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US-UK Relations Enter New Chapter As New PM King Settle In
US-UK Relations Enter New Chapter As New PM King Settle In
US-UK Relations Enter New Chapter As New PM, King Settle In https://digitalarizonanews.com/us-uk-relations-enter-new-chapter-as-new-pm-king-settle-in-4/ LONDON — President Joe Biden arrived in London to pay his respects to Queen Elizabeth II at a time of transition in U.S.-U.K. relations, as both a new monarch and a new prime minister are settling in. The hawkish approach of Prime Minister Liz Truss to Russia and China puts her on the same page as Biden. But the rise of Truss, 47, who once called the relationship “special but not exclusive,” could mark a decidedly new chapter in the trans-Atlantic partnership on trade and more. Of high concern for Biden officials in the early going of Truss’s premiership is her backing of legislation that would shred parts of the post-Brexit trading arrangements in Northern Ireland. Analysts say the move could cause deep strain between the U.K. and the European Union, and undermine peace in Northern Ireland. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the move “would not create a conducive environment” for crafting a long-awaited U.S.-UK trade deal coveted by Truss and her Conservative Party. “She’s signaled that she’s willing to go to the mattresses on this and that’s going to cause a rift not just between the U.K. and EU, but the UK and the U.S.,” said Max Bergmann, director of the Europe program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington and a former senior State Department official in the Obama administration. “It’s one that’s going to keep the White House up at night.” Biden arrived in London late Saturday and had been set to meet with Truss on Sunday, but the prime minister’s office said Saturday they would skip the weekend hello, opting instead for a meeting in New York at the U.N. General Assembly on Wednesday, though Truss still planned to gather with other world leaders converging on London for the royal funeral. The White House confirmed the U.N. meeting just as the president boarded Air Force One. The two close allies now find themselves in a period of political uncertainty on both sides of the Atlantic. Not unlike his fellow septuagenarian Biden, King Charles III faces questions from the public about whether his age will limit his ability to faithfully carry out the duties of the monarch. Charles, 73, and Biden, 79, discussed global cooperation on the climate crisis last year while both attended a summit in Glasgow, Scotland. They also met at Buckingham Palace in June 2021 at a reception the queen hosted before a world leaders’ summit in Cornwall. Truss finds herself, as Biden does, facing questions about whether she has what it takes to lift a country battered by stubborn inflation borne out of the coronavirus pandemic and exacerbated by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine unleashing chaos on the global energy market. All the while, Britain — and the rest of Europe — is carefully watching to see what the upcoming U.S. midterm elections will bring for the Democratic American president after he vowed upon taking office that “America is back” to being a full partner in the international community after four years of Republican Donald Trump pushing his “America First” worldview. “It certainly is a time of change and transformation in the U.K.,” said Barbara A. Perry, presidential studies director at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center. She added, “We don’t know what will happen in our midterms. We don’t know what will happen in 2024.” Truss, a former accountant who was first elected to Parliament in 2010, hasn’t had much interaction with Biden. The U.S. president called her earlier this month to congratulate her. Truss, as foreign secretary, accompanied her predecessor, Boris Johnson, on a White House visit last year. It’s been more than 75 years since Winston Churchill declared there was a “special relationship” between the two nations, a notion that leaders on both sides have repeatedly affirmed. Still, there have been bumps along the way. Tony Blair was derisively branded by the British tabloids as George W. Bush’s “poodle” for backing the 2003 American-led invasion of Iraq. David Cameron and Barack Obama had a “bromance,” but Obama also had his frustrations with the Brits over defense spending and the U.K.’s handling of Libya following the 2011 ouster of Muammar Gaddafi. Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan forged a close alliance in the midst of the Cold War, with the prime minister once telling students that the Republican president’s “really good sense of humor” helped their relationship. But there were difficulties too, such as when Thatcher and members of her Cabinet bristled at the Reagan administration’s initial neutrality in the Falklands War. The White House wasn’t expecting Truss’s announcement in May, when she was foreign secretary, that the government would move forward with legislation that would rewrite parts of the Northern Ireland Protocol. The agreement was part of the U.K.’s 2020 Brexit withdrawal from the EU that was designed to avoid a hard north-south border with Ireland that might upset Northern Ireland’s fragile peace. Now, in the first weeks of Truss’s premiership, Biden administration officials are carefully taking the measure of the new British leader. Analysts say there is some trepidation in the administration that undercutting the Northern Ireland protocol could plunge Europe into trade turmoil at a moment when Biden is working mightily to keep the West unified in confronting Russia over its aggression against Ukraine. “Brexit could once again become the issue — the issue that can make it difficult for all of Europe to work together at a time when it is critical for Europe to work together,” Bergmann said. “If you’re the Biden administration, this is not the time for the two of your closest partners getting into fights.” To be certain, there were areas of friction between Biden and Johnson, who had a warm rapport with former President Donald Trump. Biden staunchly opposed Brexit as a candidate and had expressed great concern over the future of Northern Ireland. Biden once even derided Johnson as a “physical and emotional clone” of Trump. Johnson worked hard to overcome that impression, stressing his common ground with Biden on climate change, support for international institutions and most notably by making certain Britain was an early and generous member of the U.S.-led alliance providing economic and military assistance to Ukraine in the aftermath of the Russian invasion. The former prime minister also unsuccessfully pressed Biden starting days into his administration to begin negotiations on a new U.S.-U.K. trade deal just as the U.K. regained control over its national trade policy weeks before Biden took office and following the end of a post-Brexit transition period. But Biden largely kept focus on his domestic to-do list in the early going of his presidency— passing trillions in spending on coronavirus relief, infrastructure, and more — and put negotiations on trade deals on the back burner. Elliot Abrams, chairman of the conservative foreign policy group Vandenberg Coalition, said that Truss needs Biden to make a new U.S.-U.K. trade deal a priority. Queen Elizabeth’s funeral won’t be the setting for tough bilateral conversations, but it still marks a moment for the two leaders to begin taking stock of each other. Truss, who succeeded Johnson after he was forced to resign in the face of a string of scandals, has lagged in the opinion polls. She also won her election with a smaller margin than her recent predecessors and is looking for an early win. “I think if I were (Truss), I want recognition of the leading role Britain’s played, far more than any other country outside the United States in supporting Ukraine,” said Abrams, who served in senior national security and foreign policy roles in the Trump, George W. Bush and Reagan administrations. “And I think I’d want some positive economic message to give the British people, which could be that the free trade agreement negotiations are starting.” ___ Madhani reported from Washington. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
US-UK Relations Enter New Chapter As New PM King Settle In
Gloria Dulgov Obituary (2022) Arizona Daily Star
Gloria Dulgov Obituary (2022) Arizona Daily Star
Gloria Dulgov Obituary (2022) Arizona Daily Star https://digitalarizonanews.com/gloria-dulgov-obituary-2022-arizona-daily-star/ Gloria Lassman Dulgov passed away peacefully on September 3, 2022, at the age of 88, after a brief illness, with her daughter, Beth Bracken, by her side. Born in Brooklyn, New York in 1934, to Bernard and Leah Lassman, she was a 1956 graduate of Juilliard School of Music, with a Bachelor of Science in Piano. Gloria and her then Husband, Gerald Dulgov, moved to Tucson, Arizona. From 1959 until her 1985 move to California, Gloria was an active part of the Tucson, Arizona Music, Art and Theatre and cultural scene with several Workshops, Studios and Theatres, Highlights include co-founding Workshop Center for the Arts, Events and Classes with the Jewish Community center and playing Piano with the Playbox Theater, in Trail Dust Town. After a stint as the Cultural Arts Director for the then “Randolph” Park. She then created and became the Executive Director of “Senior Now Generation”, bringing meals and activities to Senior sites in the Tucson and surrounding area. As the founding Executive Secretary of “Council House”, she helped bring affordable housing to Seniors by building a new accessible multi-story “Council House” on the former Jewish Community Center site. A resident of Lafayette, California since 1986, she taught Piano privately until her retirement in 2014 at age 80, this time focusing on children. Other career highlights locally include fundraising for “The Wellness Community”, ADL,” and the Berkeley Jewish Community Center”. Her home was always filled with Children and recitals. Her passion for life was equal to her passion for the Arts. It was her goal to share the love of the Arts with everyone, and instilled that in her family in New York, and then her daughter and Grandchildren with that same passion. She also continued to volunteer at the San Francisco Symphony, until age 83. Gloria had a zest for life and always forged new paths ahead of many. Gloria’s love for the Arts and her friends and family was apparent throughout her life. She also loved to entertain and would entertain often at her home in Lafayette, California. Gloria is survived by her daughter, Beth Bracken, and grandchildren Andrew Bracken and Benjamin Bracken. She is preceded in death by her parents, and beloved brother Bennett Lassman. A Celebration of Life was held in her honor for immediate friends and family. Memorial contributions in her honor can be given to the “Julliard School of Music”, “San Francisco Symphony”, and the “San Francisco Contemporary Jewish Museum”. Arrangements by Sinai Memorial Chapel, Lafayette, CA. Published by Arizona Daily Star on Sep. 18, 2022. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Gloria Dulgov Obituary (2022) Arizona Daily Star
Ted Cruz Forced To Admit Trafficking Migrants To Marthas Vineyard Is Illegal
Ted Cruz Forced To Admit Trafficking Migrants To Marthas Vineyard Is Illegal
Ted Cruz Forced To Admit Trafficking Migrants To Martha’s Vineyard Is Illegal https://digitalarizonanews.com/ted-cruz-forced-to-admit-trafficking-migrants-to-marthas-vineyard-is-illegal/ Ted Cruz was forced to admit by Sean Hannity that the transportation of undocumented migrants from Florida to Martha’s Vineyard by Ron DeSantis was likely illegal. The Florida governor has been widely criticised for flying two planeloads of Venezuelans to the upscale island, where Barack Obama has a $12m home, as part of a Republican immigration publicity stunt. Mr Cruz, a US Senator from Texas, cast doubt on the legality of the move when he appeared on Sean Hannity’s Fox News show. Hannity asked the Canadian-born lawmaker whether he would likely face arrest if he had personally taken a truck, collected immigrants from the border, and driven them across the country. “For you, a citizen, you could easily be arrested, although to be honest Joe Biden’s Justice Department wouldn’t arrest you,” replied Mr Cruz, who is a lawyer. Hannity, a long-time public critic of the president, pretended to take offence at that claim. “Oh no, I’m a conservative, I disagree, they would arrest me, if I was a liberal I would get away with it,” he said. “Well, that’s true,” admitted Mr Cruz. Hannity then asked him if the law was clear on human trafficking, to which Mr Cruz uncomfortably admitted, “It is clear.” He then quickly turned his attention back to the White House. “Right now the biggest human trafficker on the face of the planet is Joseph Robinette Bidden Jr.” The group of migrants sent by Mr DeSantis to the Massachusetts island has now been transported to a large shelter operation supported by state agencies in Cape Cod. Following two nights on the island, agencies are now “coordinating efforts among state and local officials to ensure access to food, shelter and essential services for these men, women, and children,” according to Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker’s office. The governor also plans to activate up to 125 members of the Massachusetts National Guard. Mr DeSantis has faced widespread criticism after arranging flights for 50 migrants, including families with children, most of whom initially fled Venezuela, arriving unannounced in Massachusetts. He has defended the effort, pledging that there will be “more and more” to come from a $12m state-funded programme that he has promised to “exhaust”. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Ted Cruz Forced To Admit Trafficking Migrants To Marthas Vineyard Is Illegal
Camilla Says Her Late Mother-In-Law Queen Elizabeth II Had The Most 'wonderful Blue Eyes' And A Smile She'll Never Forget
Camilla Says Her Late Mother-In-Law Queen Elizabeth II Had The Most 'wonderful Blue Eyes' And A Smile She'll Never Forget
Camilla Says Her Late Mother-In-Law, Queen Elizabeth II, Had The Most 'wonderful Blue Eyes' And A Smile She'll Never Forget https://digitalarizonanews.com/camilla-says-her-late-mother-in-law-queen-elizabeth-ii-had-the-most-wonderful-blue-eyes-and-a-smile-shell-never-forget/ Camilla, the Queen Consort, paid tribute to her late mother-in-law in a BBC television interview. Queen Elizabeth II had “wonderful blue eyes” and an “unforgettable” smile, Camilla said.  The Queen Consort also praised the monarch for carving out her role among male world leaders. Loading Something is loading. Camilla, the Queen Consort, said Queen Elizabeth II had beautiful blue eyes and a smile she’ll never forget in a clip from a BBC interview released on Sunday.  The former Duchess of Cornwall’s compliments come nearly two weeks after the monarch died “peacefully” at her residence in Balmoral, Scotland at the age of 96. The comments also precede the Queen’s funeral, set to bring 2,000 attendees including President Joe Biden and members of the royal family together on Monday at Westminster Abbey for a service honoring the monarch’s life.  “She’s got those wonderful blue eyes,” Camilla, says in a clip of the interview, which will be broadcast in full at 8 p.m. BST on Sunday. “When she smiles, they light up her whole face. I’ll always remember that smile, you know, that smile is unforgettable.” Queen Elizabeth II and then Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, in 2005. Getty Images Elsewhere in the interview, Camilla touched upon how the Queen established herself as a formidable female force during a time when world leaders were primarily male.  “It must have been so difficult for her being a solitary woman. There weren’t women prime ministers or women presidents,” the Queen Consort said. “She was the only one, so I think she carved her own role.” Camilla’s association with the late monarch greatly evolved since the controversial start of her relationship with King Charles III in the 1990s.  Charles and Camilla’s romantic relationship reportedly dates back to 1986, when he was married to Princess Diana and she was married to Andrew Parker Bowles. The pair only went public as a couple in 1997. Queen Elizabeth II in Poundbury, Dorset, in 2016. Samir Hussein/Getty Images But it was only in 2000 when the Queen reportedly agreed to formally meet Camilla, according to The New York Times. Though the Queen was not present at their wedding in 2005, the years that passed showed that she and the monarch seemed to develop a close bond.   In February, Queen Elizabeth II made her approval of Camilla clear when she announced that she wanted her daughter-in-law to have the Queen Consort title when Charles III became king, ending years of confusion as to what her future royal title would be.  “When, in the fullness of time, my son Charles becomes King, I know you will give him and his wife Camilla the same support you have given me; and it is my sincere wish that, when the time comes, Camilla will be known as Queen Consort as she continues her own loyal service,” the Queen wrote in a statement reflecting over her 70-year-reign. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Camilla Says Her Late Mother-In-Law Queen Elizabeth II Had The Most 'wonderful Blue Eyes' And A Smile She'll Never Forget
Historian Douglas Brinkley Talks Democracy Presidential History At NIU Virtual Event
Historian Douglas Brinkley Talks Democracy Presidential History At NIU Virtual Event
Historian Douglas Brinkley Talks Democracy, Presidential History At NIU Virtual Event https://digitalarizonanews.com/historian-douglas-brinkley-talks-democracy-presidential-history-at-niu-virtual-event/ A screen grab of presidential historian Douglas Brinkley (left) and NIU dean Robert Brinkmann (right) engaging in discussion during a Sept. 15, 2022, virtual event put on by Northern Illinois University’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. (Megann Horstead) September 18, 2022 at 5:45 am CDT DeKALB – Northern Illinois University’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences hosted the latest in its Rebuilding Democracy Lecture Series this week, with discussion covering the current state of democracy, highs and lows of the presidency, elections and presidential influence on America’s standing across the world. The virtual event, moderated by NIU dean Robert Brinkmann, featured a special guest appearance by presidential historian Douglas Brinkley. It also included a Q&A session to engage those on hand for the event. “On a local level, I feel things function in a sense that we’re not pointing fingers at each other at a football game or a Little League game,” Brinkley said. But at the federal level, the public’s view of government isn’t always so rosy, he said. Brinkley said the public’s understanding of federal government shows that the nation has a problem on its hands. He said it’s prompted some to demonize the federal government and what public officials are doing. “That’s why believing in free and fair elections so that our voting is real matters so much,” Brinkley said. Brinkley acknowledged that people may have fear about the future of democracy after the 2020 election but said the state of the nation isn’t uniquely oppressive. He gave several examples, including the time when Abraham Lincoln’s name failed to appear on the ballot in seven Southern states. “Imagine you’re living in one of those seven states and the guy who’s president wasn’t even on the ballot,” Brinkley said. “That spelled a lot of dysfunction.” When asked if there’s anything good to take away from the legacies of former Presidents Warren Harding, Donald Trump and Richard Nixon, Brinkley said it’s complicated. Brinkley said the three former presidents are in the “doghouse of history” right now. “Those three presidents, for many people, are all about corruption,” he said. Nixon often is known for his part in the Watergate scandal that involved a break-in of the Democratic National Committee headquarters in Washington, D.C. Much like Nixon, Harding became the subject of scandal by engaging in business dealings with friends that led to him pinning the blame for a major corruption on a fall guy. Brinkley said it’s too soon to tell whether Trump will remain in the doghouse for what he did while in office. “Trump’s hard to judge because we don’t know if he’s a one-off asterisk president who served one term,” Brinkley said. “But if he got reelected, it means now there’s something more. He’s kind of a movement, Trump, more than just a president. His idea is to kind of destroy the institution of the presidency.” But Brinkley said he believes Trump has helped Nixon’s legacy and is helping pave the way for him to revise his presidential history. “I don’t think his revision will ever go too far,” Brinkley said. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Historian Douglas Brinkley Talks Democracy Presidential History At NIU Virtual Event
Border Wall Construction Resumes Under President Joe Biden
Border Wall Construction Resumes Under President Joe Biden
Border Wall Construction Resumes Under President Joe Biden https://digitalarizonanews.com/border-wall-construction-resumes-under-president-joe-biden/ Myles Traphagen didn’t need a government presentation to tell him that border wall construction was kicking back up. He saw everything he needed on a recent visit to the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge and the Coronado National Forest, near the town of Sasabe in southern Arizona. As the borderlands coordinator for the Wildlands Network, Traphagen had visited the area many times before. It was among the sites he examined in an extensive report published in July documenting the environmental impact of the border wall expansion under President Donald Trump — President Joe Biden paused the construction shortly after his inauguration. “It’s feeling like it felt during border wall construction with Trump.” Traphagen spotted a new staging area and water holding tanks under construction. Fixed to the wall were new signs citing an Arizona trespassing law. A security guard at the scene told him construction was resuming. Later, a Border Patrol agent ordered him to leave the area. “It’s feeling like it felt during border wall construction with Trump,” Traphagen told The Intercept. “I hadn’t felt that on the border in a year and a half, and now it’s like, oh, shit, here we go again.” Six days after Traphagen’s visit, U.S. Customs and Border Protection confirmed that work on the border wall that began under Trump is revving back up under Biden. In an online presentation Wednesday, CBP — the largest division of the Department of Homeland Security and home to the Border Patrol — detailed plans to address environmental damage brought on by the former president’s signature campaign promise and confirmed that the wall will remain a permanent fixture of the Southwest for generations to come. The resumed operations will range from repairing gates and roads to filling gaps in the wall that were left following the pause on construction that Biden initiated in January 2021. The wall’s environmental harms have been particularly acute in southern Arizona, where CBP used explosives to blast through large swaths of protected land — including sacred Native American burial grounds and one-of-a-kind wildlife habitats — in service of Trump’s most expansive border wall extensions. Starting next month, contractors will return to the Sonoran Desert in Arizona to resume work on the wall, senior CBP officials said in a public webinar. In the months since Biden’s pause began, DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas approved several so-called remediation projects related to the border wall. The first plan that CBP presented for public comment was in the Tucson sector, the Border Patrol’s largest area of operations and site of Trump’s most dramatic and controversial border wall construction. In early 2020, the press was invited to watch as Border Patrol and Department of Defense officials blew apart chunks of the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, south of Tucson, to make way for Trump’s wall. The display followed months of protests, as the administration tapped into a rare desert aquifer that feeds Quitobaquito Springs, an oasis that the Hia-Ced O’odham people have held sacred for thousands of years. Two Hia-Ced O’odham women were later arrested, strip-searched, and held incommunicado after praying and protesting at the construction site. Earlier this year, one of the two women, Amber Ortega, was found not guilty of the charges after a federal judge ruled that the prosecution violated her rights under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. The controversial work, which included construction on federally designated wilderness, was permitted under the Real ID Act. Created in the wake of the September 11 attacks, the act grants DHS the authority to waive any law, including bedrock statutes meant to safeguard the environment and areas of cultural significance, to build border barriers in the name of national security. When CBP collected public comment on its proposed plans earlier this year, the vast majority were focused on Arizona, with most addressing the wall’s impact on wildlife migration and its exacerbation of flooding dangers. “Many comments specifically noted impacts to the Mexican gray wolf, jaguar, Sonoran Desert pronghorn, bighorn sheep, ocelot, javelina, mountain lion, bear, and other wildlife,” CBP noted in a summary report on its Tucson Sector feedback. “Some commenters suggested removing barrier and leaving flood gates open to address potential impacts.” In the plans laid out last week, CBP said it would finish drainages and low-water crossings in southern Arizona and in some cases reengineer border wall designs to allow for water flow. Two contracts have already been awarded for work in the state, the agency said, adding that the work in Arizona would include filling “small gaps” in the border wall that remained following Biden’s pause. CBP described similar operations along the border in other states. When asked if CBP envisioned a day when the barriers might be removed, the agency said it did not. “At this point in time,” said Shelly Barnes, the environmental planning lead for the Border Patrol’s infrastructure portfolio, “there are no current plans to remove sections of the barrier.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Border Wall Construction Resumes Under President Joe Biden
Trump Claims That Germans May Be
Trump Claims That Germans May Be
Trump Claims That Germans May Be https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-claims-that-germans-may-be/ United States: Earlier this month, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz expressed optimism that the country will “probably” make it through the winter if Russia cuts its gas supply. Former President Donald Trump said during his Save America rally in Youngstown, Ohio on Saturday that a shortfall in Russian energy supplies could leave the Germans “without a country.” He further said that he had long warned Germany of such a threat, and had even given former Chancellor Angela Merkel a white flag to “surrender” to Russia. “If Russia provides 72% of your energy, raise the white flag, because you will surrender very soon. Who thought this would happen sooner?” Trump said. The former president also noted that Berlin is currently forced to return to the “old-fashioned things” using coal as a fuel because it has no other choice. The 45th president of the United States spoke earlier this month after German Chancellor Olaf Scholz dismissed the possibility of suspending gas imports from Russia, despite the fact that only small amounts are currently coming. are. He further said that Berlin had made timely decisions on storing gas in Germany’s underground gas storage facilities, starting coal-fired power plants and building liquefied natural gas terminals. The German chancellor also claimed that “if Russia stops deliveries, which it continues to reduce, we can increase supplies from Norway, the Netherlands and Western Europe.” Russian gas giant Gazprom announced that it had received a warning from Rostekhnadzor, the country’s technical watchdog, about the only remaining operational engine malfunction for the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline, and that the facility was closed indefinitely, Till then this comment did not come. The issues were resolved. Nord Stream 1, the main pipeline supplying Russian natural gas to Europe, has been operating at 40% capacity since mid-June and 20% capacity since late July. Small amounts were attributed to problems with the maintenance and repair of Siemens turbines during the West’s anti-Russian sanctions, shortly after Russia launched a special campaign to demilitarize and de-nazify Ukraine on 24 February. . was imposed later. This was in response to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov that Nord Stream 1’s operation was suspended as a result of Western sanctions. He stressed that Moscow and Gazprom are “committed to their obligations and contracts and continue to do so,” adding that they “cannot fulfill them at this time only because of sanctions and sanctions imposed by the US and its allies”. As a result of the sanctions, gas and electricity prices in Europe rose to all-time highs, including in Germany, where inflation hit a 40-year high of 8.8 percent in August. Germans were also warned against taking daily hot baths, amid a flurry of recommendations to save water in their apartment buildings. Meanwhile, the leading Munich-based think tank Ifo has warned that a rise in energy prices is “wreaking havoc” on the German economy and could result in a 0.3% drop in the country’s GDP next year compared to June. . There has been a steep decline from estimates. 3.7% increase. Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid and Holocaust survivors arrive in Berlin Poland and Germany Talk About Opening a Maintenance Facility for Ukrainian Weapons Foreign businesses in China fighting for survival prepare for whatever comes next Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Claims That Germans May Be
Editorial: Rob Bonta Is Right About Amazon California Globe
Editorial: Rob Bonta Is Right About Amazon California Globe
Editorial: Rob Bonta Is Right About Amazon – California Globe https://digitalarizonanews.com/editorial-rob-bonta-is-right-about-amazon-california-globe/ Attorney General Rob Bonta. (Photo: Kevin Sanders for California Globe) The California Globe has not found much opportunity to praise elected California Democrats. But Attorney General Rob Bonta is right to sue Amazon for its anti-competitive, unfair, and just plain piggish policies. Conservatives ought to join liberals who are finally taking the forceful stand against the tech monopolies that conservatives have promised for years, but seldom delivered. The Globe has quite a bit of personal experience here. Google routinely demonetizes legitimate stories from the California Globe for no discernible reason. Obviously, Google does not want its advertisers to see their brands placed next to nude photos or foul language or images of graphic violence. We understand that (and agree). We painstakingly follow their published rules, since Google holds a near monopoly in the business of serving network ads. A site like ours cannot stay in business if it fails to remain in the good graces of the tastemakers at Google. So why was a story like this one demonetized? It’s about ultra-late-term abortion, but included no graphic images, no foul language, nothing outside the rules. Unless, apparently, you happen to support the practice of late-term abortion. There’s no appeal, no second chance, you just get a notice that says you’ve been demonetized, and the message is clear: Don’t run stories like this if you want to remain in business. This California Globe story was demonetized because it included the point of view that late-term abortion is equivalent to infanticide. Facebook is another constant scold. During our wildly successful bumper sticker campaign against the outrageous excesses of the lockdowns, our ads were constantly declined. No reason given. The luck of knowing a few higher-ups at Facebook was the only thing that stood between the Globe and permanent banishment. And now it’s been revealed that Facebook was actually scanning the private messages of people it suspected of wrongthink regarding January 6. Does anyone realize how troubling it is to have private companies tattling on Americans’ private conversations? It would possibly be believable that these were the innocent overreactions of rogue individuals. Except that these breaches of our civil liberties always go in the same direction. It’s always liberals policing, demonetizing, scolding, de-platforming, and shadow-banning conservatives. Why weren’t the private messages of people plotting 100 nights of BLM riots in Portland similarly shared with the authorities? You know why, and so do we. Because the people at Facebook consider the riots in Portland, Seattle and Minneapolis righteous, while the riot at the Capital represents an existential threat to democracy. These distinctions are in the eye of very few beholders, and they all work in Silicon Valley. Which brings us to Bonta’s decision to file what is so far the biggest and most meaningful threat to Amazon’s, incredibly unethical business practice of forcing its vendors not to sell their wares cheaper elsewhere. At a news conference on Wednesday, AG Bonta said, “If you think about Californians paying even just a little bit more for every product they purchased online over the course of a year, let alone a decade, which is what is at issue here, the collective magnitude of harm here is very far-reaching. … The ‘everything store’ has effectively set a price floor, costing Californians more for just about everything.” What that means is that if a rival e-commerce company came up with, say, a cheaper way to deliver, and could thus sell diapers more cheaply than Amazon, Amazon’s contract would force that vendor to raise the price at the cheaper site or else be banned from Amazon. That just seems unfair on its face, but it’s doubly so when you consider exactly how dominant Amazon has become in the e-commerce marketplace, and how it got that way. Let’s take a look at books, the original category killer. Books are now a trivial portion of Amazon’s business, and an increasingly trivial part of the public discourse as the populace gets stupider and stupider. But it’s an instructive example, because of the way Amazon’s business practices completely unraveled an industry that plays a meaningful role in the intellectual life of our citizenry. The company that owns California Globe, Sea of Reeds Media, also owns a site devoted to books, Book and Film Globe, and also the type of small, quaint, independent bookstore that every town should have — The Book House in Millburn, New Jersey. Jared Kushner’s memoir, Breaking History, hit No. 1 on the New York Times list of bestsellers. The founder of this company played a small role in the process of Breaking History, the White House memoir of former Trump senior advisor Jared Kushner (buy it here!). The team was thrilled when the book hit No. 1 on the New York Times best seller list. A feat made all the more delicious considering the shockingly personal pan it received in the Times itself. Not to mention an outright lie by California Congressman Eric Swalwell, who falsely accused Ivanka Trump of misstating that the book had been No. 1 on Amazon. (The world still awaits the congressman‘s apology, but the same groups that constantly fact check California Globe apparently aren’t as interested in the truthfulness of our elected representatives.) Any independent bookstore has a hard time competing against Amazon. But here’s some data for you. The list price of Breaking History is $35. The best price The Book House can get from its distributor is $20.30. So if the store marks it up $5 — a razor thin 24% profit margin — it sells for $25.30. Amazon sells the book for $21.12 — its retail price is only 82 cents higher than an indie’s wholesale price. This upends the model of retail stores that’s existed since the dawn of money. The nicest thing one could say about Amazon’s monopolistic, hog-like behavior is that it’s not ideological. Amazon bullies the left and right equally. So at least there is that. But it’s long overdue that elected officials like Bonta, who are in office to protect both our commercial interests and broader societal interests like access to a wide variety of ideas, are finally doing their job. It is ironic that conservatives, who have been crying for a decade about Big Tech’s obvious progressive lean, got virtually nothing accomplished on this front. It’s the liberals who are finally taking a look at Section 230 and other Clinton-era Big Tech pantsings. Obviously, progressives leading the charge now portray it as some sort of heroic stand against people who put on Viking hats and march on the capital. Rather than, for instance, the total de-platforming of the leader of the opposition party. But whatever. At least they’re doing something, and hopefully these changes will benefit all sides. For now, Godspeed to Attorney General Bonta, and let’s hope Amazon embraces the idea that everyone, including Amazon workers and customers, will benefit if stores other than Amazon survive. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Editorial: Rob Bonta Is Right About Amazon California Globe
YOUR OPINION: President Or Dictator
YOUR OPINION: President Or Dictator
YOUR OPINION: President Or Dictator https://digitalarizonanews.com/your-opinion-president-or-dictator/ Daniel Kliethermes, New Bloomfield Dear Editor, The speech President Biden gave Thursday night was a slap in the face to the American people, especially Republicans who are still wanting change in America, the way President Trump did in his four years in office. Biden never talked about the problems surrounding his administration, but he blames them on the previous administration that supposedly cause this mess. During President Trump’s four years in office, this country flourished and was on the right track to be great again. Of course there were riots in the streets after the Floyd killing that had no way of being stopped; most of the rioters broke into businesses and were not even part of the protesters but stole items instead of being part of the protest. In Biden’s administration, we have high inflation, high gas prices and high interest rates; we have killings in the streets of major cities that are mostly run by Democrats; we have fentanyl killing American kids and adults, defunding the police which now has a low morale because their treated like criminals especially if they shot a black man or woman trying to defend themselves. The Democratic regime is not doing a damn thing about it and, in my opinion, they just don’t care because it doesn’t fit their agenda. His speech was full of hate for Trump supporters and called them MAGA extremist and fascist, I don’t know what he is trying to accomplish, but I guess he is trying to scare the Republican voters into voting for the Democrats. Well, he’s just wasting his breath. He approved 89,000 more IRS agents to help catch taxpayers who make over $400,000 that try to cheat on their taxes. Now I don’t know the percentage of the people that make that much, but we don’t need those IRS agents. It is a possibility that he will you use these agents to harass Republican voters and audit them because they cannot afford an attorney like big businesses and harass you with search warrants and subpoenas. Trust me they can find out if you’re a Republican when you file your taxes. This could happen to every Trump supporter when you file your taxes. This is not far from being a dictatorship to control their people. Be prepared if the Democrats keep control, keep that in mind. God help us. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
YOUR OPINION: President Or Dictator
Hillary Clinton Exaggerates Absence Of Classified Information In Her Emails
Hillary Clinton Exaggerates Absence Of Classified Information In Her Emails
Hillary Clinton Exaggerates Absence Of Classified Information In Her Emails https://digitalarizonanews.com/hillary-clinton-exaggerates-absence-of-classified-information-in-her-emails/ Jon Greenberg and Maria Ramirez Uribe, PolitiFact.com  |  Austin American-Statesman Hillary Clinton: “I had zero emails that were classified.” PolitiFact’s ruling: Half True Here’s why: Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pushed back against comparisons between her email probe and the search on former President Donald Trump’s Florida home. In a Sept. 6 Twitter thread, Clinton said “the right is trying to make this about me again. “The fact is that I had zero emails that were classified,” Clinton claimed. “I’m more tired of talking about this than anyone, but here we are.” We have previously compared Clinton’s emails with the FBI’s search on Mar-a-Lago and have fact-checked other claims she has made about her emails. Over the years, the facts about the emails have become clearer. In 2016, Clinton said she “never received nor sent any material that was marked classified” on her private email server while secretary of state. We rated that False. Since then, the State Department and Justice Department have published new information from their own investigations of the emails.  Some of Clinton’s emails contained classified information, but none were found to be marked as such.  What we know about the markings in Clinton’s emails Clinton’s email troubles started in 2014, when the House Select Committee on Benghazi asked the State Department for all of her emails. The department didn’t have them all because, instead of using only the State Department email system (with an email address ending in @state.gov), Clinton used a personal email address (ending in @clintonemail.com) housed on private servers in her Chappaqua, New York, home. In 2014, Clinton’s lawyers combed through the private server and turned over about 30,000 work-related emails to the State Department and deleted the rest, which Clinton said involved personal matters, such as her daughter’s wedding plans. On July 5, 2016, the FBI released its findings on an investigation into Clinton’s emails. Then-FBI Director James Comey said of the 30,000 emails, 113 were determined to have contained classified information at the time they were sent. Comey said three of those had a marking indicating they were classified, and that 2,000 more were marked as classified after the fact by various agencies. The next day, the State Department explained what the three document markings suggesting classified material were all about. They had to do with what is known as “call sheets,” not classified material. Before a secretary of state calls a foreign leader, staff members prepare a guide known as a call sheet. It gives the context for the call and the key points to hit during the conversation. Early in the process, a call sheet might be marked as sensitive, but by the time it reaches the secretary, it isn’t. “The process is then to move the call sheet, to change its markings to unclassified and deliver it to the secretary in a form that he or she can use,” said then-State Department spokesperson John Kirby July 6, 2016, adding that the confidential markings resulted from human error.  In a July 7, 2016, congressional hearing, Comey said he had not heard what the State Department had said about the call sheets. He explained that classified documents come with headers that give the classification level. Comey acknowledged that the documents in Clinton’s email had no headers. Asked whether the lack of a header would have told Clinton that the material was unclassified, Comey said, “That would be a reasonable inference.” The State Department cited Clinton for three security violations for failing to follow department protocols. In 2017, after she appealed, the department dropped two, but affirmed one.  A 2018 Justice Department review of how the FBI handled its investigation noted that prosecutors found no evidence that Clinton and her colleagues ever intended to put classified materials into their email exchanges. “The emails in question lacked proper classification markings,” the report said. “The senders often refrained from using specific classified facts or terms in emails and worded emails carefully in an attempt to ‘talk around’ classified information.” State Department’s own review of Clinton’s email use The State Department reviewed thousands of documents in Clinton’s emails, and questioned dozens of State Department employees. The investigation took place primarily during Donald Trump’s presidency, running from July 2016 to September 2019. It focused on the general problem of spillage, the sharing of unmarked but nevertheless classified details. The investigation found 38 people were responsible for 91 violations. It found 497 additional violations in which no one could be held culpable.  The State Department concluded that Clinton’s use of a private email server “carried an increased risk of compromise or inadvertent disclosure.” (The 2018 Justice Department review found no evidence that the server was hacked.)  On the other hand, State Department investigators concluded that although staff members sometimes shared information that they shouldn’t have, by and large, they “were aware of security policies and did their best to implement them in their operations.” They noted that “none of the emails at issue in this review were marked as classified.” They also said there was “no persuasive evidence of systemic, deliberate mishandling of classified information.” Clinton’s longtime attorney, David Kendall, highlighted the State Department’s findings as evidence for Clinton’s claim.  Ambiguities in the classification system There is debate over the classification of material in the emails. “There is no one standard for classification,” Thomas Blanton, the director of the National Security Archive at George Washington University, told PolitiFact in early August. “It’s in the eye of the beholder. We have published thousands of examples of documents and parts of documents that one agency considered declassified and another agency kept classified; and in hundreds of cases, the difference was between two components of the same agency.” Blanton said that in Clinton’s case, he saw signs of a rift between the State Department and intelligence agencies. The State Department reviewers, he said, initially found no classified material, while the intelligence agencies said there were potentially hundreds of instances. Our ruling Clinton claimed she had “zero emails that were classified.”  At the conclusion of all investigations, no documents included in her emails were found to be marked as classified.  However, hundreds of bits of information that State Department officials considered classified did end up in emails on Clinton’s private server. Clinton is technically correct, but she sidesteps the references to classified information that staffers introduced into the email chains. We rate this claim Half True. Our Sources Email exchange with David Merrill, Hillary Clinton’s attorney, Sep. 8, 2022 Phone interview with Elizabeth Goitein, Senior Director of Liberty & National Security at Brennan Center for Justice at NYU Law, Sep. 9, 2022 PolitiFact, Read the Mar-a-Lago search warrant, what agents took, Aug. 12, 2022 Hillary Clinton, Tweet, Sep. 6, 2022 US House Committee on Government Oversight and Reform, Hearing: Comey testimony, July 7, 2016 U.S. Justice Department, A Review of Various Actions by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Department of Justice in Advance of the 2016 Election, June 2018 PolitiFact, Comparing Hillary Clinton’s emails and Donald Trump’s boxes of files, Aug. 9, 2022 Politifact, Fact-checking Benghazi: The rhetoric hasn’t matched up with reality, May 16, 2014 FBI, Statement by FBI Director James B. Comey on the Investigation of Secretary Hillary Clinton’s Use of a Personal E-Mail System, July, 5 2016 House Committee on Oversight and Reform, FBI Director Comey: Emails Were Not Properly Marked as Classified, July 7, 2016 U.S. Department of State, Daily Press Briefing, July 6, 2016 Department of State Office of Information Security, DS Report on Security Incidents Related to Potentially Classified Emails sent to Former Secretary of State Clinton’s Private Email Serve, Sep. 13, 2019 USC Dornsife, What is classified information, and who gets to decide?, May 17, 2017 PolitiFact, Hillary Clinton says none of her emails had classification headers, Sep. 7, 2016 Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Hillary Clinton Exaggerates Absence Of Classified Information In Her Emails
Serbia Police Clash With Right-Wing Protesters At LGBTQ March
Serbia Police Clash With Right-Wing Protesters At LGBTQ March
Serbia Police Clash With Right-Wing Protesters At LGBTQ March https://digitalarizonanews.com/serbia-police-clash-with-right-wing-protesters-at-lgbtq-march/ Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com BELGRADE, Sept 17 (Reuters) – Police clashed with right-wing protesters on Saturday as several thousand people joined an LGBTQ march in Serbia to mark the end of EuroPride week, an event staged in a different European city each year. Police clashed with two right-wing groups trying to disrupt the march, Prime Minister Ana Brnabic said, adding that 10 police officers were slightly injured, five police cars damaged and 64 protesters arrested. “I am very proud that we managed to avoid more serious incidents,” Brnabic, who herself is Serbia’s first gay prime minister, told reporters. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Following protests by nationalists and religious groups, the government had banned the march last week. But faced with calls by European Union officials and human rights activists, it allowed a shortened route for the march. Anti-LGTBQ protesters shout slogans in front of St. Marco church during the European LGBTQ pride march in Belgrade, Serbia, September 17, 2022. REUTERS/Zorana Jevtic Those participating walked several hundred metres to the Tsmajdan stadium where a concert took place. The United States’ ambassador to Serbia, Christopher Hill, and the European parliament’s special rapporteur for Serbia, Vladimir Bilcik, joined the march. Previous Serbian governments have banned Pride parades, drawing criticism from human rights groups and others. Some Pride marches in the early 2000s met with fierce opposition and were marred by violence. But recent Pride marches in Serbia have passed off peacefully, a change cited by EuroPride organisers as one reason Belgrade was chosen as this year’s host. Copenhagen was the host in 2021. Serbia is a candidate to join the EU, but it must first meet demands to improve the rule of law and its record on human and minority rights. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Ivana Sekularac; Editing by Christina Fincher Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Serbia Police Clash With Right-Wing Protesters At LGBTQ March
Susan C. Sue Andler Obituary (2022) Madison.com
Susan C. Sue Andler Obituary (2022) Madison.com
Susan C. “Sue” Andler Obituary (2022) Madison.com https://digitalarizonanews.com/susan-c-sue-andler-obituary-2022-madison-com/ Susan C. “Sue” Andler July 16, 1946 – Sept. 11, 2022 BEAVER DAM – Susan C. “Sue” Andler, age 76, passed away at her home on Sunday, September 11, 2022. Susan was born on July 16, 1946, to Thomas and Florence (Powers) Daley in Columbus. She was married to John O. Andler on June 7, 1975, at St. Columbkille Catholic Church, Town of Elba and together raised three children. To know Susan was to know how much fun she was, how much she loved to laugh, and if the laugh was really good – how her eyes twinkled when she did so. One of the highlights of her year was St. Patrick’s Day, and some of her best friends enjoyed celebrating it with her for decades. Susan also loved a great bartender and tavern chatter over a gin martini. She really just loved people – her love for her friends and family was unending. Susan was filled with creativity. For many years she expressed it through selling hand-painted creations at craft sales at her home. She also proudly helped to create the Sugar Plum Fair, a parish-wide craft sale that, for many years, was a hugely successful fundraiser for St. Jerome’s. Above all else, Susan loved being a wife, mother and grandmother. She and her husband, John, were true partners in life and love. They met in 6th grade, dated in adulthood, were married 47 years, and she loved John with every bit of her whole heart. Susan found immense joy raising three children. She had all the time in the world for them, and her love was endless. She delighted in talking with them daily and hearing the tales of the day – no detail was too small or ever forgotten. Her world was filled with great sorrow when her son, John Thomas, passed away in 2021. Susan was grateful that she had two wonderful sons-in-law that melded right into the family as if they’d always been there. The one thing she loved the most of all was being a grandmother. Her relationships with her beloved grandchildren brought her pure joy and seeing or talking to them was always the best part of her day. Sue is survived by her husband John of Beaver Dam; two daughters: Beth (Rob) Jens of Beaver Dam and Sarah (Grant) Frautschi of Madison; two grandchildren: Natalie and Jack Jens; one sister, Ann Ferguson of Brookfield; one brother, Joseph (Nancy) Daley of Wauwatosa; brother-in-law, Mike Kauth of Mesa, AZ; nieces: nephews, other relatives and friends. She was preceded in death by her parents; son, John Thomas in 2021; sister, Ellen Kauth; brother-in-law, Sheldon Ferguson. A private family memorial mass will be held at a later date with inurnment at St. Columbkille Cemetery. A special thanks to the exceptional staff at Hillside Hospice. Memorials may be directed to Hillside Hospice or St. Jerome Church Endowment Fund. We encourage you to share your online condolences with Sue’s family at jensenfuneralandcremation.com. Published by Madison.com on Sep. 18, 2022. 34465541-95D0-45B0-BEEB-B9E0361A315A To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Susan C. Sue Andler Obituary (2022) Madison.com
Stanley Clyde Boyle Obituary (2022) St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Stanley Clyde Boyle Obituary (2022) St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Stanley Clyde Boyle Obituary (2022) St. Louis Post-Dispatch https://digitalarizonanews.com/stanley-clyde-boyle-obituary-2022-st-louis-post-dispatch/ Boyle, Stanley Clyde Stanley Clyde Boyle, beloved husband, father, grandfather, brother and uncle, passed away suddenly on September 9, 2022 at the age of 89. He is survived by his loving wife Christie, his children, Stan Jr. (Susan), Lauren Boyle and Lisa Hoffmann (Adam). He was preceded in death by his son John and his sister Beverly Ross. He is also survived by six grandchildren, Ryan, John, Mike, Sarah, Hannah and Maddie, his sister Elaine Sanders (Jack) and numerous nieces and nephews. Stan was born in St. Louis and graduated from Western Military Academy. He received a Bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering from Washington University, followed by Master’s degrees in Business Administration and Computer Science. He worked for McDonnell Douglas for 34 years. Stan volunteered as an arbiter for the BBB, served as senior warden at Grace Church and began a second career as a fine woodworker, designing/crafting beautiful bowls, vases, and other items and selling them at art fairs where he developed quite a following. He was married to Christie (Hoffman) for almost 57 years and together they were active at Grace Church, raised four children and traveled. Stan loved to fish, golf, winter in Tucson, AZ after retirement, and spend time with family. Services: Funeral service and reception: October 5 at 2 pm at Grace Episcopal Church, 514 E. Argonne, Kirkwood. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Grace Episcopal Church Legacy Fund. Published by St. Louis Post-Dispatch on Sep. 18, 2022. 34465541-95D0-45B0-BEEB-B9E0361A315A To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Stanley Clyde Boyle Obituary (2022) St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Minneapolis: This Week (09/25/2022)
Minneapolis: This Week (09/25/2022)
Minneapolis: This Week (09/25/2022) https://digitalarizonanews.com/minneapolis-this-week-09-25-2022/ 09/19 Tenacious D with DJ Douggpound at Surly Brewing Festival Field Read More Tenacious D Speaking of censored cover artwork – what is up with the censoring of Tenacious D’s third album, Rize of the Phoenix? I had no issues with the album artwork, but I guess people are sensitive to these sort of things … 09/19/2022 Monday Tenacious D with DJ Douggpound at Surly Brewing Festival Field first-avenue.com Of all the shows taking place in Minneapolis on September 19, you’re probably at this Tenacious D show at Surly Brewing Festival Field. Of course, it’s sold out, making this one of the hottest ticket in town. Acclaimed rock duo Tenacious D will be celebrating their delayed celebration of their platinum-certified self-titled debut album, which came out in September 2001. People love the band, thanks to their two superstars: funnyman Jack Black and Kyle Gass. We last wrote about the band in our Sex Sells: Comedy Edition: “What is up with the censoring of Tenacious D’s third album, Rize of the Phoenix? I had no issues with the album artwork, but I guess people are sensitive to these sort of things. It would’ve been less subtle if they had just called the album “Rise of the Penis”, you know?” DJ Douggpound to open. Tour dates: Sep 7 Danville, VA, US Blue Ridge Rock Festival Sep 8 Lynchburg, VA, US Blue Ridge Rock Festival Sep 9 Wilmington, NC, US Live Oak Bank Pavilion Sep 11 hiladelphia, PA, US Skyline Stage, Mann Center Sep 13 Gilford, NH, US Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion Sep 14 Bridgeport, CT, US Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater Sep 16 Cuyahoga Falls, OH, US Blossom Music Center Sep 18 Milwaukee, WI, US BMO Harris Pavilion Sep 19 Minneapolis, MN, US Surly Brewing Festival Field Sep 20 Cedar Rapids, IA, US McGrath Amphitheatre Sep 22 Louisville, KY, US Louder Than Life Festival 09/24 Julia Jacklin with Katy Kirby at Fine Line Read More Julia Jacklin Australian singer/songwriter Julia Jacklin will be releasing her second album Crushing on February 22nd. In support of the new record, Jacklin will be doing a world tour this year. .… Katy Kirby Austin, TX’s Sun June is teaming up with Katy Kirby for a tour. Sun June recently shared the new single “Reminded,” from the expanded version of their acclaimed record, Somewhere (Run For Cover and Keeled Scales). .… 09/24/2022 Saturday Julia Jacklin with Katy Kirby at Fine Line first-avenue.com Australian singer-songwriter Julia Jacklin is back on tour, this time in support of her new album Pre Pleasure. Katy Kirby to open. Tour dates: 09/09 – Austin, TX @ Mohawk # 09/10 – Dallas, TX @ The Studio at The Factory # 09/12 – Nashville, TN @ The Basement East # 09/13 – Atlanta, GA @ Terminal West # 09/15 – Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club # 09/16 – Brooklyn, NY @ Brooklyn Steel # 09/17 – Philadelphia, PA @ Underground Arts # 09/18 – Boston, MA @ Paradise Rock Club # 09/20 – Montreal, QC @ Corona Theatre $ 09/21 – Toronto, ON @ Phoenix Concert Theatre $ 09/22 – Grand Rapids, MI @ Calvin University $ 09/23 – Chicago, IL @ Thalia Hall $ 09/24 – Minneapolis, MN @ Fine Line $ 09/26 – Denver, CO @ Bluebird Theater $ 09/27 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge $ 09/29 – Vancouver, BC @ Commodore Ballroom $ 09/30 – Seattle, WA @ The Crocodile $ 10/01 – Seattle, WA @ The Crocodile (SOLO) $ 10/02 – Portland, OR @ Revolution Hall $ 10/04 – San Francisco, CA @ The Fillmore $ 10/05 – Solana Beach, CA @ Belly Up Tavern $ 10/07 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Fonda Theatre $ 10/08 – Phoenix, AZ @ Crescent Ballroom $ 11/03 – Dublin, Ireland @ Vicar Street & 11/05 – Glasgow, Scotland @ SWG3 TV Studio & 11/06 – Manchester, UK @ The Ritz & 11/07 – Birmingham, UK @ The Mill & 11/09 – Bristol, UK @ SWX & 11/10 – Brighton, UK @ Chalk & 11/11 – London, UK @ Roundhouse & 11/13 – Paris, France @ La Maroquinerie & 11/14 – Antwerp, Belgium @ Trix Club & 11/15 – Cologne, Germany @ Club Bahnhof Ehrenfeld & 11/17 – Amsterdam, Netherlands @ Paradiso & 11/18 – Hamburg, Germany @ Knust & 11/20 – Oslo, Norway @ Parkteatret & 11/21 – Stockholm, Sweden @ Slaktkyrkan & 11/22 – Copenhagen, Denmark @ Dr Koncerthuset & 11/24 – Berlin, Germany @ Columbia Theatre & 11/25 – Munich, Germany @ Strom & 11/26 – Zurich, Switzerland @ Plaza & 11/27 – Milan, Italy @ Magnolia & 11/29 – Barcelona, Spain @ Apolo & 11/30 – Madrid, Spain @ SalaMon & 12/01 – Lisbon, Portugal @ Lav & # w/ Kara Jackson $ w/ Katy Kirby & w/ Erin Rae 09/24 The Gaslight Anthem with Tigers Jaw at Fillmore Read More The Gaslight Anthem New Jersey’s The Gaslight Anthem is currently on tour in support of their latest album Get Hurt, out now on Island Records. You may recall that when we talked to Matt Pinfield in 2012, he is quoted to say that the punk rock band’s song “45” was .… 09/24/2022 Saturday The Gaslight Anthem with Tigers Jaw at Fillmore livenation.com This is The Gaslight Anthem’s first headline tour in four years… and, of course, they sold out the Fillmore in Minneapolis. Frontman Brian Fallon announced, “I am very pleased to announce to you all that The Gaslight Anthem is returning to full time status as a band. We’re also beginning to write new songs for what will be our sixth LP. We’re looking forward to the future and seeing you all again. We want to thank you for staying with us.” Tigers Jaw to open. Tour dates: 09/13 – Portland, OR – Roseland Theatre † 09/14 – Seattle, WA – Showbox SODO † 09/16 – San Francisco, CA – The Masonic † 09/17 – Hollywood, CA – Hollywood Palladium † 09/18 – Tempe, AZ – The Marquee Theatre † 09/20 – Salt Lake City, UT – The Union † 09/21 – Denver, CO – The Fillmore Auditorium † 09/23 – Kansas City, MO – Midland Theatre † 09/24 – Minneapolis, MN – The Fillmore Minneapolis † 09/26 – Chicago, IL – Riviera Theatre † 09/27 – McKees Rocks, PA – Roxian Theatre † 09/30 – Niagara Falls, NY – The Rapids Theatre ^ 10/01 – Toronto, ONT – RBC Echo Beach ^ 10/02 – Detroit, MI – The Fillmore Detroit ^ 10/04 – Boston, MA – MGM Music Hall at Fenway ^ 10/05 – Washington, DC – The Anthem ^ 10/07 – Philadelphia, PA – The Met Philadelphia ^ 10/08 – Holmdel, NJ – PNC Bank Arts Center ^ † w/ special guest Tigers Jaw ^ w/ special guest Jeff Rosenstock 09/25 Tamino at Fine Line Read More Radiohead Radiohead was called On A Friday in 1995 because that’s when they met to rehearse. Oasis originally named themselves after a Beatles song called “The Rain” … 09/25/2022 Sunday Tamino at Fine Line first-avenue.com The last time we heard from Belgium’s Tamino, he was enjoying some sold out shows in late 2018. That show was recorded and released as Live at Ancienne Belgique, featuring a cover of “Seasons” by Chris Cornell, and a special appearance by Radiohead’s Colin Greenwood, playing bass on “Indigo Night” and “So It Goes”. We are told that Greenwood will be joining Tamino on this 2022 USA tour…. so Radiohead fans, here’s your chance to say hi. Tamino’s forthcoming album Sahar will be out September 23rd on Djinn/Secretly Distribution. Tour dates: Sep 15 Philadelphia, PA, US Johnny Brenda’s Sep 16 Camden, NJ, US XPoNential Music Festival Sep 19 Cambridge, MA, US The Sinclair Music Hall Sep 20 Montreal, QC, Canada Club Soda Sep 21 Toronto, ON, Canada Horseshoe Tavern Sep 22 Urbana, IL, US Pygmalion Music Festival Sep 24 Chicago, IL, US Lincoln Hall Sep 25 Minneapolis, MN, US Fine Line Sep 28 Seattle, WA, US Neumos Sep 29 Portland, OR, US Doug Fir Lounge Oct 2 San Francisco, CA, US The Independent Oct 3 Los Angeles (LA), CA, US Regent Theater Oct 4 Los Angeles (LA), CA, US Regent Theater Oct 5 Phoenix, AZ, US The Rebel Lounge Oct 7 Austin, TX, US Austin City Limits Oct 9 Atlanta, GA, US Terminal West Oct 11 Washington, DC, US Black Cat Oct 12 Brooklyn, NY, US Music Hall of Williamsburg Oct 13 Brooklyn, NY, US Music Hall of Williamsburg Nov 21 Paris, France Le Trianon Nov 22 Paris, France Le Trianon Nov 24 London, UK KOKO Nov 25 London, UK KOKO Nov 29 Cologne, Germany Gloria Theater Nov 30 Berlin, Germany Metropol Dec 2 Amsterdam, Netherlands Paradiso Dec 3 Amsterdam, Netherlands Paradiso Dec 5 Brussels, Belgium Royal Circus Dec 6 Brussels, Belgium Cirque Royal / Koninklijk Circus Dec 7 Brussels, Belgium Cirque Royal / Koninklijk Circus If your band is coming to the Minneapolis/St Paul area, please email details to vu@weheartmusic.com with a good lead time. Thank you. Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Minneapolis: This Week (09/25/2022)
US-UK Relations Enter New Chapter As New PM King Settle In
US-UK Relations Enter New Chapter As New PM King Settle In
US-UK Relations Enter New Chapter As New PM, King Settle In https://digitalarizonanews.com/us-uk-relations-enter-new-chapter-as-new-pm-king-settle-in-3/ President Joe Biden waves as he stands at the top of the steps of Air Force One before boarding with first lady Jill Biden at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., Saturday, Sept. 17, 2022, as they head to London to attend the funeral for Queen Elizabeth II. To commemorate the U.S. Air Force’s 75th Anniversary as a service the Bidens are wearing Air Force One jackets. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) LONDON — President Joe Biden arrived in London to pay his respects to Queen Elizabeth II at a time of transition in U.S.-U.K. relations, as both a new monarch and a new prime minister are settling in. The hawkish approach of Prime Minister Liz Truss to Russia and China puts her on the same page as Biden. But the rise of Truss, 47, who once called the relationship “special but not exclusive,” could mark a decidedly new chapter in the trans-Atlantic partnership on trade and more. Of high concern for Biden officials in the early going of Truss’s premiership is her backing of legislation that would shred parts of the post-Brexit trading arrangements in Northern Ireland. Analysts say the move could cause deep strain between the U.K. and the European Union, and undermine peace in Northern Ireland. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the move “would not create a conducive environment” for crafting a long-awaited U.S.-UK trade deal coveted by Truss and her Conservative Party. “She’s signaled that she’s willing to go to the mattresses on this and that’s going to cause a rift not just between the U.K. and EU, but the UK and the U.S.,” said Max Bergmann, director of the Europe program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington and a former senior State Department official in the Obama administration. “It’s one that’s going to keep the White House up at night.” Biden arrived in London late Saturday and had been set to meet with Truss on Sunday, but the prime minister’s office said Saturday they would skip the weekend hello, opting instead for a meeting in New York at the U.N. General Assembly on Wednesday, though Truss still planned to gather with other world leaders converging on London for the royal funeral. The White House confirmed the U.N. meeting just as the president boarded Air Force One. The two close allies now find themselves in a period of political uncertainty on both sides of the Atlantic. Not unlike his fellow septuagenarian Biden, King Charles III faces questions from the public about whether his age will limit his ability to faithfully carry out the duties of the monarch. Charles, 73, and Biden, 79, discussed global cooperation on the climate crisis last year while both attended a summit in Glasgow, Scotland. They also met at Buckingham Palace in June 2021 at a reception the queen hosted before a world leaders’ summit in Cornwall. Truss finds herself, as Biden does, facing questions about whether she has what it takes to lift a country battered by stubborn inflation borne out of the coronavirus pandemic and exacerbated by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine unleashing chaos on the global energy market. All the while, Britain — and the rest of Europe — is carefully watching to see what the upcoming U.S. midterm elections will bring for the Democratic American president after he vowed upon taking office that “America is back” to being a full partner in the international community after four years of Republican Donald Trump pushing his “America First” worldview. “It certainly is a time of change and transformation in the U.K.,” said Barbara A. Perry, presidential studies director at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center. She added, “We don’t know what will happen in our midterms. We don’t know what will happen in 2024.” Truss, a former accountant who was first elected to Parliament in 2010, hasn’t had much interaction with Biden. The U.S. president called her earlier this month to congratulate her. Truss, as foreign secretary, accompanied her predecessor, Boris Johnson, on a White House visit last year. It’s been more than 75 years since Winston Churchill declared there was a “special relationship” between the two nations, a notion that leaders on both sides have repeatedly affirmed. Still, there have been bumps along the way. Tony Blair was derisively branded by the British tabloids as George W. Bush’s “poodle” for backing the 2003 American-led invasion of Iraq. David Cameron and Barack Obama had a “bromance,” but Obama also had his frustrations with the Brits over defense spending and the U.K.’s handling of Libya following the 2011 ouster of Muammar Gaddafi. Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan forged a close alliance in the midst of the Cold War, with the prime minister once telling students that the Republican president’s “really good sense of humor” helped their relationship. But there were difficulties too, such as when Thatcher and members of her Cabinet bristled at the Reagan administration’s initial neutrality in the Falklands War. The White House wasn’t expecting Truss’s announcement in May, when she was foreign secretary, that the government would move forward with legislation that would rewrite parts of the Northern Ireland Protocol. The agreement was part of the U.K.’s 2020 Brexit withdrawal from the EU that was designed to avoid a hard north-south border with Ireland that might upset Northern Ireland’s fragile peace. Now, in the first weeks of Truss’s premiership, Biden administration officials are carefully taking the measure of the new British leader. Analysts say there is some trepidation in the administration that undercutting the Northern Ireland protocol could plunge Europe into trade turmoil at a moment when Biden is working mightily to keep the West unified in confronting Russia over its aggression against Ukraine. “Brexit could once again become the issue — the issue that can make it difficult for all of Europe to work together at a time when it is critical for Europe to work together,” Bergmann said. “If you’re the Biden administration, this is not the time for the two of your closest partners getting into fights.” To be certain, there were areas of friction between Biden and Johnson, who had a warm rapport with former President Donald Trump. Biden staunchly opposed Brexit as a candidate and had expressed great concern over the future of Northern Ireland. Biden once even derided Johnson as a “physical and emotional clone” of Trump. Johnson worked hard to overcome that impression, stressing his common ground with Biden on climate change, support for international institutions and most notably by making certain Britain was an early and generous member of the U.S.-led alliance providing economic and military assistance to Ukraine in the aftermath of the Russian invasion. The former prime minister also unsuccessfully pressed Biden starting days into his administration to begin negotiations on a new U.S.-U.K. trade deal just as the U.K. regained control over its national trade policy weeks before Biden took office and following the end of a post-Brexit transition period. But Biden largely kept focus on his domestic to-do list in the early going of his presidency– passing trillions in spending on coronavirus relief, infrastructure, and more — and put negotiations on trade deals on the back burner. Elliot Abrams, chairman of the conservative foreign policy group Vandenberg Coalition, said that Truss needs Biden to make a new U.S.-U.K. trade deal a priority. Queen Elizabeth’s funeral won’t be the setting for tough bilateral conversations, but it still marks a moment for the two leaders to begin taking stock of each other. Truss, who succeeded Johnson after he was forced to resign in the face of a string of scandals, has lagged in the opinion polls. She also won her election with a smaller margin than her recent predecessors and is looking for an early win. “I think if I were (Truss), I want recognition of the leading role Britain’s played, far more than any other country outside the United States in supporting Ukraine,” said Abrams, who served in senior national security and foreign policy roles in the Trump, George W. Bush and Reagan administrations. “And I think I’d want some positive economic message to give the British people, which could be that the free trade agreement negotiations are starting.” —— Madhani reported from Washington. This combination of photos shows U.S. President Joe Biden at the White House on Aug. 24, 2022, in Washington, left, and Britain’s Prime Minister Liz Truss at Westminster Hall, in the Palace of Westminster, in London on Sept. 12, 2022. The prime minister’s office said Biden and Truss will meet on Sunday, Sept. 18, at 10 Downing Street, one of several meetings that the new prime minister plans to hold with world leaders converging on London for Monday’s royal funeral. (AP Photo) FILE – Britain’s Prince Charles, left, greets the President of the United States Joe Biden ahead of their bilateral meeting during the Cop26 summit at the Scottish Event Campus (SEC) in Glasgow, Scotland, Nov. 2, 2021. Charles and Biden discussed global cooperation on the climate crisis last year while both attended a summit in Glasgow, Scotland. (Jane Barlow/Pool Photo via AP, File) FILE – British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, left, greets U.S. President Joe Biden , at the COP26 U.N. Climate Summit in Glasgow, Scotland, Nov. 1, 2021. (Christopher Furlong/Pool via AP, File) FILE – President Donald Trump meets with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson at the United Nations General Assembly in New York, Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2019. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File) FILE – U.S. President Barack Obama sits next to British Prime Minister David Cameron before the first working session of the North Atlantic Council at the NATO summit in Warsaw, Poland, July 8, 2016. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber, F...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
US-UK Relations Enter New Chapter As New PM King Settle In
Obituary: Donald Paul Winton
Obituary: Donald Paul Winton
Obituary: Donald Paul Winton https://digitalarizonanews.com/obituary-donald-paul-winton/ Originally Published: September 18, 2022 12:30 a.m. Donald Paul Winton 1959 – 2022 Honoring the life of Donald Paul Winton who passed away at the age of 62 on Sunday, August 28, 2022, at his home in Sun City West, Arizona, following a valiant 8-month battle with pancreatic cancer. He was born October 3, 1959 to Donald Patrick & Marva Dawn (Adams) Winton and raised in Phoenix, AZ along with a younger sister and brother. He married his sweetheart Tracey (Wilson) in November of 1984 in Sedona, AZ. He loved Tracey very much and doted on her as they spent 37 wonderful years together. He was a long-time resident of Cottonwood, AZ where he and his wife Tracey raised three wonderful children: Chad Paul Winton of Scottsdale, AZ, Raemy Rae Winton (David) of Flagstaff, AZ, and Cody Patrick Winton (Chelsey) of Rimrock, AZ. They attended religious services at the Verde Valley Christian Church and served the Lord in their home. He served his community as a Fireman/I EMT for the Verde Valley Fire Dept in Cottonwood for 28 years and retired in Jan 2020. He was also a General Contractor for the Verde Valley area for 28 years building many beautiful custom homes. He enjoyed, camping, trips to Lake Powell, mountain bike riding, working on his truck, and being with his family. He also really enjoyed going to JJ’s in Mexico. He was very artistic and made many things to beautify his home. He is survived by his wife, three children, and three granddaughters: Mary, Riley and Chaselynn; his sister, Tracie Robbins (Adam) of Palmdale, CA, his brother Travis Winton (Michelle) of Prescott, AZ, and Mother Dawn Godfrey of Prescott, AZ. Funeral services were held Saturday, September 10, 2022, at the Verde Valley Christian Church located at 406 S Sixth St. Cottonwood, AZ 86326 at 10:00 am. A Fire & Police Dept. precession arrived at the church prior to the service. Information provided by the family. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Obituary: Donald Paul Winton
The Islamic Republics morality Murder And US Appeasement
The Islamic Republics morality Murder And US Appeasement
The Islamic Republic’s ‘morality’ Murder And US Appeasement https://digitalarizonanews.com/the-islamic-republics-morality-murder-and-us-appeasement/ (September 18, 2022 / JNS) The killing of Mahsa Amini in Tehran last week should serve as a reminder to the United States about the regime that it’s desperate to enrich with tens of billions of dollars in exchange for another disastrous nuclear deal. And the angry street protests that have erupted around the Islamic Republic since then should signal to the P5+1 that now is the time to help weaken, not strengthen, the grip of the ayatollahs on the populace. Amini, a 22-year-old woman from Saqez in Iran’s Kurdistan Province, was on a trip with her family to the country’s capital on Tuesday, when she was arrested by the “morality police” for not having her head covered properly. According to eyewitnesses, she was beaten as soon as she entered the van that was transporting her to the station for “education.” By Friday, she was dead. One can only imagine the kind of torture she endured before she was taken to the Kasra Hospital in northern Tehran. Photos that emerged of her lying in a coma matched the medical center’s statement that when she was admitted on Sept. 13, she showed “no vital signs.” This notice was removed from the hospital’s social media pages after hardliners called its staff “anti-regime agents.” In parallel, police denied having beaten Amini to death, insisting that she had passed away from a heart attack. Compounding the lie that nobody bought—least of all her family, who said that she had been perfectly healthy and never suffered from cardiac problems—President Ebrahim Raisi, as much of an Islamist extremist as his mullah handlers, reportedly requested that the Iranian Interior Ministry open an investigation into the incident. The charade would be laughable if it weren’t so typically evil. Subscribe to The JNS Daily Syndicate by email and never miss our top stories Ditto for the response of the regime—a member of the U.N. Women’s Rights Council—to the demonstrations that ensued upon news of Amini’s demise and continued throughout her burial in Saqez on Saturday. During the funeral, women removed their hijabs and mourners chanted “Death to the dictator,” referring to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Ironically, reports that Khamenei was severely ill with a bowel obstruction, along with rumors that he may even have died, were countered on Saturday with an appearance by the octogenarian cleric at a religious ceremony. Meanwhile, Iranian security forces were busy trying to nip the unrest in the bud, with mass arrests and other means. These included firing on the crowds at Amini’s gravesite, where her tombstone was engraved with the message: “You didn’t die. Your name will be a code word [rallying cry].” Whether Amini becomes a symbol like Neda Soltan—the young woman gunned down in Tehran on June 20, 2009, during a mass demonstration against the rigged results of the presidential election that had taken place a week earlier—remains to be seen. But the similarity is inescapable. Though the 26-year-old aspiring musician was not a political activist, she had shed her chador in defiance of the Islamic dress code. She was shot by a rooftop sniper, a member of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps militia. Photos of her lifeless body, with her eyes open and blood trickling from her nose and mouth, became a symbol for the so-called “Green Revolution.” Before it fizzled out—thanks to then-U.S. President Barack Obama’s deference to the powers-that-be in Iran—the internationally viral phrase “We Are All Neda” seemed to indicate a crack in the regime’s armor. Given the current circumstances, with Obama’s political and literal successors following the same old blueprint with Tehran, it’s unlikely that Amini’s death will have any more of an impact than Neda’s, however. If there was any hope to the contrary, U.S. Special Envoy for Iran Robert Malley put it to rest on Friday through a pathetic post. “Mahsa Amini’s death after injuries sustained in custody for an ‘improper’ hijab is appalling,” he tweeted. “Our thoughts are with her family. Iran must end its violence against women for exercising their fundamental rights. Those responsible for her death should be held accountable.” No, he wasn’t joking; and he’s still bent on filling their coffers. He doesn’t have to worry about Khamenei being out of commission, though, since the ayatollah-in-chief gave Raisi the authority to make decisions on the nuclear pact in his absence. Nor is it true, as a senior Israeli official told reporters last Monday, that the administration in Washington has “sidelined” Malley, a key architect of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) from which then-U.S. President Donald Trump withdrew in 2018. A “conflict resolution” expert and advocate of engagement with Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, Malley has been so eager to appease Tehran that his second-in-command, Richard Nephew, quit his team, and others followed suit. “Rob [Malley] … is still very much in charge of … our efforts,” said State Department spokesman Ned Price in his press briefing on Tuesday. “[He] is deeply engaged day-to-day on the substance of this. He is leading a team here at the [State] Department. He is regularly engaging with our counterparts at the White House, the Treasury Department, the intelligence community and elsewhere regarding our efforts to achieve a mutual return to compliance with the JCPOA and our contingency planning, as well.” Asked during his briefing on Friday about what’s holding up the deal, Price replied, “What I can offer is our assessment, and there is only one reason that we have not yet reached an understanding on a mutual return to compliance with the JCPOA, and that is because Tehran has not yet accepted the reasonable basis presented by the E.U. as coordinator of the JCPOA talks.” He went on, “As we’ve said repeatedly, gaps remain between the United States and Iran, or between Iran and the rest of the P5+1 … And it’s clear from Iran’s response that these gaps still remain. Iran’s response did not put us in a position to close a deal, but we continue to contend that it’s not too late to conclude [one].” In other words, the ball is in Raisi’s court. And Amini’s murder—for the crime of exposing too much of her face—is as meaningless as Malley’s mealy-mouthed criticism of it. Ruthie Blum is an Israel-based journalist and author of “To Hell in a Handbasket: Carter, Obama, and the ‘Arab Spring.’ ”  Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
The Islamic Republics morality Murder And US Appeasement
'Zuckerbucks 2.0: Lawmakers Eye Private Money In Milwaukee Elections
'Zuckerbucks 2.0: Lawmakers Eye Private Money In Milwaukee Elections
'Zuckerbucks 2.0’: Lawmakers Eye Private Money In Milwaukee Elections https://digitalarizonanews.com/zuckerbucks-2-0-lawmakers-eye-private-money-in-milwaukee-elections/ Two dozen states banned the use of private money to finance election operations in response to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s pouring part of his $400 million fortune into the 2020 election process.  Wisconsin wasn’t one of them.  Now, an initiative to boost voter turnout called Milwaukee Votes 2022 involves some private partners, including a Democrat-aligned political communications company known as GPS Impact. A spokesman for Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson told The Daily Signal that GPS Impact is “one of several” partners in the initiative, which Johnson announced this week at a press conference.  However, Wisconsin state lawmakers have more questions.  “This is Zuckerbucks 2.0,” said state Rep. Janel Brandtjen, a Republican who chairs the Wisconsin State Assembly’s Campaigns and Elections Committee. Republicans in both the Assembly and the state Senate are seeking documents showing communications between the city of Milwaukee and GPS Impact. No lawmaker is alleging that Zuckerberg is funding Milwaukee’s get-out-the-vote program. Rather, “Zuckerbucks” or “Zuck Bucks” have become nicknames for private money that pays for local or state election operations.  A special counsel appointed by the Wisconsin State Assembly issued a report finding that jurisdictions getting Zuckerberg dollars may have conducted an illegal get-out-the-vote operation and violated other state laws.  Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat, vetoed a measure to ban private dollars and private actors from infiltrating election administration offices in the Badger State.  The presidential election results in Wisconsin were among the closest in the country in 2020, with Joe Biden defeating Donald Trump by about 20,000 votes. However, Biden got 79% of the vote in Milwaukee.  Various nonprofit groups in 2020 orchestrated a “well-oiled machine of knowing what ballots are outstanding, who voted, who hasn’t voted” that allowed them “to do a real-time system of turning out the vote,” Brandtjen told The Daily Signal in a phone interview.  “When we heard that they were using this group, this GPS Impact, if you look at the website it clearly is not nonpartisan,” the Republican lawmaker said. “They work for Democrats and progressives to win in states, including Wisconsin. That’s a complete set of red flags.” She also said it is improper for cities to be working to turn out voters.  “Municipalities are not supposed to be in the business of getting out the vote,” Brandtjen said. “Certainly, say [that] today is voting day and publicize that information. But to know which people have voted and not voted, that’s not the job of municipalities. That’s the job of political parties.”  GPS Impact’s Twitter account includes tweets touting Democrat politicians it works for at the federal and state level, and boasts of work more recently in helping to defeat a pro-life amendment to the Kansas Constitution.  GPS Impact should not be confused with the Washington-based opposition research group Fusion GPS that figured in the false Trump-Russia allegations. GPS Impact did not respond to phone and email inquiries from The Daily Signal for this report.  The Milwaukee Votes 2022 initiative began in May. But on Monday, the city’s mayor announced bigger plans for the program.  “We’re doing more, and I’m going to be embracing outreach and engagement through what we’re calling ‘Milwaukee Votes 2022,’” Johnson, a Democrat, said during the press conference. “As part of that, you will soon see a new website widget on many Milwaukee.gov website pages.” The planned activity potentially is illegal, Assembly Speaker Robin Vos said in a joint statement with other Republican leaders.  And these Republicans aren’t standing for it. Their statement says: We are demanding that the city of Milwaukee immediately cease assisting a privately funded, liberal group in their efforts to only engage with and turn out certain voters. The city of Milwaukee’s promotion and coordination of potentially illegal activities under the guise of canvassing is why Wisconsin voters have lost confidence in our elections. It is inappropriate for any municipality to support a get-out-the-vote campaign. Jeff Fleming, the mayor’s spokesman, said in an email Wednesday  to The Daily Signal that the city of Milwaukee neither receives nor provides money to support the Milwaukee Votes 2022 initiative. “All the work is nonpartisan; none of the efforts support individual candidates or causes,” Fleming said. “The mayor wants all eligible Milwaukee residents to cast ballots in upcoming elections. He supports democracy, and he wants voices in Milwaukee to be heard. The city works with any nonpartisan effort that encourages eligible voters to cast ballots.” Fleming said he didn’t have specifics about the cost of the initiative or the funding sources, but elaborated that partners other than GPS Impact are involved. He noted that plans began in May.  “I do not have information about individuals, corporations, or foundations that are funding nonpartisan voter outreach,” Johnson’s spokesman said. “On May 24th, the mayor first announced this partnership—and that event was supported by the two largest business associations in the region, the Greater Milwaukee Committee and the Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce. Also at the event were a representative of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, a group called ‘Souls to the Polls,’ and the League of Women Voters.” In speaking to reporters, Johnson said the effort will involve going door to door.  “Milwaukee Votes 2022 will also have door-to-door canvassers that will be underway, funded by the private sector,” Johnson said. “Dozens of canvassers will be face to face with eligible voters, encouraging them to exercise their right to vote for the November election. I’m not asking anybody to cast their ballots for one party or another or one candidate or another.” When asked about it by The Daily Signal, Fleming said: “I am not familiar with the specifics of the work of the door-to-door outreach, other than they are not paid by the city.” A city-endorsed effort to go door to door to get out the vote is still concerning, Brandtjen said.  “There is no oversight of the going door-to-door that we know of,” the Republican state lawmaker said. “Can you imagine someone shows up from the city at your door to ask you if you’ve voted yet, or says, ‘I know you haven’t voted’? That could be perceived as massive intimidation.”  Dan O’Donnell, a conservative talk radio host in Milwaukee, says that the city referred his questions to a GPS Impact staffer. When he contacted the staffer, he said, she told him that she was only an informal adviser to the get-out-the-vote initiative.  “This doesn’t pass the smell test at all,” O’Donnell said in a phone interview with The Daily Signal.  “It’s private money going into election operations in a city. I would classify this as extremely similar to Zuckerbucks,” the talk show host added. “The city working with a Democratic firm on a get-out-the-vote effort is pretty obviously a Democratic get-out-the-vote effort. The city shouldn’t be doing this.” Have an opinion about this article? To sound off, please email letters@DailySignal.com and we’ll consider publishing your edited remarks in our regular “We Hear You” feature. Remember to include the url or headline of the article plus your name and town and/or state.  Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
'Zuckerbucks 2.0: Lawmakers Eye Private Money In Milwaukee Elections
Two Dead Within Minutes: Police Investigating Early-Morning Southwest Fresno Shootings
Two Dead Within Minutes: Police Investigating Early-Morning Southwest Fresno Shootings
Two Dead Within Minutes: Police Investigating Early-Morning Southwest Fresno Shootings https://digitalarizonanews.com/two-dead-within-minutes-police-investigating-early-morning-southwest-fresno-shootings/ BREAKING NEWSFresno Co. deputy shoots and kills suspect WATCH LIVE Welcome, Your Account Log Out FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) — Detectives are investigating two homicides that happened within minutes of each other early Saturday morning in Southwest Fresno. Fresno Police say the first call came in at 2:09 am after multiple gunshots were heard along South Teilman Avenue, near Highway 180. When officers arrived, they found a man in his 20s who had been shot in his upper body. Fire and EMS crews tried to save the man’s life, but were unsuccessful and he was declared dead at the location. The next shooting happened just 15 minutes later at 2:24 am. The Shot Spotter system alerted dispatchers to seven rounds fired near East Tower and South Fairview Avenues. After searching the area, officers found a man in his 30s near the entrance to the parking lot of the Hinton Community Center. He had been shot multiple times and was declared dead by American Ambulance when they arrived. Fresno Police say the homicide unit is investigating the shootings. Copyright © 2022 KFSN-TV. All Rights Reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Two Dead Within Minutes: Police Investigating Early-Morning Southwest Fresno Shootings
Its All Magic And Other Enchanting Quotes Of The Week
Its All Magic And Other Enchanting Quotes Of The Week
‘It’s All Magic’ And Other Enchanting Quotes Of The Week https://digitalarizonanews.com/its-all-magic-and-other-enchanting-quotes-of-the-week/ “This defendant surreptitiously injected heart-stopping drugs into patient IV bags, decimating the Hippocratic oath.” — U.S. Attorney Chad E. Meacham, describing the charges against Dr. Raynaldo Rivera Ortiz Jr., 59, who was arrested Wednesday. Police say Ortiz compromised IV bags for at least 10 patients. (Thursday, The Dallas Morning News) “It’s always warmer, and you’re outside more. There’s the way we dress and the Southern sweetness that comes off as possibly flirting. … The next thing you know, you’re out in the parking lot at lunch and bad things are going on.” — Tommy Habeeb, the Dallas resident and former host of the reality television show Cheaters, presenting his theory on why Dallas topped a list of “most unfaithful cities” in the U.S., according to an analysis by a U.K.-based dating website. (Thursday, The Dallas Morning News) “It’s all magic. We use the same principles in aerospace. At some point the magic has to happen.” — Joel Lagrone, an aerospace engineer at Lockheed Martin, who will be the new Santa Claus at NorthPark Center, on explaining flying reindeer to children. (Thursday, The Dallas Morning News) “I’ve done a lot of research on this, and I’ve spent the past couple weeks talking to Granite Staters all over the state from every party, and I have come to the conclusion — and I want to be definitive on this — the election was not stolen.” — Don Bolduc, the Republican Senate nominee in New Hampshire, in a reversal of his campaign message two days after winning the primary. (Thursday, Fox News) “President Trump had solved this, and Biden decimated everything that President Trump had done to fix the border. This is Biden’s fault. Pure and simple.” — Gov. Greg Abbott on the border crisis. (Tuesday, Fox News) “There is no truth in this coverage. The advice being circulated is that all funerals booked for the 19th September proceed as arranged.” — Brendan Day, secretary of the U.K.’s Federation of Burial and Cremation Authorities, responding to rumors that the government had canceled all private funerals on the day of Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral. (Tuesday, The Associated Press) “You took a lifetime of memories away from me. … He will never walk me down the aisle. He will never meet my kids. He will never meet my future husband. … He’s gone, … I forgive you, Jaime.” — Shelby Houston, daughter of slain Mesquite police officer Richard Houston II, speaking to Jaime Jaramillo, who was convicted of murdering her father. (Thursday, The Dallas Morning News) “It’s exactly what we dreamt of … Look at all the children.” — Nancy Best, a longtime Klyde Warren Park board member, while children and families played in the water at the official opening of a water feature that bears her name. The $10 million interactive fountain is boasted to be the only one of its kind in the country. (Wednesday, The Dallas Morning News) “Earth is now our only shareholder.” — Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard, 83, in a letter announcing that he and his family had given away the multibillion-dollar outdoor apparel business, transferring ownership to a trust and a nonprofit organization focused on combating climate change. (Wednesday, The Wall Street Journal) “Definitely from Austin!!!” — TikTok user robertm7575, one of hundreds who commented on a viral video of a woman swimming in the San Antonio River along the River Walk. Swimming is illegal there. No word on the identity of the swimmer nor whether she suffered fines or dysentery. (Monday, TikTok) We welcome your thoughts in a letter to the editor. See the guidelines and submit your letter here. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Its All Magic And Other Enchanting Quotes Of The Week
In Avoiding Extremism Dallas Gets It Right
In Avoiding Extremism Dallas Gets It Right
In Avoiding Extremism, Dallas Gets It Right https://digitalarizonanews.com/in-avoiding-extremism-dallas-gets-it-right/ Like many North Texans, I am amazed — and frustrated and angry — at the craziness we’re witnessing in Washington D.C. and many parts of the country. The extremes on both ends of the political spectrum have produced paralysis and division, leaving sanity in the dust. I see a political system working wonderfully for both national political parties. The extreme positions and casting the other as the “enemy” are great for raising money. But that system and those parties are not working for you and me. Revered institutions that we once trusted and still need have been reduced to little more than political machinations. In many places in the country, we see business leaders melt in the face of political pressure, and schools, at every level, becoming little more than social experiments run by political activists. Against this backdrop, I am pretty happy with where I live and have raised my family. While being far from perfect or totally inoculated from the extremes we see in other parts of the country, we seem to be more the exception than the rule today. So, I want to share some observations, and a hope, about our part of the world. Soon, the Dallas region will be the third largest in the nation. Even though we don’t have a lot of mountains or an ocean or other geographic reasons for existing, people and businesses are moving here in big numbers. According to data from the North Central Texas Council of Governments, more than 8 million people now live in our area. And with as much diversity as any place in the nation — more than 230 languages are spoken here — it seems we focus better on the worth of a person than the group they represent. We value each other. People still count more than politics. We have gotten to this point because people and businesses take a pragmatic and balanced approach. We aren’t a city of extremes. Right here in the middle of the continent, we are a city of common ground. Instead of gridlock, you see a “can do” spirit. Police As an example of this pragmatic approach, there is an interesting comparison with our current mayor, Eric Johnson, and me. We come from different parties, but in the most fundamental responsibility of local government, there are amazing parallels. Across the country, we are seeing politics and extreme agendas trump responsibility. Let’s be honest, “defund the police” and all that goes with it is political posturing, not a serious policy approach. When I was mayor (back in the “dark ages”), we substantially increased police resources, expanding the force by 20%, the largest increase by a city of any size in decades. We saw the largest drop in crime in the nation, and we saw our city radically improve relative to other major U.S. cities. Today, Johnson is similarly increasing police resources. At a time when many cities led by extreme policies are seeing dramatic increases in crime, particularly violent crime, we stand nearly alone in witnessing declining crime. I took great pride in watching our current police chief, Eddie García, testify recently in Washington D.C. with other large-city chiefs. While those other chiefs were dancing on eggshells, trying to be politically correct, he was no-nonsense. To paraphrase him: We are going to do our job, do it well with the highest standards and focus on reducing crime in Dallas, period. Schools I’m passionate about education. Schools across the country, from elementary to those of higher learning, seem more interested in promoting social agendas than educating our kids. Meanwhile, other countries (read China) are reinforcing the fundamentals of a future world: math, communications, science, technology. Losing focus on the real function of schools cannot end well. Except for a few isolated suburbs, the divisions between parents and schools seem to be much less dramatic here. Educators seem to be much more interested in improving education rather than conducting social experiments. Public-private cooperation While there is always a natural friction between the public and private sector, they actually work pretty well together in North Texas. Think of the impact of Klyde Warren Park, an infrastructure project made possible by significant private donations. Think of the AT&T Performing Arts Center, substantially funded by private donations. Think of the city and private sector working together to change the operations of the Dallas Zoo, and the difference that has made. And think of the convention center hotel, which needed public impetus but has put our hospitality industry back on top, with private sector jobs and an explosion of private hotel business, in spite of the naysayers at the time. It is amusing to see business leaders across the country myopically following extreme political agendas. Many sway back and forth, reacting to small, extreme constituencies. Here, by contrast, I know a CEO that runs a high-profile Fortune 500 company. He makes decisions based on real economics and a future perspective devoid of politics and a Wall Street crowd ignorant of the importance of long-term capital investment. He takes a reasonable, but rare, approach to the ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance) movement. ESG is a corporate philosophy that focuses companies on environmental and sustainability issues. It’s a viewpoint that has merit, but has been overtaken by politics and special-interest agendas. This CEO ignores all that and uses common sense, making real improvements but tying them to the needs and performance of his business and its people. His company is a leader in diversity too, not because there are television cameras around but because it’s the right thing to do and it makes sense. And he is investing locally because he knows that makes the most sense for our country and his business. My sense is that he is pretty representative of our business leaders here. They don’t knee-jerk to the political extremes, different from what we see of many business leaders on the coasts. And while we can easily criticize the local media, I think it’s different here. Think of a large East Coast newspaper that penalizes its staff for even thinking of opposing views. Here, we still have folks who will actually engage and encourage real, thoughtful debate. (They may even publish this!) In office, I often disagreed with journalists, but there was never a time the local press didn’t thoughtfully hear me out. Working together I play golf with a retired surgeon. Politically, we agree on almost nothing. In the close confines of a golf cart, we can spend four hours discussing, debating and arguing many issues, and laughing about the crazies on both our sides. At the end, though, we have enormous respect for each other, both wanting a great country and city that actually work, and we know we need to work together to accomplish that. And this brings me to the hope I’d like to offer. My hope is that we, here in North Texas, will continue to be pragmatic, figure out what works and actually put the interest of our neighbors ahead of political goals and personal agendas. That will be very different than we see elsewhere. Tom Leppert was mayor of Dallas from 2007-2011 and former chairman/ CEO of The Turner Corporation, a general building company, and Kaplan Inc., an education provider. He wrote this for The Dallas Morning News. We welcome your thoughts in a letter to the editor. See the guidelines and submit your letter here. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
In Avoiding Extremism Dallas Gets It Right
Column: Election Integrity Is At Risk
Column: Election Integrity Is At Risk
Column: Election Integrity Is At Risk https://digitalarizonanews.com/column-election-integrity-is-at-risk/ “Nobody knows anything.” That’s the first line in “Adventures In the Screen Trade,” William Goldman’s excellent book about writing scripts for Hollywood films. He continues: “Not one person in the entire motion picture field knows for a certainty what’s going to work. Every time out it’s a guess and, if you’re lucky, an educated one.” Goldman’s assessment of the movie business could as well apply to the November elections. The educated guess — in that particular performance venue — is that Republicans will take control of both House and Senate this year. In normal times, the party that loses the presidential election bounces back in the off-year vote. But these are not normal times. The Supreme Court’s scuttling of Roe v. Wade has women registering to vote in unusually high numbers. Sen. Lindsey Graham’s bill to set a federal ban on abortions after 15 weeks has unsettled his colleagues. In Republican Kansas, a ban on abortions was overwhelming rejected by voters. Could that one issue change the odds? After two years of trying to reason with two holdouts, the Democratic Party was finally able to pass President Biden’s signature bill to deal with climate change and address economic and healthcare issues. It was a steep drop from the initial plan, further weakened by the need to make concessions to Senate holdouts, Krystal Sinema and Joe Manchin. Messy, but politics often is. Those two actions have somewhat clouded early, confident election forecasts. The usual assumption may not be a certainty. Aware of changing circumstances, GOP activists across the country are doing everything they can to snarl the electoral process. The 2020 election may have been accurate and error-free, but we can’t be sure about the one some seven weeks away. Most Republican-dominated states have enacted laws to discourage or limit voting. Citizen volunteers have been organized to visit county clerks to make a variety of strange demands (which they seem not to understand themselves) and to threaten lawsuits. A flood of Freedom of Information requests is being made across the country to tie up employees in an effort to impede election preparations. The Washington Post recently reported that David Clements, a New Mexico business school teacher who lost his job for refusing to wear a mask, is on a mission to convince rural audiences that Trump’s big lie is actually true. Last June, he aroused enough people in his native state to delay the certification of primary votes. Since then, he has been visiting other communities, spreading discord. Not much is being said about what role the most radical elements of the Trump coalition will play, But you can presume the White Nationalists, QAnon fanatics, and Proud Boys (who aren’t in jail) will be harassing voting lines on election day. Few of these discontents seem to know much about how elections are actually conducted. Those of us who have been through the process understand that it would take a massive collaboration between workers of both parties across the land to corrupt an election. Representatives of both parties are always present, carefully checking to be sure things are proceeding in order. It would take an official in charge of the overall process to mess it up. And a number of zealots are running for such posts this year to do exactly that. Goldman is the author of another quote that is more familiar than the one first cited. It comes from his Oscar-winning script for “All The President’s Men.” It doesn’t appear in the book on which the movie was based. It’s his own inspired phrase: “Follow the money.” If you follow the money that is awash in politics this year, you will note the huge increase in dark money focused on a Republican victory. Democrats have been accumulating funds, too, but huge chunks are coming from the narrow top of our economic pyramid, anxious to preserve the three enormous tax breaks received since 1980 from Republican administrations. One that came to light this week was a $1.6 billion gift from Chicago electronics company executive Barre Said to the little-known Marble Freedom Trust. That’s double the amount raised by Donald Trump in his 2020 campaign. Marble is a non-profit led by Leopold Leo, co-chair of the Federalist Society and the man who dictated Trump’s supreme court choices, turning the country’s higher court into a right-wing hammer. Leo is as deeply invested in dark money groups as Charles Koch. Who knows where that enormous amount will be expended? If you can find a way to follow that money, I doubt you will see it invested in feeding the poor. It appears the wherewithal to shape voters’ thinking is heavily tilted to the right. Yet, there is this feeling that the odds are evener than the pundits suspect. It may well be true that, in politics this year, “nobody knows anything” for sure. Don Wooten is a former Illinois state senator and a regular columnist. Email him at: donwooten4115@gmail.com. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Column: Election Integrity Is At Risk
Sahuarita Freshman Paola Guerrero Wins Flowing Wells Invitational | ALLSPORTSTUCSON.com
Sahuarita Freshman Paola Guerrero Wins Flowing Wells Invitational | ALLSPORTSTUCSON.com
Sahuarita Freshman Paola Guerrero Wins Flowing Wells Invitational | ALLSPORTSTUCSON.com https://digitalarizonanews.com/sahuarita-freshman-paola-guerrero-wins-flowing-wells-invitational-allsportstucson-com/ Paola Guerrero. (Andy Morales/AllSportsTucson) LINK: GIRLS PHOTOS Sahuarita freshman Paola Guerrero led the field from beginning to end to win the Flowing Wells Invitational held at the Silverbell Golf Course on Friday and Saturday. Guerrero is the sixth-ranked freshman in Division II so far. As a team, the Mustangs held off Flowing Wells 386 to 393 to win the team title. With the top 12 teams in the state qualifying for the state tournament, Guerrero and Flowing Wells standout Olivia Munoz, are currently in line for an individual state berth. Sisters Gertie, Olivia and Jolene Munoz are ready for the ⁦@FWCabsSports⁩ Invitational at Silverbell #azpreps365 pic.twitter.com/ez3a6udge2 — Andy Morales (@AZPreps365Andy) September 16, 2022 GIRLS INDIVIDUAL TOP TEN 1 Paola Guerrero, Sahuarita 74-79 153 2 Gertie Munoz, Flowing Wells 83-83 166 3 Olivia Munoz, Flowing Wells 92-88 180 4 Lacey Buchanan, Cienega 96-87 183 5 Alexa Corona, Marana 93-92 185 6 Jaelyn Cota, Tucson 97-90 187 7 Samantha Smith, Cienega 102-89 191 7 Jolene Munoz, Flowing Wells 93-98 191 9 Michelle Armenta, Sahuarita 105-100 205 10 Madison Martinez, Sahuarita 105-102 207 10 MariaFernanda Lerma, Sahuarita 102-105 207 10 Emily Donia, Sahuarita 97-110 207 Top-ranked Finn Meister wins Flowing Wells Invitational #azpreps365 https://t.co/b6Gc0iAEn0 — AZPreps365 (@AZPreps365) September 18, 2022 FOLLOW @ANDYMORALES8 ON TWITTER Named one of “Arizona’s Heart & Sol” by KOLD and Casino del Sol, Andy Morales was recognized by the AIA as the top high school reporter in 2014, he was awarded the Ray McNally Award in 2017 and a 2019 AZ Education News recognition. He was a youth, high school and college coach for over 30 years. He was the first in Arizona to write about high school beach volleyball and high school girls wrestling and his unique perspective can only be found here and on AZPreps365.com. Andy is a Southern Arizona voting member of the Ed Doherty Award, recognizing the top football player in Arizona, and he was named a Local Hero by the Tucson Weekly for 2016. Andy was named an Honorary Flowing Wells Caballero in 2019, became a member of the Sunnyside Los Mezquites Cross Country Hall of Fame in 2021 and he was a member of the Amphi COVID-19 Blue Ribbon Committee. He earned a Distinguished Service Award from Amphitheater and he was recognized by the Sunnyside School District and by Tucson City Councilman Richard Fimbres. Contact Andy Morales at amoralesmytucson@yahoo.com Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Sahuarita Freshman Paola Guerrero Wins Flowing Wells Invitational | ALLSPORTSTUCSON.com
'He Knew What He Was Doing': Family Of Phoenix Woman Fatally Stabbed While Driving For Lyft Feels Punishment Does Not Fit Crime
'He Knew What He Was Doing': Family Of Phoenix Woman Fatally Stabbed While Driving For Lyft Feels Punishment Does Not Fit Crime
'He Knew What He Was Doing': Family Of Phoenix Woman Fatally Stabbed While Driving For Lyft Feels Punishment Does Not Fit Crime https://digitalarizonanews.com/he-knew-what-he-was-doing-family-of-phoenix-woman-fatally-stabbed-while-driving-for-lyft-feels-punishment-does-not-fit-crime/ Kristina Howato was expecting her third child when she was fatally stabbed after dropping off a passenger while driving for Lyft. PHOENIX — It has been over three years since a pregnant Kristina Howato was stabbed and killed by a passenger while working as a Lyft driver in Phoenix. Despite the passage of time and the approaching sentencing of the man responsible, her family still grieves this senseless act of violence. “She always made us laugh during sad times,” said her sister LeJeune Howato. “It’s still really hard for me to talk about her.” The mother of two young boys and a soon-to-be newborn baby girl was killed in January 2019 by Fabian Durazo. Kristina had just dropped off Durazo near Eighth Street and McClintock Drive, when for reasons unknown he began stabbing her. “I always wonder what her last thoughts were,” she said. “What her last words were. She was a good person. She was my partner in crime.” LeJeune says police knocked at her door around 1:30 a.m. telling her she needed to get to the hospital because her sister had been assaulted. When they got there, the doctor delivered devastating news. “He came in and he told us that they did everything they possibly could to save my sister,” she said. “But they couldn’t save her. The baby was already gone because that was the first area he had stabbed. They told me I wasn’t allowed to see her [Kristina] because of what had occurred, it was hard.” Durazo was arrested and initially pled not guilty, starting a series of court hearings that spanned nearly three years. However, he recently changed his plea to guilty and is now scheduled to be sentenced later this week. “I just want to know why he did it? He had the knife, he took it with him, he had intent,” LeJeune said. “He knew what he was doing.” Even as this all comes to a close, she still says her family is not getting the justice they feel they deserve. “The prosecutors told me they were going to offer him a plea deal and I told them I was against it because I don’t think that’s fair considering what he took from us,” she said. “I wanted him to sit in front of a jury because I know that would make a difference in the sentence he’d gotten.” 25 years for the murder of LeJeune’s sister and 20-25 years for the murder of Kristina’s unborn daughter.  For the two lives lost, LeJeune says she wanted the death penalty. However, she says that was taken off the plate because of how young he was.  So she hoped for life behind bars, but it looks like that won’t be the case either. LeJeune says she feels like the system failed her family. “Granted he’ll have a life in jail, but my sister doesn’t have a life,” she said. “My nephews have to grow up without their mother.” It’s hard, but LeJeune says she’s trying to push through because that’s what she says her sister would want her to do. Up to Speed Catch up on the latest news and stories on the 12News YouTube channel. Subscribe today. Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
'He Knew What He Was Doing': Family Of Phoenix Woman Fatally Stabbed While Driving For Lyft Feels Punishment Does Not Fit Crime
Thunderous Trump Rocks Area Faithful
Thunderous Trump Rocks Area Faithful
Thunderous Trump Rocks Area Faithful https://digitalarizonanews.com/thunderous-trump-rocks-area-faithful/ Staff photo / R. Michael Semple Supporters rally as former President Donald Trump speaks at the Save America Rally Saturday at the Covelli Centre in downtown Youngstown. YOUNGSTOWN — Former President Donald Trump took aim at U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan, the Democratic nominee for the U.S. Senate, calling him a “militant left winger who is lying to your faces” during a Youngstown rally for J.D. Vance, the Republican candidate for the seat. Ryan is “pretending to be a moderate so he can get elected and betray everything that you believe in,” Trump said Saturday at the Covelli Centre. “He is not a moderate. He’s radical left.” Trump spent most of his speech airing past grievances, including falsely claiming the 2020 presidential election was “stolen” from him. Trump was in Youngstown primarily as part of a rally to support Vance while also backing Republicans running for House seats throughout Ohio. Trump said when he was president, “I was always fighting (Ryan). I never liked him that much.” Trump said Ryan’s moderate approach during this Senate campaign is a lie as the congressman has voted 100 percent of the time with President Joe Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Trump said when he was president, Ryan voted with him only 16 percent of the time. Trump urged those in attendance to back Vance, calling him a “tough cookie.” Trump said of Vance: “This is a very important race. This is a great person who’ve I’ve really gotten to know. Yeah, he said some bad things about me, but that was before he knew me and then he fell in love.” Trump later said that Vance “kissing his ass” would help him beat Ryan. He criticized Ryan for saying he’d end the filibuster, for supporting abortions and for “being an energy extremist.” Trump spent much of his speech complaining about the 2020 election falsely contending he didn’t lose to Biden and that the election was “rigged and stolen.” He also went after Biden, saying he was a terrible president who doesn’t know what he’s doing and if Trump was running the country, there wouldn’t have been a Russian invasion of Ukraine, high gas prices and inflation. The only reason gas prices are going down, Trump said, is that Biden and other Democrats are doing that to win the Nov. 8 election and that those prices will rise after that. There were about 5,500 people at Saturday’s rally with most of the back section of the Covelli Centre empty though there was a full crowd at the front of the facility. The last time Trump campaigned at the arena, on July 25, 2017, there were about 7,000 people in attendance. During his Saturday speech, Vance said: “We need to get back to the policies of the real Donald Trump, not fake Tim Ryan pretending he’s someone he’s not.” Vance said Ryan tries to come across as a moderate in his “nonstop fraudulent television commercials,” but it’s a lie. Vance said there’s “two Tims out there. A D.C. Tim that votes 100 percent of the time with Joe Biden, and there’s campaign Tim who pretends he’s a moderate.” “We need to kick D.C. Tim to the curb, make him go back home and get a real job for once.” Polls indicate a close race between Vance, a venture capitalist and author of “Hillbilly Elegy” and Ryan, a 10-term House member who represents much of Mahoning and Trumbull counties. In a campaign fundraising email after the rally, Ryan wrote: “Republicans are panicking about losing here. And Trump knows how important winning Ohio is. Him wading into our race means more attack ads, more dark money and a tougher environment in an already competitive race.” At a Youngstown event Friday, Ryan criticized Vance for having a rally Saturday at the same time as the Ohio State-University of Toledo football game, saying it shows his opponent is out of touch with Ohioans. As for the rally in the heart of his congressional district, Ryan said: “They’re trying to cut into my vote, which is a political tactic. The fact is J.D. Vance can’t carry his own political message.” In addition to the Saturday rally with Trump, Vance had Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a leading potential 2024 Republican presidential candidate, campaign Aug. 19 at the Metroplex Expo Center in Liberty, also in Ryan’s district. “He needs Ron DeSantis, he needs Donald Trump and he needs everybody else to come in and make the case for him because he can’t make the case for himself,” Ryan said. Ryan added: “Ohioans don’t want someone who’s got to rely on someone else to carry their message for him or to buttress or support them in some way I’m out here. I’m scrapping. I’m clearly the underdog here with all this money coming at us.” Asked to comment after Saturday’s rally, Jordan Fuja, a campaign spokeswoman, said: “I was too busy watching football, but I’m sure whatever San Francisco phony J.D. Vance and his out-of-state allies tried to talk about in a half-empty stadium would’ve rang hollow with all the Ohioans who were also busy tuning into the Ohio State-Toledo game.” Though Trump failed to win re-election in 2020, he was only the third Republican presidential candidate since 1936 to win Mahoning County. He beat Democrat Joe Biden by 1.9 percent. Trump did even better in Trumbull County. He was the first Republican candidate to win that county in two consecutive presidential elections since Herbert Hoover in 1928 and 1932 before Trumbull and Mahoning counties started consistently voting for Democrats in 1936. He beat Biden by 10.56 percent in Trumbull two years ago and beat Democrat Hillary Clinton by 6.22 percent. Trump’s victories were key parts of a changing political trend in Mahoning and Trumbull counties.His success helped some Valley Republicans win elections and made a number of other races a lot more competitive than they had been in previous years. Today’s breaking news and more in your inbox Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Thunderous Trump Rocks Area Faithful
Small Group Protests Trumps Visit To Youngstown
Small Group Protests Trumps Visit To Youngstown
Small Group Protests Trump’s Visit To Youngstown https://digitalarizonanews.com/small-group-protests-trumps-visit-to-youngstown/ YOUNGSTOWN — A small group of people gathered Saturday outside the U.S. courthouse at 125 Market St. for a “honk and wave” rally to reject politics of hate and fear ahead of former President Donald J. Trump’s visit to the Covelli Centre to support U.S. Senate hopeful J.D. Vance. The Valley United for Fair Democracy group stood outside the courthouse, just blocks away from the Covelli Centre, from 1 to 7 p.m., garnering apparent support in the form of honks from passing cars. At 3 p.m., several people in the group spoke about their visions of full democracy, equality under the law and justice for all. “The people over there have made it to where socialism is a scary word,” said Glenn Hall with the Democratic Socialists of America Mahoning Valley Chapter. “But this is the truth: when we talk about socialism and we talk about justice, immigrant justice, health care justice, all these things — that’s economic and political democracy. That’s what socialism is. We are fighting a battle for everybody.” Hall said democracy does not just exist for one year or four years, but is a constant process. “Every day we live democracy,” he said. Alicia Prieto Langarcia, a mathematics professor at YSU who listed her three speaking points as “uno,” “dos” and “tres,” said people often distinguish between immigrants who “did it right” by waiting in line for citizenship and those who do not. “But there is no line for people that look like me,” she said. She went on to say that when certain groups seek to “Make America Great Again,” “the America these people want to come back is a place where they can oppress us — I don’t want that America.” Speakers also touched on the topics of heath care and reproductive rights. “Our Valley has a proud history and tradition of supporting workers across all sectors, expanding public health services for all, thriving in multicultural and interfaith communities, welcoming immigrants,” said Chris Flak of Youngstown, one of the event’s co-organizers, in a news release. “We reject the divisive, out of step politics of hate and fear that Vance and Trump weaponize to turn Ohioans against their own interests — and we know that those who attend (their rally) are not representative of our community, our state or our nation.” Today’s breaking news and more in your inbox Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Small Group Protests Trumps Visit To Youngstown
China Values UN Relationship Despite Human Rights Criticism
China Values UN Relationship Despite Human Rights Criticism
China Values UN Relationship Despite Human Rights Criticism https://digitalarizonanews.com/china-values-un-relationship-despite-human-rights-criticism-2/ A Chinese translator works during a Security Council meeting at United Nations headquarters ahead of the General Assembly, Friday, Sept. 16, 2022. As world leaders gather in New York at the annual U.N. General Assembly, rising superpower China is also focusing on another United Nations body that is meeting across the Atlantic Ocean in Geneva. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer) BEIJING — As world leaders gather in New York at the annual U.N. General Assembly, rising superpower China is also focusing on another United Nations body that is meeting across the Atlantic Ocean in Geneva. Chinese diplomats are speaking out and lobbying others at an ongoing session of the Human Rights Council to thwart a possible call for further scrutiny of what it calls its anti-extremism campaign in Xinjiang, following a U.N. report on abuses against Uyghurs and other largely Muslim ethnic groups in the western China border region. The concurrent meetings, on opposite sides of the Atlantic, illustrate China’s divided approach to the United Nations and its growing global influence. Beijing looks to the U.N., where it can count on support from countries it has befriended and in many cases assisted financially, as a counterweight to U.S.-led blocs such as the Group of Seven, which have grown increasingly hostile toward China. “China sees the U.N. as an important forum that it can use to further its strategic interests and goals, and to reform the global order,” said Helena Legarda from the Mercator Institute for China Studies in Berlin. While holding up the United Nations as a model of multilateralism, China rejects criticism or decisions that the ruling Communist Party sees as counter to its interests. Its diplomats struck back at the report published last month by the U.N. human rights office raising concerns about possible “crimes against humanity” in Xinjiang — vowing to suspend cooperation with the office and blasting what it described as a Western plot to undermine China’s rise. China had pushed hard to block the report on Xinjiang, delaying its release for more than a year. In the end, the information did come out — but just minutes before embattled U.N. human rights chief Michelle Bachelet left office. Like the United States, China feels a certain freedom to ignore U.N. institutions when it wants: The Trump administration pulled the U.S. out of the Human Rights Council in 2018, accusing it of anti-Israel bias. The Biden administration jumped back in this year, and has made a priority of defending Israel in the 47-member-state body. Also like the United States, China leverages its influence to get its way — effectively stymieing an investigation by the U.N.’s World Health Organization into whether China was the birthplace of the coronavirus pandemic. Ken Roth, the former executive director of Human Rights Watch, said Chinese President Xi Jinping is trying to redefine what human rights are, in part by casting economic development as a key criterion. China, Roth said, “more than any government in the past, is trying to undermine the U.N. human rights system” — by pressuring U.N. officials, retaliating against witnesses and trying to bribe governments. “One of their top priorities right now — maybe after Taiwan — is to avoid condemnation by the Human Rights Council,” Roth said. The self-governing island of Taiwan is claimed by China as its sovereign territory, an issue that the Beijing government is vociferous about internationally. Shi Yinhong, an international relations expert at Renmin University in China, said advocating for the U.N.’s role in maintaining the international order doesn’t mean that China agrees with every U.N. body, citing the COVID-19 origins study and the recent Xinjiang report. “When the U.N high commissioner for human rights issues such a report, in the eyes of China, it is the same as all organizations in the world, no matter official or private, that defames China,” Shi said. But China doesn’t want its pique toward the rights office, which falls under U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, to spill over to its deepening relationship with other parts of the world body that deal with refugees, climate, the internet, satellites, world hunger, atomic weapons, energy and much more. China wields power as one of the five veto-holding members of the Security Council, helping it build relationships with the United States and others who needed China’s support for past resolutions on Iran and North Korea. That influence has diminished somewhat with the overall deterioration of U.S.-China ties, Shi said. Subsequently, both China and Russia vetoed a U.S.-backed resolution in May to impose new sanctions on North Korea. Under Xi, who came to power 10 years ago, China has expanded its U.N. involvement from primarily international development early on to political, peace and security issues, Legarda said. She noted how China has had its concepts and language worked into U.N. resolutions and used the U.N. system to promote a “Global Development Initiative” proposed by Xi in a video address to last year’s General Assembly. “This is a reflection of China’s more assertive and ambitious foreign policy under Xi,” Legarda said. China has stepped into a diplomatic void created by a lack of U.S. leadership, said Daniel Warner, a Geneva-based political analyst. Former President Donald Trump shunned many international institutions, Warner said, and successor Joe Biden has been preoccupied with domestic issues. Chinese hold the top jobs at three of the U.N.’s 18 specialized agencies: the Food and Agricultural Organization, the Industrial Development Organization and the International Telecommunications Union, where the United States has put up a candidate to succeed outgoing chief Houlin Zhao. A Chinese official headed the International Civil Aviation Organization until last year. For China, it’s a matter of prestige as well as influence, Warner said. “The United States and the Western countries were very much involved in the initial United Nations,” he said. “China doesn’t want to have that kind of leadership. They’re not talking about liberal values, but they want to make sure that their interests are defended in the U.N. system.” Chinese diplomats spearheaded a joint statement — which it said was backed by 30 countries including Russia, North Korea, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela — that blasted “disinformation” behind the U.N. report on Xinjiang and the “erroneous conclusions” drawn in it. And China’s ambassador in Geneva said Beijing could no longer cooperate with the human rights office — without specifying how. Sarah Brooks, a China expert at the International Society for Human Rights advocacy group in Geneva, said China could hold up its funding for the office — which lately has come in at $800,000 a year, far less than Western countries that give tens of millions. Still, Brooks said it would be a “huge blow” if funding from China were to stop, in part because many countries appreciate and support the causes that Beijing helps pay for. “The optics of it are really damaging,” she said. “You have a country that says, ‘Hi, I want to be responsible, but I’m so thin-skinned … I’m still going to lash out at the organization that drafted it.'” Keaten reported from Geneva. Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations contributed to this report. FILE – China’s President Xi Jinping remotely addresses the 76th session of the United Nations General Assembly in a pre-recorded message, Tuesday Sept. 21, 2021, at UN headquarters. As world leaders gather in New York at the annual U.N. General Assembly, rising superpower China is also focusing on another United Nations body that is meeting across the Atlantic Ocean in Geneva. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, Pool, File) FILE – The symbol of the United Nations is displayed outside the Secretariat Building during an emergency meeting of the U.N. General Assembly, Monday, Feb. 28, 2022, at the United Nations Headquarters, in New York. As world leaders gather in New York at the annual U.N. General Assembly, rising superpower China is also focusing on another United Nations body that is meeting across the Atlantic Ocean in Geneva. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File) FILE – Zbigniew Rau, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Poland addresses the Human Rights Council at the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, March 2, 2022. As world leaders gather in New York at the annual U.N. General Assembly, rising superpower China is also focusing on another United Nations body that is meeting across the Atlantic Ocean in Geneva. (Denis Balibouse/Pool via AP, File) FILE – A tour guide stands near a display showing images of people at locations described as vocational training centers in southern Xinjiang at the Exhibition of the Fight Against Terrorism and Extremism in Urumqi in western China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region on April 21, 2021. As world leaders gather in New York at the annual U.N. General Assembly, rising superpower China is also focusing on another United Nations body that is meeting across the Atlantic Ocean in Geneva. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File) FILE – A security guard watches from a tower around a detention facility in Yarkent County in northwestern China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region on March 21, 2021. As world leaders gather in New York at the annual U.N. General Assembly, rising superpower China is also focusing on another United Nations body that is meeting across the Atlantic Ocean in Geneva. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File) Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
China Values UN Relationship Despite Human Rights Criticism
New Evidence Of Torture At Ukraine Graves As EU Calls For Probe
New Evidence Of Torture At Ukraine Graves As EU Calls For Probe
‘New Evidence Of Torture At Ukraine Graves’ As EU Calls For Probe https://digitalarizonanews.com/new-evidence-of-torture-at-ukraine-graves-as-eu-calls-for-probe/ The European Union has called for a war crimes tribunal as Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said new evidence of torture has been found as more bodies are exhumed from a mass burial site in a town re-taken from Russian forces. Jan Lipvasky, foreign minister of the Czech Republic which holds the EU’s rotating presidency, said on Saturday that Russia’s attacks “against the civilian population are unthinkable and abhorrent” in the 21st century. “We must not overlook it. We stand for the punishment of all war criminals,” he wrote in a message on Twitter. “I call for the speedy establishment of a special international tribunal that will prosecute the crime of aggression.” The appeal follows the discovery by Ukrainian authorities of about 450 graves outside the formerly Russian-occupied city of Izyum, with some of the exhumed bodies showing signs of torture. Zelenskyy, in his evening address, said “new evidence of torture was obtained” from the bodies buried there. “More than 10 torture chambers have already been found in various cities and towns liberated in Kharkiv region,” he added, describing the discovery of electrical implements for torture. “That’s what the Nazis did. This is what Ruscists do. And they will be held accountable in the same way – both on the battlefield and in courtrooms,” he said, using the term “Ruscists” for “Russian fascists”. Al Jazeera’s Hoda Abdel-Hamid, reporting from Kharkiv, said the situation in Izyum looks “gruesome on many levels”. “Izyum is now a desolate city, completely destroyed. There’s barely a building that hasn’t been at least partially damaged, and I’m talking about civilian targets here – apartment blocks, schools, pharmacies, the church – a very desolate picture,” Abdel-Hamid said. “It’s a place where you see the real toll of this war. It’s a city that has been besieged, that has been bitterly fought between the two sides. It’s now firmly under Ukrainian control. You see the soldiers roaming the streets, but there’s barely any sign of life.” ‘Probably 1,000 tortured and killed’ US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the mass graves likely provided more evidence that Russia is committing war crimes in its pro-Western neighbouring country. French President Emmanuel Macron described what had happened in Izyum as atrocities. The Ukrainian parliament’s human rights commissioner, Dmytro Lubinets, said there were “probably more than 1,000 Ukrainian citizens tortured and killed in the liberated territories of the Kharkiv region”. The United Nations in Geneva has said it hopes to send a team to determine the circumstances of the deaths. The macabre discoveries came a little more than five months after the Russian army, driven out of Bucha near the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, left behind hundreds of corpses of civilians, many of whom had signs of torture and summary executions. On Thursday, EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said she wanted Russian President Vladimir Putin to face the International Criminal Court over war crimes in Ukraine. US President Joe Biden meanwhile warned his Russian counterpart against using chemical or tactical nuclear weapons in the wake of serious losses in his war in Ukraine. “Don’t. Don’t. Don’t,” Biden said, in an excerpt from an interview with CBS’s 60 Minutes aired on Friday evening. “You would change the face of war unlike anything since World War II,” Biden said. Al Jazeera’s Mike Hanna, reporting from Washington, DC, said the “director of the CIA in April warned Congress that there’s a possibility that President Putin could deploy nuclear devices”. “It’s also important to note that President Putin in 2020 signed a Russian military doctrine, which states clearly that Russia will use nuclear devices if other countries utilise nuclear devices against them, but then – and this is the key point – it could also respond with nuclear weapons to the use of conventional weapons when the very existence of the state is threatened,” Hanna said. “Many military experts do not see a possibility of Putin using a nuclear weapon. However, many say that this does not rule out the fact that he may threaten the use, in other words, to escalate, to de-escalate, to get out the parties to the negotiating table.” ‘Pushing them back’ On the ground, Ukrainian forces have recaptured thousands of square kilometres in recent weeks, thanks to a counteroffensive in the northeast, and now threaten enemy positions in the south, as the fighting and bombings continue. The Russians “are angry because our army is pushing them back in its counteroffensive”, said Svitlana Shpuk, a 42-year-old worker in Kryvyi Rih, a southern town, and Zelenskyy’s hometown, which was flooded after a dam was destroyed by Russian missiles. Synegubov said an 11-year-old girl had been killed by missile fire in the region. Pavlo Kyrylenko, governor of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine which has been partially controlled by Russian-backed separatists since 2014, said on social media that a thermal power plant was “shelled by Russian invaders” on Saturday morning in Mykolaivka. Ukrainian firefighters were battling the blaze, he said, adding that the Russian shelling had led to interruptions to drinking water supply. “The occupiers are deliberately targeting infrastructure in the area to try to inflict as much damage as possible, primarily on the civilian population,” he charged. He had earlier reported that two civilians had been killed and 11 wounded in the past 24 hours by Russian fire. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
New Evidence Of Torture At Ukraine Graves As EU Calls For Probe
RIORDAN Robert
RIORDAN Robert
RIORDAN, Robert https://digitalarizonanews.com/riordan-robert/ RIORDAN, Robert Leon Age 89, of Phoenix, AZ, passed away Aug. 7, 2022. Born on Aug. 12, 1932, an only child of the late Aden (Web) and Leota (Crawford) Riordan. He served his country in the U.S. Air Force, was a builder, land developer and realtor. Survived by his wife of 62 years, Bonnie, sons Steve (Debby) and Jeff (Erica), seven grandchildren, and two great-granddaughters. Celebration of life service will be at Mountain Park Church, Phoenix at 2 p.m. on Sept. 24, followed by inurnment at Gilbert Memorial Park. Updates and tributes samaritanfuneralhome.com. In lieu of flowers, please make donations in Bob’s memory to Mountain Park Church, Phoenix, Southminster Presbyterian Church, Dayton, and New Hope Presbyterian, Fort Myers, FL. Grateful thanks to Copper Creek Inn Memory Care and Aegis Hospice. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
RIORDAN Robert
In Ohio Trump Mocks Senate Candidate J.D. Vance As He Rallies For Him
In Ohio Trump Mocks Senate Candidate J.D. Vance As He Rallies For Him
In Ohio, Trump Mocks Senate Candidate J.D. Vance As He Rallies For Him https://digitalarizonanews.com/in-ohio-trump-mocks-senate-candidate-j-d-vance-as-he-rallies-for-him/ YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio —  Former President Trump drew more than 6,000 fans for a rally Saturday evening in this industrial northeast Ohio city — and mocked venture capitalist J.D. Vance, his pick in the state’s surprisingly tight U.S. Senate race, in the process. “J.D. is kissing my ass. Of course he wants my support,” Trump told the crowd. “The entire MAGA movement is for J.D. Vance,” he added. Trump has intervened in dozens of Republican primaries across the country this year. Many of the candidates he backed, including Vance, went on to win their party’s nomination. But some Republicans in Washington have questioned whether Trump’s picks, who often have strong appeal to his base, can succeed in November, when they will have to compete for swing voters. “Candidate quality has a lot to do with the outcome” of statewide races, Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), the GOP leader in the Senate, said last month. Many election forecasters believe that Democrats are likely to maintain control of the Senate. Trump won Ohio twice, both times by more than 8 percentage points. But Vance, who was once a Trump critic, has been struggling to build a lead on Rep. Tim Ryan, his Democratic opponent for the seat being vacated by retiring Republican Sen. Rob Portman. Trump backed Vance in part because he thought the “Hillbilly Elegy” author and Marine veteran had the best chance to win, he said earlier this year. “He’s a guy that said some bad s— about me. He did,” Trump told the crowd at an April rally in Cleveland. “But I have to do what I have to do. We have to pick somebody that can win.” Some at Saturday’s rally evinced little affection for Republicans not named Trump. “I love Trump. He is the best president in my lifetime,” said Patricia Delwiche, 65, of Missouri, who traveled nearly 12 hours to attend Saturday’s event. Delwiche believes Trump needs to do more to push “Republicans in Name Only” — RINOs — out of the party. “There are RINOs out there. They need to get out, like Kevin McCarthy and Lindsey Graham,” she said, referring to the Bakersfield Republican who leads the House GOP and the longtime senator from South Carolina. Delwiche was one of nearly 1,000 rallygoers who waited outside the venue from the early morning hours as music blasted from the arena’s outdoor speakers. Some attendees tailgated in the parking lots. Like most Trump rallies, Saturday’s gathering also featured appearances by a variety of Trump world celebrities. Vincent Fusca — the QAnon figure who many Q followers believe is John F. Kennedy Jr., was in attendance. Uncle Jam, an older man dressed as Uncle Sam who sings Trump-inspired renditions of popular songs, sang “Facebook Prison Blues” to the tune of Johnny Cash’s “Folsom Prison Blues.” Mike Lindell, owner of the company My Pillow, spoke on a small stage in the parking lot. “They had Jan. 6 planned out,” Lindell told the crowd before the event without specifying who “they” were. The two days after the attack on the U.S. Capitol will be remembered as some of the darkest days in our country’s history, he said. “They tried to kill your voice that day. They canceled 1.2 million voices from across social media,” Lindell said. As rallygoers waited to enter the building, Lindell paced across his stage for nearly an hour, spouting debunked election claims. Earlier this year, Dominion Voting Systems sued Lindell for defamation over his evidence-free claims that the company’s former director of product strategy and security committed treason and rigged election machines for President Biden. After rally attendees filed in, the first person to take the stage was J.R. Majewski, a former nuclear energy worker in a tight race against Democratic Rep. Marcy Kaptur, the longest-tenured woman in the House. Kaptur’s home turf, like much of northern Ohio, used to be solidly Democratic, full of union workers who backed candidates with long histories of supporting labor. But that started to change after many manufacturing jobs were outsourced and some unions started to back Trump. Redistricting recently made Kaptur’s district more competitive, and she’s a top target for Republicans this fall. Majewski’s dad used to be a “true blue Democrat until 2015, when he saw Donald Trump coming down the escalator and he spoke to his heart,” the candidate told The Times in an interview. “Donald Trump didn’t create the MAGA movement,” Majewski said. “He just taught us how to listen and gave us some insight of what our elected officials were doing, and it motivated people to get more involved.” If elected, Majewski said, he would focus on energy policy and stopping the Democrats from “trying to force the Green New Deal, wind turbines, solar panels, down the throat of the American people. We just got to keep the lobbyists and big-business money out of the picture.” Majewski’s speech took a more radical tone. He thanked Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for sending unwitting migrants to Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., and falsely claimed that the 2020 election was stolen from Trump. “This Ohio caucus is excited to work together as a team for Ohio,” he said. “We are going to lead the way — no more empty promises, no more locking us down, no more masks, no more grooming our children.” If Republicans have their way, the Ohio caucus will be led by Vance. In his speech, Vance attacked Ryan for voting too often with Biden and for supporting “rioters and looters” and the “defund the police” movement. Ryan never supported defunding the police; he said the criminal justice system is racist and believes it is “the new Jim Crow.” Vance also attacked Ryan for wanting to eventually ban gas-powered vehicles, which Ryan suggested during his 2020 presidential run. “Is that going to benefit the Youngstown autoworker? Of course not,” Vance said. Trump closed out the night by painting a dark vision of Ohio. He said Cincinnati, Cleveland and Dayton — all led by Democratic mayors — are some of the deadliest in the country and are being taken over by drug dealers. “I’m calling for the death penalty for drug dealers and human traffickers,” he said. The three Ohio cities Trump mentioned had some of the highest homicide rates in the nation in 2019, according to FBI data. He criticized Ryan for saying he wanted to “kill and confront” the extremist movement within the Republican Party. Trump also attacked Ryan for trying to appeal to moderate Republicans. “I think he is running on a ‘I love Donald Trump’ policy,” Trump said of the Democrat. “He is a militant left-winger, pretending to be a moderate.” Trump continued to push bogus claims about the 2020 election. “We won [the presidency] in two landslides, and now, we have to give J.D. a landslide,” he said. “The radical left Democrats have been fighting tooth and nail to stop me because they know I will never be loyal to them and will only be loyal to you.” Ohioans have to vote Republican on the entire ballot or risk the election being stolen, Trump added. “We need a landslide so big that the radical left can’t steal it or rig it,” Trump said. “This is the year we are going to take back the House, we are going to take back the Senate, and we are going to take back America. And in 2024, most important, we are going to take back our magnificent White House.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
In Ohio Trump Mocks Senate Candidate J.D. Vance As He Rallies For Him