Digital Arkansas News

Putin Blames Kyiv For Attack On Strategic Crimea Bridge
Putin Blames Kyiv For Attack On Strategic Crimea Bridge
Putin Blames Kyiv For Attack On Strategic Crimea Bridge https://digitalarkansasnews.com/putin-blames-kyiv-for-attack-on-strategic-crimea-bridge/ KYIV, Ukraine — President Vladimir Putin accused Ukraine on Sunday of orchestrating the attack on a key Russian link with occupied Crimea, injecting new, heightened stakes into a calamitous episode that Ukrainian leaders touted as proof of their ability to prevail in the war with Russia. Russian investigators claimed to have swiftly identified suspects in the predawn fireball Saturday that sent concrete spans of the Crimean Bridge, a $4 billion project symbolizing Russia’s ambitions to control Ukraine, buckling into the waters of the Kerch Strait. A day after the incident, which Russia’s top law enforcement body deemed a terrorist attack, Putin announced that Ukraine’s special services were responsible. “There is no doubt that the attack was aimed at destroying critical civilian infrastructure of the Russian Federation,” Putin said in a video released by the Kremlin. The 12-mile long span, while used by civilians, is also a crucial military logistics route for Russia’s armed forces, the only direct road and rail route from mainland Russia to Crimea. The incident sent shock waves across the region, puncturing Kremlin assurances about the bridge’s invincibility and compounding the challenges Russia faces in holding back a Ukrainian counteroffensive that has recovered occupied areas in the country’s south and east. While Russian officials said that limited road and rail traffic would continue, substantial damage to the bridge posed an immediate logistics challenge for Moscow’s military offensive. Putin personally inaugurated the bridge in 2018, in a step designed to solidify Russia’s grip on the peninsula, which it illegally annexed in 2014. While the Ukrainian government did not publicly claim responsibility for the incident, officials in Kyiv sought to employ the blast as evidence of its capacity to achieve a battlefield victory against Russia’s larger, better-armed military, a prospect dismissed by many Western officials only a few months ago. A Ukrainian official told The Washington Post on Saturday that Ukraine’s special services were behind the explosion, which Russian authorities said took place when a truck exploded, igniting fuel tanks on a passing train. Speaking in the video with Putin, Alexander Bastrykin, the head of Russia’s Investigative Committee, said the truck in the incident, which he said also involved Russian and other nationals, came from Bulgaria through Georgia and into Russia before being driven toward Crimea. Ukrainian officials dismissed the Russian statements, instead condemning Russia for overnight missile strikes that authorities said killed at least 14 people and injured at least 70, including 11 children, in the Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia. After the attack, officials posted photos of a partially destroyed apartment building, where the central section had collapsed into a pile of rubble. “Putin accuses Ukraine of terrorism? Sounds too cynical even for Russia,” Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, said on Twitter. “There is only one terrorist state here and the whole world knows who it is.” Russia has repeatedly struck civilian targets since its Feb. 24 invasion, including hospitals, schools, apartment buildings and railway stations. In Zaporizhzhia, at least eight people were pulled from the debris after the attack, Oleksandr Starukh, governor of the Zaporizhzhia region, said Sunday. While rescuers worked to clear the debris the following night, another airstrike devastated the area, Starukh said. About 2 a.m. Monday local time, Starukh warned people in Zaporizhzhia to take cover because of an incoming airstrike, according to his Telegram account. About an hour later, he said a residential building had been destroyed. The destruction highlighted the potential for Russian retaliation for the bridge incident, and the ongoing vulnerability of Ukrainian cities despite the massive shipments of weapons provided by the United States and European nations in recent months. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said the Zaporizhzhia attack provided further proof that Ukraine’s backers should accelerate that supply. “We urgently need more modern air and missile defense systems to save innocent lives,” he said on Twitter. Officials in Kyiv hope that the bridge incident, whatever its cause, will provide additional fuel to their campaign to attract expanded support from the West, including longer-range missiles and tanks, and in turn convince Russian troops and the Russian public that the war is a lost cause. Simon Schlegel, a Ukraine expert with the International Crisis Group, said highway routes across Russian-controlled territory to the strategic city of Kherson, which Russian is expected to defend zealously, were not an ideal replacement for the Crimean bridge because they are closer to Ukrainian military positions. Andriy Zagorodnyuk, a former Ukrainian defense minister who now serves as an adviser to the Zelensky government, said the psychological impact of the bridge incident may be greater than even the resulting logistical challenges for Russia. “It destroys the trust from the Russian military, the Russian government and even generally Russian people in their inability to manage risks and inability to protect,” he said. “And that is hugely important.” Michael Carpenter, U.S. ambassador to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, called the Zaporizhzhia attack “barbaric. … We’ll have to keep reaching deeper,” he said on Twitter. “More military assistance, more aid, more sanctions.” Russian authorities sought to telegraph normalcy following the bridge blast, despite what appeared to be serious damage to the structure. In a message on his Telegram channel, Sergei Aksyonov, head of the Crimea region, showed a photo of an undisturbed section of the bridge and said that officials were working to regularize transport between Crimea and Russia’s Krasnodar region. He said normal railway services had resumed but that only cars were passing on the bridge for now, while buses and heavy vehicles were traveling by ferry. Russia’s transport ministry reported on Sunday that passenger and freight trains were running regularly across the bridge by Sunday morning. It said commuter rail service would resume that evening, according to Interfax. It was not clear whether truck-borne explosives or something else caused the incident. Baza, a Russian news outlet that frequently reports leaked information, stated on its Telegram channel that the driver of the truck the Russian authorities said exploded on the bridge had been contracted to deliver a cargo shipment to Simferopol, a city in Crimea. The driver was supposed to be paid 48,000 rubles, or about $770, Baza reported. He was contracted on Oct. 6 and loaded the cargo in the Russian city of Armavir on Oct. 7, stopping to sleep just before the bridge and heading on early the next morning, it said. “He told his family about it, after the call he turned off his phone,” Baza said. Video posted by a Russian state newspaper showed the explosion occurring at 6:03 a.m., when few vehicles were traveling on the bridge. Officials in St. Petersburg named the two other people authorities said were killed in the explosion as Eduard Chuchakin and Zoya Sofronova, a married couple who worked as historians and documentarians. Authorities said their car was driving near the truck that exploded. The attack may also intensify internal pressure that Putin is facing over battlefield setbacks. The Russian leader is due to hold a Security Council meeting on Monday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. Already, prominent Russians are urging reprisal, including lawmakers and media figures such as Margarita Simonyan, editor in chief of state-owned channel RT. After the blast, she asked in a tweet: “And?” Dmitry Medvedev, deputy head of Russia’s Security Council, called for a forceful response. “Russia’s response to this crime can only be the direct destruction of the terrorists. The way it is generally done in the world,” he said in an interview with journalist Nadana Friedrichson, which was published on her Telegram channel. “This is what the citizens of Russia are waiting for.” Isabelle Khurhudyan in Kryvyi Rih, Kostiantyn Khudov in Kyiv and John Hudson in Washington contributed to this report. War in Ukraine: What you need to know The latest: Russian President Vladimir Putin signed decrees Friday to annex four occupied regions of Ukraine, following staged referendums that were widely denounced as illegal. Follow our live updates here. The response: The Biden administration on Friday announced a new round of sanctions on Russia, in response to the annexations, targeting government officials and family members, Russian and Belarusian military officials and defense procurement networks. President Volodymyr Zelensky also said Friday that Ukraine is applying for “accelerated ascension” into NATO, in an apparent answer to the annexations. In Russia: Putin declared a military mobilization on Sept. 21 to call up as many as 300,000 reservists in a dramatic bid to reverse setbacks in his war on Ukraine. The announcement led to an exodus of more than 180,000 people, mostly men who were subject to service, and renewed protests and other acts of defiance against the war. The fight: Ukraine mounted a successful counteroffensive that forced a major Russian retreat in the northeastern Kharkiv region in early September, as troops fled cities and villages they had occupied since the early days of the war and abandoned large amounts of military equipment. Photos: Washington Post photographers have been on the ground from the beginning of the war — here’s some of their most powerful work. How you can help: Here are ways those in the U.S. can support the Ukrain...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Putin Blames Kyiv For Attack On Strategic Crimea Bridge
Hong Kong Stocks Drop 2%; China Markets Lower After Golden Week Holiday
Hong Kong Stocks Drop 2%; China Markets Lower After Golden Week Holiday
Hong Kong Stocks Drop 2%; China Markets Lower After Golden Week Holiday https://digitalarkansasnews.com/hong-kong-stocks-drop-2-china-markets-lower-after-golden-week-holiday/ The Chinese and Hong Kong flags flutter as screens display the Hang Seng Index outside the Exchange Square complex, which houses the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, on January 21, 2021 in Hong Kong, China. Zhang Wei | China News Service via Getty Images Shares in the Asia-Pacific fell on Monday, with Hong Kong stocks leading losses. The Hang Seng index fell more than 2% in early trade, with the Hang Seng Tech index down 3.17%. In mainland China, the Shanghai Composite lost 0.39% on its return to trade after the Golden Week holiday and the Shenzhen Component dropped around 1%. The S&P/ASX 200 was 1.63% lower. Markets in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Malaysia are closed for holidays Monday. Later this week, the Bank of Korea will announce its benchmark interest rate decision, Singapore is set to announce its GDP estimate for the third quarter and China releases inflation data. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company and Japan’s Fast Retailing will report earnings and the U.S. will release inflation data for September. On Friday in the U.S., major stock indexes dropped more than 2% after data showed the unemployment rate declined in September, sparking fear that the Federal Reserve would continue hiking rates aggressively. Currency check: South Korean won weakens against the U.S. dollar The Korean won were among those losing ground against the U.S. dollar in Asia’s morning trade. The South Korean currency last changed hands at 1,427.76 per dollar after strengthening below the 1,400 level last week. Japan’s yen weakened slightly to 145.46 against the greenback, while the Australian dollar strengthened to $0.6370. The offshore Chinese yuan hovered around 7.1319 per dollar. — Abigail Ng CNBC Pro: Goldman says these ‘cheap’ global stocks are set to win in the short and long-term As Europe struggles with soaring electricity and gas bills, Goldman Sachs says global companies focussing on energy efficiency are set to outperform. “We think Energy Efficiency companies can outperform over the short term, with the focus on energy efficiency to tackle the current energy crisis that followed the Russian invasion of Ukraine,” the analysts wrote in a note on Oct. 3. “[And] over the long term, with the focus on energy efficiency to tackle the climate change and reach the ambitious ‘net zero’ targets.” CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Weizhen Tan Services activity in China contracted in September, private survey shows The Caixin services purchasing managers’ index came in at 49.3 in September, according to a report published Saturday, a steep drop from 55 in August. The 50-point mark separates growth from contraction. PMI readings compare activity from month to month. The nation’s Covid curbs caused services activity in China to contract in September for the first time since May, the report said. “Companies that reported reduced activity frequently commented that the pandemic and subsequent measures to contain the virus had restricted operations and weighed on demand in September,” the press release by Caixin said. — Abigail Ng Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Hong Kong Stocks Drop 2%; China Markets Lower After Golden Week Holiday
Senate Republican Tuberville Alleges That Democrats Seek Slavery Reparations For the People That Do The Crime
Senate Republican Tuberville Alleges That Democrats Seek Slavery Reparations For the People That Do The Crime
Senate Republican Tuberville Alleges That Democrats Seek Slavery Reparations For ‘the People That Do The Crime’ https://digitalarkansasnews.com/senate-republican-tuberville-alleges-that-democrats-seek-slavery-reparations-for-the-people-that-do-the-crime/ WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville asserted that Democrats support reparations for the descendants of enslaved people because “they think the people that do the crime are owed that.” The first-term Alabama Republican spoke at a Saturday evening rally in Nevada featuring former President Donald Trump, a political ally. His comments were part of a broader critique in the final weeks before the Nov. 8 election, when control of Congress is at stake, about how Democrats have responded to rising crime rates. But Tuberville’s remarks about reparations played into racist stereotypes about Black people committing crimes. “They’re not soft on crime,” Tuberville said of Democrats. “They’re pro-crime. They want crime. They want crime because they want to take over what you got. They want to control what you have. They want reparation because they think the people that do the crime are owed that.” He ended his appearance with a profanity as the crowd cheered. Key Words (November 2020): Senator-elect Tuberville, fresh from congressional orientation, misidentifies the three branches of government The Margin (May 2020): Trump reaffirms endorsement of Tuberville in Alabama, and a day-long back-and-forth with Sessions ensues Tuberville is falsely suggesting that Democrats promote crime and that only Blacks are the perpetrators. In fact, crime has slowed in the last year and most crimes are committed by whites, according to FBI data. The Democratic Party has not taken a stance on reparations for Black Americans to compensate for years of unpaid slave labor by their ancestors, though some leading Democrats, including President Joe Biden, back the creation of a national commission to study the issue. Some Republicans on Sunday struggled to defend Tuberville’s comments. Rep. Don Bacon, a Nebraska Republican, said he “wouldn’t say it the same way,” describing the remarks as impolite. “That’s not the way I present things,” Bacon said on “Meet the Press” on NBC. “But got to be honest that we have a crime problem in our country.” There was no immediate response from Tuberville’s office on Sunday to a request for comment. From the archives (February 2021): Tuberville stands by account of Jan. 6 Trump phone call on Pence Republicans have been trying to close out this election year with an emphasis on crime, using rhetoric that has sometimes been alarmist or of questionable veracity, similar to Trump’s late-stage argument during the 2020 campaign that Democratic-led cities were out of control. FBI data released last week showed violent and property crime generally remained consistent between 2020 and 2021, with a slight decrease in the overall violent crime rate and a 4.3% rise in the murder rate. That’s an improvement over 2020, when the murder rate in the U.S. jumped 29%. The report presents an incomplete picture, in part because it doesn’t include some of the nation’s largest police departments. More broadly, rates of violent crime and killings have increased around the U.S. since the pandemic, in some places spiking after hitting historic lows. Nonviolent crime decreased during the pandemic, but the murder rate grew nearly 30% in 2020, rising in cities and rural areas alike, according to an analysis of crime data by the Brennan Center for Justice. The rate of assaults went up 10%, the analysis found. The rise defies easy explanation. Experts have pointed to a number of potential causes, from worries about the economy and historically high inflation rates to intense stress during the pandemic that has killed more than 1 million people in the United States. Read on (March 2022): Trump rescinds endorsement of Alabama Republican Mo Brooks in Senate race Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Senate Republican Tuberville Alleges That Democrats Seek Slavery Reparations For the People That Do The Crime
Meghan McCain Scorches Pathetic Conservatives Who Support Kanye West: This Man And His Behavior Are Trash
Meghan McCain Scorches Pathetic Conservatives Who Support Kanye West: This Man And His Behavior Are Trash
Meghan McCain Scorches ‘Pathetic’ Conservatives Who Support Kanye West: ‘This Man And His Behavior Are Trash’ https://digitalarkansasnews.com/meghan-mccain-scorches-pathetic-conservatives-who-support-kanye-west-this-man-and-his-behavior-are-trash/ Meghan McCain unleashed her fury on her own political party Sunday morning, torching conservatives who are defending Kanye West following a series of anti-Semitic words and social media posts. According to the former host of “The View,” Ye is “no icon” to be defended. McCain’s words came after the rapper found himself locked out of both Twitter and Instagram this weekend for making anti-Semitic comments. In a post to Twitter on Saturday, West wrote, “I’m a bit sleepy tonight but when I wake up I’m going death con 3 On JEWISH PEOPLE The funny thing is I actually can’t be Anti Semitic because black people are actually Jew also You guys have toyed with me and tried to black ball anyone whoever opposes your agenda.” The tweet has since been deleted by Twitter, citing West’s violation of their policies, and came after another anti-Semitic post on Instagram got him restricted on that platform as well. Both social media posts came after West sat down with Tucker Carlson this week and claimed that Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and grandson of Holocaust survivors, was focused on making money for himself during diplomatic negotiations in the Middle East. Also Read: Kanye West Locked Out of Twitter After Threatening ‘Death Con 3 on Jewish People’ “I have zero tolerance for this s—. Zero,” McCain wrote on Instagram alongside a photo of Ye’s tweet. “This is poison and yet another example why this man and his behavior are trash. Conservatives always claim to hate celebrity but jump and get excited like a teenage girl at a Harry Styles concert any time any of them show our side attention.” She continued: “It is pathetic, we are supposed to be anti celebrity and for the average working men and women – but I guess that went out the window years ago. This man is no icon, he has no wisdom I care to hear. Do not look the other way from this statement – it is the public hatred of Judaism and Jews and full fucking stop there is NO place for this anywhere.” McCain has been vocal for quite some time about the increase of anti-Semitic sentiments and crimes in the country, often drawing attention to them during her time on “The View.” McCain’s criticism of West — and of a tweet from the official GOP Twitter account — was one of many. On Sunday, multiple Jewish celebrities spoke out against West, including Sarah Silverman and Jamie Lee Curtis. Also Read: Jewish Celebs Call Out Kanye West for Anti-Semitic Tweet: ‘Your Words Hurt and Incite Violence’ Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Meghan McCain Scorches Pathetic Conservatives Who Support Kanye West: This Man And His Behavior Are Trash
Kanye West Unleashes Antisemitic Tantrum Over Instagram Restriction
Kanye West Unleashes Antisemitic Tantrum Over Instagram Restriction
Kanye West Unleashes Antisemitic Tantrum Over Instagram Restriction https://digitalarkansasnews.com/kanye-west-unleashes-antisemitic-tantrum-over-instagram-restriction/ A week that began with Kanye West sporting the phrase White Lives Matter on a shirt and included his appearing on Tucker Carlson’s fanatically far-right show has ended with the rapper spewing antisemitic filth on Twitter. Late Saturday, after Instagram imposed restrictions on his account for previous posts that were alleged to be antisemitic, West leaned into hate, writing on a since-removed Twitter post, “I’m a bit sleepy tonight but when I wake up I’m going death [sic] con 3 On JEWISH PEOPLE The funny thing is I actually can’t be Anti Semitic because black people are actually Jew also You guys have toyed with me and tried to black ball anyone whoever opposes your agenda.” (The platform later locked his Twitter account.) The rapper’s turn from performance-art conservative to actual bigot comes after years in which he has been open about mental-health problems. But suffice it to say erupting in a steady stream of anti-Jewish bile is not a condition identified in the latest edition of the The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Kanye West Unleashes Antisemitic Tantrum Over Instagram Restriction
Registering The Voters
Registering The Voters
Registering The Voters https://digitalarkansasnews.com/registering-the-voters/ Early voting starts Oct. 24 Whether it is the legalization of recreational marijuana question, or more people inspired by the overturn of Roe v. Wade, voter registration this year has been heavier in Sebastian County in advance of the Nov. 8 elections, both Republican and Democratic supporters say. The last day for people to register to vote in the Nov. 8 elections is Tuesday, Oct. 11. Election boards in counties will be open until 5 p.m. for in-person registrations. Mail-in registrations must be postmarked by Oct. 11. More:What questions are on the Nov. 8 ballots in Arkansas? And more people have been registering to cast a ballot Nov. 8. Voter registration events have taken place at the University of Arkansas – Fort Smith and the Elm Grove Community Center in north Fort Smith. Republican Max Avery is running against incumbent and Democrat Jay Richardson in House District 49 that includes north Forth Smith. Both candidates attended the forum sponsored by the NAACP Saturday, Oct. 1. Avery said the River Valley Republicans participated in a voter registration event at UAFS, the Campus Block Party, in August. He said he has observed that voter registration is up this year in Sebastian County. “I expect pretty high levels of participation,” Avery said. “The pandemic has gotten people more politically motivated on either side of the fence.” People from opposite ends of the political spectrum can work together, he said, and a good number of people attended the Elm Grove forum Oct. 1. “There are still people who just care about their community, who want to make it better,” Avery said. Another voter registration day is in Van Buren Saturday. The Van Buren High School Young Democrats plan to register voters at a Crawford County Democratic Party booth 9 a.m. to noon in front of Main Attraction, 701 Main Street. Voter turnout is expected to be heavier Nov. 8 for midterm and local elections. The recreational marijuana question is on the ballots as Issue 4. Abortion and the overturn of Roe v. Wade inspired more people to register to vote, said Madeline Marquette, the chair of the Sebastian County Democratic Women. A few of the key races for Fort Smith voters include board of directors races and the State House 49 race in north Fort Smith between incumbent Democrat Rep. Jay Richardson, and Republican Avery, a commercial driving training center owner. Republican State Rep. Justin Boyd is running for a seat in State Senate District 27 against Democrat Rebecca Ward. Three Fort Smith Board of Directors seats will be decided Tuesday, Nov. 8. Christina Catsavis will challenge director Robyn Dawson for at-large director position five. Two men are competing for the at-large position seven seat. Jackson Goodwin, 25, is running against incumbent Neal Martin, 46. Martin has served one term on the board. Director Kevin Settle, 48, is challenged by Drew Smith, 31, for the position six at-large seat. The recreational marijuana question is titled as Issue 4. There are three other questions on the ballots. Issue 1 is a proposed amendment to the state constitution to allow the general assembly to convene in “extraordinary session.” Issue 2 is a proposed constitutional amendment to “ballot initiative reform,” that would require 60% voter approval on certain measures. Issue 3 is titled “The Arkansas Religious Freedom Amendment” to “provide that government may never burden a person’s freedom of religion except in the rare circumstance that the government demonstrates that application of the burden to the person is in furtherance of a compelling government interest.” Issue 4, the recreational marijuana question, states that although recreational marijuana is still federally illegal, it could be legal for those 21 and older if approved in Arkansas. Licensed dispensaries could legally sell recreational marijuana on March 8, 2023, should the voters approve. Child-proof packaging would be required. The Alcohol Beverage Control Division of the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration would enforce laws at dispensaries. A 10% state sales tax would go toward a state stipend for certified law enforcement officers, The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and drug court programs authorized by the Arkansas Drug Court, according to the ballot. How to register To register to vote in Fort Smith go to the Sebastian County Clerk’s office at 35 S. 6, room 102 in the Sebastian County Courthouse. Or in Greenwood go to 301 E. Center, Room 104. Both locations are open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. People will need a photo ID to vote. A photo ID is not required to register to vote. As of Tuesday, Oct. 4, there were 70,840 registered voter’s in Sebastian County. For more information in Sebastian County call county clerk’s office 479-782-5065. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Registering The Voters
Michael Cohen Believes Trump Saw Mar-A-Lago Docs As A 'Get Out Of Jail Free' Card
Michael Cohen Believes Trump Saw Mar-A-Lago Docs As A 'Get Out Of Jail Free' Card
Michael Cohen Believes Trump Saw Mar-A-Lago Docs As A 'Get Out Of Jail Free' Card https://digitalarkansasnews.com/michael-cohen-believes-trump-saw-mar-a-lago-docs-as-a-get-out-of-jail-free-card/ Donald Trump took classified documents from the White House to his Mar-a-Lago estate as a “get out of jail free card” in the event the government should try to pursue charges against him after he left office, his former attorney Michael Cohen hypothesized. “That’s exactly what he saw in those documents,” Cohen said on the “Salon Talks” podcast. ”‘You want to play with me? Really? I was the former president of the United States. I have documents that are so damaging to this country’s national security. Go ahead, indict me, try to throw me in prison. See what happens.’ What happens is he turns over all this classified information, not as if he hasn’t already done it, but he turns all his classified information over to our adversaries, right? ‘You want to play that game? No problem!’” He said his former boss would do “anything and everything in order to protect himself, plain and simple.” “He doesn’t care about this country. He doesn’t care about democracy. He doesn’t care about QAnon,” he added. “He doesn’t care about the independents. He doesn’t care about Republicans or Democrats. He cares about one thing and only one thing and that’s Donald J. Trump.” Cohen and others have made similar predictions since the FBI executed a search warrant on Trump’s Florida compound on Aug. 8 to retrieve sensitive government documents he unlawfully took there. During a CNN interview later that month, Cohen said Trump likely viewed the documents as a bargaining chip should he be indicted. “The second they would put him in handcuffs, he would turn around and say: ‘I have the documentation showing, for example, where our nuclear launch pads are,’” Cohen guessed. Last month, Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), who serves on the armed services and foreign relations committees, said he had a similar gut feeling about Trump’s reasons. “I spend a lot of time in secure Senate facilities. I know what this information is like,” he said on CNN. “The reason Trump took this with him to Florida was probably to try to either sell it or have it as a ‘get out of jail free’ card.” During the Aug. 8 search of Mar-a-Lago, officials were able to recover at least 20 boxes and 11 pieces of pertinent documents. Trump was found to have had more than 300 classified documents in his possession, including 150 that he returned to the National Archives. Last week, the New York Times reported that the Justice Department believes there are still more documents in Trump’s possession. Cohen, who served time in prison after facilitating a hush money payment to porn actor Stormy Daniels to keep her from disclosing an alleged affair with Trump before the 2016 election, has since authored a second critical book about the president. “Revenge: How Donald Trump Weaponized the Us Department of Justice Against His Critics” is due to be released this week. This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Michael Cohen Believes Trump Saw Mar-A-Lago Docs As A 'Get Out Of Jail Free' Card
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message https://digitalarkansasnews.com/michigan-gop-statewide-candidates-stick-to-far-right-message-4/ WARREN, Mich.  — With voting underway in Michigan’s general election, the Republican nominee for secretary of state stepped on stage as a warm-up act for former President Donald Trump and hit hard on the main theme of her campaign. Kristina Karamo repeated unfounded assertions about the 2020 presidential election that have been repeatedly debunked. She told the crowd at the recent rally at Macomb Community College that “authoritarians” are giving millions to her Democratic opponent — Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson — in an attempt to “corrupt battleground state election systems so they can control America.” “If you look at history, it shows you what tyrants do,” said Karamo, a former community college professor. “History is telling us, history is screaming to us, that if we don’t step up and fight now, we will lose the greatest country in human history.” It was an address designed to rev up the crowd of devoted Trump followers, some of whom have latched onto the baseless QAnon conspiracy theory. While Karamo’s speech drew cheers, relying on a general election strategy that appeals to the most far-right voters is a gamble for Michigan Republicans. Candidates who have to play to their party’s base during primaries or nominating conventions often shift toward the center, aiming to attract more voters for the general election. But that hasn’t happened this year for the Republicans seeking Michigan’s top three statewide offices — governor, attorney general and secretary of state. The Nov. 8 election will test whether campaigns designed to resonate with the far-right and highlight strong ties to Trump will be enough to win in a traditional swing state, where the Republican incumbent lost the White House race to Democrat challenger Joe Biden by more than 154,000 votes in 2020. All three GOP candidates stood behind Trump during the Oct. 1 rally at the college about 20 miles north of Detroit, joined by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who has amplified Trump’s election falsehoods to audiences across the country. Trump falsely claimed the 2020 election was “rigged and stolen” in Michigan, citing “evidence” he said first originated with Karamo and Matthew DePerno, a tax lawyer who is the nominee for state attorney general. In his own address to the crowd, DePerno called Democrats “radical, cultural Marxists” who want to “silence you.” “If that doesn’t work, they want to put you in jail,” DePerno told the crowd, which fell into chants of “Lock her up.” All three Democratic incumbents are women. DePerno’s campaign also is clouded by an investigation into whether he should be criminally charged for attempting to gain access to voting machines after the 2020 election. John DeBlaay, a Grand Rapids real estate agent and precinct delegate who attended the rally, said he was thrilled with the candidates. “We’ve got the best America First ticket all the way from top to bottom that we’ve had in a long time now,” he said. Some moderate Republicans are skeptical that campaigns appealing mostly to base elements of the party will be enough to beat Democratic incumbents with wide name recognition and sizable fundraising advantages. The Democrats also are expected to benefit from having an amendment on the ballot that seeks to enshrine the right to abortion in the state constitution. These Republicans say inflation, gas prices and economic anxiety should be the GOP’s main talking points, not a continued alignment with Trump and his false claims about widespread fraud costing him reelection. They point to the unusual way Michigan selects its attorney general and secretary of state candidates, a process done through a party nominating convention rather than through a primary election in which voters make the choice. The most conservative Republicans who are loyal to Trump dominated that convention in April. The party’s co-chair, Meshawn Maddock, was one of 16 Republicans who submitted false certificates stating they were the state’s presidential electors despite Biden’s certified victory in the state. Three weeks before the convention, during another Trump rally, DePerno encouraged attendees — many of them precinct delegates — to “storm” the party gathering and said it was “time for the grassroots to unite.” Delegates overwhelmingly voted to nominate Karamo. DePerno won a runoff over former legislative leader Tom Leonard, who lost in the 2018 attorney general’s race by 3 percentage points to Democrat Dana Nessel. “Karamo and DePerno are among the most loyal to Donald Trump that you will find anywhere in the country,” said Jason Roe, a longtime Republican strategist. “That loyalty has been unshakable in this election process, regardless of how it might affect general election prospects.” Roe, whose father served as the Michigan GOP’s executive director for 10 years, became executive director of the state party in spring 2021. Six months later, he stepped down due to a “difference in opinion on how many conspiracy theories we should tolerate.” Soon after Roe left, Trump began calling party leaders to “force the party to embrace things formally that weren’t going to be helpful to the upcoming election,” Roe said. The party’s candidate for governor, Tudor Dixon, won the nomination during the primary in August after receiving Trump’s endorsement. Dixon, a conservative news show host who once acted in low-budget horror films, also benefited from support of the wealthy DeVos family. While seen as less extreme than Karamo and DePerno, Dixon indicated during debates that she thought the 2020 presidential election was stolen and she recently made light of a plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat. Dixon has since tried to pivot away from denying the results of the last election by focusing on topics such as inflation and education, but she also is repeating hard-right rhetoric on cultural issues. She has called for banning “pornographic” books in schools and has pitched an education agenda modeled after the Florida policy that critics have labeled “Don’t Say Gay.” While Democrats have attacked DePerno and Karamo for their continued denial of Biden’s victory in 2020, they have focused on what they describe as Dixon’s “extreme” abortion stance. Lackluster fundraising has made it difficult for her to push back. As of Aug. 22, Dixon had $524,000 in the bank compared with Whitmer’s $14 million, according to the latest available campaign finance reports. Some of that gap has been closed by the super PAC Michigan Families United, which has received $2.5 million in donations, including from the DeVos family. “I just don’t like that there’s no commercials on TV about Dixon. Everything you see is about the other people, and it’s all negative,” said Laura Bunting, an Ionia County resident who attended the Trump rally. Karamo and DePerno had a combined $422,554 cash on hand as of Sept. 16 compared with the $5.7 million combined for their Democratic opponents, according to campaign finance reports. Michigan-based pollster Bernie Porn said the Republican candidates have been defined by their extreme stances but that none has attracted enough money to get on TV and introduce themselves to a broader swath of voters. That, he said, “makes it difficult for folks to form a favorable opinion of you.” Copyright 2022 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Sign up for the Breaking News Newsletter and receive up to date information. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Ralph Nader: Democrats Broaden Your Campaign Messages And Strategies OpEd
Ralph Nader: Democrats Broaden Your Campaign Messages And Strategies OpEd
Ralph Nader: Democrats Broaden Your Campaign Messages And Strategies – OpEd https://digitalarkansasnews.com/ralph-nader-democrats-broaden-your-campaign-messages-and-strategies-oped/ With just over four weeks to Election Day, the Democratic Party still has time to realize its limitations, which have led to them losing winnable races, or barely squeaking by at the federal and state levels. Imagine the worst, most corrupt, lying, dictatorial GOP since its creation in 1854 having their most dangerous and extreme candidates win elections. To liberate the many policies, messages, strategies, rebuttals and ground-level ways to get out more votes, Democrats need to escape the controls of their incarcerating political/media consultants, who are too often conflicted by their ongoing corporate clients and their 15% commissions received from placing repetitive, vacuous video ads. With their ample funds, the Democrats have to aggregate the case against the GOP’s morbid opposition to humanity and contrast it with the Democratic Party’s own lawmaking, votes and positions. For example, the Dems need to compare all their pro-children work with the GOP’s ugly record of cruelty to the little ones once they are born. (See my column: Big Campaign 2022 Issue: GOP’s Cruelty to Children). Trump’s GOP went out of its way to keep federal Medicaid funds from insuring children in GOP-dominated states, lunged to revoke an Obama rule to ban a pesticide, especially deadly to young children, and blocked all attempts to enact paid sick leave, family leave and daycare. In 2017 the Republicans also slashed the already low tax rates for their Rich and Powerful paymasters. Dems should move fast with a winning “Protect and Nurture ALL Our Children” platform. The GOP is chronically antagonistic to freedom and equality for women. Republican opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment, equal pay mandates, corporate marketplace discriminations and reproductive choice, and other serious biases can form the basis for a Democratic “Freedom for Women” platform plank. With lives and public infrastructure being regularly destroyed by floods, ocean surges, winds, and wildfires from Global Warming, GOP candidates respond with a curled lip: NO! Republicans voted against, or successfully blocked the public works bills backed by Congressional Democrats, costing lives, jobs, community stability and using tax dollars not to benefit the people, but to the corporate greed hounds of Wall Street and its plutocrats. Most Democrats have been reluctant to take on the 800 lb. gorilla in the political arena – the widely despised, by both liberal and conservative voters, Big Business controls coercions, bailouts and exploitations over people’s livelihoods. Over 70% of people, regardless of political labels, bear the brunt of abuses by corporate barons every day where they live, work and raise their children. Plenty of press reports, pointed studies, and litigation data make the case that Democratic candidates who commit to All the parents, All the workers, and All the consumers to make giant companies our servants, not our masters, will garner large majority voter support. People are tired of double standards. They want corporate crooks to go to jail. They want runaway CEOs to be held accountable. Such stands would immediately contrast with the GOP’s coverups of Wall Street, the big banks, insurance companies, and avaricious drug and health insurance companies. Many Democrats can point to their pending legislation holding these Goliaths to account that the Republicans have stifled. The central point of these proposals – among others available – is to energize Democratic candidates and enliven their repetitive daily campaign routines and rhetoric. It is time for the Dems to go on the offensive against the GOP’s made-up fake accusations and give a hungry media compelling substance. Reporters are tired of covering campaigns as horse races, and mainly reporting on campaign contributions and polling results. Headlines could emerge by injecting fresh issues and slogans to grab more of the 120 million eligible voters who are expected to stay at home. Some examples follow. “Go vote for a raise to $15 per hour, you’ve earned it and it’s long overdue.” The GOP hates the very idea of a minimum wage and has frozen the federal minimum at $7.25 per hour, while letting the likes of Apple’s CEO Tim Cook, make $833 per MINUTE with low tax rates! Raising the minimum wage will help over 25 million voters. “Go vote to extend the $300 a month child tax credit that reached 58 million children and cut the child poverty rates by a third, until the Congressional GOP blocked its extension in January 2022.” Democrats who show they mean what they say, stay on the offensive, and hone debating skills to provide memorable contrasts with the GOP can win a working majority in the legislatures to get things done. Moreover, exposing the GOP’s Death Cult that can’t help opposing the concrete existing and proposed health, safety and economic rights of American families, will motivate voters. GOP Florida Senator Rick Scott, in charge of electing Republican Senators, wants to sunset laws, including Social Security and Medicare as indicated in his “An 11 Point Plan to Rescue America” (https://www.politico.com/f/?id=0000017f-1cf5-d281-a7ff-3ffd5f4a0000). Run against this outrage daily. These contrasts can be summarized on a single-sheet Voter Self-Help Guides distributed in the tens of millions everywhere on paper (and online). One side can poll the voters on a dozen positions. The other side can show that the Democratic candidate is “On Their Side” and the GOP candidate is not (supported by the facts and their record). Together with civic leader Mark Green and two dozen experienced and accomplished civic advocates, we compiled a collection of such policies, strategies and messaging to attract voters and retire GOP candidates who follow their leader, Herr Trump, in further wrecking our fragile climate, democratic institutions, voting procedures and public health with their early denial of the Covid pandemic. The Winning America effort has been endorsed by Senator Edward Markey, Reps. Hakim Jeffries, John Larson, Jim McGovern, Peter DeFazio, Jamie Raskin, and Carolyn Maloney, among others. There is still time for candidates to listen, learn and self-galvanize electoral energies. The question is: Will Democrats in the close House, Senate and state legislative races be willing to break out of their managed cocoons and become Winning Monarch Butterflies on November 8, 2022? Will the Democratic Party stop the GOP Party of Anxiety, Dread, and Fear from anointing Trump lackey Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) as Speaker of the House and the corporatist Mitch McConnell (“The Guardian of Gridlock” who says he “will tell you what we’re doing to do AFTER we win the Election”) to resume his control of the Senate? Voter turnout will decide which future awaits America. See https://winningamerica.net/ Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Ralph Nader: Democrats Broaden Your Campaign Messages And Strategies OpEd
Senator: Dems Back Reparations For Those Who 'do The Crime'
Senator: Dems Back Reparations For Those Who 'do The Crime'
Senator: Dems Back Reparations For Those Who 'do The Crime' https://digitalarkansasnews.com/senator-dems-back-reparations-for-those-who-do-the-crime/ WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville asserted that Democrats support reparations for the descendants of enslaved people because “they think the people that do the crime are owed that.” The first-term Alabama Republican spoke at a Saturday evening rally in Nevada featuring former President Donald Trump, a political ally. His comments were part of a broader critique in the final weeks before the Nov. 8 election, when control of Congress is at stake, about how Democrats have responded to rising crime rates. But Tuberville’s remarks about reparations played into racist stereotypes about Black people committing crimes. “They’re not soft on crime,” Tuberville said of Democrats. “They’re pro-crime. They want crime. They want crime because they want to take over what you got. They want to control what you have. They want reparation because they think the people that do the crime are owed that.” He ended his appearance with a profanity as the crowd cheered. Tuberville is falsely suggesting that Democrats promote crime and that only Blacks are the perpetrators. In fact, crime has slowed in the last year and most crimes are committed by whites, according to FBI data. The Democratic Party has not taken a stance on reparations for Black Americans to compensate for years of unpaid slave labor by their ancestors, though some leading Democrats, including President Joe Biden, back the creation of a national commission to study the issue. Some Republicans on Sunday struggled to defend Tuberville’s comments. Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., said he “wouldn’t say it the same way,” describing the remarks as impolite. “That’s not the way I present things,” Bacon said on “Meet the Press” on NBC. “But got to be honest that we have a crime problem in our country.” There was no immediate response from Tuberville’s office on Sunday to a request for comment. Republicans have been trying to close out this election year with an emphasis on crime, using rhetoric that has sometimes been alarmist or of questionable veracity, similar to Trump’s late-stage argumen t during the 2020 campaign that Democratic-led cities were out of control. FBI data released last week showed violent and property crime generally remained consistent between 2020 and 2021, with a slight decrease in the overall violent crime rate and a 4.3% rise in the murder rate. That’s an improvement over 2020, when the murder rate in the U.S. jumped 29%. The report presents an incomplete picture, in part because it doesn’t include some of the nation’s largest police departments. More broadly, rates of violent crime and killings have increased around the U.S. since the pandemic, in some places spiking after hitting historic lows. Nonviolent crime decreased during the pandemic, but the murder rate grew nearly 30% in 2020, rising in cities and rural areas alike, according to an analysis of crime data by The Brennan Center for Justice. The rate of assaults went up 10%, the analysis found. The rise defies easy explanation. Experts have pointed to a number of potential causes, from worries about the economy and historically high inflation rates to intense stress during the pandemic that has killed more than 1 million people in the United States. © 2022 Circle City Broadcasting I, LLC. | All Rights Reserved. Read More Here
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Senator: Dems Back Reparations For Those Who 'do The Crime'
Russian Analyst Set To Face Trial On Charges Of Lying To FBI
Russian Analyst Set To Face Trial On Charges Of Lying To FBI
Russian Analyst Set To Face Trial On Charges Of Lying To FBI https://digitalarkansasnews.com/russian-analyst-set-to-face-trial-on-charges-of-lying-to-fbi-2/ ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — Five years after the term “Steele dossier” entered the political lexicon, a think tank analyst who contributed to research about Donald Trump and Russia goes on trial Tuesday for lying to the FBI about his sources of information. Igor Danchenko is the third person to be prosecuted by Special Counsel John Durham, who was appointed to investigate the origins of “Crossfire Hurricane” — the designation given to the FBI’s 2016 probe into former president Trump’s Russia connections. It is also the first of Durham’s cases that delves deeply into the origins of the dossier that Trump derided as fake news and a political witch hunt. Here’s some background on what the case is about. WHO IS DANCHENKO AND WHAT IS HE ACCUSED OF? Danchenko, a Russian analyst, was a source of information for Christopher Steele, a former British spy who was paid by Democrats to research ties between Russia and presidential candidate Donald Trump. The compilation of research files, which included salacious rumors and unproven assertions, came to be familiarly known as the “Steele dossier.” Though the dossier did not help launch the FBI’s investigation into potential coordination between Russia and Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, the Justice Department did rely on it when it applied for and received warrants to monitor the communications of a former Trump campaign adviser. As part of its efforts to verify information in the dossier, the FBI interviewed Danchenko in 2017. He is charged with lying to agents about his information sources, with prosecutors accusing Danchenko of misleading the FBI in an effort to make his own contributions seem more credible. WHAT DO THE PROSECUTORS SAY? Prosecutors say Danchenko lied when the FBI asked him about how he obtained the information he gave to Steele. Specifically, they say he denied that he relied on a Democratic operative, Charles Dolan, a public relations executive who volunteered for Hillary Clinton’s presidential 2016 campaign. Prosecutors also say Danchenko lied when he said he received information from an anonymous phone call that he believed was placed by a man named named Sergei Millian, a former president of the Russian-American Chamber of Commerce. They argue Danchenko knew that Millian wasn’t a source of any anonymous phone call. The indictment says the FBI could have better judged the veracity of the Steele dossier had it known that a Democratic operative was the source of much of its information. WHAT DOES THE DEFENSE SAY? Danchenko’s lawyers say the prosecution “is a case of extraordinary government overreach.” They note that Danchenko agreed to multiple voluntary FBI interviews throughout 2017. They say his answers to the FBI were all technically true. For instance, an FBI agent asked Danchenko whether he ever “talked” with Dolan about the information that showed up in the dossier. While prosecutors have produced evidence that the two had email exchanges about topics in the dossier, there’s no evidence that they talked orally about those topics. “It was a bad question,” said Danchenko’s lawyer, Stuart Sears, at a pretrial hearing last month. “That’s the special counsel’s problem. Not Mr. Danchenko’s.” And while Danchenko said he believed Millian was the voice on the anonymous phone call, he never told the FBI with any certainty that it was Millian. Sears argued that ambiguous statements like that fall short of what’s necessary to convict on a false statements charge. U.S. District Judge Anthony Trenga last month rejected a request from defense lawyers to dismiss the charges, though he called his decision to let the case move forward an “extremely close call.” He has since ruled that prosecutors cannot present evidence about the most salacious parts of the dossier. WHAT OTHER CASES HAS DURHAM BROUGHT? Durham was the U.S. Attorney in Connecticut in 2019 when he was tapped by then-Attorney General William Barr to hunt for potential misconduct by government officials who conducted the original Russia investigation. But after more than three years, Durham’s work has failed to meet the expectations of Trump supporters who hoped he would uncover sweeping FBI conspiracies to derail the Republican’s candidacy. The probe has produced only three criminal cases. The first case was against an FBI lawyer, Kevin Clinesmith, who was accused of altering an email related to the surveillance of former Trump campaign aide Carter Page. It ended in a guilty plea and a sentence of probation – and involved FBI misconduct already uncovered by the Justice Department’s inspector general. Last year, Durham’s team charged a Democratic lawyer with making a false statement to the FBI’s top lawyer during a 2016 meeting in which he presented information about a purported digital backchannel between a Russia bank and the Trump organization. The FBI investigated but found no suspicious contact. The case against the lawyer, Michael Sussmann, ended in a swift acquittal in May. Durham’s work has continued deep into the Biden administration Justice Department, but the Danchenko trial seems likely to be the last criminal case his team will bring. It is not clear when Durham might produce a report summarizing his findings. © 2022 Circle City Broadcasting I, LLC. | All Rights Reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Russian Analyst Set To Face Trial On Charges Of Lying To FBI
Hurricane Julia Makes Landfall In Nicaragua
Hurricane Julia Makes Landfall In Nicaragua
Hurricane Julia Makes Landfall In Nicaragua https://digitalarkansasnews.com/hurricane-julia-makes-landfall-in-nicaragua/ Hurricane Julia formed made landfall as a Category 1 storm in Nicaragua early Sunday morning, according to the National Hurricane Center. As of 8 a.m., the system was located about 60 miles west-northwest of Bluefields, Nicaragua with maximum sustained winds of 75 mph moving west at 16 mph. Julia’s hurricane winds extend 30 miles while its tropical storm-force winds have a reach of 80 miles. It is not expected to impact Florida. Hurricane warnings are in effect for San Andres, Providencia and the Santa Catalina Islands in Colombia, and in Nicaragua from Laguna de Perlas to Puerto Cabezas. A hurricane watch and tropical storm warning is in effect for Nicaragua south of Laguna de Perlas to Bluefields and north of Puerto Cabezas to the Honduras/Nicaragua border. A tropical storm watch is in effect for part of the Honduran coast. Hurricane force winds and a dangerous storm surge is expected where the core of the system crosses the islands tonight. Life-threatening flash flooding and mud slides are expected across portions of Central America through the weekend. The system is expected to make landfall in Nicaragua on Sunday. Julia becomes the fifth hurricane of the year. Models are in agreement showing Julia growing to a maximum sustained wind strength of 85 mph before making landfall potentially along San Andres, Nicaragua by Sunday morning, the NHC said. San Andres and Providencia could receive between 6 and 12 inches of rain, the NHC warned, and portions of Central America could receive 15 inches, producing life-threatening flash floods and mudslides through this weekend. Julia’s storm surge will likely raise water levels by as much as 2 to 4 feet above normal tide levels along the immediate coast in areas of onshore winds on San Andres, Providencia, and Santa Catalina Islands. After landfall, the NHC is confident Julia and its remnants should turn northwest and remain over Central America and southern Mexico through Monday. After that, Julia should be no more. So far, the 2022 hurricane season has produced nine named storms and one more tropical depression that spun up and fell apart while Ian was striking Florida. The NHC also tracked one other potential cyclone that never grew into a depression, so that is why the most recent tropical depression is named TD 12. Initially, the season was off to a slow start with a quiet July and August, but the season has picked up the pace since Sept. 1 with the emergence of four hurricanes including Fiona and Ian in the last two weeks. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted the season to be an above-average year in storm production calling for 14-21 named storms. An average year has 14. Hurricane season ends on Nov. 30. Jpedersen@orlandosentinel.com Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Hurricane Julia Makes Landfall In Nicaragua
Full Transcript Of Face The Nation On Oct. 9 2022
Full Transcript Of Face The Nation On Oct. 9 2022
Full Transcript Of “Face The Nation” On Oct. 9, 2022 https://digitalarkansasnews.com/full-transcript-of-face-the-nation-on-oct-9-2022/ On this “Face the Nation” broadcast moderated by Major Garrett: Anthony Salvanto, CBS News director of election and surveys Kari Lake, Republican gubernatorial candidate in Arizona  Kate Hobbs, Democratic gubernatorial candidate in Arizona Peter Baker, Susan Glasser, Nikole Killion, Scott MacFarlane   Mohamed El-Erian, Allianz Chief Economic Adviser Click here to browse full transcripts of “Face the Nation.”   MAJOR GARRETT: I’m Major Garrett. And this week on Face the Nation, we will dive into one of the most closely watched governor’s races in the country and examine problems facing America at home and abroad. We have new CBS polls in Michigan, Wisconsin and Arizona. And, in back-to- back appearances, we will hear from Republican Kari Lake and Democrat Katie Hobbs, as they are running dead even to be Arizona’s next governor. Our political panel will track this unique Arizona event and the week’s news. Then: Financial markets remain jumpy, and recession anxieties got more fuel after the OPEC cartel cut oil production. We will check in with top economist Mohamed El-Erian about the road ahead. Finally, a key bridge linking the Crimean Peninsula with Russia is destroyed. Ukrainians celebrate, while Russia fumes. What are Vladimir Putin’s options? Could one be battlefield nuclear weapons? We will have a report from the region. It’s all just ahead on Face the Nation. Good morning. Welcome to Face the Nation. Margaret Brennan is off. We have new CBS Battleground Tracker polls from several key states. In Michigan, Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer is leading her Republican challenger, Tudor Dixon, 53 percent to 47 percent. In Wisconsin, we’re tracking two statewide races. The governor’s race between Democratic incumbent Tony Evers and his Republican challenger, businessman Tim Michels, is deadlocked, with both candidates at 50 percent. In the Senate race, incumbent Republican Senator Ron Johnson is polling at 50 percent against his Democratic rival, Mandela Barnes, who is at 49 percent. We also learned last week in Arizona incumbent Democratic Senator Mark Kelly is narrowly ahead of his Republican challenger, Blake Masters, 51 percent to 48 percent. Joining us now to discuss all of this is CBS News elections and surveys director Anthony Salvanto. Anthony, good morning. Catch us up on the dynamics of these Senate races. ANTHONY SALVANTO: Good morning, Major. So, Wisconsin and Arizona are two Senate races out of, I think, five that will ultimately determine control the chamber. So, they’re both close for reasons that are across all of these races. And that is, it’s the economy against abortion, which is to say, Democrats are winning voters who are concerned about abortion. That’s happening in Wisconsin. Mandela Barnes is getting almost three- quarters of those who say it’s very important. And then the economy. Republicans are winning voters who say the economy is most important, going to punish the party in power. And that’s the Democrats. He’s getting almost two-thirds of them. Now, having said that, each party is sort of jockeying to try to add another set of issues to that list. And on the Republican side, one of those is crime. So, they’re running attack ads. They’re trying to tie Democrats to this unpopular position — and it is unpopular in Wisconsin — of defunding the police. And when voters perceive, if they perceive that Barnes supports defunding the police — again, that’s their perception — then they aren’t voting for him. And he’s behind Johnson on the idea of, will your — will their policies keep you safe? Now, Democrats, for their part, would like to add this issue of election integrity, threats to democracy after the attempts to overturn 2020. MAJOR GARRETT: Under that banner of threats to democracy, some Republicans won their primaries by denying or questioning the 2020 election. To what degree is that position either being embraced or backed away from or having an effect on the general elections they find themselves in now? ANTHONY SALVANTO: Well, look, for Republicans, it was almost a litmus test in their primaries. And they’re still supporting their candidates regardless of their stance. There’s a little bit of evidence that the position of trying to overturn 2020 hurts Republicans in this sense, if you look at independents who believe that Ron Johnson — again, their perception — was trying to overturn the election, they’re not voting for him. And the way it also connects is on candidate qualities. Take a look at Arizona. A majority of people say that they’d prefer their elected officials say that Joe Biden won, which he did. Now, when you look at voters who say that they think that the candidates are — or a Republican candidate is talking about 2020, they’re more likely to label that candidate as extreme, as opposed to mainstream. And that goes towards candidate qualities, where Democrats have tended to have an advantage. Those are the dynamics all at work here. MAJOR GARRETT: Anthony Salvanto, thank you very much. ANTHONY SALVANTO: Thank you. MAJOR GARRETT: Now to the race for governor of Arizona. Our latest poll shows Democrat Katie Hobbs and Republican Kari Lake tied at 49 percent. The two candidates have not scheduled a debate, but they are here to answer our questions. Each candidate will have about eight-and-a- half minutes. We intend to cover the same issues with each candidate, issues identified by our own polling as of leading concern to Arizona voters. Our ability to cover this ground, of course, will be influenced in no small measure by the length of the candidates’ answers, first Republican Kari Lake, who joins us from Phoenix. Good morning, and welcome to Face the Nation. KARI LAKE (R-Arizona Gubernatorial Candidate): Good morning, Major. Thank you so much for having me on. Just to clarify, I have agreed to any and all debates, and I will be taking part in one without my opponent next week, on the 12th. I would love it if she would show up, because I think there’s a lot of important issues that the people of Arizona need to hear about. MAJOR GARRETT: We’ll get to that, I promise. Your Web site is detailed and specific on the question of immigration and border security. You call, if elected as governor, for Arizona to join other states to form what you call a compact to carry out border security separate from the federal government, including arrest and detention. For the benefit of Arizona voters, can you explain the legal and practical application of this approach? KARI LAKE: Well, of course, if you know the Constitution, you know that Article 4, Section 4 calls for the federal government to protect us from invasion. And under Joe Biden’s lack of leadership, we just aren’t seeing that. And we have an invasion at our border. The cartels, these narco terrorist groups have operational control. And they’re using Arizona to smuggle people, to traffic children, and to traffic the most dangerous drug we’ve ever seen, fentanyl. And so we’re going to invoke our Article 1, Section 10, basically, authority to take care of our own border and protect our own border. It’s right there in black and white in the Constitution. And we meet all three criteria. We have an invasion, our people are in imminent danger, and time is of the essence. There’s no time for delay. So we’re going to have other states offer help. I have already got a couple other governors who are willing to help out. And I know that if you ask people in other states that are not border states, they deem this crisis on the border as one of the top issues facing our country… MAJOR GARRETT: Would Arizona… KARI LAKE: … with so many young people dying of fentanyl poisoning right now. MAJOR GARRETT: Would Arizona go it alone if it didn’t get this compact agreement with other states? KARI LAKE: Yes, we will. But I believe we will get help. I have already talked to some other governors. And they’re — they’re vowing to help us out wherever they can, because they realize that what comes into Arizona, fentanyl, people coming here illegally, children being trafficked, doesn’t stay in Arizona. It goes to all 50 states. And I just spoke last week to a mother and father who lost their son. And it’s just tragic. We’re losing more people to fentanyl in Arizona since Joe Biden took office than we lost in 9/11 or during COVID. MAJOR GARRETT: If, as there would likely be, federal challenges were presented, would you, as governor, await for those federal challenges to this state compact be resolved? And would you respect them if they were to any way impinge upon or restrict or nullify the state compact approach? KARI LAKE: We will — we will challenge the federal government, if they’re going to challenge us. I think we have the right to do this. And we will have attorneys file lawsuits as well. But we’re not going to back down and let our people be overrun with drugs, watch our children die. We had a 16-year-old die here in the metro area last week from a fentanyl overdose. We can’t keep having this happen. We’re losing our young generation. So I hope that Joe Biden doesn’t fight us, because then it would really look like he is on the side of the cartels. And I don’t think he wants the people to think that. MAJOR GARRETT: Your Web site also says that Washington D.C. incentivizes illegal immigration to satisfy — quote — “big business lust for cheap labor.” Does that big business lust reside in Arizona at all? KARI LAKE: I think it resides everywhere. And we saw it with Nancy Pelosi last week. I mean, it was the most racist thing, I think, I have heard her say, although she’s said quite a few things that are offensive. She said these people coming in illegally should go pick fruit in the South. I mean, I couldn’t believe my ears, Major, when I heard that. We ...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Full Transcript Of Face The Nation On Oct. 9 2022
Putin To Chair Russia Security Council Meeting After Humiliating Explosion On Strategic Crimea Bridge | CNN
Putin To Chair Russia Security Council Meeting After Humiliating Explosion On Strategic Crimea Bridge | CNN
Putin To Chair Russia Security Council Meeting After Humiliating Explosion On Strategic Crimea Bridge | CNN https://digitalarkansasnews.com/putin-to-chair-russia-security-council-meeting-after-humiliating-explosion-on-strategic-crimea-bridge-cnn/ CNN  —  Russian President Vladimir Putin will hold an operational meeting of his Security Council on Monday, just two days after a massive explosion on a key strategic bridge linking Crimea and Russia. The meeting itself isn’t out of the ordinary – Putin regularly holds operational meetings with the Security Council, usually on a weekly basis, according to TASS. However, it comes just days after a major humiliation for the Russian President, when an explosion severely damaged parts of the road and rail bridge between annexed Crimea and the Russian Federation early Saturday. And while the agenda has not been made public, the meeting comes at a strategic crossroads for the Kremlin, which must make a series of unenviable choices after Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine has faltered after a month of military setbacks. Some road traffic and train traffic has resumed on the estimated $3.7 billion bridge. On Saturday, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin said repair works on the bridge would be carried out around the clock, with a damage survey to be completed within a day and divers scheduled to check all the supports of the bridge. The first passenger services resumed travel across the bridge on Saturday, traveling from the Crimean Peninsula to Krasnodar Krai in southern Russia, Russia’s Ministry of Transport said in a statement. Car traffic on the bridge has also restarted in two lanes, Deputy Prime Minister of Russia Marat Khusnullin said on Sunday. “Traffic has already been launched along two lanes on the Crimean bridge,” he wrote in a Telegram post, adding that earlier, one lane was being used for cars traveling in alternate directions, slowing down traffic. Heavy trucks, vans and buses have been traveling by ferry since the blast. Kyiv has not claimed responsibility for the blast on the enormous 19-kilometer (about 12-mile) bridge, which was built after Moscow annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula in 2014, an annexation regarded by the West as illegal.” The crossing was opened by Putin himself in 2018, and Ukrainian reaction to the explosion has been gleeful and triumphant. Putin called the explosions on the Crimean bridge a “terrorist attack” and said the organizers and executors were “Ukrainian special services.” “Here, as reported, we have no doubts that this is a terrorist attack aimed at the destruction of the critical infrastructure of Russian Federation. And authors, executors, and masterminds are the secret services of Ukraine,” Putin said during a meeting with Chairman of the Russian Investigative Committee Alexander Bastrykin on Sunday. A round of Russian missile strikes on the southern Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia killed 13 people early Sunday, including one child, according to Kyrylo Tymoshenko, deputy head of the Office of the President of Ukraine. At least 89 civilians, including 11 children, were injured, Oleksandr Starukh, head of Zaporizhzhia regional military administration, said Sunday. According to Tymoshenko, the rescue and search operations are still ongoing, they continue to get people out from under the rubble. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Sunday dismissed the possibility of Russia using nuclear weapons in retaliation for the explosion on the bridge, Russian state media RIA Novosti reported. Peskov was asked by RIA whether the attack on the bridge could trigger an activation of Russia’s nuclear doctrine because it was “aimed at destroying critical civilian infrastructure of the Russian Federation.” “No. It’s a completely wrong formulation of the question,” Peskov said. Ukraine’s military has been making dramatic advances in a counteroffensive – the Ukrainian military has recaptured 2,400 square kilometers of territory in Kherson region in the south of the country “since the beginning of the full-scale war,” a senior Ukrainian official said Friday, and Ukrainian troops are preparing for further advances into Russian-held Luhansk in the east, according to Serhiy Hayday, head of the Luhansk region’s Ukrainian military administration. Hayday acknowledged photographs of Ukrainian troops outside the Luhansk village of Stelmakhivka, less than 20 kilometers (12 miles) northwest of the crucial post of Svatove. But with a sudden and successful Ukrainian offensive comes concerns Putin will escalate Russia’s war in Ukraine, with US President Joe Biden expressing fears of the possible use of weapons of mass destruction. “First time since the Cuban missile crisis, we have a direct threat of the use (of a) nuclear weapon if in fact things continue down the path they are going,” Biden warned during remarks at a Democratic fundraiser in New York on Friday. He added: “I don’t think there’s any such thing as the ability to easily (use) a tactical nuclear weapon and not end up with Armageddon.” Read More Here
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Putin To Chair Russia Security Council Meeting After Humiliating Explosion On Strategic Crimea Bridge | CNN
Dow Futures Fall 170 Points To Start Week With Key Inflation Data Earnings Ahead
Dow Futures Fall 170 Points To Start Week With Key Inflation Data Earnings Ahead
Dow Futures Fall 170 Points To Start Week With Key Inflation Data, Earnings Ahead https://digitalarkansasnews.com/dow-futures-fall-170-points-to-start-week-with-key-inflation-data-earnings-ahead/ Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Getty Images Stock futures are lower Sunday night as the markets come out of a tumultuous week and traders look ahead to key reports coming in the next week that can offer insights into the health of the economy. Futures connected to the Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 0.6% to 29,175 points. S&P 500 futures dropped 0.7% to 3,626.25 points, while Nasdaq 100 futures slipped 0.8% to 11,014.25 points. Market observers generally consider the week ahead as the kickoff to earnings season, with four of the world’s largest banks – JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley and Citi – reporting Friday. PepsiCo, Delta and Domino’s are also among companies reporting next week. Inflation will also take center stage as new monthly Consumer Price Index data comes Thursday morning. It will follow a week of whiplash for market participants. The first half brought a relief rally that pushed the S&P 500 up more than 5% in its largest two-day gain since 2020. But jobs data that economists say will keep the Federal Reserve on a path to continue raising interest rates and OPEC+’s decision to slash oil supply rattled investors, diluting wins later in the week. When day trading ended Friday, the S&P was up 1.5% compared to where it started the week. The Dow and Nasdaq were up 1.5% and 0.7%, respectively. Still, the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq had the first positive week in the last four. All remain down substantially so far in 2022, however, and the Nasdaq is less than 1% away from its 52-week low. Meanwhile, the 2-year Treasury yield rose 6 basis points, closing at 4.316%. One basis point is equivalent to 0.01%. “The direction of the stock market is likely to be lower because either the economy and corporate profits are going to slow meaningfully or the Fed is going to have to raise rates even higher and keep them higher for longer,” said Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer at Independent Advisor Alliance, on Friday. “Given the conditions that we are operating under, we believe it’s prudent to begin preparing for a recession,” he added. “The talk of a shallow recession that is now the narrative-du-jour strikes us as eerily similar to the ‘inflation is transitory’ narrative of last year.” Last week brought heightened concerns that corporate earnings will show the ugly side of a surging dollar as Levi Strauss became the latest to cut guidance due to sliding international sales. Core inflation will rise again, Allianz’s El-Erian predicts Allianz Chief Economic Adviser Mohamed El-Erian predicts core inflation will continue rising while headline inflation comes down to about 8%. He told CBS’ “Face The Nation” on Sunday that inflation core inflation will eventually come down. But he expects new Consumer Price Index data coming Thursday to show it rose again month over month. Core inflation previously rose 0.6% from July to August – the most recent data before what is coming next week – and was up 6.3% from a year ago. “The question is, does it come down with a slowdown in the economy or a major recession?” he said. — Alex Harring, Ashley Capoot The week ahead: Earnings season kicks off, new data and more Market observers will be watching for key data and information coming in the coming week. Four of the world’s largest banks, as well as consumer interest brands like PepsiCo and Domino’s, will report earnings for a week many call the start to the new earnings season. They will also watch for Consumer Price Index data Thursday morning as concerns over inflation continue to impact the political landscape and economic policy. New data from the University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment Index will drop Friday morning. This index gauges consumer feelings about issues such as the health of the business world and their finances and is considered a key indicator of how average Americans feel about the economy. CNBC Pro subscribers can see more to watch for here. — Alex Harring, Jesse Pound Stock futures open lower Stock futures were down at the start of after-hours trading Sunday night. Futures connected to the Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 0.3% to 29,225 points. Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 saw futures down 0.4% to 3,638 points and 11,056.75 points, respectively. — Alex Harring Read More Here
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Dow Futures Fall 170 Points To Start Week With Key Inflation Data Earnings Ahead
These Refs Are Brady Supremacists NFL Fans Fume At Controversial Roughing The Passer Call That Helps Buccaneers Trump Falcons
These Refs Are Brady Supremacists NFL Fans Fume At Controversial Roughing The Passer Call That Helps Buccaneers Trump Falcons
“These Refs Are Brady Supremacists” – NFL Fans Fume At Controversial Roughing The Passer Call That Helps Buccaneers Trump Falcons https://digitalarkansasnews.com/these-refs-are-brady-supremacists-nfl-fans-fume-at-controversial-roughing-the-passer-call-that-helps-buccaneers-trump-falcons/ Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady was on the end of a fortunate roughing the passer call Sunday. With the quarterback position being the most protected in all of sports, the NFL has gone to great lengths to make sure it’s safe. However, they may have gone a bit too far on Sunday as the Atlanta Falcons were on the wrong end of what can only be described as a soft call. Brady was tackled by a Falcons defensive end and got swung to the ground. Though a common sight for a quarterback, this one for some reason drew a flag as it prompted a roughing the passer call. This caught the attention of many NFL fans who were disgusted that it was called a penalty. One fan named Rodney Jenkins thinks that the Buccaneers quarterback is essentially a protected species. “These refs are Brady supremacists.” Others chimed in, thinking that it was definitely not a flag. @CPowers14 Brady has changed the game for the worse; weak hitting, cheating, fake no fumbles, crying for calls, back channel talking to other teams & leaving his kids to beat the Falcons 2 x a year @CPowers14 Worse NFL call since the taunting penalty called against Chicago in Pittsburgh last season @CPowers14 From unsportmanship conduct to roughing the passer OMG !!! @CPowers14 Brady is back to being my least favorite NFL player. @CPowers14 @NFLOfficiating needs to answer for these calls. what is he supposed to do? if @TomBrady can’t handle the hits anymore then just retire old man. the refs protecting him like a newborn is comical @CPowers14 That was almost as bad as when the refs called roughing the passer on Chris Jones extending that game and giving Brady another super bowl appearance. @CPowers14 If you can no longer sack a quarterback without getting called for “roughing the passer”, why not just put a flag on the quarterback and call this flag football! It is pretty clear that most are in agreement that the call was pretty bad and not worthy of a flag. Given what happened to Tua Tagovailoa a few weeks ago, and a flag wasn’t called, the tackle against Brady definitely did not warrant one. Brady and Buccaneers back to winning ways Leonard Fournette got more carries than he did last week, recording 14 rushes for 56 yards and a touchdown. Much has been made about the 45-year-old’s performances this season as he looks a shadow of the great quarterback we have seen over the last two decades. Some have pointed to his troubles off the field with Gisele. The couple looks to be headed for divorce after the quarterback chose to unretire at the end of last season. Given that there is still plenty of time to go in the NFL season, many still think that the Buccaneers will get on a roll as they have too many weapons not to be in playoff contention. The win over the Falcons is a start. However, as long as the off-field issues are still ongoing, the 45-year-old quarterback will always be fighting those mental demons on the field. Edited by nicolaas.ackermann12 Thank You! Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
These Refs Are Brady Supremacists NFL Fans Fume At Controversial Roughing The Passer Call That Helps Buccaneers Trump Falcons
Congressman Don Bacon Appears On Meet The Press Asked On Herschel Walker And Donald Trump
Congressman Don Bacon Appears On Meet The Press Asked On Herschel Walker And Donald Trump
Congressman Don Bacon Appears On Meet The Press, Asked On Herschel Walker And Donald Trump https://digitalarkansasnews.com/congressman-don-bacon-appears-on-meet-the-press-asked-on-herschel-walker-and-donald-trump/ OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – On Sunday’s edition of Meet the Press, guest moderator Kristen Welker spoke with Nebraska Republican Congressman Don Bacon. Bacon, currently in a re-election battle against State Sen. Tony Vargas, was asked about supporting a controversial GOP candidate for a Senate seat in Georgia. Herschel Walker is in a fight against incumbent Senator Raphael Warnock. Walker came under fire this past week from a report accusing the former football star turned politician of paying for a former girlfriend’s abortion. Here’s what Bacon had to say. ”I sure do, for policy positions. Senator Warnock is one of the most liberal, progressive folks,” Bacon said. “Now, Herschel needs to come clean and just be honest. We also know that we all make mistakes and it’s just better, if this actually did happen, say ‘I’m sorry’ and ask for forgiveness. But this is ultimately going to come down to positions.” Welker continued to press Bacon during the course of the interview. Also asking for his position on supporting former president Donald Trump if he ran in the 2024 election. Welker: “That you would not support former president Trump for the Republican nomination in 2024. But I want to ask you if he is the party’s nominee, will you vote for him?” Bacon: “When we get to that point, I’ll let you know.” Welker: “You’re up for re-election right now, congressman. A lot of voters want to know where you stand on this issue. Will you support former president Trump if he’s the nominee in 2024?” Bacon: “I have made my point for the primary. That’s as far as I want to go right now. In the end, we get to win in November and take back the House and the Senate to stop Joe Biden’s policy. We need to force them back in the middle. That is where my focus is on.” Thursday is the highly anticipated debate for the second Congressional seat between incumbent Don Bacon and challenger Tony Vargas. It will be streamed live on wowt.com at 12 p.m.Thursday. Copyright 2022 WOWT. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Congressman Don Bacon Appears On Meet The Press Asked On Herschel Walker And Donald Trump
Police Investigating After Anti-Trump Graffiti Left At Elderly Lansing Couple
Police Investigating After Anti-Trump Graffiti Left At Elderly Lansing Couple
Police Investigating After Anti-Trump Graffiti Left At Elderly Lansing Couple https://digitalarkansasnews.com/police-investigating-after-anti-trump-graffiti-left-at-elderly-lansing-couple/ LANSING — Sophia and Edgar Russell woke Thursday morning to find graffiti painted on their SUV, minivan and driveway of their Lansing home. The politically-charged graffiti disparaged former President Donald Trump and his supporters. It purported to be from Antifa — shorthand for anti-fascists — and signed in spray paint, “Antifa Targeting All Trump Nazi Scum” and “Antifa Revenge.” Antifa is a political movement of far-left militants who oppose neo-Nazis and white supremacists at demonstrations and other events. The Russells are staunch Trump supporters, and they said Sunday this isn’t the first time their home has been vandalized. In 2020, they filed a police report from their home in the 2800 block of Lasalle Gardens after they said their flagpole was severed, leaving their American flag on the ground. “This is creepy because of the flagpole (two years ago) and this happening this year,” Sophia Russell, 69, said. “We are Christian patriots, and we love the lord and we trust God. We don’t want to live in fear because we believe God wins.” The Russells said they’re still waiting to hear whether their automobile insurance will cover the fix, but they will have to pay to fix their driveway out of pocket. Lansing police are investigating the graffiti, Public Information Director Jordan Gulkis confirmed in an email Sunday. Gulkis urged anyone with information about the incident to call (517) 483-4600. More:What is antifa and what does the movement want? More:Michigan’s race for governor: How Whitmer, Dixon have managed art of the pivot The graffiti can be seen from North Howard Avenue, a U.S. 127 service drive. But it escaped wide notice until Friday, when Republican gubernatorial candidate Tudor Dixon posted it on her campaign’s Twitter and Facebook pages. A retired couple in Lansing had their cars and property vandalized by the tolerant people of ANTIFA because the couple supports President Trump. Another example of the radical left’s “fight like hell” tactics, courtesy of Gretchen Whitmer. pic.twitter.com/z23H44WBbN — Tudor Dixon (@TudorDixon) October 7, 2022 Sophia Russell said Dixon’s campaign didn’t ask for permission directly, obtaining the images through her son-in-law. But the couple, who voted for Dixon in the August primary, said they were OK with their use. “They said, ‘Well, let’s use this to God’s glory. Let’s use it for good.’ And I said, ‘Yeah, I want to do that,'” she said. Dixon was asked about the incident at a town hall event in Rochester Hills Friday night, and she attempted to link the vandalism to her Democratic opponent, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. “Why would we post a picture of someone’s car who had all this Antifa stuff written on it? You know why? Because they had a Trump sign in their yard. That’s why their car got spray painted. And no one believes that that’s happening,” Dixon says. https://t.co/WTLjEXClX0 pic.twitter.com/HNikls6j1o — Samuel J. Robinson (@samueljrob) October 7, 2022 Sophia Russell said she found the graffiti Thursday morning when the couple was preparing to pick up their grandchild from preschool. They said they stopped wearing Make America Great Again hats in recent years, out of fear they would be targeted. “We don’t want to start anything or antagonize people. Maybe I better not wear that hat anymore and wear this hat,” she said. “I don’t want to get people antagonized but they must have remembered because we are Trump supporters. We haven’t changed. We did follow (QANON). And we still feel the same way.” The two retirees said they are anxious and frightened. Edgar Russell, 73, a wheelchair-bound Vietnam War veteran, said in his mind, the worst-case scenario is that someone attacks his home and he can’t protect his wife. “When things get bad, she’ll go to her daughter’s house,” Edgar Russell said. “I can’t do nothing else but protect it…” “It’s not that bad, I hope,” Sophia Russell said. But the couple said their spirits have been lifted in recent days by the generosity of their neighbors, many of whom are Democrats. One neighbor offered to help pay for the damages. Another, who they hadn’t met previously, brought cookies and fall chrysanthemums and offered to help clean. And lastly, a couple from East Lansing drove over and offered to buy them outdoor motion sensor cameras and install them for free. “It felt really good,” Edgar Russell said. Sophia Russell said the couple just prays that “God will soften (the) hearts” of whoever was responsible. Contact Mike Ellis at 517-267-0415 or mellis@lsj.com or on Twitter @MikeEllis_AIM. Contact reporter Jared Weber at 517-582-3937 or jtweber@lsj.com. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Police Investigating After Anti-Trump Graffiti Left At Elderly Lansing Couple
North Little Rock Police Hold Child Safety Seat Check To Help Parents
North Little Rock Police Hold Child Safety Seat Check To Help Parents
North Little Rock Police Hold Child Safety Seat Check To Help Parents https://digitalarkansasnews.com/north-little-rock-police-hold-child-safety-seat-check-to-help-parents/ by: John Kushmaul Posted: Oct 9, 2022 / 05:32 PM CDT Updated: Oct 9, 2022 / 05:32 PM CDT NORTH LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – North Little Rock police reminded parents of young children about the importance of properly installing child safety seats Sunday. Officials with the North Little Rock Police Department held a safety seat check on JFK Blvd as part of National Faith and Blue Weekend and was co-sponsored by Park Hill Baptist Church. Parents were invited to come by to make sure their child’s seats are installed correctly and get a free replacement seat if needed. Detective Raul Dallas of the NLRPD said the purpose of the event is to leave children safer than they were before. “We outfit them with a seat, show them how it’s supposed to fit, how it’s supposed to be installed,” Dallas said. “From there they leave a little bit safer than they were before, and not penalize them for something maybe they have no control over.” The event wraps up Monday evening with a Faith and Blue Forum at 6 p.m. at Full Counsel Metro Church on Main Street in North Little Rock. Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
North Little Rock Police Hold Child Safety Seat Check To Help Parents
Trump Campaigns For Arizona Election Deniers In A State That Will Test His Power In 2022 And Beyond
Trump Campaigns For Arizona Election Deniers In A State That Will Test His Power In 2022 And Beyond
Trump Campaigns For Arizona Election Deniers In A State That Will Test His Power In 2022 And Beyond https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-campaigns-for-arizona-election-deniers-in-a-state-that-will-test-his-power-in-2022-and-beyond/ Trump campaigns for Arizona election deniers in a state that will test his power in 2022 and beyond  KAKE Read More Here
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Trump Campaigns For Arizona Election Deniers In A State That Will Test His Power In 2022 And Beyond
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message https://digitalarkansasnews.com/michigan-gop-statewide-candidates-stick-to-far-right-message-3/ Candidates often shift toward the center when the time comes to seek support from a wider range of voters for the general election. WARREN, Mich. — With voting underway in Michigan’s general election, the Republican nominee for secretary of state stepped on stage as a warm-up act for former President Donald Trump and hit hard on the main theme of her campaign. Kristina Karamo repeated unfounded assertions about the 2020 presidential election that have been repeatedly debunked. She told the crowd at the recent rally at Macomb Community College that “authoritarians” are giving millions to her Democratic opponent — Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson — in an attempt to “corrupt battleground state election systems so they can control America.” “If you look at history, it shows you what tyrants do,” said Karamo, a former community college professor. “History is telling us, history is screaming to us, that if we don’t step up and fight now, we will lose the greatest country in human history.” It was an address designed to rev up the crowd of devoted Trump followers, some of whom have latched onto the baseless QAnon conspiracy theory. While Karamo’s speech drew cheers, relying on a general election strategy that appeals to the most far-right voters is a gamble for Michigan Republicans. Candidates who have to play to their party’s base during primaries or nominating conventions often shift toward the center, aiming to attract more voters for the general election. But that hasn’t happened this year for the Republicans seeking Michigan’s top three statewide offices — governor, attorney general and secretary of state. The Nov. 8 election will test whether campaigns designed to resonate with the far-right and highlight strong ties to Trump will be enough to win in a traditional swing state, where the Republican incumbent lost the White House race to Democrat challenger Joe Biden by more than 154,000 votes in 2020. All three GOP candidates stood behind Trump during the Oct. 1 rally at the college about 20 miles north of Detroit, joined by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who has amplified Trump’s election falsehoods to audiences across the country. Trump falsely claimed the 2020 election was “rigged and stolen” in Michigan, citing “evidence” he said first originated with Karamo and Matthew DePerno, a tax lawyer who is the nominee for state attorney general. In his own address to the crowd, DePerno called Democrats “radical, cultural Marxists” who want to “silence you.” “If that doesn’t work, they want to put you in jail,” DePerno told the crowd, which fell into chants of “Lock her up.” All three Democratic incumbents are women. DePerno’s campaign also is clouded by an investigation into whether he should be criminally charged for attempting to gain access to voting machines after the 2020 election. John DeBlaay, a Grand Rapids real estate agent and precinct delegate who attended the rally, said he was thrilled with the candidates. “We’ve got the best America First ticket all the way from top to bottom that we’ve had in a long time now,” he said. Some moderate Republicans are skeptical that campaigns appealing mostly to base elements of the party will be enough to beat Democratic incumbents with wide name recognition and sizable fundraising advantages. The Democrats also are expected to benefit from having an amendment on the ballot that seeks to enshrine the right to abortion in the state constitution. These Republicans say inflation, gas prices and economic anxiety should be the GOP’s main talking points, not a continued alignment with Trump and his false claims about widespread fraud costing him reelection. They point to the unusual way Michigan selects its attorney general and secretary of state candidates, a process done through a party nominating convention rather than through a primary election in which voters make the choice. The most conservative Republicans who are loyal to Trump dominated that convention in April. The party’s co-chair, Meshawn Maddock, was one of 16 Republicans who submitted false certificates stating they were the state’s presidential electors despite Biden’s certified victory in the state. Three weeks before the convention, during another Trump rally, DePerno encouraged attendees — many of them precinct delegates — to “storm” the party gathering and said it was “time for the grassroots to unite.” Delegates overwhelmingly voted to nominate Karamo. DePerno won a runoff over former legislative leader Tom Leonard, who lost in the 2018 attorney general’s race by 3 percentage points to Democrat Dana Nessel. “Karamo and DePerno are among the most loyal to Donald Trump that you will find anywhere in the country,” said Jason Roe, a longtime Republican strategist. “That loyalty has been unshakable in this election process, regardless of how it might affect general election prospects.” Roe, whose father served as the Michigan GOP’s executive director for 10 years, became executive director of the state party in spring 2021. Six months later, he stepped down due to a “difference in opinion on how many conspiracy theories we should tolerate.” Soon after Roe left, Trump began calling party leaders to “force the party to embrace things formally that weren’t going to be helpful to the upcoming election,” Roe said. The party’s candidate for governor, Tudor Dixon, won the nomination during the primary in August after receiving Trump’s endorsement. Dixon, a conservative news show host who once acted in low-budget horror films, also benefited from support of the wealthy DeVos family. While seen as less extreme than Karamo and DePerno, Dixon indicated during debates that she thought the 2020 presidential election was stolen and she recently made light of a plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat. Dixon has since tried to pivot away from denying the results of the last election by focusing on topics such as inflation and education, but she also is repeating hard-right rhetoric on cultural issues. She has called for banning “pornographic” books in schools and has pitched an education agenda modeled after the Florida policy that critics have labeled “Don’t Say Gay.” While Democrats have attacked DePerno and Karamo for their continued denial of Biden’s victory in 2020, they have focused on what they describe as Dixon’s “extreme” abortion stance. Lackluster fundraising has made it difficult for her to push back. As of Aug. 22, Dixon had $524,000 in the bank compared with Whitmer’s $14 million, according to the latest available campaign finance reports. Some of that gap has been closed by the super PAC Michigan Families United, which has received $2.5 million in donations, including from the DeVos family. “I just don’t like that there’s no commercials on TV about Dixon. Everything you see is about the other people, and it’s all negative,” said Laura Bunting, an Ionia County resident who attended the Trump rally. Karamo and DePerno had a combined $422,554 cash on hand as of Sept. 16 compared with the $5.7 million combined for their Democratic opponents, according to campaign finance reports. Michigan-based pollster Bernie Porn said the Republican candidates have been defined by their extreme stances but that none has attracted enough money to get on TV and introduce themselves to a broader swath of voters. That, he said, “makes it difficult for folks to form a favorable opinion of you.” ►Make it easy to keep up to date with more stories like this. Download the 13 ON YOUR SIDE app now. Have a news tip? Email news@13onyourside.com, visit our Facebook page or Twitter. Subscribe to our YouTube channel. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Inflation Relief Checks Live Online Updates By State: California Florida | Payments Who Qualifies & Amounts
Inflation Relief Checks Live Online Updates By State: California Florida | Payments Who Qualifies & Amounts
Inflation Relief Checks Live Online Updates By State: California, Florida… | Payments, Who Qualifies & Amounts https://digitalarkansasnews.com/inflation-relief-checks-live-online-updates-by-state-california-florida-payments-who-qualifies-amounts/ Inflation Relief Checks: live updates  US NEWS $350 relief checks in Georgia: Who qualifies and when are the payments? Beginning in September, around 3 million Georgians received a check worth $350. This is because Governor Brian Kemp released up to $1.2 billion in covid-19 aid to send people funds to deal with inflation. While some could see this as a bit of a bung considering upcoming gubernatorial elections in November, the money will be happily received by many living in one of the most serious economic periods in the last three decades. “This assistance will help some of Georgia’s most vulnerable citizens cope with the continued negative economic impact of the covid-19 public health emergency and 40-year-high inflation caused by disastrous policies that were implemented by the Biden administration,” Kemp’s office said in a statement. As Virginians face high inflation and prices coming from policies set in Washington, these one-time tax rebates will help families lower the cost of living.   “Past administrations have overtaxed Virginians and by returning taxpayer money to Virginia’s taxpayers we are ensuring that hard working Virginians get to keep more of their paycheck during these difficult economic times. Latest News California Inflation Relief Check: do I qualify according to my filing status? After seeing a budget surplus, the Golden State has established a new tax credit, Middle-Class Tax Refund (MCTR), that will be distributed to millions. The state allocated around $9.5 billion for the refund and hopes that families will be able to use the payments to keep up with prices. The state leads the country in the cost of gas and after a brief period of relief from high prices from July to September, they are on the climb once again. The payments for the tax refund are worth anywhere between $200 and $1,050, depending on one’s income, tax filing status, and whether or not one claimed a dependent on their taxes in 2021. Read our full coverage for how payments break down by filing status and when they can be expected.  US NEWS Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan: When does it start, who qualifies and how to apply? It was announced last August that a plan for accessing the student debt forgiveness plan would come in October. This is yet to have happened but CNN reports that the application plan is due out very, very soon, so you should keep switched on to the news or be aware of updates on the Federal Student Aid website as the details will be released there first. Pell Grant recipients and non-grantees will be able to cut $20,000 and $10,000 in student loan debt, respectively, so long as they make under $125,000 a year (250,000 for married couples). Of those surveyed in a Data for Progress poll in August, 29 percent of students had less than $10,000 in debt, highlighting the large impact President Biden’s decision will have on millions of borrowers. Read our full coverage for more details on President Biden’s plan to cancel some student loan debt.  Maine offers inflation relief payments Maine governor, Janet Mills, touted the sending of $850 checks that will be sent to 850,000 residents as a part of a bipartisan bill to support households as inflation continues to cut into purchasing power.  Those who have yet to receive their checks should check in with the state’s tax authority.  More money could be distributed to California taxpayers This week the first batch of payments for the Middle Class Tax Refund were sent out.  Additionally, Gov. Gavin Newsom has announced that he is calling a special session to have the legislature pass a law that would increase taxes on profits made by oil and gas companies.  The news comes as the state sees gas prices increase rapidly as global markets have seen decreases in the price of a barrel of oil.  A windfall tax would increase state revenue on the profits these companies see that is over and above what they made in previous years. The idea would be to use the increased revenue collected through the new tax as a tax credit for taxpayers in the form of a rebate.   US NEWS California inflation relief checks 2022: amounts, eligibility and how for apply to the payments Californians who filed a 2020 tax return by 15 October 2021 will start receiving direct payments 7 October from the state’s Middle Class Tax Refund. The tax rebate plan will provide up to $1,050 to millions of California families to help with inflation and high gas prices which are on the rise again. Democratic California Governor Gavin Newsom and legislative leaders agreed at the end of June to spend part of the state’s bumper budget surplus on the $17 million inflation relief package. Read more on the payments in our full coverage.  Welcome to AS USA’s live blog on inflation and the measures states are taking to assist residents in combatting its impacts for Sunday, 9 October.   Last week, California sent out its first batch of payments for the Middle-Class Tax Refund, which will send checks worth up to $1,050 to millions of households across the state.  Additionally, this week, the Social Security Administration will announce the 2023 Cost-of-living adjustment that will be made to payments in January.   Follow along for more news on the payments being sent in other states, as well as support that may come from the federal level.  Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Inflation Relief Checks Live Online Updates By State: California Florida | Payments Who Qualifies & Amounts
Trump In Arizona: Republicans Rally With Katie Hobbs In Paradise Valley
Trump In Arizona: Republicans Rally With Katie Hobbs In Paradise Valley
Trump In Arizona: Republicans Rally With Katie Hobbs In Paradise Valley https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-in-arizona-republicans-rally-with-katie-hobbs-in-paradise-valley/ Former President Donald Trump returns to Arizona for the third time this year with an eye to pushing his preferred Republican picks over the top in the upcoming midterms. The event starts at 1 p.m., with Trump scheduled to take the stage at 4 p.m. at Bell Bank Park in Mesa. The event is streaming on YouTube. Follow coverage by Republic reporters of Trump and the Republican campaign rally in Mesa here. 2:40 p.m.: Republicans rally with Katie Hobbs in Paradise Valley Democratic candidate for governor Katie Hobbs held a brief news conference Sunday morning at Barry Goldwater Memorial Park in Paradise Valley to emphasize that Republicans should support her over rival Kari Lake. Several members of Hobbs’ “Republicans for Katie Hobbs Coalition” gathered with her at the park, which celebrates the state’s conservative icon who died in 1998 following five terms as a U.S. senator. Karie Dozier, a former spokesman for the late state Attorney General Grant Woods, said Goldwater would be “shaking his head in disgust” at how “crazy” Republican politics have become. Kari Lake is “dangerous for Arizona,” said Mesa Mayor John Giles, and that’s why he — a Republican — was at the park with Hobbs and not at Trump’s rally in Mesa on Sunday. “Those of us who support Secretary Hobbs care very deeply about the future of Arizona,” he said. “And that’s why we are putting our state above our party.” November’s election wasn’t between Republicans and Democrats, but “a choice between sanity and chaos,” he added. Monica Villalobos, president and CEO of the Arizona Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, describing herself as a former Republican, emphasized that the nation has “moved forward” under Biden. She didn’t leave the party, she said — it left her when it began running “candidates operating from places of hatred, hubris and hostility rather than honesty, humility and humanity.” Hobbs, repeating Giles’ statement about “sanity” and “chaos,” said the problem isn’t just that Lake “proudly accepts support from Nazis and spews dang conspiracy theories, it’s what she would actually do as governor.” Hobbs then ran down a litany of Lake’s positions, including her support for a territorial-era anti-abortion law, baseless conspiracy theories about the 2020 election, and surveillance cameras in public-school classrooms. Lake’s entire platform “boils down into being a sore loser,” she said. Other Republicans at the event included former Scottsdale Mayor Sam Campana and former state legislator Steve May. — Ray Stern 2 p.m.: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene appears at rally Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., echoed the language of the Great Replacement theory popular with white nationalists in her message to Arizonans in Mesa on Sunday. Speaking about illegal immigration, Greene said 5 million people have crossed the Mexican border with impunity from a derelict President Joe Biden. “Five million people from all over the world have crossed our borders,” Greene said. “Joe Biden’s 5 million illegal aliens are on the verge of replacing you, replacing your jobs, replacing your kids in school, and coming from all over the world they are also replacing your culture. That’s not great for America.” The replacement theory is an idea first popular among white nationalists that Democrats want illegal immigrants to keep their party politically viable. Some Republicans have flirted with similar rhetoric to energize their base, which has long seen the border as dangerously porous. Greene has long pushed a nationalist message. Last year, Greene and Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., were briefly linked to creating an America First Caucus that was reportedly linked to preserving the nation’s Anglo-Saxon past and dramatically restricting the nation’s immigration laws. Both lawmakers quickly distanced themselves from the caucus idea after bipartisan pushback. Before taking the stage, Greene predicted the shifting state of Arizona’s law on abortion rights would not play a significant role in the upcoming elections. The state’s guiding law seems to have whipsawed between a Civil War-era law that bans nearly all abortions and a law passed earlier this year that bans most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy. Despite the conflicting rulings and the attention it brings back to the issue, Greene said it won’t have an impact on voting in Arizona. “I don’t think it’s distracting at all,” she told a reporter before taking the stage in Mesa. Instead, America-first themes, like those identified by Republican Senate candidate Blake Masters, will resonate with voters, she said. Greene said she is looking forward to Republicans winning back the House of Representatives after the November elections. When that happens, she said, she will be placed on the House Oversight Committee, where she plans to open investigations into Hunter Biden, President Joe Biden’s embattled son. Greene also said Big Tech will face scrutiny over its “collusion” with Democrats in 2020 to censor conservative voices.  — Ronald J. Hansen 1:45 p.m.: Trump, Lake supporters travel from Arizona, out of state As the prayer, pledge of allegiance and national anthem began shortly before 1:30 p.m., attendees were still streaming into the dirt lot at Bell Bank Park. Seats were filled in the relatively small area of floor seating and risers around the speaking platform. After the national anthem, a chant of “USA, USA, USA” rose through the crowd. Many wore Trump attire, some wore anti-Biden clothes, and lots wore red, white and blue apparel, including a few people draped in American or Arizona flags. A few people were carried out on stretchers; it was a hot and sunny afternoon. “We’re just real Trump people,” said Ann-Marie Villicana, who drove from Pasadena, California, on Saturday to see Trump on Sunday. Villicana said she founded LA Trump and was a delegate from California in 2016. One of her friends is working with Lake so she came out to show support. “Since we haven’t been able to get out to Arizona to help Kari Lake, we thought the least we could do was donate money, get great seats,” she said. She and Robin Salzer had VIP seats. “People are just fed up and I think that’s why you see the enthusiasm at these rallies,” Salzer said. “You see the enthusiasm of every demographic, regardless of race, gender, creed, even sexual persuasion, people are just fed up with the way this country’s going.” Kathy Schafer of Chandler voted for Trump and is a big supporter but said she hadn’t gone to one of his events until Sunday. “I am brokenhearted that America is in the condition it’s in,” she said, adding that she’s concerned about issues like inflation, the 2nd Amendment and school curriculum. Schaefer was excited to hear from Trump and Lake in particular. “I’m 100% Trumpster, I’m 100% Kari Lake,” she said, wearing a Trump shirt and hat. She said the midterm election will be “honest” because so many more people are paying attention. Maria Foshay traveled from Rancho Cucamonga, California, to hear Trump speak. She hopes he’ll announce his next move during the speech, ideally that he’ll run for president again in 2024. Foshay wants to make sure the election is truthful, fair and with “no cheating.” Kerry Josey of Mesa said Trump is “the face of the people,” adding that she’s been to three of his rallies. She’s concerned about whether the upcoming election will be truthful. Kathy Elgin stood out in the sea of red-colored couture with her eye-catching Oregon Women for Trump-shirt. She and four friends flew in from Oregon for a quick turnaround trip solely for Trump. “We want him to know Oregon exists and Oregon loves him,” Elgin said. A resident of Salem, Elgin said Oregon was a red state “until we got mail-in voting.” Since then, she said, the state has turned blue and she doesn’t buy it. An avid Trump follower, Elgin said she got a visit from FBI after returning from the Jan. 6 rally at the U.S. Capitol. She called  the visit “audacious” explaining that she never witnessed any violence at the Capitol until she saw television footing. — Alison Steinbach, Eryka Forquer and Mary Jo Pitzl 12 p.m.: Who is scheduled to speak at Trump rally in Mesa The speaker list for Sunday’s rally includes names familiar to Arizonans, as well as some of the more outspoken Trump advocates, including U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Georgia. Two members of Arizona’s congressional delegation are on board to address the rally: Republican representatives Andy Biggs and Debbie Lesko. They will join former Trump administration staffers Rich Grenell and Kash Patel, who were with Trump at a similar rally in Nevada on Saturday. Grenell served briefly as acting director of National Intelligence in 2020, while also holding the posts of U.S. ambassador to Germany and special presidential envoy for the Serbia and Kosovo Peace Negotiations. Patel was former chief of staff at the U.S. Department of Defense. The event is a rally to support the Trump-endorsed candidates in November’s election. Arizona candidates slated to speak are gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake. U.S. Senate nominee Blake Masters, secretary of state candidate Mark Finchem and attorney general nominee Abe Hamedeh. The speeches are scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. — Mary Jo Pitzl 11 a.m.: Masters: ‘This race is winnable’ Republican U.S. Senate candidate Blake Masters continued what amounted to a victory lap ahead of his rally with former President Donald Trump in Mesa later today. Masters appeared with Maria Bartiromo on “Sunday Morning Futures” on Fox News and made the case that his showing in Thursday’s debate with Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., had reversed the race. “I expected him to struggle to defend (his record in the Senate) and he did,” Masters said of Kelly. “All I had to do...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump In Arizona: Republicans Rally With Katie Hobbs In Paradise Valley
PHOTOS: The Black Keys Hit Kia Forum With Band Of Horses The Velveteers
PHOTOS: The Black Keys Hit Kia Forum With Band Of Horses The Velveteers
PHOTOS: The Black Keys Hit Kia Forum With Band Of Horses, The Velveteers https://digitalarkansasnews.com/photos-the-black-keys-hit-kia-forum-with-band-of-horses-the-velveteers/ The Black Keys continued their lengthy North American tour on Saturday night with a performance at the Kia Forum in Inglewood, CA featuring support from Band of Horses and The Velveteers. The tour, which began back in July, marks the first major outing for The Black Keys—led by guitarist/vocalist Dan Auerbach and drummer Patrick Carney—in three years. In the time since, the band has released released two new albums, 2022’s Dropout Boogie and 2021 Delta blues covers album Delta Kream. Both of those sets were showcased extensively throughout the Forum show alongside a hefty helping of tracks from throughout the group’s catalog twenty-year catalog. Related: The Black Keys & Nathaniel Rateliff Honor Friend & Collaborator Richard Swift At Red Rocks [Video] The blues-rockers’ tour will wrap up in the coming weeks with shows in Highland, CA (10/9); Phoenix, AZ (10/10); Rogers, AR (10/13); Houston, TX (10/15); Austin TX (10/17); and Dallas, TX (10/18). For a complete list of upcoming The Black Keys concerts, head to the band’s website here. Scroll down to check out photo galleries of The Black Keys, Band of Horses, and The Velveteers at the Kia Forum courtesy of photographer Matthew Rea. Setlist: The Black Keys | Kia Forum | Inglewood, CA | 10/8/22  Set: I Got Mine, Howlin’ for You, Fever, Tighten Up, Your Touch, It Ain’t Over, Gold On The Ceiling, Stay All Night (Junior Kimbrough), Going Down South (R.L. Burnside), Poor Boy a Long Way From Home (John Fahey), Crawlin’ Kingsnake (John Lee Hooker), Have Love, Will Travel (Richard Berry), Lo/Hi, Everlasting Light, Next Girl, Ten Cent Pistol, Your Team Is Looking Good, Wild Child, She’s Long Gone Encore: Little Black Submarines, Lonely Boy The Black Keys | Kia Forum | Inglewood, CA | 10/8/22 | Photos: Matthew Rea Band of Horses | Kia Forum | Inglewood, CA | 10/8/22 | Photos: Matthew Rea The Velveteers | Kia Forum | Inglewood, CA | 10/8/22 | Photos: Matthew Rea Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
PHOTOS: The Black Keys Hit Kia Forum With Band Of Horses The Velveteers
'Those Comments Were Reckless': Pompeo Slams Biden's 'Armageddon' Remarks
'Those Comments Were Reckless': Pompeo Slams Biden's 'Armageddon' Remarks
'Those Comments Were Reckless': Pompeo Slams Biden's 'Armageddon' Remarks https://digitalarkansasnews.com/those-comments-were-reckless-pompeo-slams-bidens-armageddon-remarks/ “We have not faced the prospect of Armageddon since Kennedy and the Cuban Missile Crisis,” Biden said Thursday during a fundraiser, referencing the October 1962 crisis that put the United States and the Soviet Union on the verge of nuclear war for almost two weeks. On Sunday, speaking on ABC’s “This Week,” National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said: “The president was reflecting the very high stakes that are in play right now.” Kirby added in reference to Putin: “Neither we nor our allies are going to be intimidated by this and we’re going to continue to provide support and security assistance to Ukraine as is necessary.” Pompeo said the Biden administration would have been better off using “quiet diplomacy” in pushing Putin to understand the consequences of using nuclear weapons. “I hope that they are doing this quietly,” he said to host Shannon Bream. In discussing Saturday’s blast on the Kerch Bridge connecting Russia with the Crimea, territory that Putin annexed in 2014, Pompeo said: “My guess is that the Ukrainians had something to do with it.” Pompeo said that no matter who damaged that bridge, the attack represented a symbolic defeat for Putin, noting that the bridge was opened with great ceremony by Putin in May 2018. “In different historical epochs … people dreamed of building this bridge,” Putin said to the workers at the time. “Then they returned to this in the 1930s, the ‘40s, the ‘50s. And finally, thanks to your work and your talent, the miracle has happened.” On Sunday, Pompeo said the attack on the bridge was another sign of how disastrously bad that the Russian war against Ukraine has gone. “The Russian military is failing desperately,” Pompeo said. Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) also saw Putin’s situation as increasingly desperate. “I do think Vladimir Putin is a cornered animal,” he said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “I think he is right now unpredictable, unstable. He is getting beat in Ukraine, piece by piece, and he’s being embarrassed.” But former Gen. Wesley Clark, who formerly served as the Supreme Allied Commander Europe of NATO, said he saw Putin’s threatening language as an attempt to drive a wedge in the West and encourage Western leaders to seek a negotiated settlement that would legitimize Putin’s seizure of land from Ukraine. “When Putin said no one could win a nuclear war, OK then why is he threatening a nuclear war?” Clark said on CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS.” “Because this is basically a psychological effort against the United States, and men like Donald Trump are picking it up and they want to undercut the will and resolve of the West to assist the Ukrainians in this fight. “ Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
'Those Comments Were Reckless': Pompeo Slams Biden's 'Armageddon' Remarks
Arkansasmarijuana Sales Sees $800K Per Day In September
Arkansasmarijuana Sales Sees $800K Per Day In September
Arkansas marijuana Sales Sees $800K Per Day In September https://digitalarkansasnews.com/arkansas-marijuana-sales-sees-800k-per-day-in-september/ by: Alex Kienlen Posted: Oct 9, 2022 / 03:50 PM CDT Updated: Oct 9, 2022 / 03:50 PM CDT LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – Another month brings marijuana sales very close to $24 million in Arkansas. The Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration announced Friday that the state sold 4,571 pounds of marijuana in September, grossing $23.9 million in revenue for the month. A department spokesman said it was the year’s largest month of sales. “Patients spent approximately $800,000 daily in September on medical marijuana purchases,” Scott Hardin, spokesperson for the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration said. Scott also noted that the state is expecting for sales this year to surpass the total sales in 2021. “Additionally, 4,571 pounds is the largest month for sales in 2022. Through the first nine months of 2022, patients have spent $205 million to obtain 36,600 pounds of medical marijuana,” he said. “We anticipate 2022 sales will surpass the $264.9 million spent in 2021.” Sales for July and August had been roughly $23.2 million each month. Natural Relief Dispensary in Sherwood sold the most, moving 431 pounds in September, while Suite 443 dispensary in Hot Springs followed closely with 407 pounds sold. Eighteen dispensaries sold over 100 pounds for September. Arkansas has 38 medical marijuana dispensaries and 92,035 active patient cards, allowing the holder to purchase and use marijuana in the state. The first marijuana dispensary opened in the state in 2019. Most read on WREG.com Investigations Grizzlies Memphis Tigers Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Arkansasmarijuana Sales Sees $800K Per Day In September
SMUD Customers Lose Power In Downtown Sacramento On Sunday Outage Map Shows
SMUD Customers Lose Power In Downtown Sacramento On Sunday Outage Map Shows
SMUD Customers Lose Power In Downtown Sacramento On Sunday, Outage Map Shows https://digitalarkansasnews.com/smud-customers-lose-power-in-downtown-sacramento-on-sunday-outage-map-shows/ GOVERNMENT FOR MANAGING THESE AREAS. NOW HERE ARE OUR BIG STORIES TODAY. THIS MORNING, OFFICIALS ARE INVESTIGATING A DEADLY STABBING IN SACRAMENTO. IT HAPPENED NEAR STREET BETWEEN EX AND BROADWAY SACRAMENTO. POLICE RESPONDED TO THE CALL JUST AFTER FIVE YESTERDAY AFTERNOON. WHEN THEY ARRIVED ON SCENE, THEY FOUND A MAN WHO HAD BEEN STABBED. WE KNOW THAT ONE MAN DIED AT THE SCENE AND POLICE HAVE YET TO RELEASE NAME AND AGE. AND A SECOND MAN WENT TO THE HOSPITAL WITH SERIOUS. DETAILS AS TO WHAT LED TO THE STABBING AND THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THESE MEN IS UNKNOWN AT THIS POINT. KCRA 3 WEATHER AND EILEEN IS HELPING PLAN OUR DAY. YOU ARE GOING TO BE BEAUTIFUL OUT THERE, AARON. WE’VE GOT THAT NICE MARINE LAYER THERE IN THE DISTANCE, A HEALTHY ONSHORE BREEZE. THAT MEANS TODAY NOT GOING TO BE QUITE AS WARM AS YESTERDAY. WE’RE STILL RANGING IN THE FIFTIES AND SIXTIES IN THE VALLEY RIGHT NOW. VERY COMFORTABLE START MIDDAY. TEMPERATURES ARE GOING TO BE 80 AND THEN WE’LL LIKELY TOP OUT IN THE LOWER NINETIES TODAY, JUST ABOVE 90 IN MANY SPOTS IN THE VALLEY TOMORROW IS GOING TO FEEL A LOT LIKE TODAY. NICE, COOL MORNING FOR MONDAY. INDIGENOUS PEOPLES DAY LOTS OF SUNSHINE HIGHS IN THE LOWER NINETIES SOMEWHERE IN THE UPPER EIGHTIES TUESDAY WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY NICE COOL MORNINGS SMUD customers lose power in downtown Sacramento on Sunday, outage map shows Drivers were navigating some downtown streets without functioning stoplights. More than 2,100 SMUD customers lost power for a period on Sunday in downtown Sacramento, according to the utility’s outage map. The outage occurred at 10:50 a.m.There were at least 2,147 customers without power, as of 11:10 a.m. By 11:18 the map showed that just 253 customers remained without power.As of 1 p.m., power had been restored across the area, according to the outage map. (Video above: Top stories for Oct. 9.) Drivers navigated some downtown streets without functioning stoplights while the power was out.This story is developing. Stay with KCRA 3 for updates. More than 2,100 SMUD customers lost power for a period on Sunday in downtown Sacramento, according to the utility’s outage map. The outage occurred at 10:50 a.m. There were at least 2,147 customers without power, as of 11:10 a.m. By 11:18 the map showed that just 253 customers remained without power. As of 1 p.m., power had been restored across the area, according to the outage map. (Video above: Top stories for Oct. 9.) Drivers navigated some downtown streets without functioning stoplights while the power was out. This story is developing. Stay with KCRA 3 for updates. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
SMUD Customers Lose Power In Downtown Sacramento On Sunday Outage Map Shows
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message https://digitalarkansasnews.com/michigan-gop-statewide-candidates-stick-to-far-right-message-2/ WARREN, Mich. (AP) — With voting underway in Michigan’s general election, the Republican nominee for secretary of state stepped on stage as a warm-up act for former President Donald Trump and hit hard on the main theme of her campaign. Kristina Karamo repeated unfounded assertions about the 2020 presidential election that have been repeatedly debunked. She told the crowd at the recent rally at Macomb Community College that “authoritarians” are giving millions to her Democratic opponent — Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson — in an attempt to “corrupt battleground state election systems so they can control America.” “If you look at history, it shows you what tyrants do,” said Karamo, a former community college professor. “History is telling us, history is screaming to us, that if we don’t step up and fight now, we will lose the greatest country in human history.” It was an address designed to rev up the crowd of devoted Trump followers, some of whom have latched onto the baseless QAnon conspiracy theory. While Karamo’s speech drew cheers, relying on a general election strategy that appeals to the most far-right voters is a gamble for Michigan Republicans. Kristina Karamo, the Republican nominee for Michigan’s secretary of state, high fives prominent election denier and former state Sen. Patrick Colbeck outside a rally for President Donald Trump in Warren, Mich., Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022. (AP Photo/Joey Cappelletti) Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS/Joey Cappelletti Kristina Karamo, the Republican nominee for Michigan’s secretary of state, stops to talk with prominent election denier and former state Sen. Patrick Colbeck outside a rally for President Donald Trump in Warren, Mich., Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022. Colbeck attended the rally with MyPillow chief executive Mike Lindell. (AP Photo/Joey Cappelletti) Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS/Joey Cappelletti PreviousNext Candidates who have to play to their party’s base during primaries or nominating conventions often shift toward the center, aiming to attract more voters for the general election. But that hasn’t happened this year for the Republicans seeking Michigan’s top three statewide offices — governor, attorney general and secretary of state. The Nov. 8 election will test whether campaigns designed to resonate with the far-right and highlight strong ties to Trump will be enough to win in a traditional swing state, where the Republican incumbent lost the White House race to Democrat challenger Joe Biden by more than 154,000 votes in 2020. All three GOP candidates stood behind Trump during the Oct. 1 rally at the college about 20 miles north of Detroit, joined by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who has amplified Trump’s election falsehoods to audiences across the country. Trump falsely claimed the 2020 election was “rigged and stolen” in Michigan, citing “evidence” he said first originated with Karamo and Matthew DePerno, a tax lawyer who is the nominee for state attorney general. In his own address to the crowd, DePerno called Democrats “radical, cultural Marxists” who want to “silence you.” “If that doesn’t work, they want to put you in jail,” DePerno told the crowd, which fell into chants of “Lock her up.” All three Democratic incumbents are women. DePerno’s campaign also is clouded by an investigation into whether he should be criminally charged for attempting to gain access to voting machines after the 2020 election. John DeBlaay, a Grand Rapids real estate agent and precinct delegate who attended the rally, said he was thrilled with the candidates. “We’ve got the best America First ticket all the way from top to bottom that we’ve had in a long time now,” he said. Some moderate Republicans are skeptical that campaigns appealing mostly to base elements of the party will be enough to beat Democratic incumbents with wide name recognition and sizable fundraising advantages. The Democrats also are expected to benefit from having an amendment on the ballot that seeks to enshrine the right to abortion in the state constitution. These Republicans say inflation, gas prices and economic anxiety should be the GOP’s main talking points, not a continued alignment with Trump and his false claims about widespread fraud costing him reelection. They point to the unusual way Michigan selects its attorney general and secretary of state candidates, a process done through a party nominating convention rather than through a primary election in which voters make the choice. The most conservative Republicans who are loyal to Trump dominated that convention in April. The party’s co-chair, Meshawn Maddock, was one of 16 Republicans who submitted false certificates stating they were the state’s presidential electors despite Biden’s certified victory in the state. Three weeks before the convention, during another Trump rally, DePerno encouraged attendees — many of them precinct delegates — to “storm” the party gathering and said it was “time for the grassroots to unite.” Delegates overwhelmingly voted to nominate Karamo. DePerno won a runoff over former legislative leader Tom Leonard, who lost in the 2018 attorney general’s race by 3 percentage points to Democrat Dana Nessel. “Karamo and DePerno are among the most loyal to Donald Trump that you will find anywhere in the country,” said Jason Roe, a longtime Republican strategist. “That loyalty has been unshakable in this election process, regardless of how it might affect general election prospects.” Roe, whose father served as the Michigan GOP’s executive director for 10 years, became executive director of the state party in spring 2021. Six months later, he stepped down due to a “difference in opinion on how many conspiracy theories we should tolerate.” Soon after Roe left, Trump began calling party leaders to “force the party to embrace things formally that weren’t going to be helpful to the upcoming election,” Roe said. The party’s candidate for governor, Tudor Dixon, won the nomination during the primary in August after receiving Trump’s endorsement. Dixon, a conservative news show host who once acted in low-budget horror films, also benefited from support of the wealthy DeVos family. While seen as less extreme than Karamo and DePerno, Dixon indicated during debates that she thought the 2020 presidential election was stolen and she recently made light of a plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat. Dixon has since tried to pivot away from denying the results of the last election by focusing on topics such as inflation and education, but she also is repeating hard-right rhetoric on cultural issues. She has called for banning “pornographic” books in schools and has pitched an education agenda modeled after the Florida policy that critics have labeled “Don’t Say Gay.” While Democrats have attacked DePerno and Karamo for their continued denial of Biden’s victory in 2020, they have focused on what they describe as Dixon’s “extreme” abortion stance. Lackluster fundraising has made it difficult for her to push back. As of Aug. 22, Dixon had $524,000 in the bank compared with Whitmer’s $14 million, according to the latest available campaign finance reports. Some of that gap has been closed by the super PAC Michigan Families United, which has received $2.5 million in donations, including from the DeVos family. “I just don’t like that there’s no commercials on TV about Dixon. Everything you see is about the other people, and it’s all negative,” said Laura Bunting, an Ionia County resident who attended the Trump rally. Karamo and DePerno had a combined $422,554 cash on hand as of Sept. 16 compared with the $5.7 million combined for their Democratic opponents, according to campaign finance reports. Michigan-based pollster Bernie Porn said the Republican candidates have been defined by their extreme stances but that none has attracted enough money to get on TV and introduce themselves to a broader swath of voters. That, he said, “makes it difficult for folks to form a favorable opinion of you.” ___ Joey Cappelletti is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. ___ Follow AP for full coverage of the midterms at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message
Prosecutors Seek Prison For Rioter's Attack On AP Journalist
Prosecutors Seek Prison For Rioter's Attack On AP Journalist
Prosecutors Seek Prison For Rioter's Attack On AP Journalist https://digitalarkansasnews.com/prosecutors-seek-prison-for-rioters-attack-on-ap-journalist/ FILE – In this image from video, Alan William Byerly, center, attacks an Associated Press photographer during a riot at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Jan. 6, 2021. On Sunday, Oct. 9, 2022, federal prosecutors recommended a prison sentence of nearly four years for Byerly, of Pennsylvania, who pleaded guilty to assaulting the AP photographer and using a stun gun against police officers during a mob’s attack on the U.S. Capitol. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)[ASSOCIATED PRESS/Julio Cortez] Federal prosecutors on Sunday recommended a prison sentence of approximately four years for a Pennsylvania man who pleaded guilty to assaulting an Associated Press photographer and using a stun gun against police officers during a mob’s attack on the U.S. Capitol. U.S. District Judge Randolph Moss is scheduled to sentence Alan Byerly on Oct. 21 for his attack on AP photographer John Minchillo and police during the Jan. 6, 2021 riot in Washington, D.C. Sentencing guidelines recommend a prison term ranging from 37 to 46 months. Prosecutors are seeking a sentence of at least 46 months of imprisonment followed by three years of supervised release. Byerly’s attorney has until Friday to submit a sentencing recommendation. The judge isn’t bound by any of the sentencing recommendations. Byerly was arrested in July 2021 and pleaded guilty a year later to assault charges. Byerly purchased a stun gun before he traveled from his home in Fleetwood, Pennsylvania, to Washington for the “Stop the Steal” rally on Jan. 6. Leaving the rally before then-President Donald Trump finished speaking, Byerly went to the Capitol and joined other rioters in using a large metal Trump sign as a battering ram against barricades and police officers, prosecutors said. Then he went to the Capitol’s Lower West Terrace of the Capitol, where he and other rioters attacked Minchillo, who was wearing a lanyard with AP lettering. Byerly is one of at least three people charged with assaulting Minchillo, whose assault was captured on video by a colleague. After that, Byerly approached police officer behind bike racks and deployed his stun gun. “After officers successfully removed the stun gun from Byerly’s hands, Byerly continued to charge toward the officers, struck and pushed them, and grabbed an officer’s baton,” prosecutors wrote. Byerly later told FBI agents that he did just “one stupid thing down there and that’s all it was,” according to prosecutors. “This was a reference to how he handled the reporter and nothing more,” they wrote. Byerly treated Jan. 6 “as a normal, crime-free day, akin to the movie, ‘The Purge,’ when he could do whatever he wanted without judgment or legal consequence,” prosecutors said. “He was mistaken,” they added. More than 100 police officers were injured during the Capitol siege. Approximately 900 people have been charged with federal crimes for their conduct on Jan. 6. More than 400 of them have pleaded guilty, mostly to misdemeanor offenses. Over 280 riot defendants have been sentenced, with roughly half sentenced to terms of imprisonment ranging from one week to 10 years. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Read More Here
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Prosecutors Seek Prison For Rioter's Attack On AP Journalist
Families Separated At Border Speak Of PTS Hundreds Still Missing
Families Separated At Border Speak Of PTS Hundreds Still Missing
Families Separated At Border Speak Of PTS, Hundreds Still Missing https://digitalarkansasnews.com/families-separated-at-border-speak-of-pts-hundreds-still-missing/ WASHINGTON (AP) — Parents suing after being separated from their children at the U.S-Mexico border are pushing back against a Justice Department effort to require additional psychological evaluations to measure how much the U.S. policy traumatized them, court documents show. The effect of the Trump-era policy that was maligned as inhumane by political and religious leaders worldwide has been unusually well-documented, and it’s unfair to require parents to undergo another round of testing now, attorneys argue in court documents filed Thursday. One woman testified about sobbing as her 7-year-old daughter was taken from her for what turned out to be more than two months, court documents show. Thousands of children were separated from their parents; some have still not been reunited. The migrants seeking compensation have already undergone other evaluations, but the Justice Department said last month that testing from a government-chosen expert is necessary since the parents are alleging permanent mental and emotional injuries. Psychological evaluations from both sides are routine in emotional-damages claims, but the parents’ lawyers say the government has dragged out the process, adding that testing would be emotionally and logistically fraught, including taking off work and find childcare on low-wage salaries. The effects of the family separations have been thoroughly explored, including by government investigators who found children separated from their parents showed more fear, feelings of abandonment and post-traumatic stress symptoms. President Joe Biden, a Democrat, said during his campaign that the policies were “an outrage, a moral failing and a stain on our national character.” Former President Donald Trump stopped the practice in June 2018 amid widespread condemnation, just days before a judge ordered an end to the program in response to a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union. Parents studied by Physicians for Human Rights, a nonprofit collective of doctors that works to document human rights violations, exhibited suicidal thoughts and suffered a raft of problems including nightmares, depression, anxiety, panic, worry and difficulty sleeping. The Justice Department isn’t asking for the children to be re-evaluated now, but is reserving the right to do so later if necessary. A judge will eventually decide, possibly within weeks, whether to require the new evaluations. The requests came in two cases filed by 11 families. Nearly two dozen similar cases are pending in other courts, and some have already submitted to government-requested psychiatric evaluations. In one southern Florida case, a father and child agreed to the same examination, one that federal attorneys say is well within what’s considered appropriate. There is a separate legal effort to reunite other families, and there are still hundreds who have not been brought back together. The Biden administration has formed a task force that has reunited roughly 600 families. The two sides had been negotiating a settlement, but talks broke down after early proposal of $450,000 per person was reported and heavily criticized by Republicans. Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy meant that any adult caught crossing the border illegally would be prosecuted for illegal entry. Because children cannot be jailed with their family members, families were separated and children were taken into custody by Health and Human Services, which manages unaccompanied children at the border. No system was created to reunite children with their families. Copyright 2022 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Sign up for the Headlines Newsletter and receive up to date information. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Families Separated At Border Speak Of PTS Hundreds Still Missing