The notion, put forward by the AJC and the ADL, that a non-Jewish supporter of Israel has no right to chide Jews for their lack of interest in Zionism—and that one’s doing so is somehow offensive—is, at best, curious. Of course, American Jews are free to do as they like and support whatever causes interest them. Like many non-Jews in public life, Trump was slow to pick up on the fact that for the vast majority of U.S. Jews, support for Israel isn’t a priority or a litmus test for voting. Almost all of the Jews Trump knows are dedicated supporters of the Jewish state. That’s also true for many Republicans and Democrats in Congress, who often take a while to figure out that while backing Israel is good politics, it’s something that only a minority of Jews care deeply about. That the AJC was actually disputing the truth of what he wrote about the majority of U.S. Jews and Israel (“baseless judgements”) demonstrated the organization’s bad faith, since it knows very well that the statement was accurate. ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt was even more disingenuous. Greenblatt, who has helped transform the group from a non-partisan, if liberal-leaning, organization under his predecessor, Abe Foxman, into an auxiliary of the Democratic Party, continues to insist, without any evidence, that Trump “curries favor” with “anti-Semites.” He’s been doing this since Trump took office in 2017. The ADL falsely blamed him for bomb threats on Jewish Community Centers, which turned out to be the work of a disturbed American-Israeli teenager. It continued with the group’s joining those seeking to falsely claim that Trump supported the neo-Nazi marchers in Charlottesville, Virginia, and even to blame him for the actions of deranged extremists who attacked synagogues in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Poway, California, even though those involved were against Trump because of his support for Israel. Many on the left really do believe that Trump is akin to Hitler, despite the absurdity of the claim. Groups like the ADL, which support the Democrats’ talking points about a fake war on democracy, are committed to an approach that seeks to make the midterms a referendum on attitudes about the former president rather than on the incumbent Biden administration. As we’ve seen in recent weeks, a willingness to mainstream Jew-hatred exists on both the left and the right. But the liberal Jewish obsession with Trump, and the attempt to brand him as an anti-Semite, has nothing to do with that fight. Rather, it is part of the same strategy the Biden administration has been pursuing in the last year: trying to make the Jan. 6 Capitol riot the centerpiece of political discourse. Virtually everyone agrees that it was a disgrace, but most don’t believe the conspiracy theories the Democrats and their never-Trump allies have tried to float about its having been an attempted coup d’état. The latter more aptly describes the Russia-collusion hoax that Democrats and liberal media promoted to derail Trump’s presidency. Furthermore, most voters want Washington to be focused on the crumbling economy and raging inflation. A more sensible approach from the Democrats would be to ignore Trump. Their ongoing attempts to prosecute him on charges relating to Jan. 6 or for his having held on to classified documents are only helping him. Indeed, the worse he is treated, the easier it is for him to stay in the spotlight. It also makes it more, rather than less, likely that the Republicans will nominate him again for president in 2024. Perhaps some on the left think that is to their advantage, but right now, polls show him winning a rematch with Biden. The problem here is not figuring out what to think about Trump, a question on which Americans will always remain deeply divided. Groups that claim to be fighting anti-Semitism are too tied into partisan narratives and the effort to defeat the GOP to understand that the only way to win the battle against hate is to stop linking it to liberal talking points about Trump, and focus on those who are actually spreading Jew-hatred on both ends of the spectrum. Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS (Jewish News Syndicate). Follow him on Twitter at: @jonathans_tobin. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Why The Left Cant Stop Trying To Link Trump To Anti-Semitism
Lt. Gov. Candidates Debate: Georgia Republican Seeks To Put 2020 Aside For Other Issues
Lt. Gov. Candidates Debate: Georgia Republican Seeks To Put 2020 Aside For Other Issues
Lt. Gov. Candidates Debate: Georgia Republican Seeks To Put 2020 Aside For Other Issues https://digitalarizonanews.com/lt-gov-candidates-debate-georgia-republican-seeks-to-put-2020-aside-for-other-issues/ Lt. Gov. candidates debate: Georgia Republican seeks to put 2020 aside for other issues  WTVC Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Lt. Gov. Candidates Debate: Georgia Republican Seeks To Put 2020 Aside For Other Issues
Trump Scheduled To Be Deposed Wednesday In Writer's Defamation Lawsuit
Trump Scheduled To Be Deposed Wednesday In Writer's Defamation Lawsuit
Trump Scheduled To Be Deposed Wednesday In Writer's Defamation Lawsuit https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-scheduled-to-be-deposed-wednesday-in-writers-defamation-lawsuit/ Former President Donald Trump is scheduled to answer questions under oath Wednesday in a defamation lawsuit brought by a writer who alleges he raped her in the mid-1990s. E. Jean Carroll, who was a longtime columnist for Elle magazine, sued Trump for defamation in 2019 after the then-president denied her allegations that he raped her in an upscale Manhattan department store’s dressing room. Carroll’s lawsuit claims the former president ruined her reputation when he denied the allegation. A judge ruled last week that the former president must sit for a deposition in the defamation lawsuit, rejecting a request by Trump’s lawyers to delay the testimony. Trump’s lawyers had tried to quash the suit by arguing that he was acting in his capacity as president when he denied the rape allegations — an argument that aimed to make the U.S. government the defendant and reduce Carroll’s chances of success given protections for federal employees sued for actions on the job. U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan wrote that the lawsuit must proceed after being in legal limbo for three years, citing the “advanced age” of Carroll, 77, and Trump, 76, and potential witnesses. “The defendant should not be permitted to run the clock out on plaintiff’s attempt to gain a remedy for what allegedly was a serious wrong,” Kaplan wrote. Kaplan noted with disapproval a series of attempts by Trump to delay the collection of evidence in the defamation lawsuit. “Given his conduct so far in this case, Mr. Trump’s position regarding the burdens of discovery is inexcusable,” he wrote. “As this Court previously has observed, Mr. Trump has litigated this case since it began in 2019 with the effect and probably the purpose of delaying it.” Trump took aim at Carroll in a post on his social media platform after the judge denied his request to delay the deposition. “This ‘Ms. Bergdorf Goodman’ case is a complete con job,” Trump wrote. Trump has repeatedly denied ever meeting Carroll, saying she was “totally lying” when she accused him of sexual assault. “I’ll say it with great respect: Number one, she’s not my type. Number two, it never happened. It never happened, OK?” Trump told The Hill in 2019. In a court filing last month, Carroll’s lawyers indicated she plans to sue Trump in November under a new New York statute that permits victims of sexual assault to sue years after the incident. Summer Concepcion Summer Concepcion is a politics reporter for NBC News. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Scheduled To Be Deposed Wednesday In Writer's Defamation Lawsuit
Exclusive: Bob Woodward Releasing Audiobook Of 20 Trump Interviews CNN Tonight Podcast On CNN Audio
Exclusive: Bob Woodward Releasing Audiobook Of 20 Trump Interviews CNN Tonight Podcast On CNN Audio
Exclusive: Bob Woodward Releasing Audiobook Of 20 Trump Interviews – CNN Tonight – Podcast On CNN Audio https://digitalarizonanews.com/exclusive-bob-woodward-releasing-audiobook-of-20-trump-interviews-cnn-tonight-podcast-on-cnn-audio/ showcast CNN Tonight brings you in-depth coverage, one-on-one interviews, and analysis of the latest breaking news. Weekdays, 9 PM ET. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Exclusive: Bob Woodward Releasing Audiobook Of 20 Trump Interviews CNN Tonight Podcast On CNN Audio
Breeze Airways Adds New Destinations From Bradley Airport
Breeze Airways Adds New Destinations From Bradley Airport
Breeze Airways Adds New Destinations From Bradley Airport https://digitalarizonanews.com/breeze-airways-adds-new-destinations-from-bradley-airport/ WINDSOR LOCKS, CT (WFSB) – Breeze Airways added four destinations from Bradley Airport in Windsor Locks. Nonstop service to Phoenix, AZ, Vero Beach, FL, Provo, UT, and San Bernardino, CA was announced on Wednesday. One-way prices start at $79 for the Phoenix and Vero Beach locations. The Utah and California spots start at $99. Here’s the breakdown, according to Breeze: Vero Beach, FL – Thursday and Sunday, starting Feb. 2 – $79 one way to $149 Phoenix, AZ – Thursday and Sunday, starting Feb. 9 – $99 one way to $199 Provo, UT – One-stop/no plane change BreezeThru on Thursday and Sunday, starting Feb. 9 – $129 one way to $199 San Bernardino, CA – One-stop/no plane change BreezeThru on Thursday and Sunday, starting Feb. 16 – $99 one way to $199 Breeze said it currently serves Charleston, SC, Columbus, OH, Jacksonville, FL, Las Vegas, NV, Nashville, TN, New Orleans, LA, Norfolk, VA, Orlando, FL, Pittsburgh, PA, Richmond, VA, Sarasota-Bradenton, FL, Savannah, GA, Tampa, FL, and Tulsa, OK, from Bradley. The airline said travelers can choose from three price bundles that are offered as “Nice,” “Nicer,” and “Nicest.”  Nice and Nicer bundles are across Breeze’s fleet of Embraer 195 e-jets and Airbus A220s, while Nicest – including a First Class seat – is only available on the A220s.   They can also choose a nice or nicer bundle and add a First Class seat as well. Breeze said it ordered 80 brand new Airbus A220-300 aircraft, with options for 40 more. Flights are on sale at www.flybreeze.com and by way of the Breeze app. Copyright 2022 WFSB. All rights reserved. Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Breeze Airways Adds New Destinations From Bradley Airport
Donald Trump To Testify Today Against Woman Who Accused Him Of Rape
Donald Trump To Testify Today Against Woman Who Accused Him Of Rape
Donald Trump To Testify Today Against Woman Who Accused Him Of Rape https://digitalarizonanews.com/donald-trump-to-testify-today-against-woman-who-accused-him-of-rape/ Ms Carroll alleges that Donald Trump sexually assaulted her. (File) New York: Former US president Donald Trump is expected to testify Wednesday in a defamation case pitting him against a prominent American columnist who says he raped her in the 1990s. E. Jean Carroll, 78, alleges that Donald Trump sexually assaulted her in a New York department store. Last week, a New York federal court judge rejected a motion by Donald Trump, who has denied the accusation, to further delay his deposition. Judge Lewis Kaplan ruled that Ms Carroll’s and Donald Trump’s depositions should be held on October 14 and 19, respectively. It is not known if Ms Carroll testified on Friday, and neither of the parties’ lawyers responded to comment requests from AFP. E. Jean Carroll on Tuesday shared a photo of her lawyer Roberta Kaplan on Twitter captioned “Carroll versus Trump,” and wished Ms Kaplan “GOOD LUCK FOR TOMORROW.” She later deleted the tweet. Ms Kaplan, who is unrelated to the case’s judge, is a co-founder of the Time’s Up movement that provides legal aid to victims of sexual assault. Ms Carroll, a former columnist for Elle magazine, sued then-president Trump for defamation in a New York civil court in November 2019. In an excerpt of her book published by New York Magazine that year, Ms Carroll said she was raped by Trump in the changing room at the luxury Bergdorf Goodman department store on Fifth Avenue in New York in the mid-1990s. Donald Trump denied the accusation, saying Ms Carroll was “not my type” and that she was “totally lying,” which prompted the defamation suit. The case has been delayed by procedural battles, including whether Donald Trump should be represented by the US government, since he was president at the time he made the statements. According to several media outlets on Tuesday, Mr Trump’s lawyers have always claimed that their client was protected by his executive immunity, particularly for allegedly defamatory statements he made during his term. Last week, Donald Trump made new comments about the case on his right-wing Truth Social platform, mocking Ms Carroll’s rape allegations. According to legal experts cited in a Vice News report, Ms Carroll could argue that Donald Trump defamed her again — this time as a private citizen. Judge Kaplan said last week that Ms Carroll could claim damages from Donald Trump for the alleged rape starting from November 24, after a New York state law allowing survivors of sexual assault to file a civil suit regardless of the statute of limitations comes into effect. (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.) Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Donald Trump To Testify Today Against Woman Who Accused Him Of Rape
Russia's War In Ukraine | CNN
Russia's War In Ukraine | CNN
Russia's War In Ukraine | CNN https://digitalarizonanews.com/russias-war-in-ukraine-cnn-6/ What Ukrainians learn from downed drones used by Russia 03:47 – Source: CNN Russian President Vladimir Putin has announced martial law in the four Ukrainian regions he claims to have annexed in defiance of international law: Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk and Luhansk. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s counteroffensive continues in these regions, with Russian-backed leaders in Kherson saying they are relocating residents as Kyiv’s troops advance. Ukraine’s military says it shot down 13 Iranian-made “kamikaze” drones over the Mykolaiv region overnight as parts of the country faced power and water shortages Wednesday caused by Russian attacks on infrastructure. The US, France and the UK plan to discuss Iran’s drone transfers to Russia at a closed UN Security Council meeting Wednesday. Russian President Putin said Wednesday that he will give “additional powers” to the local leaders of all Russian regions. “Senior officials of the subjects of the Russian Federation should pay the necessary attention to the implementation of measures designed to ensure the safety of people, the protection and anti-terrorist protection of critical facilities, maintaining public order, increasing the stability of the economy, industry and expanding the production of means necessary for a special military operation,” Putin said. This comes after Putin announced on Wednesday that he has signed a law introducing martial law in four Ukrainian regions the Kremlin has sought to annex, in violation of international law. The regions — Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk and Luhansk — are not under full Russian control. Western nations have decried the annexations and vowed not to recognize them as Russian territory. “To coordinate the work of the heads of regions will receive the authority to create the appropriate headquarters. I instruct the government, the Ministry of Defense and other departments to provide them with all necessary assistance,” Putin added. Putin also said that he has instructed the government to establish a special council to coordinate the changes. “The council will include vice-premiers, representatives of law enforcement agencies, the socio-economic bloc of the government, the presidential administration, and the State Council, which will ensure close interaction with the regions,” he said. Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during the signing ceremony with separatist leaders on the annexation of four Ukrainian regions at the Grand Kremlin Palace, in Moscow, Russia on September 30. Getty Images Russian President Vladimir Putin announced on Wednesday that he has signed a law introducing martial law in four Ukrainian regions the Kremlin has sought to annex, in violation of international law. The regions — Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk and Luhansk — are not under full Russian control. Western nations have decried the annexations and vowed not to recognize them as Russian territory. Putin made the comments during a scheduled Security Council meeting. “In this regard, let me remind you that in the Donetsk People’s Republic, the Luhansk People’s Republic, as well as in the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions, martial law was in effect before joining Russia,” Putin said during a televised address. “Now we need to formalize this regime within the framework of Russian legislation.” “Therefore, I signed a decree on the introduction of martial law in these four subjects of the Russian Federation, so it will be immediately sent to the Federation Council,” Putin added.  The Federation Council will consider the decree of Russian President Vladimir Putin on martial law in the regions as soon as possible, said Andrei Klishas, chairman of the Federation Council committee on constitutional legislation, in a statement on his Telegram channel. A number of Russian missiles have been shot down over the Ukrainian capital Kyiv on Wednesday, Mayor Vitalii Klitschko said in a post on Telegram.  “Air defense shot down several Russian missiles over Kyiv,” he said. “Air raid alarm is still on! Stay in shelters! Air defense continues to work.”  A CNN team heard at least five explosions in Kyiv on Wednesday. An air raid warning has been in place in Kyiv since 12:49 p.m. local time. Remember: Russia has concentrated a series of recent strikes on the Ukrainian capital city, hitting key energy facilities and leaving multiple civilians dead. At least five people were killed Monday and at least three people died in strikes on Tuesday. Fragments of a Russian rocket burn in the village of Kipti, Chernihiv region, Ukraine, on October 19. Ukrainian Defense Ministry Press Service/AP People in Ukraine’s Chernihiv region are being advised to take shelter after a reported Russian drone attack, the head of the regional military administration said on Telegram. “Attention! There is an explosion of ‘Shahed’ [Iranian-made Shahed drones] in Chernihiv. Air defense works. Stay in shelters,” said Viacheslav Chaus, head of Chernihiv regional military administration. An air raid alert is currently in place in multiple regions of Ukraine. Earlier on Wednesday, Ukraine’s Operational Command North reported on Facebook that two rockets had been shot down over the village of Kipti in the Chernihiv region.  A CNN team heard at least five explosions in Kyiv on Wednesday. It was not clear if the explosions were impacts on the ground, or the sound of air defense interceptions.  An air raid warning has been in place in Kyiv since 12:49 p.m. local time. Russia has concentrated a series of recent strikes on the Ukrainian capital city, hitting key energy facilities and leaving multiple civilians dead. At least five people were killed Monday and at least three people died in strikes on Tuesday. Russia is trying to “intimidate” Kherson residents, Kyiv said Wednesday, after residents were told to evacuate by the Russia-imposed local authorities amid shelling threats in the region. “The Russians are trying to intimidate the people of Kherson with fake messaging about the shelling of the city by our army, and also arrange a propaganda show with evacuation,” Andriy Yermak, head of the Ukrainian President’s office, said on Telegram Wednesday. Yermak called the move “a rather primitive tactic,” saying that “the Armed Forces of Ukraine do not fire at Ukrainian cities.” “This is done by Russian terrorists only, by whom even in Russia airplanes fall on residential buildings,” he also said, adding “Propaganda will not work.” Ukraine has previously said that Russia is forcibly deporting Ukrainian civilians; human rights groups and international bodies have warned the practice may constitute a crime against humanity. The Kremlin-appointed leaders of the occupied Kherson region in southern Ukraine say they have started to evacuate civilians further away from the frontline. Vladimir Saldo, the Russian-backed governor of Kherson, told Russian TV late Tuesday they intend to relocate up to 60,000 people to the left bank of the Dnipro river. Ukraine has previously said that Russia is forcibly deporting Ukrainian civilians; human rights groups and international bodies have warned the practice may constitute a crime against humanity. Saldo had announced the “organized relocation” of civilians on Telegram on Tuesday. “Our key task is to save human lives and allow the troops of the Russian Federation to effectively perform their functions in protecting the Kherson region,” he said. “We will take the civilian population to the left bank in an organized, phased manner.” All ministries of the Russian-installed civil administration in the Kherson region will also move to the left bank of Dnipro, Saldo said, adding that entry to the region will be closed for civilians for seven days. Residents in Kherson received a text message asking to leave the city due to the threat of shelling by the Ukrainian army on Wednesday morning, Russian state media RIA Novosti reported. The “massive deportation of civilians” by Russia could, along with other alleged abuses, constitute crimes against humanity, according to a July report by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). In September, Ukraine’s deputy ambassador to the United Nations, Khrystyna Hayovyshyn, told the UN Security Council that Russia had forcibly deported 2.5 million people from Ukraine – including 38,000 children – saying this was a violation of human rights. The Kremlin’s mass evacuation of citizens from Kherson comes amid Kyiv’s efforts to retake territory in the south. A Russian official warned of a potential new Ukrainian counteroffensive in Kherson on Wednesday. Saldo’s deputy, Kirill Stremousov, said the situation was “stable” but alleged that the Ukrainian army might strike “at any moment” and asked people to cross to the left bank of the Dnipro river. “On the morning of October 19, the situation on the fronts and approaches to the Kherson region is stable,” he said. “The enemy is concentrating its forces, and at any moment may start launch the strikes at the civilian population of Kherson and the Kherson region. No one is going to retreat, but we want to save your lives. Please cross to the left bank (of the Dnipro river) as quickly as possible.”  The Ukrainian deputy head of the Kherson region, Yurii Sobolevskyi, has characterized Russia’s “evacuations” as the “semi-voluntary deportation of the Ukrainian population.” Sobolevskyi confirmed to CNN that the evacuations were underway. “People are indeed leaving. There are a lot of people in the port of Kherson now,” he said. “Today they started mass sending SMS to people about the evacuation. They also started handing out booklets about actions during evacuation. At the same time, the message is spreading among the population that if they go to Russia, they will receive certificates for housing.” Sobolevskyi, who spoke to CNN from Kyiv, accused t...
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Russia's War In Ukraine | CNN
What Are Bear Market Rallies And Do They Last?
What Are Bear Market Rallies And Do They Last?
What Are Bear Market Rallies, And Do They Last? https://digitalarizonanews.com/what-are-bear-market-rallies-and-do-they-last/ This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers visit http://www.djreprints.com. https://www.barrons.com/articles/bear-market-rally-stocks-51666116036 Updated Oct. 19, 2022 8:33 am ET / Original Oct. 18, 2022 2:01 pm ET Order Reprints Print Article The stock market is rallying. Don’t expect it to continue.  All three major indexes have gained for two straight days. The S&P 500 rose more than 2% Monday and was up another 1.1% Tuesday afternoon, but it could be only a so-called bear-market rally.   Read More Here
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What Are Bear Market Rallies And Do They Last?
O-Zone: Sheer Happiness
O-Zone: Sheer Happiness
O-Zone: Sheer Happiness https://digitalarizonanews.com/o-zone-sheer-happiness/ JACKSONVILLE – Look-ahead Wednesday. Let’s get to it … Pete from Daytona Beach, FL O-Man, you said you thought the Jaguars were good for six or seven wins this year. You seem to be an extreme optimist. My question is why? The Jaguars are 2-4 with 11 games remaining in the 2022 season. To win six-to-seven games would mean a 4-7 or 5-6 record over those last 11 games. The Jaguars have two one-sided victories with one-score losses in the other four games. They are 11th in the NFL in total offense with more than 300 yards offense in five of six games, with their most significant offensive issues that they have struggled in the red zone at times. That makes me think the offense will continue to give this team a chance at the end of games. The defense has been good three games and struggled three other games. It hasn’t been a great pass-rushing unit yet and it has allowed late-game scores with the game on the line in all four losses. Late-game issues have hurt offensively, too. The Jaguars are a young team with a second-year quarterback in his first season in a new offense. All those factors make me think the Jaguars will be close late in a lot of games and that they will improve in those late-game situations as the season continues. That doesn’t seem like extreme optimism, or a huge reach. Mike from Martinsville The Jaguars keep drafting these supposedly super athletes No. 1 instead of good athletes who are great football players. You can’t measure heart and drive. These guys step up and make big plays when the game is on the line. The Jaguars are missing this, especially on defense. Agree or disagree? If you’re asking if the Jaguars lack heart and drive, especially on defense, I have seen nothing to indicate that’s the case. This isn’t high school football. Games aren’t typically decided on want-to, heart and desire. Sometimes some of the best players in the world on one side of the ball play better in given situations than some of the best players in the world on the other side of the ball. Tom from Nocatee Since we’re doing draft talk now, I’m gonna say we need to address the cornerback position. It’s October 19. The 2023 NFL Draft is more than six months away. Eleven games remain in the Jaguars’ 2022 season. We’re not “doing draft talk now.” Matt from Chandler Does Doug not have faith in Riley Patterson? I feel these past few weeks that some of these crucial fourth-down tries we should be attempting a field goal. Our fourth-down conversion rate is succeeding at under 40 percent. Patterson has missed one field goal all year. Jaguars Head Coach Doug Pederson is going to be aggressive in fourth down if the situation makes sense. It’s what he’s about as a head coach. The situation often makes sense when the offense is in field-goal range and the down-and-distance is fourth-and-sixish or less. Sometimes that will work. Sometimes it won’t. He’s not going to change. And I haven’t gotten the sense that his decision-making has much to do with kicker Riley Patterson. Noel from Saint Augustine, FL Hey, Mr. O. Do you see Pederson’s aggressiveness on fourth down as a detriment? Not when the Jaguars make a first down. Rusty from New Iberia, LA I’ve never seen so many quick screen calls in my life. Has the coaching staff lost confidence in Trevor’s ability to go downfield? Many NFL offenses run quick screens and short passes as a fundamental part of the offense. The approach in recent seasons has come to replace a portion of the running game in many offenses. The Jaguars under Pederson have this approach. It’s not that the staff has lost confidence in quarterback Trevor Lawrence’s ability to go downfield, but they don’t want him throwing the ball downfield constantly in the wrong situations. Guest from Guest What do you make of Jacksonville Jaguars being the only team with a losing record (2–4) and a positive point deferential (+24)? That they have won two games by wide margins and lot four games by close margins – and that they’re not yet a team that is good in close games. Jason from St Augustine, FL Everybody’s grooming and dooming about this supposedly lost season but the Jaguars still have 11 games left with a talented quarterback, a talented offense, a very good play-calling coach and a defense that has been overall pretty stout. There’s nothing lost about this season. I groomed and doomed once in college. Then I went and saw the Cure. Carlos from Mexico City, Mexico Actually, after essentially a third of the season, 2-4 feels just about right. If you factor in two blowout wins against undermanned teams and being in it in the fourth quarter in all losses, the arrow still feels like it’s pointing up. Is that how you see it or do you see some bigger fractures other than growth, inexperience and lack of big-guy talent? I think the Jaguars’ biggest issues are a lack of experience, the fact that a lot of the experience hasn’t played together long, a lack of veteran elite players and the factor that Lawrence is still developing and playing in his first season in a new offense. I think those factors add up to them being close and not quite there yet. Zac from Austin, Tejas Not to nitpick, but I keep hearing Trevor’s last drive was beautiful … but it was a majority of run plays. Why credit that to him? Because he would have been blamed if they had gone three and out. Tom from Jax I’ve watched Jaguars rookie outside linebacker Travon Walker closely for the last two weeks. He seems to have been totally ineffective with his pass rush. Not only two ruffing penalties but no sacks since Game 1. He has not shown the potential of a number 1 draft choice. I hope it’s not too early to give up on him! Walker hasn’t rushed the passer great this season. He wasn’t considered a polished pass rusher entering the NFL Draft, so it’s not surprising he’s not rushing the passer great this season. That can take time. He has been better in other areas and he has struggled in areas such as recognition where many rookies struggle. He has played six NFL games. It’s not too early to give up on him. Not even close. Audie from Alamogordo Hey O, I see no relief in site. This week it’s the New York Giants, then the Denver Broncos, then the Las Vegas Raiders and of course the Chiefs. Out of those four games, I see our defense not stepping up and our offensive line will be attacked hard and if TL does not release the ball early, he will be on his back a lot. What is your thinking on this? I think the NFL is hard all the time and really hard when you’re struggling. I think if the Jaguars play well, they can win any of those games and that it will be difficult to win in Kansas City even if they play well. Tim from OKC, OK Six games played. Two of those games decided by more than one score, and four of them by only one score. We need to get better at winning the close games. I am glad we haven’t been blown out yet, but we need to get better at closing, and holding on to close games. Yep. KC from South Florida The Jaguars need to stop overpaying for free-agent cornerbacks and start drafting and developing their own guys, like Tyson Campbell. He has been, for the most part, pretty good so far this year and seems to be getting better each week. On the other hand, Shaq Griffin and Darious Williams have not looked good since signing here. What’s the deal with that exactly? How can two veteran guys, who have been solid in the past, just not look very good all of a sudden? Free agency is risky. You pay premium prices for players who are not being re-signed by their former team and there are usually reasons teams don’t retain their own players. The Jaguars, like most teams, are aware of this. It’s also not as if the Jaguars organizationally have ignored the position. They selected Jalen Ramsey No. 5 overall in the 2016 NFL Draft, C.J. Henderson No. 9 overall in 2020 and Tyson Campbell No. 33 overall in 2021. One of those players remains on the roster. The Jaguars’ current roster doesn’t have nearly enough drafted-developed players. It’s why they have been one of the worst teams in the NFL for nearly a decade. It must change, and not just at corner. Eric from Phoenix, AZ Do you hate overreaction Monday? I long ago cut the concept of hate from my life. It’s why I’m such a happy person. Read More Here
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O-Zone: Sheer Happiness
Jana Elementary To Close In Florissant Following Report Of Radioactive Contamination
Jana Elementary To Close In Florissant Following Report Of Radioactive Contamination
Jana Elementary To Close In Florissant Following Report Of Radioactive Contamination https://digitalarizonanews.com/jana-elementary-to-close-in-florissant-following-report-of-radioactive-contamination/ At a school board meeting Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2022, a board representative read a statement from the board and school leaders outlining plans to send Jana Elementary School students to virtual classes until they, and staff, are redistricted to other buildings. FLORISSANT — Following an independent report of radioactive contamination at Jana Elementary, the Hazelwood School District announced Tuesday night that the school will close and students will switch to virtual learning for the remainder of the current semester. By January, coinciding with the second semester of the current school year, students will be transferred to different schools in the district, officials said. “To the students, staff and parents of the Jana school community, we recognize that you are being faced with a situation not created by anyone in this room, and over which you have no control,” said School Board President Betsy Rachel, reading from prepared remarks. “This is causing a disruption to our student’s education and school environment, for that we sincerely apologize.” The announcement came at a packed meeting, where many parents expressed concern about the potential health effects on students and called for greater transparency from school officials. The decision followed calls by elected officials and others for swift action in response to the independent study. In a letter Tuesday to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., asked the agency to “immediately” review the independent report, conduct further testing on its own and explain what actions the Corps and other agencies are taking. “I emphasize that time is of the essence and delay is not acceptable,” Hawley wrote to Lt. Gen. Scott A. Spellmon. “Residents of this community have had to deal with uncertainty and changing facts for too long.” U.S. Rep. Cori Bush, D-St. Louis, called for an “immediate cleanup.” “The federal government is responsible for this waste, and we need answers,” Bush said in a press release. Last week, a report from an ongoing lawsuit was publicized, claiming radioactive waste was found at the school up to 22 times the expected level. Samples taken Aug. 15 from Jana Elementary’s library, kitchen, HVAC system, classrooms, fields and playgrounds were found “far in excess of the natural background” of radioactive isotope lead-210, polonium, radium and other toxins, according to a Boston Chemical Data Corp. report, which was produced for an ongoing lawsuit. The school, located at 405 Jana Drive and opened in 1972, sits in the flood plain of Coldwater Creek, which was contaminated by waste from the development of atomic weapons. Mallinckrodt Chemical Co. processed massive amounts of uranium ore on the Mississippi riverfront, north of downtown St. Louis, from 1942 to 1957. Tons of byproduct with residual radioactive material were shipped to a location on the northern border of the airport, next to Coldwater Creek, to be stored. It was later trucked about a mile away, to an industrial area in the 9200 block of Latty Avenue, which also borders Coldwater Creek. The sources of contamination at the main storage sites have mainly been remediated. Now the ongoing, multimillion dollar focus of the Army Corps of Engineers has been testing so Coldwater Creek can finally be cleaned up. Before emptying in the Missouri River, the creek travels through Hazelwood, Florissant, Black Jack, unincorporated St. Louis County and a sliver of Berkeley. The Corps said it found elevated samples along the creek near Jana Elementary but that that testing didn’t lead them to go closer or into the school. In an interview Monday, Phillip Moser, St. Louis program manager of the Corps’ Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program, or FUSRAP, said he stood by the FUSRAP testing in the area and would have no problem sending his own children to school there. Moser said he was “appalled” by the Boston Chemical report and questioned its conclusions. “This report could lead us to doing stuff, but we have to do an evaluation of the actual report itself,” he said. Doubts about findings Kim Visintine, who has has been following the Coldwater Creek story since before the U.S. government acknowledged there were radioactive contaminants from the Manhattan Project in the waterway, said Tuesday in a telephone interview that she also had doubts about the findings. “It should be cleaned up as swiftly as possible,” Visintine, a nurse practitioner and co-founder of the group “Coldwater Creek — Just the Facts Please,” said of the contamination at Jana Elementary. “Making accusations about responsible parties when we don’t have the full story is not helping anyone. It just delays cleanup for everybody involved. You have to find out what’s causing this. Where did this waste come from?” She said it’s not clear to her from the report that the contamination came from World War II-era waste, which is specifically funded for the remediation of Coldwater Creek. In a Tuesday telephone interview, Marco Kaltofen, who wrote the report in question, said he stands by the findings. “By far, the greatest part of the contamination we found comes from Manhattan Project waste,” he said. On Tuesday night, more than 100 people showed up at the Hazelwood School Board meeting to voice their concerns. Several people thanked the school district for closing Jana, but voiced concern during the public comments session about transparency. “We don’t blame you all, but we want to hear what’s going on because these are our babies,” Patrice Strickland told the board. She and her husband have two children at Jana who have been doing virtual learning since the district told parents in August that the school was being tested for radioactive contamination. Officials said all Jana classes will be virtual starting Monday. They plan to have students in new schools starting Nov. 28 and no later than the beginning of the second semester. “Right now, it feels like COVID all over again,” Strickland told the Post-Dispatch. Karen Nickel, of Just Moms STL, Rep. Doug Clemens, D-St. Ann and others told the board that there needs to be an emphasis on doing more testing and cleanup throughout north St. Louis County. “They are dragging their feet cleaning it up,” Clemens, chairman of the Legacy Waste Caucus of the Missouri House, told the school board. “In this time of need, we need to stick together.” Remediation effort The Jana Elementary property is one spot along 19 miles of Coldwater Creek. Though federal public health officials previously called for additional testing inside North County homes, the Corps is focused on testing and remediating within the 10-year flood plain. Corps officials have said that nearly all the lingering contamination they have found is bound between the banks, a few feet down, but that there are exceptions. Parts of St. Cin Park in Hazelwood, including a few backyards along Palm Drive, were already remediated in recent years. So was a high bank of the creek bordering Duchesne Park in Florissant. There’s an ongoing effort to remediate former baseball fields across from the airport site along McDonnell Boulevard near Boeing where children and adults used to play. Within the year, Moser said a design plan will be in place to clean up the rest of the creek based on hot spots found from their sampling. He said the cleanup of the whole creek will be done by 2038. In 2021, the Corps’ budget for the project was $34.55 million, up from $20 million in 2019. By late 2021, the Corps had tested to Old Halls Ferry Road, about 10 miles downstream. Of those 29,000 samples taken, the Corps said less than 5% were above evaluation criteria. Typically, every soil sample location has a minimum depth of 6 feet, with samples collected from the surface, then every 2 feet down. Sample locations exceed 20 feet, for instance, to target buried historic drainage. By late 2021, the Corps said it had identified at least 12 areas that will likely require remediation between Interstate 270 and the Missouri River that had been discussed with individual property owners. At the time, there were 39 areas, most of them still being defined, between McDonnell Boulevard and Interstate 270. Moser said “hundreds of properties” along the creek are not contaminated. Others are contaminated, yet not abundantly clear to the public. One of many issues raised is the lack of signage. “We are trying to respect the privacy of the landowners,” Moser said, adding: “We are also trying to remove the stigma of Coldwater Creek.” Stay up to date on life and culture in St. Louis. Read More Here
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Jana Elementary To Close In Florissant Following Report Of Radioactive Contamination
$1 Billion Debt Relief For US Farmers; Trump Deposition Today In Defamation Suit; Yankees Reach ALCS
$1 Billion Debt Relief For US Farmers; Trump Deposition Today In Defamation Suit; Yankees Reach ALCS
$1 Billion Debt Relief For US Farmers; Trump Deposition Today In Defamation Suit; Yankees Reach ALCS https://digitalarizonanews.com/1-billion-debt-relief-for-us-farmers-trump-deposition-today-in-defamation-suit-yankees-reach-alcs/ Today is Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2022. Let’s get caught up. Here are today’s top stories, celebrity birthdays and a look back at this date in history: *** TODAY’S WEATHER A chilly start for millions of Americans as temperatures drop below or near freezing, CNN meteorologist Pedram Javaheri has the latest forecast. *** MORNING LISTEN *** TOP STORIES President Joe Biden will announce the release of 15 million barrels of oil from the U.S. strategic reserve as part of a response to recent production cuts announced by OPEC+ nations. That’s according to senior administration officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to outline Biden’s plans. The Democratic president on Wednesday will say more oil sales are possible this winter, as his administration rushes to be seen as pulling out all the stops ahead of next month’s midterm elections. Biden in March authorized the release of 180 million barrels that was supposed to occur over six months. The strategic reserve now contains roughly 400 million barrels of oil, its lowest level since 1984. The federal government has announced a program to provide $1.3 billion in debt relief for about 36,000 farmers who have fallen behind on loan payments or face foreclosure. The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced the farm loan relief program funded from $3.1 billion set aside in the Inflation Reduction Act allocated toward assisting distressed borrowers of direct or guaranteed loans administered by USDA. The law was passed by Congress and signed by Biden in August. The money anounced Tuesday is the first round of payments designed to help farmers hard hit by pandemic-induced market disruptions or climate-driven natural disasters including drought stay in business or re-enter farming. The USDA says additional programs are to come. Russian strikes on energy utilities have left more Ukrainian villages, towns and parts of two cities without power. The overnight bombardments further tighten an energy squeeze on Ukraine that threatens misery for millions in winter. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy again urged Ukrainians to save power. He spoke ahead of another night where power substations and other infrastructure were pounded. A nearly two-week barrage of Russian attacks on Ukraine’s critical infrastructure comes as Russian forces are being forced back on the ground. In Kherson, among the first Ukrainian cities seized by Russian forces in the February invasion, Moscow-installed authorities are bracing for a Ukrainian push to take it back, telling residents to expect shelling and to evacuate. A new poll shows that many adults remain pessimistic about the state of U.S. democracy and the way elected officials are chosen. The results of the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research survey come nearly two years after a divisive presidential election spurred false claims of widespread fraud and a violent attack on the U.S. Capitol. The poll found that just 9% of U.S. adults think democracy is working “extremely” or “very well.” In a reversal from two years ago, Republicans are now more likely than Democrats to say democracy is not working well. Former President Donald Trump is set to answer questions under oath Wednesday as part of the defamation lawsuit brought by former magazine col… Democratic U.S. Rep. Val Demings of Florida went on the attack in her first debate against Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, accusing him of being a serial liar, while Rubio criticized her for supporting President Joe Biden’s economic agenda. Each accused the other of being an extremist on abortion. The two faced questions on topics including inflation, voting rights, gun violence, immigration and foreign policy. When asked to explain his position on abortion, Rubio skirted a question on whether he would support a federal abortion ban with no exceptions. He instead called Demings’ position extreme because she would not say what limits on abortion she would support. British Prime Minister Liz Truss is set for a House of Commons grilling as she tries to fend off calls to quit over her botched economic plan. Truss faces both a hostile opposition and members of her own furious Conservative Party when she attends Wednesday’s Prime Minister’s Questions session in Parliament. It comes two days after newly appointed Treasury chief Jeremy Hunt ripped up the tax-cutting package unveiled by the government less than a month ago. Many Conservatives want Truss to quit over the mess. But Foreign Secretary James Cleverly urged the party to give her another chance. He said “mistakes happen” but that Truss had the “humility” to change course. Iranian competitive climber Elnaz Rekabi has received a hero’s welcome on her return to Tehran. She arrived back early on Wednesday, after competing in an event in South Korea without wearing a mandatory headscarf required of female athletes from the Islamic Republic. Rekabi’s decision not to wear the hijab while competing on Sunday came as protests sparked by the Sept. 16 death in custody of a 22-year-old woman entered a fifth week. Mahsa Amini was detained by the country’s morality police over her clothing and her death has prompted women to remove their hijabs in public. An Instagram post on an account attributed to Rekabi called her not wearing the hijab “unintentional,” but fears for her safety have grown. The last man seen with Kristin Smart was convicted of killing the college freshman, who vanished from a California campus more than 25 years ago. Smart is presumed dead and her body remains missing. A jury on Tuesday found Paul Flores guilty of first-degree murder. His father, Ruben Flores, was found not guilty of being an accomplice for allegedly helping his son bury Smart’s body. San Luis Obispo prosecutors say Paul Flores killed Smart while trying to rape her in his dorm room in May 1996 when they were freshmen. At a news conference Smart’s father said that without Kristin, there was “no joy or happiness” in the verdict. A Los Angeles prosecutor says rape allegations by three women against “That ’70s Show” actor Danny Masterson contain some of the same disturbing elements. A deputy district attorney said in opening statements Tuesday that the women were either woozy or unconscious after a couple drinks or woke up to Masterson having sex with them. A defense lawyer says the allegations seem similar because the alleged victims contaminated the case by speaking with each other. The prosecutor says the women didn’t initially report the two-decade-old crimes because they feared being ostracized by the Church of Scientology where they and Masterson were members. A man with a distinctive back tattoo is suing Cardi B, with his lawyers saying he was humiliated after the rapper allegedly misused his likeness for her sexually suggestive mixtape cover art. Kevin Michael Brophy has filed a $5 million copyright-infringement lawsuit against the Grammy-winning musician in federal court in Southern California. Brophy alleges that he did not consent to such a use of his likeness.  Cardi B, who was in court and is expected to testify during the trial, is fighting the allegations. She has said an artist used only a “small portion” of the tattoos without her knowledge. Kevin Spacey has finished testifying at a civil trial resulting from an actor’s claims that the Oscar winner made a sexual pass at him when he was 14 in the 1980s. Spacey calmly answered questions Tuesday from a lawyer for 50-year-old actor Anthony Rapp. Rapp claims he suffered psychological trauma after Spacey picked him up after a party in his Manhattan apartment in 1986 and placed him on a bed before laying part of his body across Rapp’s. He’s seeking up to $40 million. Spacey testified Monday that the encounter Rapp describes never happened. On Tuesday, he calmly rejected Rapp’s lawyer’s suggestions that he was lying. Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton and their teammates hardly had time to party at Yankee Stadium after winning the AL Division Series. They had a game to play in Houston, and soon. Judge and Stanton hit home runs as the New York Yankees beat the Cleveland Guardians 5-1 Tuesday in the deciding Game 5 of the ALDS. The last out came less than 24 hours before the Yankees were set to play Game 1 of the AL Championship Series against the Houston Astros at Minute Maid Park on Wednesday night. In the NLCS, the Philadelphia Phillies take a 1-0 edge over San Diego into Game 2 at Petco Park. Stephen Curry took the microphone in the middle of Golden State’s championship ring ceremony Tuesday night to make an impassioned plea in support of Brittney Griner as the WNBA star spent her 32nd birthday in a Russian prison.The Warriors, long committed to social issues far beyond basketball, celebrated their fourth championship in eight years.Griner is awaiting a hearing in Russia later this month for her appeal of a nine-year prison sentence for drug possession. South Carolina is the unanimous No. 1 team in the preseason AP Top 25 women’s basketball poll. The defending national champions went wire-to-wire as the No. 1 team last year and have been the top team for 20 straight weeks. Stanford, Texas, Iowa and Tennessee round out the top five. UConn is sixth, the first time since 2006 that the Huskies aren’t in the first five in the preseason poll. Louisville, Iowa State, Notre Dame and N.C. State is the rest of the top 10. *** IMAGE OF THE DAY People pose at the summit cross on the top of Germany’s highest mountain ‘Zugspitze’ (2962 meters) near Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2022.  AP Photo/Matthias Schrader *** TODAY IN HISTORY In 1987, the stock market crashed as the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 508 points, or 22.6 percent in value, in what...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
$1 Billion Debt Relief For US Farmers; Trump Deposition Today In Defamation Suit; Yankees Reach ALCS
Post Politics Now: Biden Putting Gas Prices Front And Center As Midterms Loom
Post Politics Now: Biden Putting Gas Prices Front And Center As Midterms Loom
Post Politics Now: Biden Putting Gas Prices Front And Center As Midterms Loom https://digitalarizonanews.com/post-politics-now-biden-putting-gas-prices-front-and-center-as-midterms-loom/ Today, with less than three weeks remaining until the midterms, President Biden is scheduled to announce more actions to address the cost of gasoline, including plans to move ahead with releasing 15 million more barrels of oil from the nation’s stockpile known as the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Gas prices — and the cost of living more broadly — remain a potent political issue. While gas prices have dropped significantly from their summer highs, the national average for a gallon remains more than 50 cents higher than a year ago. In New York, former president Donald Trump is scheduled to be deposed Wednesday in a defamation case brought against him in 2019 by author E. Jean Carroll, who said he raped her in a department store dressing room decades ago. The case is among myriad legal challenges facing Trump as he eyes a 2024 White House bid. Your daily dashboard 12:15 p.m. Eastern: White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre briefs reporters at the White House. Watch live here. 1:15 p.m. Eastern: Biden delivers remarks from the White House on addressing gas costs. Watch live here. 3 p.m. Eastern: Biden delivers remarks from the White House on infrastructure. Watch live here. Got a question about politics? Submit it here. After 3 p.m. weekdays, return to this space and we’ll address what’s on the mind of readers. Noted: Gun owners support safety provisions, study says Return to menu A new report by a bipartisan gun safety organization found that gun owners are overwhelmingly concerned about gun violence and support a number of specific policies to reduce shootings. Writing in The Early 202, The Post’s Leigh Ann Caldwell and Theodoric Meyer relay that the report, commissioned by the 97percent group and conducted by Dr. Michael Siegal, a professor of public health at Tufts University, sought the opinion of gun owners in an attempt to measure whether this group opposes gun safety measures and backs policies that have generally been rejected as being too controversial to pass Congress. Noted: Biden’s oil release announcement today follows up on spring pledge Return to menu In the spring, President Biden pledged to released as many as 180 million barrels of oil from the nation’s stockpile known as the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, the largest-ever release. To date, the White House has released roughly 165 million barrels of oil from the reserve. Officials say the additional 15 million Biden will announce Wednesday completes the initial withdrawal. In previewing Biden’s action, The Post’s Cleve R. Wootson Jr. and Evan Halper note that the move follows an announcement this month by OPEC Plus, a coalition of oil-producing nations led by Saudi Arabia, that it will slash production by 2 million barrels per day, threatening further price increases in countries already grappling with high costs. On our radar: Trump scheduled for deposition today in defamation case Return to menu Former president Donald Trump is scheduled to be deposed Wednesday in New York in a defamation case brought against him in 2019 by an author who said he raped her in a department store dressing room decades ago. Last week, a federal judge denied Trump’s request to pause proceedings in the lawsuit by former Elle magazine columnist E. Jean Carroll. Writing last week about the judge’s decision, The Post’s Shayna Jacobs noted that Trump had recently won a temporary reprieve from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit, which sent the case to the appeals court in D.C. to resolve whether Trump was a federal employee as defined by the law when he publicly rebutted Carroll’s story. Noted: Party gatherings open a window into Biden’s mind Return to menu President Biden has a favorite line, one meant to show he knows that the combination of his voice and a microphone may get him into trouble. “No one ever doubts I mean what I say,” he’ll say. “The problem is I sometimes say all that I mean.” The Post’s Matt Viser reports there are few venues in which he says all that he means more than at Democratic Party fundraisers, when the audience is friendly and his guard is down. Per Matt: In just the past few weeks, Biden has told donors that Donald Trump and his followers are verging on “semi-fascism.” He warned that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s actions are risking nuclear “Armageddon.” He derided the Supreme Court as an “advocacy group.” He called Pakistan a highly dangerous country, and he suggested Italy is sliding into authoritarianism. All these colorful remarks were delivered in the cozy confines of political fundraisers, where cameras are not allowed, but reporters with notebooks are. The events, whose frequency has accelerated sharply ahead of the midterm elections, provide the closest thing to unvarnished views from the commander in chief. You can read the full story here. On our radar: GOP hopefuls stump for election deniers despite distancing from Trump lies Return to menu In an interview on the “Today” show earlier this month, former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley swore off campaigning for Republicans who repeat Donald Trump’s lies that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him. In fact, before and after that interview, she has endorsed and campaigned with a slate of Senate candidates who reject or question the 2020 election results as she positions herself as a potential 2024 presidential candidate, The Post’s Isaac Arnsdorf notes. Per our colleague: Haley appeared at a rally Tuesday with Don Bolduc of New Hampshire, who insisted Trump won the election and President Biden was illegitimate, though he has attempted to backtrack since the primary. She also campaigned with Adam Laxalt of Nevada, who led the Trump campaign’s efforts to overturn the results in that state. And she endorsed Ted Budd of North Carolina, who as a congressman voted against certifying the electoral college results on Jan. 6, 2021. Haley is not the only 2024 GOP hopeful who is trying to offer a contrast to Trump but still stumping for election deniers. Former vice president Mike Pence, Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas and Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan have all criticized Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election and have given signals about running against him in 2024. Still, in this year’s midterm elections, they’re all campaigning with Republicans who have thoroughly embraced Trump’s lies about 2020. You can read Isaac’s full story here. Analysis: The misleading claim that bank reports show Hunter Biden ‘committed serious crimes’ Return to menu If the Republicans win the House in the November elections, Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.) is on track to be chair of the House Oversight Committee. In a recent Fox News interview, Comer signaled that the business dealings of President Biden’s son Hunter and brother James with such countries as China, Russia and Ukraine will be the subject of intense scrutiny in a GOP-led Congress. “Hunter Biden’s committed serious crimes, as you mentioned, 150 suspicious activity reports,” Comer said. “Those are the most severe bank violations. This is when the bank notifies the federal government that we’re pretty confident our client has committed a crime. He’s had multiple banks file 150 suspicious activity reports, saying that we believe each instance was another act of a crime. But yet the FBI did nothing about it.” The latest: Key Oath Keepers witness testifies Jan. 6 plans were potentially ‘treasonous’ Return to menu A key government witness in the seditious conspiracy trial of Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes and four other members said defendants on Jan. 6, 2021, were prepared to stop Congress from confirming the 2020 election result “by any means necessary” — including armed combat — and understood their plans to be potentially “treasonous.” The Post’s Spencer S. Hsu reports that the testimony Tuesday by Jason Dolan was the first in the trial from several cooperating Oath Keepers witnesses who have pleaded guilty in the Capitol attack investigation. Per Spencer: The latest: At fiery debate, Rubio opposes gun measure he championed after Parkland Return to menu Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and challenger Rep. Val Demings (D-Fla.) clashed over abortion and gun regulations during a heated debate on Oct. 18. (Video: Reuters) Sen. Marco Rubio (R) and Rep. Val Demings (D) of Florida clashed heatedly over gun restrictions and abortion at a debate Tuesday in which Rubio disavowed one measure he embraced four years ago after a deadly Florida school shooting — a law banning 18-year-olds from buying assault-style rifles. The Post’s Hannah Knowles and Mariana Alfaro write that Rubio, the two-term Republican incumbent, said days after the mass shooting in Parkland, Fla. — at an event with student survivors — that he would support such age restrictions as well as expanded background checks on gun purchases. But at his first and only debate with Democratic challenger Demings, the senator said the law “doesn’t work” and that background checks would not have stopped the shootings the candidates argued over. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Post Politics Now: Biden Putting Gas Prices Front And Center As Midterms Loom
Donald Trumps Ignorant Four-Worded Taunt To LeBron James Once Inspired Lewis Hamilton To Get Rid Of His Complacent Mindset
Donald Trumps Ignorant Four-Worded Taunt To LeBron James Once Inspired Lewis Hamilton To Get Rid Of His Complacent Mindset
Donald Trump’s Ignorant Four-Worded Taunt To LeBron James Once Inspired Lewis Hamilton To Get Rid Of His Complacent Mindset https://digitalarizonanews.com/donald-trumps-ignorant-four-worded-taunt-to-lebron-james-once-inspired-lewis-hamilton-to-get-rid-of-his-complacent-mindset/ Every Formula 1 driver is blessed with a massive platform because of their profession. In fact, this is the case with most professional athletes. The platform only gets bigger with the popularity of the sport and the athlete’s success. Keeping that in mind, in recent times, Lewis Hamilton is standing on one of the biggest platforms in the world. ADVERTISEMENT Article continues below this ad However, everything has a positive and a negative aspect to it and the massive platform also comes with equal scrutiny. Hamilton uses his platform wisely, but there are always nay-sayers. These doubters often overlook the human aspect of the Mercedes man and limit him to a Formula 1 driver. ADVERTISEMENT Article continues below this ad Sadly, this is also the case with most athletes. Hamilton used a former US president’s comments toward NBA star LeBron James to express that. “[President Trump] told LeBron to “Shut up and dribble.” And there are those that say, “Just drive.” And the fact is, I drive on the side. I’m a human first,” Hamilton expressed in an interview with Highsnobiety. However, Hamilton understands racing has given him the ability to speak his mind and for it to reach millions. Moreover, the Brit wants to use this ability to reach the masses to do better without getting complacent about it. He added, “But the ability to use my voice and platform has come from racing. The question each year is, how can I do better with that platform? How can I use it more?” DIVE DEEPER Lewis Hamilton Remains Beacon of Change in F1 With Inspiring Off-Track Project 5 months ago Most would argue Hamilton’s work off-track with charities like Mission 44 is a perfect example of using one’s platform. However, the Brit wants to keep pushing to do better. Lewis Hamilton talks about using social media to further his agenda and make himself heard ADVERTISEMENT Article continues below this ad In today’s day and age, thanks to social media, there is a massive amount of content consumption by each individual. Relevant stories often slip out, with copious amounts of content being produced every second. Formula One F1 – Japanese Grand Prix – Suzuka Circuit, Suzuka, Japan – October 6, 2022 Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton ahead of the Japanese Grand Prix REUTERS/Issei Kato Hamilton wants to avoid that and use social media platforms efficiently. “[With social media], I’m trying to figure out how I can be more efficient with it, more impactful with it, less wasteful with it. — I’m hopeful that my message carries weight, rather than a waste,” he said. ADVERTISEMENT Article continues below this ad WATCH THIS STORY: Lewis Hamilton Jumps Off a Plane Amidst His Mental Health Woes Hamilton keeps pushing on and off the track to further his agendas. Let’s hope other athletes take inspiration from the Brit and use their platform wisely as well. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Donald Trumps Ignorant Four-Worded Taunt To LeBron James Once Inspired Lewis Hamilton To Get Rid Of His Complacent Mindset
Florida Police Cameras Show August Arrests For Alleged Voter Fraud | CNN Politics
Florida Police Cameras Show August Arrests For Alleged Voter Fraud | CNN Politics
Florida Police Cameras Show August Arrests For Alleged Voter Fraud | CNN Politics https://digitalarizonanews.com/florida-police-cameras-show-august-arrests-for-alleged-voter-fraud-cnn-politics/ CNN  —  Newly obtained police body camera video shows Tampa Police officers arresting confused and stunned convicted felons for allegedly voting illegally in the 2020 election. “I voted, but I ain’t commit no fraud,” Romona Oliver can be heard saying on police body cam video obtained from the Tampa Police Department. “I got out. The guy told me that I was free and clear to go vote or whatever because I had done my time,” she said. Oliver’s attorney says she received a voter registration card and thought she was eligible to vote. The videos, first reported by The Tampa Bay Times, provide a fresh glimpse into a far-reaching state operation earlier this summer to crack down on supposed voter fraud. On August 18, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced the Florida Department of Law Enforcement arrested 20 individuals accused of illegally voting in the 2020 election. He unveiled the charges at a celebratory news conference at the Broward County Courthouse, where he was flanked by police officers and state Attorney General Ashley Moody. “As convicted murderers and felony sex offenders, none of the individuals were eligible to vote,” DeSantis said. “They did not get their rights restored, and yet they went ahead and voted anyway,” DeSantis said at the time. “That is against the law, and now they’re going to pay the price for it.” Mark Rankin, a Tampa-based attorney, who is representing Oliver pro-bono, told CNN that Oliver served almost 20 years in state prison for a conviction for second degree murder. “She served her time and got out. And she got out around the time that Amendment 4 was passed, which affected the rights of felons to vote. Her understanding was that felons had their rights restored.” Rankin says Oliver was approached at the bus stop one day on the way to work by someone registering voters, and she told them she was a felon. The person then told Oliver that she could fill out the form and if she was eligible, she would get a voter registration card and if she wasn’t eligible, she wouldn’t get the card. Oliver received a voter registration card in the mail. She went to the Department of Motor Vehicles office later to get a new driver’s license and was sent an updated voter registration card with her new address, according to Rankin. “She was twice told by the State of Florida and the local Supervisor of Elections, ‘Here’s your voter registration card. You are, as far as we’re concerned, legally eligible to vote.’ And so she voted and she was shocked when she was arrested.” “She was shocked and upset because she thought her rights had been restored by the amendment. She didn’t know any different. And the State of Florida, she believed, was telling her that she was eligible to vote. And now she’s had the rug pulled out from under her. She never would have voted if she knew that she was ineligible,” Rankin said. Oliver pleaded not guilty to the illegal voting charge and has a trial set for December in Hillsborough County. County records show she was released on her own recognizance the same day she was arrested. The Tampa Police Department conducted arrests on behalf of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, the originating agency for the investigation, a police department spokesperson told CNN. CNN also reached out to the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office, which was involved in some of the arrests. The arrests marked the first public demonstration of the Florida Office of Election Crimes and Security, a controversial new investigative agency created this year and championed by DeSantis to probe voting irregularities. Created under a sweeping bill passed this year to overhaul voting in Florida, the office was given a staff of 15 to initiate probes and allowed DeSantis to assign 10 state law enforcement officers to help investigate election crimes. But almost immediately after the state announced the charges, questions began to surface about the arrests and whether the individuals knew they were violating the law when they cast a ballot. According to state law, it is the job of the Florida Department of State to “identify those registered voters who have been convicted of a felony” and “notify the supervisor and provide a copy of the supporting documentation indicating the potential ineligibility of the voter to be registered.” In the five counties where there were arrests, the local supervisor of elections office told CNN that the state did not inform the arrested individuals that they were ineligible to vote. DeSantis continued to defend the arrests and in a later news conference blamed some local election offices who, he said, “just don’t care about the election laws.” But the Office of Election Crimes and Security wrote a letter to an elections supervisor that the individuals voted illegally “through no fault of your own.” The letter, obtained by CNN, was sent on August 18 by Pete Antonacci, who served as the first director of the Office of Election Crimes and Security until he died September 23 after a medical episode at the Florida state Capitol. The arrests captured in police body cam footage also are illustrative of the confusion that still surrounds a successful 2018 constitutional amendment in Florida to restore the voting rights of some felons that had completed their sentences. The constitutional amendment, approved overwhelmingly by voters in a statewide referendum, said people convicted of murder and certain sex crimes were not eligible to have their rights restored. But the law that implemented the constitutional amendment specified that an ineligible felon who erroneously votes is in violation of the law if they “willfully submit any false voter registration information.” State Sen. Jeff Brandes, a St. Petersburg Republican and the sponsor of that legislation, has said on social media that most convicted felons have no intent to break the law. After the Tampa Bay Times published the body cam video, Brandes tweeted from his verified account, “Looks like the opposite of ‘willingly,’” and he suggested that state will struggle to prove its case in court. “I hope they have the courage to drop charges or go to trial and produce evidence of willful intent,” Brandes wrote. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Florida Police Cameras Show August Arrests For Alleged Voter Fraud | CNN Politics
Trump Aides Interfered With CDC's Communications With American Public To Downplay COVID Risks Report Finds
Trump Aides Interfered With CDC's Communications With American Public To Downplay COVID Risks Report Finds
Trump Aides Interfered With CDC's Communications With American Public To Downplay COVID Risks, Report Finds https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-aides-interfered-with-cdcs-communications-with-american-public-to-downplay-covid-risks-report-finds-2/ By Ciara Linnane Aides ‘overruled scientists to weaken multiple CDC guidance documents and to exploit and counteract CDC’s public health authorities to achieve political goals,’ says report Aides from the administration of former President Donald Trump interfered with communications from a leading public health agency to downplay the risks of the coronavirus pandemic, according to a damning new report published Monday. Aides “usurped control of CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) communications and blocked public health officials from providing accurate information about the coronavirus to the American people,” the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis, led by Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn, said in the 91-page report. It was the third such investigational report by the subcommittee on the previous administration’s handling of the pandemic. The first report found that Trump sought to prevent health experts from speaking publicly on the crisis and the second alleged that he engaged in a “knife fight” with the Food and Drug Administration. Officials interviewed senior leaders at the CDC including Dr. Robert Redfield, its former head, and heard that Trump officials blocked the agency from offering information to the American public early on in the pandemic. See also: Trump properties charged excessive rates to government, House Democrats say Other findings in the report include that aides: “installed political operatives who sought to downplay the seriousness of the pandemic and retaliated against career officials who contradicted Trump administration talking points; overruled scientists to weaken multiple CDC guidance documents and to exploit and counteract CDC’s public health authorities to achieve political goals; attempted to manipulate the content and block the publication of CDC’s scientific reports and destroy evidence of such political interference; and diverted taxpayer money away from CDC to inject overtly pro-Trump slogans into public service announcements about vaccines.” Redfield said the process for developing guidance “got complicated” during the pandemic and that it gave him “PTSD.” He also said in a transcribed interview for the report that White House officials in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) effectively had veto power over CDC’s coronavirus guidance, explaining: “We didn’t get the approval usually to issue the guidance until OMB gave it a thumb’s up.” Read also: COVID-era ‘baby boom’ marks the first major reversal in declining fertility rates since 2007 Clyburn told MSNBC’s “Rachel Maddow Show” on Monday that CDC scientists were “not prepared to have to deal with political interference. “Their job is to simply do the research, do the science, inform the public, and then hopefully the leadership will be there by the politicians to do what’s necessary to protect the public. Instead, they had their information supplanted and deleted and in many instances they were insulted and embarrassed.” The report comes as U.S. known cases of COVID are continuing to ease and now stand at their lowest level since mid-April, although the true tally is likely higher given how many people overall are testing at home, where the data are not being collected. The daily average for new cases stood at 37,655 on Monday, according to a New York Times tracker, down 17% from two weeks ago. The daily average for hospitalizations was down 4% at 26,413, while the daily average for deaths is down 7% to 357. Coronavirus Update: MarketWatch’s daily roundup has been curating and reporting all the latest developments every weekday since the coronavirus pandemic began Other COVID-19 news you should know about: — California’s coronavirus emergency will officially end in February, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Monday, nearly three years after the state’s first confirmed death from the disease prompted a raft of restrictions that upended public life, the Associated Press reported. “The State of Emergency was an effective and necessary tool that we utilized to protect our state, and we wouldn’t have gotten to this point without it,” Newsom said in a news release, adding that the declaration will formally end on Feb. 28. Newsom declared a state of emergency for the coronavirus on March 4, 2020, shortly after an elderly patient was the first confirmed death from the disease in California. — Indiana Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch tested positive for COVID-19 after experiencing cold-like symptoms on Monday, according to her office, the AP reported separately. Crouch said in a Twitter post that she had “mild symptoms and will continue to work for Hoosiers from home while following all of Indiana’s COVID guidelines.” Crouch was at her home in Evansville after testing positive with the COVID-19 virus for the first time, said her office spokesman, Ron Green. — China reported 951 new COVID infections for Monday, of which 250 were symptomatic and 701 were asymptomatic, Reuters reported, citing data from the National Health Commission. That compares with 921 new cases a day earlier–245 symptomatic and 676 asymptomatic infections, which China counts separately. There were no new deaths, same as a day earlier, keeping fatalities at 5,226. As of Oct. 17, mainland China had confirmed 256,268 cases with symptoms. — Researchers seeking treatments for long COVID are eager to see whether low doses of naltrexone, a generic drug typically used to treat alcohol and opioid addiction, can help, Reuters reported separately. The treatment has helped Lauren Nichols, a 34-year-old logistics expert for the U.S. Department of Transportation in Boston, who has been suffering from impaired thinking and focus, fatigue, seizures, headache and pain since her COVID-19 infection in the spring of 2020. The drug has been used with some success to treat a similar complex, post-infectious syndrome marked by cognitive deficits and overwhelming fatigue called myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). Here’s what the numbers say: The global tally of confirmed cases of COVID-19 topped 625.3 million on Monday, while the death toll rose above 6.56 million, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University. The U.S. leads the world with 96.9 million cases and 1,065,441 fatalities. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s tracker shows that 226.2 million people living in the U.S., equal to 68.1% of the total population, are fully vaccinated, meaning they have had their primary shots. Just 110.8 million have had a booster, equal to 49% of the vaccinated population, and 25.6 million of those who are eligible for a second booster have had one, equal to 39% of those who received a first booster. Some 14.8 million people have had a shot of the new bivalent booster that targets the new omicron subvariants. -Ciara Linnane (END) Dow Jones Newswires 10-19-22 0635ET Copyright (c) 2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Aides Interfered With CDC's Communications With American Public To Downplay COVID Risks Report Finds
He Was Great To Me: Trump Speaks Out In Support Of Kanye West Amid Tirades
He Was Great To Me: Trump Speaks Out In Support Of Kanye West Amid Tirades
‘He Was Great To Me’: Trump Speaks Out In Support Of Kanye West Amid Tirades https://digitalarizonanews.com/he-was-great-to-me-trump-speaks-out-in-support-of-kanye-west-amid-tirades/ Former US president Donald Trump appeared to defend rapper Kanye West on Monday after the latter’s recent controversial comments on social media, deemed by many Jewish groups antisemitic. In an interview with Trump, Salem News reporter Larry O’Connor asked the former president where he stood in regard to West’s recent controversy, which included a personal accusation against former White House senior adviser, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner. In a recent interview with Fox News host Tucker Carlson, West accused Kushner of brokering the 2020 Abraham Accords peace agreements between Israel and several Arab nations in order “to make money.” “He’s been saying some really offensive things lately about your own son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and about Jewish people. Jewish Americans writ large. Could you react to that? Because is this the guy that you knew?” O’Connor asked the former president. Trump replied by saying he hasn’t seen West’s recent comments on social media but said he did watch the Fox News interview. Get The Times of Israel’s Daily Edition by email and never miss our top stories By signing up, you agree to the terms Trump said West, who now goes by the name Ye, was always “really nice” to him. “Beyond anybody, he was. He was great to me,” Trump said. “And he was great, really, to MAGA, to the MAGA movement, which was very impressive. I was, you know, not surprised. I always got along with him. I liked him. I’ve always gotten along with him,” Trump continued. “So I don’t really know what statements he made. Sometimes he’ll make a statement and a lot of people will think it’s worse [than] he means it to be. But I think that, you know, I was certainly very, you know, what I’m talking about. He was really high on a guy named Donald Trump,” he said. Rapper Kanye West shows President Donald Trump a photograph of a hydrogen plane during a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House, October 11, 2018, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci) In one of his first tweets in two years, West wrote earlier this month: “I’m a bit sleepy tonight but when I wake up I’m going death con 3 On JEWISH PEOPLE The funny thing is I actually can’t be Anti Semitic because black people are actually Jew also You guys have toyed with me and tried to black ball anyone whoever opposes your agenda,” he wrote earlier this month, in one of his first tweets in two years. That tweet was later removed by Twitter. He’s since doubled down on his attack, saying he was “used to being screwed by the Jewish media,” that “the Jewish media blocked me out” and that “Jewish people have owned the Black voice.” Trump himself has also faced criticism from Jewish groups recently after urging Jews to “get their act together” and accusing them of not being appreciative enough of his support for Israel, in remarks posted to his social media platform Truth Social. Trump has frequently castigated US Jews for their perceived lack of gratitude and support and often conflated Israeli interests with those of American Jews. While many US Jews are generally supportive of Israel, they have consistently rejected accusations of dual loyalty toward the Jewish state, typically seen as an antisemitic canard. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
He Was Great To Me: Trump Speaks Out In Support Of Kanye West Amid Tirades
Analyst Acquitted At Trial Over Discredited Trump Dossier The National Herald
Analyst Acquitted At Trial Over Discredited Trump Dossier The National Herald
Analyst Acquitted At Trial Over Discredited Trump Dossier – The National Herald https://digitalarizonanews.com/analyst-acquitted-at-trial-over-discredited-trump-dossier-the-national-herald/ FILE – Igor Danchenko, a think tank analyst accused of lying to the FBI about his role in the creation of a discredited dossier about former President Donald Trump, leaves Albert V. Bryan United States Courthouse in Alexandria, Va., on Nov. 4, 2021. A jury on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2022, acquitted Danchenko on all counts. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File) ALEXANDRIA, Va. — A jury on Tuesday acquitted a think tank analyst accused of lying to the FBI about his role in the creation of a discredited dossier about former President Donald Trump. The case against Igor Danchenko was the third and possibly final case brought by Special Counsel John Durham as part of his probe into how the FBI conducted its own investigation into allegations of collusion between the 2016 Trump campaign and the Kremlin. The first two cases ended in an acquittal and a guilty plea with a sentence of probation. Danchenko betrayed no emotion as the verdict was read. His wife wiped away tears after the clerk read the final “not guilty” to the four counts he faced. Danchenko didn’t comment after the hearing, but his lawyer, Stuart Sears, spoke briefly to reporters, saying, “We’ve known all along that Mr. Danchenko is innocent. We’re happy now that the American public knows that as well.” The jury reached its verdict after roughly nine hours of deliberations over two days. One juror, Joel Greene of Vienna, Virginia, said there were no real disputes among the jury and that jurors just wanted to be thorough in reviewing the four counts. The acquittal marked a significant setback for Durham. Despite hopes by Trump supporters that the prosecutor would uncover a sweeping conspiracy within the FBI and other agencies to derail his candidacy, the three-year investigation failed to produce evidence that met those expectations. The sole conviction — an FBI lawyer admitted altering an email related to the surveillance of a former Trump aide — was for conduct uncovered not by Durham but by the Justice Department’s inspector general, and the two cases that Durham took to trials ended in full acquittals. Durham declined comment after the hearing, but he said in a statement issued through the Justice Department: “While we are disappointed in the outcome, we respect the jury’s decision and thank them for their service. I also want to recognize and thank the investigators and the prosecution team for their dedicated efforts in seeking truth and justice in this case.” He issued an identical statement after the first trial ended in acquittal. The Danchenko case was the first of the three to delve deeply into the origins of the “Steele dossier,” a compendium of allegations that Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign was colluding with the Kremlin. Most famously, it alleged that the Russians could have blackmail material on Trump for his supposed interactions with prostitutes in a Moscow hotel. Trump derided the dossier as fake news and a political witch hunt when it became public in 2017. Danchenko, by his own admission, was responsible for 80% of the raw intelligence in the dossier and half of the accompanying analysis, though trial testimony indicated that Danchenko was shocked and dismayed about how Steele presented the material and portrayed it as factual when Danchenko considered it more to be rumor and speculation. Prosecutors said that if Danchenko had been more honest about his sources, the FBI might not have treated the dossier so credulously. As it turned out, the FBI used material from the dossier to support applications for warrantless surveillance of a Trump campaign official, Carter Page, even though the FBI never was able to corroborate a single allegation in the dossier. Prosecutors said Danchenko lied about the identity of his own sources for the material he gave to Steele. The specific charges against Danchenko allege that he essentially fabricated one of his sources when the FBI interviewed him to determine how he derived the material he provided for the dossier. Danchenko told the FBI that some of the material came when he received an anonymous call from a man he believed to be Sergei Millian, a former president of the Russian-American Chamber of Commerce. Prosecutors said Danchenko’s story made no sense. They said that phone records show no evidence of a call, and that Danchenko had no reason to believe Millian, a Trump supporter he’d never met, was suddenly going to be willing to provide disparaging information about Trump to a stranger. Danchenko’s lawyers, as a starting point, maintain that Danchenko never said he talked with Millian. He only guessed that Millian might have been the caller when the FBI asked him to speculate. And they said he shouldn’t be convicted of a crime for making a guess at the FBI’s invitation. That said, Danchenko’s lawyers say, he had good reason to believe the caller may well have been Millian. The call came just a few days after Danchenko had reached out to Millian over email after a mutual acquaintance brokered a connection over email. And Danchenko’s lawyers say it’s irrelevant that his phone records don’t show a call because Danchenko told the FBI from the start that the call might have taken place over a secure mobile app for which he had no records. The jury began deliberations Monday afternoon after hearing closing arguments on four counts. On Friday, U.S. District Judge Anthony Trenga threw out a fifth count, saying prosecutors had failed to prove it as a matter of law. Trenga nearly threw out all of the charges before the trial began, citing the legal strength of Danchenko’s defense, but allowed the case to proceed in what he described as “an extremely close call.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Analyst Acquitted At Trial Over Discredited Trump Dossier The National Herald
Mavs At Suns GAMEDAY: Can Doncic Dinwiddie Repeat Game 7 Magic?
Mavs At Suns GAMEDAY: Can Doncic Dinwiddie Repeat Game 7 Magic?
Mavs At Suns GAMEDAY: Can Doncic, Dinwiddie Repeat Game 7 Magic? https://digitalarizonanews.com/mavs-at-suns-gameday-can-doncic-dinwiddie-repeat-game-7-magic/ The moment we’ve all been waiting for has finally arrived, as the Dallas Mavericks officially open their 2022-23 season on the road against the Phoenix Suns on Wednesday night. Although it will just be one regular-season game out of 82, there are a handful of interesting storylines that should give this one a little extra juice. The last time the Mavs and Suns met, Luka Doncic and Spencer Dinwiddie combined for 65 points in a Western Conference semifinals Game 7 blowout victory. It was the first time two teammates had each scored 30 points in a Game 7 since Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O’Neal did it for the Los Angeles Lakers in 2002. After trailing the series 2-0 and then 3-2, Doncic and the Mavs persevered and pulled off the biggest upset of the postseason. Some things have changed for both teams since that playoff series five months ago. Suns big man DeAndre Ayton and coach Monty Williams didn’t speak to each other over the summer after having a confrontation in that Game 7. Jae Crowder has made numerous trade requests, and he won’t be playing for the Suns as the franchise finds a trade partner for him. After hoping to make a big trade for Kevin Durant over the offseason, Phoenix didn’t really do anything to improve its roster when Durant and the Brooklyn Nets agreed to move forward together. As for the Mavs … they are a much bigger team now. Dallas lost Jalen Brunson to the New York Knicks in free agency, but it added Christian Wood, former Suns backup center JaVale McGee, promising rookie Jaden Hardy, and 31-year-old point guard Facu Campazzo, who is a former Real Madrid teammate of Doncic. It might take some time for the Mavs’ new pieces to build chemistry, but overall, Dallas should be in for a very successful season. WHAT TO WATCH: How will Wood perform in his Mavs debut? Coach Jason Kidd will bring Wood off the bench in a sixth-man role to start the season, and Wood has said all the right things so far when it comes to accepting his role. Although McGee will be starting, Wood will still be getting the majority of the Mavs’ center minutes, and he should be able to have his way against the Suns’ second unit. He performed extremely well on the offensive end in preseason play. Now, let’s see if he can carry that over into the regular season. RECORDS: Dallas Mavericks (0-0), Phoenix Suns (0-0) Scroll to Continue WHEN: Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2022 at 9 p.m. CT WHERE: Footprint Center (Phoenix, AZ) ODDS: The Suns are currently 4.5-point favorites over the Mavs. The O/U is 216.5. Click here for real-time betting odds updates. NEXT UP: The Mavs will fly home to Dallas for their home opener against Ja Morant and the Memphis Grizzlies. Dallas won the regular-season series against Memphis 2-1. The American Airlines Center should be rocking on Saturday night. FINAL WORD: “As long as he’s Luka, he’s always going to be in the conversation of MVP, early and often. I think he’s ready to have that season to win that,” said Kidd after Tuesday’s practice before flying to Phoenix. “He will understand the league better. With his talent, he’s always going to make his teammates better. He’s (one of) if not the best player in the world. It could be where things are a little clearer where he can see things a lot better and understand what teams are trying to do.” Want the latest in breaking news and insider information on the Mavericks? Click Here. Follow DallasBasketball.com on Twitter and Facebook. Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Mavs At Suns GAMEDAY: Can Doncic Dinwiddie Repeat Game 7 Magic?
Ukraine War: Russia Begins Evacuation From Kherson In South
Ukraine War: Russia Begins Evacuation From Kherson In South
Ukraine War: Russia Begins Evacuation From Kherson In South https://digitalarizonanews.com/ukraine-war-russia-begins-evacuation-from-kherson-in-south/ Image source, Izvestia Image caption, Russia’s Izvestia website showed footage of people gathering to cross the Dnieper river Tens of thousands of civilians and Russian-appointed officials are being moved out of Ukraine’s southern Kherson region ahead of a Ukrainian offensive, says the Russia-installed local leader. Vladimir Saldo said 50-60,000 civilians would leave four towns on the west bank of the Dnieper river in an “organised, gradual displacement”. All Russian-appointed departments in Kherson city would cross the river too. Russian TV footage showed a number of people gathering near the Dnieper. As they queued for boats, it was not clear how many were leaving. The transfer or deportation of civilians by an occupying power from occupied territory is considered a war crime. Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak pointed out it was less than a month since Russia had held a ceremony to annex Kherson: “Reality can hurt if you live in a fictional fantasy world.” Late on Monday, Russia’s new military commander in Ukraine, Gen Sergei Surovikin, had described the situation in Kherson city, the regional capital, as difficult. A Russian-installed official, Kirill Stremousov, warned Kherson residents that Ukrainian forces would launch an assault on the city “in the very near future”. “No one is going to retreat but we also want to save your life. Please move as quickly as possible to the left bank,” he added. Mr Saldo, who was appointed governor of the region by Moscow, told Russian TV that no-one was about to surrender, but it was “undesirable” for residents to remain in a city facing military action. “In the past two days, more than 5,000 people have left Kherson,” he was quoted as saying. Earlier this month, Kherson’s exiled deputy mayor said only 100,000 residents remained in Kherson city of the pre-war population of 320,000, with many fleeing Russia’s occupation. The mayor of Russian-occupied Melitopol, Ivan Fedorov, warned that Kherson’s civilians were facing enforced deportation and being deprived of their homes so that Russia could populate the city with “soldiers and traitors”. Last month, Ukraine said 2.5 million people had been forcibly deported from Ukraine to Russia. The Russian-appointed governor accused Ukraine of building up for a large-scale offensive and planning to destroy the Kakhovka dam on the River Dnieper, flooding the area. Media caption, Watch: Gen Sergei Surovikin describes the situation in Ukraine as “tense” Kherson was the first major city to fall to Russian forces when they invaded Ukraine in February. However, in just a few weeks the Ukrainian military has recaptured territory in the north of the region and pushed as far as 30km (19 miles) south along the Dnieper, threatening to trap Russian troops. As well as annexing Kherson, the Kremlin also announced last month that three other Ukrainian regions were part of Russia – a claim rejected internationally. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Ukraine War: Russia Begins Evacuation From Kherson In South
MY BODY NO CHOICE Presented By 8 Valley Theatres Pre-Election
MY BODY NO CHOICE Presented By 8 Valley Theatres Pre-Election
MY BODY NO CHOICE Presented By 8 Valley Theatres Pre-Election https://digitalarizonanews.com/my-body-no-choice-presented-by-8-valley-theatres-pre-election/ The Bridge Initiative is joining a national effort to raise awareness around the issue of women’s bodily autonomy in advance of the November midterm elections. When Roe v. Wade was overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in June, Molly Smith, Artistic Director at Arena Stage in Washington, DC, responded by commissioning monologues from eight leading playwrights. The resulting free public event, entitled My Body No Choice, will be fully staged at Arena and presented as readings at 20 universities and theatres across the country over the next few weeks. The Bridge Initiative is helping bring it to ASU Kerr in Scottsdale November 1st & 3rd at 8:00pm. “I knew I had to make a theater piece in response to this horrifying decision,” Smith said. “Now women need to change the conversation… We need to tell our stories. It’s past time.” The stories collected in My Body No Choice tackle choices ranging from pregnancy and abortion, to body size, to end of life. Ronin Theatre Company was the first to learn of the national effort and they reached out to The Bridge Initiative to partner. As the only theatre company in Arizona whose mission is dedicated to gender parity, “It was a no-brainer,” says Bridge Artistic Director Brenda Foley. She suggested the two companies invite others to join as, “I think a lot of people want to amplify this message. So many people feel silenced and sidelined right now. This project is exactly how theatre artists can best contribute to the conversation.” The eight monologues represent stories that are both fiction and nonfiction from playwrights Lee Cataluna, Fatima Dyfan, Lisa Loomer, Dael Orlandersmith, Sarah Ruhl, Mary Hall Surface, V (formerly Eve Ensler), and “Anonymous.” Bridge and Ronin will be joined by local companies B3 Theatre, Laughing Pig Theatre, Megaw Theatre and Actors’ Studio, Order Chaos Theatre Company, Southwest Shakespeare Company, and Space 55 Theatre Ensemble. Participating actors and directors include Cherylandria Banks, Lydia Corbin, Cody Goulder, Melody Knudson, Ilana Lydia, Elaine ‘EE’ Moe, and Shonda Royall, with more to be announced. CONTENT NOTE: Includes moments of great joy and laughter as well as mature themes including trauma, child abuse, and sexual assault. Open dress rehearsal Tuesday, November 1st, at 8:00 p.m. and reading performance Thursday, November 3rd, at 8:00 p.m., at ASU Kerr, 6110 N. Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale, AZ 85253. Preshow social hour at the venue. Free, $10 suggested donation, reservations at: https://cloud.broadwayworld.com/rec/ticketclick.cfm?fromlink=2204116®id=64&articlelink=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ticketmaster.com%2FASU-Kerr-Cultural-Center-tickets-Scottsdale%2Fvenue%2F204827?utm_source=BWW2022&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=article&utm_content=bottombuybutton1 Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
MY BODY NO CHOICE Presented By 8 Valley Theatres Pre-Election
ResilienX Announces Phase IIE / III SBIR Contract With NASA
ResilienX Announces Phase IIE / III SBIR Contract With NASA
ResilienX Announces Phase IIE / III SBIR Contract With NASA https://digitalarizonanews.com/resilienx-announces-phase-iie-iii-sbir-contract-with-nasa/ TruWeather, Longbow Group, Spright & PABLO AIR to Join ResilienX in Research Investigating the Impacts of Urban Winds on UAS Operations Syracuse, NY – ResilienX, Inc. announced today that they have been awarded Phase IIE and Phase III contracts by NASA to advance cutting-edge research addressing the impact of winds on uncrewed aircraft systems (UAS) operations in urban environments. The research will be centered around NASA’s Langley Research Center (LaRC) and the Hampton, VA region where NASA is hosting their High Density Vertiplex (HDV) effort, which feeds into NASA’s larger vision for Advanced Air Mobility (AAM). Under a Phase II effort, ResilienX and TruWeather Solutions (TWS), researched scalable methodologies to close the weather gap for low-altitude weather in urban environments. Phase III expands that research and demonstrates its scalability by extending from downtown Hampton, VA to the LaRC. With this expanded focus, the team will evaluate the commercial implications of closing the wind data gap, to help maximize safety and efficiency of drone operations. This research will produce a scalable method to monitor weather sensor performance, which in turn will help enable deployment of cost-effective weather sensors around urban environments. The data from these sensors will inform urban wind models, which have utility for both flight safety and efficiency. Low altitude urban wind data will assist operators in avoiding areas of high turbulence exceeding the UA performance envelope and assisting with contingency management. A key element of the Phase III research is examining the effects of wind on battery life. By performing R&D in an instrumented environment where the wind profile for an operation can be measured, research will contribute to predicting battery usage. The resulting capability will help drive efficiency of highdensity commercial operations by predicting required recharge times and enabling more multi-stop delivery routes. These efficiencies will help drive higher margins for operators who need to maximize the time the drone is in the air to make money. “Scaling infrastructure deployments of weather sensors is a hard, but necessary, task to enable scaled, urban drone operations. With UAS weather standards moving to data performance quantification rather than certified equipment, we can exponentially reduce sensor network costs,” said Andrew Carter, CTO of ResilienX. He added, “our partners are then able to use that data to inform vertiport wind conditions, flight routes, turbulent areas, safety, and battery implications. This is made possible, in part, through the ResilienX FRAIHMWORK ® monitoring the health, performance, and data integrity of these sensors and informing and assisting with down-stream decision making.” Nancy Mendonca, Deputy AAM Mission Integration Manager for the Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate (ARMD) at NASA, said “ResilienX is testing a critical safety element for performance-based weather; the ability to monitor and assess the quality of the weather observations.  Determining that a sensor is providing accurate data without sending a person out to validate the sensor’s data will be essential to cost-effective, reliable sensor networks informing uncrewed, automated advanced air mobility (AAM) operations along with today’s emergency medical evacuation, general aviation, and helicopter flights.” TWS, a global leader in UAS low altitude weather and urban wind modeling is driving disruptive weather innovation for mission-critical decisions and operations. “We need to augment weather satellite and radar data sets to improve low altitude weather accuracy by collecting high density wind, cloud ceiling and visibility measurements where drones and air taxi’s fly,” said Don Berchoff, TWS CEO and former Director of the Office of Science and Technology for the National Weather Service. “Only then can we reliably provide the operational picture required to safely navigate the urban airspace.” The Longbow Group, LLC will support ResilienX by coordinating the local planning and establish a cybersecurity architecture with NASA LaRC to get weather sensor and radar data from the NASA CERTAIN Range to Longbow’s PEGASUS Data and Operations Center. This activity will establish a secure IoT data exchange point in Hampton, Virginia, as part of a build up to a sustainable AAM ecosystem in Hampton Roads. “We are excited to work with ResilienX and its partners in this SBIR to assist in laying the foundation of a scalable and secure IoT data exchange infrastructure” said Marco Sterk, CEO of The Longbow Group. As part of the Phase III effort, ResilienX is also partnering with two leading industry operators, Spright and PABLO AIR for flight testing and validation of the research in live commercial environments. “Having the right information at the right time is what allows our decision-making to be both predictive, and if necessary, reactive, in all phases of our flight operations,” says James Rector, VP of Operations at Spright. “From mission planning to real-time monitoring in Spright’s Remote Operations Control Center (ROCC), weather is one of many associated elements we monitor using FRAIHMWORK, to ensure resiliency across our operations. Spright looks forward to working with ResilienX, NASA, and other SIBR partners to further the research and understanding of boundary layer weather and the associated effects on UAS endurance.” “This is a great project to bolster the UAS industry with a proven set of market leaders. We are excited to work with the NASA and ResilienX team to enhance the safety features of our UAS operations,” said Kim Young-Joon, PABLO AIR CEO. “This effort represents an excellent opportunity for PABLO AIR to serve as a bridge and enhance cooperation between the U.S and South Korea and set the bar for safe UAS environments globally.” “With our world-class team, we are together pushing the boundaries of the possible. It is not an exaggeration to say that the research undertaken in this project is key to unlocking the future of AAM in urban settings. The SBIR program and NASA support makes this possible,” said Ryan Pleskach, CEO of ResilienX. About ResilienX ResilienX is a software company developing safety assurance solutions for highly automated and autonomous ecosystems. Their FRAIHMWORK software platform monitors the health, integrity and performance of the systems involved in scaled BVLOS operations, enabling organizations meet the FAA’s requirements around associated elements (i.e., …in-service monitoring criteria to detect out-of-compliance performance and initiate corrective action…). Founded in 2018 in Syracuse, NY, they ensure the safe integration of UAS into existing airspace systems and transforming mobility globally. www.resilienx.com. About TWS TruWeather Solutions is a leading innovator in micro-weather sensing, modeling, and decision insights for weather-sensitive government activities, industries, and companies. TruWeather’s V360 data analytics platform is one of the few, if not only, micro-weather platform that can plug and play new sensor data, government data and crowd-sourced data on a single web application platform or API. They lead with full spectrum low altitude weather data and are changing the paradigm for how micro-weather is used to optimize UAS flight ops. www.truweathersolutions.com About Spright Spright is the drone division of Air Methods, created to help solve for many of the toughest challenges facing communities across North America. This innovative, drone-based solution is tasked with leveraging emerging aeronautical technology to create operational solutions that can be implemented locally. Based in Gilbert, AZ, Spright as a stand-alone Part 135 Operator with a leadership team that touts more than 70 years of aviation operational experience. About PABLO AIR Since its first step into the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) market in 2018 in South Korea, PABLO AIR has provided a wide array of integrated drone solutions, including UAV control system, aircraft development, and drone delivery platform and service. In addition, PABLO AIR is continuously carrying forward research and development, and commercialization at home and abroad to become a pioneer of the global UAV industry. Furthermore, with the establishment of the U.S. branch as a starting point in 2021, it has been recognized for its technological prowess in the global UAV market. https://pabloair.com About Longbow Group, LLC The Longbow Group LLC is a privately-held, international aviation services company based in Hampton, Virginia. The company has a multi-year Space Act Agreement with NASA to develop BVLOS UAS flight corridors in Hampton Roads and over the Chesapeake Bay reaching across to Eastern Shore. It operates the Unmanned Systems Research and Technology Center (USRTC) on Fort Monroe to conduct and support UAS and UAM/AAM research flights. www.USRTC.org Post navigation Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
ResilienX Announces Phase IIE / III SBIR Contract With NASA
It May Be Her First Campaign But Building Blocks Of Leavitts Politics Were Laid Years Ago
It May Be Her First Campaign But Building Blocks Of Leavitts Politics Were Laid Years Ago
It May Be Her First Campaign, But Building Blocks Of Leavitt’s Politics Were Laid Years Ago https://digitalarizonanews.com/it-may-be-her-first-campaign-but-building-blocks-of-leavitts-politics-were-laid-years-ago/ Published October 19, 2022 at 5:45 AM EDT Karoline Leavitt’s first job after graduating college in 2019 was a big one: working in the White House press office for President Donald Trump. The goal of that office during the former president’s term was to present a counter-narrative to any critical coverage. Being a spokesperson, in some ways, is the opposite of what Leavitt once thought she’d do as a career: reporting on the news, not making it. “I was always infatuated with the news,” Leavitt told the Highlight Her podcast earlier this year. “Like, growing up, my family still has home videos of me pretending to be a reporter.” Those news anchor ambitions would eventually be sidelined, but her ability to communicate effectively, paired with an unstinting conservativism formed in the mold of her former boss and a self-described outsider image, helped fuel Leavitt’s surprise victory in a crowded GOP primary field for New Hampshire’s 1st Congressional District this year. Now, she is now set to take on incumbent Democrat Chris Pappas in what polling shows is a tight race less than three weeks until Election Day. (Leavitt’s campaign did not respond to an interview request for this story.) It has been a rapid rise for Leavitt, 25, who grew up in Atkinson scooping chocolate at her family’s ice cream stand. As a communications major at St. Anselm College, which she originally attended on a softball scholarship, she founded the school’s first broadcasting club in 2017, working with other students to cover college news and local sports. The club also provided Leavitt with her first chance to do something she would regularly do as a candidate: go on camera to defend and support the policies of President Trump. “People are hash tagging Muslim ban. This isn’t a Muslim ban,” Leavitt said during a Jan. 31 2017 episode of the SAC Broadcasting Station. “It’s a ban on seven Middle Eastern states that are basically war torn countries.” Todd Bookman/NHPR / Leavitt greets her supporters outside of Estey’s General Store in Londonderry. During her time on campus, Leavitt interned at WMUR, New Hampshire’s only statewide network television station, and also wrote op-eds for the school’s newspaper, the St. Anselm Crier, where she took aim at the “liberal media” and criticized her professors for criticizing the president. Leavitt would later describe herself as the “token conservative” on campus, a status that, whether accurate or not at the Catholic college, only seems to have given her more resolve to speak out. “I was a conservative, and certainly our higher education university is definitely left leaning, professors and students alike,” she told Highlight Her. “So I really had to be more brave than I ever was and standing up for what I believed in in classes where I was the only student who felt that way.” If her time on campus served as a political awakening of sorts, it also coincided with the beginning of the Trump era of Republican politics. As a college freshman, she attended a Trump rally in her hometown, where she gave a supportive quote to the Boston Globe. As a candidate herself, she has made complete loyalty to the former president part of her political brand, including repeating false claims that Trump was the rightful winner of the 2020 election. Woven tightly with those conservative political convictions are Leavitt’s religious ones. She talks about her Catholic education as formative for her spirituality, including in an interview with the Catholic Current podcast. “Central Catholic High School was an incredible place,” she told Father Robert McTeigue, describing her alma mater in Lawrence, Mass. “It taught me discipline. It brought me closer in my own relationship with God, and it also taught me the importance of public service and giving back to your community.” Those same values–faith, family, opposition to abortion rights–now help drive her political campaign for Congress, her first run for elected office. “This is a challenge that I’ve thrown myself into,” she said on the podcast. “And my faith in God carries me through. I wake up everyday and say my prayers and ask God to give me the strength I need to power through another day on a very difficult campaign trail.” Todd Bookman/NHPR / Leavitt during a GOP primary debate in September on the campus of New England College in Henniker (file photo) That campaign is about to get more intense. Leavitt and Pappas are scheduled to debate later this week. At 42-years old, Pappas himself is young by New Hampshire political standards, but he’s held various offices for two decades, rising the political ranks from local and county positions to now seeking a third term in Congress. Still, Neil Levesque, who directs St. Anselm’s Institute of Politics and says he served as something of a mentor for Leavitt during her time on campus, says her relative lack of experience may not hurt her. “She’s a young person, I think everyone recognizes that, but she is very capable of doing things that most people would probably say, ‘You need to wait your turn,’ ” Levesque said. She’s trying to make some history along the way, too. If elected at 25-years old, an age where the experiences of high school and college are still fresh, Leavitt would be the youngest woman ever elected to Congress. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
It May Be Her First Campaign But Building Blocks Of Leavitts Politics Were Laid Years Ago
New Georgia Poll Of Likely Hispanic Voters Finds Abrams And Kemp Knotted Walker Leading Warnock Georgia Recorder
New Georgia Poll Of Likely Hispanic Voters Finds Abrams And Kemp Knotted Walker Leading Warnock Georgia Recorder
New Georgia Poll Of Likely Hispanic Voters Finds Abrams And Kemp Knotted, Walker Leading Warnock – Georgia Recorder https://digitalarizonanews.com/new-georgia-poll-of-likely-hispanic-voters-finds-abrams-and-kemp-knotted-walker-leading-warnock-georgia-recorder/ When Raysa Aragon immigrated to the United States at the age of 38, living under the tyrannical regime of Cuban dictator Fidel Castro was more than enough to deter her from blindly joining a political party.  For the next several decades, the 66-year-old retired interpreter and Clayton County resident voted for the candidates she thought were most suitable for office, but she was more ideologically aligned with ideals of independence and smaller government typically associated with Republicans. This week, when Aragon voted for the midterm elections, her bitter dissatisfaction with former Republican President Donald Trump prompted her to vote for a Democratic candidate for governor, U.S. Senate, secretary of state, lieutenant governor and attorney general.  During Trump’s term in office, Aragon was turned off by his actions and subsequent false claims of a stolen 2020 presidential election. This week, she voted for candidates in Georgia who promise to promote better medical care, education, and abortion rights. “America is in a civil war with our civil rights being crushed,” Aragon said. “Our individual rights are taken away. This is a war and you have to vote for a party who’s against that.” Aragon is one of 309 self-identified Hispanic and Latino likely voters who expressed their preferences on candidates and issues. Georgia’s Hispanic population is the fastest growing demographic and now accounts for a little less than 5% of registered voters. The text-to-web survey was conducted in English by the University of Georgia’s School of Public and International Affairs Survey Research Center and commissioned by several newsrooms as part of the Georgia News Collaborative.  The survey results reveal that the races for U.S. Senate, governor, secretary of state and attorney general are too close to call right now among Hispanic voters. It differs in some significant ways with the coalition’s poll of a larger pool of likely Georgia voters conducted in late September and early October that sampled the overall population. While 58% of respondents identified themselves as Democrats, 39% as Republicans, and 8% as independents, Hispanic voters are more likely to crossover than other demographics. It is more likely that women will vote for Democratic candidates and that their vote will be swayed by abortion rights issues than Hispanic men. The poll surveyed contains a margin of error of 5.6 points. Republican Gov. Brian Kemp is trailing Democratic nominee Stacey Abrams by 1%, with Abrams 49% to Kemp’s 48%. Meanwhile, GOP U.S. Senate candidate Herschel Walker received 47% of support from the likely Hispanic voters compared to 41% for Democrat U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock.  The respondents slightly favored the Republican candidates for secretary of state and attorney general while in the race for lieutenant governor, Republican Sen. Burt Jones holds an 11% advantage among Hispanic voters over Democratic challenger and former prosecutor Charlie Bailey. Additionally, Hispanic voters are more likely than other minorities to choose candidates from different political parties on the same ballot and the polls revealed that Republican candidates like Kemp and Raffensperger have much stronger support from likely Hispanic voters who are moderates and Democrats. The survey also covered the reaction to the Supreme Court overturning Roe vs. Wade and the 2019 law passed by Georgia Republican legislators that would ban most abortions after fetal cardiac activity is detected, potentially as early as six weeks into pregancy and before many women know they are pregnant. Women, at 65 percent, said they wanted to elect candidates who pledged to protect abortion compared to 38 percent of Hispanic men. The rising prices for gas and food were having a significant impact on 63% of respondents, but only 18% of liberal respondents said it reached that level of pain and 59% said it was noticeable. Gilda Pedraza, executive director of Latino Community Fund, said getting more poll results about Hispanic and Latino voters is positive. Overall, the results demonstrate that no political party should take Hispanic voters for granted and should be willing to engage in what they desire, Pedraza said. “I think they are very smart and they vote for whatever platform or candidate that speaks to their needs with the hope that change will elevate their daily lives,” Pedraza said. Since the poll is only for likely voters, it doesn’t represent a large segment of the Hispanic community that is undocumented or the voter rolls use from two years ago don’t reflect the population growth of groups like the Puerto Rican evacuees. Also,more voters might have responded if the poll was also available in Spanish and not only through text to web. Our stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our web site. Please see our republishing guidelines for use of photos and graphics. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
New Georgia Poll Of Likely Hispanic Voters Finds Abrams And Kemp Knotted Walker Leading Warnock Georgia Recorder
Many Remain Critical Of State Of US Democracy: AP-NORC Poll
Many Remain Critical Of State Of US Democracy: AP-NORC Poll
Many Remain Critical Of State Of US Democracy: AP-NORC Poll https://digitalarizonanews.com/many-remain-critical-of-state-of-us-democracy-ap-norc-poll/ WASHINGTON (AP) — Many Americans remain pessimistic about the state of U.S. democracy and the way elected officials are chosen — nearly two years after a divisive presidential election spurred false claims of widespread fraud and a violent attack on the U.S. Capitol. Only about half of Americans have high confidence that votes in the upcoming midterm elections will be counted accurately, according to a new poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, though that’s an improvement from about 4 in 10 saying that just before the 2020 presidential election. Just 9% of U.S. adults think democracy is working “extremely” or “very well,” while 52% say it’s not working well. In a reversal from two years ago, Republicans are now more likely than Democrats to say democracy is not working well. This year, 68% of Republicans feel this way compared with 32% two years ago. The share of Democrats with a sour outlook on how democracy is functioning in the U.S. dropped from 63% to 40%. Ronald McGraw Sr., 67, of Indianapolis, is a retired construction worker who recently registered to vote and intends to cast a ballot for the first time this year. “I thought I’d let everybody else put their vote in and just go with the flow, but this whole thing is at stake now,” he said, referring to democracy, the economy, ”everything, how the whole country runs.” FILE – Supporters of then-President Donald Trump gather for a rally on Jan. 6, 2021, at the Ellipse near the White House in Washington. A new poll shows that many Americans remain pessimistic about the state of their democracy and the way elected officials are chosen. The results of the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research survey come nearly two years after a divisive presidential election spurred false claims of widespread fraud and a violent attack on the U.S. Capitol. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File) Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS/Jose Luis Magana FILE – A poll worker stamps a vote-by-mail ballot at a ballot drop-off location at the Miami-Dade Elections Department during the primary election, Aug. 23, 2022, in Doral, Fla. A new poll shows that many Americans remain pessimistic about the state of their democracy and the way elected officials are chosen. The results of the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research survey come nearly two years after a divisive presidential election spurred false claims of widespread fraud and a violent attack on the U.S. Capitol. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky, File) Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS/Lynne Sladky FILE – Voters wait in line outside the Richland County election office on the first day of in-person absentee voting in South Carolina on Oct. 5, 2020, in Columbia, S.C. A new poll shows that many Americans remain pessimistic about the state of their democracy and the way elected officials are chosen. The results of the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research survey come nearly two years after a divisive presidential election spurred false claims of widespread fraud and a violent attack on the U.S. Capitol. (AP Photo/Meg Kinnard, File) Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS/Meg Kinnard PreviousNext McGraw, who is Black and considers himself a moderate, said a big concern is the political turmoil in the country and the fact that he sees too many self-serving politicians concerned with power, especially those who work against the interest of minorities. He said he registered as a Republican but did not give any thought to party platforms or stances at the time. “I am paying attention now,” he said. After every presidential election, members of the losing candidate’s party can experience a letdown. The fallout from the 2020 election has been deeper, fueled by the lies from former President Donald Trump and his allies that Democrats stole the election. There is no evidence of widespread fraud or manipulation of voting machines. Exhaustive reviews in key states upheld Democrat Joe Biden’s win, while judges — including some appointed by Trump — dismissed numerous lawsuits challenging the outcome. Trump’s own attorney general, William Barr, called the claims bogus. The general despair over democracy comes after decades of increasing polarization nationwide, from the presidential and congressional races down to local contests such as races for school boards. Overall, just a quarter of U.S. adults — including similar percentages of Republicans and Democrats — say they are optimistic about the way leaders are chosen, while 43% say they are pessimistic. An additional 31% feel neither. Adam Coykendall, a 31-year-old social studies teacher from Ashland, Wisconsin, said he sees party loyalties driving lawmakers more than the good of the country. “I feel like everything is becoming a little more divisive, a little more polarized, more focused on party loyalty … rather than working for your constituency, having things that work for people rather than working for the party,” said Coykendall, who described himself as an independent who leans toward the Democratic Party. The AP-NORC poll also found a large segment of Republicans, 58%, still believe Biden’s election wasn’t legitimate. That’s down slightly from 66% in July 2021. Gary Phelps, a 70-year-old retired truck driver in Clearwater, Minnesota, accepts Biden is president but doesn’t think he was legitimately elected. Phelps said he was concerned about voter fraud, mail ballots being received and counted after Election Day, and irregularities with some voting machines, although he acknowledged it’s based on his feeling rather than evidence. Phelps remains concerned about the voting process and whether the tallies will be accurate. “I would hope so, but I don’t think so,” the Republican-leaning independent said. The poll shows 47% of Americans say they have “a great deal” or “quite a bit” of confidence that the votes in the 2022 midterm elections will be counted accurately. Confidence is highest among Democrats, 74% of whom say they’re highly confident. On the Republican side, confidence in elections is decidedly mixed: 25% have high confidence, 30% have moderate confidence and 45% have little to no confidence. That erosion of trust comes after two years of Trump and his allies promoting lies about the 2020 presidential election and peddling conspiracy theories about voting machines. Narratives about mailed ballots mysteriously changing vote totals have been one persistent source of misinformation. To be clear, results announced on election night are unofficial and often incomplete. It’s normal for counting to continue several days after Election Day, as mailed ballots received by their deadline are processed and added to the tally. In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic led to a surge of mailed balloting as voters opted to avoid crowded polling stations. A large number of those ballots slowed down the results as local election offices worked through the steps to verify the ballots and ensure they matched registered voters. Julie Duggan, a 31-year-old police officer from Chicago, is among the Republicans who does not believe Biden’s win was legitimate. She said watching his gaffes and missteps, it was impossible to believe he garnered enough support to win. She is concerned about the country’s direction, citing inflation, illegal immigration, crime rates and a lack of respect for law enforcement. “If we don’t get the right people in, we will be at the point of no return,” she said, adding she hopes elections will be run fairly but has her doubts. “My confidence has definitely been shaken.” ___ The poll of 1,121 adults was conducted Oct. 6-10 using a sample drawn from NORC’s probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus or minus 3.8 percentage points. ___ Cassidy reported from Atlanta. Associated Press writers Hannah Fingerhut in Washington and Nuha Dolby in New York contributed to this report. ___ Follow the AP’s coverage of the midterm elections at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections. 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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Many Remain Critical Of State Of US Democracy: AP-NORC Poll
Trump Era DOJ Lawyer Clark Asks US Court To Block Discipline (1)
Trump Era DOJ Lawyer Clark Asks US Court To Block Discipline (1)
Trump Era DOJ Lawyer Clark Asks US Court To Block Discipline (1) https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-era-doj-lawyer-clark-asks-us-court-to-block-discipline-1/ By David McAfee Former Trump Justice Department official Jeffrey Bossert Clark asked a federal court to intervene in and block disciplinary charges brought against him over claims he attempted to help overturn the 2020 election. Clark, who announced last year he would head up strategic litigation efforts at a civil rights nonprofit after serving as top environmental lawyer under the Trump administration, was accused of attempting to engage in dishonesty in connection with his 2020 election advice to Trump. Counsel to Clark said the case doesn’t belong before the D.C. Board of Professional Responsibility. “Mr. Clark is in front of the DC Bar’s … To read the full article log in. © 2022 The Bureau of National Affairs, Inc. All Rights Reserved Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Era DOJ Lawyer Clark Asks US Court To Block Discipline (1)
Trump Knew His Letters To Kim Jong Un Were Classified And 'so Top Secret': Bob Woodward
Trump Knew His Letters To Kim Jong Un Were Classified And 'so Top Secret': Bob Woodward
Trump Knew His Letters To Kim Jong Un Were Classified And 'so Top Secret': Bob Woodward https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-knew-his-letters-to-kim-jong-un-were-classified-and-so-top-secret-bob-woodward/ North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Former US President Donald Trump inside the demilitarized zone (DMZ) separating the South and North Korea on June 30, 2019 in Panmunjom, South Korea.Dong-A Ilbo via Getty Images/Getty Images) Trump told journalist Bob Woodward in 2020 that the letters he wrote to Kim were “so top secret.” In his upcoming audiobook, Woodward wrote that Trump was cagey about showing him the letters. The letters to Kim were among the classified files Trump brought to Florida, per The Washington Post. Former President Donald Trump indicated during an interview in January 2020 that he knew the letters he wrote to Kim Jong Un were top secret. From 2016 to 2020, veteran journalist Bob Woodward spoke to Trump in 20 interviews. Now, Woodward is releasing over eight hours of Trump interviews in an upcoming audiobook, “The Trump Tapes: Bob Woodward’s Twenty Interviews with President Trump.” Among the topics they discussed were the letters to Kim, which Trump once described as love letters. In a December 2019 conversation, Trump was cautious about showing Woodward the letters he wrote to the North Korean leader. A month later, when Woodward again asked Trump if he could see the letters, Trump said the letters were “so top secret,” per The Washington Post’s reporting of Woodward’s notes from the call. Woodward viewed the Kim letters at a later date, and dictated their contents into a voice recorder, per an audio clip aired on CNN on Tuesday. In the clip, Trump can be heard telling Woodward to refrain from publicizing that it was Trump himself who had shown the letters to him. “Nobody else has them, but I want you to treat them with respect,” Trump told Woodward, per CNN. “Don’t say I gave them to you. Okay?” The National Archives and Records Administration, or NARA, removed 15 boxes of documents from Mar-a-Lago in January. The Kim letters were among the documents. Some of the other files had classification markings on them, which raised alarm bells at NARA about how much protected material Trump took with him to his Florida residence. The FBI is probing whether Trump broke any of three federal laws — including the Espionage Act — by keeping the documents at his Florida residence. The FBI seized a cache of classified documents, including some marked “top secret” when it raided Mar-a-Lago on August 8. Woodward’s account that Trump knew the files were declassified appears to contradict the former president’s many defenses. Trump’s lawyer, Pat Philbin, claimed to NARA in 2021 that the boxes found at Mar-a-Lago contained only news clippings. For his part, Trump baselessly claimed in September that the documents found by NARA were already declassified — and that he has the power to declassify documents just by thinking about doing so. A representative at Trump’s post-presidential press office did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment. Read the original article on Business Insider Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Knew His Letters To Kim Jong Un Were Classified And 'so Top Secret': Bob Woodward
Russian Commander Warns Of Tenuous Control Over Southern Stronghold
Russian Commander Warns Of Tenuous Control Over Southern Stronghold
Russian Commander Warns Of Tenuous Control Over Southern Stronghold https://digitalarizonanews.com/russian-commander-warns-of-tenuous-control-over-southern-stronghold/ Current time in: Moscow Oct. 19, 10:47 a.m. Washington Oct. 19, 3:47 a.m. Image A destroyed Russian military vehicle near Mykolaivka in Ukraine’s Kherson region this month.Credit…Nicole Tung for The New York Times The commander of the Russian invasion said on Tuesday that his army might face “hard decisions” about its tenuous hold over the strategically important Ukrainian region of Kherson, just minutes after a top Moscow-appointed official there announced an evacuation of civilians from four occupied districts. Gen. Sergei Surovikin, the top Russian commander in Ukraine, acknowledged in a rare interview that the situation in the Kherson region has been “difficult” after the Ukrainian army damaged two key connections to other Russian occupied territory. For weeks, Ukrainian forces have been advancing slowly toward the regional capital, the city of Kherson, in a counteroffensive aimed at driving the Russians back across the Dnipro River. In a video statement, Vladimir Saldo, the head of the regional occupation administration, said that residents would be evacuated from four districts on the west side of the Dnipro River. Mr. Saldo — who was appointed governor of the Kherson region by the Kremlin shortly after Russia formally annexed the territory at the end of September — cited the risk of shelling and the need for Russia to build defensive lines to repel an expected Ukrainian attack. General Surovikin, in his first public remarks since he was appointed as head of the Russian military force in Ukraine on Oct. 8, said that the Russian Army would assist the evacuation and stressed the challenging conditions his forces face — with a tacit acknowledgment that a retreat from the city of Kherson might be necessary. “Our future plans and actions regarding the city of Kherson will depend on the unfolding military-tactical situation,” he said in a televised statement. “I repeat — today it is already quite difficult.” The announcements underscored Russia’s precarious hold on the strategically important swath of Ukrainian land that allows the Russian forces to operate on the western side of the Dnipro River, which divides the country into two. That control allows Russia to threaten the rest of the Ukrainian-controlled Black Sea coast, including the symbolic city of Odesa. But advancing Ukrainian forces have severed the bridges that were used to resupply and reinforce Russian troops on the west bank of the Dnipro River. Ukraine has coveted the liberation of Kherson since the first weeks of the war, when the city became the only regional capital to fall to Russian forces since the invasion began. But as Ukrainian forces push closer to the city limits, they face a conundrum: Unlike the Russian military, which appears to have no qualms about targeting infrastructure and killing civilians to achieve its war aims, Ukraine would like to avoid destroying Kherson in the process of recapturing it. If Russian forces put up a concerted fight to keep the city, Ukraine might hesitate to use all of its firepower. Pro-Russian military bloggers — an increasingly vocal group in Russia — praised General Surovikin for being frank about the challenges in Kherson. Many interpreted his statement as a sign that Russia might be preparing for a large-scale battle, while others said it could be a sign of a coming retreat. “There are three options here: Either our forces would dig in where they are, or they would retreat to the city of Kherson, trying to engage the enemy in street fighting,” said Vladlen Tatarsky, a popular blogger. “Or they would evacuate.” Image A protest outside the Iranian Embassy in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Monday.Credit…Brendan Hoffman for The New York Times WASHINGTON — Iran has sent trainers to occupied Ukraine to help Russians overcome problems with the fleet of drones that they purchased from Tehran, according to current and former U.S. officials briefed on the classified intelligence, a further signal of the growing closeness between Iran and Russia since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. The Iranian trainers are operating from a Russian military base in Crimea where many of the drones have been based since being delivered from Iran. The trainers are from the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, a branch of the Iranian military designated as a terrorist organization by the United States. In recent days, the Iranian drones have become an important weapon for Russia, which has used them as part of the broad strikes across Ukraine against electrical infrastructure and other civilian targets. The deployment of the Iranian trainers appears to coincide with the stepped-up use of the drones in Ukraine and indicates a deeper involvement by Iran in the war. “Sending drones and trainers to Ukraine has enmeshed Iran deeply into the war on the Russian side and involved Tehran directly in operations that have killed and injured civilians,” said Mick Mulroy, a former senior Pentagon official and retired C.I.A. officer. “Even if they’re just trainers and tactical advisers in Ukraine, I think that’s substantial,” Mr. Mulroy said. The United Nations’ human rights body has said that deliberate strikes on such civilian targets could constitute war crimes. Image Arne Schönbohm was removed from his role as head of Germany’s Federal Office for Information Security on Tuesday.Credit…Henning Kaiser/picture alliance, via Getty Images BERLIN — The German government has removed the official responsible for keeping the country safe from cyberattacks over reports that he kept in touch with a lobbying group that had links to Russian intelligence. The move comes as Russia’s war against Ukraine has increased fears over cybersecurity. The Interior Ministry confirmed on Tuesday the dismissal of Arne Schönbohm, who had led the Federal Office for Information Security since 2016. The accusations of possible ties to Russian intelligence, which were reported this month by a German satirical news show, “have permanently damaged the necessary public trust in the neutrality and impartiality” of Mr. Schönbohm, a spokeswoman for the ministry said. The dismissal comes after ZDF Magazin Royal reported that Mr. Schönbohm had kept contact with a lobbying group he co-founded a decade ago that included at least one Russian cybersecurity company founded by a Russian intelligence agent as a member even after Russia invaded Ukraine. The group cut ties with the Russian company three days after the show aired. The show did not link Mr. Schönbohm directly with Russian intelligence, though the current president of the lobbying group acknowledged such contacts. Mr. Schönbohm did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but the German newsmagazine Der Spiegel quoted him as saying that he had asked this week for disciplinary proceedings to clear up the issue. The Interior Ministry said that the accusations “would be thoroughly and vigorously investigated” and that he was “presumed innocent.” Mr. Schönbohm’s removal comes amid fears of attacks on German infrastructure. After attacks on the idled gas pipeline connecting Russia and Germany and targeted sabotage of a communication system used by the rail system, the federal police have intensified their focus on infrastructure. Image Brittney Griner, who has been detained in Russia since February, in Khimki, Russia, in August.Credit…Evgenia Novozhenina/Reuters Brittney Griner, the American basketball star who has been detained in Russia since February, sent a message of thanks to her supporters on Tuesday — her 32nd birthday. According to a statement from two of her lawyers in Russia, Maria Blagovolina and Alexander Boykov, Ms. Griner said: “Thank you everyone for fighting so hard to get me home. All the support and love are definitely helping me.” The lawyers said they had met with Ms. Griner for several hours on Tuesday and relayed messages from well-wishers. “Today is of course a difficult day for Brittney,” they said, adding that she was “very stressed” in anticipation of a hearing over the appeal of her conviction on drug charges, which is scheduled for Oct. 25. Ms. Griner told her lawyers last week that she was not optimistic about the chances of her being freed before serving her full nine-year sentence and that she was struggling emotionally. Ms. Griner is allowed outside once a day, according to Mr. Boykov, during which she walks for an hour in a small courtyard at the penal colony outside Moscow where she is being held. She spends the rest of her time in a small cell with two cellmates, sitting and sleeping on a specially elongated bed to accommodate her 6-foot-9 frame. While she awaits the appeals court hearing, Mr. Boykov said, Ms. Griner struggles in large part because it is “very difficult” to speak to her relatives. He added that it had been very difficult to organize phone calls with Ms. Griner’s wife, Cherelle, and that she had been unable to speak to her parents or siblings since her detention, as far as he was aware. Last Wednesday, President Biden said that there had been no movement with the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin, over Ms. Griner’s case. A White House official said last week that the administration was trying “every available channel” with Moscow, including the one through which U.S. officials arranged a prisoner swap in April to secure the release of Trevor Reed, a former Marine who had been serving a nine-year prison sentence in Russia. Ms. Griner was stopped in February at an airport near Moscow on her way to play for UMMC Yekaterinburg, a Russian professional women’s basketball team. Customs officials said that she had been carrying two vape cartridges with hashish oil in her luggage. In August, she was sentenced to nine years in prison after a trial that was all but assured to end in a con...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Russian Commander Warns Of Tenuous Control Over Southern Stronghold
Inflation In Britain Hits 10.1 Percent Driven Higher By Food Prices
Inflation In Britain Hits 10.1 Percent Driven Higher By Food Prices
Inflation In Britain Hits 10.1 Percent, Driven Higher By Food Prices https://digitalarizonanews.com/inflation-in-britain-hits-10-1-percent-driven-higher-by-food-prices/ Business|Inflation in Britain Hits 10.1 Percent, Driven Higher by Food Prices https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/19/business/uk-prices-inflation-september.html After easing slightly the previous month, inflation continued rising in September, heightening the country’s cost-of-living crisis. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. Oct. 19, 2022Updated 3:26 a.m. ET Consumer prices in Britain rose 10.1 percent in September from a year earlier, continuing their steep climb as the nation grapples with rapidly increasing food prices, high energy costs and political uncertainty. The annual inflation rate returned to its fastest pace since 1982, matching the pace set in July. It rose from 9.9 percent in August. Inflation was expected to peak next month, at a slightly higher rate, but a reversal in the government’s policy to hold down household energy bills has made the future path of prices even more uncertain. Prices were pushed higher by large increases in the cost of food and, to a lesser extent, at restaurants and hotels, in September. Food prices rose 14.5 percent last month from a year earlier, the largest annual rise in more than 40 years, according to the Office for National Statistics. High energy costs were still contributing to inflation growing at its fastest pace in decades. But price increases are widespread across goods and services, so core inflation, which excludes food and energy prices, rose 6.5 percent from a year earlier, up from 6.3 percent in August. It’s another sign of the stickiness of inflation that politicians and policymakers are facing all over the world. That is encouraging central bankers to go for steeper increases in interest rates, in an effort to send a firm message that they will get inflation back down and won’t let rapid price increases become entrenched in the economy. But constantly changing fiscal policies, as governments try to support households through increases in the cost of living, are also complicating the picture. Just under six weeks ago, Prime Minister Liz Truss of Britain pledged to freeze household energy bills, one of the biggest sources of inflation increases, from October for the next two winters. This week, much of Ms. Truss’s economic agenda was scrapped by Britain’s new finance minister, Jeremy Hunt, as he tried to restore calm in financial markets, which had seemingly stopped believing in the government’s fiscal credibility. One victim of Mr. Hunt’s policy reversal was Ms. Truss’s landmark policy on energy bills; now Britons are guaranteed a freeze on their bills only until April. After that the government said it would come up with a less expensive and more targeted plan to help people with their bills. If households had to return to paying a price cap set by market prices through Ofgem, the government’s energy regulator, the headline rate of inflation would increase by about five percentage points, economists at Pantheon Macroeconomics wrote in a research note this week. But, they said, it’s too soon to forecast what is most likely to happen as the government is still devising a new plan to help with bills beyond April. The Bank of England has been raising interest rates since December to tackle inflation. At its past two meetings it raised rates by half a percentage point, double its previous moves, amid signs of broadening inflationary pressures, especially in the labor market, where wages are rising and large numbers of people are staying out of the work force. While the central bank is expected to keep raising interest rates for several more months, analysts question how high rates can go and how long the increases will continue as the British economy slows down. High inflation is squeezing household budgets and there are growing predictions that the economy will contract next year amid a decline in consumer spending. The International Monetary Fund predicted the British economy would go from 3.6 percent growth this year to a 0.3 percent contraction next year “as high inflation reduces purchasing power and tighter monetary policy takes a toll on consumer spending and business investment.” Traders are currently betting the central bank will raise interest rates above 5 percent next year, from 2.25 percent. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Inflation In Britain Hits 10.1 Percent Driven Higher By Food Prices