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Voter Challenges Records Requests Swamp Election Offices
Voter Challenges Records Requests Swamp Election Offices
Voter Challenges, Records Requests Swamp Election Offices https://digitalarizonanews.com/voter-challenges-records-requests-swamp-election-offices-2/ Spurred by conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election, activists around the country are using laws that allow people to challenge a voter’s right to cast a ballot to contest the registrations of thousands of voters at a time. In Iowa, Linn County Auditor Joel Miller had handled three voter challenges over the previous 15 years. He received 119 over just two days after Doug Frank, an Ohio educator who is touring the country spreading doubts about the 2020 election, swung through the state. In Nassau County in northern Florida, two residents challenged the registrations of nearly 2,000 voters just six days before last month’s primary. In Georgia, activists are dropping off boxloads of challenges in the diverse and Democratic-leaning counties comprising the Atlanta metro area, including more than 35,000 in one county late last month. Election officials say the vast majority of the challenges will be irrelevant because they contest the presence on voting rolls of people who already are in the process of being removed after they moved out of the region. Still, they create potentially hundreds of hours of extra work as the offices scramble to prepare for November’s election. “They at best overburden election officials in the run-up to an election, and at worse they lead to people being removed from the rolls when they shouldn’t be,” said Sean Morales-Doyle of The Brennan Center for Justice, which has tracked an upswing in voter challenges. The voter challenges come as activists who believe in the election lies of former President Donald Trump also have flooded election offices across the country with public records requests and threats of litigation, piling even more work on them as they ready for November. “It’s time-consuming for us, because we have to consult with our county attorneys about what the proper response is going to be,” said Rachel Rodriguez, an elections supervisor in Dane County, Wisconsin, which includes Madison, the state capital. She received duplicate emails demanding records about two weeks ago: “It’s taking up valuable time that we don’t necessarily have as election officials when we’re trying to prepare for a November election.” Michael Henrici, the Democratic commissioner of elections in New York’s Otsego County, received a single-line email last week warning of unspecified “election integrity” litigation, then a follow-up complaining he hadn’t responded. “These aren’t people with specific grievances,” Henrici said. “They’re getting a form letter from someone’s podcast and sometimes filling in the blanks.” Multiple investigations and reviews, including one by Trump’s own Department of Justice, found no significant fraud i n the 2020 presidential election, and courts rejected dozens of lawsuits brought by Trump and his allies. But Trump has continued to insist that widespread fraud cost him re-election. That has inspired legions of activists to become do-it-yourself election sleuths around the country, challenging local voting officials at every turn. In Linn County, Iowa, which includes the city of Cedar Rapids, Miller said he and the auditors who run elections in the state’s other 98 counties have been deluged with both records requests and voter challenges. “The whole barrage came in a two-week period,” Miller said, following the tour by Frank, who uses mathematical projections to make claims of a vast conspiracy to steal the election from Trump, “and it’s happening to auditors across the state.” Election offices routinely go through their voter rolls and remove those who have moved or died. Federal law constrains how quickly they can drop voters, and conservative activists have long complained that election officials do not move swiftly enough to clean up their rolls. The recent challenges stem from activists comparing postal change-of-address and other databases to voter rolls. Election officials say this is redundant, because they already take the same steps. Sometimes the challenges come after election conspiracists go door-to-door, often in heavily minority neighborhoods, seeking evidence that votes were cast improperly in 2020. Texas’ heavily Democratic Harris County, which includes Houston, received nearly 5,000 challenges from a conservative group that went door-to-door checking voter addresses. The election office said it dismissed the challenges it legally had to review before the election and will finish the remainder after Nov. 8. Activists in Gwinnett County, which stretches across the increasingly Democratic northern Atlanta suburbs, spent 10 months comparing change-of-address and other databases with the county’s voter rolls. They submitted eight boxes of challenges last month. About 15,000, they said, were complaints that specific voters improperly received mail ballots in 2020. Another 22,000 were for voters they contend are no longer at their registered address. There are so many challenges that election officials have yet to even count them all. But Zach Manifold, Gwinnett’s election supervisor, said that, in every single mail ballot complaint the office has sampled, the voter properly received a mailed ballot. But if any of the address-challenged voters do try to cast a ballot in November, the county’s elections board will need to decide whether that vote should count. They’ll only have six days to make a decision, as they have to certify their vote total by the Monday after Election Day under Georgia law. Manifold estimated his office has a month to log and research the challenges, before mail ballots go out for the November elections: “It is a tight window to get everything done,” he said. Many of the large counties facing voter roll challenges are places where President Joe Biden beat Trump in 2020, including Gwinnett and Harris. Yet those behind the effort dispute the notion that they are targeting Democratic-leaning counties and say they’re working on behalf of all voters. In Florida’s Nassau County, for example, Trump won with more than 72% of the vote. “They should be glad that the voter rolls are being cleaned up so they can make sure their votes count,” said Garland Favorito, a conservative activist who has teamed up with supporters of Trump’s election lies and is helping with voter challenges in Georgia. Favorito said more challenges are coming in other Georgia counties. Under legislation passed last year by the Republican-controlled Legislature, there are no limits on the number of voter challenges that can be filed in Georgia. Most states implicitly set restraints on challenges, said Morales-Doyle of the Brennan Center. They require a complainant to have specific, personal information about the voters they target and establish penalties for making frivolous challenges. Florida is an example. Its voter challenge law only permits the filing of challenges 30 days before an election, requiring election officials to contact each voter challenged before Election Day. It is a misdemeanor to file a “frivolous” challenge. But voter challenges almost derailed Florida’s primary last month in heavily-Republican Nassau County, in the northeastern part of the state. Two women who belonged to a conservative group, County Citizens Defending Freedom, dropped off the nearly 2,000 challenges at the county elections office six days before the Aug. 23 primary. Luckily for the office, the challenges were filed in an incorrect format. Elections Supervisor Janet Adkins told the activists they would review them, anyway — after the primary. “To take away a person’s right to vote is a very serious thing,” Adkins said. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Voter Challenges Records Requests Swamp Election Offices
What To Know About Raymond Dearie The Special Master Reviewing Mar-A-Lago Documents Deltaplex News
What To Know About Raymond Dearie The Special Master Reviewing Mar-A-Lago Documents Deltaplex News
What To Know About Raymond Dearie, The Special Master Reviewing Mar-A-Lago Documents – Deltaplex News https://digitalarizonanews.com/what-to-know-about-raymond-dearie-the-special-master-reviewing-mar-a-lago-documents-deltaplex-news/ (NEW YORK) — Judge Aileen Cannon has appointed an independent arbiter to review documents seized from former President Donald Trump’s Florida residence. Raymond Dearie, a senior district judge for the Eastern District of New York, has been named the “special master” in the case to sift through all of the materials taken by federal agents during the Aug. 8 raid at Mar-a-Lago, including the roughly 100 documents bearing classification markings. Dearie was one of the two candidates Trump’s legal team proposed to serve as special master. The Department of Justice, which also submitted two names for consideration to Judge Cannon, had deemed Dearie was an adequate choice, writing he and their picks all had “substantial judicial experience.” But the DOJ has said overall that a special master appointment was unnecessary and would delay the government’s review, potentially causing “irreparable harm to our national security and intelligence interests.” The DOJ on Friday appealed to the 11th Circuit for a partial stay on Cannon’s order, which halted the government’s ability to use the classified documents and other materials seized in its ongoing criminal investigation. The DOJ is asking the appeals court to permit it to continue working with the classified records and not disclose them for review by the special master. Here’s what to know about Dearie and the role he’ll be playing in the high-profile Trump investigation. Who is Dearie? Dearie, 78, started his career in private practice after graduating from St. John’s University School of Law in 1969. He then served in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Eastern District of New York for six years as chief of the appeals division. He was also the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York before being tapped by President Ronald Reagan in 1986 to serve on the federal bench. He was the chief judge of the U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of New York for four years before assuming senior status in 2011. Dearie also served on the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, or FISA court, which considers applications from the government for the collection of electronic surveillance or physical searches. During his time on the FISA court, Dearie approved of a warrant for the DOJ and FBI to surveil Carter Page — a former campaign aide for Trump — during special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation after the 2016 election. The FISA court’s ruling was heavily criticized by Trump and his Republican allies. What will he be doing? Dearie will be reviewing the seized materials from Mar-a-Lago for any personal items and will examine documents for certain types of privileges, namely attorney-client and executive privilege, that should not be used in the DOJ probe. Judge Cannon said the special master will prioritize reviewing the classified documents, and requested they submit interim reports and recommendations “as appropriate.” Dearie also had 10 days after the Sept. 15 order to consult with lawyers for both the DOJ and Trump’s team and then provide Judge Cannon with a timeline for the review. The DOJ argued in court the special master wasn’t needed because a “filter team” has already completed its review of material possibly covered by attorney-client privilege. The federal agency also questioned whether Trump’s claims of executive privilege — a tool presidents possess to shield communications from courts or Congress — were warranted given he’s no longer in office. Dearie has until Nov. 30 to finish his work, several weeks longer than the DOJ wanted. Trump is 100% responsible for “the professional fees and expenses of the Special Master and any professionals, support staff, and expert consultants engaged at the Special Master’s request,” Cannon ruled. Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
What To Know About Raymond Dearie The Special Master Reviewing Mar-A-Lago Documents Deltaplex News
Opinion | Bolsonaros Quest To Be Brazils Top Gun Endangers The Whole Country
Opinion | Bolsonaros Quest To Be Brazils Top Gun Endangers The Whole Country
Opinion | Bolsonaro’s Quest To Be Brazil’s Top Gun Endangers The Whole Country https://digitalarizonanews.com/opinion-bolsonaros-quest-to-be-brazils-top-gun-endangers-the-whole-country/ Robert Muggah is co-founder of the Igarapé Institute, a Brazil-based think tank. Mac Margolis, a Global Opinions contributing columnist, is the author of “Last New World: The Conquest of the Amazon Frontier.” Whether cocking finger pistols, vowing to put a rifle in every home or working to gut arms controls, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro has spent his entire 33-year political career aspiring to be his country’s top gun. “I want everyone armed,” he berated his cabinet in a 2020 meeting that turned into a viral video. Plagiarizing the National Rifle Association, he added that “a people armed will never be enslaved.” This is not just political theater. Bolsonaro’s call to arms threatens Brazilian security, civic concord and perhaps democracy itself. The stakes are particularly high now, in the rancorous run-up to the Oct. 2 presidential elections, the most sharply contested since military rule ended 37 years ago. That Bolsonaro, a cashiered army captain who swoons for men in epaulets, takes every opportunity to extol his country’s 21-year military dictatorship only heightens the concerns. Bolsonaro has militarized the government, packing his cabinet with more former and active brass than any leader since the dictators were in charge. He deployed troops, tanks and fighter planes to celebrate Brazil’s independence day, as if it were a martial victory. (It wasn’t.) By evangelizing assault rifles and handguns, he also seems bent on militarizing the future. This is grim news for a country that clocks more than 40,000 murders a year, most of them gun-related. Research by the Igarapé Institute think tank and other civil society organizations shows just how pervasive the cult of guns has become. Hastened by some 40 presidential pro-gun decrees and norms, the number of civilian-owned small arms nearly tripled from 2018 to 2021, Igarapé found. By July, Brazil’s total cache of privately owned arms in circulation had reached 1.9 million, according to Freedom of Information filings. These include weapons in the hands of presumably well-intentioned civilians genuinely concerned for their safety, but also many with owners who intone the official cant that good guys with guns are the answer to crime. Bolstering that conceit is declining trust in the police and the paucity of rule of law in Brazil’s crime hotspots. Perhaps nowhere are these failings more conspicuous than in the Amazon, which has become a new frontier for the Brazilian arms race. If arming well-meaning citizens were the solution to criminal violence, the region — where total registered arms more than doubled just from December 2018 to November 2021 — should be a haven of lawfulness and security. Instead, a host of scourges — more guns, metastasizing criminal networks and faulty governance — has turned the world’s largest tropical forest into a killing field. Nowhere in Brazil has the rate of lethal gun violence increased so sharply, rising 78 percent in Amazonian states from 2010 to 2019, even as it dropped by 10 percent in the rest of the country. according to Igarapé’s review of Ministry of Health data. In three critical Amazon frontier states, fatal gunplay spiked during the same period: Acre (253 percent), Amapá (125 percent) and Amazonas (55 percent). Not coincidentally, these areas are also emerging deforestation hotspots, where unruly migration, plunder, land grabbing and dysfunctional governance abound. The Amazon’s surge in gun-related homicides is just one indication Bolsonaro and his following are missing the mark. Even with more citizens carrying than ever, polls show that Brazilians are feeling no safer. Fewer than a third of Brazilians canvassed by national pollster Quaest said they would buy a gun if given the option. Nearly 7 in 10 said that they feared being near people with weapons and that wider gun access means putting young people in danger. No matter. The Bolsonaro mission to spread weapons, lower the age for gun permits and limit oversight has only energized his gun-toting base. It would be folly to dismiss his bully talk as bluster. If he loses the election to former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (as voter polls suggest he will), don’t wait for Bolsonaro to go down shooting, or for the armed forces to stage a coup. After four years of feckless governance and disastrous pandemic management, neither the president nor military has the cachet to pull off such a stunt. But Bolsonaro has also given no sign that he would, if defeated, contain indignant loyalists. On the contrary, Donald Trump’s most devoted Latin American disciple has relentlessly emboldened his boosters to distrust the polls and decry the electoral system, while making sure they’re packing heat. Even if a tropical version of the United States’ Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection is unlikely, there are risks ahead. Whoever wins Brazil’s election will govern a country facing not just food inflation, deepening poverty and hunger, and a fiscal sinkhole, but also one poisoned by partisan choler and — more than ever — armed to the teeth. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Opinion | Bolsonaros Quest To Be Brazils Top Gun Endangers The Whole Country
Phony Document Lands On Court Docket In Trump Search Case
Phony Document Lands On Court Docket In Trump Search Case
Phony Document Lands On Court Docket In Trump Search Case https://digitalarizonanews.com/phony-document-lands-on-court-docket-in-trump-search-case-2/ WASHINGTON (AP) When a government document mysteriously appeared earlier this week in the highest profile case in the federal court system, it had the hallmarks of another explosive storyline in the Justice Department’s investigation into classified records stored at former President Donald Trump’s Florida estate. The document purported to be from the U.S. Treasury Department, claimed that the agency had seized sensitive documents related to last month’s search at Mar-a-Lago and included a warrant ordering CNN to preserve “leaked tax records.” The document remained late Thursday on the court docket, but it is a clear fabrication. A review of dozens of court records and interviews by The Associated Press suggest the document originated with a serial forger behind bars at a federal prison complex in North Carolina. The incident also suggests that the court clerk was easily tricked into believing it was real, landing the document on the public docket in the Mar-a-Lago search warrant case. It also highlights the vulnerability of the U.S. court system and raises questions about the court’s vetting of documents that purport to be official records. The document first appeared on the court’s docket late Monday afternoon and was marked as a “MOTION to Intervene by U.S. Department of the Treasury.” The document, sprinkled with spelling and syntax errors, read, “The U.S. Department of Treasury through the U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Marshals Service have arrested Seized Federal Securities containing sensitive documents which are subject to the Defendant Sealed Search Warrant by the F.B.I. arrest.” It cited a federal statute for collecting financial records in federal investigations. The document also included the two supposed warrants, one that claimed to be sent to CNN in Atlanta and another to a towing company in Michigan. Those supposed warrants, though, are identical to paperwork filed in another case in federal court in Georgia brought by an inmate at the prison medical center in Butner, North Carolina. The case was thrown out, as were the array of other frivolous lawsuits the man has filed from his prison cell. The man has been in custody for several years since he was found not competent to stand trial after an arrest for planting a fake explosive outside the Guardian Building, a skyscraper in Detroit. Since his incarceration, he has filed a range of lawsuits and has impersonated the Treasury Department, claimed to be a federal trustee and claimed to be a lawyer for the Justice Department, a review of court records shows. In the Georgia case, the man alleged that Trump and others had “acquired ‘millions of un- redacted classified tax returns and other sensitive financial data, bank records and accounts of banking and tax transactions of several million’ Americans and federal government agencies,” court documents say. The judge in that case called his suit “fanatic” and “delusional,” saying there was no way to “discern any cognizable claim” from the incoherent filings. The man has repeatedly impersonated federal officials in court records and has placed tax liens on judges using his false paperwork, two people familiar with the matter told the AP. Because of his history as a forger, his mail is supposed to be subjected to additional scrutiny from the Bureau of Prisons. It’s unclear how the documents — the fake motion and the phony warrants — ended up at the court clerk’s office at the courthouse in West Palm Beach, Florida. A photocopy of an envelope, included in the filing, shows it was sent to the court with a printed return address of the Treasury Department’s headquarters in Washington. But a postmark shows a Michigan ZIP code, and a tracking number on the envelope shows it was mailed Sept. 9 from Clinton Township, Michigan, the inmate’s hometown. The AP is not identifying the inmate by name because he has a documented history of mental illness and has not been charged with a crime related to the filing. “There is simply nothing indicating that he has any authorization to act on behalf of the United States,” the judge in the Georgia case wrote. But despite the clear warning signs — including a stamp noting the Georgia case number on the phony warrants — the filing still made its way onto the docket. Spokespeople for the Justice Department and the Treasury Department would not comment. They declined to answer on the record when asked if the document was false and why the government had not addressed it. Representatives in the court clerk’s office and the magistrate judge overseeing the search warrant case did not respond to requests for comment. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Phony Document Lands On Court Docket In Trump Search Case
Abraham Alexander Releases Stay Featuring Gary Clark Jr.
Abraham Alexander Releases Stay Featuring Gary Clark Jr.
Abraham Alexander Releases “Stay” Featuring Gary Clark Jr. https://digitalarizonanews.com/abraham-alexander-releases-stay-featuring-gary-clark-jr/ Fort Worth-based singer songwriter Abraham Alexander releases “Stay” featuring fellow Texan and multi Grammy Award-winning guitarist Gary Clark Jr. “Gary was one of my early heroes and it was just another instance of being in the right place at the right time when we connected. But beyond his musicality he’s someone that I definitely look up to and I’m grateful for, and someone I want to emulate,” Alexander explains of the collaboration which is his first release for Dualtone Records. While Alexander’s lyrics often speak to pain and trauma and life-changing loss, he instills his music with a joyful passion and irrepressible spirit, ultimately giving way to songs that radiate undeniable hope. “Stay” is a snapshot of those experiences and a glimpse of what’s to come. “I think going and coming back is not the same as never leaving. I wrote ‘Stay’ when I had the opportunity to leave Fort Worth and record in London,” says Alexander. “But as I was in London I was missing home, missing my family, and missing Fort Worth. Without my family, I’m not me. My experience in London proved to me that this is what I want to do and that I’m willing to go the extra mile but I can still go that mile surrounded by the people who love me.” From open mics in Fort Worth, TX to recent stints on the road opening for Leon Bridges, Black Pumas, Ani DiFranco, and Mavis Staples — Alexander is ready for the headlining spotlight and to articulate what many of us are feeling. ON TOUR: Sept. 9 – The Kennedy Center Millennium Stage – Washington, DC Sept. 11 – Moon River Festival – Chattanooga, TN Sept. 15 – Exit/In (Americanafest showcase) – Nashville, TN Sept. 16 – The Mountain Winery – Saratoga, CA + Sept. 18 – Pala Casino (Starlight Theater) – Pala, CA + Sept. 21 – Rialto Theatre – Tucson, AZ + Sept. 23 – Pepsi Amphitheater – Flagstaff, AZ + Sept. 24 – Santa Fe Opera – Santa Fe, NM + Sept. 25 – Chautauqua Auditorium – Boulder, CO + Spet. 30 – Levitt Pavilion – Arlington, TX Oct. 1 – Trans Pecos Festival – Marfa, TX Oct. 2 – The Admiral – Omaha, NE # Oct. 4 – Union Event Center – Salt Lake City, UT # Oct. 5 – Revolution Concert House – Garden City, ID # Oct. 6 – Grand Sierra Resort & Casino – Reno, NV # Oct. 9 – Hard Rock Live – Wheatland, CA # Oct. 10 – Wooly’s – Des Moines, IA ^ Oct. 12 – The Pablo Center – Eau Claire, WI ^ Oct. 13 – Kalamazoo State Theatre – Kalamazoo, MI ^ Oct. 14 – Headliners Music Hall – Louisville, KY ^ Oct. 15 – Madison Theater – Covington, KY ^ Nov. 11 – Ogden Theatre – Denver, CO * Nov. 12 – The Commonwealth Room – Salt Lake City, UT * Nov. 15 – El Korah Shrine – Boise, ID * Nov. 16 – Neptune Theatre – Seattle, WA * Nov. 18 – McMenamins Crystal Ballroom – Portland, OR *  + w/ Rodrigo y Gabriela # w/ Gary Clark Jr. ^ w/ Ani Difranco * w/ Lucius Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Abraham Alexander Releases Stay Featuring Gary Clark Jr.
US Forecast
US Forecast
US Forecast https://digitalarizonanews.com/us-forecast-14/ City/Town, State;Yesterday’s High Temp (F);Yesterday’s Low Temp (F);Today’s High Temp (F);Today’s Low Temp (F);Weather Condition;Wind Direction;Wind Speed (MPH);Humidity (%);Chance of Precip. (%);UV Index Albany, NY;74;60;81;64;A shower in the p.m.;S;8;66%;100%;4 Albuquerque, NM;87;63;86;63;Mostly sunny;S;9;29%;15%;7 Anchorage, AK;58;46;56;48;Increasing clouds;SE;6;67%;89%;2 Asheville, NC;78;54;79;54;Partly sunny;E;5;64%;3%;7 Atlanta, GA;83;62;85;62;Sunshine;ENE;6;58%;2%;7 Atlantic City, NJ;77;67;81;70;Sunlit, breezy, nice;SW;15;63%;3%;5 Austin, TX;94;74;95;75;Mostly sunny;SE;4;62%;3%;8 Baltimore, MD;83;65;88;69;Mostly sunny, warm;SW;6;51%;6%;5 Baton Rouge, LA;92;73;91;71;A t-storm around;SE;7;69%;43%;8 Billings, MT;76;53;78;56;Partly sunny;SE;9;42%;6%;5 Birmingham, AL;85;65;87;64;Partly sunny, nice;E;6;58%;3%;7 Bismarck, ND;65;47;80;54;Mostly sunny, warmer;SSW;8;59%;41%;4 Boise, ID;80;58;78;53;An afternoon shower;NNE;8;41%;44%;3 Boston, MA;68;62;84;63;Warmer;NNE;12;55%;82%;5 Bridgeport, CT;72;63;84;67;Warmer, more humid;SW;10;58%;20%;5 Buffalo, NY;80;67;78;67;Winds subsiding;SSW;14;65%;91%;2 Burlington, VT;69;60;73;61;A little p.m. rain;SSE;8;77%;98%;2 Caribou, ME;64;46;63;35;Turning sunny;N;6;53%;1%;4 Casper, WY;73;45;79;48;Sunshine and nice;SSW;8;53%;7%;5 Charleston, SC;83;71;85;71;A t-storm around;ENE;8;65%;55%;7 Charleston, WV;85;61;84;61;Sunshine and humid;S;5;61%;7%;6 Charlotte, NC;84;60;85;61;Plenty of sun;ESE;5;56%;3%;6 Cheyenne, WY;73;48;81;52;Plenty of sun;WSW;10;30%;6%;6 Chicago, IL;86;69;82;67;A t-storm around;S;11;67%;92%;5 Cleveland, OH;82;69;83;69;Warm with some sun;SSW;11;59%;75%;5 Columbia, SC;87;63;86;65;Sunny;E;6;55%;5%;7 Columbus, OH;83;60;83;65;Warm with sunshine;SSW;8;62%;61%;5 Concord, NH;70;53;82;58;Showers around;ESE;8;65%;99%;2 Dallas-Ft. Worth, TX;93;75;94;76;Lots of sun, warm;SSE;10;53%;2%;7 Denver, CO;82;54;87;58;Sunny;SW;6;24%;5%;6 Des Moines, IA;74;65;81;63;A strong t-storm;ENE;6;79%;80%;5 Detroit, MI;85;66;84;68;Mostly cloudy, warm;SW;10;59%;97%;3 Dodge City, KS;96;70;99;68;Hot;S;18;36%;5%;6 Duluth, MN;68;61;70;57;Cloudy;WSW;9;72%;26%;2 El Paso, TX;95;69;93;70;Sunny and very warm;SE;9;36%;33%;8 Fairbanks, AK;56;44;56;40;Clearing;NE;6;57%;21%;1 Fargo, ND;68;49;73;54;Partly sunny;S;8;79%;5%;3 Grand Junction, CO;80;56;85;58;Breezy in the a.m.;SSE;13;26%;0%;6 Grand Rapids, MI;82;67;78;64;A shower or two;SW;11;74%;94%;5 Hartford, CT;73;60;84;65;Warmer;SSW;9;61%;30%;5 Helena, MT;73;46;74;50;Mostly cloudy;S;4;49%;29%;4 Honolulu, HI;88;75;88;76;A couple of showers;ENE;13;64%;85%;5 Houston, TX;90;76;91;77;Humid with a shower;ESE;7;70%;81%;6 Indianapolis, IN;84;64;85;68;Partly sunny, warm;SSW;9;60%;60%;5 Jackson, MS;90;67;91;70;Mostly sunny, nice;SE;3;60%;2%;7 Jacksonville, FL;82;74;82;74;A stray a.m. t-storm;NNE;8;74%;93%;5 Juneau, AK;59;48;58;42;A shower in the a.m.;NE;5;75%;55%;2 Kansas City, MO;90;74;94;74;Hot;SSW;14;59%;9%;5 Knoxville, TN;84;60;85;59;Mostly sunny;SE;4;61%;3%;6 Las Vegas, NV;94;68;94;68;Plenty of sunshine;S;10;18%;0%;6 Lexington, KY;84;62;85;65;Mostly sunny, warm;S;7;62%;13%;6 Little Rock, AR;91;70;93;71;Mostly sunny and hot;SSW;7;55%;2%;7 Long Beach, CA;77;67;78;64;Partly sunny, nice;W;7;55%;5%;6 Los Angeles, CA;78;65;78;62;Partly sunny;SW;7;55%;27%;6 Louisville, KY;85;64;87;68;Sunshine and warm;S;8;60%;41%;6 Madison, WI;80;66;79;57;A p.m. t-storm;NNW;8;78%;77%;2 Memphis, TN;90;71;94;72;Mostly sunny and hot;SE;6;48%;1%;6 Miami, FL;88;78;87;78;A stray t-shower;ENE;8;74%;69%;7 Milwaukee, WI;84;68;82;63;A morning t-storm;W;11;70%;80%;3 Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN;82;62;74;58;Variable cloudiness;W;8;68%;26%;2 Mobile, AL;91;73;92;71;Mostly sunny;NNW;7;65%;9%;8 Montgomery, AL;87;66;86;64;Mostly sunny, nice;ENE;6;61%;2%;7 Mt. Washington, NH;44;41;49;43;Afternoon rain;SSE;36;98%;100%;1 Nashville, TN;86;62;89;64;Warm with sunshine;S;6;56%;2%;6 New Orleans, LA;88;77;89;76;A t-storm in spots;SSE;10;69%;44%;7 New York, NY;75;66;87;70;Warmer, more humid;SW;10;51%;9%;5 Newark, NJ;77;63;86;68;Warm and more humid;SW;9;54%;10%;5 Norfolk, VA;83;64;86;67;Sunny and very warm;S;6;60%;4%;6 Oklahoma City, OK;94;74;95;72;Breezy and hot;S;15;54%;2%;6 Olympia, WA;67;49;75;45;Partly sunny;NE;7;51%;2%;4 Omaha, NE;83;63;84;62;Brilliant sunshine;ENE;7;80%;30%;5 Orlando, FL;87;73;88;74;A t-storm or two;E;5;73%;75%;8 Philadelphia, PA;83;65;87;69;Mostly sunny, warm;SSW;9;52%;5%;5 Phoenix, AZ;101;77;103;80;Mostly sunny, warm;W;7;17%;1%;7 Pittsburgh, PA;82;63;84;66;Fog in the morning;SSW;7;58%;27%;5 Portland, ME;67;56;73;55;Afternoon rain;NE;10;67%;97%;2 Portland, OR;71;56;78;54;Mostly cloudy;NNE;7;53%;4%;3 Providence, RI;72;60;83;65;Warmer;SW;10;60%;28%;5 Raleigh, NC;84;58;85;62;Mostly sunny;S;5;63%;5%;6 Reno, NV;76;52;67;47;An afternoon shower;NW;11;38%;60%;2 Richmond, VA;83;59;87;62;Warm with sunshine;S;7;57%;3%;6 Roswell, NM;97;64;92;65;Sunny and very warm;SSE;10;45%;10%;7 Sacramento, CA;78;61;72;62;A couple of showers;SE;10;61%;99%;2 Salt Lake City, UT;78;60;88;62;Increasingly windy;SSE;15;30%;0%;5 San Antonio, TX;94;75;95;75;Partly sunny, humid;SE;7;59%;27%;8 San Diego, CA;74;65;75;64;Partly sunny;NW;8;60%;0%;6 San Francisco, CA;66;62;72;63;Breezy with rain;SSE;18;69%;98%;2 Savannah, GA;84;71;84;70;A stray p.m. t-storm;ENE;11;75%;47%;7 Seattle-Tacoma, WA;66;55;72;52;Mostly cloudy;NNE;11;51%;3%;3 Sioux Falls, SD;83;56;78;56;Mostly sunny;E;5;68%;25%;5 Spokane, WA;72;48;78;50;Decreasing clouds;SSW;2;39%;3%;3 Springfield, IL;86;66;85;67;More humid;SSW;8;65%;85%;5 St. Louis, MO;89;66;91;71;Hot and more humid;SSW;8;61%;83%;6 Tampa, FL;90;72;87;73;Mostly sunny;N;6;74%;44%;8 Toledo, OH;85;62;83;66;Increasing clouds;SW;7;60%;97%;5 Tucson, AZ;100;71;99;73;Mostly sunny and hot;NW;8;27%;9%;7 Tulsa, OK;95;74;97;72;Hot;S;10;52%;7%;6 Vero Beach, FL;86;72;87;73;A t-storm in spots;NNE;6;84%;84%;4 Washington, DC;83;63;87;65;Mostly sunny, warm;S;7;51%;5%;5 Wichita, KS;91;72;98;71;Sunny, breezy, hot;SSW;17;49%;6%;6 Wilmington, DE;82;64;86;67;Mostly sunny, warm;SSW;10;56%;5%;5 _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
US Forecast
Irans President Raeisi: No Meeting With US President On Sidelines Of UN General Assembly Session
Irans President Raeisi: No Meeting With US President On Sidelines Of UN General Assembly Session
Iran’s President Raeisi: No Meeting With US President On Sidelines Of UN General Assembly Session https://digitalarizonanews.com/irans-president-raeisi-no-meeting-with-us-president-on-sidelines-of-un-general-assembly-session/ President Ebrahim Raeisi says he has no plans for either meeting or talking with his American counterpart, Joe Biden, during his upcoming trip to New York, where the Iranian chief executive is slated to address the 77th Session of the United Nations General Assembly. “I do not think that such a meeting is going to take place,” Raeisi told CBS News’ 60 Minutes program during an interview conducted Tuesday, which the channel is going to broadcast in full on Sunday. Iran’s president made the comment when he as asked, “Are you open to a meeting with President Biden?  A face-to-face?” adding, “I don’t  believe having a meeting or a talk with him will be beneficial.” The Iranian president was also asked whether he could see any differences between the Biden administration and the administration of his predecessor Donald Trump. “The new administration in the US, they claim that they are different from the Trump administration,” Raeisi said, adding, “They have said it in their messages to us. But we haven’t witnessed any changes in reality.” Under Trump, the United Sates left a 2015 nuclear agreement between Iran and world powers, reinstating the sanctions that the deal had lifted. On his campaign trail, Biden alleged that he intended to return Washington to the deal, which is officially known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). He has, however, stopped short of taking any such measure, and has even imposed more sanctions on the Islamic Republic. The Austrian capital of Vienna has been hosting many rounds of negotiations between Iran and the JCPOA’s remaining members since last year to examine the potential of the deal’s revival and fresh removal of the sanctions. The talks have, however, failed to bring about either amid, what Tehran has denounced as, Washington’s continual foot-dragging and inflexibility. Speaking to Qatar’s Al Jazeera television network on Thursday, Raeisi likewise said direct talks with the US over the nuclear agreement were “of no avail.” The final decision for restoration of the JCPOA rested with the US, he said, adding, “The US has to take trust-building measures” towards the Iranian side. Raesi also told the Doha-based network that any potential removal of the American sanctions had to be accompanied with relevant “guarantees” that Washington would not return the bans again. The Iranian president censured a raft of new sanctions that Washington had imposed most recently on Iran, asking, “If Washington is after an agreement, why does it apply new sanctions during the course of the nuclear talks?” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Irans President Raeisi: No Meeting With US President On Sidelines Of UN General Assembly Session
Midair Collision Kills Three People Colorado Authorities Say
Midair Collision Kills Three People Colorado Authorities Say
Midair Collision Kills Three People, Colorado Authorities Say https://digitalarizonanews.com/midair-collision-kills-three-people-colorado-authorities-say/ Two planes crashed midair in Colorado on Saturday, killing three people, authorities say. Joshua Bonafede, a Boulder County sheriff’s deputy, said two planes collided on Saturday morning. One plane was found about 30 miles northwest of downtown Denver. According to NBC affiliate 9 News, the other plane was found a few blocks away. At about 8:50 a.m. local time, a single-engine Cessna 172 and a second aircraft collided and crashed near Vance Brand Airport in Longmont, a spokesperson with the Federal Aviation Administration told The Washington Post in an email. Two people were aboard the Cessna 172, the FAA spokesperson said. The National Transportation Safety Board said on Twitter that it is investigating a Cessna 172 collision with a plane it identified as a Sonex Xenos in Longmont, Colo. “The FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board will investigate,” the FAA spokesperson said. “The NTSB will be in charge of the investigation and will provide additional updates.” The Cessna 172, also known as a Skyhawk, is one of the most popular airplanes in the world. It can seat four and is commonly used in flight instruction. Midair collisions are rare, with fewer than 30 occurring in the United States in a typical year. They almost always involve small private planes or military craft, not commercial jets, and are usually the result of human error such as miscommunication or navigation issues. Under federal aviation regulations, private pilots are required to “see and avoid” other aircraft flying in the space near them, and they must follow takeoff and landing procedures closely. Collisions are more likely in populous, heavily trafficked areas. Mountain View Fire Rescue, which serves the area, confirmed the three deaths and asked people to avoid the Niwot area, northeast of Boulder. Police had closed some roads in the area, Bonafede told The Washington Post. “It’s still very early in the investigation,” Bonafede said, adding that federal investigators were “on their way.” Praveena Somasundaram contributed to this report. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Midair Collision Kills Three People Colorado Authorities Say
On The Trail: Bolduc Makes U-Turn On Key Issues
On The Trail: Bolduc Makes U-Turn On Key Issues
On The Trail: Bolduc Makes U-Turn On Key Issues https://digitalarizonanews.com/on-the-trail-bolduc-makes-u-turn-on-key-issues/ Republican Senate nominee Don Bolduc headed to Georgia on Friday – in search of fundraising dollars to compete against incumbent Democrat Maggie Hassan – to attend and speak at a retreat organized by the National Republican Senatorial Committee for major donors. But the former Army general who narrowly edged longtime state Senate President Chuck Morse on Tuesday left behind a brewing controversy following his backtracking on comments he made during his primary campaign supporting former President Donald Trump’s repeated unproven claims that the 2020 election was “stolen.” Bolduc, who struck a populist theme as he ran as an outsider and MAGA-style Republican amid a crowded primary field of contenders for the GOP nomination, embraced Trump’s constant bemoaning of his 2020 election loss. Bolduc, who served 10 tours of duty in the Afghanistan War, was part of a group of retired generals who signed a letter questioning the legitimacy of the election due to what they charged was “a tremendous amount of fraud.” “I signed a letter with 120 other generals and admirals saying Trump won the election, and damn it, I stand by [it],” Bolduc proclaimed, during a primary debate last month. But on Thursday, Bolduc shifted gears during a TV interview on Fox News. “We live and learn, right?” he said. “And I’ve done a lot of research on this.” His research included speaking with Granite State voters, he said. “I have come to the conclusion, and I want to be definitive on this, the election was not stolen,” Bolduc emphasized. He added that while he still believes there was fraud in the 2020 contest, “elections have consequences and, unfortunately, President Biden is the legitimate president of this country.” State Rep. Al Baldasaro of Londonderry, a top Trump supporter and surrogate in New Hampshire, was not impressed. “It’s a shame that he changed his mind,” Baldasaro said. “I disagree with him.” Hassan’s campaign on Friday put out a statement spotlighting Bolduc’s change of stance that was headlined “Bolduc fails in his attempt to run away from his very, very long record of election denial.” Bolduc also appears to be moderating his stance on the issue of legalized abortion. Following the blockbuster move in June by the conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling, sending the combustible issue of legalized abortion back to the states, Bolduc called the decision a necessary correction. Bolduc, who repeatedly highlighted that he’s “pro-life,” said at a primary debate this summer that he would “always default for a system that protects lives from beginning to end.” But Bolduc says that he would not support a proposal, unveiled on Tuesday by Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, to implement a federal abortion ban after 15 weeks of pregnancy. “No, I’m not going to support it because it makes no sense,” Bolduc said on Fox News after declaring his primary victory. “The Supreme Court has already decided that this is a state issue. The states have it. That’s where it needs to be. Women on both sides of the issue will get a better voice at the state level.” Hassan told reporters on Wednesday that Bolduc’s statements are “inconsistent with what he’s been saying for years. He has said he would vote for anti-choice legislation in Washington.” Bolduc’s new comments opposing a federal abortion ban do call in to question a television commercial from the Hassan campaign launched on Wednesday that charged that “if Don Bolduc and Congressional Republicans take control of the U.S. Senate they would push for a nationwide ban on abortion — a ban with no exceptions.” While Bolduc gave New Hampshire conservatives plenty of red meat during the primaries, there were concerns from some Republicans in the state and nationally that a nomination victory by the retired general, who has severely struggled with fundraising, would allow Hassan to win re-election. A couple of weeks ago a newly formed super PAC named the White Mountain PAC, which had loose links to longtime Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell’s political orbit, dished out roughly $4 million to run TV commercials in New Hampshire boosting Morse and blasting Bolduc for his “crazy ideas.” Now, post-primary, Bolduc appears to be doing what some other MAGA-style GOP nominees have done as they shifted to the general election, and that’s moderate their stance on some key issues. New Hampshire’s competitive Republican primaries for the past six months often pitted conservative candidates supported by mainstream Republicans against far-right contenders often aligned with Trump and his legions of MAGA loyalists. The patching up of primary differences is a work in progress, but one top Republican says is essential to secure victory in November. “Now is the time for us to unite and come together as a party in New Hampshire, come together as a party all across this country and do what needs to be done,” former Vice President Mike Pence emphasized on Wednesday night, as he headlined a fundraiser for Bolduc in Wilton. The next morning, the New Hampshire GOP held their post-primary unity breakfast at the Grappone Conference Center in Concord. NHGOP chair Steve Stepanek warned the audience to not “take anything for granted between now and November,” and urged that “as passionately as you worked for your candidate in the primary, whether they won or lost, everyone has to work as passionately for the Republican ticket going forward.” Seeking some unity, Bolduc walked over to Republican Gov. Chris Sununu and gave him a big hug during the breakfast. After stressing at the end of his speech that “we do not win without this team coming together,” Bolduc stepped down from the podium and approached Sununu, who was next in line to speak, and embraced the governor, who remains the most popular politician among Granite State Republicans. The hug by Bolduc appeared to be an attempt to erase a recent history of bad blood between the two men, who now share the top of the GOP ticket on November’s ballot in New Hampshire. National Republican leaders spent a year trying to recruit Sununu to take on Hassan, viewed as vulnerable as she seeks a second term in the Senate. However, the governor announced last November that he would instead run for re-election. Bolduc claimed last year that Sununu was a “communist Chinese sympathizer” and that the Sununu family’s business “supports terrorism.” While Bolduc has walked back those attacks, he has continued to criticize Sununu’s policies during the coronavirus pandemic as “executive overreach.” A few weeks ago, Sununu said on a popular statewide talk-radio program that Bolduc was “not a serious candidate, he’s really not, and if he were the GOP nominee, I have no doubt we would have a much harder time… He’s kind of a conspiracy theorist-type candidate.” While Sununu tempered those criticisms in recent days, he endorsed Morse ahead of the primary. On the eve of the unity breakfast, Bolduc appeared to try and make amends with some of his past rhetoric on the campaign trial. “A campaign is tough. It’s tough on everybody. We say things in the heat of conversation that we regret later. We hope that we can say we’re sorry for it and people forgive, but that’s not always the case. And I’m no different,” he lamented during the Pence-headlined fundraiser. “I’m a man who’s fallible. A man who errs. A man who says things that perhaps should be left unsaid.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
On The Trail: Bolduc Makes U-Turn On Key Issues
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine https://digitalarizonanews.com/live-updates-russias-war-in-ukraine-6/ 4 min ago Our coverage for the day has ended. Follow the latest Ukraine news here or read through the updates below. 19 min ago At least 30 areas of Ukraine damaged by Russian attacks on Saturday, Ukrainian military says From CNN’s Mariya Knight in Atlanta  The infrastructure of at least 30 areas across the country was damaged due to Russian attacks on Saturday, according to the Ukrainian military.  “The enemy struck military and civilian facilities on the territory of Ukraine four times with missiles, 15 times with aviation and more than 20 times with multiple-launch rocket systems,” Oleksandr Shtupun, spokesperson of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine spokesman, said in a video briefing. Shtupun said most areas affected by Russian attacks were Kharkiv, Siversk, Druzhkivka, Kostiantynivka, New York, Marinka, Krasnohorivka, Poltavka, Kryvyi Rih, Zaporizhzhia, Nikopol, Orikhiv, Myrolyubivka and Ochakiv. At the same time, Ukrainian aviation struck 10 areas “of concentration of enemy manpower and equipment and three positions of anti-aircraft missile systems,” Shtupun added. He didn’t specify the location of those areas. 17 min ago For the first time, defense chiefs of Finland and Sweden attend NATO meeting From CNN’s Sonnet Swire & Barbara Starr For the first time, Finland and Sweden attended the Chiefs of Defence meeting at the NATO Military Committee Conference, according to a readout of the meeting from the US Defense Department. Meeting in Talinn, Estonia, on Saturday, the NATO military officials “discussed military strategic developments within the Alliance, to include implementation measures for decisions agreed upon during the NATO Madrid Summit in June 2022,” according to the statement. Finland — which shares a land border with Russia — and Sweden applied for membership in the 30-nation alliance, abandoning decades of foreign policy neutrality in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. NATO allies signed their accession protocol this summer to allow the two countries to join, and it must be ratified by the parliaments of all its members before Finland and Sweden can be protected by the NATO defense clause, which considers an attack on one member an attack against all. Only three countries have yet to ratify the addition of Finland and Sweden into NATO: Hungary, Slovakia and Turkey. 24 min ago The Zaporizhzhia plant has been reconnected to Ukraine’s grid. Here’s the significance of the nuclear site From CNN staff A Russian serviceman patrols the territory of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Station in Energodar on May 1, 2022. (Andrey Borodulin/AFP/Getty Images) Today, the International Atomic Energy Agency said that one of the main power lines in the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant was repaired and is once again supplying the plant with electricity from the Ukrainian grid. Ukraine relies heavily on nuclear power – about half of its electricity comes from 15 nuclear reactors at four plants across the country, according to the World Nuclear Association. The Russian-controlled plant, with six reactors, is the largest nuclear power station in Europe. It was mostly built in the Soviet era and became Ukrainian property after its declaration of independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. The Zaporizhzhia plant is located on the eastern bank of the Dnipro river in Ukraine. The area, and the nuclear complex, has been under Russian control since the beginning of the war, but the plant is still mostly operated by Ukrainian workers. Each of Zaporizhzhia’s reactors would cost $7 billion to replace, making the plant a target for Russians to capture undamaged, with hopes of serving its own electricity market, according to analysis by defense and security intelligence firm Janes. Should Russia keep it, Ukraine would lose 20% of its domestic electricity generating capacity. What does its position on the front line mean? Shelling in the surrounding towns as well as near the power plant has been common, according to local reports. Both Ukraine and Russia have accused each other of shelling the site. CNN cannot independently verify either government’s claims. The international community has been on high alert about nuclear safety, yet experts believe a Chernobyl-style disaster is unlikely. Yet risks remain, one of which is potential damage to nuclear waste stored openly on site – in ponds of water and in casks, according to Petro Kotin, president of Energoatom, which runs nuclear power plants in Ukraine. IAEA visit On Sept. 1, a team from the IAEA visited the plant for the first time since Russia’s invasion on Feb. 24. The team saw damage to the roofs of various buildings, to the special building that houses fresh nuclear fuel and solid radioactive waste storage facility. They also witnessed shelling during the visit and called on both sides to cease hostilities in the area. IAEA head Rafael Grossi has since called for a nuclear safety zone around the plant and surrounding area. Two IAEA members remain at the site. 51 min ago Ukraine claims Russians are creating retreat routes from southern Kherson region From CNN’s Mariya Knight Russian forces are preparing retreat routes from the Kherson region, Ukraine’s military claimed in an update Saturday. In today’s update, a Ukrainian military spokesperson claimed Russians sunk nine railway cars to construct a crossing in the city of Kakhovka. “Due to the successful actions of the Armed Forces of Ukraine to disable all crossings across the Dnipro River on the Kherson front, the occupiers are preparing their retreat routes,” Oleksandr Shtupun, spokesperson for the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, said in a social media post. Kherson is considered crucial to controlling Ukraine’s southern coast and access to the Black Sea. It was one of the first areas to be occupied by Russian forces when they invaded nearly seven months ago. Last week, Ukraine claimed it had inflicted further losses on Russian forces in the south, including in Kherson. Senior US and Ukrainian officials told CNN earlier this month that Kyiv set an ambitious goal of taking back most of Russian-occupied Kherson by the end of the year. 2 hr 1 min ago Here’s the latest map of control in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine These are the latest areas of Russian and Ukrainian control in Russia’s war in Ukraine. This month brought huge strategic losses for the Kremlin as Ukraine carried out counteroffensives in the northeast and south. Ukraine’s military has recaptured a total of 8,000 square kilometers (about 3,088 square miles) of land, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Wednesday. 2 hr 37 min ago Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant reconnected to national grid, UN nuclear watchdog says From CNN’s Mariya Knight in Atlanta A Russian all-terrain armored vehicle is parked outside the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant during the visit of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) expert mission on September 1.  (Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters) One of the four main power lines in the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant has been repaired and is once again supplying the plant with electricity from the Ukrainian grid, according to a statement from the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog. “Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP) is once again receiving electricity directly from the national grid after engineers repaired one of the four main external power lines that have all been damaged during the conflict,” International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Rafael Grossi confirmed Saturday. Grossi said that the restored line is now “providing Europe’s largest nuclear power plant with the electricity it needs for reactor cooling and other essential safety functions.” “With the main line’s re-connection yesterday afternoon, the three back-up power lines are again being held in reserve,” according to the IAEA. “The three other main external 750 kV (kilovolt) power lines that were lost earlier during the conflict remain down.”  “All the ZNPP’s six reactors are in a cold shutdown state, but they still require power to maintain necessary safety functions,” Grossi added, according to the statement. He also warned that the situation around the plant is still dangerous. “While the ZNPP’s power status has improved over the past week – in sharp contrast to earlier this month when all power lines at one stage were down and it depended on its last operating reactor for vital electricity supplies – the general situation for the plant located in the middle of a war zone remains precarious,” Grossi said. On Friday, Ukraine’s state nuclear company Energoatom said it delivered urgently needed parts to “repair the damaged power lines as well as additional fuel supplies for the plant’s emergency diesel generators that can be used as a back-up power source.” Some background: Grossi called for a safety zone around the nuclear plant after he and his team visited the Russian-held site earlier this month. The plant and the area around it, including the nearby city of Enerhodar, endured persistent shelling that has raised fears of a nuclear accident. Each side accuses the other of acts of nuclear terrorism, and CNN has been unable to verify either government’s claims. Two members of the 14-person IAEA team remained behind as part of the agency’s plan to establish a continuous presence at the plant. 2 hr 20 min ago Exhumation of bodies at Izium mass burial site continues, according to Zelensky From CNN’s Josh Pennington and Sahar Akbarzai In his Friday night address, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the exhumation of bodies at a mass burial site in Izium was continuing. “As of now, more than 440 graves have been identified. It is too early to speak about the total number of people buried there, [but] the investigation continues,” the president...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine
Death On A Train: A Tragedy That Helped Fuel The Railroad Showdown
Death On A Train: A Tragedy That Helped Fuel The Railroad Showdown
Death On A Train: A Tragedy That Helped Fuel The Railroad Showdown https://digitalarizonanews.com/death-on-a-train-a-tragedy-that-helped-fuel-the-railroad-showdown/ Aaron Hiles, a locomotive engineer, told his wife he “felt different,” though he couldn’t say exactly how. He made an appointment to see a doctor, his family said. But then his employer, BNSF, one of the largest freight rail carriers in the nation, unexpectedly called him into work. Failing to show up would invite penalties under a new attendance system BNSF had adopted just a few months earlier, a policy that unions have decried as the strictest in the nation. So Hiles, 51, delayed his doctor’s visit, his family said, and went into work. A few weeks later, on June 16, Hiles suffered a heart attack and died in an engine room on a BNSF freight train somewhere between Kansas City, Mo., and Fort Madison, Iowa — a tragedy that helped fuel a labor standoff that last week nearly shut down the U.S. economy. Railroad attendance policies were at the heart of the dramatic showdown between the nation’s largest rail carriers and railroad workers, who did not strike after President Biden and other top administration officials brokered a last-minute agreement early Thursday. The deal includes a 24 percent pay increase by 2024 — the largest for railroad workers in more than four decades — and new flexibility for workers to take time off when they are hospitalized or to attend routine doctor’s appointments without penalty. But discontent among rail workers is still brewing. They say few details have been made available about the agreement, which leaves the points-based attendance policy in place for other types of emergencies. And some say they doubt the deal will address their fundamental concerns about quality of life amid painful labor shortages and the continued spread of covid-19. “This policy is pretty cruel. Everybody is worried about points,” said Joel Dixon, a BNSF conductor and Hiles’s best friend of more than two decades. “It’s always a question whether Aaron would still be around if he made that doctor’s appointment. Him and I talked everyday. We were brothers.” BNSF would not discuss the details of Hiles’s death but pointed out that employees receive generous vacation packages and are able to take time off when needed without fear of retribution. The company said that it is committed to working with employees when “extenuating circumstances” arise but that the points-based policies are necessary to keep the trains running during a challenging worker crunch. Still, reaction on social media has been outraged since union leaders walked away with a deal that guarantees rail workers only a single additional paid day off. Some workers said they weren’t sure how the negotiators arrived at these policies, in their tug-of-war of proposals in closed-door talks over some 20 hours at the Department of Labor offices. More specific contract language will be distributed to workers in the coming weeks and explained in educational sessions intended to persuade workers to ratify the agreements, union leaders say. The stakes are high. Unless union leaders persuade 115,000 workers across 12 unions to vote to ratify contracts, a nationwide rail strike is still possible — and could snarl much of the nation’s supply-chain just ahead of the midterm elections. Points-based attendance policies date to 2020, when Union Pacific, one of the country’s largest carriers, rolled out new rules to help ensure staffing during the pandemic. Under these policies, employees are granted a certain number of points, which are deducted when they miss a request to come into work or call out of work unexpectedly. If their point totals fall too low, penalties can apply up to and including termination. BNSF adopted its own points-based attendance policy in February 2022. Unions called BNSF’s policy “the worst and most egregious attendance policy ever adopted by any rail carrier.” BNSF said that the policy was implemented to “incentivize consistent and reliable attendance” amid increased demand for smooth-running services. Employees can gain points by agreeing to be on call for 14 days straight. Rail carriers have been dealing with high turnover and labor shortages over the past two years. Rail transportation is down 12,500 jobs since the pandemic began, according to the Labor Department. Under these policies, union leaders say workers have lost points or faced penalties for calling out sick with covid, suffering a heart attack, and getting into a severe car accident. Another employee lost points after missing work when his mother died. BNSF spokesman Benjamin Wilemon denied those claims, saying that the system may automatically assign points for absences but that employees can explain the situation to their supervisor and regain their points. Wilemon said that BNSF’s attendance policy is designed so that “employees can take time off when needed” and that “employees are encouraged to use their points without fear of retribution.” He noted that points are available to use for doctor’s visits and that employees have at least three weeks of vacation and 10 personal days available to them. “It is unfortunate that some would use the death of Mr. Hiles to further their agenda while ignoring the facts of this tragic situation,” Wilemon said. “Out of respect for his family, BNSF will not discuss the circumstances around his passing.” Wilemon also noted that workers received a 25 percent increase in personal days this year and that employees cannot work more than six days in a row under federal law. Union leaders say the federal law allowance is misleading, because time spent stranded in a hotel, after working a long shift, waiting to be called back to work, does not count as a work day. Just missing a phone call from BNSF to come into work results in a 15-point deduction, BNSF confirmed. Many conductors and engineers live in rural parts of the country with limited cell service. Once called, workers have 90 minutes to two hours to report to work, regardless of the time of day and how far they live from their station. Failing to show up for work on weekends, holidays and other ‘high impact’ days, such as Super Bowl Sunday and Mother’s Day, result in the largest deductions. Although employees can win back points by being available to work 14 days in a row. More than 700 BNSF employees have quit their jobs since the policy was rolled out in February, union officials say, exacerbating the workload for those who remain. BNSF’s Wilemon said the company has seen more workers taking planned vacation days since rolling out its attendance-based policy. He said that workers take off 24 hours, on average, between each shift and that that number has increased since the attendance policy kicked in. He added that the policy has resulted in fewer attendance-based discipline actions. BNSF employees say the points-based attendance system has worsened a difficult occupation that already weighs on their mental and physical health. Many railway workers suffer chronic health conditions, such as obesity and sleep apnea, according to union officials. Workers regularly stay in motels for days on end, unsure when they’ll be able to return home, exacerbating tensions in already strained marriages and relationships with their children. Jordan Boone, 41, a BNSF conductor in Galesburg, Ill., has five kids at home. Since the policy went into effect in February, Boone said, he misses most sports games, birthdays, recitals and vacations. If he is lucky, he can squeeze in a few hours with his family a week. “BNSF came up with this policy, because of all the cuts they’ve made, and they’re trying to do all they can to get us to pick up the slack. They haven’t hired enough,” Boone said. “The time away from family has a big impact on our mental health. I know people that have missed doctor’s appointments for months and months because of this policy.” Aaron Hiles signed up for a rail job at BNSF in Galesburg after serving in the Marines in Desert Storm and Somalia. The job was prestigious, but life on the railroad was tough. Hiles spent weeks away from home, living out of motels, working through Christmas and other holidays, and collecting coins and reading about current events to pass the time. But things took a turn for the worse when BNSF adopted its updated points policy in February, Hiles’s parents said. They noticed Aaron looked “tired and really run down.” “When he told us about the mandate, I said, ‘Someone’s going to have a heart attack and die,’ and he said, ‘Yes, they will,’” recalled Donna Hiles, his mother. On the day Hiles died, two BNSF representatives traveled to his home in Lee Summit, Mo., to inform his wife. She called his parents to let them know their son had passed. BNSF paid for Hiles’s funeral expenses, but his parents never heard directly from them. “It’s devastating,” Donna Hiles said. “He was larger than life. He was kindhearted. I dare you to find one person who disliked him. He had hundreds of friends.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Death On A Train: A Tragedy That Helped Fuel The Railroad Showdown
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-2/ President Joe Biden headed to the United Kingdom on Saturday to pay his respects to Queen Elizabeth II at a time of transition in US-UK 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 US-UK 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 UK 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 UK 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 and Truss had been set to meet Sunday, but the prime minister’s office said Saturday they would skip the weekend hello, opting instead for a meeting 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. Politics 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 UK,” 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 UK’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 UK’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.-UK 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.-UK 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.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
US-UK Relations Enter New Chapter As New PM King Settle In
U.S.-U.K. Relations Enter New Chapter As Premier King Settle In
U.S.-U.K. Relations Enter New Chapter As Premier King Settle In
U.S.-U.K. Relations Enter New Chapter As Premier, King Settle In https://digitalarizonanews.com/u-s-u-k-relations-enter-new-chapter-as-premier-king-settle-in/ President Biden and first lady Jill Biden prepare to board Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., on Saturday as they head to London to attend the funeral for Queen Elizabeth II. To commemorate the Air Force’s 75th anniversary, they are wearing Air Force One jackets. Susan Walsh/Associated Press WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden headed to the United Kingdom on Saturday to pay his respects to Queen Elizabeth II at a time of transition in U.S.-U.K. relations, as both a new royal 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 U.S.-U.K. relationship “special but not exclusive,” could mark a decidedly new chapter in the transatlantic partnership on trade and more. Of high concern for Biden officials in the early going of Truss’ 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 UK 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.-U.K. 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 U.K. 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 and Truss had been set to meet Sunday, but the prime minister’s office said Saturday they would skip the weekend hello, opting instead for a meeting 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 Gadhafi. 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’ 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 UK’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’ 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 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.” Invalid username/password. Please check your email to confirm and complete your registration. Use the form below to reset your password. When you’ve submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code. « Previous Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
U.S.-U.K. Relations Enter New Chapter As Premier King Settle In
Gaetz Sought Pardon Related To Justice Department Sex Trafficking Probe
Gaetz Sought Pardon Related To Justice Department Sex Trafficking Probe
Gaetz Sought Pardon Related To Justice Department Sex Trafficking Probe https://digitalarizonanews.com/gaetz-sought-pardon-related-to-justice-department-sex-trafficking-probe-2/ Congressman Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) told a former White House aide that he was seeking a preemptive pardon from President Donald Trump regarding an investigation in which he is a target, according to testimony given to the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Johnny McEntee, according to people familiar with his testimony, told investigators that Gaetz told him during a brief meeting “that they are launching an investigation into him or that there’s an investigation into him,” without specifying who was investigating Gaetz. McEntee added that Gaetz told him “he did not do anything wrong but they are trying to make his life hell, and you know, if the president could give him a pardon, that would be great.” Gaetz told McEntee that he had asked White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows for a pardon. Asked by investigators if Gaetz’s ask for a pardon was in the context of the Justice Department investigation into whether Gaetz violated federal sex trafficking laws, McEntee replied, “I think that was the context, yes,” according to people familiar with the testimony who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters. The testimony is the first indication that Gaetz was specifically seeking a pardon for his own exposure related to the Justice Department inquiry into whether he violated sex trafficking laws. His public posture in the final months of the Trump administration was much less specific, repeatedly calling for broad preemptive pardons to fend off possible Democratic investigations. McEntee testified that Gaetz met him briefly one evening and discussed the issue of a pardon but McEntee could not recall whether their conversation happened before or after the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, according to people familiar with the testimony. The Justice Department investigation into whether Gaetz paid for sex, paid for women to travel across state lines to have sex, and had a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old, was opened in the final months of the Trump administration with approval from Attorney General William P. Barr. The probe stemmed from a federal investigation of Gaetz’s friend who is now a convicted sex trafficker. Gaetz has denied paying for sex or having sex with a minor as an adult. McEntee did not respond to repeated requests for comment. Neither Meadows nor his lawyer immediately responded to requests for comment. A spokesperson for Gaetz declined to address the testimony or whether Gaetz discussed a pardon with McEntee or Meadows and instead responded that Gaetz never directly asked Trump for a pardon. “Congressman Matt Gaetz discussed pardons for many other people publicly and privately at the end of President Donald Trump’s first term,” the spokesperson wrote in an email. “As for himself, President Trump addressed this malicious rumor more than a year ago stating, ‘Congressman Matt Gaetz has never asked me for a pardon.’ Rep. Gaetz continues to stand by President Trump’s statement.” The House select committee also declined to comment. Gaetz has not been charged with any crimes but Joel Greenberg, a Gaetz associate and former tax collector for Seminole County, Fla., pleaded guilty last spring to six criminal charges, including sex trafficking of a minor. Greenberg agreed to cooperate fully with prosecutors and testify in court, and has been providing investigators with information about Gaetz since 2020, The Washington Post previously reported. “The last time I had a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old, I was 17,” Gaetz has previously said. On Nov. 25, 2020, weeks after Trump lost the presidential election, Gaetz told Fox News that Trump “should pardon everyone from himself to his administration officials to Joe Exotic if he has to.” Cassidy Hutchinson, a top White House aide to Meadows, told the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack that she recalled Gaetz and Rep. Mo Brooks (R-Ala.) both advocating for a “blanket pardon” for lawmakers who attended a Dec. 21, 2020, meeting at the White House to discuss efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election. In the previously aired testimony, she said they also advocated for pardons for “a handful of other members that were not at the December 21st meeting.” Hutchinson added that Gaetz, however, “was personally pushing” for a pardon “since early December.” But the focus of that pardon request was not clear from Hutchinson’s testimony. “I’m not sure why Mr. Gaetz would reach out to me to ask if he could have a meeting with Mr. Meadows about receiving a presidential pardon,” she added. Brooks, who put a request for a pardon in an email to a White House aide at the time, defended his actions in a statement after Hutchinson’s testimony saying, “There was a concern Democrats would abuse the judicial system by prosecuting and jailing Republicans” for objecting in Congress to the certification of the election. Eric Herschmann, a former Trump White House lawyer, told investigators that he also believed that Gaetz was seeking a pardon, according to an excerpt of the deposition played during one of the committee’s public hearings. “The general tone was, we may get prosecuted because we were defensive of, you know, the president’s positions on these things,” Herschmann recalled. “The pardon that he was discussing requesting was as broad as you can describe, from the beginning — I remember he is — from the beginning of time up until today for any and all things. Then he mentioned Nixon. And I said Nixon’s pardon was never nearly that broad.” Gaetz ultimately did not receive a pardon from the former president. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Gaetz Sought Pardon Related To Justice Department Sex Trafficking Probe
AZ Inno See Who Attended The Inaugural AZ Inno Under 25 Event The Business Journals
AZ Inno See Who Attended The Inaugural AZ Inno Under 25 Event The Business Journals
AZ Inno – See Who Attended The Inaugural AZ Inno Under 25 Event – The Business Journals https://digitalarizonanews.com/az-inno-see-who-attended-the-inaugural-az-inno-under-25-event-the-business-journals/ AZ Inno – See who attended the inaugural AZ Inno Under 25 event  The Business Journals Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
AZ Inno See Who Attended The Inaugural AZ Inno Under 25 Event The Business Journals
A 'born And Bred Racist' Recounts How He Became A Best-Selling Christian Author KYMA
A 'born And Bred Racist' Recounts How He Became A Best-Selling Christian Author KYMA
A 'born And Bred Racist' Recounts How He Became A Best-Selling Christian Author – KYMA https://digitalarizonanews.com/a-born-and-bred-racist-recounts-how-he-became-a-best-selling-christian-author-kyma/ By John Blake, CNN (CNN) – The summer before his junior year in high school, Philip Yancey attended a Fourth of July rally that featured some of the most dangerous racists in America. It was 1964, and the event, billed as “Patriots Rally Against Tyranny,” was held at a racetrack in Yancey’s hometown of Atlanta. It featured a Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard alongside segregationists such as governors George Wallace of Alabama and Ross Barnett of Mississippi. As Yancey sat in the bleachers with about 11,000 cheering White Southerners waving miniature Confederate flags, he heard speakers denounce the same enemies he learned about in his fundamentalist church, where the pastor lampooned “Martin Lucifer Coon” and preached that “coloreds” were inferior because of the “Curse of Ham.” But something took place at the rally that made Yancey question what he had been taught. He noticed a group of Black men sitting in the stands. Just before Wallace spoke, three of them began to boo. That was the cue for a group of Klansmen to rise from their seats and attack the men. Other Whites joined them, punching the Black men in their faces and hitting them with folded chairs as the men frantically tried to escape. The crowd began chanting, “Hit ’em! Kill ’em!” “I reacted first as part of the cheering mob: Who were these Black guys trying to crash our party?” Yancey told CNN in a recent interview. “Yet when the White men started beating them with fists and even chairs, I felt sick at my stomach. I left the rally with a bitter taste in my mouth, the taste of shame. For years I didn’t talk about that experience.” There’s been a lot of debate in recent years about the rise of White Christian nationalism and White evangelicals’ steadfast support for former President Trump. But few people are better equipped than Yancey to explain how racism infiltrates White churches and how one can escape it. Yancey went from being a self-described “born and bred racist” to becoming one of the most popular authors and speakers in contemporary America. His books have sold an estimated 17 million copies and been translated into 50 languages. Several, such as “What’s So Amazing About Grace?” and “Where Is God When It Hurts?” have become contemporary Christian classics. The anecdote about the White supremacist rally marks one of Yancey’s most candid admissions of his youthful embrace of racism. It comes from his recently released memoir, “Where the Light Fell.” In the book, Yancey recounts how racism corrupted his faith and eventually led to him feeling betrayed by the church. He rejected the racism of his youth, though, after encountering a series of remarkable people during his years as a journalist and an author. Yancey, 72, says he wanted to tell a story about what it takes to change the “calloused conscience” of someone who was raised to view Black people as inferior. “I have a shelf full of best-selling books chronicling the Black experience and exhorting us to become anti-racists,” Yancey says. “I look in vain for one that explores the mind of a bigot and what it might take to change that mind.” CNN talked to Yancey about White Christian nationalism, why he still calls himself an evangelical, and how he thinks the media distorts most evangelicals’ beliefs. The conversation was edited for brevity. Why do you think you were able to change when so many other people who were ‘born and bred to a be racist’ never evolved? I was a reader. And when I read “Black Like Me” (A 1961 nonfiction book about a White man who darkened his skin and traveled through the segregated South), that was a turning point, because it just didn’t make sense. Here’s the exact same person who artificially changed the color of his skin, and at one point he’s treated like a gentleman and has access to anywhere he wants to go. And then suddenly he’s treated like a dirty animal and people spit on him. He has to step off the sidewalk. He can’t use the restroom. Can’t get a drink of water. He’s the exact same person. It was a moral splinter that would stick inside my head and bother me. Was a personal encounter just as important as a book you read? You talk in your memoir about meeting Dr. Cherry, a Black scientist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. You were assigned to work with him during a summer job at the CDC. The Dr. Cherry incident just blew my mind because it exposed that what the Church was telling me about races of color being inferior was a lie. It was absolutely wrong. Here was the smartest man I had ever met, and it just blew away all the categories I had been taught. You said in your memoir that though you were poor, Black people gave you someone to look down on. How does that dynamic play out today? It’s at the core of racism. I’ve been to 87 countries now. And I found that kind of instinct all over. When I first went to Norway, they started telling jokes about Swedes. They were the same jokes that we Whites told about Blacks growing up. I went to New Zealand and they’re telling the same jokes about the (indigenous) Maori people. Or then you go to Africa, like in Rwanda, where they have exactly the same color of skin. And one group starts killing the other group because they’re a little bit different. And there’s something about that fear of the other that we’ve got to overcome. And as a Christian, this fear just stands out to me. Jesus talked about the Good Samaritan, not the Good Jew. The very first missionary in the book of Acts was a castrated Black man, the Ethiopian eunuch. The Apostle Paul was raised to be a Jew of all Jews, but he eventually said that in Christ, there is no Jew or Gentile, there’s something bigger than race. Do you ever wonder if what you call the ‘thoughtful mainstream evangelical’ subculture has evaporated in the last couple of years? You’re known for writing open-ended books that ask tough questions about faith, but if you started out today writing such books I wonder if you would be as popular with evangelical readers. I would say, no, it hasn’t. The group I came out of would be Wheaton College, Christianity Today magazine, InterVarsity, and Fuller Theological Seminary. I’ve spoken at a lot of Christian colleges and universities and there’s some really bright scholars in those places producing wonderful work. I love being in a room with those people, and I wish that’s what people thought of when they thought of evangelicals. I don’t think they have disappeared, but what’s happened is the spotlight has turned away from those people, and it (the term evangelicals) has become a political filter. People only want to judge evangelicals by politics. Growing up, we weren’t political. Fundamentalists would never aspire to political office. And now the word “evangelical” almost implies right-wing politics to most people. And that’s really dangerous. But Philip, look at the polls. Are they not accurate? White evangelicals have been the most steadfast supporters of former President Trump. White evangelical support for Trump actually increased from 2016 to 2020. Is it really unfair to say that many White evangelicals have become MAGA Republicans? Okay. (chuckles) You got to be a little more subtle than that. I remember reading an article in The Imaginative Conservative magazine. You hear the phrase, 80 or 81% had voted for Trump. The more religiously committed evangelicals were, the less there is a complete sweep of going for Trump. Nowadays, if you ask people who check evangelical in a box in a poll, a lot of them can’t even name two of the four Gospels. It’s become a label that to them means, I don’t like abortion. I don’t like the way the country is going to transgender or gay people, so I must be an evangelical. It used to be a theological category. It’s not now. It’s become a slogan for “I don’t like some things going on in my country and I’m kind of angry about them.” And Trump brilliantly tapped into that anger. But I think it’s more subtle than just assuming that all evangelicals or the vast majority voted for Trump. The serious evangelicals, of the type that I was trained in and worked around, did not vote for Trump. There still seems to be a sizeable number of White evangelicals who support Trump? How would you explain that? I would say the division in this country is between the coasts … and the South and the Heartland. It was more obvious in 2016. The media is coming from the coast, and progressives just assumed that when something like gay marriage happens, well, we’re all on board. Well, the people in rural Tennessee think, “Oh, that’s not right.” And then other people are very strong on the abortion issue. And then people get angry and say, “We can’t have people in schools teaching my six-year-old to decide whether to be a boy or a girl.” I think Trump just tapped into that sense that something’s wrong. We’re going in the wrong direction. Something is wrong with this country. What would it take for White evangelical support for Trump to dry up? What would it take for them to abandon Trump? I doubt anything would cause Trump’s hardcore supporters to abandon him. I’m sure you remember what he said while running in 2016: “I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, and I wouldn’t lose any voters.” He made that remark before a cheering audience at Dordt University in Iowa — a Christian college. Some polls indicate that the January 6 hearings have nibbled away at his popularity, but the problem is that hardcore supporters on both sides listen to separate sources of news and tend to hear what confirms their own biases. And more moderate Republicans can’t get much traction without Trump’s support base. Since we’re talking a lot about politics, it makes me wonder: Is it more difficult ...
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A 'born And Bred Racist' Recounts How He Became A Best-Selling Christian Author KYMA
Exclusive: Zelenskiy Accuses Russia Of War Crimes Sees No Early End To War
Exclusive: Zelenskiy Accuses Russia Of War Crimes Sees No Early End To War
Exclusive: Zelenskiy Accuses Russia Of War Crimes, Sees No Early End To War https://digitalarizonanews.com/exclusive-zelenskiy-accuses-russia-of-war-crimes-sees-no-early-end-to-war/ Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Zelenskiy: it’s too early to say tide turning in war Outcome of war hinges on arms supplies, he says Northeast counterattack should boost support, he says Zelenskiy proposes Russia free POWs in ammonia deal KYIV, Sept 16 (Reuters) – President Volodymyr Zelenskiy accused Russia on Friday of committing war crimes in Ukraine’s northeast and said it was too early to say the tide of the war was turning despite rapid territorial gains by his forces this month. The Ukrainian leader also told Reuters in an interview that the outcome of the war with Russia, now in its seventh month, hinged on the swift delivery of foreign weapons to his country. He compared the situation in newly liberated areas of the northeast “to the bloody soap opera after Bucha”, a town near Kyiv where he accused Russian forces of committing numerous war crimes in the first phase of the war. Moscow denied the charges. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com “As of today, there are 450 dead people, buried (in the northeastern Kharkiv region). But there are others, separate burials of many people. Tortured people. Entire families in certain territories,” Zelenskiy said. Asked if there was evidence of war crimes, he said: “All this is there… There is some evidence, and assessments are being conducted, Ukrainian and international, and this is very important for us, for the world to recognise this.” The Kremlin did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Zelenskiy’s new allegations. Russia regularly denies targeting civilians during what it calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine and has said in the past that accusations of human rights abuses are a smear campaign. The governor of Kharkiv region, Oleh Synhubov, told reporters on Friday at one of the burial sites in the city of Izium that some bodies exhumed there had been found with their hands tied behind their backs. read more Moscow has not commented on the mass burial site in Izium, which was a Russian frontline stronghold before Ukraine’s counter-offensive forced its forces to flee. NO EARLY END TO WAR Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy speaks during an interview with Reuters, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine September 16, 2022. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko Friday’s interview took place in the president’s office in the heavily-guarded government district, which is now like a citadel for Zelenskiy and his advisers. Sandbags were piled up in the windows of the building’s labyrinthine, dimly-lit corridors. An air raid siren – used to warn of the danger of incoming missiles – sounded in Kyiv shortly before the interview. Zelenskiy, who visited Izium on Wednesday, repeated his appeal forWestern countries and others to step up weapons supplies to Ukraine. “We would want more help from Turkey, We would want more help from South Korea. More help from the Arab world. From Asia,” he said. Zelenskiy also cited “certain psychological barriers” in Germany to supplying military equipment because of its Nazi past but said such supplies were vital for Ukraine to defend itself against what he called Russian “fascism”. He has often accused Berlin of dragging its feet over providing arms. He lauded Ukraine’s rapid counter-offensive but played down any suggestion that the war was entering some kind of end game. “It’s early to talk about an end to this war,” he said. Zelenskiy said he would only support the idea of reopening Russian ammonia exports through Ukraine, an initiative proposed by the United Nations, if Moscow handed back Ukrainian prisoners of war to Kyiv. read more Speaking in Uzbekistan on Friday, Russian President Vladimir Putin brushed off Ukraine’s counter-offensive with a smile, but warned that Russia would respond more forcefully if its troops were put under further pressure. read more Zelenskiy said he had been convinced that foreign weapons supplies to Ukraine would have fallen if Kyiv had not launched its counter-offensive and that the territorial gains would impress other countries. “I think this is a very important step that influenced, or will influence, the decisions of certain other countries,” he said. Asked on the 205th day of the war if he ever got a chance to relax, Zelenskiy said: “I’d really want the Russians to relax”. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Editing by Gareth Jones Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
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Exclusive: Zelenskiy Accuses Russia Of War Crimes Sees No Early End To War
Lane Shakes Off Rust With 2 TD Effort To Propel Red Mountain Past Desert Ridge
Lane Shakes Off Rust With 2 TD Effort To Propel Red Mountain Past Desert Ridge
Lane Shakes Off Rust With 2 TD Effort To Propel Red Mountain Past Desert Ridge https://digitalarizonanews.com/lane-shakes-off-rust-with-2-td-effort-to-propel-red-mountain-past-desert-ridge/ Red Mountain wide receiver Ja’kobi Lane, far right, lines up against the Desert Ridge defense in the fourth quarter on Friday at Jim Jones Field in Mesa. Red Mountain defeated Desert Ridge, 35-25, behind two touchdowns from Lane. (Logan Stanley photo/AZPreps365) Logan Stanley is an ASU Cronkite School of Journalism student assigned to cover Red Mountain High School for AZPreps365.com MESA – This year was supposed to be a pivotal season for Red Mountain senior wide receiver Ja’kobi Lane, who recently committed to the University of Southern California and is regarded as one of the top football players in the state of Arizona. But after only 39 yards in the first two games, Lane was struggling to get open while facing defenses that were loading up to stop him. Those struggles came to an end on Friday night at Jim Jones Field in Mesa as Red Mountain defeated visiting Desert Ridge, 35-25, fueled by two spectacular second-quarter touchdowns from Lane. The game got off to a rough start for the Mountain Lions, with senior quarterback Carter Crispin and Lane fumbling the exchange on the very first play of offense. The Jaguars recovered the fumble, but were held to a 23-yard field goal by junior kicker Rylen Thomson to make it 3-0 with 9:55 remaining in the first quarter. Another fumble happened on the ensuing drive for Red Mountain. Two running play attempts had resulted in two fumbles. The offense was sputtering to start the game, but the defense held firm and kept the Desert Ridge offense from the end zone. After one quarter of play, Desert Ridge held a 3-0 lead. Then, Lane put his stamp on the game with two signature catches. On 3rd and goal at the 7:53 mark in the second quarter and in need of a score, Crispin floated a pass high into the left corner of the end zone. At first, the pass looked like it may sail over Lane’s hands, but the USC commit used all of his 6-foot-5-inch frame to come down and secure the ball. “We have a heavy formation,” Lane said. “We only have one play that’s designed for it to be a pass. It’s called 92. From the moment it got called, I was like, ‘Alright. It’s a touchdown. I’m just gonna levitate over this dude and go get it.’ Carter threw it perfectly. It was just a matter of going up and getting it. I knew I could do that.” — Logan Stanley (@LSscribe) September 17, 2022 Following his first touchdown of the season, Lane turned, stopped and stared into the crowd with his hands tucked into his chest – almost as if to intimate that he was announcing his arrival for the season. “I definitely felt the juice,” Lane said. “I wanted to spin the ball – but coach [Kyle] Enders would have gotten real mad at me, so I didn’t do it.” After the two teams exchanged drives and with the ball back in the hands of the Jaguars, senior strong safety Elijah Albee recovered a fumble to put the Mountain Lions in their opponents’ territory.  On 1st and 10 from the Desert Ridge 15-yard line with 2:15 left in the second quarter, Crispin pump-faked the defender to create a bit of separation before launching the ball into nearly the same exact spot as the first touchdown from Lane – and again, the result was the same. “I know he’s going to be open. That’s what you know about Ja’kobi,” Crispin said. “He’s going to be in the right spot at the right time. He’s always going to be the one to make the play. It’s nice having him out there knowing I can count on him. It definitely makes me comfortable. Just knowing that I can go back to him whenever I need to is good for me. It’s a lot of help out there.” Lane hauls in another ridiculous TD catch, this one a 15-yard pass from Crispin. Lane is starting to take over this game. Red Mountain 14, Desert Ridge 3 | 2:15, 2Q. #azpreps365 #azfb pic.twitter.com/wR71dm9HM6 — Logan Stanley (@LSscribe) September 17, 2022 For the game, Lane finished with six receptions for 36 yards and two touchdowns. While the stat line may not be gaudy, the impact of Lane’s play was clearly imprinted on the game as a whole.  Coming off a loss at Sandra Day O’Connor and following a tough week of practice, Enders was looking to his star wide receiver to make his presence known. It was only a five-minute stretch of actual game time, but that was all Lane needed to put his stamp on the contest. “Athletically-gifted, there’s not a better player in the state,” Enders said. “He’s a freak. And you saw it tonight with some of those incredible catches. Those are ridiculous.” Read More Here
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Lane Shakes Off Rust With 2 TD Effort To Propel Red Mountain Past Desert Ridge
The Providence Journal Obituaries In Providence RI | The Providence Journal
The Providence Journal Obituaries In Providence RI | The Providence Journal
The Providence Journal Obituaries In Providence, RI | The Providence Journal https://digitalarizonanews.com/the-providence-journal-obituaries-in-providence-ri-the-providence-journal/ Sidmon Joel Kaplan of Providence, RI, and Tucson, AZ, and formerly of Cleveland, Ohio, passed away on Sept. 16, 2022. Born in Buffalo and raised in Cleveland, Mr. Kaplan graduated from Western Reserve Academy (WRA) in 1952 and Washington and Lee University in 1956. He completed basic training in the Army in 1957. Mr. Kaplan was predeceased by his beloved wife of 64 years, Barbara Bing Kaplan. He is survived by four children, Janice Kaplan (Michael Allen) of Washington, DC, Mary Jo Kaplan (Scott Triedman) of Providence, Doug Kaplan (Amy Kaplan) of Chicago, and Linda Kaplan (Neal Steingold) of Providence; a sister, Mickey (Ronnie) Lipton of Miami, and grandchildren Satchel (Alyssa), Halle, Hudson, Natalie (Warren), Lucy (Drew), Cole, Cooper, Gil, Sarah and Benjamin. He was the son of the late Mildred and Edward Ely Kaplan. Beginning in 1961, Mr. Kaplan was the owner and CEO of Landseair Travel, located in Cleveland. In 1982, he sold his agency to Prescott, Ball and Turban, merging with their travel division and becoming President of the largest travel business in Cleveland, also overseeing multiple Midwest locations. His profession and love of travel took him and Barbara around the world. Favorite destinations included Sydney; London; Bermuda; New Orleans; Sun Valley, ID; Gainesville, FL; Boothbay Harbor, ME, and Hudson, OH. Mr. Kaplan met his wife at dancing school when they were 13. They continued to dance through life at proms, formals and weddings. As an adult, Mr. Kaplan was a competitive tennis player and voracious eater, especially three-pound lobsters and hot fudge sundaes. A generous philanthropist, together with family and friends, he established the Kaplan Scholarship Fund to support Jewish students at WRA. A private family funeral service will be held in Providence with burial at Swan Point Cemetery. Shiva will be held at the home of Linda Kaplan on Wednesday, September 21, 2-4 pm and 7-9 pm. In lieu of flowers, contributions in his memory may be made to the Rhode Island Community Food Bank, 200 Niantic Ave., Providence, RI 02907 or to WRA’s Kaplan Scholarship Fund, 115 College Street, Hudson, Ohio 44236. Posted online on September 17, 2022 Published in Providence Journal Read More Here
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The Providence Journal Obituaries In Providence RI | The Providence Journal
Can The Fed Tame Inflation Without Further Crushing The Stock Market? What Investors Need To Know.
Can The Fed Tame Inflation Without Further Crushing The Stock Market? What Investors Need To Know.
Can The Fed Tame Inflation Without Further Crushing The Stock Market? What Investors Need To Know. https://digitalarizonanews.com/can-the-fed-tame-inflation-without-further-crushing-the-stock-market-what-investors-need-to-know/ The Federal Reserve isn’t trying to slam the stock market as it rapidly raises interest rates in its bid to slow inflation still running red hot — but investors need to be prepared for more pain and volatility because policy makers aren’t going to be cowed by a deepening selloff, investors and strategists said. “I don’t think they’re necessarily trying to drive inflation down by destroying stock prices or bond prices, but it is having that effect.” said Tim Courtney, chief investment officer at Exencial Wealth Advisors, in an interview. U.S. stocks fell sharply in the past week after hopes for a pronounced cooling in inflation were dashed by a hotter-than-expected August inflation reading. The data cemented expectations among fed-funds futures traders for a rate hike of at least 75 basis points when the Fed concludes its policy meeting on Sept. 21, with some traders and analysts looking for an increase of 100 basis points, or a full percentage point. Preview: The Fed is ready to tell us how much ‘pain’ the economy will suffer. It still won’t hint at recession though. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, logged a 4.1% weekly fall, while the S&P 500 SPX, dropped 4.8% and the Nasdaq Composite COMP, suffered a 5.5% decline. The S&P 500 ended Friday below the 3,900 level viewed as an important area of technical support, with some chart watchers eyeing the potential for a test of the large-cap benchmark’s 2022 low at 3,666.77 set on June 16. See: Stock-market bears seen keeping upper hand as S&P 500 drops below 3,900 A profit warning from global shipping giant and economic bellwether FedEx Corp. FDX, further stoked recession fears, contributing to stock-market losses on Friday. Read: Why FedEx’s stock plunge is so bad for the whole stock market Treasurys also fell, with yield on the 2-year Treasury note TMUBMUSD02Y, soaring to a nearly 15-year high above 3.85% on expectations the Fed will continue pushing rates higher in coming months. Yields rise as prices fall. Investors are operating in an environment where the central bank’s need to rein in stubborn inflation is widely seen having eliminated the notion of a figurative “Fed put” on the stock market. The concept of a Fed put has been around since at least the October 1987 stock-market crash prompted the Alan Greenspan-led central bank to lower interest rates. An actual put option is a financial derivative that gives the holder the right but not the obligation to sell the underlying asset at a set level, known as the strike price, serving as an insurance policy against a market decline. Some economists and analysts have even suggested the Fed should welcome or even aim for market losses, which could serve to tighten financial conditions as investors scale back spending. Related: Do higher stock prices make it harder for the Fed to fight inflation? The short answer is ‘yes’ William Dudley, the former president of the New York Fed, argued earlier this year that the central bank won’t get a handle on inflation that’s running near a 40-year high unless they make investors suffer. “It’s hard to know how much the Federal Reserve will need to do to get inflation under control,” wrote Dudley in a Bloomberg column in April. “But one thing is certain: to be effective, it’ll have to inflict more losses on stock and bond investors than it has so far.” Some market participants aren’t convinced. Aoifinn Devitt, chief investment officer at Moneta, said the Fed likely sees stock-market volatility as a byproduct of its efforts to tighten monetary policy, not an objective. “They recognize that stocks can be collateral damage in a tightening cycle,” but that doesn’t mean that stocks “have to collapse,” Devitt said. The Fed, however, is prepared to tolerate seeing markets decline and the economy slow and even tip into recession as it focuses on taming inflation, she said. The Federal Reserve held the fed funds target rate at a range of 0% to 0.25% between 2008 and 2015, as it dealt with the financial crisis and its aftermath. The Fed also cut rates to near zero again in March 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. With a rock-bottom interest rate, the Dow DJIA, skyrocketed over 40%, while the large-cap index S&P 500 SPX, jumped over 60% between March 2020 and December 2021, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Investors got used to “the tailwind for over a decade with falling interest rates” while looking for the Fed to step in with its “put” should the going get rocky, said Courtney at Exencial Wealth Advisors. “I think (now) the Fed message is ‘you’re not gonna get this tailwind anymore’,” Courtney told MarketWatch on Thursday. “I think markets can grow, but they’re gonna have to grow on their own because the markets are like a greenhouse where the temperatures have to be kept at a certain level all day and all night, and I think that’s the message that markets can and should grow on their own without the greenhouse effect.” See: Opinion: The stock market’s trend is relentlessly bearish, especially after this week’s big daily declines Meanwhile, the Fed’s aggressive stance means investors should be prepared for what may be a “few more daily stabs downward” that could eventually prove to be a “final big flush,” said Liz Young, head of investment strategy at SoFi, in a Thursday note. “This may sound odd, but if that happens swiftly, meaning within the next couple months, that actually becomes the bull case in my view,” she said. “It could be a quick and painful drop, resulting in a renewed move higher later in the year that’s more durable, as inflation falls more notably.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Can The Fed Tame Inflation Without Further Crushing The Stock Market? What Investors Need To Know.
Obituaries In Columbus OH | The Columbus Dispatch
Obituaries In Columbus OH | The Columbus Dispatch
Obituaries In Columbus, OH | The Columbus Dispatch https://digitalarizonanews.com/obituaries-in-columbus-oh-the-columbus-dispatch/ John J. O’Meara, passed away at his recent residence in Lake Bluff, IL, on Wednesday September 14, 2022. He was a long-time resident of Columbus, OH, Deerfield, IL and Wadsworth, IL. Born in Omaha, NE in 1925, he was preceded in death by his son Brian, parents Mary A. and Matthew F. O’Meara, brothers William E. and Matthew F. (Frank) of Washington, PA and sister Mary E. Foley of Phoenix, AZ. Mr. O’Meara leaves his wife Eileen (Schmelzer) O’Meara, sons Dr. Michael J (Margaret O’Conner) of Chicago, IL, Daniel J. (Joni Dominges) of Honolulu, HI and daughter Sharon M. (David) Leach of Davie, FL along with 3 grandchildren Samantha O’Meara, Shelby and Brian Leach as well as several nieces and nephews. Mr. O’Meara served in the Navy in World War II. He is a graduate of St. Charles High School, Columbus, OH and The Ohio State University. Funeral service is private. Military Honors and burial at St. Joseph Cemetery, Lockbourne, OH. Arrangements under the care of the MAEDER-QUINT-TIBERI Funeral Home, (614) 444-1185. To view and sign the on-line register, visit www.MaederQuintTiberi.com Posted online on September 17, 2022 Published in Columbus Dispatch Read More…
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Obituaries In Columbus OH | The Columbus Dispatch
Analysis | Ex-Governors Test Whether Civil Discourse Is Possible Or Productive
Analysis | Ex-Governors Test Whether Civil Discourse Is Possible Or Productive
Analysis | Ex-Governors Test Whether Civil Discourse Is Possible — Or Productive https://digitalarizonanews.com/analysis-ex-governors-test-whether-civil-discourse-is-possible-or-productive/ Watching television news after 7 p.m. on almost any night, Bill Haslam says, is “unbearable, or at least it is for me. Because it’s just totally, ‘I’m trying to get you to be as outraged as you can about the things that I already know that you’re outraged about.’” Haslam is like many Americans who are exhausted after half a dozen years of nonstop political conflict and news cycles that bleed from one into another and another. Unlike most Americans, Haslam and his friend Phil Bredesen are trying to offer some counterprogramming. Haslam is a Republican who served as governor of Tennessee from 2011 to 2019. Bredesen is a Democrat who served for the eight years preceding Haslam’s tenure. Both are also former mayors in Tennessee — Haslam in Knoxville and Bredesen in Nashville — and both come from a business background. Their politics are different, though as a conservative Democrat, Bredesen isn’t always all that far away from the moderately conservative (in today’s GOP) Haslam. By temperament they are temperate; their political style is oriented toward finding solutions rather than scoring points for cable television. Each has had some difficulty adjusting to the current state of their respective parties. Neither Haslam nor Bredesen is a shouter, so they have come together not to shout but to talk — to talk not about the latest outrage that has caused the Twittersphere to light up but about some real issues and whether it’s possible to find real common ground in this divided nation. They have launched a podcast called “You Might Be Right”; that’s a reference to something another Tennessee politician, former Republican senator Howard Baker, said to remind his fellow partisans that the other person might be right some of the time. The podcast is housed at the Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy at the University of Tennessee. The world is awash in podcasts, and the Haslam-Bredesen experiment in civil discourse echoes discussions that can be found in many places around the country, though often in places where people tend to agree with one another and less often across the barricades of what constitutes daily political life. Their expectations are understandably modest. They are beginning with what they call a test flight, a series of conversations with pairs of guests, after which they will review and tweak. They have put off conversations about some of the most difficult topics — abortion or the teaching of America’s history of slavery and racism — until a second season. A bigger challenge, perhaps, is whether these kinds of forums and formats are capable of producing more than just civil discussion. Generating understanding of opposing viewpoints is one thing. Reaching beyond easy compromise or lowest-common-denominator agreement to generate fresh and unorthodox thinking about issues that have been debated forever is another. Right now they are hoping simply to create both a model for civilized debate aimed at finding some agreement for solving public policy problems and some encouragement for others in the public arena to turn conversation into, say, legislation. “There are certainly plenty of people in politics for whom it’s all about. ‘I just need to keep exciting my base and stay elected,’ ” Bredesen said. “I also believe there’s a lot of people in politics today who genuinely want to find some common ground and give some progress on some of these difficult issues. It’s more a matter of getting the camel’s nose under the tent here.” The two governors talked with The Post about their hopes for the project, a day after they had recorded a session that featured two former Republican senators from Tennessee, Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker, who debated (or at least discussed) their opposing views about the Senate filibuster. Alexander remains a defender, but Corker now sees a need to reform it, believing, Haslam said, that the Senate is so hamstrung that even decisions made on 51-49 votes are better than doing nothing. Bredesen has been out of office now for almost more than a decade. He said one change he has seen, drawing from his experience as both a mayor and governor, is that state and local issues that once were seen as just that and therefore more disconnected from national debates have become increasingly nationalized. Whether issues of education or even local election campaigns, he said, “those issues have gotten much more tied up with this national positioning” by the two major parties. For Haslam the biggest differences between when he was first running for governor and today is the pernicious influence of social media’s growth and influence, a common diagnosis. “We all know you don’t get likes and retweets by saying something that’s not critical or not that inflammatory,” he said. “People figured out the more inflammatory I am, the more I get retweeted, the more I get liked. And I honestly think that has dramatically changed politics.” Few would disagree. Bredesen, who governed as a Democrat in a region of the country that was becoming more conservative and staunchly Republican, was often at odds with his own party while in office. He said the Democrats have “moved so far to the left” nationally that “you have to just carefully insulate yourself” to survive. He tried to do just that when he ran for the Senate in 2018. It didn’t work. He lost by double digits to now-Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R). Haslam was the first Republican governor to have Republican majorities in the legislature. However, it wasn’t always an easy relationship, with legislators sometimes further to the right than the governor. “We’ve lost some of the benefit in Tennessee that we had when you had two strong parties that were debating and arguing with each other and when you had to win two elections, not just one,” he said. “Ultimately, I’m a proud Republican, but it does change when the only thing you have to worry about is your primary.” Bredesen has long lived in Tennessee but grew up in Upstate New York. Both places today, he said, are part of Trump country. “I just know a lot of people who find that attractive,” he said. “And when you peel it back, it is almost a cultural phenomenon of people feeling that government has not served them and hasn’t solved problems. And their response to it is — it’s almost a bomb-throwing response. But I think there’s enormous frustration among reasonable people that problems are not being solved in a way that benefits them.” The podcast that Bredesen and Haslam are starting could easily be drowned out by that which draws the most attention in politics today, the noise of a divided electorate, the hostility that is now in the open, as well as genuine concerns about the turmoil caused by former president Donald Trump and related threats to democracy. The two ex-governors want to focus on issues that divide people but that still might be subject to broader consensus than cable TV debates might suggest. But they are realists. “I guess we’re under no illusions that we’re going to solve all the country’s problems in our podcast,” Haslam said. “But I’d say this, and I think at the heart of a lot of the issues you talked about is this incredible passion really on both sides of the country. And I think that passion is ignited a lot by folks who feel like, you know, I have to fight about this, and don’t really understand what’s the other side of the argument.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Analysis | Ex-Governors Test Whether Civil Discourse Is Possible Or Productive
Gaetz Sought Pardon Related To Justice Department Sex Trafficking Probe
Gaetz Sought Pardon Related To Justice Department Sex Trafficking Probe
Gaetz Sought Pardon Related To Justice Department Sex Trafficking Probe https://digitalarizonanews.com/gaetz-sought-pardon-related-to-justice-department-sex-trafficking-probe/ Congressman Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) told a former White House aide that he was seeking a preemptive pardon from President Donald Trump regarding an investigation in which he is a target, according to testimony provided to the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Johnny McEntee, according to people familiar with his testimony, told investigators that Gaetz told him during a brief meeting “that they are launching an investigation into him or that there’s an investigation into him,” without specifying who was investigating Gaetz. McEntee added that Gaetz told him “he didn’t do anything wrong but they are trying to make his life hell, and you know, if the president could give him a pardon, that would be great.” Gaetz told McEntee that he had asked White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows for a pardon. Asked by investigators if Gaetz’s ask for a pardon was in the context of the Justice Department’s investigation into whether Gaetz violated federal sex trafficking laws, McEntee replied, “I think that was the context, yes,” according to people familiar with the testimony who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters. The testimony is the first indication that Gaetz was specifically seeking a pardon for his own exposure related to the Justice Department inquiry into whether he violated sex trafficking laws. His public posture in the final months of the Trump presidency was much less specific, repeatedly calling for broad preemptive pardons to fend off possible Democratic investigations. McEntee testified that Gaetz met him briefly one evening and discussed the issue of a pardon but McEntee could not recall whether their conversation happened before or after the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, according to people familiar with the testimony. The Justice Department’s investigation into whether Gaetz paid for sex, paid for women to travel across state lines to have sex, and had a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old, was opened in the final months of the Trump administration with then-Attorney General William P. Barr’s approval. The probe stemmed from a federal investigation of Gaetz’s friend who is now a convicted sex trafficker. Gaetz has denied paying for sex or having sex with a minor as an adult. McEntee did not respond to repeated requests for comment. Neither Meadows nor his lawyer immediately responded to requests for comment. A spokesperson for Gaetz refused to address McEntee’s testimony or whether Gaetz discussed a pardon with McEntee or Meadows and instead responded that Gaetz never directly asked Trump for a pardon. “Congressman Matt Gaetz discussed pardons for many other people publicly and privately at the end of President Donald Trump’s first term,” the spokesperson wrote in an email. “As for himself, President Trump addressed this malicious rumor more than a year ago stating, ‘Congressman Matt Gaetz has never asked me for a pardon.’ Rep. Gaetz continues to stand by President Trump’s statement.” The House select committee also declined to comment. Gaetz has not been charged with any crimes but Joel Greenberg, a Gaetz associate and former tax collector for Seminole County, Fla., pleaded guilty last Spring to six criminal charges, including sex trafficking of a minor. Greenberg agreed to cooperate fully with prosecutors and testify in court, and has been providing investigators with information about Gaetz since 2020, The Washington Post previously reported. “The last time I had a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old, I was 17,” Gaetz had previously said. On Nov. 25, 2020, weeks after Trump lost the election, Gaetz told Fox News that Trump “should pardon everyone from himself to his administration officials to Joe Exotic if he has to.” Cassidy Hutchinson, a top aide to White House chief of Staff Mark Meadows, told the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack that she recalled Gaetz and Rep. Mo Brooks (R-Ala.) both advocating for a “blanket pardon” for lawmakers who attended a Dec. 21, 2020, meeting at the White House to discuss efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election. In the previously aired testimony, she said they also advocated for pardons for “a handful of other members that weren’t at the December 21st meeting.” Hutchinson added that Gaetz, however, “was personally pushing” for a pardon “since early December.” But the focus of that pardon request was not clear from Hutchinson’s testimony. “I’m not sure why Mr. Gaetz would reach out to me to ask if he could have a meeting with Mr. Meadows about receiving a presidential pardon,” she added. Brooks, who put a request for a pardon in an email to a White House aide at the time, defended his actions in a statement after Hutchinson’s testimony saying, “There was a concern Democrats would abuse the judicial system by prosecuting and jailing Republicans” for objecting in Congress to the certification of the election. Eric Herschmann, a former Trump White House lawyer, told investigators that he also believed that Gaetz was requesting a pardon, according to an excerpt of the deposition played during one of the committee’s public hearings. “The general tone was, we may get prosecuted because we were defensive of, you know, the president’s positions on these things,” Herschmann recalled. “The pardon that he was discussing requesting was as broad as you can describe, from beginning — I remember he’s — from the beginning of time up until today for any and all things. Then he mentioned Nixon. And I said Nixon’s pardon was never nearly that broad.” Gaetz ultimately did not receive a pardon from the former president. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Gaetz Sought Pardon Related To Justice Department Sex Trafficking Probe
Cactus Earns First Win Of Season Boncore And Galvan Shine
Cactus Earns First Win Of Season Boncore And Galvan Shine
Cactus Earns First Win Of Season, Boncore And Galvan Shine https://digitalarizonanews.com/cactus-earns-first-win-of-season-boncore-and-galvan-shine/ A balanced offensive attack and a stout defense performance produced a convincing home win for the Cobras. (Jordy Fee-Platt photo/AZPreps365) Jordy Fee-Platt is an ASU Cronkite School of Journalism Student assigned to cover Cactus High School for AZPreps365.com. The Cactus Cobras secured their first win of the season Friday in their 5A non-section matchup against the Mesquite Wildcats, dominating in all three phases en route to a 47-6 victory.  Junior quarterback Braiden Lagafuaina threw for 315 yards and four TDs and sophomore Nikko Boncore had six catches for 142 yards and two scores.  After struggling offensively during their first two games, the Cobras made a change to their offensive game plan that immediately reaped benefits. Wide receiver Will Galvan was lined up in the backfield on numerous occasions, both taking direct snaps and handoffs.  On their first drive, Cactus was faced with third-and-goal from the 11-yard line. Galvan took the direct snap, sprinted down the right sideline, and snuck inside the pylon to give his team an early 7-0 lead.  The former West Valley Region Player of the Year has transitioned from quarterback to wide receiver this season, and has seen his touches drop. Cactus Coach Brian Belles made it a point of emphasis to get the ball in Galvan’s hands more often. “It was a coach’s decision,” Belles said. “We just felt like we needed to give our tailback a break, and Will [Galvan] can do everything,” Belles said.  Later in the quarter, Galvan further displayed that versatility, adding a receiving TD to his tally and giving his team a 14-0 advantage. Galvan’s early scores helped ignite an offense that had only scored 12 points combined in its first two games. The Cobras registered 546 total yards in the game and 21 total first downs. For most of the first half, however, Cactus was not taking advantage of its offensive success, with two drives stalling inside the Mesquite 5-yard line.  Momentum could have shifted on both occasions, but the Cactus defense ensured this did not happen. The unit forced crucial safeties on both drives, pushing the team’s lead to 18-0 at halftime. Following the break, the Cobras really found their stride offensively, consistently converting red zone trips into touchdowns. The emergence of a deep passing attack that had been absent the first two weeks played a major role. Belles credited the offensive line for giving Lagafuaina the time to wait for the deeper routes to develop.   “We had been missing that piece the last couple of weeks, and they came out and did a lot of good things,” Belles said. With time to throw, Lagafuaina was able to connect with open receivers for chunk plays, particularly Boncore, who had four receptions of 20-plus yards and two touchdowns. The wideout pointed to the chemistry he has built with Lagafuaina during seven-on-seven drills that is now paying off in games.  “I love my quarterback. This connection we have, it’s been developing, and tonight we showed it,” Boncore said. “We are going to have this connection for next year too, so hopefully we get more big plays like that.”  While the Cobras were flourishing offensively, Mesquite could never seem to get into a rhythm. Coach Vance Miller attributed its struggles to the inexperience of his group. “Out of our 35 guys that are dressed, we have three that have played varsity football before,” Miller said. “So we’re just young and we’re learning. We’re making that transition from being athletic and relying on our own athleticism to learning the game of football, and you know that’s going to come in time.”  Mesquite quarterback Pj Jones finished with 102 passing yards, but easily could have had more with multiple deep throws narrowly missing receivers.  In the end, the visitors simply could not keep pace with Cactus’ balanced attack on offense. In addition to success through the air, the aforementioned success of the offensive line also opened up running lanes for Cactus tailback Damian Jiles, who rushed for 164 yards on 15 carries.  The Cobras (1-2) will now turn their attention to a road game against Snowflake Friday (3-0), while Mesquite (1-2) will face Gilbert (2-1) at home.  Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Cactus Earns First Win Of Season Boncore And Galvan Shine
Youth Gets Best Of Walden Grove In Close Road Loss To Arizona College Prep | ALLSPORTSTUCSON.com
Youth Gets Best Of Walden Grove In Close Road Loss To Arizona College Prep | ALLSPORTSTUCSON.com
Youth Gets Best Of Walden Grove In Close Road Loss To Arizona College Prep | ALLSPORTSTUCSON.com https://digitalarizonanews.com/youth-gets-best-of-walden-grove-in-close-road-loss-to-arizona-college-prep-allsportstucson-com/ GILBERT — Friday night’s 28-20 loss on the road against Arizona College Prep was a big test for the young Walden Grove Red Wolves squad, which had its youth ultimately got the best of it in a game coming down to the final play. On paper, Walden Grove outperformed Arizona College Prep, but a handful of turnovers and issues in the red zone would end up being too much to overcome. “We’ve got to learn how to play in these types of games,” Walden Grove coach Corey Noble said. “We’ve got to learn how to play in these really tough games, and we haven’t been in a whole lot of them, but they showed a hell of a lot of fight tonight.” ACP started the game off with the football, but a fumble on the fourth play quickly gave the ball to Walden Grove around midfield. The Red Wolves weren’t able to string a series of plays together early, ultimately turning the ball over on downs following a sack for a loss of six yards. On the following drive, ACP was able to march down the field and cap it off with a 15-yard touchdown pass and an extra point to make it 7-0 with 6:43 remaining. Junior quarterback Gabriel Smith was able to start getting into a flow on the following possession, where a mix of both passing plays and runs had them creeping up on the red zone. Finding themselves in fourth and long territory at the 28-yard-line, Walden Grove decided to go for it. However, a sack would ultimately result in a loss of four yards and another turnover on downs towards the end of the first quarter. Defense was able to step up and force ACP to punt on the following possession, but it was a frustrating moment when the ball was fumbled on the handoff and recovered by ACP at the Walden Grove 20. It only took one play and the Knights were in the end zone once again. Attempting the extra point attempt, the ball hit the left upright and bounced back onto the field, leaving the score at 13-0 with 10:56 left before the half. “We put ourselves in a bad position starting flat not making plays,” Noble said. Walden Grove was finally loosened up, and it showed on its next possession. Despite Smith getting hit hard on the drive, the Red Wolves were still able to get the ball across the goal line on a 19-yard touchdown pass from senior Caleb Lyden to senior Jahme Dawson. The extra point was no good. Walden Grove cut ACP lead to 13-6 with 9:00 exactly before halftime. The momentum was on Walden Grove’s side at this point, where the defense forced ACP to punt once again. The Red Wolves took over at their own 19, where they slowly but surely chipped away towards the end zone. Making it all the way to the 10-yard-line, Walden Grove wasn’t able to finish the drive, ultimately turning the ball over on downs with less than a minute left before the half. Coming back out after halftime, the Red Wolves got the ball to start things off. Making some adjustments, Walden Grove was able to extend the possession and take it down the field for six, polished off with a five-yard run from sophomore Robert Cash III. This time, the extra point attempt was blocked, leaving Walden Grove still trailing 13-12 with 7:03 left in the third. What ensued in the following three minutes would be arguably the biggest difference-maker in the outcome of the game for a handful of reasons. ACP came out on the following possession with an explosive 62-yard touchdown run to quickly push the lead back out to 19-12. Going for two, the Knights were able to convert to make it 21-12 with 6:05 left in the 3rd. On the kickoff, an unfortunate fumble from Walden Grove put the ball right back in the hands of ACP, taking over with excellent field position at their own 27. Taking two more minutes off the clock as they finished the drive, the Knights capped it off with a 10-yard touchdown pass to make it 27-12 with 4:03 remaining, along with a successful extra point attempt. Making things worse, Walden Grove went a quick three and out on the following possession, forcing its defense back on the field once again. Forcing a quick visit to the field for the Knights, the defense was able to force a punt with around 1:30 left in the third, setting up Walden Grove at their own 40. Smith was doing his best on the following possession to move the ball, but the greenness of the offensive line shined through once again, resulting in an upsetting turnover on downs after once again making it to the red zone. Defense was still hungry to play, forcing yet another fumble recovered in the air by sophomore Carlos Montoya Jr and returned to the ACP 25. From there, it was enough momentum for the Red Wolves to finally capitalize on their field position, where Smith was able to find Lyden in the end zone for a touchdown. “Our defense was playing lights-out,” Noble said. “I think we’ve got a shot to be one of the top defenses in the state. Our defense is playing lights-out football. Montoya made another huge play tonight, getting the strip and taking it back for a long return and really getting us back in it.” Knowing the game was within reach, the Red Wolves decided to go for two and were able to convert. Smith found junior Paul Guy in the front corner of the end zone, making a diving catch to cut the score to 28-20 with 7:32 left to play. ACP’s following drive was able to chew off another four and a half minutes, eventually turning over the ball on downs at the Walden Grove 15-yard-line with 2:50 left in the game. Once again, Walden Grove was able to make a push at scoring, reaching the 20-yard-line, but a sack, and incompletion, and another sack would ultimately bring an end to the game. Overall, Smith completed 21 of his 34 pass attempts for approximately 237 yards on the night and no interceptions. Lyden also was one for one on his solo pass attempt in the second quarter for a 19-yard touchdown, giving the Red Wolves a total of around 256 yards in the air. Rushing yards were harder to come by, though, as a tumultuous second half on the ground cut down their overall total to only around 76 yards on the night. Much of the yardage lost on the ground Friday night came in the form of QB sacks. Smith was sacked six times alone by Cayden Gibson, who set a school single-game record for sacks. “We got out-physicaled up front a little bit,” Noble said. “Starting three sophomores on the O-line, they’ve got to learn to play big boy football, and they will. They’re doing a hell of a job, they’ve got a lot better, but we’ve still got a long way to go.” Walden Grove, who is currently 1-2 on the season after a tough set of teams to start of the year, will return home next week to host Pueblo (2-0). Noble is looking forward to correcting some of the mistakes from the past week and taking on a solid Pueblo team. WALDEN GROVE (1-1, 0-0) Red Wolves compete in the 4A Gila. *Region game. +Sahuarita High School. Games start at 7 p.m. Date Opponent W/L Ovr Reg 9/2 @ CDO L, 28-7 0-1 0-0 9/9 Greenway W, 48-7 1-1 0-0 9/16 @ AZ College Prep L, 28-20 1-2 0-0 9/23 Pueblo 10/7 @ Mountain View 10/14 Sahuaro* 10/21 @ Rio Rico* 10/28 @ Amphi* 11/4 Sahuarita*+ 11/10 Catalina Foothills* Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Youth Gets Best Of Walden Grove In Close Road Loss To Arizona College Prep | ALLSPORTSTUCSON.com
Republicans Will Take US Senate In November: Senator Rick Scott
Republicans Will Take US Senate In November: Senator Rick Scott
Republicans Will Take US Senate In November: Senator Rick Scott https://digitalarizonanews.com/republicans-will-take-us-senate-in-november-senator-rick-scott/ Republican American Senator Rick Scott has said Democrats are going to lose in the 2022 midterm elections in November and Republicans will take the Senate. “I’m 100% certain we’ll take the Senate,” Scott, the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC), said in an interview with Gray Television White House correspondent Jon Decker airing this weekend. “I think we’re going to have a breakthrough.” Scott pointed out the quality of Republican Senate candidates, naming Wisconsin candidate Ron Johnson, Pennsylvania candidate Mehmet Oz, North Carolina candidate Ted Budd, Georgia candidate Herschel Walker and Nevada candidate Adam Laxalt, among others. “Just look at our candidates. I mean, look at them … These guys have great backgrounds. And they’re working hard. They’re running good races,” Scott said. The Florida senator argued that President Joe Biden’s low approval ratings in contested states give him confidence that the Republicans have a chance at winning, calling Biden the “best advocate for why you do not want to vote for any Democrats right now.” “This is a referendum on Biden,” said Scott.  “I do know that Biden helps us every day when he has a party for inflation in the day that inflation is 8.3%. That probably helps us a lot when he continues to leave the border open, that probably helps us a lot … If you look at everything he’s doing when he says, ‘Oh, if you’re a construction worker, you’re going to pay off the debt of somebody going to an Ivy League school.’ That probably helps us win,” he added. The GOP senator said that he thinks Democrats “have to talk about abortion” because in his view they are doing badly on other issues. “They can’t talk about inflation. They can’t talk about job growth. We lost 242,000 full-time jobs last month,” he said. “I mean, they can’t talk about the economy, they can’t talk about schools, they can’t talk about Afghanistan, they can’t talk about the border, they can’t talk about crime because it’s all bad issues for them,” Scott continued. Recent opinion polls have depicted a gloomy landscape for Democrats as they gear up for the 2022 midterm elections. A recent USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll found that Republicans maintain a clear lead on the congressional ballot over Democrats as Joe Biden’s approval rating plunges to a new low of 38 percent. Nearly two-thirds of Americans, 64 percent, say they do not want Biden to run for a second term in 2024, including a troubling 28 percent of Democrats. Biden has proven a disappointment for many who voted him into office last year, with 16 percent of those surveyed saying he has done a worse job as president than they expected. Overall, 46 percent of Americans hold that view. More worrying for Biden, another new survey by Emerson College has found that Trump would beat the incumbent by two points – 45 to 43 percent – if the election was held today. Analyst: Midterm elections are usually a sign of buyers’ remorse American political analyst and activist Myles Hoenig told Press TV Democrats “are guaranteed to lose. President Barack Obama called his first off-year defeats in 2010 a ‘shellacking’. How big a party loses depends on many factors, but losing is almost always the outcome.”  He said that ending student debt for 46 million Americans can offset an embarrassing loss in November. “First mid-term elections are usually corrective, often based on buyers’ remorse. This past election is different in that the losing candidate was Trump who broke all the rules for the Presidency and his party. But Biden needs to do a Herculean job in the next 200 days to reverse the expected outcome in 2022. There is so much that he ran on that he and his party have ignored. Even if he took on one major issue, like forgiving student debt, one of his campaign promises, he would stand a chance of offsetting an embarrassing defeat this November,” Hoenig stated. “The total student debt in this country is $1.75 trillion for nearly 45 million Americans. With this debt, students (who are likely long into their adulthood) cannot buy a home, invest in a business, raise a family, or spend money freely. Most Americans have very little in savings and are often a paycheck away from bankruptcy. Medical bills, even when insured, is the #1 reason for bankruptcies. Relieving student debt will change the economic fortunes of generations,” the student added. “Money spent monthly to the banks (including interest) to pay off these loans would be going instead to buying cars, fixing homes, recreation and travel, paying medical bills. The vast majority of Americans would like to see this happen yet both political parties are too beholden to the banks to make good on it. This alone, relieving Americans of this exploitive debt, would be heralded as President Biden making good on a campaign promise and at least pretending to show that he has an affinity and empathy with real working Americans, as phony as that would be. But in politics, messaging, even when specious, can work,” he concluded. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Republicans Will Take US Senate In November: Senator Rick Scott
Hurricane Warning Issued For Puerto Rico Ahead Of Tropical Storm Fiona | CNN
Hurricane Warning Issued For Puerto Rico Ahead Of Tropical Storm Fiona | CNN
Hurricane Warning Issued For Puerto Rico Ahead Of Tropical Storm Fiona | CNN https://digitalarizonanews.com/hurricane-warning-issued-for-puerto-rico-ahead-of-tropical-storm-fiona-cnn/ CNN  —  Tropical Storm Fiona is poised to whip the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico on approach Saturday and may strike the latter as a hurricane on Sunday, posing a significant flooding and mudslide threat to the larger US territory, forecasters say. A hurricane warning was issued Saturday for Puerto Rico, reflecting forecasters’ belief that it will strengthen to a hurricane – with sustained winds of at least 74 mph – by the time it’s near or over the island Sunday night. Hurricane watches, meanwhile, are in effect for the US Virgin Islands as well as parts of the Dominican Republic, the National Hurricane Center said. “The center of Fiona is expected to move near or south of the Virgin Islands (Saturday) evening, approach Puerto Rico (Saturday night), and move near or over Puerto Rico Sunday night” before moving near the Dominican Republic on Monday, the hurricane center said. Fiona’s biggest threat may be the rain it’s expected to dump on Puerto Rico: generally 12-16 inches, with 20 inches in isolated areas there, forecasters say. “These rains are likely to produce flash and urban flooding, along with mudslides in areas of higher terrain, particularly southern and eastern Puerto Rico and the eastern Dominican Republic,” the hurricane center said. Fiona, having whipped Guadeloupe and other northeastern Caribbean islands with heavy rain and strong winds Friday and early Saturday, was centered over the Caribbean about 130 miles southeast of St. Croix of the US Virgin Islands as of 11 a.m. ET Saturday, the NHC said. It had maximum sustained winds of 60 mph – short of the 74 mph threshold for a Category 1 hurricane, though strengthening is expected as the weekend progresses. Tropical storm conditions – including winds of at least 39 mph – were expected to reach the US and British Virgin Islands starting Saturday afternoon and spread across Puerto Rico on Saturday night. CNN Weather Hurricane conditions were expected on Puerto Rico on Sunday and Sunday night – and are possible on the US Virgin Islands on Saturday night, the hurricane center said. The storm also could be at hurricane strength when it passes over or near the Dominican Republic on Monday, forecasters said. Fiona became a tropical storm over the Atlantic on Wednesday before entering the eastern Caribbean on Friday. CNN Weather Here is how much rain is expected in each location, according to the hurricane center: • Leeward Islands, including Guadeloupe, and the northern Windward Islands: 2-4 inches on top of what they’ve already received. • British and US Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico: 4-6 inches, with isolated areas of 10 inches possible. • Puerto RIco: 12-16 inches, with isolated areas of 20 inches possible. • Dominican Republic: 4-8 inches, with isolated areas of 12 inches possible. particularly on the far eastern coast. • Haiti: 1-3 inches, with isolated maximum totals of 4 inches. • Turks and Caicos: 4-10 inches. CNN Weather This is the first time in more than three years that Puerto Rico has been issued a hurricane watch or warning. The last time was in August 2019, when Hurricane Dorian passed the island as a Category 1 storm. A few tropical storms have passed the island since then, but Dorian was the last storm at hurricane strength to pass within 50 miles, CNN meteorologists said. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Hurricane Warning Issued For Puerto Rico Ahead Of Tropical Storm Fiona | CNN
Yeshiva University Cancels All Clubs After It Was Ordered To Allow An LGBTQ Group
Yeshiva University Cancels All Clubs After It Was Ordered To Allow An LGBTQ Group
Yeshiva University Cancels All Clubs After It Was Ordered To Allow An LGBTQ Group https://digitalarizonanews.com/yeshiva-university-cancels-all-clubs-after-it-was-ordered-to-allow-an-lgbtq-group/ People walk by the campus of Yeshiva University in New York City on Aug. 30. The school told students in an email that it was pausing all student clubs on campus. Spencer Platt/Getty Images hide caption toggle caption Spencer Platt/Getty Images People walk by the campus of Yeshiva University in New York City on Aug. 30. The school told students in an email that it was pausing all student clubs on campus. Spencer Platt/Getty Images Yeshiva University says it’s pausing all student clubs on campus just days after the U.S. Supreme Court refused to block a lower court ruling that ordered the school to recognize an LGBTQ group. In an unsigned email to students, the New York City school said that, considering upcoming Jewish holidays, “the university will hold off on all undergraduate club activities while it immediately takes steps to follow the roadmap provided by the US Supreme Court to protect YU’s religious freedom. Warm wishes for a Shannah Tovah.” Earlier this week the Supreme Court told Yeshiva to go back to New York state court to continue its legal battle with the YU Pride Alliance, an LGBTQ student group that wants to be officially recognized by the university. The YU Pride Alliance sued the school last year after Yeshiva refused to officially recognize it, claiming that it conflicted with the school’s interpretation of the Torah. A New York state court ruled that the university had to recognize the club, and the Supreme Court has left that ruling in place for now. Pride group lawyer calls Yeshiva’s decision “shameful” Katie Rosenfeld, an attorney for the YU Pride Alliance, said the decision to cancel all club activities “rather than accept one LGBTQ peer support group on campus is a throwback to 50 years ago when the city of Jackson, Mississippi closed all public swimming pools rather than comply with court orders to desegregate.” “We are confident that YU students will see through this shameful tactic and stand together in community,” Rosenfeld added in a statement. Yeshiva University did not immediately respond to NPR’s request for comment. Earlier in the week, Yeshiva University President Rabbi Ari Berman said in a statement that the school would continue to press its case in court. “Every faith-based university in the country has the right to work with its students, including its LGBTQ students, to establish the clubs, places and spaces that fit within its faith tradition. Yeshiva University simply seeks that same right of self-determination,” Berman said. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Yeshiva University Cancels All Clubs After It Was Ordered To Allow An LGBTQ Group
George Conway Said Trump Is Threatening To Incite Violence If He Gets Indicted: 'It's Just Like January 6 All Over Again'
George Conway Said Trump Is Threatening To Incite Violence If He Gets Indicted: 'It's Just Like January 6 All Over Again'
George Conway Said Trump Is Threatening To Incite Violence If He Gets Indicted: 'It's Just Like January 6 All Over Again' https://digitalarizonanews.com/george-conway-said-trump-is-threatening-to-incite-violence-if-he-gets-indicted-its-just-like-january-6-all-over-again/ George Conway accused former President Donald Trump of threatening to incite violence again. Conway said he’s acting like he’s “being persecuted for no valid reason” in relation to Mar-a-Lago. “He is absolutely encouraging people to engage in violence,” Conway said on CNN. Loading Something is loading. Conservative lawyer George Conway said former President Donald Trump is inciting violence by telling millions of people that he’s “being persecuted for no valid reason” in relation to the Mar-a-Lago probe. Conway, when asked by CNN in Friday interview, if he would characterize Trump’s response as a “threat” said that he would. “Yes, absolutely,” Conway. “I mean he’s basically saying, ‘What a nice country you have here, too bad if something would happen to it.'” Last month, the FBI executed a search warrant at the former president’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida and recovered several boxes containing classified records that Trump took with him from the White House once he left office, according to the court records made public.  The search unearthed more than two dozen boxes containing some “11,000 documents and 1,800 other items from the office and storage room,” according to court filings. Some of the boxes were distinctly marked as “top secret,” Insider’s Sonam Sheth reported.  Some of those materials include private and potentially sensitive documents like medical, tax, and accounting records, the court said.  Trump has denied all assertions of wrongdoing, saying that he had “declassified” the documents. He also said that “everyone ends up having to bring home their work from time to time.” Recently, Trump said there would be “big problems” if he were indicted in relation to the probe. Conway compared the remarks to the Capitol riot, which resulted in several deaths and injuries. Over a year later, at least 910 people have been charged by federal prosecutors.  “It’s basically January 6 all over again,” Conway told CNN. “He’s denying inciting violence but the fact of the matter is he is inciting violence because … he’s convinced millions of people that he is being persecuted for no valid reason, when in fact, he knows and he’s terrified about the fact that he’s been caught red-handed stealing government documents of the highest, highest security nature.” “By perpetrating that lie to the American people, he is absolutely encouraging people to engage in violence,” Conway added. “There’s just no question about it.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
George Conway Said Trump Is Threatening To Incite Violence If He Gets Indicted: 'It's Just Like January 6 All Over Again'
US Asks Appeals Court To Lift Judge's Mar-A-Lago Probe Hold
US Asks Appeals Court To Lift Judge's Mar-A-Lago Probe Hold
US Asks Appeals Court To Lift Judge's Mar-A-Lago Probe Hold https://digitalarizonanews.com/us-asks-appeals-court-to-lift-judges-mar-a-lago-probe-hold-2/ By: By ERIC TUCKER Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department asked a federal appeals court Friday to lift a judge’s order that temporarily barred it from reviewing a batch of classified documents seized during an FBI search of former President Donald Trump’s Florida home last month. The department told the 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in Atlanta that the judge’s hold, imposed last week, had impeded the “government’s efforts to protect the nation’s security” and interfered with its investigation into the presence of top-secret information at Mar-a-Lago. It asked the court to remove that order so work could resume, and to halt a judge’s directive forcing the department to provide the seized classified documents to an independent arbiter for his review. “The government and the public would suffer irreparable harm absent a stay” of the order, department lawyers wrote in their brief to the appeals court. U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon’s appointment of a so-called special master to review the documents, and the resulting legal tussle it has caused, appear certain to slow by weeks the department’s investigation into the holding of classified documents at the Florida property after Trump left office. The Justice Department has been investigating possible violations of multiple statutes, including under the Espionage Act, but it remains unclear whether Trump — who has been laying the groundwork for a potential presidential run — or anyone else might be charged. The FBI says it took about 11,000 documents, including roughly 100 with classification markings found in a storage room and an office, while serving a court-authorized search warrant at the home on Aug. 8. Weeks after the search, Trump lawyers asked a judge to appoint a special master to conduct an independent review of the records. Cannon granted the request last week, assigning a special master to review the records and weed out any that may be covered by claims of attorney-client or executive privilege. She directed the department to halt its use of the classified documents for investigative purposes until further court order, or until the completion of the special master’s work. On Thursday night, she assigned Raymond Dearie, the former chief judge of the federal court based in Brooklyn, to serve in the role. She also declined to lift her earlier order, citing ongoing disputes about the nature of the documents that she said merited a neutral review by an outside arbiter. “The Court does not find it appropriate to accept the Government’s conclusions on these important and disputed issues without further review by a neutral third party in an expedited and orderly fashion,” she wrote. The Justice Department on Friday night told the appeals court that Cannon’s injunction “unduly interferes with the criminal investigation,” prohibiting investigators from “accessing the seized records to evaluate whether charges are appropriate.” It also prevents the FBI from using the seized records in its criminal investigation to determine which documents, if any, were disclosed and to whom, the department said. Though Cannon has said investigators are free to do other investigative work that did not involve a review of the documents, the department said Friday that that was largely impractical. Noting the discovery of dozens of empty folders at Mar-a-Lago marked classified, it said the judge’s hold appeared to bar it from “further reviewing the records to discern any patterns in the types of records that were retained, which could lead to identification of other records still missing.” The department also asked the appeals court to reject Cannon’s order that it provide the newly appointed special master with the classified documents, suggesting there was no reason for the arbiter to review highly sensitive records that did not involve questions of legal privilege. “Plaintiff has no claim for the return of those records, which belong to the government and were seized in a court-authorized search,” department lawyers wrote. “The records are not subject to any possible claim of personal attorney-client privilege. And neither Plaintiff nor the court has cited any authority suggesting that a former President could successfully invoke executive privilege to prevent the Executive Branch from reviewing its own records.” Cannon has directed Dearie to complete his work by Nov. 30 and to prioritize the review of the classified documents. She directed the Justice Department to permit the Trump legal team to inspect the seized classified records with “controlled access conditions” — something government lawyers said Friday was needless and harmful. On Friday, Dearie, a former federal prosecutor, scheduled a preliminary conference with Trump lawyers and Justice Department lawyers for Tuesday afternoon. _____ Associated Press writer Jill Colvin in New York contributed to this report. Follow Eric Tucker on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/etuckerAP Copyright 2022 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. 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·digitalarizonanews.com·
US Asks Appeals Court To Lift Judge's Mar-A-Lago Probe Hold