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Post Politics Now: Biden Heads West With Eye On Boosting Fellow Democrats
Post Politics Now: Biden Heads West With Eye On Boosting Fellow Democrats
Post Politics Now: Biden Heads West With Eye On Boosting Fellow Democrats https://digitalarizonanews.com/post-politics-now-biden-heads-west-with-eye-on-boosting-fellow-democrats/ Today, President Biden heads west on a trip heavily focused on bolstering fellow Democrats in advance of next month’s midterm elections. His first stop is Colorado, where he plans to designate Camp Hale as a new national monument, delivering on a key priority for Sen. Michael F. Bennet (D-Colo.), who faces a competitive reelection bid. Other stops in coming days include California and Oregon. Meanwhile, the latest in a string of debates in marquee Senate races — this one between Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) and his Democratic challenger, Mandela Barnes — is scheduled Wednesday night. Earlier in the day, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments, including in a case about the “fair use” doctrine in copyright law. Your daily dashboard 9:15 a.m. Eastern: Biden departs the White House en route to Colorado. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre will brief reporters aboard Air Force One. Listen live here. 3:30 p.m. Eastern (1:30 p.m. Mountain): Biden delivers remarks at Camp Hale in Vail, Colo. Watch live here. 7 p.m. Eastern: Johnson and Barnes debate in Milwaukee. 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: In Georgia’s race for governor, Kemp enjoys a clear lead, poll says Return to menu Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) has a clear lead over Democratic challenger Stacey Abrams, while the race for Senate in the state is tighter, according a University of Georgia poll released Wednesday. Kemp leads Abrams in the poll by 51 percent to 41 percent among likely voters, a significantly wider gap than in Kemp’s narrow 2018 defeat of Abrams, a voting rights activist and former minority leader of the Georgia House of Representatives. Meanwhile, the poll shows Sen. Raphael G. Warnock (D-Ga.) drawing 46 percent support compared with 43 percent for Republican Herschel Walker, a former football star. That finding is within the poll’s margin of error. Analysis: Abortion is a strong motivator for voters, which is good news for Democrats Return to menu Democrats and Republicans are sharpening their battle plans in the final stretch of the midterm campaign, aiming to find the right messaging to motivate their bases to get to the polls on Election Day. Writing in The Health 202, The Post’s Rachel Roubein says that a new survey out Wednesday from the Kaiser Family Foundation has both good and bad news for Democrats. Per Rachel: The good: Abortion is a stronger motivator for midterm voters now than it was in July. In particular, access to the procedure is motivating Democratic and Democratic-leaning voters in states where most abortions are illegal. The bad: The Medicare provisions in the party’s health-and-climate bill are popular among Democrats and independents. But few voters are aware of the law’s specific health provisions roughly two months after President Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act. Midterm elections see far fewer voters than in the presidential election years, meaning races will be won and lost by which factions turn out in November. That gives increasing importance to any issue that could drive voters to the ballot box. You can read Rachel’s full analysis here. The latest: Jan. 6 panel to highlight new evidence Trump was alerted of violence Return to menu The probable final public hearing of the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol is expected to highlight newly obtained Secret Service records showing how President Donald Trump was repeatedly alerted to brewing violence that day, but still sought to stoke the conflict, according to three people briefed on the records. The Post’s Carol D. Leonnig and Jacqueline Alemany report that the committee plans to share in Thursday’s hearing new video footage and internal Secret Service emails that appear to corroborate parts of the most startling inside accounts of that day, according to the people briefed, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive internal records. Per our colleagues: On our radar: Harris calling in to radio stations in six competitive states Return to menu Vice President Harris on Wednesday plans a blitz of radio interviews focused on a half-dozen states with competitive Senate and gubernatorial races. According to her office, Harris plans to call in to local stations in Georgia, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Her aim, her office says, is “to share with listeners how the Biden-Harris Administration has delivered for working American families and speak to the investments the Administration has made into specific communities.” Analysis: Parties fight for control of key state legislatures Return to menu The 2022 midterm elections are officially less than one month away and efforts to shore up or flip majorities in state legislatures have kicked into high gear across the country. Writing in The Early 202, The Post’s Leigh Ann Caldwell and Theodoric Meyer note that states are often where national political and policy trends bubble up. Control of these bodies is particularly important now that the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade has left the issue of access to abortion up to state governments. Per our colleagues: On our radar: Biden to designate Colorado’s Camp Hale as his first national monument Return to menu President Biden will travel to Colorado on Wednesday to designate a World War II-era military site as a national monument, using his executive powers to protect the historic landscape and delivering on a key priority for Sen. Michael F. Bennet (D-Colo.) ahead of next month’s midterm elections. The Post’s Maxine Joselow reports that Biden has yet to create an entirely new national monument, although he has expanded existing monuments that President Donald Trump slashed in size. Per Maxine: The designation will apply to Camp Hale, which served as winter training grounds for the Army in the 1940s and now provides critical habitat for wildlife including elk, deer, lynxes and migratory songbirds. The Camp Hale-Continental Divide National Monument will encompass more than 53,800 acres and will also include the Tenmile Range, a mountain range with stunning views that is prized by hikers and rock climbers, according to a White House statement. You can read Maxine’s full story here. Noted: Biden sees ‘a very slight recession’ at worst and other CNN interview highlights Return to menu President Biden, in a prime-time interview broadcast Tuesday night, said he doesn’t see a recession coming and believes it would be “very slight” if there is one. Speaking to CNN’s Jake Tapper, Biden downplayed repeated forecasts by some economists that the U.S. economy could fall into a recession. “Every six months they say this,” Biden said. “Every six months, they look down the next six months and say what’s going to happen. … It hadn’t happened yet. It hadn’t. … I don’t think there will be a recession. If it is, it’ll be a very slight recession. That is, we’ll move down slightly.” The latest: Biden says Supreme Court ‘more of an advocacy group’ than ‘evenhanded’ Return to menu President Biden on Tuesday stepped up his criticism of the Supreme Court, calling it “more of an advocacy group” than “evenhanded.” Biden’s assessment came toward the end of remarks at a virtual fundraiser for Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.) as he laid out what he sees at stake for Democrats in November. “So, I view this … off-year election as one of the most important elections that I’ve been engaged in, because a lot can change because the institutions have changed,” Biden said. “The Supreme Court is more of an advocacy group these days than it is … evenhanded.” On our radar: The most surprising battleground for the House is New England Return to menu A handful of Republicans in New England — including candidates in Maine, New Hampshire and Connecticut — have a chance of winning in a region where Republicans at the federal level had been considered an endangered species. The Post’s Leigh Ann Caldwell and Theodoric Meyer note that there are no New England Republicans in the House, and Sen. Susan Collins (Maine) is the only Republican senator from the northeastern part of the country. Per our colleagues: The political environment appears to favor Republicans to retake the House. But Republicans in New England point to additional factors in their favor, including a cadre of strong candidates and a “perfect storm” of issues that include the high cost of energy and food as well as the rise of fentanyl in New England communities, which GOP candidates argue is arriving up north due to a lack of security at the southern border. You can read the full story, which includes a look at the competitive race in Rhode Island between Democrat Seth Magaziner and Republican Allan Fung, here. On our radar: In crucial Nevada, economic woes threaten to shake Democrats’ grip Return to menu In Nevada, a crucial midterm battlefront where Republicans haven’t won a Senate race in a decade and have come up short in other key races, economic woes have raised the GOP’s hopes of flipping seats throughout the ballot. Reporting from Las Vegas, The Post’s Hannah Knowles writes that financial strains are testing Democrats’ ability to retain and turn out the minority, working-class voters who have long helped power them to victory, according to interviews with voters, candidates and strategists, as well as a review of polling. Per Hannah: Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Post Politics Now: Biden Heads West With Eye On Boosting Fellow Democrats
Kristina Karamo A 2020 Election Denier Wants To Oversee Michigans Voting Laws
Kristina Karamo A 2020 Election Denier Wants To Oversee Michigans Voting Laws
Kristina Karamo, A 2020 Election Denier, Wants To Oversee Michigan’s Voting Laws https://digitalarizonanews.com/kristina-karamo-a-2020-election-denier-wants-to-oversee-michigans-voting-laws/ Two years ago, Kristina Karamo was not a name millions of Michiganders needed to know. But after being a Detroit poll challenger in 2020, she has turned false claims of widespread election fraud into statewide candidacy. Karamo beat multiple local clerks and a state lawmaker at a Republican convention this spring, securing the party’s nomination for Michigan Secretary of State, the office that oversees elections. She will face Democrat incumbent Jocelyn Benson on Nov. 8. MLive made multiple requests to Karamo’s campaign manager to interview her about her vision if elected on Nov. 8, but none were fulfilled. Karamo also did not participate in the Vote411 voter guide, an MLive and League of Women Voters initiative. An idea of how she would govern, then, can be gleaned from her website, a small number of press conferences and various videos and speeches she has done. On policy, she writes on her website of “securing chain of custody” throughout the voting system, from ballot printing to processing. Karamo also says “all reports” from citizens that allege election fraud “must be investigated in-depth.” Karamo wants every voting software and hardware manufacturer operating in Michigan to “turn over all source and/or object codes” to her administration. “The Secretary of State must have full access to every detail, of all election hardware and software, in order for any provider to be able to sell the state of Michigan software or hardware impacting voting results,” her website says. Non-voting proposals she outlines include giving SOS branch office managers more say in what happens at their locations, plus reforming the SOS auto shop inspection process so to minimize the possibility that fines intimidate shops or generate income for the state. Jobs she held before running for SOS, according to her LinkedIn profile, include teaching an orientation class at Wayne County Community College, being a “youth enrichment instructor,” hosting trivia events and working at an auto parts store. She has a bachelor’s degree in communications from Oakland University and a master’s from Biola University in Christian apologetics, a branch of Christianity dedicated to defending the religion. Karamo’s history and present of election criticism The SOS’s top duty is overseeing elections and carrying out Michigan’s voting laws. That is where Karamo and Benson, who told MLive she has tried to “stand guard” over election denying, are deeply divided. Karamo claimed to witness irregularities in absentee ballot processing at Detroit’s counting hub in 2020, and she made dozens of appearances in right-wing media as an election fraud “whistleblower.” In launching her campaign, Karamo said she wants to “remove corruption from our elections.” “Donald Trump won Michigan,” she falsely claimed in a social media video in December 2020. Michigan’s election results were legitimate. Trump’s loss by 154,000 votes was confirmed by more than 250 state and local audits, as well as a Republican-led state Senate report that “found no evidence of widespread or systematic fraud.” Karamo has pushed the widespread fraud theory throughout her candidacy. Most recently, she claimed last month that surveillance videos prove “an illegal ballot mule operation” and did not respond to MLive’s request to elaborate. State guidance for clerks disproves her allegations. Related: Videos claim illegal ballot dropping but Michigan election guidance explains practices She has often called Benson an “authoritarian” and rejected being labeled as a “conspiracy theorist.” But Karamo also has more mainstream criticism of Michigan elections. Before the August primary, she criticized guidelines from Benson’s office that say poll challengers can be removed for “repeated impermissible challengers.” Karamo argued that puts challengers in a “one-sided situation where the election inspector can just arbitrarily decide that that was an impermissible challenge.” Karamo also complained that concerns about having too few Republican election workers in large Democratic areas like Detroit have not been properly heard or remedied. She has been an outspoken opponent as well to Proposal 2, a constitutional amendment on the November ballot that would ensure things like nine days of early in-person voting. Karamo argues these changes will increase costs for municipalities, who will then raise property taxes to pay for it. Related: The 3 proposals on your ballot, explained Karamo said at Trump’s Michigan rally earlier this month she wants to clean up state voter rolls, which have thousands of dead people on them. She also framed what Benson calls “disinformation” as instead “people speaking truth about her corruption.” “These people are not liberals, they’re authoritarians,” Karamo said. “… And the office of Secretary of State has never before in American history been so inextricably linked to our liberty.” Karamo is endorsed by Trump and other prominent election deniers, including former state Sen. Patrick Colbeck and podcaster “Trucker” Randy Bishop. Trump’s endorsement noted she will be strong on the “massive” crime of election fraud. “The vote counter in our country is, in my opinion, far more important than the candidate,” Trump said of Karamo’s candidacy at the Oct. 1 rally. Karamo is also part of a coalition of election-hawking SOS candidates led by Nevada’s Jim Marchant. “President Trump and I lost an election in 2020 because of a rigged election,” Marchant said at a Trump rally this past weekend. “… And when my coalition of secretary of state candidates around the country get elected, we’re going to fix the whole country, and President Trump is going to be president again in 2024.” Read more from MLive: For Michigan SOS Jocelyn Benson, standing guard over democracy and voting rights are her priorities How students can vote at University of Michigan, Eastern Michigan and MSU on Election Day Michigan Republican SOS candidate Kristina Karamo tried to crash car with family in it, according to court filing Saying ‘deceiving parents….is evil,’ Republicans push to fire state superintendent If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Kristina Karamo A 2020 Election Denier Wants To Oversee Michigans Voting Laws
QC Kinetix (Academy) A Tucson Sports Injury Doctor Treats Mild And Severe Sports Injuries And Pains Naturally Using Regenerative Medicine Digital Journal
QC Kinetix (Academy) A Tucson Sports Injury Doctor Treats Mild And Severe Sports Injuries And Pains Naturally Using Regenerative Medicine Digital Journal
QC Kinetix (Academy), A Tucson Sports Injury Doctor, Treats Mild And Severe Sports Injuries And Pains Naturally Using Regenerative Medicine – Digital Journal https://digitalarizonanews.com/qc-kinetix-academy-a-tucson-sports-injury-doctor-treats-mild-and-severe-sports-injuries-and-pains-naturally-using-regenerative-medicine-digital-journal/ Tucson, AZ – QC Kinetix (Academy) treats different types of sports injuries and pains naturally, without prescribing addictive medications or surgery. The medical providers use a wide spectrum of treatments that may be an alternative for knee repair, hip replacement, and knee replacement surgeries. The clinic uses regenerative medicine to speed up the body’s natural healing abilities, allowing it to heal damaged tissues much faster than normal. Their treatments have long-lasting results as they strengthen the tendons, ligaments, and cartilage in the injured areas to avoid re-injury. The pain control clinic helps patients get back to their normal life by improving their joint function and quality of life. They offer customized treatment plans uniquely tailored to meet patients’ health needs. Their sports medicine treatments are ideal in cases where the common advice of rest, ice, compression, and elevation has failed to alleviate their pain and rehabilitate their injuries. The clinic steps in to offer therapies that combine traditional sports injury treatments, rest, and bracing with regenerative medicine for optimal results. The pain control clinic offers treatment for injuries, including golfer’s elbow, torn ACL/MCL, torn Meniscus, and torn rotator cuff, among others. They offer free consultations to every patient. The consultation session determines patients’ eligibility for regenerative medicine and the most useful treatments for them. This is determined by a thorough analysis of the patient’s medical history and may involve additional tests in some cases. Their therapies barely have any downtime allowing patients to get back to their sports hobbies and careers sooner than they would have if they had undergone surgery. QC Kinetix (Academy) has treated hundreds of patients through its team of board-certified physicians. The clinic uses advanced technologies and modern equipment, and techniques that improve accuracy in diagnosis and treatment. The staff implements a patient-centered approach to medicine that focuses on meeting patient needs and including patient values and feedback to the treatment plan. The clinic representative had this to say about their services, “Whether you’re a professional athlete or just someone who enjoys sports and moving around, you need a reliable and effective way of managing your injuries. Our natural treatments are perfect for people experiencing acute joint pain or musculoskeletal pain due to sports-related injuries.” In addition to addressing sports injuries, QC Kinetix (Academy)’s regenerative medicine treatments also cater to pain in different body parts like the knee, hip, wrist, and shoulders. They treat pain in large and small joints caused by degenerative conditions like arthritis and also provide Tucson back pain treatment. The clinic’s physicians perform follow-up services to ensure that treatments are working as expected. During treatment, the clinic offers personalized concierge-level service for logistical support to patients getting treated at the facility. QC Kinetix (Academy) is located at 310 N Wilmot Rd Suite 101, Tucson, AZ, 85711, US. For consultation and booking, contact their staff by calling (520) 497-4955. Visit the company website for more information on their non-surgical sports medicine treatments. Media Contact Company Name QC Kinetix (Academy) Contact Name Scott Hoots Phone (520) 497-4955 Address 310 N Wilmot RdSuite 101 City Tuscon State AZ Postal Code 85711 Country United States Website https://qckinetix.com/tucson/academy Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
QC Kinetix (Academy) A Tucson Sports Injury Doctor Treats Mild And Severe Sports Injuries And Pains Naturally Using Regenerative Medicine Digital Journal
Trump Mocked For Giving pathetic Wedding Speech
Trump Mocked For Giving pathetic Wedding Speech
Trump Mocked For Giving ‘pathetic’ Wedding Speech https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-mocked-for-giving-pathetic-wedding-speech/ Donald Trump has been mocked for giving a speech at a wedding all about himself instead of speaking about the bride and groom. “I just want to say it’s been an honour to be your president,” Mr Trump told the guests, according to a video tweeted by lawyer Ron Filipkowski. “And so many of my friends are in this room, and they happen to be Jewish. And they said tonight, that no president has done more for Israel than I had.” The attorney quipped. “Most romantic wedding speech ever. Really makes it all about the happy couple.” Argentine historian Federico Finchelstein tweeted that “in Trumpist ideology, America First really means Me First”. “Fanatic followers do not see this a problem insofar as the leaders embodies them,” he added. “It’s the final scenes of Raging Bull where Jake LaMotta is punch drunk and managing the night club in Miami,” the account Michigan GOP Watch wrote. Author Jeff Pearlman simply wrote: “How pathetic.” John Oberlin said that “this is why nobody invites Trump to a funeral. He would want to make it all about him. Completely forget the dead guy”. “The dream of every girl is… my dad dropped a 100 grand on my wedding at a Trump club and we got a toast honoring Trump by Trump himself… said no normal person ever,” one Twitter user said. “It is such a mystery why people think this narcissist cares about them,” another added. “What idiot would spend money to have this jacka** hijack his kid’s wedding,” a third said. Catherine Cullen noted that “something famously said about Teddy Roosevelt is more accurately said of Trump: ‘He wants to be the baby at every christening, the bride at every wedding and the corpse at every funeral.’ It’s all about him all the time”. “That’s a wedding story that will live in infamy for generations of that family,” one account holder wrote. “I’m sorry, I’d have tossed my champagne in his fat mug and laughed while his orange pancake ran,” another Twitter user said. “I would feel bad for that family but they’re gazing at him like he’s some kind of Olympian God who materialized in their midst. Some day, they’ll HIDE their wedding pix.” “God this is pathetic. I don’t know whom I’m more embarrassed for–the pitiful old bore begging people to notice him, or the couple who chose to have their reception ruined by him,” Damien Veatch wrote. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Mocked For Giving pathetic Wedding Speech
New Evidence To Show Trump Was Warned Of Violence On Jan. 6
New Evidence To Show Trump Was Warned Of Violence On Jan. 6
New Evidence To Show Trump Was Warned Of Violence On Jan. 6 https://digitalarizonanews.com/new-evidence-to-show-trump-was-warned-of-violence-on-jan-6/ The probably final public hearing of the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol is expected to highlight newly obtained Secret Service records showing how President Donald Trump was repeatedly alerted to brewing violence that day, and he still sought to stoke the conflict, according to three people briefed on the records. The committee plans to share in Thursday’s hearing new video footage and internal Secret Service emails that appear to corroborate parts of the most startling inside accounts of that day, said the people briefed, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive internal records. Former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson testified in June that Trump was briefed on Jan. 6 that some of his supporters were armed for battle, demanded they be allowed into his rally and insisted he wanted to lead them on their march to the Capitol. Surveillance footage the committee plans to share was taken near the Ellipse that morning before Trump’s speech and shows throngs of his supporters clustered just outside the corralled area for his “Stop the Steal” rally. Secret Service officers screened those entering who sought to get closer to the stage. Law enforcement officials who were monitoring video that morning spotted Trump supporters with plastic shields, bulletproof vests and other paramilitary gear, and some in the Secret Service concluded they stayed outside the rally area to avoid having their weapons confiscated, according to people familiar with the new records. Other internal emails likely to be revealed at the hearing further buttress accounts about staff members warning Trump about the risk and then the reality of violence that day, as he continued to press nervous Secret Service agents to take him to the Capitol to join his supporters marching there, the three people said. After being alerted to violence erupting at the Capitol when he returned to the White House, Trump tweeted criticism of Vice President Mike Pence for not blocking the certification of the election, whipping up supporters who had already trampled over security barricades and were battling police to break into the halls of Congress. The newly obtained Secret Service records are just part of a larger hearing in which the committee hopes to summarize and remind the American public of all the ways Trump is said to have played a central role in fomenting a violent insurrection at the Capitol, one of the most brutal attacks on democracy in U.S. history, according to multiple people briefed on the evidence and committee plan. While the committee’s previous hearings took center stage over several weeks this summer, the committee is trying to revive interest in its probe and deliver what it has privately called its “closing arguments” about past and ongoing threats to democracy as voters prepare to cast ballots next month in the midterm elections. The hearing aims to highlight new evidence gathered by investigators that corroborates the committee’s key findings about Trump and the Jan. 6 insurrection, according to the people briefed: that he sought to rile up his supporters to help block the certification of Joe Biden’s electoral victory; used his bully pulpit to encourage a fiery showdown at the Capitol; and then refused to budge to help rescue thousands of lawmakers, staff members and police officers on Capitol Hill who were either fleeing or fighting for their lives that afternoon. It’s unclear, however, if the new material will shed any light on a particularly dramatic part of Hutchinson’s testimony, in which she recounted a senior Secret Service official telling her that Trump had erupted in anger and lunged at the lead security agent in his motorcade when told he could not go to the Capitol. Email shows question over Trump’s plans One email the committee has obtained highlights the level of alarm inside Secret Service headquarters on Jan. 6 about the possibility that Trump would get his wish to head to the Capitol — and join a melee in progress. By 1 p.m. Eastern time that day, according to police testimony, hand-to-hand combat between protesters and officers was breaking out on the steps and platforms immediately outside the Capitol. The Secret Service had just then offered to send reinforcements to help an overwhelmed U.S. Capitol Police force, according to texts and testimony from then-Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund. The new correspondence obtained by the committee shows that while Trump was still speaking to his supporters and announcing he was going to the Capitol, Secret Service personnel in charge of transportation and field operations scrambled to try to secure a safe motorcade route for the president and his entourage, two people briefed on the records said. The Secret Service staff members sought D.C. police help to block intersections. But with tens of thousands of protesters in downtown Washington, and D.C. police being dispatched to help Capitol Police with protesters breaking through barricades, D.C. police declined the Secret Service’s request. About 1:10 p.m., Trump had left the Ellipse in his motorcade after finishing his speech and demanded to go to the Capitol. Trump’s detail leader, Bobby Engel, riding with Trump in his sport utility vehicle, told an enraged Trump that they were heading back to the White House and it was not safe to take him to the Capitol, The Washington Post previously reported. “We don’t have the assets,” Engel told Trump of the inability to secure safe passage for his motorcade, according to a Secret Service official briefed on Engel’s account. By about 1:20 p.m., Trump was back at the White House. One of the committee’s newly obtained documents shows that sometime between 1:30 and 2 p.m., a senior Secret Service supervisor for protective operations emailed Engel with an urgent update and seeking to know if Trump’s plan to go to the Capitol was successfully quashed. It came after a tumultuous hour for the Secret Service detail, which had effectively ignored a command from the president. Even with Trump back at the White House, Secret Service headquarters wanted to be sure the president was staying put. The supervisor, Ronald L. Rowe, warned Engel that the situation was rapidly devolving at the Capitol and sought Engel’s confirmation he was not considering taking Trump there, according to a senior law enforcement official familiar with the records turned over to the committee. Rowe urged Engel to call him. Rowe declined to comment, but Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said Rowe’s email reflected the larger agency’s position: Trump’s idea of going to the Capitol was a non-starter. In other internal emails, agents relayed reports that Trump was angry about being told he couldn’t go to the Capitol. Some of the information, the people briefed said, calls into question the previous testimony of Engel and Anthony Ornato, then a Secret Service leader who was serving in an unprecedented political role of White House deputy chief of staff. Both men told the committee in closed-door depositions that they could not recall certain events relayed by other witnesses, including Trump’s demand that the Secret Service let armed people into his rally. After Hutchinson testified that Ornato told her that Trump had lunged at Engel inside the sport utility vehicle they were traveling in, anonymous Secret Service sources said that Engel and Ornato disputed any altercation occurred and were prepared to say so under oath. The committee has not yet re-interviewed the two men, as lawmakers sifted through the additional trove of Secret Service records. Ornato and Engel, through a Secret Service spokesman, declined to comment. How the committee got the documents The vast trove of records turned over to the Jan. 6 committee is the result of an ironic twist of events, according to the people briefed on the documents. The same Secret Service that permanently deleted agents’ texts from Jan. 6 and the surrounding days amid congressional requests last year has now provided to the committee this large volume of internal communications from the same time period. Voluntarily, the agency has turned over every record it kept of logistical planning, security concerns and private discussions related to the scheduled protests and president’s movements. This extensive sharing of records — more than 1 million pages’ worth and many which the committee did not specifically request — followed a period when the Secret Service came under fire for executing an agencywide destruction of all texts exchanged from agents phones in that key period. Federal regulations mandate the preservation of government records, and the Secret Service’s deletion of these records prompted a federal investigation into the failure to do so. The texts were wiped from agents’ phones as part of a Secret Service-wide update of employees phones that began in January 2021. Secret Service officials have said the mass deletion of reams of potential evidence was unintentional, and the agency’s telephone provider has concluded those texts are now impossible to recover. The committee had considered sharing a portion of its videotaped interview with Ornato at a previous hearing and it’s unclear if lawmakers will do so Thursday. In one portion of his interview, according to two people briefed on his account, Ornato described briefing White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows the afternoon of Jan. 6 about detailed reports of violence breaking out at the Capitol, as well as police officers being transported to a hospital. The committee learned from other witnesses that Meadows then briefed Trump. The hearing could build out the evidence that Trump took steps to ratchet up the conflict at the Capitol, despite being warned of escalating violence. Law...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
New Evidence To Show Trump Was Warned Of Violence On Jan. 6
Wednesday Briefing: Ukraine Hit By More Russian Airstrikes; Student Debt Relief Hearing; Long Covid; Angela Lansbury; And More
Wednesday Briefing: Ukraine Hit By More Russian Airstrikes; Student Debt Relief Hearing; Long Covid; Angela Lansbury; And More
Wednesday Briefing: Ukraine Hit By More Russian Airstrikes; Student Debt Relief Hearing; Long Covid; Angela Lansbury; And More https://digitalarizonanews.com/wednesday-briefing-ukraine-hit-by-more-russian-airstrikes-student-debt-relief-hearing-long-covid-angela-lansbury-and-more/ 1 Russia bombarded Ukraine with airstrikes for the second day in a row. The target: Key infrastructure in 12 of Ukraine’s 24 regions. Nearly 20 cities have been hit since Monday — retaliation for an attack on a strategic Russian bridge this weekend. What else to know: Leaders from the Group of Seven, the world’s wealthiest democracies, yesterday promised to support Ukraine for “as long as it takes” to hold off Russia. 2 There’s a hearing today on the student debt relief plan. The details: Six Republican-led states will argue that the Biden administration doesn’t have the power to offer such widespread forgiveness. A reminder: The White House wants to forgive up to $10,000 in student debt for borrowers earning under $125,000 per year. Pell Grant recipients can get up to $20,000. Why it matters: Officials have held off releasing an application for the program because of the legal challenges, and this case may be the plan’s biggest threat. 3 Many coronavirus patients haven’t recovered months after being infected. How we know this: Data from nearly 100,000 people who participated in a Scottish study of long covid, released today. What it found: 1 in 20 people had not recovered between six and 18 months after getting sick, and 42% reported feeling only somewhat better. Why it matters: Millions are suffering from the long-term effects of covid. This data helps us understand the scale of the problem. 4 Controversy is swirling around the Republican Senate candidate in Georgia. Why? Herschel Walker has campaigned against abortion in all cases. However, he has been accused of paying for a girlfriend’s abortion and encouraging her to have another. The details: The woman said the abortion happened in 2009, which is after Walker said his beliefs about abortion changed. Walker has denied the woman’s claims. Why this race matters: It could determine which party controls the Senate. 5 Angela Lansbury, the star of “Murder, She Wrote,” died yesterday. Climate change is causing heavier rains in almost every part of the country. Portugal wants you to move there and work remotely. And now … Fat Bear Week has a winner: Meet 747, a.k.a. “Bear Force One.” Plus, your dog knows when you’re upset: Scientists explained how. Want to catch up quickly with “The 7” every morning? Download The Post’s app and turn on alert notifications for The 7 or sign up for the newsletter. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Wednesday Briefing: Ukraine Hit By More Russian Airstrikes; Student Debt Relief Hearing; Long Covid; Angela Lansbury; And More
Alice (Wezniak) Jones
Alice (Wezniak) Jones
Alice (Wezniak) Jones https://digitalarizonanews.com/alice-wezniak-jones/ Alice (Wezniak) Jones passed peacefully at her home in Warwick, RI, on October 5, 2022, six months shy of her 100th birthday. She was born April 27, 1923 in Ludlow, Massachusetts, to the late John and Stella (Karas) Wezniak. She was the wife of the late Rolland H. Jones. Alice spent most of her married life in East Greenwich, raising nine children and enjoying planting (and weeding) her ever-expanding and much-admired flower gardens. She was a founding member of the Cindywood Garden Club, and served as its president for many years. She also joined the RI Federation of Garden Clubs, and participated in multiple flower shows and competitions. Alice spent her later years in Warwick, enjoying the friends she made through several bridge clubs, doing jigsaw puzzles, reading voraciously, and “skunking” her kids at cribbage—all while enjoying the view of hummingbirds visiting her nasturtiums and Mandevilla each summer. Alice leaves behind her grieving, but grateful, children: Rollice Ernst of Cranston RI, Rolland “Ron” Jr. and wife Judith of Dayville, CT; Jeffrey and wife Silvia of Laredo, TX; Pamela Kosteniuk of Warwick, RI; Peter and wife Gwen of Richmond, VA; Kathryn and husband Richard Gabriel of Scottsdale, AZ; Elizabeth Jones of Warwick, and Allyson and husband Michael Wise of Chandler, AZ. Her youngest son, Michael, pre-deceased her. She had fourteen grandchildren, and twenty-nine great-grandchildren. Alice’s patience, forgiveness, support, and unconditional love will be greatly missed. She wanted to enjoy the flowers while she was here to see them, and requests that, if you wish, please make a donation instead to the cancer charity of your choice. And in Alice’s memory, plant a garden—or just one flower. Make the world a kinder, more beautiful place. To see her complete obituary, please visit www.barrettandcotter.com. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Alice (Wezniak) Jones
Obituaries In Akron OH | Akron Beacon Journal
Obituaries In Akron OH | Akron Beacon Journal
Obituaries In Akron, OH | Akron Beacon Journal https://digitalarizonanews.com/obituaries-in-akron-oh-akron-beacon-journal-3/ Thomas Orvin Brown, 90, of Wellington, died Friday, October 7, 2022, at Keystone Pointe in Lagrange. Tom was born on August 26, 1932, in Memphis, TN to Nelis Davis and Willie Frances (nee Buckley) Brown. He graduated from high school in Jackson, Mississippi and earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Mississippi State. He later earned his PhD from Kent State in 1969. During the Korean War, Tom served his country in the Navy. He taught high school history in Lakewood, Colorado where he was also the co-owner of a Tastee-Freez. He moved to Akron, Ohio in 1964 and worked for the next 30 years at the University of Akron. He was the Director of the Counselling and Testing Center until his retirement in 1994. Thomas loved antiques and turned his treasured hobby into a business. He began at Windham Church Antiques, eventually took a booth at the Medina Antique Mall and then in 2002 opened Black River Antiques in Wellington. Alongside his wife, Betty, Tom ran Black River Antiques until retirement in 2014. Survivors include his wife, Betty Ann (nee Moore) Brown; children, Amie Brown of Fairlawn, Mason Brown of Portland, OR and Andrew Brown, of Middleburg Heights; son-in-law, Greg Hartig of Phoenix, AZ and grandson, Sonny Bolender of Fairlawn. Tom was preceded in death by his daughter, Beth Hartig and brothers, Edward and Davis Brown. Visitation will be held on Friday, October 14 from 4-7 p.m. at Norton-Eastman Funeral Home, 370 S. Main St., Wellington, where Funeral Services will be held on Saturday, October 15 at 11:00 a.m. A luncheon will follow at Wellington Fire Department, 202 Kelly Street. Fond memories and expressions of sympathy for the Brown family may be given online at: www.norton-eastmanfuneralhome.com. Posted online on October 12, 2022 Published in Akron Beacon Journal Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Obituaries In Akron OH | Akron Beacon Journal
LeGarrette Blount Youth Football Fight Goes To Prosecutors
LeGarrette Blount Youth Football Fight Goes To Prosecutors
LeGarrette Blount Youth Football Fight Goes To Prosecutors https://digitalarizonanews.com/legarrette-blount-youth-football-fight-goes-to-prosecutors/ Prosecutors will decide if former NFL running back LeGarrette Blount will face charges regarding a fight he got into following a youth football game. The three-time-Super Bowl Champion was involved in an altercation where he threw punches at another adult after the game. Video obtained by TMZ shows Blount running after someone after the two teams’ postgame handshake. You see Blount land multiple punches before all hell breaks loose. Cops arrived on the scene, but by then it was over. No injuries were reported. Will Blount’s Apology Be Enough? Blount was the coach of the GCFYC Gators, one of the twelve-and-under football teams. A spokesperson for the Gilbert Police Dept. told TMZ Sports that they have concluded their investigation and handed it over to the Town of Gilbert Prosecutor’s Office for review in the last few days. Blount later apologized for his role in the incident. In a statement Blount said, “As a leader, coach, father and a role model I understand my actions are unacceptable. I hope and pray for your understanding and forgiveness and plan to continue to be a positive impact in the lives of our youth.” During his NFL career, Blount was a two-time Super Bowl Champion for the New England Patriots before winning another with the Philadelphia Eagles. Blount last played in 2018, rushing for 418 yards with Detroit. LeGarrette BlountNew England PatriotsNFLPhiladelphia Eagles Written by Mike Gunzelman Mike “Gunz” Gunzelman has been involved in the sports and media industry for over a decade. He’s also a risk taker – the first time he ever had sushi was from a Duane Reade in Penn Station in NYC. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
LeGarrette Blount Youth Football Fight Goes To Prosecutors
WSJ News Exclusive | U.S. Suppliers Halt Operations At Top Chinese Memory Chip Maker
WSJ News Exclusive | U.S. Suppliers Halt Operations At Top Chinese Memory Chip Maker
WSJ News Exclusive | U.S. Suppliers Halt Operations At Top Chinese Memory Chip Maker https://digitalarizonanews.com/wsj-news-exclusive-u-s-suppliers-halt-operations-at-top-chinese-memory-chip-maker/ U.S. export control measures restrict companies sending chips and chip-making equipment to China.Photo: FLORENCE LO/REUTERS Updated Oct. 12, 2022 8:52 am ET BEIJING–U.S. chip equipment suppliers are pulling out staff based at China’s leading memory chip maker and pausing business activities there, according to people familiar with the matter, as they rush to assess the impact of Commerce Department semiconductor export restrictions. State-owned Yangtze Memory Technologies Co. is facing a freeze in support from key suppliers including KLA and Lam Research the people said. The suspensions follow last week’s sweeping curbs imposed by the U.S. on China’s chip sector, ostensibly to prevent American technology from advancing China’s military power, though the impact might reach further into the industry. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
WSJ News Exclusive | U.S. Suppliers Halt Operations At Top Chinese Memory Chip Maker
Trident University International Introduces Online Teaching Concentration
Trident University International Introduces Online Teaching Concentration
Trident University International Introduces Online Teaching Concentration https://digitalarizonanews.com/trident-university-international-introduces-online-teaching-concentration/ Trident is set to offer the K-12 Online Teaching and Learning concentration as part of its Master of Arts in Education program. Enrollment is open now. Chandler, AZ (PRWEB) – Trident University International has announced a new K-12 Online Teaching and Learning concentration as part of its Master of Arts in Education (MAED) program. Instruction begins during the October 31 session. The K-12 Online Teaching and Learning concentration is the eighth concentration available in Trident’s MAED program. All concentrations consist of four courses, which are three credit hours each. Given the increasing prevalence of online learning and technology usage in the K-12 setting, this new concentration is designed to meet these evolving needs. Research (1) shows that teachers and administrators need the tools to support students in online, virtual, and remote learning and teaching environments. This new concentration exposes teachers and administrators to skills needed to deliver online learning with various types of technology, develop strategies for classroom management, communicate effectively with parents, and tactics for meeting a range of student learning needs. “The rapid shift to online learning during the COVID-19 pandemic left many educators unprepared to implement new technologies and to connect with students remotely,” comments Dr. Heidi Schmidt, Department Chair of the MAED program. “The goal of the K-12 Online Teaching and Learning concentration is to increase teacher and administration self-efficacy in the online classroom.” The MAED program can be completed in either a 10-month or 20-month track. Courses that make up this new concentration include: Teacher and Administrative Roles in Online Learning Managing the Classroom and Communication in Online Learning Designing and Delivering Effective Instruction in the Online Classroom Using Assessments in the Online Classroom Students should be aware that this is not a certificate, licensure, or credentialing program. For students considering transferring from another institution, up to six credits of master’s level coursework may be transferred in to the MAED program. Credit for professional training and certifications may be considered as well, subject to Dean approval (2). Additionally, up to eight credits may be transferred into Trident’s Doctor of Education (Ed.D.) or Ph.D. in Educational Leadership programs. About Trident University International Founded in 1998, Trident University International is a member of the American InterContinental University System, which is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission (hlcommission.org). Trident uses the EdActive learning approach, which employs case-based learning in an online setting to teach real-world relevant critical thinking skills designed to enhance the lives and education of students. Trident offers quality associate, bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degree programs and certificates, led by a qualified faculty team, over 80% of whom have doctoral degrees. Trident has over 32,000 alumni, of which more than 27,000 have a military affiliation, and has received acknowledgements from Washington Monthly, Military Times, and Military Advanced Education & Transition for their dedication to student success. Visit http://www.trident.edu or call at (855) 290-0290 to learn more about Trident’s wide range of educational options. 1 DeCoito, I. and Estaiteyeh, M. (2022). Transitioning to Online Teaching During the COVID-10 Pandemic: an Exploration of STEM Teachers’ Views, Successes, and Challenges. J Sci Educ Techn 31(3), 340-356. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8958807/ Winter, E., Costello, A., O’Brien, M. and Hickey, G. (2021). Teachers’ use of technology and the impact of COVID-19. https://doi.org/10.1080/03323315.2021.1916559 2 Transfer credit is evaluated on an individual basis. Not all credits are eligible to transfer. See the University Catalog for transfer credit policies. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trident University International Introduces Online Teaching Concentration
Social Security COLA 2023 Release Live Online: Estimate Adjustment And Inflation Relief Checks | SSA Updates
Social Security COLA 2023 Release Live Online: Estimate Adjustment And Inflation Relief Checks | SSA Updates
Social Security COLA 2023 Release, Live Online: Estimate, Adjustment And Inflation Relief Checks | SSA Updates https://digitalarizonanews.com/social-security-cola-2023-release-live-online-estimate-adjustment-and-inflation-relief-checks-ssa-updates/ Update: October 12th, 2022 07:26 EDT 2023 COLA: live updates Latest News Will everyone get the full amount of the Social Security COLA increase? Not only those who receive social security benefits will receive the COLA, rather all those who receive benefits from the various programs administered by the SSA will see the COLA applied to their checks. This includes Supplemental Security Income as well as Social Security Disability Insurance. Since 1982, the COLA increases have been effective with benefits payable for December, which means that recipients will start to see the increased payments from January onwards. Read our full coverage for more information on the increases, in addition to details on what has led to such high inflation in recent months.  How is the Social Security COLA calculated? The Social Security Administration calculates the Cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) applied to benefits each year by comparing the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers from quarter 3 (July, August, September) from the current year to the previous.  The CPI-W data for July and August is available and the current average sits at 291. The average for Q3 last year was 268.421. This means that if the COLA was determined by the numbers from July and August, seniors would see an 8.4 percent boost in their payment amounts. However, if price increases in September were not as large as those seen earlier this summer, this number could shrink.  Social Security COLA 2023 When does COLA 2023 take effect for Social Security Benefits? The Social Security Administration adjusts recipients’ benefits on an annual basis in order to keep monthly payments apace with inflation. The COLA 2022 increase of 5.9 percent announced last year was the highest in four decades due to rampant inflation as the economy recovered from the pandemic-induced slowdown. Once again, with prices still rising at an accelerated rate, another historic COLA increase has been predicted for benefits in 2023, expected to surpass the one from last year. The final results of the Social Security Administration’s calculation will be released Thursday 13 October. Read our full coverage on when the new benefit amounts will be distributed.  When will the COLA inflation increase be announced? The inflation figures for September 2022 are expected to be released later this week, at which point the Social Security Administration (SSA) will confirm details of the cost-of-living adjustment for next year. The 2023 COLA increase will be released on Thursday 13 October, if the SSA sticks to the schedule employed in previous years.  Latest news Are stimulus checks for inflation taxable? Even though this year no stimulus checks have been granted at the federal level, several states in the country, at least 16, have taken it upon themselves to authorize their own relief checks to help their residents combat the high costs of inflation. When the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) delivered the first, second and third stimulus checks, though, some people had doubts about whether they had to pay taxes on the money received, and at the time, the answer was a resounding NO. As with the federal stimulus checks, the reality is that the inflation stimulus checks are also not taxable. US NEWS California Inflation Relief Check: when will I receive the payment & how to track? The first payments for the Middle Class Tax Refund were sent out on October 7. People will of course be hoping to receive their money as soon as possible and fortunately the Californian Franchise Tax Board (CFTB) has published information for when people should receive their payment. The CFTB says it expects to send 90 percent of the direct deposit payments for the Middle Class Tax Refund in October 2022. Those who received the first or second Golden State Stimulus (GSS I and II) via direct deposit can expect to see the money in their account between 7 October and 25 October. The remaining direct deposits will be issued between 28 October and 14 November 2022. Hello and welcome to AS USA’s live blog on the support available to help combat inflation at the household level.  Several states are sending out payments to low-and-middle-income families to help them increase their purchasing power as inflation cuts into it. One of these state, California, is also considering applying a windfall tax on the increased profits from oil and gas companies that will be divided and redistributed to drivers.  Tomorrow the Social Security Administration will announce the 2023 Cost-of-living adjustment, which could be as high as eight percent, based on recent consumer price reports.  Tagged in: Inflación Estados Unidos Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Social Security COLA 2023 Release Live Online: Estimate Adjustment And Inflation Relief Checks | SSA Updates
Trump Rally Uses Song By Ipswich's Nik Kershaw Without Permission
Trump Rally Uses Song By Ipswich's Nik Kershaw Without Permission
Trump Rally Uses Song By Ipswich's Nik Kershaw Without Permission https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-rally-uses-song-by-ipswichs-nik-kershaw-without-permission/ Published: 12:40 PM October 12, 2022 Famed Ipswich artist Nik Kershaw has hit out at an American politician after he used one of his chart-topping songs at a Trump rally. Nevada Republican Party chairman Michael J. McDonald played ‘I am the One and Only’ as he walked on stage at former US President Donald Trump’s most recent Save America Rally. Singer-songwriter Nik Kershaw – who wrote the UK chart-topper, which also made the Billboard US top 10 –  tagged the politician in a tweet, saying: “Dude. I wrote this song. “I do not endorse you, Trump, your views or your ideology and deeply resent your use of this song as your walk-on music. “Kindly cease and desist.” The Ipswich-born star also tagged musician Chesney Hawkes who released the song on his 1991 album ‘Buddy’s Song’. He tweeted: “I am the original artist and 100% agree with @NikKershaw.” The Republican Party chairman was a guest speaker at Trump’s rally which took place on Saturday, October 8. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Rally Uses Song By Ipswich's Nik Kershaw Without Permission
John Fetterman Stumbles Stutters During In-Person Interview
John Fetterman Stumbles Stutters During In-Person Interview
John Fetterman Stumbles, ‘Stutters’ During In-Person Interview https://digitalarizonanews.com/john-fetterman-stumbles-stutters-during-in-person-interview/ With weeks to go before the election, Pennsylvania’s lieutenant governor and Democratic Senate nominee, John Fetterman, is still struggling with the effects of a May stroke. In his first in-person interview, which aired Tuesday night, Fetterman required the use of closed captioning. The Democrat is “still suffering from auditory processing issues, which means he has a hard time understanding what he’s hearing,” NBC News reporter Dasha Burns said. NBC News agreed to the use of closed captioning technology during the interview, where a screen transcribed Burns’ questions. “I sometimes will hear things in a way that’s not perfectly clear. So I use captioning so I’m able to see what you’re saying on the captioning,” Fetterman said. Fetterman “occasionally stuttered and had trouble finding words,” according to the report, responding to Burns’ oral questions after subsequently reading the captions on a computer screen. In the interview, Fetterman can clearly be seen behind the screen reading the questions as they come. “Every now and then I’ll miss a word. Every now and then. Or sometimes I’ll maybe mush two words together. But as long as I have captioning, I’m able to understand exactly what’s being asked,” he said. In the interview, Fetterman can be seen having difficulty attempting to pronounce the word “empathetic,” moving between “emphetic” and “empathetic” before finally landing on the latter. He then used that as an example of the side affects of the stroke. Fetterman said he is still in the recovery process but that “I don’t think it’s going to have an impact. I feel like I’m gonna get better and better—every day. And by January, I’m going [to] be, you know, much better. And Dr. Oz is still going to be a fraud.” Burns said that before the interview and without captioning, “it wasn’t clear he was understanding our conversation.” After the interview aired, other journalists who interviewed Fetterman since his stroke said he didn’t appear to have any of the comprehension difficulties highlighted during Burns’ piece. Addressing those claims on Today early Wednesday, Burns said it was “completely fair” that others had a different experience with Fetterman. “We can only report our own [experience],” Burns told Savannah Guthrie. “I will say that it’s important to note that according to the campaign itself, our team was the first to be in the room with Fetterman for an interview rather than via remote video conferencing. Myself, my producer, and our crew did find that small talk before that captioning was difficult because of those auditory processing issues I mentioned.” Burns added that stroke experts say Fetterman’s symptoms would not indicate that he has any cognitive impairment or memory issues, and that he can fully recover. When questioned why he would not supply NBC with medical records or make any of his doctors available for an interview, Fetterman replied: “I feel like we have been very transparent in a lot of different ways. When our doctor has already given a letter saying that I’m able to serve and to be running. And then I think there’s—you can’t be any more transparent than standing up on a stage with 3,000 people and having a speech without a teleprompter and just being—and putting everything and yourself out there like that. I think that’s as transparent as everyone in Pennsylvania can see.” Concerns surrounding Fetterman’s health have run rampant in the lead-up to the November election, with some questioning whether his health and heart are up to the job. Republicans are already using the footage to their advantage; Steve Guest, special adviser for communications for Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), called it a “disaster,” claiming “John Fetterman is not well.” “No wonder Fetterman has refused to do interviews,” he tweeted. “And this is who Democrats want to be a Senator.” Former Trump aide Stephen Miller tweeted that “if one was going to elect a new Senator with grave cognitive impediments to performing his duties one would likely want an individual who was in every other way exemplary. Not the crazy, radical, dresses like he’s 11, pro-murderer anti-cop marxist zealot deadbeat John Fetterman.” Clay Travis of the conservative podcast The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show called the interview “insane,” adding, “imagine what media would be saying if a Republican was trying to pull this campaign off.” Former Fox News contributor and Trump Treasury Department spokeswoman Monica Crowley labeled Fetterman “unfit to serve in the Senate,” criticizing him because he “couldn’t even make it through a basic, friendly interview with MSNBC: couldn’t hear, couldn’t understand.” Dr. Oz’s team is yet to comment, however senior communications adviser Rachel Tripp told Insider in August: “If John Fetterman had ever eaten a vegetable in his life, then maybe he wouldn’t have had a major stroke and wouldn’t be in the position of having to lie about it constantly.” When The Daily Beast reached out to Tripp at the time, she replied via email: “Nice try. Dr. Oz has been urging people to eat more veggies for years. That’s not ridicule. It’s good health advice. We’re only trying to help.” Speaking on The Last Word on Tuesday night, Fetterman criticized Dr. Oz for the comments, saying, “I can’t believe that having a doctor that is cheering on for me not to get better.” Fetterman still leads in the polls. The Democrat has used closed captioning technology in interviews before; it was cited in a piece earlier this month in The New Yorker, where he used Google Meet to conduct the interview. “Because the stroke had made it difficult for him to process what he hears, the video chat has closed captioning technology that allowed him to read my questions in real time,” reporter Rebecca Traister wrote. Fetterman has agreed to an Oct. 25 debate with his opponent, Republican Mehmet Oz, but under the condition that Fetterman have access to a closed captioning monitor so he can read the questions as they come in. Political commentator Adam Jentleson said the interview was a “good moment for a gut check here.” He wrote in a tweet: “I’m biased but when I watch the clip I see a guy recovering and recovering overcoming a challenge. I wonder what voters will see.” Political, public affairs, and communications strategist Jeff Timmer tweeted that it was a “bold but wise” strategy to have Fetterman doing interviews and “showing the accessibility tools he uses to process the spoken word. I commend him and his team for having the guts and balls to do this.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
John Fetterman Stumbles Stutters During In-Person Interview
Russia's FSB Arrests Eight For Crimean Bridge Bombing
Russia's FSB Arrests Eight For Crimean Bridge Bombing
Russia's FSB Arrests Eight For Crimean Bridge Bombing https://digitalarizonanews.com/russias-fsb-arrests-eight-for-crimean-bridge-bombing/ FSB says Ukrainian military intelligence blew up bridge Russia arrests 5 Russians, 3 from Ukraine and Armenia Ukraine has not taken responsibility MOSCOW, Oct 12 (Reuters) – Russia’s Federal Security Service said on Wednesday that it had detained five Russians and three citizens of Ukraine and Armenia in connection with the bombing of a vital bridge to Crimea, an attack it said was masterminded by Ukraine. The FSB said the attack was organised by Ukrainian military intelligence and its director, Kyrylo Budanov – echoing accusations by President Vladimir Putin over what he has called a “terrorist attack” against critical civilian infrastructure. “The organizer of the terrorist attack on the Crimean Bridge was the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, its head Kyrylo Budanov, its employees and agents,” said the FSB, the main successor to the Soviet-era KGB. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Ukraine has not officially confirmed its involvement in the bridge blast on Saturday, but some Ukrainian officials have celebrated the damage and an unidentified Ukrainian official told the New York Times that Kyiv was behind the attack. The FSB said the explosive device was camouflaged in rolls of construction polyethylene film on 22 pallets with a total weight of 22.7 tonnes, and moved from Ukraine to Russia via Bulgaria, Georgia and Armenia. “Control over the movement of the cargo along the entire route and contacts with participants in the criminal transportation scheme were carried out by an employee of HUR MO,” the FSB said in a statement, using the acronym for Ukrainian military intelligence. The 12-mile (19 km) road and rail bridge, a prestige project personally opened by Putin in 2018, had become logistically vital to his military campaign, with supplies to Russian troops fighting in south Ukraine channelled through it. The explosion wrecked one section of the road bridge, temporarily halting traffic. It also destroyed several fuel tankers on a train heading towards the annexed Crimean peninsula from neighbouring southern Russia. On Monday Russian forces launched mass missile strikes against Ukrainian cities, including power supplies, in what Putin said was retaliation for the bridge bombing. The FSB, headed by Putin ally Alexander Bortnikov, also said that it had prevented Ukrainian attacks in both Moscow and the western Russian city of Bryansk. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Reuters; editing by Guy Faulconbridge Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Russia's FSB Arrests Eight For Crimean Bridge Bombing
DOJ Asks Supreme Court To Deny Trump Plea; Remembering Angela Lansbury; MLB Playoff Recap WKBT
DOJ Asks Supreme Court To Deny Trump Plea; Remembering Angela Lansbury; MLB Playoff Recap WKBT
DOJ Asks Supreme Court To Deny Trump Plea; Remembering Angela Lansbury; MLB Playoff Recap – WKBT https://digitalarizonanews.com/doj-asks-supreme-court-to-deny-trump-plea-remembering-angela-lansbury-mlb-playoff-recap-wkbt/ October 12, 2022 6:30 AM Associated Press, CNN Posted: October 12, 2022 6:30 AM Updated: October 12, 2022 6:34 AM Today is Wednesday, Oct. 12, 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 *** TOP STORIES AP In 1933, bank robber John Dillinger escaped from a jail in Allen County, Ohio, with the help of his gang, who killed the sheriff, Jess Sarber. AP In 1942, Attorney General Francis Biddle announced during a Columbus Day celebration at Carnegie Hall in New York that Italian nationals in the United States would no longer be considered enemy aliens. AP In 1973, President Richard Nixon nominated House minority leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan to succeed Spiro T. Agnew as vice president. AP In 1984, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher escaped an attempt on her life when an Irish Republican Army bomb exploded at a hotel in Brighton, England, killing five people. AP In 1986, the superpower meeting in Reykjavik, Iceland, ended in stalemate, with President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev unable to agree on arms control or a date for a full-fledged summit in the United States. AP In 1997, singer John Denver was killed in the crash of his privately built aircraft in Monterey Bay, California; he was 53. AP In 2000, 17 sailors were killed in a suicide bomb attack on the destroyer USS Cole in Yemen. AP In 2002, bombs blamed on al-Qaida-linked militants destroyed a nightclub on the Indonesian island of Bali, killing 202 people, including 88 Australians and seven Americans. AP In 2007, former Vice President Al Gore and the U.N.‘s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change won the Nobel Peace Prize for sounding the alarm over global warming. AP Ten years ago: Eight people were killed in a shooting at a hair salon in Seal Beach, California. (Scott Dekraai, whose ex-wife, Michelle Fournier, was among the victims, pleaded guilty to murder in 2014 and is serving life in prison.) AP Ten years ago: A Nigerian al-Qaida operative pleaded guilty to trying to bring down a jetliner with a bomb in his underwear; Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab (OO’-mahr fah-ROOK’ ahb-DOOL’-moo-TAH’-lahb) defiantly told a federal judge in Detroit that he had acted in retaliation for the killing of Muslims worldwide.  Amr Nabil Ten years ago: Thousands of supporters and opponents of Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi clashed in Cairo’s Tahrir Square in the first such violence since Morsi took office more than three months earlier.  AP Five years ago: Wells Fargo announced that its embattled CEO, John Stumpf, was stepping down as the nation’s second-largest bank found itself roiled by a scandal over its sales practices. AP In 2017, President Donald Trump lashed out at hurricane-devastated Puerto Rico, saying the federal government can’t keep sending help “forever” and suggesting that the U.S. territory was to blame for its financial struggles. AP In 2019, a Black woman, Atatiana Jefferson, was fatally shot by a white Fort Worth, Texas, police officer inside her home after police were called to the residence by a neighbor who reported that the front door was open. (Officer Aaron Dean, who shot Jefferson through a back window, resigned in the days after the shooting and is charged with murder; he has pleaded not guilty and is scheduled to go to trial in November.) Pool The Washington Post One year ago: At the start of fast-tracked Senate confirmation hearings, Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett presented her approach to the law as conservative and fair, while Democrats cast her as a threat to Americans’ health care coverage during the coronavirus pandemic.  AP In 2020, at his first campaign rally since he contracted COVID-19, President Donald Trump insisted to supporters in Florida that he had delivered the nation a “rapid recovery” from the pandemic.  AP One year ago: Roberta McCain, the mother of the late Arizona Sen. John McCain, died at 108. John Minchillo One year ago: The New Jersey Nets said Kyrie Irving could not play or practice with them until he could be a full participant; New York City required professional athletes to be vaccinated against COVID-19 in order to play or practice in public venues. (Irving would be allowed to rejoin the team for out-of-town games in January 2022, and for home games two months later.)  AP Rock singer Bob Schneider is 56. AP Olympic gold medal skier Bode Miller is 45.  AP Jazz musician Chris Botti (BOH’-tee) is 59. Pool AFP Broadcast journalist Chris Wallace is 74.  Invision Actor Hiroyuki Sanada is 62.  Invision Actor Hugh Jackman is 53.  Invision Actor Josh Hutcherson is 30.  AP Actor Kirk Cameron is 51.  Invision Country musician Martie Maguire (Courtyard Hounds, The Chicks) is 52.  Invision Singer Sam Moore (formerly of Sam and Dave) is 86.  Invision Actor Tyler Blackburn is 36.  AP FILE 1986 — Walter Payton becomes the first NFL player to accumulate 20,000 all-purpose yards in the Chicago Bears’ 20-7 victory over the Houston Oilers. Payton has 76 yards rushing and 30 yards receiving for a career total of 20,045. Walter Payton, running back for the Chicago Bears, is pictured in 1986. (AP Photo) AP FILE 1992 — Art Monk of the Washington Redskins becomes the NFL’s career reception leader when he catches a 10-yard sideline pass in the fourth quarter of a 34-3 victory over Denver. Monk’s seven catches move him past former Seattle star Steve Largent, who retired after the 1989 season with 819 receptions. Washington Redskins wide receiver Art Monk is hoisted by his teammates after breaking the record for career receptions in the fourth quarter of their game against the Denver Broncos at RFK Stadium in Washington, Oct. 12, 1992. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee) AP FILE 2003 — Michael Schumacher wins a record sixth world title. He clinches the Formula One championship by two points after finishing eighth in the Japanese Grand Prix. Ferrari teammate Rubens Barrichello wins the season-ending race. Ferrari driver Michael Schumacher of Germany is all smiles as he is lifted by a team member under the shower of champagne following his winning the Formula One season title at Suzuka circuit in Suzuka, Japan, Sunday, Oct. 12, 2003. (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi) AP FILE 2009 — Brent Seabrook scores 26 seconds into overtime and the Chicago Blackhawks matched the biggest comeback in NHL history, rallying from a five-goal deficit to beat the Calgary Flames 6-5. Chicago fell behind 5-0 in the first period before overtaking the Flames. Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Brent Seabrook shoots the winning goal between the legs of Calgary Flames defenseman Mark Giordano in ovetime of an NHL hockey game Monday, Oct. 12, 2009, in Chicago. Chicago won 6-5. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) *** MORNING LISTEN *** IMAGE OF THE DAY Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
DOJ Asks Supreme Court To Deny Trump Plea; Remembering Angela Lansbury; MLB Playoff Recap WKBT
Today In History: Oct. 12
Today In History: Oct. 12
Today In History: Oct. 12 https://digitalarizonanews.com/today-in-history-oct-12/ Today in history: Oct. 12 One year ago: The New Jersey Nets said Kyrie Irving could not play or practice with them until he could be a full participant; New York City required professional athletes to be vaccinated against COVID-19 in order to play or practice in public venues. (Irving would be allowed to rejoin the team for out-of-town games in January 2022, and for home games two months later.)  2012: Mohammed Morsi Ten years ago: Thousands of supporters and opponents of Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi clashed in Cairo’s Tahrir Square in the first such violence since Morsi took office more than three months earlier.  Amr Nabil 2020: Donald Trump In 2020, at his first campaign rally since he contracted COVID-19, President Donald Trump insisted to supporters in Florida that he had delivered the nation a “rapid recovery” from the pandemic.  AP 2021: Kyrie Irving One year ago: The New Jersey Nets said Kyrie Irving could not play or practice with them until he could be a full participant; New York City required professional athletes to be vaccinated against COVID-19 in order to play or practice in public venues. (Irving would be allowed to rejoin the team for out-of-town games in January 2022, and for home games two months later.)  John Minchillo Related to this collection Things to know today: DOJ asks Supreme Court to deny Trump’s plea in FBI search; remembering Angela Lansbury; MLB divisional round opens. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Today In History: Oct. 12
Hunt's Kitchen & Design Offers A Wide Selection Of Customized Kitchen Cabinets In Scottsdale AZ Digital Journal
Hunt's Kitchen & Design Offers A Wide Selection Of Customized Kitchen Cabinets In Scottsdale AZ Digital Journal
Hunt's Kitchen & Design Offers A Wide Selection Of Customized Kitchen Cabinets In Scottsdale, AZ – Digital Journal https://digitalarizonanews.com/hunts-kitchen-design-offers-a-wide-selection-of-customized-kitchen-cabinets-in-scottsdale-az-digital-journal/ Scottsdale, AZ – Hunt’s Kitchen & Design is a premier and one of the most reputed kitchen cabinet designers in the area. They offer a wide range of custom cabinet options available in different sizes, colors, and prices. Their showroom has a wide cabinet selection from top manufacturers, and they also offer custom cabinet creations and designs. The company offers great value in each project regardless of the budget. The Scottsdale kitchen cabinets designer works with the largest cabinet manufacturers in the country to provide endless quality choices and options. The renowned designer works with established concepts to create the most popular cabinet kitchen styles, including modern designs, traditional designs, farmhouse style layouts, and many more. Whatever style a client may have in mind, the company has the expertise, experience, and the latest software that brings every idea and vision to life. Hunt’s Kitchen & Design has a cabinet showroom where they display and stock a wide range of designs to choose from. Clients are spoilt for choice with options for inset, flat, glass, and wooden paneled cabinets, and more. The brands and styles can also be viewed from the company website. The Scottsdale custom cabinets expert crafts in-house custom cabinets at their Scottsdale workshop, guaranteeing clients their cabinets are handcrafted to precision and the original plan. The company believes visiting the showroom is the fastest and easiest way to make a decision since clients get to choose exactly what they want. They can also check out the kitchen designs and cabinetry guide for more information about redesigning a kitchen. The company spokesperson had this to say about their services. “We pride ourselves in making sure every Scottsdale cabinets project is completed meticulously, utilizing the best quality materials. We guide you on the right look and durability while still working within your budget. We understand you are making a serious long-term investment and are committed to making this dream come true. We always find the perfect fit for your kitchen and get the job done right the first time.” Hunt’s Kitchen & Design was founded in 2002 by two brothers who wanted to revolutionize the remodeling industry. The family-owned and operated business boasts of a tightly knit team who are determined to give every single client personalized, one on one attention while building their dream living spaces. Clients can visit their showroom to view selected pieces and meet renowned interior design specialists at their headquarters at 14651 N Northsight Blvd Suite 137, Scottsdale, Arizona, 85260, United States. They can also call the company at (480) 650-4402 for inquiries or additional questions or to book a free one-on-one strategy session with a designer. Visit the company website to view a gallery of completed kitchen cabinetry projects. Media Contact Company Name Hunt’s Kitchen & Design Contact Name Jeff & Josh Hunt Phone (480) 650-4402 Address 14651 N Northsight Blvd Suite 137 City Scottsdale State Arizona Postal Code 85260 Country United States Website https://www.huntskitchendesigns.com/ Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Hunt's Kitchen & Design Offers A Wide Selection Of Customized Kitchen Cabinets In Scottsdale AZ Digital Journal
Here Is Today
Here Is Today
Here Is Today https://digitalarizonanews.com/here-is-today-16/ The forecast is showing a hot day in Tucson. It looks to reach a balmy 86 degrees. Today’s forecasted low temperature is 61 degrees. The area will see gentle winds today, with winds only reaching 7 miles per hour, coming from Southeast. This report is created automatically with weather data provided by TownNews.com. For more daily forecast information, visit tucson.com. Local Weather Get the daily forecast and severe weather alerts in your inbox! Tucson folks should be prepared for high temperatures. It looks to reach a balmy 84 degrees. 64 degrees is today’s low. The Tucson area should… The Tucson area can expect a hot day. It looks to reach a warm 83 degrees. We’ll see a low temperature of 62 degrees today. The Tucson area sh… Tucson folks will see warm temperatures today. It looks like it will be a moderate 78 degrees. Today’s forecasted low temperature is 63 degree… Tucson folks should be prepared for high temperatures. It should reach a balmy 85 degrees. 62 degrees is today’s low. The Tucson area should s… Tucson folks should be prepared for high temperatures. It looks like it will be a balmy 83 degrees. We’ll see a low temperature of 62 degrees … For the drive home in Tucson: Partly cloudy. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low near 65F. Winds SE at 5 to 10 mph. Friday, Tucson… Tonight’s weather conditions in Tucson: A clear sky. Low 62F. Winds SE at 10 to 15 mph. Hot temperatures are predicted tomorrow. It looks like… The Tucson area can expect a very hot day. It looks like it will be a balmy 87 degrees. We’ll see a low temperature of 65 degrees today. The T… Tucson’s evening forecast: Mostly clear. Low 62F. Winds SE at 10 to 15 mph. The forecast is showing a hot day in Tucson Sunday. It looks to re… Tucson’s evening forecast: Partly cloudy. Low 64F. Winds ESE at 10 to 15 mph. Saturday, Tucson folks should be prepared for high temperatures.… Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Here Is Today
Trump Lawyer Who Vouched For Documents Meets With FBI
Trump Lawyer Who Vouched For Documents Meets With FBI
Trump Lawyer Who Vouched For Documents Meets With FBI https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-lawyer-who-vouched-for-documents-meets-with-fbi-2/ October 12, 2022October 11, 2022 By ERIC TUCKER, Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — A lawyer for former president Donald Trump who signed a letter stating that a “diligent search” for classified records had been conducted and that all such documents had been given back to the government has spoken with the FBI, according to a person familiar with the matter. Christina Bobb told federal investigators during Friday’s interview that she had not drafted the letter but that another Trump lawyer who she said actually prepared it had asked her to sign it in her role as a designated custodian of Trump’s records, said the person, who insisted on anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation. The process is of interest to investigators because the Justice Department says the letter was untrue in asserting that all classified records sought by the government had been located and returned. Though the letter, and 38 documents bearing classification markings, were presented to FBI and Justice Department officials during a June 3 visit to Mar-a-Lago, agents returned to the Florida estate with a search warrant on Aug. 8 and seized about 100 additional classified records. According to an August court filing, the signed certification letter was presented to investigators who visited Mar-a-Lago on June 3 to collect additional classified material from the home. The Justice Department had weeks earlier issued a subpoena for the records after it says it developed evidence that more classified documents remained at the estate beyond those contained in 15 boxes recovered in January by the National Archives and Records Administration. The letter produced for investigators asserted that, in response to the subpoena, “a diligent search was conducted of the boxes that were moved from the White House to Florida” and that “any and all responsive documents accompany this certification.” The letter also included the caveat that the statements in it were true “based upon the information that has been provided to me.” At the time, the FBI was presented with an envelope containing 38 documents with classification markings, including at the top-secret level. But agents began to suspect that they had not received the entire stash of records, and returned two months later with a warrant. Bobb told the FBI that the letter was actually drafted and prepared by another of Trump’s lawyers, M. Evan Corcoran, and that he had asked her to sign it in her capacity as custodian of the records, according to the person. Corcoran did not immediately return an email and phone message on Tuesday. Spokespeople for the FBI and Justice Department declined to comment, and Bobb did not immediately return a phone message seeking comment. The interview was first reported by NBC News. The person familiar with it said it was a voluntary discussion with investigators and did not take place before a grand jury, and that she is not regarded as a target of the investigation. The Justice Department has said that, beyond investigating possible crimes in the retention of the documents themselves, it is also investigating whether anyone sought to obstruct its probe. It is not clear if anyone will be charged. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Lawyer Who Vouched For Documents Meets With FBI
Labor Proposal Could Upend Rules For Gig Workers Companies
Labor Proposal Could Upend Rules For Gig Workers Companies
Labor Proposal Could Upend Rules For Gig Workers, Companies https://digitalarizonanews.com/labor-proposal-could-upend-rules-for-gig-workers-companies-2/ FILE – An Uber sign is displayed inside a car in Palatine, Ill., Thursday, Feb. 10, 2022. The U.S. Department of Labor is proposing a new rule on employee classifications, saying workers have incorrectly been deemed independent contractors, which hurts their rights. The department said Tuesday, Oct. 11, that misclassifying workers as independent contractors instead of employees denies employees’ protections under federal labor standards, promotes wage theft, allows certain employers to gain an unfair advantage over businesses, and hurts the economy. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh, File) The Biden administration proposed new standards Tuesday that could make it more difficult to classify millions of workers as independent contractors and deny them minimum wage and benefits. The U.S. Department of Labor rule, which could take months to take effect, would replace a scrapped Trump-era standard that had lowered the bar for classifying employees as contractors, workers who are not covered by federal minimum wage laws and are not entitled to benefits including health insurance and paid sick days. The reaction in markets for major gig companies was immediate. Shares of of the ride-hailing companies Lyft fell 12 percent while Uber tumbled about 10 percent, although both companies dismissed the significance of the new proposal and its potential to affect their business. In one key change, employers are required to consider whether the work provided is an integral part of their business. That could affect app-based companies that rely almost entirely on freelance workers to provide their services. The Trump-era rule had narrowed that criteria to whether the work in part of an integrated unit of production, and gave more weight to other considerations such as the worker’s opportunity to make a profit or loss. The new rule directs employers to consider six criteria for determining whether a worker is an employee or a contractor, without predetermining whether one outweighs the other. The criteria also include the degree of control by the employer, whether the work requires special skills, the degree of permanence of the relationship between worker and employer and the investment a worker makes, such as car payments. The rule, however, does not carry the same weight as a law passed by Congress or state legislatures, nor does it specify whether any specific company or industry should reclassify their workers. Rather, it offers an interpretation of who should qualify for protections under the 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act. The rule could bolster labor advocates seeking to challenge worker classification in courts, or state lawmakers seeking to pass stricter laws for designating workers as contractors, said Patricia Campos-Medina, executive director of the Worker Institute at Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations. “It creates a base from which to work and it discourages predatory companies that want to lower their costs by denying basic rights to their employees,” said Campos-Medina. Still, there is room for interpretation since some companies might meet one set of criteria for contractor designation, but not others. “I don’t think it will stop the debate,” Campos-Medina said. “The only thing the federal rule does is it creates a basic standard for evaluation.” The Labor Department said misclassifying workers as independent contractors denies those workers protections under federal labor standards, promotes wage theft, allows certain employers to gain an unfair advantage over businesses, and hurts the economy. “While independent contractors have an important role in our economy, we have seen in many cases that employers misclassify their employees as independent contractors, particularly among our nation’s most vulnerable workers,” said Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh in a prepared statement. Wedbush analyst Dan Ives said the proposal would constitute a major change for workers and employers from previous years. “A classification to employees would essentially throw the business model upside down and cause some major structural changes if this holds,” Ives wrote. But both Uber and Lyft dismissed the potential impact of the new rule. “Today’s proposed rule takes a measured approach, essentially returning us to the Obama era, during which our industry grew exponentially,” CR Wooters, head of federal affairs at Uber, said in a statement. In a blog post, Lyft said the company had expected this change since the start of the Biden administration. “Importantly this rule: Does not reclassify Lyft drivers as employees. Does not force Lyft to change our business model,” the company said. The new rule is subject to a 45-day period ending Nov. 28 during which stakeholders can submit comments, and may not take effect for months. Gig economy giants have weathered past attempts in the U.S. to require their drivers to be classified as employees. In 2020, California voters overwhelmingly approved a proposition to exempt drivers for app-based companies from a state law requiring them to be designated as employees. Uber, Lyft and other companies had spent $200 million campaigning in favor of the proposition. However, a judge struck down the ballot measure as unconstitutional last year, setting up a legal fight that could end up in the California Supreme Court. App-based companies have long argued that their workers want the flexibility to set their own hours as contract workers. Beyond gig workers, the new law has the potential to change the circumstances of millions of custodians, truck drivers, waiters, construction workers and others, according to the Labor Department. Workers themselves are divided over the debate. In California, for example, hundreds of port truck drivers seeking to preserve their independent contractor status shut down operations in the Port of Oakland last summer to protest the state’s gig workers law. But other truckers have successfully fought to force their companies to classify them as employees with full benefits. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Labor Proposal Could Upend Rules For Gig Workers Companies
Instead Of Freaking Out About Nuclear War Let
Instead Of Freaking Out About Nuclear War Let
Instead Of Freaking Out About Nuclear War, Let https://digitalarizonanews.com/instead-of-freaking-out-about-nuclear-war-let/ This is an emergency.  Right now, we’re closer to a cataclysmic nuclear war than at any time since the Cuban missile crisis in 1962. One assessment after another has said the current situation may be even more dangerous. Yet few members of Congress are advocating for any steps that the U.S. government could take to decrease the dangers of a nuclear conflagration. The silences and muted statements on Capitol Hill are evading the reality of what’s hanging in the balance — the destruction of almost all human life on Earth. “The end of civilization.” Public passivity is helping elected officials to sleepwalk toward unfathomable catastrophe for all of humanity. If senators and House members are to be roused out of their timid refusal to urgently address — and work to reduce — the present high risks of nuclear war, they need to be confronted. Nonviolently, but emphatically. Russian President Vladimir Putin has made thinly veiled, extremely reckless statements about possibly using nuclear weapons in the Ukraine war. At the same time, some of the U.S. government’s policies make nuclear war more likely. Changing them is imperative. For the last few months, I’ve been working with people in many states who aren’t just worried about the spiking dangers of nuclear war — they’re also determined to take action to help prevent it. That resolve has resulted in organizing more than 35 picket lines this Friday, Oct. 14, at local offices of Senate and House members around the country. (To find out about picketing in your area, go here.) Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course. What could the U.S. government do to lessen the chances of global nuclear annihilation? The Defuse Nuclear War campaign, which is coordinating those picket lines, has identified key needed actions. Such as: Rejoin nuclear-weapons treaties the U.S. has withdrawn from. President George W. Bush withdrew the United States from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty in 2002. Under Donald Trump, the U.S. withdrew from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty in 2019. Both pacts significantly reduced the chances of nuclear war. Take U.S. nuclear weapons off hair-trigger alert. Four hundred intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) are armed and ready for launch from underground silos in five states. Because they’re land-based, those missiles are vulnerable to attack and thus are on hair-trigger alert — allowing only minutes to determine whether indications of an incoming attack are real or a false alarm. End the policy of “first use.” Both Russia and the United States have so far refused to pledge not to be the first to use nuclear weapons. Support congressional action to avert nuclear war. In the House, H.Res. 1185 includes a call for the U.S. to “lead a global effort to prevent nuclear war.” The single overarching need is for senators and representatives to insist that U.S. participation in nuclear brinkmanship is unacceptable. As our Defuse Nuclear War team says, “Grassroots activism will be essential to pressure members of Congress to publicly acknowledge the dangers of nuclear war and strongly advocate specific steps for reducing them.” Is that really too much to ask? Or even to demand? Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Instead Of Freaking Out About Nuclear War Let
US: Justice Dept Asks Court To Deny Trump
US: Justice Dept Asks Court To Deny Trump
US: Justice Dept Asks Court To Deny Trump https://digitalarizonanews.com/us-justice-dept-asks-court-to-deny-trump/ Find this comment offensive? Choose your reason below and click on the Report button. This will alert our moderators to take action Name Reason for reporting: Foul languageSlanderousInciting hatred against a certain communityOthers Your Reason has been Reported to the admin. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
US: Justice Dept Asks Court To Deny Trump
Russia Makes Crimea Bridge Arrests; Ukraine Struggles To Restore Water Power Supplies After Strikes
Russia Makes Crimea Bridge Arrests; Ukraine Struggles To Restore Water Power Supplies After Strikes
Russia Makes Crimea Bridge Arrests; Ukraine Struggles To Restore Water, Power Supplies After Strikes https://digitalarizonanews.com/russia-makes-crimea-bridge-arrests-ukraine-struggles-to-restore-water-power-supplies-after-strikes/ Ukraine is dealing with the aftermath of another day of missile attacks,, with power and water supplies still damaged in many locations after critical infrastructure was targeted by Russia. Air raid sirens sounded out across multiple regions in Ukraine again on Tuesday with the emergency services warning of more Russian strikes. Those came early in the day, with both Lviv in the west and Zaporizhzhia in the south hit by missile strikes, giving Ukraine’s authorities more logistical challenges to deal with and causing more casualties, a day after Russian attacks left at least 19 people dead and over 100 injured. Rescuers at work following a missile attack on Zaporizhzhia in southeastern Ukraine on Oct. 11, 2022. Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty Images President Zelenskyy said in his nightly address Tuesday that, were it not for the additional strikes during the day, the Ukrainian authorities would have been able to focus on repairing and restoring water and energy supplies. “If it wasn’t for today’s strikes, we would have already restored the energy supply, water supply and communications that the terrorists damaged yesterday. And today, Russia will achieve only one additional thing: it will delay our recovery a little,” Zelenskyy said. Russia’s ramping up of missile strikes comes after it was dealt a blow last weekend when an explosion partially destroyed the Kerch Bridge that links the Russian mainland to Crimea, which Moscow illegally annexed in 2014. On Wednesday, Russia’s security services said it had made arrests in connection to the attack. Kyiv has not said whether it was responsible for the attack on the bridge, although the blast was widely seen as humiliating for Moscow and President Vladimir Putin. Ukraine won’t comment on Russia’s Crimea bridge arrests Ukraine’s intelligence services said it will not respond to Russia’s arrests of eight individuals it alleges are connected to last Saturday’s Crimea bridge blast. “All the activities of the FSB and the Investigative Committee are nonsense. These are fake structures that serve the Putin regime, so we will definitely not comment on their regular statements,” Andrey Yusov, a spokesperson for the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense, said in a statement provided to CNBC on Wednesday. Russia’s Federal Security Service said Wednesday that it arrested five Russians and three citizens of Ukraine and Armenia that it alleged were connected to the attack, which partially damaged the bridge that Russia uses to access the peninsula it annexed from Ukraine in 2014, and to resupply its troops in southern Ukraine. Ukraine has not claimed responsibility for the bridge attack and Yusov insinuated the arrests (and potentially, the attack) were staged. “It is surprising that no business card has yet been found in the area of ​​​​the Crimean bridge,” he said. That was a reference to an attack on a checkpoint near Sloviansk in Donetsk in eastern Ukraine in 2014 that Russia claimed was led by Ukrainian nationalist Dmytro Yarosh. Ukraine claimed pro-Russian separatists (or Russian special forces) had initiated what it described as a “staged” attack and had planted Yarosh’s business card at the scene in order to blame it on Ukraine. The purported discovery of Yarosh’s business card was widely ridiculed by Ukrainians at the time. — Holly Ellyatt Russia makes arrests in alleged connection to Crimea bridge attack Russia’s security services said it has arrested eight people it alleges are connected to the explosion that damaged the Kerch Strait Bridge connecting Russia and Crimea last Saturday.  Russia’s Federal Security Service said Wednesday that it has arrested five Russians and three citizens of Ukraine and Armenia that it alleged were connected to the attack, which partially damaged the bridge that Russia uses to access the peninsula, that it annexed from Ukraine in 2014, and to resupply its troops in southern Ukraine. The FSB issued a statement alleging that the explosion was organized by the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine and its director, Kyrylo Budanov.  “At the moment, five citizens of Russia, three citizens of Ukraine and Armenia, who participated in the preparation of the crime, have been detained as part of a criminal case,” the FSB said. “The investigation into the attack continues. All its organizers and accomplices, including foreign citizens, will be held accountable in accordance with Russian law,” it added. Black smoke billows from a fire on the Kerch bridge that links Crimea to Russia, after a truck exploded, near Kerch, on October 8, 2022. – | Afp | Getty Images Ukraine has not claimed responsibility for the bridge attack and is yet to respond to the allegations. CNBC has approached the Ministry of Defense for comment. The FSB detailed how it alleges the plot to blow up the bridge took place, claiming that “the explosive device was camouflaged in rolls with a construction polyethylene film on 22 pallets with a total weight of 22,770 kg.” The FSB claimed the device was shipped from Odesa to Bulgaria and then on to Georgia and Armenia before crossing over the border to Russia and then on its final journey to Crimea. — Holly Ellyatt Russia’s latest attacks on Ukraine are a ‘show of weakness,’ says former U.S. ambassador to NATO A firefighter extinguishes a fire after a flat was hit by a missile strike in Bakhmut, Donetsk region, on Sept. 15, 2022. Juan Barreto | Afp | Getty Images Russia’s latest attacks on Ukraine aren’t a show of strength, but a “show of weakness” that reflects its inability to advance and seize Ukrainian territory, said Kurt Volker, a distinguished fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis. “Putin’s goal was to take over Ukraine, replace the government, have someone in Ukraine that was subordinate to Moscow. That’s simply not going to happen,” the former U.S. ambassador to NATO (2008-2009) told CNBC’s “Capital Connection” on Tuesday. “Ukrainians have made tremendous inroads taking territory back. This is the kind of thing that Putin has to resort to.” He said Russia’s increasing aggression is an expected reaction to Ukraine’s resistance. Volker added that Putin will have more to lose than gain should he escalate the threat of nuclear weapons. Even the Russian military may not support Putin if he starts a nuclear war, he said. Read more here: Russia’s latest attacks on Ukraine are a ‘show of weakness,’ says former U.S. ambassador to NATO — Natalie Tham Ukraine takes another pummeling from strikes, but its ground forces hold firm Ukrainian soldier Viktor, 35, checks his heavy machine gun at a position along the front line in the Mykolaiv region on October 5, 2022, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Dimitar Dilkoff | Afp | Getty Images Despite being subject to further Russian missile strikes Tuesday, Ukraine’s counteroffensive in the south continues, with its forces are consolidating gains and holding firm against Russian counterattacks, the army reported. Ukraine’s southern command issued an update on Facebook last night in which it said its forces continue “to control the situation in Southern Buh direction,” referring to the Buh river in the west of the country that flows down to Mykolaiv on the southern coast. Southern command said Ukraine’s forces were “destroying the enemy’s reserves, disrupting the control and logistical support systems of the Russian occupiers” there, as well as gaining a foothold in five liberated settlements. It added that Russian forces had tried to counterattack Ukrainian positions in the Ishchenka area to the east of Mykolaiv “under cover of a massive missile attack across Ukraine” but that “the Russian invaders suffered losses and had to retreat.” “Over the past day, Ukrainian aviation launched nine strikes on the areas of invaders’ manpower, weapons and equipment build-up in Beryslav and Mykolaiv districts,” southern command said, claiming to have destroyed or damaged various Russian positions, vehicles and equipment. It added that “the enemy conducts intensive aerial reconnaissance around 17 settlements along the front line and in the newly liberated territories and continues shelling the positions” of Ukraine’s armed forces. CNBC was unable to verify the information in the report. — Holly Ellyatt Ukraine struggles to restore water and energy supplies after more strikes A cafe without electricity in western Ukrainian city of Lviv, after three Russian missiles fired targeted energy infrastructure on Oct. 11, 2022. Lviv’s mayor said that one-third of homes were without power. Yuriy Dyachyshyn | Afp | Getty Images Ukraine is dealing with the aftermath of another day of missile attacks, with power and water supplies still damaged in many locations after critical infrastructure was targeted by Russia. Air raid sirens sounded out across multiple regions in Ukraine again on Tuesday, with the emergency services warning of more Russian strikes. Those came early in the day, with both Lviv in the west and Zaporizhzhia in the south hit by missile strikes, giving Ukraine’s authorities more logistical challenges to deal with. Smoke rises above the buildings after the Russian missile attack on the critical infrastructure of Lviv on Oct. 10, 2022. Russia launched 15 rockets in the Lviv region, some were shot down by air defense forces, the rest hit energy infrastructure facilities. Due to the rocket attack, Lviv was left without electricity, water and mobile communication. Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images President Zelenskyy said in his nightly address Tuesday that, were it not for the additional strikes during the day, the Ukrainian authorities would h...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Russia Makes Crimea Bridge Arrests; Ukraine Struggles To Restore Water Power Supplies After Strikes
Miriam Adelson Wont Pick A Favorite In Republicans 2024 Primary
Miriam Adelson Wont Pick A Favorite In Republicans 2024 Primary
Miriam Adelson Won’t Pick A Favorite In Republicans’ 2024 Primary https://digitalarizonanews.com/miriam-adelson-wont-pick-a-favorite-in-republicans-2024-primary/ Prospective candidates have eagerly sought out meetings with the 76-year-old, Israeli-born Adelson, whose net worth, according to Forbes, is more than $26 billion. The list of possible contenders who’ve spoken with Adelson includes Trump, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, former Vice President Mike Pence, former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Florida Sen. Rick Scott and Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson. Adelson’s team has been bombarded with requests from Republican politicians looking to get face time with her, and some have made pilgrimages to her Las Vegas home. The attention reflects her outsize influence: Over the past decade, she and her late husband spent more than a half-billion dollars on GOP causes. Adelson’s lieutenants say her decision is driven by a desire to stay out of what could be a bitter fight for the nomination. After supporting former House Speaker Newt Gingrich in 2012, Adelson and her late husband sat out the 2016 primary. They later became major contributors to Trump, spending over $100 million to support his campaigns. Other major Republican contributors will face their own decisions about whether to engage in the 2024 primary – with the prospect of a Trump comeback complicating the race. While some of the biggest givers rallied to Trump during his presidency, others aligned with the GOP’s more establishment wing remained cool to him. One of the party’s biggest donors has tipped his hand as to whom he may back. Tech billionaire Larry Ellison has contributed $20 million to a super PAC aligned with South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, a potential contender who has been crisscrossing the country ahead of this year’s midterm elections. Many candidates have been making aggressive efforts to woo contributors – including Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Pence, both of whom recently hosted retreats attended by donors. Adelson, a physician and the majority shareholder of the Las Vegas Sands Corporation, began meeting with potential candidates last fall, after observing a period of mourning following the Jan. 2021 passing of her husband. While she has made clear she has no interest in wading into the 2024 race, she has played an active role in this year’s midterm elections, so far donating $10 million to Congressional Leadership Fund, the principal GOP House super PAC. During a trip to Washington earlier this year, she met separately with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, where she received briefings on the 2022 campaign, according to a person familiar with the discussion. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Miriam Adelson Wont Pick A Favorite In Republicans 2024 Primary
Dorchester County GOP Hosts Debate In Summerville
Dorchester County GOP Hosts Debate In Summerville
Dorchester County GOP Hosts Debate In Summerville https://digitalarizonanews.com/dorchester-county-gop-hosts-debate-in-summerville/ On Thursday evening, October 6, a predominantly Republican crowd filled the Summerville Country Club Candlelite Pavilion to hear Dorchester County GOP Chairman Steven Wright debate South Carolina Democratic Party Chairman Trav Robertson on issues likely to influence voters in the upcoming November 8 election. Moderators for the debate were Abby Barnett, a junior at Charleston Southern University, studying political science, and Nick Reagan, a reporter with Live 5 News. In days leading up to the debate both chairmen were asked about their goals for the debate. Both officials indicated they wanted to offer a clear contrast between the visions of their respective parties. Wright identified major issues as abortion, defunding police, student debt, inflation and world-stage events related to Russia, the Taliban and the southern border. The GOP Chairman, who is the youngest person to hold that office, indicated that he was motivated to have a debate by what he called “shots” taken by Democrats at Dorchester Council Member Harriet Holman, who switched parties and ran as a Republican in her last election. Wright expressed pride that every elected official representing Dorchester County who resides in Dorchester County is a Republican. “We need to ask what kind of country are we handing the next generation.” “This debate provides an opportunity to clearly demonstrate the differences between a Republican Party that focuses on the past without a vision towards the future and the Democratic Party that displays a vision of the future while focusing on creating an economy and quality of life that works for every person,” said Robertson. He criticized the Republican Party for not believing in infrastructure or healthcare, adding that Democrats have passed legislation dealing with both issues. “Most importantly, it is an opportunity to disagree without being disagreeable and to talk about the constant attack on the freedom of women by the modern day Republican Party.” During the course of the evening, the debate moderators would put forth 10 questions covering five topics. Moderator Nick Reagan greeted the crowd, explained the time limits and asked attendees to be respectful throughout the debate and keep rounds of applause and outbursts to a minimum. This request was challenged numerous times during the event. In opening remarks, Robertson shared that he had been chastised by some Democrats for agreeing to come into a hotbed of Republican voters only to give the GOP Chairman a platform to say he is running for the state party chair position. “They will beat you like a drum and make you look like a fool,” Robertson joked. “But there’s one important caveat: it’s extremely important for our people to see two people who are diametrically opposed to each other come together in civil discourse.” Robertson characterized Republicans as wanting to nationalize every issue and take attention away from the assault on the freedom of women and “horrible rankings,” citing South Carolina public education as 44th; healthcare as 34th; infrastructure as 38th and fiscal stability as 31st in the nation. He added that South Carolina has one of the highest, if not the highest, crime rates in America, with N. Charleston leading the way. “Those are not my facts,” said Robertson. Wright began his comments by thanking the Summerville Country Club for hosting the event and then wondered aloud how Dorchester County had gotten to the point of Harriet Holman switching parties. He stated that the Democratic Party has lost its way and America is in a crisis with families suffering, full-blown inflation and high gas prices. “Joe Biden has done this in less than two years,” said Wright. He cautioned the crowd that this election is not just about November. “If Democrats have their way, they will turn South Carolina into California. We are blessed with Governor McMaster. On the opposite, we have a Democratic Party that wants to abolish 2nd Amendment Rights and perform gender-changing surgery on four-year-olds — not what we want for South Carolina.” The First question referred to the federal government goal of making half of new vehicles sold in the United States, zero emission by 2030, asking if this was a feasible goal. “Absolutely not,” said Wright. “That should be determined and run by the private sector; they want to dictate to the private sector,” he said, reiterating that Democrats want to turn America into California. “Just think about the cost that puts on the consumer.” Robertson countered by saying that it’s not about public versus private enterprise. “What makes America great is that we have partnerships.” He cited the recent announcement by IBM of a 20-billion dollar investment, saying it was directly because of the bi-partisan CHIPS and Science Act signed into law in August of 2022. “We have to make sure we never find ourselves again at the mercy of an American president who starts a trade war. You have to have a leader with vision.” This statement drew laughter and negative background comments from the crowd. Question Two asked how to cool inflation and deal with its consequences. Wright referred to the Inflation Reduction Act, saying it is essentially useless and that non-partisan analysts have said it will increase inflation. He blamed Democrats for “their Socialist spending spree” and criticized the CARES Act for resulting in giving stimulus checks to violent murderers like Dylann Roof. He encouraged the crowd to send people like U. S. Representative Nancy Mace and Senator Tim Scott back to Congress who will fight Biden’s spending policies. “I’m on the Rand Paul train,” said Wright. Robertson agreed that inflation is not good, adding that President Biden has created the Inflation Reduction Act. Numerous individuals gathered in the pavilion burst into laughter at Robertson’s comments and conversed among themselves. “Inflation started with a trade war with China; these problems started with China,” said Robertson. “One of the aspects of dealing with inflation is bringing prices down. For the first time in history we will have a Medicare system that can negotiate prices.” Robertson used the example of caps on cost of insulin for children. “We are working hand in glove with every elected official to bring down inflation.” Question Three asked the debaters to speak on whether the recent overturning of Roe v. Wade was a step forward or backward. “Thank God for President Trump because it was his three Supreme Court Justices that overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision,” said Wright. “Our state legislature is fighting to ban abortion in our state.” Wright shared that the issue is personal for him as his mother was only sixteen when he was born and relatives encouraged her to have an abortion. “Democrats want our abortion policy to be in alignment with North Korea — abortion on demand without restriction.” Robertson acknowledged a very big difference in viewpoints. “We believe women should be free to make their decisions. That bill [Senator Lindsey Graham’s proposed 15-week ban] believes that the rights of rapists and pedophiles are more important than the rights of children, 11 or 12 year-olds who are raped and pregnant. They don’t believe she has to right to access to mental health, a psychologist. Democrats stand up for the rights of victims and the rights of women, with support from their doctors, husbands and clergy to make decisions.” Robertson’s comments were awarded with clapping from a small segment of the crowd. Wright repeatedly challenged Robertson on whether he supports abortion with restrictions or not. Robertson reiterated that it’s a woman’s decision. The discussion about abortion continued with Question Four asking why Republicans cannot get on the same page regarding access and restrictions. Wright professed to be 100 percent pro-life, but opposed to Graham’s 15-week ban. He said he believes it should be decided with each individual state. “Sadly, at the end of the day, there are some Republicans who aren’t pro-life.” Robertson challenged Republicans with not wanting government in people’s lives, but willing to have people who are not doctors take away the freedoms of women of South Carolina. “We have seen something happen that has never happened — a Supreme Court that has taken away the rights of its citizens.” At this, the crowd erupted into hostile laughter, booing and yelling out. Questions Five and Six turned to the topic of education including the loss of South Carolina teachers, low rate of graduating teachers and privatization efforts. Discussion bounced back and forth between these issues. Wright stated that he believed parents should decide where to send their children to school, denouncing kids being trapped in failing schools because of their zip codes. Robertson offered the following solutions to the problems in education: “Pay our public school teachers; reduce size of classrooms; and stop diverting funds to private schools.” He claimed that South Carolina Act 388 destroyed the school system and resulted in the loss of accreditation. Wright argued that South Carolina spends a lot of money on education, but agreed that Act 388 was bad legislation. Act 388 eliminated homeowner property taxes used to operate schools in exchange for raising the state sales tax. Wright expressed approval over the South Carolina legislature passing a raise for teachers but said he doesn’t think pay is going to solve the issues. “We have to talk about testing — and liberals wanting to put Critical Race Theory in our schools.” The latter comment drew vigorous applause from the audience. When asked to respond, Robertson asked Wright to define Critical Race Theory, saying he wasn’t sure what that is. Shouts of “I can” came from several people in the crowd. Wright responded by saying: “I ...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Dorchester County GOP Hosts Debate In Summerville
Annette Smith Offers Watercolor Demonstration
Annette Smith Offers Watercolor Demonstration
Annette Smith Offers Watercolor Demonstration https://digitalarizonanews.com/annette-smith-offers-watercolor-demonstration/ Left: Cecil by Annette Smith, watercolor portrait. Right: Old Hollywood by Annette Smith, watercolor portrait. (Courtesy/NAWS) Acclaimed Arizona watercolorist Annette Smith has been developing her artistic skills over decades combining a comprehensive sense of drawing with the added nuances that watercolor affords. She will demonstrate her approach to drawing the head and her gloriously splashy technique for painting watercolor portraits on Friday, Oct. 28, at 9 a.m., at the Sedona United Methodist Church on 110 Indian Cliffs Road in Sedona.  This program is being sponsored by the Northern Arizona Watercolor Society (NAWS), a regional non-profit watermedia art association with members from Flagstaff to Prescott. Annette is an artist who teaches.  She holds classes and workshops drawing students from Arizona as well as the rest of the country and Canada.  This allows her to expand on her range of ideas, techniques, and materials through teaching and sharing with a wide range of students of varying ages and abilities. She now teaches at Scottsdale Artists’ School where she was once a student herself. Her portrait of “Cecil” was accepted into the 153rd annual International Exhibition of the American Watercolor Society in 2020, awarded “Best in Show” in the Arizona Watercolor Association Fall 2019 Membership Exhibition, received First Place in the Portrait Artists of Arizona’s 10th Annual Members’ Juried Portrait Exhibition, and claimed Outstanding Watercolor in the Bold Brush Juried Exhibition in 2019. For more information about the artist, please visit annettesmithfineart.com. Founded in 1995, NAWS has about 150 members who meet monthly to celebrate watermedia painting. These meetings typically feature informative learning topics and artist demonstrations. Additional membership benefits include access to exceptional quality workshops, participation in smaller critique groups and an extensive DVD loan library of painting technique videos.  NAWS welcomes visitors to its monthly meetings. For more information about NAWS, send an email to nawsmembershipjoy@gmail.com. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Annette Smith Offers Watercolor Demonstration
Exhumed Premiere New Single
Exhumed Premiere New Single
Exhumed Premiere New Single https://digitalarizonanews.com/exhumed-premiere-new-single-2/ Exhumed Premiere New Single “Disgusted” Band Photo: Exhumed (?) California-based deathgrind outfit Exhumed premiere their new single “Disgusted” off the band’s upcoming album “To The Dead“, streaming via YouTube and Spotify for you below. It is the band’s final advance track to arrive ahead of the album’s release on October 21st through Relapse Records. Tells vocalist/guitarist Matt Harvey: “Our final single from ‘To The Dead‘ is a veritable labyrinth of riffs that mirrors the lyrical content, dragging the listener kicking and screaming on a descent into homicidal mania. If you make it through this track alive after it slices, dices, chops, and rips your senses, you deserve a beer before you dive back in for another listen! It’s an Exhumed track – you know what to do: crank up the volume, crack open a cold one, and shed some brain cells with us!” Exhumed will be out on the road again for the below headlining U.S. tour: w/ Hulder, Vitriol & Molder: 11/10 Portland, OR – Dante’s 11/11 Seattle, WA – Substation 11/12 Boise, ID – The Shredder 11/13 Salt Lake City, UT – Ace’s High Saloon 11/14 Denver, CO – HQ 11/16 Omaha, NE – Reverb Lounge 11/17 Des Moines, IA – Lefty’s 11/18 Chicago, IL – Reggies 11/19 Milwaukee, WI – Club Garibaldi 11/20 Detroit, MI – Sanctuary 11/21 Cincinnati, OH – Legends 11/22 Cleveland, OH – No Class w/ Hulder, Vitriol & Castrator: 11/23 Pittsburgh, PA – Cattivo 11/25 Boston, MA – Sonia 11/26 Philadelphia, PA – Johnny Brendas 11/27 Brooklyn, NY – The Meadows 11/29 Baltimore, MD – Metro Gallery 11/30 Norfolk, VA – Norfolk Taphouse 12/01 Columbia, SC – New Brookland Tavern 12/02 Atlanta, GA – Bogg’s 12/03 Orlando, FL – Will’s Pub 12/04 Tampa, FL – Brass Mug 12/07 Houston, TX – White Oak 12/08 Austin, TX – Come And Take It Live 12/09 Dallas, TX – Amplified 12/10 San Antonio, TX – Rock Box 12/12 Albuquerque, NM – The Launchpad 12/13 Mesa, AZ – Nile Underground 12/14 San Diego, CA – Brick By Brick 12/15 Santa Ana, CA – Constellation 12/16 Los Angeles, CA – Don Quixote 12/17 Oakland, CA – Eli’s Mile High Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Exhumed Premiere New Single
Anger Erupts At Los Angeles City Council Meeting Over Racist Remarks
Anger Erupts At Los Angeles City Council Meeting Over Racist Remarks
Anger Erupts At Los Angeles City Council Meeting Over Racist Remarks https://digitalarizonanews.com/anger-erupts-at-los-angeles-city-council-meeting-over-racist-remarks/ LOS ANGELES — President Biden joined a growing chorus on Tuesday calling for the resignation of three Democratic politicians in the nation’s second-largest city, after a leaked audio recording revealed racist and disparaging remarks made by the City Council president in a meeting last year. Scores of angry protesters disrupted a council meeting as the episode exposed painful racial fault lines in the diverse and heavily Democratic city. The details: In the profanity-laced recording, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times and which was first reported by The Los Angeles Times on Sunday, Councilwoman Nury Martinez, who is Latina, compared the Black child of a white council member to a “changuito,” Spanish for little monkey. She also called Oaxacan immigrants living in Koreatown “short little dark people.” The remarks occurred during a meeting of Ms. Martinez with two other council members, Gil Cedillo and Kevin de León, and the head of one of Los Angeles County’s most powerful labor organizations. That official, Ron Herrera, resigned late Monday. Ms. Martinez stepped down as council president on Monday and said on Tuesday that she would take a leave of absence. But she stopped short of resigning from the council, despite calls for her and the two other members to do so from Mayor Eric Garcetti of Los Angeles, both of the candidates running to replace him, President Biden and many other prominent Democratic officials. Mr. Biden’s spokeswoman called the language used on the tape “unacceptable” and “appalling.” Oct. 11, 2022, 9:36 p.m. ET Oct. 11, 2022, 9:36 p.m. ET Image Mike Bonin, a member of the Los Angeles City Council, shed tears on Tuesday as he spoke about the racist comments directed toward his son.Credit…Sarah Reingewirtz/The Orange County Register, via Associated Press LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles City Council chamber became a raucous floor for protest on Tuesday, as an hourslong cavalcade of speakers furiously demanded that three Latino council members immediately resign over a secretly recorded private discussion that involved racist insults and slurs. Latino residents said they were betrayed by their own leaders. A Black speaker said she wanted “an investigation into all decisions that have affected Black people” in Los Angeles. A white council member whose Black child was the target of racist comments tearfully told his colleagues how he and his husband were both “raw and angry and heartbroken and sick.” President Biden on Tuesday called for the departure of the three council members in the nation’s second-largest city. “He believes they should all resign,” Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, said. “The language that was used and tolerated in that conversation was unacceptable, and it was appalling.” The recorded conversation involving some of Los Angeles’s top power brokers exposed the racial and ethnic factions that have come to dominate politics in California. But it also highlighted the political impatience among leaders of the city’s largest ethnic group: Latinos, who make up roughly half of the city’s population but who hold only four of its 15 City Council seats. Los Angeles is a kind of microcosm of the world; its roughly four million residents speak a combined 200-plus languages at home. Over the decades, the assorted constituencies have tried to develop a coalition style of politics based on common interests in the heavily Democratic city, but, beneath that veneer, the reality often has been a quest for power and political spoils. The recording was a conversation among Nury Martinez, the Council president; Gil Cedillo and Kevin de León, council members; and Ron Herrera, the leader of the powerful Los Angeles County Federation of Labor, that took place in October 2021 during intense negotiations over City Council redistricting. Ms. Martinez is heard comparing the Black child of Councilman Mike Bonin to a “changuito,” Spanish for little monkey, and joking with Mr. de León that Mr. Bonin carries the child around like a designer handbag. Those were only two of the offensive comments in the 80-minute recording, which included ugly remarks describing recent migrants from the Mexican state of Oaxaca and disparaging remarks about the trustworthiness of white liberals and a councilwoman who is of South Asian descent. Image Protesters gathered outside Los Angeles City Hall on Tuesday.Credit…Lauren Justice for The New York Times News of the recording was first reported on Sunday by The Los Angeles Times; by Monday night, Mr. Herrera had resigned from the labor federation and Ms. Martinez had relinquished her leadership post on the City Council, although she resisted calls for her to leave the Council entirely. Mr. Cedillo and Mr. de León also have resisted calls for them to step down from their council seats. Although the raw language on the audio riveted the city, political observers said the recording was less a reflection of Los Angeles residents — who in polls largely express pride in the city’s diversity — than of the political climate in City Hall. Challenged by Covid-19, besieged with a succession of public corruption investigations and presented with the political opportunity of new political maps, Los Angeles local government has, in the past couple of years, been a hotbed of internecine conflict. “As much as it was a racist, racial, ethnic disparagement of everyone in town, it was more about power,” Zev Yaroslavsky, a longtime Los Angeles leader who served for 40 years on the City Council and the county’s Board of Supervisors, said of the meeting. “It was a raw power grab,” he said. Mr. Cedillo and Mr. de León appeared on the dais near the start of Tuesday’s meeting and were greeted with shouted profanities from the packed gallery. They left after a brief discussion with Councilman Mitch O’Farrell, who was presiding over the meeting as president pro tem. Outside, before the session, protesters chanted “fuera,” or “out” in Spanish, demanding that the three council members resign. Inside, the cacophonous demonstration was so relentless and deafening that the council members recessed, hoping, in vain, for calm. Later, during the meeting, Mr. Bonin said through tears: “I take a lot of hits, and I know I practically invite a bunch of them. But my son? Man, that makes my soul bleed.” Mr. O’Farrell, the council member leading the meeting, condemned the comments and the political maneuvering of his colleagues. “There are no excuses,” he said. “The court of public opinion has rendered a verdict, and the verdict is they all must resign.” Image Councilman Kevin de León, left, and the Council’s president, Nury Martinez, conferred at a City Council meeting this month.Credit…Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times, via Getty Images For more than a half-century, Los Angeles politics have been a study in demographic constituencies and race relations. Not for nothing is Rodney King’s plea during the 1992 riots often viewed as the city’s signature utterance: “Can we all get along?” White Angelenos, particularly in the San Fernando Valley and on the city’s affluent Westside, have long controlled the city’s wealth and power, but they now represent only 28 percent of the population. The city’s Black community, with a vibrant middle class and powerful community leaders like Tom Bradley, a former mayor, and Magic Johnson, the Los Angeles Lakers star, has long wielded clout. Still, Black Angelenos are leaving the city as many are priced out of the communities they have built over decades. Although 20 percent of the Council seats are held by Black elected officials, Black Angelenos make up only 8.8 percent of the population. The city’s Asian community has become a rising political force with nearly 12 percent of the population. But Latinos make up the city’s largest ethnic group by far. In recent years, young progressives who studied the Los Angeles riots in school have risen to power, learning from past racial and ethnic conflicts in the city. Labor organizations also have gained influence as their ranks have swelled with Latino workers following California’s battle over immigrant rights in the 1990s. “There are naturally tensions,” said Mr. Yaroslavsky, who now teaches at the Luskin School of Public Affairs at the University of California, Los Angeles, which conducts annual surveys of Los Angeles County. “The question is how you deal with that tension. I think there’s been a lot of effort made in this city and county to manage it.” Image Protesters outside City Hall on Tuesday.Credit…Lauren Justice for The New York Times Constance L. Rice, a veteran civil rights lawyer in the city, said that efforts to work together tended to intensify during zero-sum contests such as the redrawing of political boundaries that occurs each decade. A citizen advisory committee conducts Los Angeles’s redistricting process and recommends maps, but — unlike California’s statewide line-drawing by an independent commission — the final boundaries are determined by the City Council. In years past, Ms. Rice said, lawyers with expertise in federal voting rights law wielded considerable influence on the drawing of local political boundaries. As the Supreme Court has eroded the federal Voting Rights Act, however, outside experts have wielded less clout and political battles have intensified, she said. “It used to be all about maximizing rights and balancing power,” Ms. Rice said. “Now it’s ‘Game of Thrones.’” As Angelenos processed the furor, calls for solutions focused on whether the city’s redistricting process had been changed — and whether it might have been corrupted. Council members said on Tuesday that they intended to seek an independent redistricting process that doesn’t allow them to draw their own politic...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Anger Erupts At Los Angeles City Council Meeting Over Racist Remarks
Kings Vs. Suns: Start Time Where To Watch What's The Latest
Kings Vs. Suns: Start Time Where To Watch What's The Latest
Kings Vs. Suns: Start Time, Where To Watch, What's The Latest https://digitalarizonanews.com/kings-vs-suns-start-time-where-to-watch-whats-the-latest/ By HoopsHype | October 12, 2022 The Sacramento Kings play against the Phoenix Suns at Footprint Center The Sacramento Kings are spending $71,253,127 per win while the Phoenix Suns are spending $173,201,067 per win Game Time: 10:00 PM EDT on Wednesday October 12, 2022 Broadcast Info National TV: N/A Home TV: Bally Sports AZ Away TV: Kings.com Home Radio: KMVP 98.7 / S: KSUN Away Radio: Sactown Sports 1140 AM When the game is underway, you can follow it here! To leave a comment, you will need to Sign in or create an account if you already have an account. Typed comments will be lost if you are not signed in. Read More…
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Kings Vs. Suns: Start Time Where To Watch What's The Latest