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Fears Of major Disaster As Cuba And Florida Brace For Hurricane Ian Follow Live
Fears Of major Disaster As Cuba And Florida Brace For Hurricane Ian Follow Live
Fears Of ‘major Disaster’ As Cuba And Florida Brace For Hurricane Ian – Follow Live https://digitalarizonanews.com/fears-of-major-disaster-as-cuba-and-florida-brace-for-hurricane-ian-follow-live/ Central Florida stores struggle to keep water on shelves ahead of Tropical Storm Ian Rain and winds have lashed Cuba’s western tip as Hurricane Ian strengthened into a category 3 storm today, the National Hurricane Center said. The hurricane is about 35 miles (55km) south of the city of Pinar Del Rio Cuba, with maximum sustained winds of 115 miles per hour (185kmph), it added. Authorities in Cuba have evacuated 50,000 people, set up at least 55 shelters, and rushed in emergency personnel. Meanwhile, mandatory evacuations are also underway in parts of Florida amid warnings of life-threatening conditions from the potentially category 4 storm in the coming days. According to the Hurricane Center Ian won’t linger over Cuba but will slow down over the Gulf of Mexico, growing wider and stronger, “which will have the potential to produce significant wind and storm surge impacts along the west coast of Florida.” There is risk of flash flooding, strong winds, storm surge of up to 10 feet, and possible isolated tornadoes along Florida’s Gulf Coast with impacts beginning up to 36 hours before the peak. Florida governor Ron DeSantis has warned people to prepare but not panic. Registration is a free and easy way to support our truly independent journalism By registering, you will also enjoy limited access to Premium articles, exclusive newsletters, commenting, and virtual events with our leading journalists Email Please enter a valid email Please enter a valid email Password Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number First name Please enter your first name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters Last name Please enter your last name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters You must be over 18 years old to register You must be over 18 years old to register Year of birth I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent.  Read our Privacy notice You can opt-out at any time by signing in to your account to manage your preferences. Each email has a link to unsubscribe. Already have an account? sign in Registration is a free and easy way to support our truly independent journalism By registering, you will also enjoy limited access to Premium articles, exclusive newsletters, commenting, and virtual events with our leading journalists Email Please enter a valid email Please enter a valid email Password Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number First name Please enter your first name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters Last name Please enter your last name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters You must be over 18 years old to register You must be over 18 years old to register Year of birth I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent.  Read our Privacy notice You can opt-out at any time by signing in to your account to manage your preferences. Each email has a link to unsubscribe. Already have an account? sign in Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Fears Of major Disaster As Cuba And Florida Brace For Hurricane Ian Follow Live
Michael Anthony Mike Marquez Obituary (2022)
Michael Anthony Mike Marquez Obituary (2022)
Michael Anthony “Mike” Marquez Obituary (2022) https://digitalarizonanews.com/michael-anthony-mike-marquez-obituary-2022/ Michael Marquez’s passing on Saturday, September 24, 2022 has been publicly announced by Martinez Funeral Chapels – Tucson in Tucson, AZ. According to the funeral home, the following services have been scheduled: Visitation, on October 6, 2022 at 5:00 p.m., ending at 9:00 p.m., at Martinez Funeral Chapels-Tucson, 2580 S. 6th Ave, Tucson, ARIZONA. Rosary, on October 6, 2022 at 7:00 p.m., at Martinez Funeral Chapels-Tucson, 2580 S. 6th Ave, Tucson, ARIZONA. Service, on October 7, 2022 at 10:00 a.m., ending at 11:00 a.m., at St. John’s Catholic Church, 602 W. Ajo way, Tucson, ARIZONA. Legacy invites you to offer condolences and share memories of Michael in the Guest Book below. The most recent obituary and service information is available at the Martinez Funeral Chapels – Tucson website. Published by Legacy on Sep. 27, 2022. Legacy.com reports daily on death announcements in local communities nationwide. Visit our funeral home directory for more local information, or see our FAQ page for help with finding obituaries and sending sympathy. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Michael Anthony Mike Marquez Obituary (2022)
Who Will Control State GOP After Election?
Who Will Control State GOP After Election?
Who Will Control State GOP After Election? https://digitalarizonanews.com/who-will-control-state-gop-after-election/ The whirling noise you may have heard recently is all the moderate Michigan Republicans who are spinning in their collective graves over the direction their beloved party has taken since they departed. Donald Trump is the leader — and unelected, at that. Yeah, defenders of the current incarnation of this party point out there are duly elected co-chairs. They are Ron Weiser and Meshawn Maddox. He got his votes from what’s left of the establishment wing of the party and she rode to an easy victory with a big boost from the former president, who, in reality, is the unelected head of the state party. Two of those aforementioned grave-spinners are Bill McLaughlin and Jerry Roe. Back in the 70s, when moderates actually had a pretty strong foothold on things with Gov. Bill Milliken in the saddle, the handsome, gray curly-haired McLaughlin was chair, and his nuts-and bolts, rather frumpy sidekick, Roe, did all the behind-the-scenes heavy lifting. Jason Roe remembers it well. The son of Jerry Roe was a little tike in those days and was probably relegated to licking envelopes, but, these days, as a grown-up, certified political consultant, he opined the other day on the future of the party. “Well, there are definitely things to be concerned about. I’ve never seen the party more fractured than it is now,” he begins his analysis of what’s going on and what will happen next. Now, all you Democrats out there gloating about this internal civil war that threatens to cost Republicans the governor’s race, secretary of state race, and the state attorney general’s office — and maybe even legislative control — get beyond your partisanship and note that two healthy and diversified political parties are good for the state and political discourse, and we don’t have that now. Roe goes on. During the four years of the Trump presidency, “the Republican hierarchy here was demolished … there is no party leader, or a governor-like person who can kinda lead the party from this wasteland where Donald Trump could ride unfettered.” Now, all you President Trump supporters, take a bow for taking over a party you never much liked in the first place when all those moderates were calling the shots, but your critics would advise you that winning a battle is one thing, but not working with others who hold a different viewpoint could cost you the war. More and more in this town you are hearing the scuttlebutt that, if the GOP takes a bath this November, it creates the opportunity to configure a new party. “If we lose, and if we lose by wide margins as a party, we’re going to have to do a little self-examination about what direction we’re going to go,” Roe said. “If we’re out of power, everyone is going to sober up a little bit and take a look at how we move forward if we’re going to be relevant …” Which takes us to that obvious question: Who the heck is the person who can paste Humpty Dumpty back together again? Roe says that search could be complicated if Mr. Trump runs for president in 2024, which means he will continue to do everything within his power to keep his stranglehold on the state party, allowing no room for reinvention to take place where authority is shared with others. Any volunteers? The line forms to the right. The far right or the sensible center? That’s the sticky question, and some would say there is only one answer to stop all that spinning racket. Today’s breaking news and more in your inbox Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Who Will Control State GOP After Election?
Japan Farewells Its Longest Serving Prime Minister
Japan Farewells Its Longest Serving Prime Minister
Japan Farewells Its Longest Serving Prime Minister https://digitalarizonanews.com/japan-farewells-its-longest-serving-prime-minister/ The polls are open in America and in six Tuesdays from today, America will vote.  In several states across the country, early voting has begun in the most consequential midterm elections for Congress in 12 years.   Midterm elections are a referendum on the president, and this year is no different.  Biden’s future is on the line no less than the control of Congress. However, the current President is painting an optimistic future. There are only 50 days until the midterms. Imagine the possibilities if we elect more Democrats to the Senate and keep the House. From codifying Roe v. Wade to protecting voting rights—I’m ready to get it done. Join us and get involved at https://t.co/V9Mzpw8kB0. — Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) September 19, 2022 In 2010, President Barack Obama lost 63 Democrats in the House, giving Republicans control in that chamber, and six Senate seats but keeping Democratic control over the Senate.   It was a big setback. That result meant that Obama’s ability to pass his legislative agenda came to a halt for the balance of his presidency. President Obama, 2010 midterms. For the next six years, there were no significant new legislative initiatives in health care and the environment or any other major domestic policy issues. As of today, the outlook for the November 8 midterm elections for Congress looks like a replay for President Joe Biden. Republican gains that will give them control of the House, and continued, but very narrow, Democratic control over the Senate.  This would be a better-than-expected outcome for Biden and the Democrats than many thought just three months ago.  At the end of June, Biden’s popularity was plummeting. Petrol prices reached record highs; inflation had erupted and there was sticker shock on groceries; supply chains were a mess; there were no legislative victories. Now to mention the nightmare of women losing their constitutional rights becoming all too real with the decision by the Trump Supreme Court to repeal the landmark Roe decision.  Biden had slumped to the mid-30s in approval.  Republicans seemed in easy reach of matching the average historical benchmark of gaining 26 seats from the president’s party in these midterms – and taking the Senate too.  But momentum shifted in August to the Democrats.  Women across the country are furious about what the Supreme Court did to their reproductive health rights – with the Republican Party all-in with the Court.  Biden started getting big legislation through Congress, especially on health care costs, clean energy and climate change, and high-tech manufacturing for the future. Donald Trump’s legal challenges mounted, from FBI raids to get back the classified documents he took from the White House to state officials in Georgia and New York moving against him.  Biden regained some popular approval, and the Republicans were on the defensive – especially on abortion with their candidates for the Senate on the wrong side of the anger from women voters. In the 1992 presidential campaign, Bill Clinton’s team kept reminding him, and the county, that “it’s the economy stupid.” Clinton won the White House in the wake of a painful recession on President George H.W. Bush’s watch.  This economy is hurting Biden and the Democrats.  The gut punch last Friday of the Fed’s raising interest rates by 75 basis points – with mortgages now the highest in over a decade and no end in sight to further sharp interest rate rises – and the markets tanking as a result, has left the mood of many deeply anxious and uncertain about the future.  Inflation is still too high and most Americans believe the country is already in a recession. “People are seeing their wage increases eaten up by inflation.” federal reserve chair jerome powell This plays to the Republicans, who are already pounding the culture war buttons on high crime in the cities, “out-of-control” immigration on the southern border and putting more control from parents back into the classroom particularly on gender and racial issues. The essence of Donald Trump as a major factor in American politics and what America’s experience with him means about the future of America’s democracy is crystallizing.  As many as two thirds of American believe that their democracy is on the brink, and they are worried about it.  Together with an extremist Supreme Court that has repealed fundamental rights for women, this makes Trump-supported Republican candidates – especially in the Senate – vulnerable. If the Republicans take the Senate thanks to the Trump-endorsed candidates winning in key states like Pennsylvania, Georgia, Arizona, Nevada, and New Hampshire, that will be a big win for Trump as he moves to declare for the 2024 presidential campaign.  The converse is also true:  If Democrats beat Trump candidates this year, then they are more likely to beat Trump and the Republicans again in 2024. There are two possible shock outcomes:  a sweep of both chambers by either party.  A Republican Congress will move aggressively against Biden, his policies and his government.  Expect big investigations.  Expect Biden to be impeached by the House Republicans. A Democratic Congress, especially if they gain one or two more Senators, would present a complete reversal of fortune, making it possible to enact crucial legislation on abortion rights and voting rights and cement a historical place for Joe Biden as a truly great president. The stakes are huge.  We’ll know the final verdict in 8 weeks. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Japan Farewells Its Longest Serving Prime Minister
Myong Ok Godoy Obituary (2022)
Myong Ok Godoy Obituary (2022)
Myong Ok Godoy Obituary (2022) https://digitalarizonanews.com/myong-ok-godoy-obituary-2022/ Myong Godoy’s passing on Wednesday, September 21, 2022 has been publicly announced by Evergreen Mortuary, Cemetery & Crematory – Tucson in Tucson, AZ. According to the funeral home, the following services have been scheduled: Service, on September 29, 2022 at 12:00 p.m., at Evergreen Mortuary, 3015 North Oracle Road, Tucson, AZ. Graveside service, on September 29, 2022 at 1:00 p.m., at Evergreen Cemetery, 3015 North Oracle Road, Tucson, AZ. Legacy invites you to offer condolences and share memories of Myong in the Guest Book below. The most recent obituary and service information is available at the Evergreen Mortuary, Cemetery & Crematory – Tucson website. Published by Legacy on Sep. 27, 2022. Legacy.com reports daily on death announcements in local communities nationwide. Visit our funeral home directory for more local information, or see our FAQ page for help with finding obituaries and sending sympathy. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Myong Ok Godoy Obituary (2022)
Far-Right Trump Supporters Go On Trial For January 6 'Sedition'
Far-Right Trump Supporters Go On Trial For January 6 'Sedition'
Far-Right Trump Supporters Go On Trial For January 6 'Sedition' https://digitalarizonanews.com/far-right-trump-supporters-go-on-trial-for-january-6-sedition/ Last Updated: September 27, 2022, 10:45 IST Washington Supporters of President Donald Trump are confronted by US Capitol Police officers in Washington on January 6. (Image: AP file) The sedition charge is the toughest yet in the prosecutions of hundreds who took part in the January 6 rebellion, which aimed to reverse Joe Biden’s victory in the November 2020 election, and brings up to 20 years in prison. The leader and four members of the far-right Oath Keepers militia who joined the January 6, 2021 attack on the US Capitol go on trial Tuesday for the rare charge of sedition. Stewart Rhodes, the eyepatch-wearing former soldier and Yale Law School graduate who plotted a military-style assault on the Capitol, and his followers are charged with taking up weapons against the United States in an effort to keep Donald Trump in the White House despite his election defeat. The sedition charge is the toughest yet in the prosecutions of hundreds who took part in the January 6 rebellion, which aimed to reverse Joe Biden’s victory in the November 2020 election, and brings up to 20 years in prison. Rhodes and eight Oath Keeper members in total have been charged with sedition; four of the eight will go on trial beginning November 29. Rhodes and his followers conspired “to oppose by force the law transfer of presidential power,” the charges say. At Rhodes’ direction “they coordinated travel across the country to enter Washington DC (and) equipped themselves with a variety of weapons, donned combat and tactical gear” for the attack, it said. “We aren’t getting through this without civil war,” Rhodes told the Oath Keepers in a group chat weeks before the uprising, according to the indictment. If Biden became president, he said, “It will be a bloody and desperate fight… That can’t be avoided.” Rarely used charge The nine Oath Keepers will be the first of some 870 charged in the Capitol attack to go on trial for seditious conspiracy. The majority have been charged with illegally entering the Capitol, illegally disrupting a session of the legislature — the confirmation of Biden as president-elect — and assault on law enforcement officers. The sedition charge is very rarely used by US prosecutors. The last time a conviction was obtained on the charge was against Ramzi Yousef, the planner of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. The charge of seditious conspiracy was used in that case in the absence of a domestic terrorism law, and was used to highlight Yousef’s intent to damage the US government. In the January 6 case, the charge is being used against members of armed militia groups who took part and allegedly coordinated among themselves to lead the attack. Members of the Proud Boys, another key player on January 6, were also charged with seditious conspiracy in June, but their case has not gone to court yet. Insurrection Act defense The Oath Keepers was launched in the early 2000s by Rhodes to bring together people, mostly former military, who believed the government was becoming repressive and that the time would come to rise up in an armed revolt. The trial will focus on allegations that they planned a violent attack on January 6, positioning a stockpile of weapons at a hotel just a few miles (kilometers) from the Capitol, and moved together in a military-style “stack” formation to break through police lines and into the Capitol. The FBI has collected communications between the group members and has photos and videos of their actions that day. The group’s lawyers suggest they will defend themselves by saying they understood that Trump would invoke the 1807 Insurrection Act on that day and deputize the militias to lawfully prevent Biden from being confirmed as president. That claim has raised expectations that the trial could reveal more about links between the Capitol attack and members of Trump’s administration or his personal advisors. The first days of the trial will focus on jury selection, picking a panel of a dozen out of 120 candidates. Read the Latest News and Breaking News here Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Far-Right Trump Supporters Go On Trial For January 6 'Sedition'
Russians Paying 25000 For Seats On Private Planes After War Mobilisation
Russians Paying 25000 For Seats On Private Planes After War Mobilisation
Russians Paying £25,000 For Seats On Private Planes After War Mobilisation https://digitalarizonanews.com/russians-paying-25000-for-seats-on-private-planes-after-war-mobilisation/ Demand for seats on private jets has boomed in Moscow after Vladimir Putin ordered the first mobilisation since the second world war and wealthy Russians look for a way out of the country amid reports that authorities plan to close the borders to men of mobilisation age. Passengers are said to be predominantly heading to Armenia, Turkey and Azerbaijan, which allow Russians visa-free entry. They are paying between £20,000 and £25,000 for a seat on a private plane, while the price to rent an eight-seater jet ranges from £80.000 to £140,000, which is many times more expensive than the normal fare. “The situation is absolutely crazy at the moment,” said Yevgeny Bikov the director of a broker jet company, Your Charter. “We would get 50 requests a day; now it is around 5,000.” The Kremlin’s decision to announce a partial mobilisation has led to a rush among men of military age to leave the country, sparking a new, possibly unprecedented brain drain. Miles-long traffic jams have formed at Russia’s border crossings, while most one-way commercial plane tickets have sold out for the coming days. Bikov said his firm had started to charter larger commercial planes in an effort to meet the demand and bring down prices. “But we simply cannot find enough spots for everyone,” he said, adding that the cheapest seat on a chartered commercial plane to Yerevan was priced at about 200,000 rubles (£3,000). FlightWay, which offers private jet flights, said it was experiencing an increase in requests for one-way flights to Armenia, Turkey, Kazakhstan and Dubai. “The demand has increased by 5o times,” said Eduard Simonov, the company head. He said the availability of jets for rent was severely limited after the EU and UK introduced sanctions on Russia shortly after the start of the conflict that prohibited the leasing or insuring of aircraft for use in Russia. “All the European private jet firms have left the market. There is more demand than supply now and the prices are through the roof compared with six months ago,” Simonov said. It is not only the very rich looking to make use of private jets, with some companies chartering planes to fly out their male staff. According to the Russian business outlet Kommersant, one video game design company in Moscow chartered an entire flight to get employees out of the country. “We are getting a completely new client base, companies as well as people who never flew private before,” Simonov said. “There are many who had some extra money left and are looking to get away.” There are widespread fears in Russia that the Kremlin plans to close its borders this week. Independent human rights groups have said that since Sunday border guards at Russia’s only operational crossing point with Georgia have been stopping some people from exiting, citing the law on mobilisation. Asked about the possibility of border closures in a call with reporters on Monday, the Kremlin’s spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said: “I don’t know anything about this. At the moment, no decisions have been taken on this.” Russia was already set to lose 15% of its millionaires this year, according to one study, as its wealthiest citizens move abroad. The mobilisation is likely to deepen this outflow, potentially exacerbating the damage to Russia’s economy. “Most of our male younger clients left when Putin announced the mobilisation last week,” said one staffer at a luxury concierge service company in Moscow. “I used to be calling up restaurants and bars on the Patriarch Ponds to book tables for them,” he said, referring to an upmarket neighbourhood in central Moscow. “Now, all I do is scroll through flight aggregators to get the last plane seat for them to Yerevan.” The exodus of Russia’s rich and powerful could fuel some of the anger observed in the poorer areas of the country that appear to be disproportionately affected by the conscription. A recent prank call involving Peskov’s son highlighted the belief held by many that senior Russian officials and their children will not be drafted to fight in Ukraine. In the call, orchestrated by two activists linked to the jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny, Nikolai Peskov is heard saying he will “obviously not” enlist in the army when asked to report to the military commissariat at 10am the next day. “You must understand it is not right for me to be there. I have to resolve this on a different level,” Nikolai Peskov is heard saying. When asked about the phone call, his father said he was “aware of it” and claimed that the full transcript had not been published. The Guardian has seen evidence that the son of one prominent Duma member, an official who frequently makes anti-western and patriotic statements, left the country on a flight to Istanbul on Saturday. According to text messages reviewed by the Guardian, the Duma deputy escorted his son to an airport in Moscow to ensure he would be let out of the country. “The great escape,” said one Snapchat story sent to a private group by the son on the plane to Turkey. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Russians Paying 25000 For Seats On Private Planes After War Mobilisation
Twitter To Interview Elon Musk Known For Combative Testimony
Twitter To Interview Elon Musk Known For Combative Testimony
Twitter To Interview Elon Musk, Known For Combative Testimony https://digitalarizonanews.com/twitter-to-interview-elon-musk-known-for-combative-testimony/ WILMINGTON, Del., Sept 26 (Reuters) – Billionaire Elon Musk’s tendency to dish out insults while being questioned under oath will be tested anew this week, when lawyers for Twitter Inc (TWTR.N)are expected to interview the Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) CEO about his abrupt decision in July to ditch his $44 billion deal for the social media company. Testifying in past legal battles, the world’s richest person has called opposing attorneys “reprehensible,” questioned their happiness and accused them of “extortion.” He asked one attorney if he was working on a contingency because the lawyer’s client was allegedly behind on child support payments. “So probably you’re on a contingency or you’re taking that kid’s money. Which is it?” Musk asked a lawyer for a whistleblower in a case against Tesla, according to a transcript of the 2020 deposition. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com The high-stakes Twitter interview is closed to the public. A court filing last week said the Musk deposition was scheduled to begin on Monday and run into Wednesday, if needed. Sources with knowledge of the deposition said Musk was not questioned on Monday and they did not know what day it would begin nor did they give a reason for the delay. Musk’s lawyers will want to keep him focused on answering questions, but that can be a challenge with such a smart and opinionated witness, said James Morsch, a corporate litigator who is not involved in the court battle. “I would compare it to trying to hold a tiger by his tail,” Morsch said. In a 2019 deposition in litigation over Tesla’s takeover of solar-panel maker SolarCity, Musk refused five times to answer one of the initial questions because of the way it was worded, the transcript shows. “We can stare at each other until you rephrase it,” Musk told opposing attorney Randall Baron, according to a transcript. “I’ll guess we’ll just cancel this deposition,” Baron responded. Baron suggested that he would seek an order from the judge directing Musk to answer questions, which seemed to get things moving. Twitter declined to comment and Musk’s legal team did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Twitter’s attorneys are expected to use the interview to try to show that Musk abandoned the deal due to falling financial markets and not because the company misled him about the real number of users or hid security flaws, as he alleged. Musk wants a judge to allow him to walk away without penalty, while Twitter wants an order forcing him to buy the company for $54.20 per share. Twitter’s stock ended up 0.4% at $41.58 on Friday. A five-day trial is scheduled to begin on Oct. 17 in Wilmington, Delaware. Dozens of depositions are scheduled in the case, including of Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal, as each side questions witnesses and gathers evidence to make its case. Elon Musk’s Twitter profile is seen on a smartphone placed on printed Twitter logos in this picture illustration taken April 28, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration Agrawal was scheduled to answer questions from Musk’s lawyers at a law firm in San Francisco starting at 9 a.m. local time on Monday, according to a court filing, although sources said that deposition was also postponed and did not give a reason. Twitter co-founder and former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey was scheduled to be deposed last week. WHAT IS THE WHOLE TRUTH Musk at times has shown in his depositions the charm and wit he deploys on Twitter, where he has built a cult-like following. The Twitter deposition atmosphere could be especially fraught. Its legal team includes the firm of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, and the main lawyer on the case, Bill Savitt, initially represented Musk and Tesla in the SolarCity deal, although not during discovery and depositions in the litigation. Savitt did not respond to a request for comment. Twitter is also represented by Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati. A constant in the three depositions reviewed by Reuters is Musk’s dislike of attorneys representing the opposing side, who he accuses of “trickery” and pursuing him merely for money. “I heard yesterday that 3% of the U.S. economy is legal services. That’s one of the saddest facts I’ve heard in a long time,” Musk said to Baron, the lawyer in the SolarCity deposition. The deposition in the litigation with the Tesla whistleblower, Martin Tripp, who accused the company of wasting raw materials, began with Musk being asked if he understood the oath he took to testify truthfully. “This sounds like some sort of legalese, semantic argument. The — what is the whole truth of something?” asked Musk, according to the transcript. “You say, ‘Is that a tree? What kind of tree is it? Is it a tree with lots of leaves?’ Or is — if you’re saying something is a tree is the whole truth? No, of course not.” Tripp’s attorney reminded Musk that the judge warned he would oversee the deposition in person if questions weren’t answered properly. “Do you intend to comply with the judge’s admonition there?” asked attorney William Fishbach. “Of course,” Musk said. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Additional reporting by Hyunjoo Jin in San Francisco; Editing by Amy Stevens and David Gregorio Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Tom Hals Thomson Reuters Award-winning reporter with more than two decades of experience in international news, focusing on high-stakes legal battles over everything from government policy to corporate dealmaking. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Twitter To Interview Elon Musk Known For Combative Testimony
3 People Including Child And Teen Hospitalized After Crash In Phoenix
3 People Including Child And Teen Hospitalized After Crash In Phoenix
3 People, Including Child And Teen, Hospitalized After Crash In Phoenix https://digitalarizonanews.com/3-people-including-child-and-teen-hospitalized-after-crash-in-phoenix/ PHOENIX (3TV/CBS 5) — Firefighters say three people, including a child and 14-year-old boy, are in the hospital after two cars crashed in Phoenix on Monday night. The crash happened near 64th Street and Bell Road just before 8 p.m. When firefighters arrived, they found one car on its side with several people inside. Crews got everyone out of the car and one child, the teen boy and a 38-year-old man were taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. Officers did not say what led up to the collision. Police are asking drivers to avoid the area as the investigation continues. Editor’s Note: Initial information from police said seven vehicles were involved. Police say only two cars crashed and the other five vehicles had damage unrelated to the crash. Firefighters initally said the three people were in critical condition, but their injuries have been updated to non-life-threatening. Copyright 2022 KTVK/KPHO. All rights reserved. Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
3 People Including Child And Teen Hospitalized After Crash In Phoenix
'Let's Get Right To The Violence': New Documentary Film Footage Shows Roger Stone Pre-Election Day KYMA
'Let's Get Right To The Violence': New Documentary Film Footage Shows Roger Stone Pre-Election Day KYMA
'Let's Get Right To The Violence': New Documentary Film Footage Shows Roger Stone Pre-Election Day – KYMA https://digitalarizonanews.com/lets-get-right-to-the-violence-new-documentary-film-footage-shows-roger-stone-pre-election-day-kyma/ CNN By Zachary Cohen, Holmes Lybrand and Jackson Grigsby, CNN The day before the 2020 election, Roger Stone, the long-time Republican operative and ally of former President Donald Trump, said in front of a documentary film crew that he had no interest in waiting to tally actual votes before contesting the election results. “F**k the voting, let’s get right to the violence,” Stone can be heard saying, according to footage provided by a Danish documentary film crew and obtained by CNN. The clip is one of multiple pieces of footage obtained by CNN that the filmmakers also shared with the House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol. The filmmakers tell CNN they came to an agreement to share certain clips with the committee after a subpoena for the footage was signed by the panel’s chairman, Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, and delivered to the filmmakers in Copenhagen about two months ago. The filmmakers, Christoffer Guldbrandsen and Frederik Marbell, followed Stone for portions of about three years for their documentary film. The footage shared with the committee may be incorporated into its upcoming hearing this week. Committee member Rep. Jamie Raskin, a Maryland Democrat, suggested publicly over the weekend that the panel has more to reveal about the connection between Stone and domestic extremist groups, as well as efforts to keep Trump in power after the US Capitol attack and the ongoing threats to democracy. “Stay tuned,” Raskin said at the Texas Tribune festival when asked about Stone’s possible connections to the Capitol riot. “He’s someone who I think saw where things were going,” Raskin said. In an exclusive interview with CNN’s Don Lemon, the filmmakers said the committee appeared interested in footage that focused on Stone’s relationship with the White House, and also his alleged ties to the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys. The filmmakers said they were not able to establish a link between Stone, those groups and the White House. Members of the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys face multiple charges — including seditious conspiracy — for their actions during the Capitol riot. The trial for several Oath Keepers, including their leader Stewart Rhodes, will begin with jury selection on Tuesday. When committee investigators traveled to Denmark to review documentary footage related to Stone, they came to agreement with the filmmakers to share 8 minutes of video that were of interest to the panel and within the scope of its investigation. Politico first reported that trip in August. The film crew was also contacted by the FBI in March and has not shared footage with federal investigators, the filmmakers said. The FBI did not issue the crew a subpoena, they said. In a second clip of the documentary, also obtained by CNN, Stone said that Trump should prematurely claim victory on election night 2020. “I really do suspect it’ll still be up in the air. When that happens, the key thing to do is to claim victory. Possession is nine tenths of the law, no we won,” Stone said on November 1, 2020, according to the footage. In another clip, filmed a week after January 6, Stone is seen criticizing the White House Counsel’s Office for what he described as their argument that Trump could not provide preemptive pardons to Stone and others for their alleged involvement in efforts to overturn the election. “I believe the President is for it. The obstacles are these — are these lily livered, weak kneed, bureaucrats in the White House Counsel’s Office and now they must be crushed because they’ve told the President something that’s not true,” Stone says in the clip. As far back as July 2020, Stone talked about challenging the upcoming presidential election in the courts. “The election will not be normal,” he said. “Sorry, we’re not accepting them,” he said of the anticipated results. “We’re challenging them in court.” “If the electors show up at the Electoral College, armed guards will throw them out,” he continued. “I’m challenging all of it. And the judges we’re going to, are judges I appointed.” Stone disputed the authenticity of the footage. “I challenge the accuracy and the authenticity of these videos and believe they have been manipulated and selectively edited. I also point out that the filmmakers do not have the legal right to use them. How ironic that Kim Kardashian and I are both subjected to computer manipulated videos on the same day,” Stone said in a statement to CNN. “The excerpts you provided below prove nothing, certainly they do not prove I had anything to do with the events of January 6th. That being said, it clearly shows I advocated for lawful congressional and judicial options,” he added. It’s unclear what the committee may have uncovered, but there are some basic details that are known of Stone’s whereabouts and involvement in the events surrounding January 6. On January 5, the day before the Capitol attack, members of the far-right militia group the Oath Keepers provided security for Stone during a rally that day, including driving him around on a golf cart. Stone also had contacts with the Proud Boys, a right-wing group known for street violence, and has been recorded reciting the group’s creed in a video released by the House select committee. According to former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson’s testimony to the committee this summer, the night before January 6, Trump told then-chief of staff Mark Meadows to ask Stone and former national security adviser Michael Flynn what was going to happen on January 6. Hutchinson testified that Meadows called Stone and Flynn that evening and tried to go to Washington’s Willard Hotel, where Trump supporters — including Stone — had set up a “war room.” Stone, who attended the “Stop the Steal” rally on January 6, has not been charged with a crime related to the Capitol attack. This story has been updated with additional details Monday. The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More Here
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'Let's Get Right To The Violence': New Documentary Film Footage Shows Roger Stone Pre-Election Day KYMA
Teen Interest In Long-Lasting Birth Control Soars After Roe
Teen Interest In Long-Lasting Birth Control Soars After Roe
Teen Interest In Long-Lasting Birth Control Soars After Roe https://digitalarizonanews.com/teen-interest-in-long-lasting-birth-control-soars-after-roe/ Sixteen-year-old Adismarys Abreu had been discussing a long-lasting birth control implant with her mother for about a year as a potential solution to increasing menstrual pain. Then Roe v. Wade was overturned, and Abreu joined the throng of teens rushing to their doctors as states began to ban or severely limit abortion. “I’m definitely not ready to be pregnant,” said Abreu, who had Nexplanon — a reversible, matchstick-sized contraceptive — implanted in her arm in August. Her home state of Florida bans most abortions after 15 weeks, and not having that option is “such a scary thought,” she said. Experts say the U.S. Supreme Court’s June ruling appears to be accelerating a trend of increased birth control use among teens, including long-acting reversible forms like intrauterine devices and implants. Appointments have surged and Planned Parenthood has been flooded with questions as doctors report demand even among teens who aren’t sexually active. Some patients are especially fearful because the new abortion laws in several states don’t include exceptions for sexual assault. “Please, I need some birth control in case I get raped,” patients tell Dr. Judith Simms-Cendan, a pediatric-adolescent gynecologist in Miami, where state law does not provide exceptions for rape or incest after 15 weeks. Simms-Cendan, the president-elect of the North American Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology, said parents who might have been hesitant in the past now want to discuss birth control. “It’s a sea change of, ‘I don’t have room to play. We have got to get my child on something,’” she said. Teens already were shifting to more effective long-acting forms of birth control, which have similar or even lower failure rates than sterilization, said Laura Lindberg, a professor at Rutgers University’s School of Public Health in New Jersey. Her research found the number of 15- to 19-year-olds using those methods rose to 15% during the period 2015 to 2019, up from 3% during the 2006 to 2010 period. No national data is available for the months since Roe was overturned, said Lindberg, who previously worked for nearly two decades at the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights. But she said “major ripple effects” have to be expected from the loss of abortion access and noted that it wouldn’t be the first time politics have led to a shift in birth control usage. In the weeks after former President Donald Trump’s election, as women raised concerns online that the Affordable Care Act would be repealed, demand for long-acting birth control rose by nearly 22% across all age groups, according to a 2019 research letter published in JAMA Internal Medicine. In Ohio, where a judge this month blocked a ban on virtually all abortions, patients — both male and female — now listen with rapt attention to the contraception talk that Dr. Peggy Stager has long made a part of routine appointments at her pediatric practice in Cleveland. Stager said her practice’s dedicated spots for insertion of the Nexplanon implant are consistently filled, and requests for contraceptive refills have increased 30% to 40% since Roe was overturned. Recently, she talked to a college-bound student who wasn’t sexually active but decided to get an IUD anyway. “She was real clear: ‘I want to have a great four years without any worry,’” recalled Stager, who is the chair of the section on adolescent health at the American Academy of Pediatrics. “And that’s a change.” In Missouri, among the first states in the country with a trigger law in effect to ban abortions at any point in pregnancy, Dr. David Eisenberg also has seen a similar sense of urgency from college-bound teens to choose the most effective option. “Fear is an amazing motivator,” said Eisenberg, an associate professor at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, who performs abortions in neighboring Illinois. “They understand the consequence of a contraceptive failure might mean they become a parent because they might not be able to access an abortion.” Interest is also high at the contraception clinic that Dr. Elise Berlan oversees in Columbus, Ohio. Before the Supreme Court’s decision, the clinic booked appointments for new patients within a week or two. Now, they are booking several months out for first appointments, said Berlan, an adolescent medicine specialist who sees mothers and daughters in tears in her exam room. She said the demand is so high they are adding a provider. On the day the Supreme Court ruled against Roe, twice as many birth control questions as normal poured into Roo, Planned Parenthood’s online chatbot aimed at teens. Online birth control appointments also skyrocketed that day — up 150% from a typical day, with an even-larger 375% surge for IUD-seekers, said Julia Bennett, director of digital education and learning strategy for Planned Parenthood Federation of America. By mid-July, several weeks after the ruling, birth control appointments remained up about 20%, although the data isn’t broken down by age group. The growing interest exists even in states like North Carolina, where abortion remains legal but the Legislature is conservative. Dr. Kavita Arora, an obstetrician-gynecologist in Chapel Hill, said she saw maybe one teen a month before the ruling. Now, she said, she sees them at each clinic session. “They’re aware that this is an incredibly fluid situation, and what is allowed at one moment may not be allowed a week or a month later,” said Arora, the chair of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists’ Committee on Ethics. That uncertain future is part of what motivated Abreu, the Florida teen, whose implant will prevent pregnancy for up to five years. “I don’t know what’s going to happen with the laws in that time period,” said Abreu, who was using a short-acting form of birth control before switching. “Having this already in my arm, it makes me feel so much safer.” Her mother, Maribys Lorenzo, said in Spanish that she, too, is a little more at peace knowing her daughter cannot get pregnant and said she would recommend the implant because it does not require her daughter to remember to take a contraceptive pill. She said she is not worried, any more or less, that her daughter will become sexually active because of the implant. But if it happens, she will be protected, Lorenzo said. “I don’t think that’s fair to me or my family to not have abortion as an option,” said her daughter, Abreu. ___ Roxana Hegeman in Wichita contributed to this report. Rodgers 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 her on Twitter at https://twitter.com/arleighrodgers Read More Here
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Teen Interest In Long-Lasting Birth Control Soars After Roe
Justice Department Asks Judge To Order Former Trump Adviser Peter Navarro To Return Federal Records KESQ
Justice Department Asks Judge To Order Former Trump Adviser Peter Navarro To Return Federal Records KESQ
Justice Department Asks Judge To Order Former Trump Adviser Peter Navarro To Return Federal Records – KESQ https://digitalarizonanews.com/justice-department-asks-judge-to-order-former-trump-adviser-peter-navarro-to-return-federal-records-kesq/ By Katelyn Polantz, CNN Reporter, Crime and Justice The Justice Department has asked a judge to order former Trump White House trade adviser Peter Navarro to return federal records they say he wrongfully kept after leaving the administration. The DOJ’s aggressive move seeks to bring a quick resolution in their lawsuit filed against Navarro earlier this year in yet another records dispute where the administration maintains the Trump White House inappropriately handled their official records. “There is no genuine dispute of fact that Dr. Navarro used at least one unofficial email account to conduct official business, that those records are the property of the United States, and that Dr. Navarro has refused to return the records to the United States. Indeed, his counsel has expressly admitted as much,” Justice Department lawyers wrote on Monday night. “Because Dr. Navarro remains in possession of property that belongs to the United States, this Court should issue a writ of replevin requiring Dr. Navarro to return what he wrongfully continues to possess,” the lawyers continued. The Navarro dispute, which is separate from his criminal contempt of Congress case, deals with emails he sent while working in the White House on the coronavirus pandemic response. The Justice Department said Navarro used a private mail account for presidential business, “such as the need for ventilators, the creation and deployment of National-Guard based rapid response teams, and the use of hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID,” the filing Monday said. Because of a House committee investigation, the National Archives realized it was not in possession of the Navarro emails, the filing added. The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More Here
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Justice Department Asks Judge To Order Former Trump Adviser Peter Navarro To Return Federal Records KESQ
Hurricane Ian's Latest Path: Hurricane Warning Issued For Tampa Bay Area
Hurricane Ian's Latest Path: Hurricane Warning Issued For Tampa Bay Area
Hurricane Ian's Latest Path: Hurricane Warning Issued For Tampa Bay Area https://digitalarizonanews.com/hurricane-ians-latest-path-hurricane-warning-issued-for-tampa-bay-area/ LIVE UPDATES Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has declared a “state of emergency.” Last Updated: September 26, 2022, 11:35 PM ET Hurricane Ian strengthened to a Category 2 hurricane on Monday as it took aim at Cuba and Florida. Ian is currently forecast to make landfall on the west coast of Florida or the Florida Panhandle by midday Thursday, though there is uncertainty about the hurricane’s track and intensity. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has declared a “state of emergency” for the entire state, with storm conditions “projected to constitute a major disaster.” The National Hurricane Center has advised residents of Cuba, the Florida Keys and the Florida Peninsula to have a hurricane plan in place and to closely follow forecast updates. Hurricane Ian continued to intensify Monday night, with maximum sustained winds now at 105 mph. The hurricane is about 105 miles east-southeast of the western tip of Cuba, which is expected to see significant wind and storm surge impacts soon. The storm is expected to become a major hurricane overnight or Tuesday morning. -ABC News’ Melissa Griffin Tampa International Airport will stop all operations starting 5 p.m. Tuesday to secure its airfield and terminals ahead of Hurricane Ian’s expected landfall later this week. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has declared a public health emergency for the state of Florida. HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra made the declaration Monday to address the possible health impacts for Florida residents once Hurricane Ian nears the state. “We will do all we can to assist Florida officials with responding to the health impacts of Hurricane Ian,” Becerra said in a statement. “We are working closely with state, local, and tribal health authorities, as well as our federal partners, and stand ready to provide additional public health and medical support.” HHS has pre-positioned two 15-person health and medical task force teams from its National Disaster Medical System, as well as a 13-person incident management team and two pharmacists to assist with the response in Florida. “These teams are highly trained and ready to respond if, when, and where they may be needed following the storm,” HHS Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response Dawn O’Connell said. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency on Saturday. That declaration was approved by President Joe Biden on Sunday. The National Hurricane Center has issued a hurricane warning for the Tampa Bay area just after its 5 p.m. advisory for Hurricane Ian. The hurricane, currently a Category 2, is forecast to strengthen before it slows down as it approaches land. It is then expected to hover off the coast of Tampa from Wednesday into Thursday before making landfall. A hurricane watch has also been issued for Big Bend, Florida, near the panhandle, and tropical storm warnings are in effect for much of southwest Florida. Tropical storm watches are in effect for Orlando toward the northeast portion of the state, from Fort Pierce to Jacksonville. -ABC News’ Melissa Griffin Read More Here
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Hurricane Ian's Latest Path: Hurricane Warning Issued For Tampa Bay Area
Harris Focuses Asia Trip On Security Adds Tour To Korea DMZ
Harris Focuses Asia Trip On Security Adds Tour To Korea DMZ
Harris Focuses Asia Trip On Security, Adds Tour To Korea DMZ https://digitalarizonanews.com/harris-focuses-asia-trip-on-security-adds-tour-to-korea-dmz/ U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris, right, holds a bilateral meeting with South Korea’s Prime Minister Han Duck-soo in Tokyo, Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2022. (Leah Millis/Pool Photo via AP) TOKYO – In meeting after meeting with Asian leaders Tuesday, Vice President Kamala Harris emphasized the U.S. commitment to regional security, and the White House disclosed that she would visit the Demilitarized Zone between the Koreas. An official said Harris would tour the border area between South and North Korea on Thursday, at the end of her trip to Asia. The visit comes amid persistent concerns about North Korea’s missile and nuclear programs. North Korea test-fired a short-range ballistic missile shortly before Harris left Washington, an apparent response to joint military exercises between the United States and South Korea that include the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan. U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited the DMZ in August, and former President Donald Trump went in 2019 when he met with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. Harris’ plan, which had been kept under wraps by her team, was unexpectedly revealed during a meeting with South Korean Prime Minister Han Duck-soo on Tuesday. A White House official rushed to confirm details of her trip afterward. The official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said Harris “will tour sites at the DMZ, meet with service members and receive an operational briefing from U.S. commanders.” She will also “reflect on the shared sacrifice of tens of thousands of American and Korean soldiers who fought and died together” in the war that divided the peninsula seven decades ago. Harris has been emphasizing security ties during her time in Tokyo, where she’s attending the state funeral of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who was assassinated in July. During her meeting with Han, Harris said the U.S. alliance with South Korea is the “linchpin of security and prosperity” in the region. “We stand with you in the face of threats,” she said. Afterwards, Harris met with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, telling him their countries share a “common goal and bond as it relates to our dedication to peace and security.” The conversations follow Harris’ meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Monday, shortly after arriving in Tokyo. During that encounter, Harris described the U.S. alliance with Japan as “a cornerstone of what we believe is integral to peace, stability and prosperity” in the region. Like the abrupt disclosure of Harris’ trip to the DMZ, the meeting with Kishida was also marked by confusion. His staff tried to usher reporters out of the room while Harris was still speaking. The commotion drowned out some of her remarks, making it hard for her office to finalize a transcript of her exact comments. In addition to concerns over North Korea, there’s been increased tension involving Taiwan, the self-governing island that China views as part of its territory. President Joe Biden recently said that the U.S. would send troops to defend Taiwan if China attacked. Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, said Saturday that any attempt to prevent reunification with Taiwan would be “crushed by the wheels of history.” Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Read More Here
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Harris Focuses Asia Trip On Security Adds Tour To Korea DMZ
McConnell Calls Democrat Kyrsten Sinema the Most Effective First-Term Senator Deltaplex News
McConnell Calls Democrat Kyrsten Sinema the Most Effective First-Term Senator Deltaplex News
McConnell Calls Democrat Kyrsten Sinema ‘the Most Effective First-Term Senator’ – Deltaplex News https://digitalarizonanews.com/mcconnell-calls-democrat-kyrsten-sinema-the-most-effective-first-term-senator-deltaplex-news/ (WASHINGTON) — Arizona Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema on Monday doubled down on her controversial support for the filibuster and displayed her unconventional friendship with Senate Minority leader Mitch McConnell during a speech hosted by the Republican in his home state of Kentucky. Speaking at the McConnell Center at the University of Louisville, Sinema reiterated her stance that the Senate should continue passing legislation under a 60-vote threshold, clarifying that she hopes to resurrect the filibuster for “everything,” including all judicial and executive branch nominees. That move would almost guarantee that the 50-50 Senate would block nearly all of President Joe Biden’s appointments. “I committed to the 60-vote threshold, it’s been an incredibly unpopular view. I actually think we should restore the 60 vote threshold for the areas in which it has been eliminated already,” the moderate Democrat said during her speech on “The Future of Political Discourse and the Importance of Bipartisanship.” “It would make it harder for us to confirm judges. It would make it harder for us to confirm executive appointments in each administration. But I believe by restoring, we’d actually see more of that middle ground in all parts of our governance which is what I believe our forefathers intended.” Sinema has over the past two years been the outlier among fellow Democratic senators who have attempted to pass legislation in a tied Senate, remaining steadfast in her allegiance to the filibuster rule despite mounting criticism. Her main argument against eliminating the filibuster was that doing so might turn the Senate into the House — a lower chamber without the longstanding Senate rule. “The trouble with that is …the House with elections every two years, representing a smaller group of voters by each House, they really represent the passions of the moment in the political spectrum,” she said, noting the impending midterm elections just over a month and a half away. Sinema is not yet up for reelection for another term. “Control changes between the House and the Senate every couple of years, it’s likely to change again, in just a few weeks … The Senate was designed to be a place that moves slowly to cool down those passions, to think more strategically and long term about the legislation before us.” Ahead of her remarks, Sinema was called “the most effective first term senator I’ve seen in my time in the Senate,” by McConnell, who has served 37 years in the chamber and is poised to break records for leadership longevity. His selection of Sinema for the bipartisan speaking series means the Arizonan is now part of a longstanding list of political heavyweights, including Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., Biden while he was vice president and Hillary Clinton while she was secretary of state. “She is today what we have too few of in the Democratic Party, a genuine, moderate, and a dealmaker,” McConnell said, noting with particular reverence her dedication to the Senate’s 60-vote threshold rule. “It took one hell of a lot of guts for Kyrsten Sinema to stand up and say, ‘I’m not going to break the institution in order to achieve a short-term goal,”” he said, noting her departure from the Democrats’ desire to lower the threshold. McConnell also said that former President Donald Trump “would harangue me on virtually a weekly basis,” about the same idea. He also applauded Sinema’s involvement in moving forward bipartisan legislation — a role she has enjoyed as one of the few swing votes in the 50-50 Senate. “Kyrsten has been right in the middle of, if not the principal leader, in getting us to an outcome in a highly partisan time, on infrastructure on school safety, mental health, postal reform, that ships bill you name it, every single thing that we’ve been able to work together on,” McConnell said. Sinema, too, touted her friendship with the top Republican during her speech. “At first glance, Sen. McConnell and I have relatively little — or some could even say nothing — in common,” she said. “For starters, he drinks bourbon, I drink wine. He’s from the Southeast and I’m from the great Southwest. He wears suits and ties, and I wear dresses and these fierce sneakers. Perhaps most obviously, we come from opposing political parties.” “But despite our apparent differences, Sen. McConnell and I have forged a friendship — one that is rooted in our commonalities, including our pragmatic approach to legislating, our respect for the Senate as an institution, our love for our home states and a dogged determination on behalf of our constituents.” Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved. Read More Here
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McConnell Calls Democrat Kyrsten Sinema the Most Effective First-Term Senator Deltaplex News
GOP Planning Impeachment Move Against Joe Biden After Midterm Elections
GOP Planning Impeachment Move Against Joe Biden After Midterm Elections
GOP Planning Impeachment Move Against Joe Biden After Midterm Elections https://digitalarizonanews.com/gop-planning-impeachment-move-against-joe-biden-after-midterm-elections/ US President Joe Biden (Photo: Reuters) A section of the Republicans are “seriously” planning bringing an impeachment motion in the House of Representatives should they retake the house in the upcoming November 8 midterm elections, even as poll pundits predict that the odds are divided, albeit democrats could have swing votes with abortion rights, stricter gun laws and threats to democracy campaigns. Rep. Nancy Mace said on Sunday that some Republicans are thinking about impeaching President Joe Biden if they take over the House chamber following the midterm elections. “I believe there’s a lot of pressure on Republicans to have that vote and put that legislation forward,” Mace, R-S.C., told host Chuck Todd on NBC’s “Meet the Press”. Mace said that if the impeachment vote happened, it would be “divisive”, and that the House needs to work together. She also said she would back whomever the GOP nominates, including former President Donald Trump.Some Republicans, including Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, also speculated about a Biden impeachment. “Yeah, I do think there’s a chance of that, whether it’s justified or not,” Cruz said on an episode of his podcast “Verdict with Ted Cruz”, as early as January itself. He said he thought Democrats used impeachment “for partisan purposes to go after Trump because they disagreed with him.” It may be recalled that Nancy Mace won the republican primaries recently though she had at first slammed: Trump for January 6, then backtracked during her S.C. primary. Did that help her win? But the effort to impeach Trump was bipartisan and included 10 House Republicans who broke from their party ranks and joined House Democrats. Eight of them are retiring. Two of them were in the race. One of them, Liz Cheney, lost her seat in Wyoming to a Trump backed candidate. She has vowed to launch a movement to prevent Trump from entering White House again. Her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney under former President George W. Bush has supported her. Mace, who defeated Trump-backed challenger Katie Arrington in the GOP primary in June, has supported the results of the 2020 presidential election. Mace worked on Trump’s presidential campaign, but criticised him following the January 6 attack. The race for the mid-terms has gained much momentum reaching a very crucial phase and Gallup polls are predicting a 42 per cent to 46 per cent chance for both Trump and Biden in the close race between Republicans and Democrats. Speculation about a hung house is rife as voting is expected to be very partisan along party lines. But swing voters as among independents on either side could hold the trump card to give a wafer thin majority to either side – the Republicans and the Democrats. Pundits call the midterm elections as the most decisive in American politics in recent times and a definite move ahead of the 2024 presidential elections. They also said when any incumbent president got a 42 per cent approval ratings at the hustings , the party lost 17 seats, and if the rating was 50 per cent the party lost 37 seats and this has been the tradition in all elections in the midterms of an incumbent presidency. –IANS ash/pgh (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Subscribe to Business Standard Premium Exclusive Stories, Curated Newsletters, 26 years of Archives, E-paper, and more! First Published: Tue, September 27 2022. 09:05 IST Read More Here
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GOP Planning Impeachment Move Against Joe Biden After Midterm Elections
TRUST NOTICE IN THE MATTER OF THE TRUST:
TRUST NOTICE IN THE MATTER OF THE TRUST:
TRUST NOTICE IN THE MATTER OF THE TRUST: https://digitalarizonanews.com/trust-notice-in-the-matter-of-the-trust/ TRUST NOTICE IN THE MATTER OF THE TRUST: The Patricia J. Kinsella 2011 Revocable Trust To all persons regarding Patricia J. Kinsella, deceased, who died on or about August 23, 2022. You are hereby notified that the trustee listed below is the trustee of the Patricia J. Kinsella 2011 Revocable Trust dated on August 22, 2011 (as amended and restated). Any action to contest the validity of the trust must be brought in the District Court of Dubuque County, Iowa, within the later to occur of four (4) months from the date of second publication of this notice or thirty (30) days from the date of mailing this notice to all heirs of the decedent settlor and the spouse of the decedent settlor whose identities are reasonably ascertainable. Any suit not filed within this period shall be forever barred. Notice is further given that any person or entity possessing a claim against the trust must mail proof of the claim to the trustee at the address listed below via certified mail, return receipt requested, by the later to occur of four (4) months from the second publication of this notice or thirty (30) days from the date of mailing this notice if required or the claim shall be forever barred unless paid or otherwise satisfied. Dated on September 22, 2022. Joanne P. Bramson, Trustee 11203 E Honey Mesquite Dr. Scottsdale, AZ 85262 Jeffrey A. Trannel #AT0007918, Attorney for Trustee Hughes and Trannel PC 1154 Iowa St, Dubuque, Iowa 52001 Date of second publication: October 4, 2022 2t 9/27, 10/4 Read More Here
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TRUST NOTICE IN THE MATTER OF THE TRUST:
Heavy Fighting As Annexation Vote In Ukraine Enters Final Day
Heavy Fighting As Annexation Vote In Ukraine Enters Final Day
Heavy Fighting As Annexation Vote In Ukraine Enters Final Day https://digitalarizonanews.com/heavy-fighting-as-annexation-vote-in-ukraine-enters-final-day/ A man walks with his bicycle past banners informing about a referendum on the joining of Russian-controlled regions of Ukraine to Russia, in the Russian-controlled city of Melitopol in the Zaporizhzhia region, Ukraine September 26, 2022. The banner (C) reads: “Future. 23-27 September 2022”. REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Heavy fighting as Russian referendums enter last day Russian conscription sparks protests, exodus No decisions taken on closing Russian border, Kremlin says KYIV, Ukraine, Sept 27 (Reuters) – Ukrainian and Russian forces were locked in heavy fighting in different parts of Ukraine on Tuesday as Russian-organised referendums in four regions Moscow hopes to annex drew to a close. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said the Donetsk region in the east remained his country’s — and Russia’s — top strategic priority, with fighting engulfing several towns as Russian troops try to advance to the south and west. There were also clashes in Kharkiv region in the northeast — focus of a Ukrainian counter-offensive this month. And Ukrainian forces pressed on with a campaign to put out of action four bridges and other river crossings to disrupt supply lines to Russian forces in the south. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com The Ukrainian Armed Forces southern command said on Tuesday that its counter offensive in Kherson had resulted in enemy losses of 77 servicemen, six tanks, five howitzers, three anti-aircraft installations and 14 armoured vehicles. Reuters could not immediately verify battlefield reports. Moscow hopes to annex the provinces of Kherson, Luhansk, Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia, in the east and south, which make up about 15 percent of Ukraine. None of the provinces are fully under Moscow’s control and fighting has been under way along the entire front line, with Ukrainian forces reporting more advances since they routed Russian troops in a fifth province, Kharkiv, earlier this month. Russian President Vladimir Putin has issued a veiled threat to use nuclear weapons to protect Russian soil, which would include the four provinces if annexed. Voting on whether to join Russia began on Friday in the regions and is due to end on Tuesday, with the Russian parliament possibly approving the annexation within days. Kyiv and the West have dismissed the referendums as a sham and pledged not to recognise the results. CONSCRIPTION In Russia, the call-up of some 300,000 reservists has led to the first sustained protests since the invasion began, with one monitoring group estimating at least 2,000 people have been arrested so far. All public criticism of Russia’s “special military operation” is banned. Flights out of Russia have sold out and cars have clogged border checkpoints, with reports of a 48-hour queue at the sole road border to Georgia, the rare pro-Western neighbour that allows Russian citizens to enter without a visa. Asked about the prospect of the border being shut, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Monday: “I don’t know anything about this. At the moment, no decisions have been taken on this.” Russia counts millions of former conscripts as official reservists. The authorities have not spelled out precisely who is due to be called up, as that part of Putin’s order is classified. The mobilisation has also seen the first sustained criticism of the authorities within state-controlled media since the war began. But Sergei Tsekov, a senior lawmaker who represents Russian-annexed Crimea in Russia’s upper house of parliament, told RIA news agency: “Everyone who is of conscription age should be banned from travelling abroad in the current situation.” Two exiled news sites – Meduza and Novaya Gazeta Europe – both reported that the authorities were planning to ban men from leaving, citing unidentified officials. Moscow says it wants to rid Ukraine of nationalists and protect Russian-speaking communities. Kyiv and the West describe Russia’s actions as an unprovoked war of aggression. Late on Monday, Zelenskiy described the military situation in Donetsk as “particularly severe.” “We are doing everything to contain enemy activity. This is our No. 1 goal right now because Donbas is still the No. 1 goal for the occupiers,” he said, referring to the wider region that encompasses Donetsk and Luhansk. Russia carried out at least five attacks on targets in the Odesa region using Iranian drones in the last few days, according to the regional administration. Russian missiles hit the airport in Kriviy Rih, Zelenskiy’s home town in central Ukraine, destroying infrastructure and making the airport unusable, Valentyn Reznichenko, governor of Dnipropetrovsk region, said on Telegram. More U.S. funding looks to be on the way as negotiators of a stop-gap spending bill in Congress have agreed to include nearly $12 billion in new military and economic aid to Ukraine, according to sources. read more Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Reuters bureaus; Writing by Michael Perry and Costas Pitas; Editing by Shri Navaratnam Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Heavy Fighting As Annexation Vote In Ukraine Enters Final Day
Phoenix Ranks As 4th Best City For Vegans And Vegetarians AZ Big Media
Phoenix Ranks As 4th Best City For Vegans And Vegetarians AZ Big Media
Phoenix Ranks As 4th Best City For Vegans And Vegetarians – AZ Big Media https://digitalarizonanews.com/phoenix-ranks-as-4th-best-city-for-vegans-and-vegetarians-az-big-media/ Just in time for  World Vegetarian Day (Oct. 1) and World Vegan Day (Nov. 1 ), WalletHub recently released its report on 2022’s Best Cities for Vegans & Vegetarians, and Phoenix ranks very high. The full report reflects how vegan and vegetarian-friendly various restaurants and other consumer options are for the 15.5 million U.S. adults having a vegetarian or vegan diet, and reveals how Phoenix ranks in several categories. To determine the best and cheapest places for following a plant-based diet, WalletHub compared the 100 largest cities across 17 key indicators of vegan- and vegetarian-friendliness. The data set ranges from the share of restaurants serving meatless options to the cost of groceries for vegetarians to salad shops per capita. READ ALSO: Ranking Arizona: Top 10 vegan restaurants for 2022 The vegetarian and vegan lifestyle in Phoenix (1=Best; 50=Avg.): 44th – Cost of Groceries for Vegetarians 48th – % of Restaurants Serving Vegetarian Options 43rd – % of Restaurants Serving Vegan Options 15th – Farmers Markets & CSA Programs per Capita 1st – Juice & Smoothie Bars per Capita 7th – Salad Shops per Capita 8th – Vegetable Nurseries per Capita From the experts: What tips do you have for a person that wishes to have a vegetarian/vegan lifestyle while on a budget? “A plant-based lifestyle can be very affordable. Frozen or canned produce can be more affordable than fresh, especially if you are eating out of season. Frozen and canned also keep for much longer, which minimizes costs related to food waste. Making your own meals will cost less than relying on prepackaged meals. Minimally processed proteins like beans, peanut butter, dairy, or tofu are less expensive than meat alternatives that are intended to replicate burgers, chicken nuggets and so on.” Robin M. Tucker, Ph.D., RD, FAND – associate professor, Michigan State University “Eating plant-based protein can be extremely economical. I recommended buying bulk dried pulses (which include beans, lentils and peas) and stocking up when they go on sale. Dried beans are inexpensive, and using reusable bags when buying in bulk is environmentally friendly as well. To prepare dried beans, soak them overnight, simmer on medium heat for an hour in the morning, rinse them off and store them in the refrigerator. They should last several days and they freeze well.” Heidi Lynch, Ph.D., RDN – associate professor, Point Loma Nazarene University What can parents do to encourage children to consume more veggies? “One of the most important things parents can do is to model eating fruits and vegetables. Children learn to eat by watching their parents eat and their preferences reflect what they are served regularly. This means parents eat fruits and vegetables every day and incorporate them into meals and snacks that they provide to their children.” Jane Burrell, M.S., RD, CDN – associate teaching professor, Syracuse University “Parents should serve (or offer) a variety of fruits and vegetables prepared in a variety of ways including raw, with dip, cooked, roasted, and blended in smoothies and soups, etc. I believe the parent’s job is to expose the children to the food and it is the child’s job to decide how much to eat. I think eventually kids become interested in foods and will try them…Children often need to be exposed several times to a food dish before they like it. I also found that my children were more accepting of vegetables when they were blended in soups or smoothies or lightly salted and roasted in olive oil. I even hooked a few college athletes on broccoli and cauliflower by serving it broiled with garlic and olive oil. And it is so easy!” Enette Larson-Meyer, Ph.D., RD, CSSD, FACSM – professor; Director, Master in Nutrition and Dietetics Program, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University What are the most common mistakes people make when being on a vegan or vegetarian diet, and how can they avoid them? “I feel the most common mistake of eating a vegan or vegetarian diet is the motivation behind the change. If a person drastically changes their eating (in any form) due to a strongly held desire to lose weight, or change their body size, then I would categorize this as a “diet.” From the research, we know that dieting or restriction with eating is not successful long-term (i.e., not greater than a couple of years at most). If, however, a person is motivated to eat a vegetarian or vegan diet due to moral, ethical, religious or just food preferences, they are less likely to be affected by a scarcity mindset, and more likely to continue eating vegetarian or vegan. Eating in a way that aligns with your core values is less likely to feel restrictive. Whereas, removing food in hopes that it will lead to weight loss feels the restrictive and long-term success of maintaining this eating pattern is diminished. With restriction we often see the pendulum swing in an equal and opposite direction, leading to an increased desire to eat the restricted foods even more.” Alisa Dodds, MS, RDN – senior lecturer, Loyola Marymount University “A common mistake I see is that people just cut out animal foods and do not replace them with other plant-based foods. This can leave someone without enough calories to be satisfied. Also, being vegetarian does not mean that whole food groups should be eliminated, instead, look for alternatives in each one. For example, replace meat or chicken with beans and rice and substitute soy milk or yogurt for cow’s milk and yogurt. Another thing I see is the reliance on processed plant-based foods instead of cooking or using whole foods. Processed food of all types has added sugars and sodium that most people do not need more of.” Jane Burrell, M.S., RD, CDN – associate teaching professor, Syracuse University Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Phoenix Ranks As 4th Best City For Vegans And Vegetarians AZ Big Media
Biden Faces Pressure To Waive Restriction As Ship Idles Off Puerto Rico Coast
Biden Faces Pressure To Waive Restriction As Ship Idles Off Puerto Rico Coast
Biden Faces Pressure To Waive Restriction As Ship Idles Off Puerto Rico Coast https://digitalarizonanews.com/biden-faces-pressure-to-waive-restriction-as-ship-idles-off-puerto-rico-coast/ President Biden faced growing pressure Monday to grant a federal waiver and allow a BP ship loaded with diesel fuel to access a port in Puerto Rico, where hundreds of thousands of hurricane-ravaged Americans remain without power. Because the ship is not U.S.-owned, it has been idling off the island’s coast, awaiting a decision by the Biden administration on waiving the Jones Act, a century-old law backed by labor unions and key to the president’s “Made in America” agenda. Despite mounting calls from the governor of Puerto Rico, local activists and members of Congress, the Biden administration did not grant the waiver required for the ship to dock Monday, raising concerns that the ship could soon leave the power-starved island behind. White House officials said the Biden administration did not have the authority to simply suspend the Jones Act in Puerto Rico, citing a law passed by Congress in 2020 to crack down on broad waivers. Local officials said Biden had the power to issue one-time waivers that could still provide much-needed, temporary relief, but an administration official said that any exception would require careful consideration to ensure it is legal. The debate highlights the challenge Biden faces as he balances competing appeals from two constituencies he has pledged to champion as president: labor unions and the residents of Puerto Rico. As the labor movement defends the federal shipping restrictions and denounces calls to give foreign shippers special access to Puerto Rico, local officials and activists have long decried regulations that increase costs and make it more difficult to deliver essential goods to the island. The Jones Act, part of a World War I-era shipping law, requires that goods shipped between points in the United States be carried on U.S.-flagged ships built and mostly owned by Americans. Under the act, which was intended to support a U.S. shipping industry for national defense purposes, territories such as Puerto Rico and far-flung states such as Hawaii can face fewer options for shipping goods. As Puerto Rico continued to suffer from power outages and food shortages in the aftermath of Hurricane Fiona, a wide range of officials began to call on the federal government to intervene by waiving the Jones Act. The push came to a head Monday when Gov. Pedro Pierluisi announced that he had asked for federal relief in order for the offshore vessel to dock. “I have requested the personal intervention of the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security so that a ship contracted by a private supplier, loaded with diesel and located near Puerto Rico, can unload the fuel for the benefit of our people,” Pierluisi said Monday in a tweet. Carmen M. Feliciano, executive director of the Puerto Rico Federal Affairs Administration, said that Pierluisi favored a temporary Jones Act exemption to facilitate the shipment of fuel to the island. Officials also pressed their case at the White House, where four Puerto Rican lawmakers met on Monday with the administration’s liaison for Puerto Rican affairs, as well as other administration officials. The Puerto Rican officials — three from the state’s House, one from its state Senate — asked for the administration to grant the Jones Act waiver and to bypass immigration restrictions to the island to allow high-skilled workers, said Tatito Hernández, the speaker of the island’s House. Eight members of Congress, including New York Democrats Nydia M. Velázquez and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, wrote an open letter to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas last week requesting the waiver. After news of the idling ship — first reported by television station Las Noticias T11 — began to circulate online Monday, Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) added their voices to the chorus of officials calling for the federal government to grant the reprieve. “@WhiteHouse must immediately grant this Jones Act waiver and provide much-needed relief to the people of Puerto Rico,” Lee wrote on Twitter. A Biden administration official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations, said that any waivers of the act would have to go through a deliberative interagency process to determine legality. The kinds of broad waivers requested by some members of Congress would not be legally viable, the official said. For one-off requests like the one sought for the BP ship, the Department of Homeland Security aims to complete the review process and provide a response within two days, the official said. Waiver requests must show that the items being shipped are necessary for the national defense and cannot be otherwise obtained by U.S.-flagged vessels, officials said. Labor unions, which have been among Biden’s strongest supporters, have opposed efforts to weaken or waive the Jones Act, including after natural disasters. The American Maritime Partnership — a coalition that represents operators of U.S.-flagged vessels and unions covered by the Jones Act — wrote a letter to Mayorkas on Friday explaining why the Jones Act should not be waived in the aftermath of Hurricane Fiona. The group said that domestic vessels were ready and available to support the recovery effort in Puerto Rico, with more than 2,000 containers positioned in the port of San Juan to provide supplies before the storm. The group’s president, Ku’uhaku Park, said that U.S.-flagged ships are providing Puerto Rico with essential goods for its recovery, adding that waiving the Jones Act would benefit foreign shippers rather than Puerto Ricans. “There is no indication that American shipping capacity is insufficient to meet demand, and, therefore, no justification for a waiver of the Jones Act,” he said. For his part, Biden has repeatedly voiced his support for the act, often winning the praise of unions for speaking out in favor of a law that some Democrats and Republicans have called antiquated. Five days after his inauguration, Biden signed an executive order to promote “Made in America” policies, citing the Jones Act as one such law. Under Biden’s executive order, waivers of the Jones Act must be reviewed by the White House’s “Made in America” office. In a “National Maritime Day” proclamation earlier this year, Biden cited his “unwavering support” for the Jones Act and praised the law for supporting hundreds of thousands of jobs. Earlier this year, he won praise from unions for rejecting calls to suspend the act in response to rising gas prices and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Still, Biden has previously suspended the Jones Act as president, including after a cyberattack on the Colonial Pipeline that led to gas shortages last year. The White House pointed to other actions it has taken to support recovery efforts in Puerto Rico, where Fiona, which came ashore as a Category 1 hurricane and strengthened later, has devastated communities still struggling to rebuild after Hurricane Maria in 2017. Biden approved a major disaster declaration for much of the island last week, and later directed his government to cover all of the costs for debris removal, search and rescue, power and water restoration, and shelter and food for one month. There are more than 1,000 federal officials on the island helping to restore power and providing other support, a White House official said. Biden has repeatedly said he would bring the full force of the federal government to help Puerto Rico rebound. His actions are being closely watched by Puerto Ricans, particularly after President Donald Trump received poor marks from locals for his handling of Hurricane Maria. Trump angered residents by feuding publicly with local politicians, denigrating the island as corrupt and tossing paper towels at storm-ravaged Puerto Ricans during a visit in 2017. Trump, however, did provide a temporary waiver of the Jones Act for the island in 2017, after facing increasing pressure and criticism of his stewardship of the storm. By contrast, Biden has sought to showcase a more serious and collaborative approach, saying that he would provide the island with whatever it needed to recover. “I promise you, it is a high priority,” he told supporters last week, according to a video captured by “The View” co-host Ana Navarro and posted on social media. “And from day one I was on the phone with the governor … Whatever he wants, we’re giving him everything he’s asked for and more.” But more than a week after Fiona touched down, roughly 80 percent of the island’s water and sewer plants are without electricity, meaning they have to rely on their diesel-powered backup generators. That creates the immediate need for the fuel. Hernández, the House speaker, stressed that power outages on the island were responsible for more deaths following Hurricane Maria in 2017 than the storm itself. “We have a ship full of diesel in the south waiting to enter the island. It’s right there, waiting for us — if they give us the waiver we’ll import it right away,” Hernández said. “A lot of people need oxygen, a lot of people need water, a lot of people need help … It’s really scary.” As of Sunday, blackouts were still affecting key parts of the island — 95 percent of residents in Ponce; 88 percent of those in Mayaguez; and 84 percent of those in Arecibo, were suffering from power outages, according to information provided by the speaker’s office. Against that backdrop, local officials called on the Biden administration to take additional action to provide relief. The storm has exposed long-standing concerns about the way the U.S. territory is treated under federal law. Ramón Luis Nieves, who served in Puerto Rico’s state Senate and focuses on the island’s energy policy, said that the Jones Act also prevents Puerto Rico from buying liq...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Biden Faces Pressure To Waive Restriction As Ship Idles Off Puerto Rico Coast
'Let's Get Right To The Violence': New Documentary Film Footage Shows Roger Stone Pre-Election Day
'Let's Get Right To The Violence': New Documentary Film Footage Shows Roger Stone Pre-Election Day
'Let's Get Right To The Violence': New Documentary Film Footage Shows Roger Stone Pre-Election Day https://digitalarizonanews.com/lets-get-right-to-the-violence-new-documentary-film-footage-shows-roger-stone-pre-election-day/ By Zachary Cohen, Holmes Lybrand and Jackson Grigsby, CNN (CNN) — The day before the 2020 election, Roger Stone, the long-time Republican operative and ally of former President Donald Trump, said in front of a documentary film crew that he had no interest in waiting to tally actual votes before contesting the election results. “F**k the voting, let’s get right to the violence,” Stone can be heard saying, according to footage provided by a Danish documentary film crew and obtained by CNN. The clip is one of multiple pieces of footage obtained by CNN that the filmmakers also shared with the House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol. The filmmakers tell CNN they came to an agreement to share certain clips with the committee after a subpoena for the footage was signed by the panel’s chairman, Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, and delivered to the filmmakers in Copenhagen about two months ago. The filmmakers, Christoffer Guldbrandsen and Frederik Marbell, followed Stone for portions of about three years for their documentary film. The footage shared with the committee may be incorporated into its upcoming hearing this week. Committee member Rep. Jamie Raskin, a Maryland Democrat, suggested publicly over the weekend that the panel has more to reveal about the connection between Stone and domestic extremist groups, as well as efforts to keep Trump in power after the US Capitol attack and the ongoing threats to democracy. “Stay tuned,” Raskin said at the Texas Tribune festival when asked about Stone’s possible connections to the Capitol riot. “He’s someone who I think saw where things were going,” Raskin said. In an exclusive interview with CNN’s Don Lemon, the filmmakers said the committee appeared interested in footage that focused on Stone’s relationship with the White House, and also his alleged ties to the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys. The filmmakers said they were not able to establish a link between Stone, those groups and the White House. Members of the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys face multiple charges — including seditious conspiracy — for their actions during the Capitol riot. The trial for several Oath Keepers, including their leader Stewart Rhodes, will begin with jury selection on Tuesday. When committee investigators traveled to Denmark to review documentary footage related to Stone, they came to agreement with the filmmakers to share 8 minutes of video that were of interest to the panel and within the scope of its investigation. Politico first reported that trip in August. The film crew was also contacted by the FBI in March and has not shared footage with federal investigators, the filmmakers said. The FBI did not issue the crew a subpoena, they said. In a second clip of the documentary, also obtained by CNN, Stone said that Trump should prematurely claim victory on election night 2020. “I really do suspect it’ll still be up in the air. When that happens, the key thing to do is to claim victory. Possession is nine tenths of the law, no we won,” Stone said on November 1, 2020, according to the footage. In another clip, filmed a week after January 6, Stone is seen criticizing the White House Counsel’s Office for what he described as their argument that Trump could not provide preemptive pardons to Stone and others for their alleged involvement in efforts to overturn the election. “I believe the President is for it. The obstacles are these — are these lily livered, weak kneed, bureaucrats in the White House Counsel’s Office and now they must be crushed because they’ve told the President something that’s not true,” Stone says in the clip. Stone disputed the authenticity of the footage. “I challenge the accuracy and the authenticity of these videos and believe they have been manipulated and selectively edited. I also point out that the filmmakers do not have the legal right to use them. How ironic that Kim Kardashian and I are both subjected to computer manipulated videos on the same day,” Stone said in a statement to CNN. “The excerpts you provided below prove nothing, certainly they do not prove I had anything to do with the events of January 6th. That being said, it clearly shows I advocated for lawful congressional and judicial options,” he added. It’s unclear what the committee may have uncovered, but there are some basic details that are known of Stone’s whereabouts and involvement in the events surrounding January 6. On January 5, the day before the Capitol attack, members of the far-right militia group the Oath Keepers provided security for Stone during a rally that day, including driving him around on a golf cart. Stone also had contacts with the Proud Boys, a right-wing group known for street violence, and has been recorded reciting the group’s creed in a video released by the House select committee. According to former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson’s testimony to the committee this summer, the night before January 6, Trump told then-chief of staff Mark Meadows to ask Stone and former national security adviser Michael Flynn what was going to happen on January 6. Hutchinson testified that Meadows called Stone and Flynn that evening and tried to go to Washington’s Willard Hotel, where Trump supporters — including Stone — had set up a “war room.” Stone, who attended the “Stop the Steal” rally on January 6, has not been charged with a crime related to the Capitol attack. The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More Here
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'Let's Get Right To The Violence': New Documentary Film Footage Shows Roger Stone Pre-Election Day
Bidens Student Loan Forgiveness Will Cost $400B New Estimate Says As White House Pushes Back WFIN Local News
Bidens Student Loan Forgiveness Will Cost $400B New Estimate Says As White House Pushes Back WFIN Local News
Biden’s Student Loan Forgiveness Will Cost $400B, New Estimate Says, As White House Pushes Back – WFIN Local News https://digitalarizonanews.com/bidens-student-loan-forgiveness-will-cost-400b-new-estimate-says-as-white-house-pushes-back-wfin-local-news/ (WASHINGTON) — President Joe Biden’s federal student loan forgiveness plan will cost $400 billion over 10 years, according to a revised estimate this week from the Congressional Budget Office. That’s a lower number than from one leading outside estimate, but the nonpartisan federal agency’s projection drew quick pushback from the White House, which is sensitive to criticism it is growing rather than reducing the government deficit. In a letter sent Monday to North Carolina Republicans Sen. Richard Burr and Rep. Virginia Foxx following their inquiries into Biden’s announcement last month to forgive up to $20,000 in federal student loans, the CBO noted that the cost of pausing repayments through the end of 2022 will add an additional $20 million onto that $400 billion price tag. That CBO estimate does not include the cost of another feature of Biden’s plan: lowering the maximum amount a borrower can pay back to 5% of their income, down from 10%. The nonpartisan Committee for Responsible Federal Budget estimates that would tack on $120 million. The CBO score, which the agency estimates is “highly uncertain” due to components that include projections dependent on future economic conditions and on how future terms of loans might be modified, is slightly less than the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton Business School assessment that all three components of the forgiveness plan would cost about $605 billion. Opponents of Biden’s student loan program — including some members of his own party — have insisted that the plan is impractical during a time of historic inflation rates and high gas prices, though the many Democratic supporters of the plan say it helps addresses education’s affordability issues. The White House maintains that the cost of the student loan forgiveness plan pales in comparison to the president’s ability to foster debt reduction elsewhere. The estimated loan cancellation price comes in higher than the $300 million amount that the Biden-backed Inflation Reduction Act is expected to reduce the federal deficit by, however. (An administration official noted to ABC News that, overall, the cash flow impact of debt cancellation will be very small in 2023 — about $21 billion.) MORE: Biden’s student loan forgiveness policy: How to apply, who qualifies, moreIn a statement, a White House spokesman emphasized that the president is still likely to reduce the federal deficit this year, despite the outlay for debt forgiveness, and the spokesman compared that with a major tax cut under Biden’s predecessor Donald Trump. “The Biden-Harris Administration’s student debt relief plan provides breathing room to tens of millions of working families. It gives people who have been struggling with student debt that shot they want at starting a business, buying that first home, or just having a slightly easier time paying the monthly bills,” Abdullah Hasan said. “It’s a stark contrast to the Trump tax bill, which ballooned the deficit by nearly $2 trillion and provided the vast majority of benefits to big corporations and the wealthiest individuals.” The White House also circulated a memo pushing back on the CBO estimate, noting that it assumed a 90% participation rate in the forgiveness program — though similar, smaller-scale programs had much lower participation. The White House memo challenged how the CBO arrived at $400 billion, suggesting that the agency’s own logic pegged the number at around $250 billion. The debt cancellation program is expected to open for applications in October. Copyright (C) 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved. Read More Here
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Bidens Student Loan Forgiveness Will Cost $400B New Estimate Says As White House Pushes Back WFIN Local News
Trump Nominee Is Voted Out As Head Of Inter-American Development Bank
Trump Nominee Is Voted Out As Head Of Inter-American Development Bank
Trump Nominee Is Voted Out As Head Of Inter-American Development Bank https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-nominee-is-voted-out-as-head-of-inter-american-development-bank-2/ The Inter-American Development Bank, the hemisphere’s premier international lending institution, voted Monday to fire its president. Mauricio Claver-Carone was terminated following a unanimous recommendation by the 14-member executive board, the organization said. The termination was first reported by Reuters. In a statement, the IDB said Claver-Carone, whose term was set to expire in 2025, “will cease to hold the office of President of the Bank” effective Monday. The statement did not refer to a well–publicized investigation into him. Two people familiar with the probe said it was the results of that investigation that led to the vote. The individuals spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about the inner workings of IDB or the results of the investigator’s report, which has not been made public. One of the individuals said investigators found evidence to conclude Claver-Carone had a relationship with a staff member who reported directly to him, and to whom he gave raises totaling more than 45 percent of base pay in less than one year. Claver-Carone’s leadership of the organization also resulted in employees fearing retaliation from him, the person said. Vice President Reina Irene Mejía Chacón will lead the organization until a new president is elected, the statement said. The Biden administration appeared to welcome Claver-Carone’s ouster. A spokesperson for the Treasury Department said the United States “supports the dismissal of the IDB President.” The department said Claver-Carone’s “refusal to fully cooperate with the investigation, and his creation of a climate of fear of retaliation among staff and borrowing countries, has forfeited the confidence of the Bank’s staff and shareholders and necessitates a change in leadership.” Claver-Carone had previously criticized the nature of investigation, saying in a statement to the Associated Press that the probe “failed to meet international standards of integrity that both the IDB and the region strive to exemplify.” He had added: “In clear and direct contravention of IDB ethics rules, neither I nor any other IDB staff member has been given an opportunity to review the final investigative report, respond to its conclusions, or correct inaccuracies.” In a statement after the vote, Claver-Carone also claimed without evidence that ousting him from his position would embolden China, the AP reported. In June 2020, President Donald Trump announced the nomination of Claver-Carone, then a senior figure at the National Security Council whom the Trump administration credited with boosting private-sector investment in Latin America and the Caribbean. His election that September marked the first time the United States — by far the bank’s biggest donor — held the top position at the six-decade-old organization. Claver-Carone’s defenders described him as a reformer leading a long-beleaguered organization rife with corruption. According to his biography on the IDB’s website, he had led “a comprehensive reform of the Bank’s business model” and was “overseeing a broad effort to improve operational efficiency, productivity and transparency to facilitate better results, impact and monitoring effectiveness.” Critics describe him differently. Investigators said there was evidence he conducted an affair with a staffer at the National Security Council, which prompted one official to warn that it posed a counterintelligence security risk, the AP reported. The Biden administration — which has sought to reaffirm America’s relationship with multinational organizations — had indicated it was taking the allegations against Claver-Carone seriously. Michael Shifter, former president of the Inter-American Dialogue think tank and an adjunct professor at Georgetown University, said Claver-Carone’s lack of high-level diplomatic expertise made him an unusual choice for the IDB role. “There was a basic question of how qualified was he, given his background,” Shifter said in an interview. “There was always a cloud, or at least a big question.” Read More Here
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Trump Nominee Is Voted Out As Head Of Inter-American Development Bank
DOJ Asks Judge To Compel Peter Navarro To Return Trump White House Emails
DOJ Asks Judge To Compel Peter Navarro To Return Trump White House Emails
DOJ Asks Judge To Compel Peter Navarro To Return Trump White House Emails https://digitalarizonanews.com/doj-asks-judge-to-compel-peter-navarro-to-return-trump-white-house-emails/ The Department of Justice filed a motion Monday asking a judge to order former White House adviser Peter Navarro to return government email communications he allegedly handled through a private account while serving in the Trump administration. Driving the news: “While serving as a presidential advisor, [Navarro] used at least one non-official email account, namely a ProtonMail account, to send and receive messages in the course of discharging his official duties,” the DOJ said in its filing to the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. “There is no genuine dispute of fact that Dr. Navarro used at least one unofficial email account to conduct official business, that those records are the property of the United States, and that Dr. Navarro has refused to return the records to the United States,” the Justice Department said. “Indeed, his counsel has expressly admitted as much. Because Dr. Navarro remains in possession of property that belongs to the United States, this Court should issue a writ of replevin requiring Dr. Navarro to return what he wrongfully continues to possess.” The other side: Representatives for Navarro did not immediately respond to Axios’ request for comment, but his lawyers told The Hill when the DOJ filed the lawsuit last month that he “never refused to provide records to the government” and he had “instructed his lawyers to preserve all such records.” Read More Here
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DOJ Asks Judge To Compel Peter Navarro To Return Trump White House Emails
Trump Nominee Is Voted Out As Head Of Inter-American Development Bank
Trump Nominee Is Voted Out As Head Of Inter-American Development Bank
Trump Nominee Is Voted Out As Head Of Inter-American Development Bank https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-nominee-is-voted-out-as-head-of-inter-american-development-bank/ The Inter-American Development Bank, the hemisphere’s premier international lending institution, voted Monday to fire its president. Mauricio Claver-Carone was terminated following a unanimous recommendation by the 14-member executive board, the organization said. The termination was first reported by Reuters. In a statement, the IDB said Claver-Carone, whose term was set to expire in 2025, “will cease to hold the office of President of the Bank” effective Monday. The statement did not refer to a well–publicized investigation into him. Two people familiar with the probe said it was the results of that investigation that led to the vote. The individuals spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about the inner workings of IDB or the results of the investigator’s report, which has not been made public. One of the individuals said investigators found evidence to conclude Claver-Carone had a relationship with a staff member who reported directly to him, and to whom he gave raises totaling more than 45 percent of base pay in less than one year. Claver-Carone’s leadership of the organization also resulted in employees fearing retaliation from him, the person said. Vice President Reina Irene Mejía Chacón will lead the organization until a new president is elected, the statement said. The Biden administration appeared to welcome Claver-Carone’s ouster. A spokesperson for the Treasury Department said the United States “supports the dismissal of the IDB President.” The department said Claver-Carone’s “refusal to fully cooperate with the investigation, and his creation of a climate of fear of retaliation among staff and borrowing countries, has forfeited the confidence of the Bank’s staff and shareholders and necessitates a change in leadership.” Claver-Carone had previously criticized the nature of investigation, saying in a statement to the Associated Press that the probe “failed to meet international standards of integrity that both the IDB and the region strive to exemplify.” He had added: “In clear and direct contravention of IDB ethics rules, neither I nor any other IDB staff member has been given an opportunity to review the final investigative report, respond to its conclusions, or correct inaccuracies.” In a statement after the vote, Claver-Carone also claimed without evidence that ousting him from his position would embolden China, the AP reported. In June 2020, President Donald Trump announced the nomination of Claver-Carone, then a senior figure at the National Security Council whom the Trump administration credited with boosting private-sector investment in Latin America and the Caribbean. His election that September marked the first time the United States — by far the bank’s biggest donor — held the top position at the six-decade-old organization. Claver-Carone’s defenders described him as a reformer leading a long-beleaguered organization rife with corruption. According to his biography on the IDB’s website, he had led “a comprehensive reform of the Bank’s business model” and was “overseeing a broad effort to improve operational efficiency, productivity and transparency to facilitate better results, impact and monitoring effectiveness.” Critics describe him differently. Investigators said there was evidence he conducted an affair with a staffer at the National Security Council, which prompted one official to warn that it posed a counterintelligence security risk, the AP reported. The Biden administration — which has sought to reaffirm America’s relationship with multinational organizations — had indicated it was taking the allegations against Claver-Carone seriously. Michael Shifter, former president of the Inter-American Dialogue think tank and an adjunct professor at Georgetown University, said Claver-Carone’s lack of high-level diplomatic expertise made him an unusual choice for the IDB role. “There was a basic question of how qualified was he, given his background,” Shifter said in an interview. “There was always a cloud, or at least a big question.” Read More Here
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Trump Nominee Is Voted Out As Head Of Inter-American Development Bank
The Indo Daily: Will Mounting Legal Woes Spell The End Of Donald Trump?
The Indo Daily: Will Mounting Legal Woes Spell The End Of Donald Trump?
The Indo Daily: Will Mounting Legal Woes Spell The End Of Donald Trump? https://digitalarizonanews.com/the-indo-daily-will-mounting-legal-woes-spell-the-end-of-donald-trump/ ith the final investigative hearing into the Capitol Hill riot by the January 6 committee scheduled for tomorrow, Donald Trump is fighting fires on all sides in Washington, Florida and New York. Is this the end of the line for the man known as ‘Teflon Don’? Host: Fionnán Sheahan. Guest: Gina London. Close Former US President Donald Trump rallies with his supporters at Wilmington International Airport in North Carolina. Photo: Reuters/Jonathan Ernst Former US President Donald Trump rallies with his supporters at Wilmington International Airport in North Carolina. Photo: Reuters/Jonathan Ernst September 27 2022 02:30 AM ith the final investigative hearing into the Capitol Hill riot by the January 6 committee scheduled for tomorrow, Donald Trump is fighting fires on all sides in Washington, Florida and New York. The Indo Daily: Will mounting legal woes spell the end of Donald Trump? Is this the end of the line for the man known as ‘Teflon Don’? Former CNN Anchor and Sunday Independent columnist Gina London tells The Indo Daily about the legal jeopardy facing the former US President. Read More Here
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The Indo Daily: Will Mounting Legal Woes Spell The End Of Donald Trump?
Russia's FSB Detains And Expels Japanese Consul For Alleged Spying Agencies
Russia's FSB Detains And Expels Japanese Consul For Alleged Spying Agencies
Russia's FSB Detains And Expels Japanese Consul For Alleged Spying – Agencies https://digitalarizonanews.com/russias-fsb-detains-and-expels-japanese-consul-for-alleged-spying-agencies/ Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com MOSCOW/TOKYO, Sept 26 (Reuters) – Russia’s FSB security agency said on Monday it had detained a Japanese consul in Russia’s Pacific port city of Vladivostok for alleged espionage and ordered him to leave the country, Russian news agencies said. The consul was released after a few hours of detention by the Russian agency, Japan’s Kyodo news reported on Tuesday, citing government sources. The FSB said the consul was declared persona non grata after he was caught “red-handed” receiving secret information on the effects of Western sanctions on the economic situation in Russia’s far east. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com It said the classified information, which also concerned Russia’s cooperation with an unnamed Asia-Pacific country, had been obtained in return for a “monetary reward”. Russia has protested to Japan, the agencies quoted the FSB as saying. Japan’s Embassy in Russia lodged a severe protest about the detention to Moscow’s foreign ministry, saying “it was a clear violation of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations” and the order to leave the country was “unreasonable”, according to Kyodo. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Nick Macfie and Gerry Doyle Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
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Russia's FSB Detains And Expels Japanese Consul For Alleged Spying Agencies
ABI Multifamily Sells 10 Luxury Sedona Cabins For $3167500 AZ Big Media
ABI Multifamily Sells 10 Luxury Sedona Cabins For $3167500 AZ Big Media
ABI Multifamily Sells 10 Luxury Sedona Cabins For $3,167,500 – AZ Big Media https://digitalarizonanews.com/abi-multifamily-sells-10-luxury-sedona-cabins-for-3167500-az-big-media/ ABI Multifamily, the leading multifamily brokerage and advisory services firm in the Western U.S., announced the $3,167,500 / $316,750 per unit / $615.05 per square foot sale of Destination @ Oak Creek, a retreat featuring luxury Sedona cabins located at 6401 North State Route 89A. ABI Multifamily’s Patrick Burch and John Klocek represented the seller in this transaction. The buyer and seller are based in Arizona. READ ALSO: 7 fun facts about Sedona’s Verde Valley Destination @ Oak Creek is a private, 10 cabin retreat located just south of Slide Rock State Park in between Sedona and Flagstaff. Located right on majestic Oak Creek, the property boasts magnificent views from its Sedona cabins, private creek access, amazing accommodations, wedding venue space, and more. Destination @ Oak Creek is an absolutely gorgeous 2.32-acre property consisting of 10 luxury cabins that are tucked right up on the red rocks of Oak Creek Canyon with breathtaking views in every direction. The luxurious cabins have a rich history since 1952 with a modern rustic remodel in 2016. The venue area is perfect for an intimate wedding, family reunion, or corporate event. Nestled in the red rocks of Oak Creek Canyon with flowing mature trees, lush green grass, beautiful landscaping, and the soothing sound of a grand and breathtaking waterfall, the property is an idyllic setting offering a rare investment opportunity in one of the most beautiful locations in the world. Sedona is an Arizona desert town near Flagstaff that’s surrounded by red-rock buttes, steep canyon walls and pine forests. It’s noted for its mild climate and vibrant arts community. Uptown Sedona is dense with new age shops, spas, and art galleries. On the town’s outskirts, numerous trailheads access Red Rock State Park, which offers birdwatching, hiking, and picnicking spots. From Sedona jeep tours, hiking, Slide Rock, and Oak Creek Canyon to spiritual healing, massages, psychic readings, and energy vortexes, Sedona will have your senses buzzing for days. Sedona, Arizona has become a mecca for all sorts of communities including spiritual healers, mountain bikers, hikers, artists, nature photographers, and even filmmakers. This vibrant and stunning area of Arizona’s ability to attract and accommodate so many walks of life has created and nurtured an eclectic, unique culture unlike anywhere you’ve ever experienced. Sedona is truly one of a kind and visiting is on the bucket lists of travelers all over the world. ABI Multifamily (https://www.abimultifamily.com/) is a brokerage and advisory services firm that focuses exclusively on apartment investment transactions. With offices in Phoenix, Las Vegas, San Diego, and Tucson, the experienced advisors at ABI Multifamily have completed billions of dollars in sales and thousands of individual multifamily transactions. ABI Multifamily incorporates a global approach with regional real estate expertise to successfully complete any multifamily transaction, regardless of size and complexity. Read More…
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ABI Multifamily Sells 10 Luxury Sedona Cabins For $3167500 AZ Big Media
Obituaries In Beaver PA | The Beaver County Times
Obituaries In Beaver PA | The Beaver County Times
Obituaries In Beaver, PA | The Beaver County Times https://digitalarizonanews.com/obituaries-in-beaver-pa-the-beaver-county-times/ The Reverend Frederick Baker Zikeli, 85, of North Huntingdon, PA, passed away Saturday September 24, 2022. He was born May 21, 1937, in Ellwood City, PA, the son of the late Andrew F. and Margaret (Lightner) Zikeli. Fred graduated from Lincoln High School in 1955, from Thiel College in 1959, and Gettysburg Lutheran Theological Seminary in 1963. Pastor Zeke, as he was affectionately known to so many, was ordained on June 13, 1963. He served St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in Wichita, KS from 1961-1962; Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church in Chambersburg, PA from 1963-1965; the First Evangelical Lutheran Church in Apollo, PA from 1965-1988; and The Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Holy Trinity in Irwin, PA from 1988 until his retirement in 2000. Pastor Zeke continued to serve as a supply pastor for many local congregations and at Peace Lutheran Church in Fort Myers, FL where he spent his winters. He was very active in youth ministry in the Apollo and Irwin congregations, teaching innumerable kids from the Apollo church to tent camp and water ski at Lake Chautauqua. He was also instrumental in starting a confirmation camp program with his fellow pastors from Warren, Corry and Erie, PA, and enjoyed teaching God’s word to the young confirmands for over 20 years at Camp Lutherlyn in Prospect, PA. “Be a sinner and sin boldly, but believe and rejoice in Christ even more boldly.” -Martin Luther Pastor Zeke remained a member of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, Irwin, and was also a member of Peace Lutheran Church in Fort Myers where he sang in the choir and served as a supply pastor. He volunteered his time with Meals on Wheels and served on the boards while in Apollo and later in Irwin. He was a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and a member of the Free and Accepted Masons, Shidle Lodge No. 601 in Irwin, PA. He enjoyed spending time at Fort Myers Beach with Bev, Melanie, Andy, Nate and Bri, and many friends; socializing at his retirement community center, dining and dancing with Kathi, and rarely missed a day at the pool. He was a lifelong golfer and enjoyed the many golf trips with Bev, Andy and friends; playing in the BROMAS Masonic league in the summer and the Century 21 community league in Florida during the winter months; and finally achieved his goal of shooting par golf just three summers ago. He was preceded in death by Beverly Zikeli, his beloved wife of more than 57 years. He is survived by his daughter Melanie Zikeli-Hines of Fort Myers, FL.; his son Andrew F. Zikeli II of North Huntingdon, PA; his grandchildren Nathaniel Washington of Fort Myers, FL and Brianna Washington of Alexandria, VA; his sisters Nancy (William) Herge of Audubon, PA, and Elizabeth (Toivo) Laitinen of Dale City, VA; sisters-in-law Barbara (the late George) Zikeli of Atlantic Beach, FL, Charlotte (the late Alan) Yates of Columbus, OH, Karen (Terry) Kiesling of Scottsdale, AZ, brother-in-law David (the late Doris)Tritt of Philadelphia, PA; numerous nieces and nephews; and his dear friend and companion Kathi (the late Matthew) Ciminero of Niles, OH. Friends will be received from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday and 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Friday at the William Snyder Funeral Home Inc., 521 Main Street, Irwin. A funeral service will be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday in Holy Trinity Lutheran Church with Bishop Kurt F. Kuserow, officiating. Interment will follow in Brush Creek Cemetery. A masonic funeral service will be held at 8 p.m. Friday in the funeral home. In lieu of flowers a contribution can be made to Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 502 Main Street, Irwin, 15642. For online condolences please visit www.snyderfuneralservices.com. Posted online on September 26, 2022 Published in Ellwood City Ledger, The Beaver County Times Service Information Interment Brush Creek Cemetery Visitation William Snyder Funeral Home Inc., 521 Main Street, Irwin September 29, 2022 at 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM Visitation William Snyder Funeral Home Inc., 521 Main Street, Irwin September 30, 2022 at 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM Visitation William Snyder Funeral Home Inc., 521 Main Street, Irwin September 30, 2022 at 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM Funeral Service Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 502 Main Street, Irwin, 15642 October 01, 2022 at 10:30 AM Read More Here
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Obituaries In Beaver PA | The Beaver County Times
Student Loan Cancellation Finally Gets A Price Tag: $400b
Student Loan Cancellation Finally Gets A Price Tag: $400b
Student Loan Cancellation Finally Gets A Price Tag: $400b https://digitalarizonanews.com/student-loan-cancellation-finally-gets-a-price-tag-400b/ Become smarter in just 5 minutes Get the daily email that makes reading the news actually enjoyable. Stay informed and entertained, for free. About $400 billion. That’s how much President Biden’s student loan cancellation plan could cost the government over a decade, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated yesterday. That’s not including an additional $20 billion in costs for extending the freeze on loan repayments one final time. If the estimates prove correct, student loan cancellation would rank among the Biden administration’s most expensive initiatives. For context, the $420 billion is about on par with the amount spent on Covid stimulus checks from Biden’s American Rescue Plan. And it would more than negate the $238 billion in deficit reduction expected from Democrats’ recent tax and climate plan. Quick recap In August, Biden fulfilled a campaign promise by pledging to wipe out $10,000 in student debt for borrowers making less than $125,000 a year, and $20,000 for Pell grant recipients. Under the plan, more than 40 million Americans would have at least some of their student debt canceled. While the wipeout made moderate Democrats (and 40 million Americans) quite happy, it was criticized by both the left, who said it didn’t go far enough, and the right, who said it was a misuse of government money and an accelerant for inflation. The new CBO estimates were immediately used by Republicans to hammer home their message that student loan cancellation is fiscally irresponsible. The numbers got some pushback First of all, the CBO said its projections were “highly uncertain” because it couldn’t know how much of the debt would be paid back if cancellation never existed. And some economists argue that a lot of the debt would never have been paid back anyway, making the plan less expensive than it appears. In defending debt relief, Democratic Senators Chuck Schumer and Elizabeth Warren said it was a worthy investment in America’s middle class, as opposed to former President Trump’s heavy tax cuts for corporations. Looking ahead…now that the price tag’s out, expect student debt relief to become a bigger talking point in the run-up to the midterm elections.—NF Read More Here
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Student Loan Cancellation Finally Gets A Price Tag: $400b