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Judge Narrows Trial Of Analyst Who Reported Salacious Claims About Trump
Judge Narrows Trial Of Analyst Who Reported Salacious Claims About Trump
Judge Narrows Trial Of Analyst Who Reported Salacious Claims About Trump https://digitalarizonanews.com/judge-narrows-trial-of-analyst-who-reported-salacious-claims-about-trump/ WASHINGTON — John H. Durham, the Trump-era special counsel, set off political reverberations last year when he unveiled a lengthy indictment of an analyst he accused of lying to the FBI about sources for the so-called Steele dossier, a discredited compendium of political opposition research about purported ties between Donald Trump and Russia. But the trial of the analyst, Igor Danchenko, which opens Tuesday with jury selection in federal court in Alexandria, Virginia, now appears likely to be shorter and less politically salient than the sprawling narrative in Durham’s indictment had suggested the proceeding would be. In an 18-page order last week, the judge overseeing the case, Anthony J. Trenga of the Eastern District of Virginia, excluded from the trial large amounts of information that Durham had wanted to showcase — including material that undercuts the credibility of the dossier’s notorious rumor that Russia had a blackmail tape of Trump with prostitutes. Sign up for The Morning newsletter from the New York Times Certain facts Durham dug up related to that rumor “do not qualify as direct evidence as they are not ‘inextricably intertwined’ or ‘necessary to provide context’ to the relevant charge,” Trenga wrote, adding that they “were substantially outweighed by the danger of confusion and unfair prejudice.” In that and other disputes over evidence, Trenga, a George W. Bush appointee, almost always sided with Danchenko’s defense lawyers. Durham, they said, had tried to inject irrelevant issues into the trial in “an unnecessary and impermissible attempt to make this case about more than it is.” Trenga’s ruling has pared down the larger significance of the trial, which is likely to be Durham’s final courtroom act before he retires as a longtime prosecutor. The grand jury that Durham has used to hear evidence has expired, suggesting he will bring no further indictments. Durham is also writing a report to Attorney General Merrick Garland, who succeeded the Trump administration official who appointed him as special counsel, William Barr. The dossier, which is at the heart of the Danchenko trial, attracted significant public attention when BuzzFeed published it in January 2017. Trump and his supporters frequently try to conflate it with the official Russia inquiry or falsely claim that it was the basis for the FBI’s investigation. But the FBI did not open the investigation based on the dossier, and the final report by the special counsel, Robert Mueller, did not cite anything in it as evidence. The FBI did cite some claims from the dossier in applying for court permission to wiretap a former Trump campaign adviser with ties to Russia. The dossier grew out of opposition research indirectly funded by Hillary Rodham Clinton’s presidential campaign and the Democratic National Committee. Their law firm, Perkins Coie, contracted with the research firm Fusion GPS, which subcontracted research about Trump business dealings in Russia to a company run by Christopher Steele, a former British intelligence agent. Steele in turn subcontracted to Danchenko, a Russian-born analyst living in the United States, who canvassed people he knew, including in Europe and Russia. Danchenko verbally relayed what the analyst later called “raw intelligence” — essentially uncorroborated gossip — to Steele, who drafted the dossier. A bureau counterintelligence analyst determined Danchenko’s identity and the FBI first spoke to him in early 2017, during which he said he had not seen the dossier until BuzzFeed published it. Its tenor was more conclusive than was justified, he said, and he portrayed the blackmail tape story as mere rumor and speculation. Danchenko talked to the FBI for hours about what he had gathered, and court filings by Durham disclosed that the bureau formally deemed him a confidential human source. An inspector general report revealed in late 2019 that Danchenko’s interview had raised doubts about the credibility of the dossier and criticized the bureau for failing to tell that to a court in wiretap renewal applications that continued to cite it. The report essentially portrayed Danchenko, whom it did not name, as a truth-teller, and the FBI as deceptive. But after further investigation, Durham accused Danchenko of deceiving the FBI — including by concealing that a public relations executive with ties to Democrats, Charles Dolan, had been his source for a minor claim involving office politics in the Trump campaign. That assertion made its way into the dossier. At the trial, Danchenko’s defense will apparently be that the FBI asked him whether he had ever “talked” to Dolan about information in the dossier and that his somewhat equivocal denial was true: They had instead communicated by writing about that topic. Defense lawyers had asked Trenga to throw out the charge, arguing that the particular statute Danchenko had been charged with covers only affirmative misstatements, not misleading omissions. The judge has characterized that issue as a close call but let it go forward, while suggesting he could revisit the question later. Durham had also wanted to present striking but inconclusive evidence: In the summer of 2016, when Danchenko went to Moscow to gather rumors like the one about a purported sex tape, Dolan was staying at the hotel where the tape had supposedly been filmed three years earlier — and toured the suite where Trump had stayed. But Dolan told Durham’s team that he had never heard the tape rumor until BuzzFeed published the dossier, and Durham did not claim that Dolan was a source of the rumor. The judge excluded that information from the trial as irrelevant to the false statements Danchenko is charged with making. Durham also brought four false-statement charges against Danchenko related to accusations that he lied to the FBI about a person he said had called and provided information without identifying himself. Danchenko told the FBI he believed the caller had probably been Sergei Millian, a former president of the Russian-American Chamber of Commerce, but Durham contends that is a lie and Danchenko never believed that. Like Steele, Millian is abroad; he refused to come to the United States to be a witness at the trial. The judge has also ruled inadmissible two emails Millian apparently wrote about Danchenko in 2020 denying that he talked to Danchenko. The “emails lack the necessary ‘guarantees of trustworthiness’ as the government does not offer direct evidence that Millian actually wrote the emails, and, even if he did, Millian possessed opportunity and motive to fabricate and/or misrepresent his thoughts,” the judge wrote. After Durham was assigned to investigate the Russia investigation in the spring of 2019, Trump and his supporters stoked expectations that Durham would uncover a “deep state” conspiracy against him and charge high-level FBI and intelligence officials with crimes. But instead, Durham developed two cases on narrow charges of false statements involving outside efforts to uncover links between Trump and Russia. One was against Michael Sussmann, a lawyer with Democratic ties who was acquitted of lying to the FBI when he shared a tip about possible connections between Trump and Russia. Another was against Danchenko. Durham filled court filings with copious amounts of information seemingly extraneous to the charges, while insinuating that Democrats had conspired to frame Trump for colluding with Russia. While that was not the theoretical conspiracy Trump and his supporters at outlets like Fox News had originally focused on, Durham’s filings provided fodder for them to stoke grievances about the Russia investigation. But judges in both cases have proved skeptical about putting much of that material before a jury. In both instances, however, Durham’s earlier filings had already made that information public. Danchenko was the subject of a counterintelligence investigation more than a decade ago, after the FBI received a tip that he had made a remark that someone interpreted as an offer to buy classified information. He had also had contact with someone at the Russian embassy believed to be an intelligence officer. The bureau closed the case in 2011 without charging him. Danchenko — who made his name as a Russia analyst by bringing to light evidence that President Vladimir Putin of Russia likely plagiarized parts of his dissertation — has denied being a Russian agent and said he has no memory of the purported remark. For now, the judge has barred Durham’s team from introducing details about that inquiry, although prosecutors can tell the jury that there had been one. In an interview last month with the conservative Washington Examiner, Barr suggested that despite the special counsel’s limited achievements in the courtroom, the investigation was a success from another point of view. “I think Durham got out a lot of important facts that fill in a lot of the blanks as to what was really happening,” Barr said, adding that he expected “the Danchenko trial will also allow for a lot of this story to be told, whether or not he’s ultimately convicted.” © 2022 The New York Times Company Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Judge Narrows Trial Of Analyst Who Reported Salacious Claims About Trump
Biden Needs To 'back Off' Armageddon Language Work To Get Russia To The Table With Ukraine: Mullen
Biden Needs To 'back Off' Armageddon Language Work To Get Russia To The Table With Ukraine: Mullen
Biden Needs To 'back Off' Armageddon Language, Work To Get Russia To The Table With Ukraine: Mullen https://digitalarizonanews.com/biden-needs-to-back-off-armageddon-language-work-to-get-russia-to-the-table-with-ukraine-mullen/ President Joe Biden’s warning last week that Vladimir Putin was “not joking” about possibly using nuclear weapons was “concerning” and counterproductive to bringing an end to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, retired Adm. Mike Mullen said Sunday. Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, was asked in an interview on ABC’s “This Week” to assess the nuclear risk from Russia after Putin said he would use “all available means” to protect what he called his country’s territorial integrity. “President Biden’s language — we’re about at the top of the language scale, if you will. And I think we need to back off that a little bit and do everything we possibly can to try to get to the table to resolve this thing,” Mullen told “This Week” co-anchor Martha Raddatz. Mullen was referring to what Biden said on Thursday when he warned that for the “first time since the Cuban missile crisis, we have the direct threat of the use of a nuclear weapon if in fact things continue down the path that they are going.” MORE: Biden warns Putin is ‘not joking’ about nuclear weapons “I don’t think there’s any such thing as the ability to easily [use] a tactical nuclear weapon and not end up with Armageddon,” Biden said then. The White House has since clarified that the president was not acting on new intelligence of looming danger but was trying to underline the stakes given the current conflict in Ukraine, where Ukrainian forces have recaptured ground in the country’s contested eastern and southern regions and have pushed back Russian troops. On “This Week,” Raddatz pressed Mullen on his proposed resolution: “How do you see him [Putin] saving face if he doesn’t come to the table? If Ukraine can’t figure anything out?” Diplomacy and international pressure on both Ukraine and Russia would ultimately be key, Mullen argued. “It’s got to end and usually there are negotiations associated with that,” he said. “The sooner the better, as far as I’m concerned.” Admiral Michael Mullen, former chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, speaks during the funeral ceremony of late Senator John Warner at the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., June 23, 2021. Oliver Contreras/Sipa/Bloomberg via Getty Images, FILE Putin is “pretty well cornered and boxed in,” Mullen said. And potential use of tactical nuclear weapons could cause problems for Russia’s president at home: “The winds all blow back onto Russia, so he would have to, in a way, contaminate his own country.” Forecasting a possible strike, Mullen said Putin “could pick a symbolic target. He could pick [Ukraine President Volodymyr] Zelenskyy’s hometown, for instance.” Raddatz opened Mullen’s interview Sunday by having him respond to John Kirby, a spokesman for the White House National Security Council, who also went one-on-one with Raddatz on Sunday. Kirby said that the Biden administration’s strategy against nuclear threats from North Korea was both to ensure the U.S. can “defend our national security interests” and to pursue direct talks with Kim Jong Un’s regime to denuclearize the region. “Do you see any strategy differences? Do you see anything that’s going to work?” Raddatz asked Mullen in light of Kirby’s comments. “I believe for some time that the path to any resolution of this has got to go through Beijing — pressure brought on by Xi Jinping, with respect to dealing with Kim Jong Un,” Mullen said, referring to China’s leader. “I’m fine with us negotiating directly, if that’s what Kim Jong Un wants to do.” “Is denuclearization really realistic at this point?” Raddatz asked. “I think sometimes we lose perspective on how devastating these weapons are. And I think we need to do everything we possibly can to the extreme to make sure that that still is a possibility,” Mullen said. “And I’m just not willing to admit that it isn’t yet. I know it’s difficult.” Raddatz cited Mullen’s view in 2017 that North Korea had increased the possibility of nuclear war to a historic high. “How about now?” she asked. “I think in the end it comes down to will he [Kim] ever use it? And I just don’t know the answer to that,” Mullen said. But he was concerned: “I think it’s more possible than it was five years ago.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Biden Needs To 'back Off' Armageddon Language Work To Get Russia To The Table With Ukraine: Mullen
Obituary: THOMAS RAY MERTENS
Obituary: THOMAS RAY MERTENS
Obituary: THOMAS RAY MERTENS https://digitalarizonanews.com/obituary-thomas-ray-mertens/ THOMAS RAY MERTENS Provided Photo December 15, 1946 – September 23, 2022 Thomas Ray Mertens, 75, of Windsor, CO passed away on Friday, September 23, 2022, surrounded by his family after complications from his recent motorcycle accident. Tom was born to Raymond and Mary Mertens on December 15, 1946, in Greeley, CO, and was the first of five children. He grew up in New Raymer, CO and was part of the last class to graduate from Raymer High School in 1964. He went on to take classes in business and agriculture from Northeastern Junior College before joining the United States Navy in 1967 during the Vietnam War. In both school and the service, he made and maintained friends that he still stays in close contact with today. After returning home from the service in 1971, Tom took classes at Colorado State University but left in 1972, for a farmland opportunity and started a partnership with his brother Paul, which he is still is a part of today. The brothers started farming and ranching on the family farm west of New Raymer, and started Mertens Bros Inc, in 1980 when Jim joined the operation. Farming was his lifelong passion and sharing that love and knowledge with all was what brought him joy, but being able to share what he built with his grandchildren made him the proudest. In April 1980, he married Shirley Brandt, and together they raised 4 children, Greg, Brad, Ryan and Allison in their family home below Pawnee Pass just west of Sterling until Tom retired in 2010. Tom and Shirley then started on their next adventure, having to no longer shovel snow and “deal with the cold” and started traveling south for the winter months. Making this permanent in 2015 by moving to Mesa, Arizona to live on a golf course and swim every day in the pool. To say he was loved by all who met him is an understatement. It seemed that there was never a person Tom did not know and he made friends and conversation everywhere he went. He joked that after retirement he was busier than when he was working. He never said no to anyone and was always there to lend a helping hand. There was nothing it seemed that he could not fix or build. Tom was active in the Arizona Commemorative Air Force and traveled with the B-17 & B-52 bombers for several weeks each summer. He was an active member of every church he and Shirley attended, grill master for the Lion’s Club, part of the Logan County Planning and Zoning Commission, and served on the Board of Directors for Wiggins Telephone Association from 1985-2011, serving as President for 11 of those years. In his retirement, Tom was found traveling the country with the fifth wheel, riding his Harley Davidsons, going to car shows with his Pontiac Star Chief (same car he had after high school), playing golf and swimming in his pool in Mesa, and spending time with family and friends. All were always welcome, and no one would leave hungry, the grill was almost always fired up with steak and potatoes as his signature dish. Tom’s proudest moments were watching the successes of his children but especially his grandchildren. Even up to his final moments, his grandchildren would bring a smile to his face and comfort to his heart. Tom is survived by his wife of 42 years, Shirley; 4 children, sons Greg (Lori) Sharp of Greeley, Brad (Karen) Sharp of Boston, Ryan (Robin) Mertens of Pueblo West and daughter Allison (Carson) Summers of Windsor. 10 grandchildren that were the highlight of his life, Sydney, Katrina, Alice, Annabelle, Cameron, Natalie, Margot, Mason, Jackson, and Hudson. Siblings, Ruth (Lee) Fritz of Greeley, Paul (Ann) Mertens of New Raymer, John (Lorraine) Mertens of Brush, and Jim (Danelle) Mertens of New Raymer. In-Laws, Bill Brandt of Loveland and Ed (Jodi) Brandt of Sterling. As well as several very close cousins, nieces, nephews, naval comrades, and numerous friends. Tom was greeted in heaven by his parents, Ray and Mary Mertens, in-laws, Henry & Esther Brandt, Chuck Brandt, Edna & Russ Harrach, and Ruth Brandt and countless other loved ones. A celebration of life will be held at the Berean Church in Sterling, CO on Saturday, October 1, 2022, at 10:30 AM. We will have a short memorial service with an honor guard and a luncheon immediately following. All are welcome to attend. We will also have a virtual service available at the following URL (http) The family would like to thank Medical Center of the Rockies ER and Surgical ICU teams for their compassionate care during Tom’s stay. We’d also like to thank all of the family and friends for their support, prayers, stories and well wishes from the time of Tom’s accident to now. He truly treasured each person in his life. Respectfully request no flowers, donations can be made in his honor to the New Raymer FFA, care of Katie Hatch 42315 WCR 133, New Raymer, CO 80742, or Arizona Commemorative Air Force, 2017 N. Greenfield Rd., Mesa, AZ 85215. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Obituary: THOMAS RAY MERTENS
Ron Johnson And Mandela Barnes In Tight Senate Race In Wisconsin CBS News Battleground Tracker Poll
Ron Johnson And Mandela Barnes In Tight Senate Race In Wisconsin CBS News Battleground Tracker Poll
Ron Johnson And Mandela Barnes In Tight Senate Race In Wisconsin — CBS News Battleground Tracker Poll https://digitalarizonanews.com/ron-johnson-and-mandela-barnes-in-tight-senate-race-in-wisconsin-cbs-news-battleground-tracker-poll/ It seems like Wisconsin elections are always pretty close these days, and here are two more following that trend. The Senate race has incumbent Republican Sen. Ron Johnson running just one point ahead of Democrat Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes in a toss-up contest, and the governor’s race is currently even between incumbent Democrat Gov. Tony Evers and Republican Tim Michels. Johnson gets enthusiastic support from the GOP base and is boosted by Wisconsin voters’ concerns about crime and economic issues, though his views on the 2020 election may be alienating some independents.  Meanwhile, Barnes has consolidated the Democratic base and is getting robust support from those who place great importance on the issue of abortion, the top factor his voters give for backing him. On balance, voters also like Barnes personally more than Johnson. Republicans appear to have a turnout advantage. They are four points more likely than Democrats to say they’re definitely voting this year, and Johnson supporters are ten points more likely than Barnes backers to say they’re very enthusiastic about voting. In some ways, these midterms are a referendum on President Joe Biden. On that note, more are casting their Senate votes to oppose him than support him, and Johnson is easily winning those voters in Wisconsin.  The power of incumbency may also be helping Johnson. Most of his backers call his Senate record a major factor in their vote, plus, Republicans like him personally. That’s different than the dynamic in other battleground states where Republicans are not incumbents. In Pennsylvania, Georgia, and Arizona, Republicans are voting more out of opposition to Democrats than affinity for their own nominee. But as much as the Republican base likes Johnson, he faces an equal measure of dislike from the other side. Most of those backing Barnes say the main reason is to oppose Johnson, not because they like Barnes. This is particularly true for independents currently backing Barnes. The impact of Johnson’s stances What role do Ron Johnson’s views on 2020 play? For Republicans, not a major one. But they may be alienating to some independents. Republicans overwhelmingly support Johnson, whether they believe he accepted or wanted to overturn the 2020 election results — and many say they’re not sure which it was. That said, there’s a bit more crossover to Barnes among the third of Republicans who believe Johnson wanted the election overturned. But Johnson’s views on 2020 may be hurting him with voters outside his own party.  Among independents who say he wanted the election overturned, eight in 10 support Barnes. Other independents — who say Johnson accepted the results or aren’t sure of his stance — overwhelmingly back Johnson. Importantly, there may be a limit to the power of this — because many voters do not know what Johnson’s stance was, either way. Those paying less attention to the midterms are less likely to know. And that, in turn, it may be because voters rank the 2020 election relatively low in importance compared to issues like the economy or abortion. And Johnson gets nine in 10 votes from voters who thought COVID policies in Wisconsin were too strict. That’s true whether or not they think Johnson has made mostly critical statements about vaccines. What do Ron Johnson’s supporters like about him?  Johnson may have garnered a lot of attention for remarks he has made about the 2020 election and the coronavirus and vaccines, but those are not major reasons most of his voters give for backing him, nor is his support for Donald Trump. These factors matter some, but they trail far behind the weight his supporters place on Johnson’s economic policies and his Senate record.  Who backs Barnes? Barnes has a likability advantage over Johnson among the broader electorate. But it’s a smaller gap than Democratic candidates enjoy in other Senate battlegrounds. In Arizona, for example, Democrat Mark Kelly has a 20-point advantage over Republican Blake Masters on the way they handle themselves, and Kelly leads that race by three points. Barnes voters cite his stance on abortion as the top factor for supporting him — it’s far ahead of any other issue tested. He leads substantially among voters who say abortion is very important to their vote. That tracks with Democratic support in other crucial Senate battlegrounds. The abortion issue is helping keep the race close, but Johnson is boosted by a wide lead with voters who prioritize the economy, inflation, and crime, which are all issues that voters rank higher in importance than abortion. Among all issues measured, Johnson’s widest margins come from voters who say immigration and crime are very important — even more so than those prioritizing economic issues. Half of Wisconsin voters believe Barnes supports defunding the police — and few want elected officials to support less funding for police. These voters are especially likely to say Barnes would support policies that would make them less safe from crime, and by four to one, they prefer Johnson to Barnes. When asked directly which candidate would back policies that would keep them and their family safe from crime, more voters select Johnson than Barnes. Barnes leads Johnson with women and younger voters. He trails narrowly among White voters, getting a similar share of them that Biden got in 2020. Johnson leads with men and older voters. More older voters cite crime as a very important issue, and most think Johnson’s policies will keep them safe. Wisconsin voters see different groups benefiting depending on who wins this Senate race. If Barnes is elected, a majority think he would support policies that would help Black people — the only group he elicits a majority for — and more voters think women will be helped than hurt If Johnson wins, majorities think the wealthy, men, White people, and people of faith will benefit. Neither candidate is seen by a majority as supporting policies that would help the middle class, but more say so of Barnes’ policies than Johnson’s. The race for governor The governor’s race is tied between Democrat Evers and Republican Michels. Democrat Gov. Tony Evers garners mixed and highly partisan ratings for his job as governor. Most voters overall approve of his handling of the coronavirus, but just one in five voters see this as a very important issue in their midterm vote. Instead, the economy and inflation top the list, followed by crime, and here, we again see the Republican candidate leading among voters who say these issues are very important to their vote. On balance, voters are more likely to say Evers will make them less safe rather than more safe from crime; they say the opposite of Republican challenger Michels. Of all four candidates running for statewide office that the poll tested, Evers is the most liked — the only one for whom a majority of voters say they like how he handles himself personally. He has a 10-point advantage over Michels on this measure, but that doesn’t translate into much of an advantage in the race. He’s running about even with Barnes, who has a narrower likability advantage against Johnson. Most voters want abortion to be legal in Wisconsin, and most see Evers as a candidate who will protect abortion access. But while it’s the top issue to both Democrats and Evers supporters, just half of voters overall say it’s very important in their vote, and fewer than a third of Michels’ supporters do (and most of them don’t want it to be legal). Michigan: Whitmer leads Dixon for governor Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer leads Republican challenger Tudor Dixon by six points in her reelection bid. Most voters view the incumbent governor as competent and mainstream, while less than half see her opponent that way. Unlike Whitmer, Dixon is seen as extreme by most voters, a label that’s hurting her with those outside her own party. Most voters who view her as extreme are backing Whitmer.  But voters’ concerns about the state’s economy and a pessimistic economic outlook could provide an opening for Dixon. Whitmer has a positive job approval rating, and one that’s significantly higher than Biden’s is in the state. For Whitmer’s backers, Biden appears to have little to do with her standing: nearly two-thirds say Biden’s support for Whitmer makes them no more or less likely to vote for her. Moreover, roughly a quarter of voters who disapprove of Biden’s job are still backing Whitmer. Many of these voters are independents who approve of the job Whitmer is doing as governor. Whitmer also gets positive ratings overall on her handling the coronavirus outbreak. But those who feel the policies put in place in Michigan were too strict — a largely Republican group — overwhelmingly disapprove of her handling of the coronavirus, and most aren’t voting for her. But it’s the economy that’s more on the minds of Michigan voters than the coronavirus, and most of them rate the state’s economy negatively (although better than the nation’s). Half of voters are expecting the U.S. to be in recession next year, perhaps leaving some room for Dixon to gain ground. As in Wisconsin, voters who place a lot of importance on the economy and inflation are mostly voting Republican, especially those who expect a recession. And by two to one, more voters think Biden’s policies have hurt, rather than helped Michigan’s economy. This suggests that further nationalization of this race, and making it a referendum on Democrats nationally, could help Dixon. Abortion has been a central issue in Whitmer’s campaign, and it’s giving her a boost. She leads big among those who say it’s very important in their vote. Abortion is the top issue for women under age 45 in the state. (For ...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Ron Johnson And Mandela Barnes In Tight Senate Race In Wisconsin CBS News Battleground Tracker Poll
Ohio State Finally Makes Move In ESPN College Football Power Rankings After Week 6
Ohio State Finally Makes Move In ESPN College Football Power Rankings After Week 6
Ohio State Finally Makes Move In ESPN College Football Power Rankings After Week 6 https://digitalarizonanews.com/ohio-state-finally-makes-move-in-espn-college-football-power-rankings-after-week-6/ October 9, 2022 11:30 am ET It took a few weeks of Ohio State football looking fantastic and Alabama and Georgia looking far from it, but the Buckeyes have finally moved up in ESPN’s weekly college football power rankings. OSU dispatched of Michigan State handily, 49-20, in a game that could have gotten even more out of hand if not for a pull-back and mindset of mercy down the stretch and had plenty of offensive fireworks. C.J. Stroud became the first Big Ten quarterback to throw for six touchdown passes in a game on three separate occasions, and Marvin Harrison Jr became the first Ohio State player to catch three touchdown passes on three separate instances. Buy Buckeyes Tickets There were interesting games throughout the country, but we didn’t see the big upset in Week 6 to really turn things on their ear. What we did witness is Alabama struggling again, Georgia bouncing back a bit after two subpar performances in a row, Michigan finally extending things late against Indiana, and much more. With all that was observed and all that was, here’s how ESPN laid out its power rankings after Week 6, with movement at the top. 25 Notre Dame Fighting Irish (3-2) ARLINGTON, TEXAS – DECEMBER 29: A detailed view of a Notre Dame Fighting Irish players helmet showing the CFP logo during the College Football Playoff Semifinal Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic against the Clemson Tigers at AT&T Stadium on December 29, 2018, in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) Last Week Won vs. BYU (28-20) Up Next vs. Stanford 24 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers (6-0) Sep 18, 2021; Buffalo, New York, USA; Assistant equipment manager Mike Marangelli works on the helmet of Coastal Carolina Chanticleers offensive lineman Isaac Owusu-Appiah (71) during the pre-game warm-up at UB Stadium. Coastal Carolina Chanticleers were preparing to take on the Buffalo Bulls. Credit: Nicholas LoVerde-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won at UL-Monroe (28-21) Up Next vs. Old Dominion 23 Baylor Bears (3-2) Jan 1, 2022; New Orleans, LA, USA; Baylor Bears helmets on the sidelines in the first quarter of the 2022 Sugar Bowl at the Caesars Superdome. Credit: Chuck Cook-USA TODAY Sports Last Week IDLE Up Next at West Virginia 22 Texas Longhorns (3-2) Nov 10, 2018; Lubbock, TX, USA; A Texas Longhorns helmet on the sidelines during the game against the Texas Tech Red Raiders at Jones AT&T Stadium. Credit: Michael C. Johnson-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won at Oklahoma (49-0) Up Next vs. Iowa State 21 Cincinnati Bearcats (5-1) Oct 3, 2020; Cincinnati, OH, USA; Cincinnati Bearcats helmet during the game between the Cincinnati Bearcats and the South Florida Bulls at Nippert Stadium. Credit: Joseph Maiorana-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won vs. USF (28-24) Up Next IDLE 20 Utah Utes (4-2) Sept. 14, 2019; Salt Lake City, UT, USA; A general view of the helmet worn by Utah Utes quarterback Tyler Huntley (1) against the Idaho State Bengals at Rice-Eccles Stadium. Rob Gray-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Lost at UCLA (42-32) Up Next vs. USC 19 Kansas Jayhawks (5-1) Nov. 2, 2019; Lawrence, KS, USA; A general view of a Kansas Jayhawks helmet during the game against the Kansas State Wildcats at David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium. Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Lost vs. TCU (49-0) Up Next at Oklahoma 18 Syracuse Orange (5-0) Sep 16, 2017; Syracuse, NY, USA; General view of a Syracuse Orange helmet on the turf prior to the game against the Central Michigan Chippewas at the Carrier Dome. Credit: Rich Barnes-USA TODAY Sports Last Week IDLE Up Next vs. NC State 17 Kansas State Wildcats (5-1) Nov 6, 2021; Lawrence, Kansas, USA; A general view of a Kansas State Wildcats helmet against the Kansas Jayhawks during the second half at David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium. Credit: Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won at Iowa State (10-9) Up Next IDLE 16 Mississippi State Bulldogs (5-1) Dec. 26, 2016; St. Petersburg, FL, USA; A Mississippi State Bulldogs helmet on the field prior to the game between the Miami Redhawks and the Mississippi State Bulldogs at Tropicana Field. Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won vs. Arkansas (40-17) Up Next at Kentucky 15 NC State Wolfpack (5-1) Nov 13, 2021; Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA; A North Carolina State Wolfpack helmet seen on the sideline during the second half against the Wake Forest Demon Deacons at Truist Field. Credit: William Howard-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won vs. Florida State (19-17) Up Next at Syracuse 14 Oregon Ducks (5-1) An “End racism” sticker joins the American Flag on the helmets of Oregon players Saturday, Oct. 30, 2021. Credit: USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won at Arizona (49-22) Up Next IDLE 13 Wake Forest Demon Deacons (5-1) Sept. 30, 2017; Winston-Salem, NC, USA; A closeup view of a Wake Forest Demon Deacons helmet during the game against the Florida State Seminoles at BB&T Field. Jeremy Brevard-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won vs. Army (45-10) Up Next IDLE 12 TCU Horned Frogs (6-0) Jul 14, 2022; Arlington, TX, USA; A view of the TCU Horned Frogs helmet logo during the Big 12 Media Day at AT&T Stadium. Credit: Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won at Kansas (38-31) Up Next vs. Oklahoma State 11 UCLA Bruins (6-0) Sep 25, 2014; Tempe, AZ, USA; Detailed view of UCLA Bruins helmets on the sidelines against the Arizona State Sun Devils at Sun Devil Stadium. Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won vs. Utah (42-32) Up Next IDLE 10 Penn State Nittany Lions (5-0) Nov 16, 2013; University Park, PA, USA; General view of a Penn State Nittany Lions helmet prior to the game against the Purdue Boilermakers at Beaver Stadium. Credit: Rich Barnes-USA TODAY Sports Last Week IDLE Up Next at Michigan 9 Oklahoma State Cowboys (5-0) Jan 1, 2022; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Detailed view of an Oklahoma State Cowboys helmet during the 2022 Fiesta Bowl at State Farm Stadium. Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won vs. Texas Tech (41-31) Up Next at TCU 8 Ole Miss Rebels (6-0) Oct. 12, 2019; Columbia, MO, USA; A general view of a Mississippi Rebels helmet during the game against the Missouri Tigers at Memorial Stadium/Faurot Field. Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won at Vanderbilt (52-28) Up Next vs. Auburn 7 Tennessee Volunteers (5-0) Nov 23, 2019; Columbia, MO, USA; A general view of a Tennessee Volunteers helmet during the second half against the Missouri Tigers at Memorial Stadium/Faurot Field. Credit: Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won at LSU (40-13) Up Next vs. Alabama 6 Michigan Wolverines (6-0) Dec 30, 2016; Miami Gardens, FL, USA; A Michigan Wolverines football helmet sits on the field prior to the game between the Florida State Seminoles and the Michigan Wolverines at Hard Rock Stadium. Credit: Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won vs. Indiana (31-10) Up Next vs. Penn State 5 USC Trojans (6-0) Dec 29, 2017; Arlington, TX, USA; General overall view of the 2017 Cotton Bowl logo on the back of the helmet of Southern California Trojans long snapper Jake Olson at AT&T Stadium. Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won vs. Washington State (30-14) Up Next at Utah 4 Clemson Tigers (6-0) The Clemson football helmet near the Fiesta Bowl trophy at the coaches’ press conference in Scottsdale, Arizona Friday, December 27, 2019. Credit: USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won at Boston College (31-3) Up Next at Florida State 3 Alabama Crimson Tide (6-0) Jul 18, 2018; Atlanta, GA, USA; An Alabama Crimson Tide helmet is shown on the main stage during SEC football media day at the College Football Hall of Fame. Credit: Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won vs. Texas A&M (24-20) Up Next at Tennessee 2 Georgia Bulldogs (6-0) Dec 12, 2020; Columbia, Missouri, USA; A detailed view of a Georgia Bulldogs helmet during the second half against the Missouri Tigers at Faurot Field at Memorial Stadium. Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-USA TODAY Sports Last Week Won vs. Auburn (42-10) Up Next vs. Vanderbilt 1 Ohio State Buckeyes (6-0) Oct. 1, 2022; Columbus; A sticker-laden Ohio State Buckeyes helmet sits on the turf during warmups before Saturday’s game against the Rutgers Scarlet Knights in Columbus. Barbara Perenic/Columbus Dispatch Last Week Won at Michigan State (49-20) Up Next IDLE Contact/Follow us @BuckeyesWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Ohio State news, notes, and opinion. Follow Phil Harrison on Twitter. Let us know your thoughts, and comment on this story below. Join the conversation today. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Ohio State Finally Makes Move In ESPN College Football Power Rankings After Week 6
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message https://digitalarizonanews.com/michigan-gop-statewide-candidates-stick-to-far-right-message-3/ WARREN, Mich. — With voting underway in Michigan’s general election, the Republican nominee for secretary of state stepped on stage as a warm-up act for former President Donald Trump and hit hard on the main theme of her campaign. Kristina Karamo repeated unfounded assertions about the 2020 presidential election that have been repeatedly debunked. She told the crowd at the recent rally at Macomb Community College that “authoritarians” are giving millions to her Democratic opponent — Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson — in an attempt to “corrupt battleground state election systems so they can control America.” “If you look at history, it shows you what tyrants do,” said Karamo, a former community college professor. “History is telling us, history is screaming to us, that if we don’t step up and fight now, we will lose the greatest country in human history.” It was an address designed to rev up the crowd of devoted Trump followers, some of whom have latched onto the baseless QAnon conspiracy theory. While Karamo’s speech drew cheers, relying on a general election strategy that appeals to the most far-right voters is a gamble for Michigan Republicans. Candidates who have to play to their party’s base during primaries or nominating conventions often shift toward the center, aiming to attract more voters for the general election. But that hasn’t happened this year for the Republicans seeking Michigan’s top three statewide offices — governor, attorney general and secretary of state. The Nov. 8 election will test whether campaigns designed to resonate with the far-right and highlight strong ties to Trump will be enough to win in a traditional swing state, where the Republican incumbent lost the White House race to Democrat challenger Joe Biden by more than 154,000 votes in 2020. All three GOP candidates stood behind Trump during the Oct. 1 rally at the college about 20 miles north of Detroit, joined by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who has amplified Trump’s election falsehoods to audiences across the country. Trump falsely claimed the 2020 election was “rigged and stolen” in Michigan, citing “evidence” he said first originated with Karamo and Matthew DePerno, a tax lawyer who is the nominee for state attorney general. In his own address to the crowd, DePerno called Democrats “radical, cultural Marxists” who want to “silence you.” “If that doesn’t work, they want to put you in jail,” DePerno told the crowd, which fell into chants of “Lock her up.” All three Democratic incumbents are women. DePerno’s campaign also is clouded by an investigation into whether he should be criminally charged for attempting to gain access to voting machines after the 2020 election. John DeBlaay, a Grand Rapids real estate agent and precinct delegate who attended the rally, said he was thrilled with the candidates. “We’ve got the best America First ticket all the way from top to bottom that we’ve had in a long time now,” he said. Some moderate Republicans are skeptical that campaigns appealing mostly to base elements of the party will be enough to beat Democratic incumbents with wide name recognition and sizable fundraising advantages. The Democrats also are expected to benefit from having an amendment on the ballot that seeks to enshrine the right to abortion in the state constitution. These Republicans say inflation, gas prices and economic anxiety should be the GOP’s main talking points, not a continued alignment with Trump and his false claims about widespread fraud costing him reelection. They point to the unusual way Michigan selects its attorney general and secretary of state candidates, a process done through a party nominating convention rather than through a primary election in which voters make the choice. The most conservative Republicans who are loyal to Trump dominated that convention in April. The party’s co-chair, Meshawn Maddock, was one of 16 Republicans who submitted false certificates stating they were the state’s presidential electors despite Biden’s certified victory in the state. Three weeks before the convention, during another Trump rally, DePerno encouraged attendees — many of them precinct delegates — to “storm” the party gathering and said it was “time for the grassroots to unite.” Delegates overwhelmingly voted to nominate Karamo. DePerno won a runoff over former legislative leader Tom Leonard, who lost in the 2018 attorney general’s race by 3 percentage points to Democrat Dana Nessel. “Karamo and DePerno are among the most loyal to Donald Trump that you will find anywhere in the country,” said Jason Roe, a longtime Republican strategist. “That loyalty has been unshakable in this election process, regardless of how it might affect general election prospects.” Roe, whose father served as the Michigan GOP’s executive director for 10 years, became executive director of the state party in spring 2021. Six months later, he stepped down due to a “difference in opinion on how many conspiracy theories we should tolerate.” Soon after Roe left, Trump began calling party leaders to “force the party to embrace things formally that weren’t going to be helpful to the upcoming election,” Roe said. The party’s candidate for governor, Tudor Dixon, won the nomination during the primary in August after receiving Trump’s endorsement. Dixon, a conservative news show host who once acted in low-budget horror films, also benefited from support of the wealthy DeVos family. While seen as less extreme than Karamo and DePerno, Dixon indicated during debates that she thought the 2020 presidential election was stolen and she recently made light of a plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat. Dixon has since tried to pivot away from denying the results of the last election by focusing on topics such as inflation and education, but she also is repeating hard-right rhetoric on cultural issues. She has called for banning “pornographic” books in schools and has pitched an education agenda modeled after the Florida policy that critics have labeled “Don’t Say Gay.” While Democrats have attacked DePerno and Karamo for their continued denial of Biden’s victory in 2020, they have focused on what they describe as Dixon’s “extreme” abortion stance. Lackluster fundraising has made it difficult for her to push back. As of Aug. 22, Dixon had $524,000 in the bank compared with Whitmer’s $14 million, according to the latest available campaign finance reports. Some of that gap has been closed by the super PAC Michigan Families United, which has received $2.5 million in donations, including from the DeVos family. “I just don’t like that there’s no commercials on TV about Dixon. Everything you see is about the other people, and it’s all negative,” said Laura Bunting, an Ionia County resident who attended the Trump rally. Karamo and DePerno had a combined $422,554 cash on hand as of Sept. 16 compared with the $5.7 million combined for their Democratic opponents, according to campaign finance reports. Michigan-based pollster Bernie Porn said the Republican candidates have been defined by their extreme stances but that none has attracted enough money to get on TV and introduce themselves to a broader swath of voters. That, he said, “makes it difficult for folks to form a favorable opinion of you.” Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Trump Speaks Via Video At Rally Of Global Far-Right In Spain
Trump Speaks Via Video At Rally Of Global Far-Right In Spain
Trump Speaks Via Video At Rally Of Global Far-Right In Spain https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-speaks-via-video-at-rally-of-global-far-right-in-spain-2/ MADRID — Former President Donald Trump threw his weight behind Spain’s far-right Sunday in a video shown at a rally in Madrid that also featured messages by the leading stars of Europe’s populist right like Italy’s Giorgia Meloni and Hungary’s Viktor Orban. In a recording that lasted under 40 seconds made while Trump was on a plane, Trump thanked Spain’s far-right Vox party and its leader Santiago Abascal for what he called the “great job” they do. “We have to make sure that we protect our borders and do lots of very good conservative things,” Trump said. “Spain is a great country and we want to keep it a great country. So congratulations to Vox for so many great messages you get out to the people of Spain and the people of the world.” Vox captured national attention on Spain’s political landscape in 2019 when it became the third-largest force in Spain’s Parliament after an election that led to a national left-wing coalition that still holds power. Vox’s messages include zero tolerance for Catalan separatism, disdain for gender equality, diatribes against unauthorized immigration from Africa and embracing both the “Reconquista” of medieval Spain from Islam as well as the legacy of Gen. Francisco Franco’s 20th-century dictatorship. Abascal returned the flattery when he took to the stage at the outdoor venue after more video messages by European and South American right-wing politicians and an in-person speech by Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki. “My thanks for President Donald Trump, a visionary in the fight for sovereign nations, a visionary in the fight for secure borders, who has had to suffer (attacks) from the most powerful establishment in the world and the largest media attack that any world leader has had to face in recent memory,” Abascal told the crowd of several thousand, many waving red-and-yellow Spanish flags. Despite its spectacular rise, the party led by Abascal failed to meet the expectations it set for itself in regional contests this year and had suffered its first serious bout of in-fighting among its leaders. Vox is now eyeing regional and municipal elections next year as it battles to surpass Spain’s traditional conservatives. The annual rally came just weeks after Abascal and the rest of Europe’s far-right celebrated the victory of Meloni’s neo-fascist Brothers of Italy Party. Meloni’s recorded message lasted several minutes and was focused on her priorities as she prepares to become Italian premier: pushing for a price cap on energy in the European Union and recovering economic self-reliance. The win by Meloni has worried European Union leaders that Italy, the bloc’s third-largest economy, could put national interests first, like Hungary and Poland are doing. “We are not monsters, the people understand that. Long live Vox, long live Spain, long live Italy, long live Europe patriots,″ Meloni said. “Only by winning in our countries can Europe become a political giant that we want, and not a bureaucratic giant.” Vox and its supporters are hoping that Meloni’s surge in Italy can spill over to Spain. “Meloni’s victory has given us reasons to believe that this is possible and that our side is not as demonized in Europe as some want to make us believe,” said Francisco Hermida, a 25-year-old entrepreneur attending the rally. Trump and others leading figures of the world’s popular right have been trying for years to weave together networks of support in what they describe as a winner-take-all struggle against the political left. Orban was in the U.S. recently to speak to leading conservatives there and met with Trump. The Vox rally also featured video appearances by former Colombian President Álvaro Uribe, Chilean right-wing politician José Antonio Kast, the daughter of former Bolivian interim President Jeanine Añez, and U.S. Republican Senator Ted Cruz. “On the one side, there is the global elites and the global left, that is growing evermore thuggish and violent, on the other side are conservative populist, who share the values of God, and country and family and freedom,” Cruz said. “Sometimes the left scores dangerous victories, as we saw in Colombia. Sometimes the good guys win, like we saw in Italy.” Cruz said he is looking forward to a landslide Republican win in the U.S. congressional midterm election next month. Trump has been campaigning for right-wing candidates in the Nov. 8 election and is pondering another presidential run for the 2024 vote. Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Speaks Via Video At Rally Of Global Far-Right In Spain
Trump Airs Video Of Biden Slip-Ups At Nevada Rally MsnNOW
Trump Airs Video Of Biden Slip-Ups At Nevada Rally MsnNOW
Trump Airs Video Of Biden Slip-Ups At Nevada Rally – MsnNOW https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-airs-video-of-biden-slip-ups-at-nevada-rally-msnnow/ Trump airs video of Biden slip-ups at Nevada rally  msnNOW Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Airs Video Of Biden Slip-Ups At Nevada Rally MsnNOW
Trump Speaks Via Video At Rally Of Global Far-Right In Spain
Trump Speaks Via Video At Rally Of Global Far-Right In Spain
Trump Speaks Via Video At Rally Of Global Far-Right In Spain https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-speaks-via-video-at-rally-of-global-far-right-in-spain/ BARCELONA, Spain — (AP) — Former U.S. President Donald Trump has thrown his weight behind Spain’s far-right in a video shown at a rally in Madrid that also featured messages by the leading stars of Europe’s populist right like Italy’s Giorgia Meloni and Hungary’s Viktor Orban. In a recording that lasted under 40 seconds made while Trump was on an airplane, Trump thanked Spain’s far-right Vox party and its leader Santiago Abascal for what he called the “great job” they do. “We have to make sure that we protect our borders and do lots of very good conservative things,” Trump said. “Spain is a great country and we want to keep it a great country. So congratulations to Vox for so many great messages you get out to the people of Spain and the people of the world.” Vox captured national attention on Spain’s political landscape in 2019 when it became the third-largest force in Spain’s Parliament after an election that led to a national left-wing coalition that still holds power. Vox’s messages include zero tolerance for Catalan separatism, disdain for gender equality, diatribes against unauthorized immigration from Africa and embracing both the “Reconquista” of medieval Spain from Islam as well as the legacy of Gen. Francisco Franco’s 20th-century dictatorship. Abascal returned the flattery when he took to the stage at the outdoor venue after more video messages by European and South American right-wing politicians and an in-person speech by Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki. “My thanks for President Donald Trump, a visionary in the fight for sovereign nations, a visionary in the fight for secure borders, who has had to suffer (attacks) from the most powerful establishment in the world and the largest media attack that any world leader has had to face in recent memory,” Abascal told the crowd of several thousand, many waving red-and-yellow Spanish flags. Despite its spectacular rise, the party led by Abascal failed to meet the expectations it set for itself in regional contests this year and had suffered its first serious bout of in-fighting among its leaders. Vox is now eyeing regional and municipal elections next year as it battles to surpass Spain’s traditional conservatives. The annual rally comes just weeks after Abascal and the rest of Europe’s far-right celebrated the victory of Meloni’s neo-fascist Brothers of Italy Party. Meloni’s recorded message lasted several minutes and was focused on her priorities as she prepares to become Italian premie r: pushing for a price cap on energy in the European Union and recovering economic self-reliance. The win by Meloni has worried European Union leaders that Italy, the bloc’s third-largest economy, could put national interests first, like Hungary and Poland are doing. “We are not monsters, the people understand that. Long live Vox, long live Spain, long live Italy, long live Europe patriots,″ Meloni said. “Only by winning in our countries can Europe become a political giant that we want, and not a bureaucratic giant.” The Vox rally also featured video appearances by former Colombian President Álvaro Uribe, Chilean right-wing politician José Antonio Kast, the daughter of former Bolivian interim President Jeanine Añez, and U.S. Republican Senator Ted Cruz. “On the one side, there is the global elites and the global left, that is growing evermore thuggish and violent, on the other side are conservative populist, who share the values of God, and country and family and freedom,” Cruz said. “Sometimes the left scores dangerous victories, as we saw in Colombia. Sometimes the good guys win, like we saw in Italy.” Cruz said he hoped the gains of the global right will include a landslide Republican win at the U.S. congressional midterm election next month. Trump has been campaigning for right-wing candidates in that Nov. 8 election and is pondering another presidential run. ___ AP writer Colleen Barry contributed to this report from Milan, Italy. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Speaks Via Video At Rally Of Global Far-Right In Spain
Donald Trump Jr. Shoots Moose On Hunt In Maine
Donald Trump Jr. Shoots Moose On Hunt In Maine
Donald Trump Jr. Shoots Moose On Hunt In Maine https://digitalarizonanews.com/donald-trump-jr-shoots-moose-on-hunt-in-maine/ Election 2022 Nevada Senate MAINE MOOSE HUNT — Donald Trump Jr. speaks during a campaign event for Republican Nevada Senate candidate Adam Laxalt in Las Vegas on June 10, 2022. Trump, an avid hunter, bagged a moose last week in Maine during the state’s first week of its annual moose hunting season. (Steve Marcus/Las Vegas Sun via AP) MAINE MOOSE HUNT — Donald Trump Jr. speaks during a campaign event for Republican Nevada Senate candidate Adam Laxalt in Las Vegas on June 10, 2022. Trump, an avid hunter, bagged a moose last week in Maine during the state’s first week of its annual moose hunting season. (Steve Marcus/Las Vegas Sun via AP) Contributed • October 9, 2022 By Bill Trotter, Bangor Daily News Staff Donald Trump Jr., the son of the former president, shot a bull moose during the first week of the state’s annual moose hunting season while visiting Maine recently. Craig Corsi, who operates Grove Hill Outfitters in Brownville, confirmed on Friday that he and another guide took Trump out last week in the Stacyville area. Hunting for bull moose was allowed last week, from Sept. 26 through Oct. 1, in certain parts of northern and eastern Maine. Corsi declined to release details about the hunt — photos of which are circulating on social media — saying that he wanted to let Trump tell his own story about how he bagged the moose.  “We did guide him on a moose hunt,” Corsi said.  Trump obtained a moose permit through the outfitter, which had won the permit from the state through the special hunting lodge moose permit lottery, Corsi said. Information about the hunt is expected to be posted by Trump at Field Ethos, an online hunting publication that Trump co-founded. When Trump releases information about the hunt, Corsi said he will share more information and images from the experience. “It’s his moose,” he said. “We’re excited to tell people about it.” Thank you for reading your 4 free articles this month. To continue reading, and support local, rural journalism, please subscribe. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Donald Trump Jr. Shoots Moose On Hunt In Maine
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message https://digitalarizonanews.com/michigan-gop-statewide-candidates-stick-to-far-right-message-2/ By: By JOEY CAPPELLETTI Associated Press/Report for America WARREN, Mich. (AP) — With voting underway in Michigan’s general election, the Republican nominee for secretary of state stepped on stage as a warm-up act for former President Donald Trump and hit hard on the main theme of her campaign. Kristina Karamo repeated unfounded assertions about the 2020 presidential election that have been repeatedly debunked. She told the crowd at the recent rally at Macomb Community College that “authoritarians” are giving millions to her Democratic opponent — Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson — in an attempt to “corrupt battleground state election systems so they can control America.” “If you look at history, it shows you what tyrants do,” said Karamo, a former community college professor. “History is telling us, history is screaming to us, that if we don’t step up and fight now, we will lose the greatest country in human history.” It was an address designed to rev up the crowd of devoted Trump followers, some of whom have latched onto the baseless QAnon conspiracy theory. While Karamo’s speech drew cheers, relying on a general election strategy that appeals to the most far-right voters is a gamble for Michigan Republicans. Candidates who have to play to their party’s base during primaries or nominating conventions often shift toward the center, aiming to attract more voters for the general election. But that hasn’t happened this year for the Republicans seeking Michigan’s top three statewide offices — governor, attorney general and secretary of state. The Nov. 8 election will test whether campaigns designed to resonate with the far-right and highlight strong ties to Trump will be enough to win in a traditional swing state, where the Republican incumbent lost the White House race to Democrat challenger Joe Biden by more than 154,000 votes in 2020. All three GOP candidates stood behind Trump during the Oct. 1 rally at the college about 20 miles north of Detroit, joined by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who has amplified Trump’s election falsehoods to audiences across the country. Trump falsely claimed the 2020 election was “rigged and stolen” in Michigan, citing “evidence” he said first originated with Karamo and Matthew DePerno, a tax lawyer who is the nominee for state attorney general. In his own address to the crowd, DePerno called Democrats “radical, cultural Marxists” who want to “silence you.” “If that doesn’t work, they want to put you in jail,” DePerno told the crowd, which fell into chants of “Lock her up.” All three Democratic incumbents are women. DePerno’s campaign also is clouded by an investigation into whether he should be criminally charged for attempting to gain access to voting machines after the 2020 election. John DeBlaay, a Grand Rapids real estate agent and precinct delegate who attended the rally, said he was thrilled with the candidates. “We’ve got the best America First ticket all the way from top to bottom that we’ve had in a long time now,” he said. Some moderate Republicans are skeptical that campaigns appealing mostly to base elements of the party will be enough to beat Democratic incumbents with wide name recognition and sizable fundraising advantages. The Democrats also are expected to benefit from having an amendment on the ballot that seeks to enshrine the right to abortion in the state constitution. These Republicans say inflation, gas prices and economic anxiety should be the GOP’s main talking points, not a continued alignment with Trump and his false claims about widespread fraud costing him reelection. They point to the unusual way Michigan selects its attorney general and secretary of state candidates, a process done through a party nominating convention rather than through a primary election in which voters make the choice. The most conservative Republicans who are loyal to Trump dominated that convention in April. The party’s co-chair, Meshawn Maddock, was one of 16 Republicans who submitted false certificates stating they were the state’s presidential electors despite Biden’s certified victory in the state. Three weeks before the convention, during another Trump rally, DePerno encouraged attendees — many of them precinct delegates — to “storm” the party gathering and said it was “time for the grassroots to unite.” Delegates overwhelmingly voted to nominate Karamo. DePerno won a runoff over former legislative leader Tom Leonard, who lost in the 2018 attorney general’s race by 3 percentage points to Democrat Dana Nessel. “Karamo and DePerno are among the most loyal to Donald Trump that you will find anywhere in the country,” said Jason Roe, a longtime Republican strategist. “That loyalty has been unshakable in this election process, regardless of how it might affect general election prospects.” Roe, whose father served as the Michigan GOP’s executive director for 10 years, became executive director of the state party in spring 2021. Six months later, he stepped down due to a “difference in opinion on how many conspiracy theories we should tolerate.” Soon after Roe left, Trump began calling party leaders to “force the party to embrace things formally that weren’t going to be helpful to the upcoming election,” Roe said. The party’s candidate for governor, Tudor Dixon, won the nomination during the primary in August after receiving Trump’s endorsement. Dixon, a conservative news show host who once acted in low-budget horror films, also benefited from support of the wealthy DeVos family. While seen as less extreme than Karamo and DePerno, Dixon indicated during debates that she thought the 2020 presidential election was stolen and she recently made light of a plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat. Dixon has since tried to pivot away from denying the results of the last election by focusing on topics such as inflation and education, but she also is repeating hard-right rhetoric on cultural issues. She has called for banning “pornographic” books in schools and has pitched an education agenda modeled after the Florida policy that critics have labeled “Don’t Say Gay.” While Democrats have attacked DePerno and Karamo for their continued denial of Biden’s victory in 2020, they have focused on what they describe as Dixon’s “extreme” abortion stance. Lackluster fundraising has made it difficult for her to push back. As of Aug. 22, Dixon had $524,000 in the bank compared with Whitmer’s $14 million, according to the latest available campaign finance reports. Some of that gap has been closed by the super PAC Michigan Families United, which has received $2.5 million in donations, including from the DeVos family. “I just don’t like that there’s no commercials on TV about Dixon. Everything you see is about the other people, and it’s all negative,” said Laura Bunting, an Ionia County resident who attended the Trump rally. Karamo and DePerno had a combined $422,554 cash on hand as of Sept. 16 compared with the $5.7 million combined for their Democratic opponents, according to campaign finance reports. Michigan-based pollster Bernie Porn said the Republican candidates have been defined by their extreme stances but that none has attracted enough money to get on TV and introduce themselves to a broader swath of voters. That, he said, “makes it difficult for folks to form a favorable opinion of you.” ___ Joey Cappelletti is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. ___ Follow AP for full coverage of the midterms at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections Copyright 2022 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Sign up for the Morning Newsletter and receive up to date information. Read More Here
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Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
MOST ACCURATE FORECAST: Possible Isolated Storms Sunday In AZ
MOST ACCURATE FORECAST: Possible Isolated Storms Sunday In AZ
MOST ACCURATE FORECAST: Possible Isolated Storms Sunday In AZ https://digitalarizonanews.com/most-accurate-forecast-possible-isolated-storms-sunday-in-az/ PHOENIX — Isolated showers across the valley Saturday evening brought gusty winds, moderate downpours and lightning. The storm system that’s brought storms across Arizona this week is slowly moving east and will keep storm chances around through Sunday evening. We’ll see the best chance for scattered storms in eastern Arizona but don’t rule out a stray shower or two in the Valley Sunday night. Storms that develop will be capable of producing strong winds, areas of blowing dust, hail, and heavy rain, so stay weather-aware. Temperatures will warm slightly into the low 90s Sunday, with cooler morning temperatures in the 60s to low 70s each day. Storm chances drop off by early next week and we’ll stay in the low to mid 90s. _________________________________________ 2022 Rainfall totals: Sky Harbor Official Rainfall: 2.79″ (-2.71″ from average) Valley Average (Phoenix Rainfall Index): 4.32″ __________________________________________ Daily rainfall reports from all across the Valley can be found here. __________________________________________ PHOENIX IS GETTING DRIER – LOWER RAINFALL AVERAGES NOW Average Monsoon Rainfall in Phoenix (1981-2010): 2.71″ of rain NEW Average Monsoon Rainfall in Phoenix (1991-2020): 2.43″ of rain Average Yearly Rainfall in Phoenix (1981-2010): 8:03″ of rain NEW Average Yearly Rainfall in Phoenix (1991-2020): 7.22″ of rain __________________________________________ Share your weather photos and videos with us anytime. Email share@abc15.com. ______________________________________ See the full 7-Day forecast Interactive Arizona Radar Copyright 2022 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Sign up for the Headlines Newsletter and receive up to date information. Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
MOST ACCURATE FORECAST: Possible Isolated Storms Sunday In AZ
Five Takeaways From Budd And Beasleys Senate Debate In NC
Five Takeaways From Budd And Beasleys Senate Debate In NC
Five Takeaways From Budd And Beasley’s Senate Debate In NC https://digitalarizonanews.com/five-takeaways-from-budd-and-beasleys-senate-debate-in-nc/ U.S. Senate candidates Ted Budd and Cheri Beasley met on the debate stage for the first time Friday and discussed the former and current presidents, where they stand on policy issues and who was actually elected to the White House in 2020. Budd, the Republican nominee and a current member of the U.S. House of Representatives, and Beasley, the Democratic nominee and the state’s former Supreme Court chief justice, had avoided all debates in 2022 until now. The candidates agreed to meet for one debate, on Spectrum News 1, a subscription cable network that made the debate public on its website and app. The debate was moderated by political reporter Tim Boyum. North Carolina’s U.S. Senate race hasn’t garnered as much attention as others despite the candidates polling closer than in most states. Friday’s debate showed the most spunk seen thus far from its two participants, but not the typical spark one would expect from candidates competing for the unaffiliated voters who make up the state’s largest group. At stake is Democrats’ hold on their majority in the Senate. North Carolina has not elected a Democrat to the Senate since 2008, and if Beasley wins to replace retiring Republican Sen. Richard Burr, she would become the first Black senator from North Carolina. Here are five top takeaways from the night: Beasley keeps her distance from Biden When members of the Biden administration visited North Carolina during the current campaign season, Beasley’s absence didn’t go unnoticed. Despite that, her opponent repeatedly called her a rubber stamp for President Joe Biden. In Budd’s closing statement Friday night he said, “Joe Biden is on the ballot on Nov. 8, and he goes by the name this year of Cheri Beasley, because she will be a rubber stamp.” Boyum asked Beasley if she was avoiding appearing alongside Biden officials, if she wanted Biden to campaign for her in North Carolina and whether she would be his rubber stamp in Washington. Beasley said Biden and Congress “could work a whole lot harder” to lower inflation, laying a share of that blame on Budd. She said she’s glad when Biden comes to North Carolina to hear the state’s challenges and its successes and to meet residents. “It’s wrong to align me with anybody unless I specifically say what my positions are, and I’m glad to talk about my positions, because my positions really do support people here in North Carolina…” Beasley said. Boyum didn’t let up from his question and asked Beasley to answer whether she would stand on stage with Biden if he called and said he would campaign with her next week. “You know, if it’s an official visit, we’ll just have to see if that’s something that’s available,” Beasley said. Beasley was asked if Biden should run for reelection. “I don’t think he’s going to ask me, and so we’ll see what happens,” Beasley said. U.S. Senate Democrat candidate Cheri Beasley answers a question during an hour-long debate with Republican Ted Budd at Spectrum News 1 studio in Raleigh, NC Friday, Oct. 7, 2022. Travis Long tlong@newsobserver.com Budd says Biden is president On Jan. 6, 2021, Budd was one of many members of Congress who voted against certifying Biden’s election. On Friday night, Budd acknowledged that Biden is the president of the United States. “I don’t like what Joe Biden is doing at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. …but he is the president and unfortunately, he’s destroying our country,” Budd said. “He’s got 70% of the people saying we’re on the wrong track. I don’t like what he’s doing, but he is the president.” He was asked if he stood by his vote against certifying Biden’s election. “The core of that vote, Tim, was to inspire more debate, because I think debate is healthy for democracy, so that’s what it led to,” Budd said. “We didn’t have the votes to overturn it, but of course, having the debate was a healthy thing, and I do stand by it.” Rioters hoping to force Congress out of certifying Biden’s election stormed the U.S. Capitol before Budd cast his vote in the middle of the night. A Senate report blames the riot for the deaths of at least seven people. U.S. Senate Republican candidate Ted Budd answers a question during an hour-long debate with Democrat Cheri Beasley at Spectrum News 1 studio in Raleigh, NC Friday, Oct. 7, 2022. Travis Long tlong@newsobserver.com Budd aligns with Trump Budd did not shy away from his connection to former President Donald Trump and reminded viewers that Trump won North Carolina in 2016 and 2020. Budd went on to tout a better economy, lower inflation, record unemployment and growing wages under Trump’s administration. “President Trump endorsed me before, and I don’t run away from that like my opponent may be running away from Joe Biden, even though she’s a rubber stamp for his policies,” Budd said. “She would be a rubber stamp for him. He endorsed me because I’m an America First candidate and I believe in the things that led to that 1.4% inflation, that led to record low unemployment for women, for people of color, for Hispanics, so again, he had a lot of wins here in the state, including for our economy, including for those at the bottom of the economic pyramid.” Beasley, on the other hand, said Trump represents the most extremist policies and ideologies and pointed out that when he recently visited Wilmington, the former president called her a “Marxist liberal.” “The reality is that Congressman Budd has aligned himself with somebody who was truly an extremist, in this race, and that’s a reflection on him, so folks need to be reminded of that as they’re thinking about the clear choice that can be made here in this race,” Beasley said. Differences on legalizing marijuana Both Budd and Beasley were asked where they stood on legalizing marijuana. On Thursday, Biden announced he would pardon federal convictions for simple possession of marijuana and encouraged state officials to follow suit. Budd said he believes the president overstepped his authority. He said he does not support legalizing marijuana and thinks doing so sends a bad message to children. “If someone can prove to me that there is a medical case for marijuana, we can certainly have that discussion,” Budd said, after saying he is absolutely opposed to recreational use. Beasley said she would legalize both recreational and medical use. Two more candidates Beasley and Budd are not the only candidates in the U.S. Senate race. Shannon Bray, a Libertarian, and Green Party candidate Matthew Hoh will also appear on the ballot on Nov. 8, but weren’t invited to debate. Instead, Spectrum interviewed the two men in a preshow that aired an hour earlier. Hoh told Spectrum his focus is on housing issues like rent control and banning banks and corporations from buying single-family homes. He supports a single-payer health care system. Both he and Bray want to end the war on drugs. Bray added that he wants to fight inflation through tax reduction and increasing transparency in the government. For more North Carolina government and politics news, subscribe to the Under the Dome politics newsletter from The News & Observer and the NC Insider and follow our weekly Under the Dome podcast at campsite.bio/underthedome or wherever you get your podcasts. This story was originally published October 7, 2022 10:55 PM. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Five Takeaways From Budd And Beasleys Senate Debate In NC
Ukraine: Russian Strikes Kill 17 Following Bridge Attack
Ukraine: Russian Strikes Kill 17 Following Bridge Attack
Ukraine: Russian Strikes Kill 17 Following Bridge Attack https://digitalarizonanews.com/ukraine-russian-strikes-kill-17-following-bridge-attack/ ZAPORIZHZHIA, Ukraine (AP) — A Russian missile barrage that crumbled apartment buildings and houses in Ukraine’s city of Zaporizhzhia killed at least 17 people and wounded dozens, Ukrainian officials said Sunday as Moscow strained to enforce its takeover of illegally annexed territory. The blasts that collapsed at least one high-rise residential building and blew out the windows of others came from six missiles launched in Russian-occupied areas of the Zaporizhzhia region, the Ukrainian air force said. The region is one of four Russia claimed as its own this month, but the regional capital remains under Ukrainian control. The multiple strikes came after an explosion Saturday caused the partial collapse of a bridge linking the Crimean Peninsula with Russia. The Kerch Bridge attack damaged an important supply route for the Kremlin’s faltering war effort in Ukraine and a towering symbol of Russia’s power in the region. Stunned residents watched from behind police tape as emergency crews tried to reach the upper floors of a building that took a direct hit. The attack collapsed several floors, leaving a smoldering chasm at least 40-feet wide where apartments had stood. Several hours later, the top floors caved in as well. In an adjacent apartment building, the barrage blew windows and doors out of their frames in a radius of hundreds of feet. At least 20 private homes and 50 apartment buildings in all were damaged, and at least 40 people were hospitalized, city council Secretary Anatoliy Kurtev said. Zaporizhzhia resident Mucola Markovich, 76, said he and his wife hid under a blanket when they heard incoming rockets and booms from blasts. “There was one explosion, then another one,” he said. Then, in a flash, their fourth-floor apartment was gone, Markovich said, holding back tears. “When it will be rebuilt, I don’t know,” he said. “I am left without an apartment at the end of my life.” Russian officials did not immediately comment on the strikes. Following Russian President Vladimir Putin’s annexation of the Zaporizhzhia region last week, Russia has repeatedly bombarded the city of the same name. At least 19 people died in Russian missile strikes on apartment buildings in the city on Thursday. “Again, Zaporizhzhia. Again, merciless attacks on civilians, targeting residential buildings, in the middle of the night,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy wrote in a Telegram post. “Absolute meanness. Absolute evil. … From the one who gave this order, to everyone who carried out this order: they will answer. They must. Before the law and the people,” he added. Tetyana Lazunko, 73, and her husband, Oleksii, took shelter in the hallway of their top floor apartment after first hearing air raid sirens and then an explosion that shook the building and sent their possessions flying. Lazunko wept inconsolably as the couple surveyed the damage to their home since 1974, wondering why an area with no military infrastructure in sight was targeted. “Why are they bombing us. Why?” she said. While Russia targeted Zaporizhzhia before Saturday’s explosion on the Crimea bridge, the attack on the 12-mile-long span was a significant blow to Moscow. Russia annexed Crimea in March 2014 following a hastily called local vote, a move that drew U.S. and European Union sanctions. Putin personally opened the $3.7 million Kerch Bridge in May 2018 by driving a truck across it in a symbol of Moscow’s claims on Crimea. The bridge, the longest one in Europe, is vital to sustaining Russia’s military operations in southern Ukraine. The Crimean Peninsula is a popular destination for Russian tourists and home to a Russian naval base. A Russian tourist association estimated that 50,000 tourists were in Crimea on Saturday. Putin signed a decree late Saturday tightening security for the bridge and for energy infrastructure between Crimea and Russia, and put Russia’s federal security service, the FSB, in charge of the effort. Some Russian lawmakers called for Putin to declare a “counterterrorism operation,” rather than the term “special military operation” that has downplayed the scope of fighting to ordinary Russians. Hours after the explosion, Russia’s Defense Ministry announced that the air force chief, Gen. Sergei Surovikin, would now command all Russian troops in Ukraine. Surovikin, who this summer was placed in charge of troops in southern Ukraine, had led Russian forces in Syria and was accused of overseeing a bombardment that destroyed much of Aleppo. No one has claimed responsibility for damaging the bridge. Zelenskyy, in a video address, indirectly acknowledged the bridge attack but did not address its cause. “Today was not a bad day and mostly sunny on our state’s territory,” he said. “Unfortunately, it was cloudy in Crimea. Although it was also warm.” Train and automobile traffic over the bridge was temporarily suspended. Automobile traffic resumed Saturday afternoon on one of the two links that remained intact, with the flow alternating in each direction, said Crimea’s Russia-backed leader, Sergey Aksyonov. The Russian transport ministry said on Telegram Sunday that passenger train traffic between Crimea and the Russian mainland resumed overnight “according to schedule.” In a separate Telegram post Sunday, the ministry said car ferries also were working between Crimea and the mainland. The Institute for the Study of War, a think tank based in Washington, said videos of the bridge indicated the damage from the explosion “is likely to increase friction in Russian logistics for some time” but not cripple Russia’s ability to equip its troops in Ukraine. “The collapsed lane of the road bridge will restrict Russian military movements until it is repaired, forcing some Russian forces to rely on the ferry connection for some time,” the institute said. “Russian forces will likely still be able to transport heavy military equipment via the railroad.” While Russia seized areas north of Crimea early in its invasion of Ukraine and built a land corridor to it along the Sea of Azov, Ukraine is pressing a counteroffensive to reclaim that territory and other parts of Ukraine Putin illegally annexed this month. The Ukrainian military on Sunday morning said that fierce clashes were ongoing around the cities of Bakhmut and Avdiivka in the eastern Donetsk region, where Russian forces have claimed some recent territorial gains. In its regular social media update, the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine did not acknowledge any loss of territory but said that “the most tense situation” on the entire territory of Ukraine had been observed around the two cities. The regional governor of Zaporizhzhia reported that the death toll had risen to 32 after Russia’s missile strike on a civilian convoy making its way out of the city on September 30. In a Telegram post, Oleksandr Starukh that one more person died in the hospital on Friday. A part of the Zaporizhzhia region currently under Russian control is home to Europe’s largest nuclear power station. Fighting has repeatedly imperiled the the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, and Ukrainian authorities shut down its last operating reactor last month to prevent a radiation disaster. The International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N.’s nuclear watchdog, said Saturday that the Zaporizhzhia plant has since lost its last remaining external power source as a result of renewed shelling and is now relying on emergency diesel generators. ___ Schreck reported from Kyiv Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Ukraine: Russian Strikes Kill 17 Following Bridge Attack
Markets Need To Abandon Hope Of The 'Fed Put' After The September Jobs Report And Another Jumbo Rate Hike Is All But Certain In November
Markets Need To Abandon Hope Of The 'Fed Put' After The September Jobs Report And Another Jumbo Rate Hike Is All But Certain In November
Markets Need To Abandon Hope Of The 'Fed Put' After The September Jobs Report – And Another Jumbo Rate Hike Is All But Certain In November https://digitalarizonanews.com/markets-need-to-abandon-hope-of-the-fed-put-after-the-september-jobs-report-and-another-jumbo-rate-hike-is-all-but-certain-in-november/ Stocks will likely fall further in anticipation of the Fed delivering another jumbo rate hike, analysts say.  Investors priced in a more hawkish outlook for rate hikes after the strong September jobs report.  The stock market “is simply going to be collateral damage” in the inflation fight, one analyst said.  Loading Something is loading. Thanks for signing up! Access your favorite topics in a personalized feed while you’re on the go. Another hefty rate increase by the inflation-fighting Federal Reserve appears on the way and stocks will likely take further hits in anticipation of the move – but investors should set aside the notion the Fed is looking to steer equities away from sharp declines.  Investors after the September payrolls report were pricing in a more hawkish outlook for the Fed’s likely rate hike in November. The CME FedWatch tool showed an 82.3% probability of a 75-basis-point increase, up from 75.2% a day earlier and higher than 56.5% a week earlier.  “I think the Fed feels like they have the license to push ahead aggressively to combat inflation,” Jan Szilagyi, CEO and co-founder Toggle AI, an investment research firm, told Insider after Labor Department released its payrolls report on Friday. The US created 263,000 new jobs in September, beating the 250,000 average estimate. The unemployment rate fell to 3.5% from 3.7%.  US stocks tumbled after the jobs report. The Nasdaq Composite lost nearly 4% and the S&P 500 gave up nearly 3%.  “Today’s jobs report likely does not change the Fed’s calculus in its fight against inflation, which is still on track for another 75 bp rate hike in early November,” Jason Pride, chief investment officer of private wealth at Glenmede, wrote in a note. The report could lead to new 2022 lows for stocks this month, Bank of America said Friday.  The US stock market is already submerged in a bear market, with the Nasdaq Composite off by roughly 32% this year and the S&P 500 down more than 20%. The Fed has been aggressive in raising interest rates to pull down inflation that’s sitting around a four-decade high and in turn that’s left equities in the red.  “On a variety of metrics, I think there’s definitely still downside particularly because I don’t think there’s any sense the Fed is trying to help the market. The Fed is focused on inflation, which is different from some other situations where you have an economic crisis or a financial crisis,” Szilagyi said in swatting away the idea of a so-called “Fed Put”.  A Fed Put refers to the belief among investors that policymakers at the US central bank will enact policies aimed at aiding stocks if they drop sharply and quickly to worrying levels. The market saw Fed Puts in 1987, 2010, 2016, and 2018, according to the Corporate Finance Institute.  Szilagyi said “garden variety” bear markets running back to the 1929 crash on Wall Street have lasted between 10-12 months and have taken stocks down about 33%. The S&P 500 in the current downturn is off by about 24% year to date.  “I don’t think [Fed policy makers] are thinking that the market has come down so dramatically that they now suddenly need to pivot,” he said. “Back in 2018, when the market reacted very poorly to the prospect of potentially tightening, they did actually take the market into account. But that was when inflation was not a problem. I think now you’re in exactly in the reverse situation where inflation is suddenly a problem and the market is simply going to be collateral damage.”  Szilagyi also said stocks appeared to have dropped Friday as investors erased the notion that signs of potential stress in financial systems would lead the Fed to dial back on rate moves, including concerns about the health of Swiss lender Credit Suisse and the Bank of England’s emergency £65 billion bond-market intervention. “That glimmer of hope there might be a little bit of a pivot – not anything near resembling an actual easing of monetary policy – is being priced out. We’re retesting the June lows, which, ultimately, is something that we probably need to do anyway if there’s ever hope of reaching a major low in the market.”  The September inflation report is due on Thursday to update the August headline reading that came in at 8.3%. The Fed is expected to raise rates for the sixth time at its November 1-2 meeting to push the fed funds rate from the current range of 3% to 3.25%. The Fed has kicked up the benchmark rate by 75 basis points at its past three meetings. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Markets Need To Abandon Hope Of The 'Fed Put' After The September Jobs Report And Another Jumbo Rate Hike Is All But Certain In November
TV And Streaming Viewing Picks For October 9 2022: How To Watch NFL Week 5
TV And Streaming Viewing Picks For October 9 2022: How To Watch NFL Week 5
TV And Streaming Viewing Picks For October 9, 2022: How To Watch NFL Week 5 https://digitalarizonanews.com/tv-and-streaming-viewing-picks-for-october-9-2022-how-to-watch-nfl-week-5/ All Times Eastern Bundesliga Matchday 9 Borussia Mönchengladbach vs. 1. FC Köln — ESPN+, 9:20 a.m. Hertha Berlin vs. Sport-Club Freiburg — ESPN+, 11:20 a.m. VfB Stuttgart vs. 1. FC Union Berlin — ESPN+, 1:20 p.m. College Football Championship Drive — ESPN2, 1 p.m. College Soccer Men’s Oregon State vs. Stanford — Pac-12 Network/Pac-12 Oregon, 3 p.m. Washington vs. Cal — Pac-12 Washington/Pac-12 Bay Area, 5 p.m. Women’s Louisville vs. Boston College — ACC Network, noon Michigan State vs. Michigan — Big Ten Network, noon Notre Dame vs. Florida State — ESPNU, noon Minnesota vs. Iowa — Big Ten Network, 2 p.m. Mississippi vs. Texas A&M — ESPNU, 2 p.m. Texas vs. Kansas — Longhorn Network, 2 p.m. Missouri vs. Florida — SEC Network, 2 p.m. Rutgers vs. Indiana — ESPN2, 3 p.m. Stanford vs. Washington State — Pac-12 Bay Area, 3 p.m. New Mexico vs. San Jose State — Stadium College Sports Central, 3 p.m. Utah State vs. Air Force — Stadium College Sports Pacific, 3 p.m. Georgia vs. Tennessee — SEC Network, 4 p.m. UCLA vs. Arizona — Pac-12 Network/Pac-12 Los Angeles/Pac-12 Arizona, 5 p.m. College Volleyball Women’s South Carolina at Tennessee — SEC Network, noon Florida International at Charlotte — Stadium College Sports Atlantic, 1 p.m. Pittsburgh at Georgia Tech — ACC Network, 2 p.m. Oregon State at Washington State –Pac-12 Washington, 3 p.m. Notre Dame at Boston College — ACC Networ, 4 p.m. USC at Arizona State — Pac-12 Insider, 4 p.m. Stanford at Utah — ESPNU, 6 p.m.. Oregon at Washington — Pac-12 Network/Pac-12 Oregon/Pac-12 Washington, 7 p.m. English Premier League Matchweek 10 Crystal Palace vs. Leeds United — USA Network, 8:55 a.m. West Ham United vs. Fulham — Telemundo, 8:55 a.m./CNBC, 9 a.m. Arsenal vs. Liverpool — USA Network/Telemundo, 11:25 a.m. Everton vs. Manchester United — USA Network/Telemundo, 1:55 p.m. Premier League Mornings — USA Network, 8 a.m. La Liga Premier Extra — Telemundo, 8:30 a.m. Premier League Live — USA Network, 11 a.m. La Liga Premier Extra — Telemundo, 11 a.m. Premier League Live — USA Network, 1:30 p.m. La Liga Premier Extra — Telemundo, 1:30 p.m. Goal Zone — USA Network, 4 p.m. Golf DP World Tour Spanish Open, Club de Campo Villa de Madrid, Madrid, Spain Final Round — Golf Channel, 7:30 a.m. PGA Tour Champions Constellation Furyk & Friends, Timuquana Country Club, Jacksonville, FL Final Round — Golf Channel, 2 p.m. Golf Central Pregame — Golf Channel, 1:30 p.m. PGA of America PGA Jr. League Championship, Grayhawk Golf Club, Scottsdale, AZ Final Round — ESPNU, 4 p.m. PGA Tour Shriners Children’s Open, TPC Summerlin, Las Vegas, NV Final Round — Golf Channel/Peacock, 5 p.m. LPGA Tour Mediheal Championship, Saticoy Club, Somis, CA Final Round — Golf Channel, 9 p.m. (same day coverage) The Charlie Rymer Golf Show — ESPN2, 7 a.m. The Charlie Rymer Golf Show — ESPN2, 7:30 a.m. Golf Central — Golf Channel, 8 p.m. Horse Racing Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series “Win and You’re In Series,” Keeneland Race Course, Lexington, KY Juddmonte Spinster Stakes — CNBC, 5 p.m. America’s Day at the Races — FS1, 12:30 p.m. America’s Day at the Races — FS2, 2:30 p.m. LaLiga Matchday 8 Real Valladolid vs. Real Betis — ESPN+, 7:50 a.m. Cádiz CF vs. RCD Espanyol de Barcelona — ESPN+, 10:05 a.m. Real Sociedad vs. Villarreal — ESPN+, 12:20 p.m. Barcelona vs. Celta de Vigo — ESPN+, 2:30 p.m. Ligue 1 Round 10 Montpellier Hérault SC vs. AS Monaco — beIN Sports/beIN Sports en Español, 6:50 a.m. Stade Brestois vs. FC Lorient — beIN Sports Xtra en Español, 8:50 a.m. OGC Nice vs. Estac Troyes — beIN Sports/beIN Sports en Español, 8:55 a.m. Stade Rennais vs. FC Nantes — beIN Sports/beIN Sports en Español, 10:55 a.m. LOSC Lille vs. RC Lens — beIN Sports/beIN Sports en Español, 2:35 p.m. The Express Preview — beIN Sports/beIN Sports en Español, 2:30 p.m. The Express Wrap-Up — beIN Sports, 4:45 p.m. MLB Postseason Wild Card Series National League Game 3, Citi Field, Queens, New York, NY San Diego Padres at New York Mets — ESPN, 7 p.m. (series tied 1-1) Baseball Tonight — ESPN, 6:30 p.m. MLB Tonight — MLB Network, 6:30 p.m. MLB Tonight — MLB Network, 10 p.m. MLS Decision Day/Final Day of Regular Season Atlanta United vs. New York City FC — Bally Sports Southeast/YES, 2:30 p.m. Chicago Fire vs. New England Revolution — WGN/WSBK, 2:30 p.m. D.C. United vs. FC Cincinnati — NBC Sports Washington Plus/WSTR, 2:30 p.m. Inter Miami vs. Montreal Impact — WBFS/WAMI/TSN1, 2:30 p.m. New York Red Bulls vs. Charlotte FC — MSG Network/WAXN, 2:30 p.m. Orlando City SC vs. Columbus Crew — FS1, 2:30 p.m. Philadelphia Union vs. Toronto FC — WPHL/TSN4, 2:30 p.m. Austin FC vs. Colorado Rapids — KXAN/KTFO/Altitude, 5 p.m. FC Dallas vs. Sporting Kansas City — KTXA/KMPX/KMCI, 5 p.m. Houston Dynamo vs. LA Galaxy — AT&T SportsNet Southwest/Spectrum SportsNet, 5 p.m. LAFC vs. Nashville SC — KCOP/KRCA/WUXP, 5 p.m. Minnesota United vs. Vancouver Whitecaps — Bally Sports North/WUCW/TSN1/TSN4, 5 p.m. Real Salt Lake vs. Portland Timbers — ESPN2, 5 p.m. Seattle Sounders vs. San Jose Earthquakes — KZJO/NBC Sports California, 5 p.m. NASCAR NASCAR Cup Series — Playoffs: Round of 12 Bank of America Roval 400, Charlotte Motor Speedway: Road Course, Concord, NC Race — NBC, 2 p.m. NASCAR RaceDay: Charlotte — FS1, 11:30 a.m. Countdown to Green — NBC, 1 p.m. NBA Preseason Chicago at Toronto — NBA TV/NBC Sports Chicago, 6 p.m. Los Angeles Lakers at Golden State — NBA TV/Spectrum SportsNet/NBC Sports Bay Area, 8:30 p.m. Portland at Sacramento — NBC Sports California, 9 p.m. Minnesota at Los Angeles Clippers — Bally Sports North/KTLA, 10:30 p.m. Inside the Association — Stadium, 1:30 p.m. NBA GameTime — NBA TV, 1 a.m. (Monday) NFL Week 5 NFL London Game, Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London, England, United Kingdom New York Giants vs. Green Bay Packers — NFL Network/NFL+/WABC (NY)/WLUK (Green Bay)/WTMJ (Milwaukee), 9:30 a.m. NFL on CBS — 1 p.m. Houston at Jacksonville Los Angeles Chargers at Cleveland Miami at New York Jets Pittsburgh at Buffalo Tennessee at Washington NFL on Fox — 1 p.m. Atlanta at Tampa Bay Chicago at Minnesota Detroit at New England Seattle at New Orleans NFL on CBS — 4:05 p.m. San Francisco at Carolina NFL on Fox — 4:25 p.m. Dallas at Los Angeles Rams Philadelphia at Arizona NFL Viewing Maps — the506.com Sunday Night Football, M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, MD Cincinnati Bengals at Baltimore Ravens — NBC/Peacock/Universo NFL GameDay Kickoff — NFL Network, 7 a.m. That Other Pregame Show — CBS Sports Network, 9 a.m. Sunday NFL Countdown  — ESPN, 10 a.m. Fantasy Football Now — ESPN2, 10 a.m. Pro Football Today — SportsGrid, 10 a.m. Fox NFL Kickoff — Fox, 11 a.m. Fantasy Football Pregame with Matthew Berry — Peacock, 11 a.m. Inside the League — Stadium, 11:30 p.m. The NFL Today — CBS, noon Fox NFL Sunday — Fox, noon Red Zone Channel — DirecTV Channel 703, 12:55 p.m. Fantasy Zone Channel– DirecTV Channel 704, 12:55 p.m. NFL RedZone — Check your local listings, 12:58 p.m. NFL GameDay Live — NFL Network, 1 p.m. NFL Today Postgame — CBS, 4 p.m. NFL GameDay Live — NFL Network, 4:30 p.m. Football Night in America  — NBC, 7 p.m. The O.T. — Fox, 7:30 p.m. NFL GameDay Highlights — NFL Network, 7:30 p.m. NFL Primetime — ESPN+, 7:30 p.m. Sunday Night Football en Universo pregame — Universo, 8 p.m. NFL GameDay Final — NFL Network, 11:30 p.m. Peacock Sunday Night Final — Peacock, 11:30 p.m. NHL NHL Tonight: Western Conference Preview — NHL Network, 7 p.m. Soccer Turkish Süper Lig Matchday 9 Fenerbahçe vs. Fatih Karagümrük — beIN Sports Xtra/beIN Sports Xtra en Español, 12:50 p.m. ESPN FC — ESPN+, 4:50 p.m. Línea de cuatro — TUDN, 7:30 p.m. Sports News & Talk SportsCenter — ESPN, 7 a.m. SportsCenter — ESPN, 8 a.m. 30 for 30: The U: Part 2 — ESPNU, 8 a.m. More Ways to Win — FanDuel TV, 8 a.m. SportsCenter — ESPN, 9 a.m. Daily Wager — ESPN2, 9 a.m. E60: Man’s Best Friend — ESPNews, 9 a.m. Sport Today — BBC World News, 9:15 a.m. BBC Green Sport Awards — BBC World News, 10:30 a.m. Live on the Line — Stadium, noon Fubo Sports Presents — Fubo Sports Network, 12:30 p.m. The Rally Rewind — Stadium, 1 p.m. E60: Truth Be Told — ESPN2, 1:30 p.m. Boundless: Colorado: Vail Mountain Games– Stadium, 2 p.m. Sport Today — BBC World News, 2:15 p.m. República deportiva — Univision, 3 p.m. SportsCenter — ESPN2, 7:30 p.m. No Chill With Gilbert Arenas: Paul Pierce — Fubo Sports Network, 7 p.m. ACC Legends: Bobby Bowden — ACC Network, 8 p.m. TrueSouth: Madisonville, TN — SEC Network, 8 p.m. Contacto deportivo — TUDN, 8:30 p.m. Sport Today — BBC World News, 9:45 p.m. SportsCenter at Night — ESPN, 10:30 p.m. Zona mixta — Telemundo, 11:30 p.m. SportsCenter at Night With Scott Van Pelt — ESPN, midnight. La jugada — Univision/TUDN, midnight Boomer and Gio — CBS Sports Network, 6 a.m. (Monday) Keyshawn, JWill and Max — ESPN2, 6 a.m. (Monday) Sport Today — BBC World News, 6:45 a.m. (Monday) Tennis Courtside-Live: UniCredit Firenze Open (ATP)/Gijon Open (ATP)/Transylvania Open (WTA) — Tennis Channel, 5 a.m. (Monday) Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
TV And Streaming Viewing Picks For October 9 2022: How To Watch NFL Week 5
The Right Wing Media Wages A Culture War On Americans: Cable News Delivers Cheap Expedient Viscerally-Agitating Content Instead Of The Journalism Its Viewers Need And Deserve
The Right Wing Media Wages A Culture War On Americans: Cable News Delivers Cheap Expedient Viscerally-Agitating Content Instead Of The Journalism Its Viewers Need And Deserve
The Right Wing Media Wages A Culture War On Americans: Cable News Delivers Cheap, Expedient, Viscerally-Agitating Content Instead Of The Journalism Its Viewers Need And Deserve https://digitalarizonanews.com/the-right-wing-media-wages-a-culture-war-on-americans-cable-news-delivers-cheap-expedient-viscerally-agitating-content-instead-of-the-journalism-its-viewers-need-and-deserve/ Rob Tornoe | for Editor & Publisher Jim Small has covered Arizona politics for more than 20 years. During that time, he’s spent time at protests, rallies and all sorts of political events in the state’s Capitol in Phoenix. But thanks to former President Donald Trump’s 2020 election lies and the venom stoked at journalists casually on right-wing media outlets like Fox News, Small said for the first time in his long career as a reporter and editor that he can’t take his safety for granted. Small said at a press conference following the 2020 election, a person dressed in clothing decked out with extremist insignias confronted one of his Arizona Mirror colleagues. He chose not to name him out of concern for his continued safety. “The man came up to him and basically told him, ‘I know who you are, and I’m keeping my eye on you, and if you make a wrong move, you’re going to get it,’” Small recalled. “We spoke to law enforcement about it, and nothing ended up coming out of it, but it was unsettling and definitely concerning.” Small and many other local reporters across the country have been forced to deal with an increasingly alarming trend in our media ecosystem — the nationalization of news led by outlets like Fox News, which often grab local stories, strip them of their context, and use them to push political agendas or conspiracy theories aimed at keeping their viewers angry. That anger trickles back down into communities, infects local politics and forces reporters at small news outlets already stretched thin to grapple with larger issues of misinformation and polarization. In Arizona’s case, former President Trump’s lies about the results of the 2020 election have created a cesspool of misinformation in the state’s midterm elections. Those lies were weaponized early and often by outlets like Fox News (which, ironically, was the first major network to call Arizona for then-candidate Joe Biden), where some hosts openly pushed unfounded information about voter fraud and repeatedly attacked Dominion Voting Systems. Dominion is currently suing the network for $1.6 billion and is the most serious legal threat Fox News has encountered based on irresponsible and baseless programming. In response to our request for comment on this article, Fox News sent us a statement on the Dominion lawsuit, “We are confident we will prevail as freedom of the press is foundational to our democracy and must be protected. In addition to the damages claims being outrageous, unsupported and not rooted in sound financial analysis, serving as nothing more than a flagrant attempt to deter our journalists from doing their jobs.” According to Small, the result is a midterm election where Republicans in most big-ticket races have backed Trump’s election lies, led by gubernatorial candidate (and former television news anchor) Kari Lake. This has distorted the race away from issues important to Arizona voters as candidates seek out outlets like Fox News, One America News and Newsmax to raise funds. “What ends up happening is you have a lot more to write about because these extreme candidates are in a forum where they feel safe and unguarded,” Small said. “There are newsworthy things that come out of these shows because they’re saying things that are way outside the norm from what you’d expect a serious candidate for statewide office to be saying.” Local-news distortions as ammunition in the culture wars Apart from lies about the 2020 election (which the network has since backed away from as support for Trump wanes), Fox News hosts tend to push “culture war” issues related to race, LGBTQ+ rights, immigration or what’s being taught at schools. Critical race theory is an example of this ecosystem at work. Right-wing media outlets took the term — an academic framework that focuses on lingering racism across U.S. institutions — and used it as a catch-all term and associated it with any local news report involving school districts teaching about racism in America. It didn’t take long before misleading and out-of-context stories trickled down into local communities. School board meetings became polarized battlefields over everything from masks in schools to curriculum critics claimed had a progressive agenda. Anna Lynn Winfrey, politics reporter at the Pueblo Chieftain, had to deal with a lot of misinformation when she covered school board meetings in her previous reporting job with the Montrose Daily Press in Colorado. While working at her first newspaper job, it was one of Anna Lynn Winfrey’s responsibilities to cover school board meetings for the Montrose Daily Press in Colorado. But last year, Winfrey — who has since joined the Pueblo Chieftain to cover politics — began to notice meetings were becoming much more heated and confrontational. It wasn’t long before she was forced to deal with misinformation about critical race theory, which school board candidates falsely claimed was being taught at the Montrose County School District. “I was one of just a small handful of local reporters in Montrose, and I didn’t want to waste my time on these national conspiracy theories,” Winfrey said. “So, in my articles, I would write that the candidates spoke about critical race theory, but the superintendent said it wasn’t being taught there. I tried to emphasize the local impacts as much as possible.” The right-wing activism against critical race theory was pushed far and wide on Facebook, where so-called “concerned citizens” pushed the misinformation about public schools into unsuspecting communities across the country. But Fox News, easily the most-watched cable news network in the country, quickly became one of the largest conduits of out-of-context information regarding critical race theory. Media Matters, a progressive media watchdog, tracked the numbers and found that Fox News mentioned critical race theory over 3,900 times in 2021, compared to just 1,854 mentions combined on MSNBC and CNN over that same timeframe (which mainly included segments explaining the term and debunking false claims about its use in public schools). “It’s not an accident that critical race theory is dominating local school board meetings,” said Dannagal Young, a communications and political science professor at the University of Delaware. “If you ask those people where it came from, if you follow those breadcrumbs, it goes back to the conservative media ecosystem, which keeps its audience engaged and loyal through this reinforcement of identity threat.” “And now that has trickled down to our local communities,” Young added. In this 155th episode of “E&P Reports,” Mike Blinder goes one-on-one with Chris Stirewalt. Former Fox News political editor Chris Stirewalt, who lost his job following the 2020 election and wrote “Broken News: Why the Media Rage Machine Divides America and How to Fight Back,” told E&P Publisher Mike Blinder during an E&P Reports vodcast that it’s no surprise the network and so many national outlets lean hard on culture wars coverage and bypass real reporting. Chris Stirewalt, former Fox News political editor, lost his job following the 2020 election and wrote “Broken News: Why the Media Rage Machine Divides America and How to Fight Back.” “Culture wars news is easier; personalities and emotions are easier to do than hard news because hard news requires you to spend money. … You have a lot of stories that don’t pay off. It’s a real pain,” Stirewalt said. “What’s easy to do is have somebody do a piece that says, ‘We’re smart, and they’re dumb.’ … It scratches the news consumer’s itch.” The blurred line between opinion and straight news On paper, there is a clear division between the news division at Fox News — which features anchors like Bret Baier and Bill Hemmer — and opinion hosts like Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingraham. But when you watch the individual programs, that line gets blurred pretty quickly. “Oftentimes, the news shows take their cues from an interview or a monologue Tucker Carlson or Sean Hannity has done,” said Erik Wemple, a columnist and media critic at The Washington Post. “So, they’re by no means this fair and balanced production.” Erik Wemple is a columnist and media critic at The Washington Post. Wemple thinks one of the most cynical and brilliant moves former CEO Roger Ailes made in building Fox News was having a Washington bureau with a White House presence and credentialed reporters to cover the U.S. government. Viewers can see it at work every day, with White House correspondent Peter Doocy battling with Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre daily. This dynamic didn’t exist when Trump was in the White House and current Fox News host Kayleigh McEnany was behind the podium. “This coverage has given Fox News the fig leaf of legitimacy. And it’s a fig leaf that the opinion people at night hide behind when they pump their misinformation into the American public,” Wemple said. Another journalistically-dubious way Fox News pushes narratives is to interview right-wing activists without identifying them on air. In the case of critical race theory, Fox News demonstrated a pattern of hosting anti-critical race theory activists and simply identifying them as concerned parents, misleading viewers about their motivation and perspective. This didn’t just happen on the network’s opinion shows. On one October 2021 episode of “America’s Newsroom,” anchor Bill Hemmer aired interviews of three right-wing activists, describing each as just a “Fairfax County parent.” According to Media Matters, one was a former Trump administration offici...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
The Right Wing Media Wages A Culture War On Americans: Cable News Delivers Cheap Expedient Viscerally-Agitating Content Instead Of The Journalism Its Viewers Need And Deserve
A Free People Need A Free Press For Democracy To Flourish | Opinion Pennsylvania Capital-Star
A Free People Need A Free Press For Democracy To Flourish | Opinion Pennsylvania Capital-Star
A Free People Need A Free Press For Democracy To Flourish | Opinion – Pennsylvania Capital-Star https://digitalarizonanews.com/a-free-people-need-a-free-press-for-democracy-to-flourish-opinion-pennsylvania-capital-star/ By Quentin Young In the weeks after he assumed office, former President Donald Trump put reporters in the crosshairs when he labeled them “the enemy of the American people.” He was following the authoritarian playbook, long consulted by the likes of Stalin and Hitler, but it was shocking to see such strongman rhetoric coming from an American leader, who swore an oath to a constitution that takes press freedoms pretty seriously. The open animus toward journalists that Trump exemplified is increasingly a standard trait of leaders at all levels of American government, particularly, but not only, among Republicans. Hostility to the press coincides with the growing reliance by politicians on digital platforms such as social media to bypass journalists and communicate directly with constituents. Their access to free and easy forms of mass communication allows them to indulge their animosity for reporters who might challenge them on misjudgments, misinformation and misdeeds, with the result being an electorate that is misled, misinformed and mistreated. What was true in 1789 is true in 2022: A strong press is essential to a strong America. Despite the First Amendment and the country’s venerable journalistic traditions, the U.S. has descended to a mediocre place among nations of the world in terms of press freedoms. The 2022 World Press Freedom Index, which measures the ability of journalists to disseminate news independently and without political or other interference, ranks the U.S. at 42, just behind Burkina Faso, which as of several days ago is ruled by a 34-year-old army captain who led a coup. Republicans have taken press blocking to new levels in the run-up to the November elections. “In this cycle, I’ve started to see more Republican candidates avoiding the press, blocking the press from events, and taking advantage of the fact that there is conservative media that will ask different questions and has a different audience,” Washington Post reporter Dave Weigel told NPR. Far-right candidates, such as Pennsylvania governor hopeful Doug Mastriano and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, treat legacy media with near-total disdain. The editor of The Plain Dealer in Ohio last month ran a blank space where a photo was supposed to appear of a rally for DeSantis and U.S. Senate candidate J.D. Vance as a protest after those Republicans imposed restrictions that amounted to barring the press from covering the event. It’s no surprise that candidates and office holders would prefer to communicate directly with constituents. That way they can inflate the good stuff and omit the bad stuff. “In a sign of how siloed our information sources have become,” CNN correspondent Kyung Lah wrote, “midterm campaigns, many of them Republican, are widely shutting out local papers, local TV stations and national reporters.” Mesa County Clerk and Colorado secretary of state candidate Tina Peters talks with 710 KNUS radio host Randy Corporon at the Western Conservative Summit in Aurora on June 4, 2022. (Chase Woodruff/Colorado Newsline) Even in a state like Colorado, where Democrats dominate and one might expect challengers to court as much public exposure as they can get, many Republicans have adopted a posture of no-access scorn toward journalists. In an unprecedented move, the Western Conservative Summit denied access to The Denver Post in June. The event featured appearances by many of the leading Republican Colorado candidates for elective office, including U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert and University of Colorado Regent Heidi Ganahl, who’s running for governor. When Ganahl announced her running mate, Danny Moore, at an event in July, neither Ganahl nor Moore took a single question from reporters. Newsline has experienced such aversion to press scrutiny first hand, most recently when the conservative Centennial Institute denied press credentials for Newsline journalists to cover a publicly advertised candidate forum with the Democratic and Republican candidates for the Colorado 7th Congressional District seat. The denial came in an unsigned email and offered no explanation, but it did include the gratuitous warning, “We hope you will respect our private property rights.” The event was announced on the institute’s website, which did not specify any guest or press restrictions. I, as the Newsline editor, requested an explanation of the denial but received no reply. I sent the institute’s director, Jeff Hunt, a private message asking him to reconsider but received no reply. He apparently had strong feelings about the matter, however. “Many news outlets should be prosecuted for fraud,” Hunt tweeted on the morning of the forum. “They don’t report the news. They are leftist propagandists who harbor personal animosity toward Christians.” Newsline’s Sara Wilson covered the event anyway, based on a livestream, even after the Democratic candidate declined to show up. Readers can be the judge if we should be prosecuted for our reporting. So many Republican leaders are preoccupied with so-called cancel culture and what they perceive as censorship of their views. It’s an astounding feat of hypocrisy for them to also bar journalists from events, which is a form of censorship in that it preempts news readers’ access to impartial speech about people who hold public office. And this highlights the larger problem when candidates and holders of public office reject the role of journalists in an open democratic society — if it were merely newsrooms that suffered due to the trend, Americans might not have reason to care much, but it’s democracy itself that’s damaged. A democracy functions only when constituents have access to reliable information about their government and the officials who lead public institutions, especially information that’s unflattering to those officials. It’s no surprise that candidates and office holders would prefer to communicate directly with constituents. That way they can inflate the good stuff and omit the bad stuff. But that’s exactly why Americans should reject the practice. And the more a politician maligns truth tellers in the press, the more constituents should be skeptical. They will find that the “enemy of the American people” is in fact a trusted friend. Quentin Young is the editor of Colorado Newsline, a sibling site of the Pennsylvania Capital-Star, where this column first appeared. Our stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our web site. Please see our republishing guidelines for use of photos and graphics. Read More Here
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A Free People Need A Free Press For Democracy To Flourish | Opinion Pennsylvania Capital-Star
The Mercurys Sound Off For Sunday Oct. 9
The Mercurys Sound Off For Sunday Oct. 9
The Mercury’s Sound Off For Sunday, Oct. 9 https://digitalarizonanews.com/the-mercurys-sound-off-for-sunday-oct-9/ Could some of the pro-left Sound Off commentators explain why the left is so soft on crime? It really seems that they support criminals and certainly encourage them. The concern of progressive politicians is for the criminal, not for the victims of the crimes. Why is that? I really don’t understand what is going on with this stuff. It makes no sense to me. They totally support Antifa and BLM. Please help me understand. H. John For those who do not know, Donald Trump is not on the ballot in 2022. All of the distractions are to hide the numerous Biden-Harris failures and disasters since Jan. 20, 2021. The 2022 election is all about those who support Joe Biden and his enablers. Do you want more of the same or a change in course? Vote accordingly. Can’t believe people are actually going to vote for John Fetterman. Now he wants to end the Senate filibuster so that Democrats could push through gun bans. The filibuster was initiated to slow the deliberation of bills and to force compromise. It has served the USA well over the years. Eliminating it would destroy the voice of the minority party in the federal government. Holly A couple of weeks ago, Democrats went crazy over 50 illegal immigrants landing in Martha’s Vineyard courtesy of Ron DeSantis. Yesterday, 3 plane loads of illegal immigrants sent by Joe Biden landed in Montgomery, New York, and then herded onto buses. Police stopped one bus. Turned out it was filled with teenage girls, most under 18. No one could answer where they were headed, except they were being sponsored — but by whom? Ruth Mutter Comments Trump made at his recent rallies: “Nobody knows more about taxes than I do.” He used the same line numerous times but removed “taxes” for these words: “Construction, campaign finance, drones, technology, infrastructure, H-1B, H-2B, ISIS, Facebook, steel workers, golf.” “I understand things, I comprehend very well. Better than almost anybody.” Then why did he plead the 5th if he knows more than anybody? Just A Retired Guy OK folks, you may not be thrilled with the Pennsylvania voting choices but it is what it is.  One choice is between a successful heart surgeon and a man who lived off his family for most of his adult life.   Who cares how many houses Oz has — at least he earned the money to pay for them himself. Pragmatic Voter Though you won’t see it blasted on the front page of newspapers or it being the lead story on the mainstream media news stations (like you would if Trump were president), it’s official! The US just recorded its 2nd consecutive quarter of economic contraction. For all you low-intelligence Biden voters, that’s the well-established textbook definition of a recession. Enjoy being crippled by Bidinflation. You voted for it! Dems be tripp’n! Butch Were Reps. Dean & Houlahan parties to sedition? As VP, Biden withheld a billion in aid to Ukraine until the prosecutor investigating the firm for which his son had a “no show” job was fired. He crowed about it. Trump never engaged in a quid pro quo but did inquire about this with a government, effectively installed by the Obama Administration, that was a party to the Russian collusion hoax. For this, he was impeached. M. Furlong OK, Lefty, so hurricanes are manmade occurrences now? I guess when the cavemen first discovered fire that was the start of hurricanes. I wonder what they did to create the ice ages. You need to get real and realize that severe weather has been around from the beginning of time. Does man cause some issues — probably, but not to the degree you would like to think. Meteorologist 101 Now that the elections are getting closer, I hope everyone starts to think seriously about the shape our country is in. If we continue another two years under this so-called Democrat team there will be no turning back to anything called normal. I surely don’t have to spell out the trouble this country is in right now with all the inflation and problems. Let’s get serious and not vote party line but what is best for the country. The Martha’s Vineyard thing might be the best and clearest example of what so many of us have been talking about for years. The progressive elites advocate for policies that they never have to suffer the consequences of. And the one time they do, it ends quickly. Couldn’t be more clear! J Dog God never gives you more than you can handle … unless you die of something. Bill Wilson The election this November could not have a sharper contrast. If you prefer open borders, government mandates, inflation, censorship, surging crime, and higher energy prices, vote to reelect U.S. Reps. Houlahan and Dean. If you want a return to secure borders, civil liberties, low inflation, support for our police, and energy independence, vote for Republicans Guy Ciarrocchi and Christian Nascimento. Houlahan and Dean can’t hide from their liberal voting records nor the disastrous results! Robert Minninger Thank God we don’t have a Republican governor in Pennsylvania. We see death and destruction in Florida and evil Ronnie is banning books, manipulating voter rights, jetting immigrants around the states, hating trans kids and doing other assorted atrocities. In other words, he’s being a perfectly hateful conservative. His military career is also suspect but bone spurs were not an issue. Pray for Florida! Lefty Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas should not be allowed to serve on the court. His wife is heavily involved with the big lie and probably talks to him about it all the time. I have never seen anything like this in my life! Another example of the damage Trump has created. Josh Shapiro has been the Attorney General of Pennsylvania since 2017. He has presided over record increases in crime throughout the Commonwealth. Philadelphia is going to set another record this year for carjackings, robberies, and murders. Police in Philadelphia are restricted from enforcing traffic violations, registration violations, etc. Wawas in Philadelphia are being destroyed by mobs. Who is responsible? The top law enforcement official in the Commonwealth: Democrat Josh Shapiro. Michael Stern Here is a promoted Bible quote from Rebbie Mastriano on a woman’s role in marriage: “Wives, submit yourselves to your own husbands as you do to the Lord,” the passage states. “For the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church, his body, of which he is the Savior. Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit to their husbands in everything.” Patriot54 It really is a sad state of affairs when someone bases their vote strictly on abortion. If you are happy with inflation, crime and open borders (which no other country has) then vote Democrat. If you want a change vote republican. I know I want a change! Dot Jim Fitch, try a simple fact check. Joe and Jill Biden own a 6,850-square-foot home in Wilmington as well as a 4,800-square-foot vacation home in Rehoboth Beach, Del. You were more interesting when you stuck to Dad Jokes. The Moderate So what if I want to let killers out of jail? I went to Harvard and you didn’t. You can’t expect me to pay taxes. I’m a trust fund baby. Hey, don’t tell me that you are suffering from inflation. It’s not bothering me. My kids go to private school. Yours don’t. So what? I went to Harvard. You didn’t. Oz earned his money. I was born that way. It makes me better than him. “Johan Festerman” Someone recently touted Republicans being the party of Lincoln freeing the slaves, etc. It’s true of course. Hope most will catch up on later history and read about the “Southern Strategy.” Then there’s Jim Crow and Women’s Suffrage. Parties change throughout our history. One constant is a group feeling their hold on power threatened by free and fair voting for all citizens and using fear-mongering in an attempt to maintain it. KC Democrat Susan Wild is running for a second term in the House. What a great job she did. She voted for every bill by Biden that has put us in a recession with higher gas and food prices and open borders. We have to pay the price for it. Democratic cities are overrun with illegals, so what has Susan done about it? She’s backed judges soft on criminals and cut police. Wild is no leader, send her home! My friends in Florida sent me pictures of the disaster situation as a result of hurricane Ian. This historic storm is going to cost billions of dollars and the loss of human life. Global warming is the only explanation for the severity of the storm. Please support senator Fetterman and his colleagues in funding efforts for global warming. Jay Miller The stock market is down about 6% since Biden’s been in office. If you’re saying your 401(k) is down 30%, you are either lying, made terrible decisions, or are being taken advantage of by insane fees. In the 2008 crash, the stock market dropped about 50% from its previous highs. If you’re that confident about the economy crashing under Biden, switch your 401(k) selections to less risky, more stable choices before then. BY KC, don’t put faith in “60 Minutes.” Not the same “60 Minutes” of 30 years ago! Journalism is on the light side, as everything political has an angle to it! I urge everyone to expand their news sources, give Newsmax, OAN, FNC and others a view and see what you are missing! CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN, MSNBC, WP, NYT are the DNC machine! See and hear what information you are missing, and ask why? We’re square in the middle of the election cycle. It all boils down to just a few issues. Democrats are emphasizing abortion, electric cars, and former President Donald Trump. Republicans counter with inflation, open borders, and crime. It shouldn’t even be close. The calculation is clear. Barney Let’s rehash, which party tried to overthrow an election, ban a variety of books, threaten their own members if they have a different view, ha...
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The Mercurys Sound Off For Sunday Oct. 9
Strikes Kill At Least 17 In Key Southern City As Russian Hawks Demand Revenge For Bridge Attack
Strikes Kill At Least 17 In Key Southern City As Russian Hawks Demand Revenge For Bridge Attack
Strikes Kill At Least 17 In Key Southern City, As Russian Hawks Demand Revenge For Bridge Attack https://digitalarizonanews.com/strikes-kill-at-least-17-in-key-southern-city-as-russian-hawks-demand-revenge-for-bridge-attack/ Image A residential building heavily damaged by a Russian missile strike in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, on Sunday.Credit…Reuters KYIV, Ukraine — Less than a day after a major attack damaged Russia’s bridge to Crimea and delivered a blow to Moscow’s war effort, a barrage of missiles slammed into civilian areas of the city of Zaporizhzhia overnight and killed at least 17 people, local officials said on Sunday, as Russian forces continued the relentless targeting of residential areas there. Ukrainian officials have accused Russia of carrying out revenge attacks on civilian targets as Ukrainian forces have gained ground on the battlefield in recent weeks. Many were bracing for a severe Russian response to the bridge attack, which analysts described as a significant setback for Moscow both symbolically and practically, damaging a span that holds personal importance for President Vladimir V. Putin and that has played a key role in supplying his forces occupying southern Ukraine. Zaporizhzhia, in the southeast of Ukraine, was battered overnight by several missiles that hit homes and destroyed part of an apartment building, Anatolii Kurtiev, the acting mayor, wrote on Telegram. He said that five residences were destroyed and another 40 were damaged. Photos in Ukrainian news outlets showed piles of rubble and a partially collapsed building illuminated by fires burning around it. Video taken at the scene of the strike after daybreak on Sunday showed dozens of emergency workers and volunteers digging through the rubble of the building looking for survivors.” Oleksandr Starukh, the governor of the Zaporizhzhia region, said in a Telegram post on Sunday morning that there may still be people trapped in the rubble in the city, which Russian forces have targeted relentlessly in recent days. “The enemy continues to terrorize the city of Zaporizhzhia,” he wrote in another post, warning civilians of the risk of continued attacks. The strikes were just the latest in weeks of assaults on civilians that have shaken Zaporizhzhia and other Ukrainian cities, and it was not immediately clear if they were linked to the explosion on the Kerch Strait Bridge on Saturday, which sent part of the 12-mile span tumbling into the sea. While Ukraine’s government did not officially claim responsibility, a senior Ukrainian official told The New York Times that Ukraine’s intelligence services had orchestrated the explosion, using a bomb loaded onto a truck being driven across the bridge. On Thursday in Zaporizhzhia, a Russian missile attack killed at least 14 people, with some bodies pulled from the rubble more than a day later. The city, a large regional center on the Dnipro River, has also been a major humanitarian hub for residents of smaller towns and cities who had fled intense fighting closer to home. The Zaporizhzhia region is one of four Ukrainian regions that Mr. Putin illegally annexed last week, a move that Ukraine and its allies have ignored. In Thursday’s attack, President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said the Russian military had also targeted rescuers by launching a second missile strike on an area that had been hit earlier in the day. “Absolute meanness. Absolute evil,” Mr. Zelensky said in a recorded address. “There have already been thousands of manifestations of such evil. Unfortunately, there may be thousands more.” Iranian-made “kamikaze” drones, which slam directly into their targets, have also hit the city, Ukraine’s military said on Friday. Humanitarian convoys out of the city have been suspended during the recent attacks. Late last month a Russian missile strike hit a convoy of vehicles filled with people fleeing the fighting in the Zaporizhzhia region, killing at least 30 people and wounding 88 others. Russia has previously denied attacking civilians, saying without evidence that such assaults are the work of Ukrainian forces trying to rally support to their cause. Image Smoke above the collapsed part of the Kerch Strait Bridge in Crimea on Saturday.Credit…Maxar Technologies Within hours of a blast that damaged the sole bridge linking Crimea with Russia early Saturday, hard-line military bloggers and Russian officials were calling for a swift and strong response from Moscow. One high-level politician said that anything less than an “extremely harsh” response would show weakness from the Kremlin, which is facing continued losses on the battlefield and mounting criticism at home. For President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, who presided over the bridge’s opening in 2018, the explosion seemed to be a highly personal affront, underscoring his failure to get a handle on a relentless series of Ukrainian attacks. Some news media commentators demanded that Russia destroy Ukraine’s electricity infrastructure and the transportation systems used to import Western armaments. Evgeny Poddubny, a war correspondent for the state RT outlet, said that nobody in the Ukrainian leadership seemed to fear Russia anymore. “The enemy has stopped being afraid, and this circumstance needs to be corrected promptly,” he wrote in RT’s Telegram channel. “Commanders of formations, heads of intelligence agencies, politicians of the Kyiv criminal regime sleep peacefully, wake up without a headache and in a good mood, without a sense of inevitability of punishment for crimes committed.” UKRAINE 3,000 ft CRIMEA RUSSIA Sevastapol Crimea Crimea Krasnodar, Russia Outer two lanes collapsed here. Several tanker cars of a train could be seeing burning here. 100 ft UKRAINE Kherson CRIMEA RUSSIA Sevastapol 3,000 ft Crimea Krasnodar, Russia Outer two lanes collapsed here. Several tanker cars of a train could be seeing burning here. 100 ft Aleksandr Kots, a war correspondent for the Russian tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda, wrote on Telegram that disabling the bridge bodes ill for Moscow’s already troubled efforts to hold onto territory in the Kherson region of southern Ukraine — and most likely foreshadowed a future attack on Crimea itself. He described the “consistency” that Ukraine was showing in the war as “enviable” and called for Russia to “hammer Ukraine into the 18th century, without meaningless reflection on how this will affect the civilian population.” While there were no official claims of responsibility, Ukrainian officials, who in the past have said the bridge would be a legitimate target for a strike, indicated that the explosion was no accident and made no secret of their satisfaction. “Crimea, the bridge, the beginning,” Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukraine’s president, wrote in a Twitter post on Saturday. “Everything illegal, must be destroyed. Everything stolen returned to Ukraine. All Russian occupiers expelled.” The explosion is emblematic of a Russian military in disarray. Russian forces were unable to protect the road and rail crossing despite its centrality to the war effort, its personal importance to Mr. Putin and its potent symbolism as the literal connection between Russia and Crimea. For Russia, the rail crossing “has played a key role in moving heavy military vehicles to the southern front during the invasion,” the British defense intelligence agency wrote in its daily assessment on Sunday. It added that although the extent of the damage to the rail line was uncertain, “any serious disruption to its capacity will highly likely have a significant impact on Russia’s already strained ability to sustain its forces in southern Ukraine.” Two of the four lanes of roadway “have collapsed in several places” over an approximately 250-meter stretch, the report said. Hours after the explosion, the Kremlin appointed Gen. Sergei Surovikin, yet another new commander, to oversee its forces in Ukraine. Previous leadership shake-ups have done little to right the military’s floundering performance. General Surovikin, 55, has long had a reputation for corruption and brutality, military analysts said. “He is known as a pretty ruthless commander who is short with subordinates and is known for his temper,” said Michael Kofman, the director of Russia studies at C.N.A., a defense research institute based in Virginia. His appointment was quickly praised by some of the biggest supporters of the war, including Yevgeny Prigozhin, the founder of the Wagner mercenary group that was deployed heavily in Syria. He made a rare public endorsement of the general, calling him “legendary.” Image Workers cleaned up debris after a piece of a shot-down missile fell into a park opposite its primary target, in central Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Saturday.Credit…Ivor Prickett for The New York Times KHARKIV, Ukraine — Four Russian missiles struck the city center of Kharkiv just after midnight on Saturday morning in one of the most intense attacks in weeks, targeting two building complexes used by the Ukrainian military. One 45-year-old man was hospitalized with shrapnel wounds, the head of the Kharkiv regional military administration, Oleh Syniehubov, said on Telegram. Three of the missiles landed in building courtyards, and a fourth landed in a park across the street. One missile landed on the grounds of the city library, an elegant pale yellow stucco building also used by the Institute of Agriculture, where Ukrainian soldiers had been using an annex in recent months. On Saturday, uniformed soldiers examined a crater beside a mangled green bus. Two of the missiles had struck another building complex adjacent to the library, severely damaging part of a three-story building and nearby shops. Soldiers in civilian clothes barred entrance to the courtyard of the complex as police officials arrived to inspect the damage. The building seems to have been an ammunition depot, according to residents who posted v...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Strikes Kill At Least 17 In Key Southern City As Russian Hawks Demand Revenge For Bridge Attack
North Korea Fires Two Ballistic Missiles In Seventh Of Recent Launches
North Korea Fires Two Ballistic Missiles In Seventh Of Recent Launches
North Korea Fires Two Ballistic Missiles In Seventh Of Recent Launches https://digitalarizonanews.com/north-korea-fires-two-ballistic-missiles-in-seventh-of-recent-launches/ TOKYO, Oct 9 (Reuters) – North Korea fired two ballistic missiles early on Sunday, authorities in neighbouring countries said, the seventh such launch by Pyongyang in recent days that added to widespread alarm in Washington and its allies in Tokyo and Seoul. Officials in the South Korean capital have said the uptick in the North’s missile launches could signal it is closer than ever to resuming nuclear testing for the first time since 2017, with preparations observed at its test site for months. Both of Sunday’s missiles reached an altitude of 100 km (60 miles) and covered 350 km (218 miles), Japan’s state minister of defence, Toshiro Ino, told reporters. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com The first was fired at about 1:47 a.m. (1647 GMT) and the second some six minutes later. They fell outside Japan’s exclusive economic zone, and authorities were looking into what type they were, including the possibility that they were submarine-launched ballistic missiles, he added. The U.S. military said it was consulting closely with allies and partners following the launches, which it said highlighted the “destabilizing impact” of the North Korean nuclear arms and ballistic missile programs. Still, the United States assessed that the latest launches did not pose a threat to U.S. personnel or American allies. “The U.S. commitments to the defence of the Republic of Korea and Japan remain ironclad,” the Hawaii-based U.S. Indo-Pacific Command said in a statement. The latest missile launches from the Muncheon area on North Korea’s east coast are a “serious provocation” that harms peace, South Korean authorities said. On Tuesday, North Korea test-fired a ballistic missile farther than ever before, sending it soaring over Japan for the first time in five years and prompting a warning to residents there to take cover. Ino said Tokyo would not tolerate the repeated actions by North Korea. The incident was the seventh such launch since Sept. 25. Japan’s foreign ministry said the nuclear envoys of the United States, South Korea and Japan held a telephone call and shared the view that the North’s ballistic missile launches threatened the peace and security of the region and the international community, besides posing a civil aviation risk. North Korea, which has pursued missile and nuclear tests in defiance of U.N. sanctions, said on Saturday its missile tests were for self-defence against direct U.S. military threats and had not harmed the safety of neighbours. “Our missile tests are a normal, planned self-defence measure to protect our country’s security and regional peace from direct U.S. military threats,” said state media KCNA, citing an aviation administration spokesperson. South Korea and the United States held joint maritime exercises on Friday, a day after Seoul scrambled fighter jets in reaction to an apparent North Korean bombing drill. The United States also announced new sanctions on Friday in response to North Korea’s latest missile launches. North Korea’s neighbour and ally China pointed to joint military exercises held by the United States and its allies around the Korean peninsula when asked about Sunday’s launches. “The U.S.’s words should match its actions, its stance that it does not bear ill will towards North Korea should translate into actions, it should create the conditions for the resumption of meaningful dialogue,” foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning told a regular briefing. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Nobuhiro Kubo and David Dolan in Tokyo, Phil Stewart in Washington; Additional reporting by Daniel Leussink and Eduardo Baptista; Editing by Leslie Adler and Clarence Fernandez Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
North Korea Fires Two Ballistic Missiles In Seventh Of Recent Launches
In Memoriam: Funeral Notices October 9 2022
In Memoriam: Funeral Notices October 9 2022
In Memoriam: Funeral Notices, October 9, 2022 https://digitalarizonanews.com/in-memoriam-funeral-notices-october-9-2022/ In memoriam: Funeral notices, October 9, 2022 Funeral notices for Sunday, October 9, 2022. For more obituaries go to legacy.com/obituaries/tucson/ In memoriam: Funeral notices, October 9, 2022 Paid Obituaries John Andersen John Oliver Andersen (1934-2022) John Oliver Andersen (88) passed away peacefully on September 16, 2022, in Tucson, Arizona. He was born April 3, 1934, in Oak Park, Illinois to Harvey and Margaret Andersen. John was a proud graduate of Fenwick High School, from which he maintained many lifelong friendships. He then attended Loyola University, Chicago.  John was an Army veteran who was proud of his service. As a professional, he excelled as an advertising manager for the Chicago Sun-Times and the Erie Times.  After John’s retirement, he and Delphine moved to Oro Valley, Az in 2000 when they found a lovely home with a view of the golf course and a beautiful view of the mountains. He loved golf and was in charge of organizing his highly successful Friday golf group.  He was very proud of his Irish and Norwegian heritage. He was preceded in death by his wife Delphine, his parents, brothers Robert and William Andersen, and his nephew John Andersen.  John leaves behind two sisters-in-law, Barbara Hushmidth and Corinne Drew, nephews James Drew, Christopher and Tim Andersen, niece Dawn Wilmsen, and many fond great-nieces, nephews, and lifelong friends. The Celebration of Life will be held 4 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 13, 2022, at Vistoso Funeral Home, 2285 E Rancho Vistoso Blvd, Oro Valley, AZ 85755 (NE corner of Innovation Dr. and Rancho Vistoso Blvd.) The Funeral Mass will be celebrated Friday Oct. 14th at 11 a.m. at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church, 8650 N Shannon Rd, Tucson, AZ 85742, AZ.  Interment will follow the funeral mass at Holy Hope Catholic Cemetery, 3555 N Oracle Rd, (SE southeast corner of Prince Rd. and Oracle Rd.) Tucson, AZ 85705.  John is being interred with his bride, Delphine. Corda Beasley Carol went to be with the Lord Oct. 4, 2022 after a hard fought battle with cancer.  Carol began her life journey on Dec 3, 1948 in Delta, CO where she was welcomed by her parents Joe & Corda Pace.  Carol and her family moved to Phoenix, AZ in the early 1950’s and then on to Tucson, AZ Aug 1963 where she resided the remainder of her life.  Carol graduated from Pueblo High School and Lamsons Business College.  Carol worked as a Medical Secretary for the Veterans Administration Hospital where she met her husband Alejo Gonzalez.  Carol and Al had 7 children who were undeniably her pride and joy.  Carol was blessed with 6 grandchildren and 2 great-granddaughters. Carol was a faithful Christian, always putting her belief first and foremost in her life.  She enjoyed singing, especially old hymns and contemporary Christian songs.  One of her favorites was “There’s Something About That Name”, the song her husband and sons were singing to her when she passed.  Carol also enjoyed spending time and participating in activities at the Elle Towne Senior Center where she met her husband Les Beasley.  Carol was preceded in death by her parents, husband Alejo, brother Michael Pace, niece Elizabeth and nephew Michael II.  Carol is survived by husband Leslie Beasley; children Samantha Gonzalez (Colorado Springs, CO), Joseph (Melanie) Gonzalez (Fairhope, AL), Amanda (Ryan) Millard (Highlands Ranch, CO), Jonathan Gonzalez (Tucson, AZ), Jeremy (Vanessa) Gonzalez (South Jordan, UT), Jason (Katelyn) Gonzalez (Clearfield, UT) and Jeffery (Jade) Gonzalez (Tucson, AZ); 6 grandchildren Austin, Isaiah, Nathanial, Natalie, Barrett and Lily; 2 great-granddaughters Aaliyah and Elliott; sisters Gayla and Mary Pace (Tucson, AZ); nephews Daniel (Gretchen) Pace (Lowell, IN) and Thomas (Daina) Keith (Tucson, AZ); 5 great-nephews Navin, Owen, Donovan, Henry and Charles and 1 great-niece Charlotte.  All service will be held at Evergreen Mortuary, 3015 N Oracle Road Tucson, AZ 85705 on Monday, Oct 10, 2022.  Visitation 10AM – 12PM; Chapel Memorial Service 12PM; Graveside Service and Burial immediately following.  Joann Belvedere Larry S Young 09/27/1948-10/09/2021 Larry Stephen Young 73 passed away 10-09-2021. He is survived by his wife Jean of 50 years, children Alan, Brian, and Donna, 6 grandchildren and 2 great-grandsons. He was born in Altoona, PA and spent his adult life in Tucson. He graduated with an Electrical Engineering degree from the U of A in 1970. He retired from the engineering department after 42 years with the phone company. He was a life member of IEEE and Sons of the Pioneers. His confidence, honesty, strength, and stories made him the best husband and father a family could have asked for. He is deeply loved and missed by his family and friends. Arthur Cake of Tucson, Arizona was born July 20th, 1960, and passed away suddenly Sunday, September 25th, 2022. He grew up in New Jersey, New York and Connecticut. Art played football at Westhill High School in Stamford, CT. His favorite sport was wrestling, and he was named to the all-state team in Connecticut. He continued his wrestling career at Northern Arizona University, where he was a Four-year letterman. He had a remarkable ability to “float weight classes”, as needed. During a single season (1979-80) he wrestled varsity in 5 different weight classes (158, 167, 177, 190 and unlimited) adjusting his actual weight to wrestle in each weight class. His willingness to make sacrifices helped to create the strongest dual meet team at Northern Arizona University. Art received his Bachelor’s Degree in Business, with an emphasis in Hotel and Restaurant Management. He designed and managed several restaurants in Arizona and Florida. He relocated to Tucson establishing a restaurant supply business, then shifted business skills to real estate investments, eventually starting Silverado Plumbing. In addition to being a dog lover, Art had a strong desire to help others succeed. He had a contagious laugh and was known for his kind and compassionate spirit. Loyalty and honor were deeply ingrained in Art’s make-up, and he exhibited these characteristics daily and admired them in others. A true friend, Art would drop everything to help a friend in need. He was a good friend and a great father. Art was also an avid fly fisherman and loved spending time with his family and friends at his home in Montana’s Paradise Valley. He will be missed by many. Art was preceded in death by his father, Arthur Fischer Cake (a prolific inventor) and mother, Joy Elizabeth Cake and his beloved dogs, Hershey and Teddy. He is survived by his brother, Elwood Cake; two stepchildren, Shea and Sunshine, and many close friends. A Celebration of Art’s Life will be held on Monday, October 17, at 2:30 p.m., at Hacienda Del Sol Guest Ranch Resort. In lieu of flowers, please consider a Memorial Donation to the Humane Society of Southern Arizona in Art’s name. Arrangements by EVERGREEN MORTUARY. Dorothy Epperson Dorothy Ann Epperson (August 3, 1948 – September 18, 2022) Loving daughter, sister, wife, daughter-in-law, sister-in-law, mother, mother-in-law, and a true friend to many.  Dorothy and her late husband of 52 years, Tom, were also the owners of Clyde Wanslee Auto Sales for over 35 years. Per Dorothy’s request, there will not be a memorial service. In lieu of flowers the family requests donations be made to the Alzheimer’s Association at: Alz.org Andre Haymore Andre “Dre” Haymore passed away on September 30th, 2022 at the age of 46 in Tucson, Arizona, leaving behind a legacy as the best father, son, brother, uncle, cousin, and friend you could ask for. He bravely fought complications from endocarditis until the end. Dre was born in Tucson on February 24, 1976, son of Viola and Richard Sr. and baby brother to Myron, Terry, Richard, and Courtney. From the get-go, he was always observant and curious, cool and calm. But he was also fun – and loved music of all kinds. Viola remembers when he was 5 how he moonwalked in church, making her friend Michelle laugh so hard she could barely get it out. He was religious throughout his life, and was baptized September 1st, 1985. Dre made his reputation as an athlete at Amphi High School, where he was an all-city sprinter and running back. He rushed for 1,185 yards in 1993. But even better, at Amphi he met his wife, Amy. They graduated in 1994 and went on to enjoy 21 years of marriage together, raising two amazing children, Addy and Aeden. Dre lives on through his family; we see him every day in Amy’s limitless love, Addy’s gentle compassion, and Aeden’s leadership and musical abilities. Andre’s personality was larger than life, and his laugh was contagious. He loved to watch the San Francisco 49ers play, especially when they were against a buddy’s favorite team so he could razz them. His favorite movies were Smokey and the Bandit and The Polar Express, and he watched them most every night before bed. And he loved Waylon Jennings, so much so that he had a tattoo of the Flying W. Andre loved a challenge, to be challenged and to go beyond those challenges. He was known to be always working on something, whether it be a personal project or a favor for friends or family. You could always count on him for being that smart aleck, and he took great pleasure in bantering with his closest buddies. He loved trucks, boats and fishing trips and organized the party wherever he went. Cooking and entertaining for friends and family while enjoying Bud Light and Jack Daniels were his favorite things to do. He truly was the anchor of his family. He loved and cared for others deeply in a way that made everyone around him feel special. He was a father, son, and brother to many, even if not by blood. We all knew and loved that big heart and that bald head. Even if you didn’t know Andre personally, there’s a good chance he touched your life as he served as a ...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
In Memoriam: Funeral Notices October 9 2022
Gas Prices Today October 9 2022: Check The Cheapest Gas Stations Today
Gas Prices Today October 9 2022: Check The Cheapest Gas Stations Today
Gas Prices Today, October 9, 2022: Check The Cheapest Gas Stations Today https://digitalarizonanews.com/gas-prices-today-october-9-2022-check-the-cheapest-gas-stations-today/ As we end the first week of October, it’s clear that gas prices are going to be rising again in the USA this month, causing further headaches for consumers. For a variety of reasons, the supply of gas has gone down once more and this has caused prices to bounce back up. It really is worthwhile, therefore, shopping around to find the best price and that’s why we’ve made this guide to the cheapest gas stations in the country’s 10 major cities. What state has the highest gas prices? California is once again the state with the highest overall average gas prices, as has predominantly been the case over the course of 2022. It has climbed back up, currently at 6.335 dollars per gallon. The cheapest price tends to alternate more frequently around the southern states but right now the cheapest average is in Georgia where it is 3.226 dollars per gallon. Where are the cheapest gas stations in the US? When it comes to finding the cheapest gas stations in the USA, these are the lowest-priced places to get gas in the top 10 most populated cities in the country: New York, New York (2.91 dollars): Diesel & Gas, 210 14th St Jersey City, NJ. Los Angeles, California (5.29 dollars): Doheny, 34241 Doheny Park Rd Capistrano Beach, CA. Chicago, Illinois (3.67 dollars): Gulf, 280252nd St Kenosha, WI. Houston, Texas (2.59 dollars): Valero, 16630 Clay Rd Houston, TX. Phoenix, Arizona (4.69 dollars): Circle K, 1440 W Bell Rd Phoenix, AZ. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (3.17 dollars): Liberty, 1070 Mantua Pike Oak Valley, NJ. San Antonio, Texas (2.85 dollars): Costco, 11210 Potranco Rd San Antonio, TX. San Diego, California (5.95 dollars): Son’s, 445 W 5th Ave Escondido, CA. Dallas, Texas (2.87 dollars): Murphy Express, 1200 Eastchase Pkwy Fort Worth, TX. San Jose, California (5.85 dollars): Spartan Station, 444 E Taylor St San Jose, CA. Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Gas Prices Today October 9 2022: Check The Cheapest Gas Stations Today
Biden Is rounding Up Pro-Life Activists Everywhere IG News
Biden Is rounding Up Pro-Life Activists Everywhere IG News
Biden Is ’rounding Up Pro-Life Activists Everywhere’ IG News https://digitalarizonanews.com/biden-is-rounding-up-pro-life-activists-everywhere-ig-news/ IG News Updates, Former President Donald Trump called on the Department of Justice (DOJ) to send the FBI to arrest lifeguards across the country over alleged minor crimes. Speaking in front of a crowd of supporters at his rally in Nevada, the former president said Joe Biden and his Democrat supporters in government are “turning America into a police state,” citing the administration’s humiliating arrests and turning a blind eye to his turned to Massive bombing of pro-life clinics at the hands of pro-choice terrorists. “Before our eyes, Biden and his leftist handlers are turning America into a police state,” Trump said. Look what’s happening. After ignoring violent attacks on pro-life clinics, the Biden administration is cornering pro-life activists across the country. First they arrested the minister, which you all read about, then this week they arrested the grandparents with guns, several agents barged into their tiny houses and put them in jail. In September, the FBI raided the home of pro-life activist Mark Hawke after his “screaming” children were watched in horror over allegations related to the FACE Act stemming from an incident in which Hawke killed a 72-year-old abortion worker. was pushed, who was escorting. Women in a Planned Parenthood clinic. Hawke’s family says the man was harassing their 12-year-old son. Just last week, the Department of Justice (DOJ) indicted 11 pro-life advocates with federal charges related to the 2021 protests at a Tennessee abortion clinic. Most defendants could face up to eleven years in prison. “These guys went out and protested beautifully, quietly, and they’re in jail now,” Trump said of pro-life activists. “They were protesting outside abortion clinics and [the government] They are being charged with a crime of up to 11 years in prison. In many cases, they are grandparents and elderly people…” He continued: These are peaceful patriots. You can agree with them. You don’t need to agree. They want to put him in jail for 11 years which he has every right to do. Democrats are shutting down their political opponents, spying on their political rivals, silencing dissent, and using the full force of government, law enforcement, and the media, fake media. The former president then called on “every freedom-loving American” to protest this tyranny in the upcoming midterm election. “This election, we have to do this. We don’t have the luxury of waiting. The only way for evil to triumph is for good men and women to do nothing,” he concluded. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Biden Is rounding Up Pro-Life Activists Everywhere IG News
How Trump Deflected Demands For Documents Enmeshing Aides
How Trump Deflected Demands For Documents Enmeshing Aides
How Trump Deflected Demands For Documents, Enmeshing Aides https://digitalarizonanews.com/how-trump-deflected-demands-for-documents-enmeshing-aides/ Late last year, as the National Archives ratcheted up the pressure on former President Donald Trump to return boxes of records he had taken from the White House to his Mar-a-Lago club, he came up with an idea to resolve the looming showdown: cut a deal. Trump, still determined to show he had been wronged by the FBI investigation into his 2016 campaign’s ties to Russia, was angry with the National Archives and Records Administration for its unwillingness to hand over a batch of sensitive documents that he thought proved his claims. In a time of both misinformation and too much information, quality journalism is more crucial than ever. By subscribing, you can help us get the story right. SUBSCRIBE NOW Read More Here
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How Trump Deflected Demands For Documents Enmeshing Aides
US Officials Meet The Taliban First Time After Al-Zawahiri's Murder
US Officials Meet The Taliban First Time After Al-Zawahiri's Murder
US Officials Meet The Taliban First Time After Al-Zawahiri's Murder https://digitalarizonanews.com/us-officials-meet-the-taliban-first-time-after-al-zawahiris-murder/ The deputy director of the CIA and the top State Department official responsible for Afghanistan are revealed to have met with the Taliban in Qatar. The Taliban flag. Senior Biden administration officials met in person with the Taliban on Saturday, as revealed by US officials to CNN. This would mark the first time they meet since Al-Qaeda leader Ayman Al-Zawahiri was killed in a US drone strike in Afghanistan.  The deputy director of the CIA and the top State Department official responsible for Afghanistan met with the Taliban delegation in Doha, Qatar. The delegation included Abdul Haq Wasiq, the Taliban’s head of intelligence. After Al-Zawahiri was killed in a drone strike, Washington accused the Taliban of “clear and blatant violation of the Doha agreement” which was brokered by the Trump administration. The deal stipulates that the Taliban would not harbor terrorists if the US withdraws from Afghanistan.  Taliban officials have condemned the killing of Al-Zawahiri.  The US continued to engage with the Taliban, in addition to negotiating with the US to release US citizen Mark Frerichs.  CIA Deputy Director David Cohen and Wasiq met on Saturday. Three weeks ago, Frerichs was released after more than 2 years in captivity with help from Qatar. Administration officials said they spent months negotiating with the Taliban to release the prisoner. Diplomatic sources spoke to Al Mayadeen in August, revealing that Al-Zawahiri was not killed the way Washington said he was killed, indicating that the Al-Qaeda chief was killed as a result of a mysterious explosion that was not and cannot be disclosed. US President Joe Biden claimed that there were no US boots on the ground in Afghanistan at the time of the attack.  However, Washington claims that its forces studied the construction of the Al-Qaeda leader’s home, finalizing a plan using a detailed model of his safehouse in Afghanistan and presenting it to Biden on July 1. The strike was carried out using a non-explosive version of Hellfire, the R9X, which deploys a series of knife-like blades from its fuselage and shreds its target. The “flying ginsu” missiles have been used several times by the United States to kill other targets in Washington’s scope. By the end of August, the Taliban reported that they have not yet found the body of Al-Zawahiri, and that investigation was still underway. Read more: How exactly was Al-Qaeda’s Zawahiri killed? Read More Here
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US Officials Meet The Taliban First Time After Al-Zawahiri's Murder
Hurricane Julia Makes Landfall In Nicaragua As A Category 1 Storm | CNN
Hurricane Julia Makes Landfall In Nicaragua As A Category 1 Storm | CNN
Hurricane Julia Makes Landfall In Nicaragua As A Category 1 Storm | CNN https://digitalarizonanews.com/hurricane-julia-makes-landfall-in-nicaragua-as-a-category-1-storm-cnn/ CNN  —  Hurricane Julia made landfall in Nicaragua early Sunday as a Category 1 storm, the National Hurricane Center said. The storm had sustained winds of 85 mph when it moved onshore near Laguna de Perlas around 1:15 a.m., the center said. Along with hurricane-force winds, life-threatening rainfall of 6 to 10 inches, with isolated amounts of up to 15 inches, is possible in Nicaragua, forecasters said. “Life-threatening flash floods and mudslides possible from heavy rains over Central America and Southern Mexico through early next week,” the hurricane center said in its 2 a.m. ET update. Storm surge of up to four feet above normal tide levels is possible along San Andres and Providencia islands. Storm surge of up to six feet and large, damaging waves were expected along the coast of Nicaragua. After moving across Nicaragua Sunday, the storm is expected to approach the Pacific coasts of Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala Monday and Monday night. “Julia is forecast to weaken to a tropical depression on Monday and dissipate by Monday night or Tuesday,” the NHC said. Read More Here
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Hurricane Julia Makes Landfall In Nicaragua As A Category 1 Storm | CNN
Final Stretch Begins As Early Ballots Hit Mailboxes
Final Stretch Begins As Early Ballots Hit Mailboxes
Final Stretch Begins As Early Ballots Hit Mailboxes https://digitalarizonanews.com/final-stretch-begins-as-early-ballots-hit-mailboxes/ Voters will get their first chance this week to weigh in on the two candidates running for the final seat up for grabs on the Scottsdale City Council as early ballots go out Wednesday for the Nov. 8 election. The lengthy ballot – which includes state offices, a U.S. Senate seat, Congressional and state legislative hopefuls and 10 initiatives – also includes three elections closer to home as Barry Graham and Pamela Carter duke it out for the last council seat, five candidates vie for two Scottsdale Unified Governing Board posts and the school district seeks approval of a budget override.  Carter and Graham landed in the council runoff after finishing with 27,287 and 22,831 votes, respectively, in the Aug. 2 Primary Election – not enough to meet the threshold for an outright win. Winning outright were incumbents Kathy Littlefield and Solange Whitehead in their quests for a third and second term, respectively. Both Graham and Carter have billed themselves as limited growth candidates and here’s a closer look at their backgrounds and positions. Pamela Carter Carter, 72, is a mother of two and grandmother of two and has lived in Scottsdale for 40 years. She holds a master’s in biblical theology and communications and is the retired owner of a sports medicine and weight training business.  She said the city is doing a good job replenishing the city’s aquifers when it comes to protecting Scottsdale’s water supply and she wants to keep that up.  She also wants to maintain the height and density limits in Old Town.  In forums, Carter expressed concerned about panhandling and drug use in town and has advocated a raise for city police officers. City Council approved a pay hike for them in August). Carter said she is a strong proponent of helping those who cannot help themselves but opposes any plan to convert an old hotel into a shelter, contending that it is not the city’s job to provide housing.  Efforts to keep seniors in their homes should be done through faith-based organizations, not the city, she said. And as far as affordable housing goes generally, Carter said she doubts Scottsdale would ever be affordable.  She supports asking the voters whether or not they support extending a .2% sales tax to support maintenance of the Preserve, Greenbelt and other parks.  She is endorsed by business owner and candidate for Superintendent of Public Instruction Shiry Sapir and state Sen. Nancy Barto as well as several candidates for state offices. Barry Graham Graham, 37, and his wife Farrah have twin boys. A 26-year Scottsdale resident, he holds a master’s in accounting from the University of Massachusetts and a bachelor’s in economics and international relations from Boston University. He is a certified public accountant with a local accounting firm.  He has spent 10 years on several city boards and commissions, including the Planning Transportation Commission and the Planning Commission. He has stated repeatedly that service makes him the more experienced candidate. While on the Planning Commission, he voted against the 9400 Shea apartment complex near Shea Boulevard and 92nd Street and the Greenbelt 88 mixed-use development near the corner of Hayden and Osborn roads. Limiting growth in Scottsdale will go a long way toward conserving the city’s water resources, he says.  Graham also said existing heights and density in Old Town should not be changed because it’s a tourist draw and that increasing height and density there would increase water use, traffic and demand for public safety resources.  He, too, said the city must protect its brand when it comes to homelessness and opposes any government-run shelter in Scottsdale. Graham said lowering rents is often used as an excuse to champion more apartment complexes, but that won’t work because the issue is not a simple supply and demand problem. He also said simply building more housing will harm Scottsdale’s character.  He salso upports asking the voters whether or not they support extending a .2% sales tax to support maintenance of the McDowell Sonoran Preserve, the Indian Bend Wash Greenbelt and other parks.  Graham is endorsed by, among others, former councilman Paul Messinger, Coalition of Greater Scottsdale (COGS) Treasurer Jim Davis, current council members Betty Janik and Kathy Littlefield, city Planning Commissioner Barney Gonzales, Protect Our Preserve President Howard Myers, Scottsdale Development Review Board Member Michal Joyner and state Rep. Joseph Chaplik. Important dates for the General Election  Oct. 11: Last day to register. Go to elections.maricopa.gov. Oct. 12: Mail ballots go out. Oct. 28: Last day to request a mail ballot. Nov. 1: Last day to mail your ballot. Nov. 4: Last day to vote at an early voting location. Nov. 8: Polls open 6 a.m.-7 p.m. Information: elections.maricopa.gov, votingmatters.org. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Final Stretch Begins As Early Ballots Hit Mailboxes
Kuhn Floyd Joseph
Kuhn Floyd Joseph
Kuhn, Floyd Joseph https://digitalarizonanews.com/kuhn-floyd-joseph/ Floyd Joseph Kuhn Floyd Joseph Kuhn passed away peacefully at home with his wife, Linda, by his side on September 29, 2022. His cause of death was lung cancer. He was born August 4, 1938 in Garrison, ND to Elizabeth Fix Peterson and Fred Gohl. He was adopted at age six by Annie (Fix) and Joseph Kuhn in Stanton, ND. Floyd married Linda Boehrnsen on Thursday, April 26, 1962 in Dickinson, ND. They moved to Bozeman, MT in June of 1963 and have lived there since. Floyd spent two summers during his high school years working on the George Antonsen Ranch west of Bozeman. He then served in the U.S. Marine Corps from Nov. 1957 to Nov. 1960. He worked for Husky Oil until he moved to Bozeman. Floyd then worked for Ivan Richardson at East End Chevron, Lowell Klatt at Klatt’s Conoco, and then spent 1971 through retirement in 1999 with Western Telecommunications, Inc. Floyd was an outdoor man enjoying hunting, fishing, camping, agate hunting, gardening, and bowling. He was a former member of the Elks Club, and in later years was a member of and worked at the Bozeman Senior Center. He is survived by his wife, Linda; daughters, Lynelle Sing (Sid) of Florida and Shelly McMullen (Joey) of Bozeman; son, David Kuhn of Belgrade, MT; four grandchildren, Chase Haggberg (Steph) of Tucson, AZ, Rich McMullen (Whitney) of Tallahassee, FL, Alyssa (Wacy) Slaugh of Vernal, UT, and Jenna McMullen (Josh Bennington) of Bozeman; and five great-grandchildren, Liam and Crew Haggberg of Tucson, AZ, Eleanor and Maeve McMullen of Tallahassee, FL, and Paislee Slaugh of Vernal, UT. A great-grandson, Bennington, will arrive later this month. His siblings include numerous brothers and sisters from both his birth and adoptive families. Floyd was preceded in death by his grandparents, parents, and aunts and uncles. He requested cremation and no services except a Celebration of Life at the Bozeman Lodge on Saturday, October 15 from 1:00 to 3:00 P.M., where beverages and dessert will be served. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Bozeman Senior Center or Enhabit Hospice. Arrangements are in the care of Dokken-Nelson Funeral Service. www.dokkennelson.com Get any of our free daily email newsletters — news headlines, opinion, e-edition, obituaries and more. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Kuhn Floyd Joseph
Kanye West Said He Will Go 'death Con 3' On Jewish People In A Now-Removed Tweet
Kanye West Said He Will Go 'death Con 3' On Jewish People In A Now-Removed Tweet
Kanye West Said He Will Go 'death Con 3' On Jewish People In A Now-Removed Tweet https://digitalarizonanews.com/kanye-west-said-he-will-go-death-con-3-on-jewish-people-in-a-now-removed-tweet/ Kanye West said that he was “going death con 3 on JEWISH PEOPLE” on Twitter Saturday night. Twitter removed the tweet for violating its guidelines.  West was accused of posting antisemitic content to his Instagram earlier on Saturday.  Loading Something is loading. Thanks for signing up! Access your favorite topics in a personalized feed while you’re on the go. Rapper Kanye West faced more accusations of antisemitism on Saturday after posting a rant about Jewish people.  In a tweet now removed by Twitter for violating its guidelines, the rapper and fashion designer said he was “going death con 3 on JEWISH PEOPLE.”  West defended himself by saying he could not be antisemitic because “black people are actually Jew [sic].” —Ritchie Torres (@RitchieTorres) October 9, 2022 West returned to Twitter — from which he had been on hiatus since Nov. 4, 2020 — after his Instagram account was restricted amid a week of tirades on the platform. Instagram confirmed to Insider it had restricted West’s account but did not specify which post was in violation of its policies. After his return to the platform Saturday, tech mogul Elon Musk replied to West, tweeting, “welcome back to Twitter, my friend!”  Users on Twitter were swift to call the rapper out for antisemitism and Fox News Host Tucker Carlson for enabling his remarks by interviewing him on his show on Friday.  After photos and videos surfaced of West on Monday wearing a hoodie with the words “White Lives Matter,” prominent Republicans like Candace Owens, former congressional candidate Lavern Spicer, and the GOP House Judiciary Committee came to his defense. West, a friend of Former President Donald Trump, pulled the stunt as a part of his YZYSZN9 show at Paris Fashion Week. Critics pointed out that the phrase on West’s hoodie is tied to white supremacist movements. —Molly Jong-Fast (@MollyJongFast) October 9, 2022 The American Jewish Committee chastised the rapper Saturday, calling into question an interview he did with Carlson on Friday in which he called into question the motives of Jared Kushner, son-in-law and former adviser to President Donald Trump. During the interview, West said Kushner, who is Jewish, brokered the Abraham Accords — declarations of peace between Israel and other countries in the Middle East — in order “to make money.”  West also shared screenshots of texts that he purportedly sent to Sean “Diddy” Combs, where the rapper said he will use Combs “as an example to show the Jewish people that told you to call me that no one can threaten or influence me.”  Representatives for West and Twitter did not respond to Insider’s request for comment. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Kanye West Said He Will Go 'death Con 3' On Jewish People In A Now-Removed Tweet