Digital Arkansas News

4529 bookmarks
Custom sorting
Biden Will Visit Puerto Rico And Florida To Assess Damage From Storms.
Biden Will Visit Puerto Rico And Florida To Assess Damage From Storms.
Biden Will Visit Puerto Rico And Florida To Assess Damage From Storms. https://digitalarkansasnews.com/biden-will-visit-puerto-rico-and-florida-to-assess-damage-from-storms/ FORT MYERS, Fla. — The extent of Hurricane Ian’s destruction became clearer on Thursday as people across southwestern Florida, left without electricity, drinking water or inhabitable homes, began to assess the damage and gird for what Gov. Ron DeSantis said would be a yearslong recovery. The scale of the wreckage was staggering, even to Florida residents who had survived and rebuilt after other powerful hurricanes. The storm pulverized roads, toppled trees, gutted downtown storefronts and set cars afloat, leaving a soggy scar of ruined homes and businesses from the coastal cities of Naples and Fort Myers to inland communities around Orlando. Although state officials had not released a death toll by late in the day, Mr. DeSantis said Thursday night that “we absolutely expect” to learn of storm-related fatalities as rescuers work through a backlog of 911 calls and scour the most devastated neighborhoods. More than 500 people in Charlotte and Lee Counties, the hardest hit, had been rescued on Thursday, the Florida Division of Emergency Management said; the small town of Fort Myers Beach, on a barrier island just off the coast, appeared decimated. While Ian left Florida on Thursday afternoon as a tropical storm, South Carolina residents were bracing for lashing winds and heavy rain as it quickly became a hurricane again at sea; forecasters said it could strengthen again before doubling back onto land there by Friday. Photos from several areas of the state showed homes crunched together in a chaotic jumble, or smashed into what looked like toothpicks. Fishing boats and pleasure cruisers had been hurled onto the ground as if they were bathtub toys. The streets were a perilous obstacle course of toppled trees and downed wires. In North Fort Myers, where Marion Burkholder, 84, survived the storm by clambering into a dinghy inside a neighbor’s screened-in porch and floating up with the rising waters, Thursday brought dreaded news. Her carpets were sopping and her floors were covered with a dark brown liquid. Her fridge lay on its side. “Everything floated,” said Marvis Long, 96, who lives nearby. “The water was coming in just like waves in here.” Mayors, sheriffs and other officials surveying the damage struggled to even describe its scope. The sheriff in Volusia County, near Orlando on the state’s east coast, said by text message that the coastal county was seeing “unprecedented flooding.” Mr. DeSantis said there had been “biblical” storm surge on Sanibel Island, normally a tourist haven of gleaming beaches and mangroves southwest of Fort Myers. “The damage that was done has been historic,” Mr. DeSantis said in a briefing on Thursday. “We’ve never seen a flood event like this. We’ve never seen storm surge of this magnitude.” On Fort Myers Beach, a laid-back strip dotted with hotels, bars and restaurants that for many Southwest Florida residents offered a cherished escape from the mainland, the storm had laid waste to beloved landmarks, including the fishing pier and Times Square, the communal gathering spot where sunset was celebrated each night. Several residents of the island reported not hearing from friends who rode out the storm there. “When you look at Fort Myers Beach in particular, there’s no words to describe it,” Sheriff Carmine Marceno of Lee County said after taking a helicopter tour of his county, where Hurricane Ian came ashore as a Category 4 hurricane on Wednesday with winds up to 155 miles per hour. The causeway to nearby Sanibel Island had a missing section and a collapsed section, said Jared Moskowitz, Florida’s former emergency management chief, who flew over the area on Thursday. “Fort Myers Beach and Sanibel Island look like they will need to be 80 percent rebuilt,” he estimated. The storm’s heavy blow to infrastructure complicated efforts to gauge the damage — early estimates said insured losses could reach up to $40 billion — and to reach hard-hit barrier islands, where homes and businesses were now heaps of wood pulp and broken concrete. Cell service was spotty or nonexistent up and down the coast, another agonizing impediment to residents’ efforts to seek help or reach missing family members. “You’re powerless to help,” said Julie Hittle, who lives in Texas and has been anxiously waiting for updates from her brother, who fled his flooding apartment in Naples by crawling out a window and onto the roof of a minivan. When a flicker of cell service returned on Thursday evening, her brother, Chip Aldridge, 56, recounted how he, his fiancée and dog, Kobi, had walked two miles through the storm and ended up at a La Quinta Inn, where they were now staying because their apartment was a mildewy shambles. Mr. Aldridge had lost everything in Hurricane Irma in 2017, and was now facing the prospect of starting over, once again. “We’re survivors,” Mr. Aldridge said in a telephone interview. “Last night was shock and just exhaustion. This morning was, OK, what’s next? Tomorrow we go face the actual reality.” The economic toll of the storm in a region heavily dependent on tourism and recreation was only beginning to be felt. Universal Studios in Orlando had not announced when it would reopen, though Disney said its theme parks appeared to have minimal structural damage and would start to reopen on Friday. On both the east and west coasts, beachside bars, boardwalks and piers that had been bustling with tourists a week ago were now a wasteland of muddy debris. At least 2.6 million people remained without power on Thursday, though Florida officials said there were 20,000 utility workers poised to start getting power back on. The storm severed sections of two bridges connecting mainland Florida to barrier islands in the Gulf of Mexico and reduced some roads to rubble while littering others with trees and power lines. Rescuers were arriving by air and sea to reach people who had not evacuated. Across the region on Thursday, people waded back home and trudged up muddy, debris-covered streets that had been raging waterways just a day earlier to see what, if anything, had survived. In Port Charlotte, across a river from where the storm made landfall, Teresa Madden and her husband slipped on waders to slog through thigh-deep brown water — risking encounters with red ants, snakes and the two alligators known to live in the lake at their community for people 55 and older. The water had spared most of the homes, but one had been destroyed by the wind, its roof gashed open to reveal the remnants of a dining room. A clock still hung on the wall, but most everything else lay in tatters on the sodden grass: a flower pot, socks, a festive tinsel leprechaun. Elsewhere in the complex, Sarah Walters, 41, arrived in flip-flops and cutoff shorts to assess the damage to her mother’s house. It could have been worse, she said. But she still could not reach her mother, who had evacuated to her nurse’s house. Ms. Walters spent the storm at her own home about a mile away, with her husband and stepdaughter bracing against their front door for three hours to keep it from blowing in. “We just have to figure out a way to fix things,” she said. People who decided not to evacuate described harrowing escapes through chest-high floodwaters. Some made it out on a kayak or jet skied down a four-lane road. Some huddled on top of cars. Some had to flee to their second floors and watched couches and furniture float through their living rooms. In Naples Park, Joe Lema, 76, and his wife, Joyce, 70, spent four hours trapped inside their house by the force and weight of the rising water outside. Unable to open the doors, they tried to break their expensive hurricane impact windows, to no avail. They called 911, but they were told it was too late. “I said a lot of prayers,” Mrs. Lema said on Thursday. They had been in the evacuation zone but said nothing like this had ever happened since buying the home in 1986. Chad Sulkes thought he had been prepared for the worst, having bought a generator, gas, food and a portable air-conditioner until Ian’s storm surge began to invade his home in Naples Park, forcing him to flee into the storm. “There’s no items you can buy to prepare for that,” he said. “The only preparation is to leave.” On Thursday, he returned to the house he rents on Seagull Drive to find it in complete disarray. His boat in the canal out back was sinking. All his furniture and belongings were strewn about, covered in mud. The floor was slick with mud tainted with gasoline. Cities farther inland and along the Atlantic Coast appeared to have endured the storm’s lacerating winds with less damage than the southwestern coast where Ian first made landfall. But at points during the day, heavy rains fueled warnings from the National Weather Service of “widespread, life-threatening catastrophic flooding” in Central Florida. At the Avante, an assisted-living facility in Orlando, rescuers sloshed through floods to evacuate the facility’s 100 residents, carrying some out on stretchers as rain and wind whirled around them. Some hospitals and nursing homes were managing to run on generator power while patients from at least 16 hospitals and an additional 3,500 nursing-home residents were evacuated from other facilities in southwestern Florida, industry officials said. There were surreal moments of destruction mixed with normalcy. The streets of downtown Fort Myers were littered with plant matter and other debris from the surging Caloosahatchee River. But the waters had receded by Thursday afternoon and several restaurants were open and packed with people in undershirts, shorts and flip flops looking for something warm to eat. Diane Dorsey, 57, and her family moved to Fort Myers in 2019 from Maryland, considering it a pre-retirement adventure, never...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Biden Will Visit Puerto Rico And Florida To Assess Damage From Storms.
Trump Says New York AG Has No Case 'if He Invokes Disclaimer Clause'
Trump Says New York AG Has No Case 'if He Invokes Disclaimer Clause'
Trump Says New York AG Has No Case 'if He Invokes Disclaimer Clause' https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-says-new-york-ag-has-no-case-if-he-invokes-disclaimer-clause/ Washington: Former US President Donald Trump has claimed his disclaimer clause in agreements with lenders will dismiss New York (NY) Attorney General (AG) Letitia James’ tax fraud case against him. James had sued Trump and his three grown up children of perpetuating a fraud over a decade by overstating the net worth of their assets and securing loans and evading taxes. Trump’s net-worth statements start with disclaimers that essentially warn lenders: “Check my math.” The statements were unsealed last week as part of James’ fraud lawsuit against Trump. Trump told Sean Hannity of Fox News the disclaimers absolve him of any responsibility and the AG has “no case”. Trump hunched forward in his gold-painted, spindle-backed chair under the chandeliers of Mar-a-Lago’s glittering grand ballroom and told Sean Hannity why New York’s Attorney General, who’d sued him earlier that day, has “no case”, says the Business Insider. “We have a disclaimer,” Trump told the Fox News host. “Right on the front. And it basically says, you know, get your own people. You’re at your own risk … It may be way off.” Trump was describing the disclaimer that fills the second and third pages of his annual proclamations of net-worth – the 20-page “Statements of Financial Condition” at the center of AG Letitia James’ massive lawsuit against the former president, his three oldest kids, and his real estate and golf resort empire. James calls these statements “fraudulent”, and says each one is filled with wildly exaggerated math – implausible numbers that misled banks into lending Trump and the New York-incorporated Trump Organization hundreds of millions of dollars over the past decade. But Trump told Hannity none of that would matter because each Statement of Financial Condition begins with a warning. “Be careful,” Trump told Hannity the disclaimers essentially say. “Because it may not be accurate. It may be way off … get your own people. Use your own lawyers,” Trump added. “Don’t rely on us.” Former financial crimes prosecutor Armen Morian, who worked for the AGs office from 2006 to 2019 before founding Morian Law, believes Trump has a point. Sure, the annual Statements of Financial Condition may be filled with real whoppers, including all those years – from 2012 through 2016 – when they tripled the actual square footage of Trump’s triplex atop Manhattan’s Trump Tower, adding as much as $200 million a year to the former president’s net worth. But each year, the disclaimers put banks on notice to double check the numbers before relying on them in deciding how much to lend and at what rate of interest, Morian said. And if the banks cut Trump a good deal anyway, despite this warning – as Deutsche Bank did year after year, pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into his Miami golf club, his skyscraper in Chicago and the Old Post Office in DC – then they did so with eyes wide open, he said. “What the disclaimers are saying is, ‘Beware when you read these financial statements,’” Morian said, after a decade’s worth of the statements were unsealed in court filings last week. “That’s all it has to do,” he said of their disclaimers, affixed to the front of each year’s statement by longtime Trump accountants Mazars USA. “And that doesn’t cover just Mazars,” added Morian, whose AG financial fraud cases included the 13-year prosecution of insurance magnate Maurice “Hank” Greenberg. “It covers Trump.” Morian noted that these are “robust” disclaimers – set down right in the open, not hidden in fine print. “We have not audited or reviewed the accompanying financial statement,” their first paragraphs say, in boilerplate language repeated through the years. And so, the accountants at Mazars, “do not express an opinion or provide any assurance about whether the financial statement is in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.” Deutsche Bank in particular – the largest single lender to the Trump Organization and Donald Trump over the last ten years – is a “sophisticated counterparty,” Morian said. They well knew Trump’s reputation for puffery in an industry – real estate – already known for puffery. “All of that,” Morian said, “essentially renders the disclaimer an absolute defence.” A license to exaggerate? To lie? So, a business can lie about its worth? And get away with it, just by warning, as Trump put it, “It may not be accurate. It may be way off?” “There is something unsatisfying about it,” Morian conceded. “But I have a hard time taking off my hat as a lawyer. This is a legal question, and it turns on facts and the law. That’s the game we’re playing in, and that’s the game the attorney general is playing in also, the Insider said. “It’s shocking that they brought this case,” Morian said. But not everyone agrees, least of all the former president’s fixer-turned-critic, Michael Cohen, who turned over Trump’s Statements of Financial Condition for 2011 through 2013 as part of his testimony before Congress in 2019. “The attorney general was not filing a 200-plus page lawsuit, after three years of investigatory work, to have her case negated by a disclaimer,” Cohen told Insider. That disclaimer was written and signed by Mazars in order to protect Mazars, not Trump, Cohen noted. These are not our numbers, Mazars essentially tells would-be lenders, and you’ll get no assurances from us on their accuracy. Diana Florence, a former Manhattan prosecutor for complex financial fraud cases, agreed. “Sure, they’re a hurdle,” she told Insider of the disclaimers. “They do weaken the case.” But that’s not the full story, she said. The AG is alleging that ten years of Trump’s Statements of Financial Condition contain a total of some 200 false and misleading valuations involving 23 properties. Deutsche Bank can’t be expected “to literally chase down everything in the statement and verify it,” Florence said. And while James’ lawsuit shines its widest, brightest spotlight on the Statements of Financial Condition, it suggests that other paperwork could put Trump at greater risk. Through the years, Trump or his children signed multiple documents that personally attest to Mazars and to Deutsche Bank that the Statements of Financial Condition are accurate, or at least “fairly” represent Trump’s worth, the lawsuit alleges. And those “boilerplate disclaimers?” James’ lawsuit is aware of them. “The disclaimers … do not give license to Mr. Trump or the Trump Organization to submit to their accountant’s fraudulent and misleading asset valuations for inclusion in the Statements,” the lawsuit says. “Trump could say, ‘Yeah, if Deutsche Bank were really worried, they could have asked for more things or could have turned us down. They didn’t do any due diligence,’” Florence said. “But it doesn’t change what the case is about, which is patterns of fraud.” The AGs office and lawyers for Trump did not immediately respond to requests for comment. In February, Mazars quit working for Trump entirely – in the middle of preparing his and Melania Trump’s tax returns – and issued the ultimate disclaimer by saying that the last 10 years of Statements of Financial Condition “should no longer be relied upon.” In declining to comment, a Mazars spokesperson said, “We remain committed to fulfilling all of our professional and legal obligations.” Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Says New York AG Has No Case 'if He Invokes Disclaimer Clause'
Trump Abortion Loom Large In Congressional Race
Trump Abortion Loom Large In Congressional Race
Trump, Abortion Loom Large In Congressional Race https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-abortion-loom-large-in-congressional-race/ (WEHT)- Former President Donald Trump may not appear on any ballot this year, but his presence is still very much felt across the country and across western Kentucky. After all, incumbent 1st District Rep. James Comer says 75 percent of his district likes and approves the ex-President, while the 25 percent dislikes and disapproves of him. Should Comer, who was first elected to Congress in 2016, and the Republicans regain control of the House of Representatives for the first time since before the 2018 midterms, Comer says he could stand to receive a major promotion: chairing the crucial House Oversight Committee. What does Comer plan to do with that power? Well, in addition to “having the taxpayer’s back,” Comer says people should get used to seeing Hunter Biden before the committee for an investigation into his background. Comer, who claims to be in possession of Hunter Biden’s laptop hard drive, says the President’s son has used his family name for personal gain, potentially compromising America’s energy and international interests. However, Comer’s opponent- Democrat Jimmy Ausbrooks says the inner workings of Hunter Biden or his laptop are not the main priority for him or for voters in the 1st Congressional District. Ausbrooks says voters in the district that weaves its way from far western Kentucky, to the western parts of the Kentucky Tri-State area, along the Tennessee border, around Bowling Green, and into parts of central Kentucky, would rather focus on kitchen table issues. That, Ausbrooks explains, means a focus on how voters will be able to afford food on their table, gas in their car, and reliable WiFi in rural areas. In fact, Ausbrooks says he’s rarely, if ever, seen Comer in the district since he was elected. Ausbrooks says abortion access in the wake of the Supreme Court overturning Roe vs. Wade in the summer is also a key concern for a multitude of reasons. Not only have women lost the right to an abortion in several states, Ausbrooks notes, but there could be a new focus on overturning other rights provided by the Supreme Court but not codified into federal law- perhaps including same-sex marriage. Still, Comer says those concerns are overblown- as are concerns regarding a nationwide ban on abortion or contraceptives. Comer notes that the courts have already ruled on abortion and states are left to themselves to either ban it, like Indiana has attempted, or keep it legal, as Illinois has. However, Ausbrooks doesn’t believe Comer. Indeed, Ausbrooks says he doesn’t believe much of what Comer says anyways and warns that the “majority is letting the minority take away our rights.” And while Comer says he’d rather focus on reducing government spending and the federal deficit, Ausbrooks says he wants to inspire others through his campaign and hopes someone out there uses his campaign to make a difference in their own community. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Abortion Loom Large In Congressional Race
Today In History: October 3 MLB
Today In History: October 3 MLB
Today In History: October 3, MLB https://digitalarkansasnews.com/today-in-history-october-3-mlb/ Today is Monday, Oct. 3, the 276th day of 2022. There are 89 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Oct. 3, 1995, the jury in the O.J. Simpson murder trial in Los Angeles found the former football star not guilty of the 1994 slayings of his former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and Ronald Goldman. (Simpson was later found liable for damages in a civil trial). On this date: In 1941, Adolf Hitler declared in a speech in Berlin that Russia had been “broken” and would “never rise again.” In 1944, during World War II, U.S. Army troops cracked the Siegfried Line north of Aachen, Germany. In 1951, the New York Giants captured the National League pennant by a score of 5-4 as Bobby Thomson hit a three-run homer off Ralph Branca of the Brooklyn Dodgers in the “shot heard ’round the world.” In 1961, “The Dick Van Dyke Show,” also starring Mary Tyler Moore, made its debut on CBS. In 1970, the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) was established under the Department of Commerce. In 1974, Frank Robinson was named major league baseball’s first Black manager as he was placed in charge of the Cleveland Indians. In 1981, Irish nationalists at the Maze Prison near Belfast, Northern Ireland, ended seven months of hunger strikes that had claimed 10 lives. In 1990, West Germany and East Germany ended 45 years of postwar division, declaring the creation of a reunified country. In 2001, the Senate approved an agreement normalizing trade between the United States and Vietnam. In 2003, a tiger attacked magician Roy Horn of duo “Siegfried & Roy” during a performance in Las Vegas, leaving the superstar illusionist in critical condition on his 59th birthday. In 2008, O.J. Simpson was found guilty of robbing two sports-memorabilia dealers at gunpoint in a Las Vegas hotel room. (Simpson was later sentenced to nine to 33 years in prison; he was granted parole in July 2017 and released from prison in October of that year.) In 2011, an Italian appeals court freed Amanda Knox of Seattle after four years in prison, tossing murder convictions against Knox and an ex-boyfriend in the stabbing of their British roommate, Meredith Kercher. Ten years ago: An aggressive Mitt Romney sparred with President Barack Obama on the economy and domestic issues in their first campaign debate. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton promised a full and transparent probe of the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, that killed the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other Americans. Five years ago: President Donald Trump, visiting Puerto Rico in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria, congratulated the U.S. island territory for escaping the higher death toll of what he called “a real catastrophe like Katrina”; at a church used to distribute supplies, Trump handed out flashlights and tossed rolls of paper towels into the friendly crowd. The United States expelled 15 of Cuba’s diplomats to protest Cuba’s failure to protect Americans from unexplained attacks in Havana. Yahoo announced that the largest data breach in history had affected all 3 billion accounts on its service, not the 1 billion it had revealed earlier. One year ago: A report from the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists found that hundreds of world leaders, politicians, billionaires, religious leaders and drug dealers had been hiding investments in mansions, beachfront property, yachts and other assets for decades, using shell companies and offshore accounts to keep trillions of dollars out of government treasuries; those identified as beneficiaries of the secret accounts included Jordan’s King Abdullah II and former U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair. An EgyptAir jet landed in Tel Aviv, making the first official direct flight by the Egyptian national carrier since the two countries signed a 1979 peace treaty. Tom Brady rallied the Tampa Bay Buccaneers to a 19-17 victory over the Patriots on a rainy Sunday night in his return to New England. Today’s Birthdays: Composer Steve Reich is 86. Rock and roll star Chubby Checker is 81. Actor Alan Rachins is 80. Former Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., is 79. Singer Lindsey Buckingham is 73. Jazz musician Ronnie Laws is 72. Blues singer Keb’ Mo’ is 71. Former astronaut Kathryn Sullivan is 71. Baseball Hall of Famer Dave Winfield is 71. Baseball Hall of Famer Dennis Eckersley is 68. Civil rights activist Rev. Al Sharpton is 68. Actor Hart Bochner is 66. Actor Peter Frechette is 66. World Golf Hall of Famer Fred Couples is 63. Actor-comedian Greg Proops is 63. Actor Jack Wagner is 63. Actor/musician Marcus Giamatti is 61. Rock musician Tommy Lee is 60. Actor Clive Owen is 58. Actor Janel Moloney is 53. Singer Gwen Stefani (No Doubt) is 53. Pop singer Kevin Richardson is 51. Rock singer G. Love is 50. Actor Keiko Agena is 49. Actor Neve Campbell is 49. Actor Lena Headey is 49. Singer India.Arie is 47. Rapper Talib Kweli is 47. Actor Alanna Ubach is 47. Actor Seann (cq) William Scott is 46. Actor Shannyn Sossamon is 44. Rock musician Josh Klinghoffer (Red Hot Chili Peppers) is 43. Actor Seth Gabel is 41. Rock musician Mark King (Hinder) is 40. Actor Erik Von Detten is 40. Actor Tessa Thompson is 39. Country singer Drake White is 39. Actor Meagan Holder is 38. Actor Christopher Marquette is 38. Actor-singer Ashlee Simpson is 38. Rapper A$AP Rocky is 34. Actor Alicia Vikander is 34. Actor Noah Schnapp (TV: “Stranger Things”) is 18. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Today In History: October 3 MLB
Hackers Release Stolen LAUSD Data After District Refuses To Pay Ransom
Hackers Release Stolen LAUSD Data After District Refuses To Pay Ransom
Hackers Release Stolen LAUSD Data After District Refuses To Pay Ransom https://digitalarkansasnews.com/hackers-release-stolen-lausd-data-after-district-refuses-to-pay-ransom/ LOS ANGELES (KABC) — Hackers have released data stolen in a cyberattack against the Los Angeles Unified School District, Superintendent Alberto Carvalho confirmed Sunday. “Unfortunately, as expected, data was recently released by a criminal organization,” Carvalho said in a statement. “In partnership with law enforcement, our experts are analyzing the full extent of this data release.” The data was released Saturday — two days before a deadline previously given by the hackers — after Carvalho’s stated refusal to pay ransom to an international hacking syndicate. The group claiming responsibility for the cyberattack had previously set a Monday deadline for the district pay a ransom to the organization. In a dark web post detected and reprinted by Brett Callow of the cybersecurity firm Emsisoft, the hacking syndicate Vice Society listed the LAUSD as one of “our partners,” and stated, “The papers will be published by London time on October 4, 2022 at 12:00 a.m.” The post did not give any indication about what information had been obtained or what would be published. Carvalho previously acknowledged that the district received a ransom demand from the group responsible for the Labor Day weekend hack — which he declined to name. “We can acknowledge … that there has been communication from this actor (hacker) and we have been responsive without engaging in any type of negotiations,” he told reporters. “With that said, we can acknowledge at this point … that a financial demand has been made by this entity. We have not responded to that demand.” He did not provide specifics about the demand. Carvalho told the Los Angeles Times on Friday that the district would not pay the ransom demand or negotiate with the hackers. “What I can tell you is that the demand — any demand — would be absurd,” he told the Times. “But this level of demand was, quite frankly, insulting. And we’re not about to enter into negotiations with that type of entity.” A hotline will be available starting Monday at 6:00 a.m. “This hotline will assist those from our school communities who may have questions or need additional support,” Carvalho said. The telephone number for the incident response hotline is (855) 926-1129. Hours of operation will be 6:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding major U.S. holidays. City News Service contributed to this report. Copyright © 2022 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Hackers Release Stolen LAUSD Data After District Refuses To Pay Ransom
Buy This Hair-Care Stock. It Looks Like A Beauty Of A Bargain.
Buy This Hair-Care Stock. It Looks Like A Beauty Of A Bargain.
Buy This Hair-Care Stock. It Looks Like A Beauty Of A Bargain. https://digitalarkansasnews.com/buy-this-hair-care-stock-it-looks-like-a-beauty-of-a-bargain/ Updated October 2, 2022 / Original September 30, 2022 Order Reprints Print Article Hair-care firm Olaplex Holdings is an emerging growth company with astonishingly high profit margins. Photograph by Maggie DiMarco and Scott Semler Jordan Goldstein always wanted to pull off that wavy, fresh-off-the-beach look, but his long, dry hair made it implausible. That was until last year, when a barber in Santa Cruz, Calif., recommended a new hair-care line that promised to bring his tresses back to life. Although the 33-year-old environmental scientist went in just for a trim, Goldstein left with two hair products made by Olaplex Holdings (ticker: OLPX), an emerging growth company with astonishingly high profit margins that made its market debut a year ago. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Buy This Hair-Care Stock. It Looks Like A Beauty Of A Bargain.
Legacy Harbour Marina Wrecked By Hurricane Ian In Ft. Myers Florida
Legacy Harbour Marina Wrecked By Hurricane Ian In Ft. Myers Florida
Legacy Harbour Marina Wrecked By Hurricane Ian In Ft. Myers, Florida https://digitalarkansasnews.com/legacy-harbour-marina-wrecked-by-hurricane-ian-in-ft-myers-florida/ The Daily Beast Rick Scott Panics When Asked About Trump’s Racist Truth Social Post CNNSen. Rick Scott (R-FL) tried his best at justifying former President Donald Trump’s racist Truth Social post from Friday, in which the ex-commander in chief said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell had a “DEATH WISH” and called his former transportation secretary Elaine Chao “Coco Chow.” The senator, flailing after being asked during a CNN appearance about the post, defended Trump’s predilection for “nicknames.”Trump Claims McConnell has ‘Death Wish’ in Stinging Attack“As you know, the pre ABC News Rick Scott responds to Trump’s ‘death wish’ attack on Mitch McConnell Florida Sen. Rick Scott, a member of Republican leadership in the upper chamber, said Sunday that he does not “condone violence” after Donald Trump lashed out at Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell and suggested McConnell had a “death wish”– but Scott stopped short of condemning the former president. Trump, in a post on his Truth Social website last week, wrote that McConnell must have a “death wish” after supporting a continuing resolution to fund the federal government. Trump went on to criticize McConnell’s wife in racist terms, writing that he should “seek help and advise [sic] from his China loving wife, Coco Chow!” Trump was referring to Elaine Chao, who is Taiwanese. Miami Herald Two disturbances are in the Atlantic Ocean. What the forecast shows A pair of disturbances are in the Atlantic Ocean Sunday afternoon, one of which the National Hurricane Center estimates has a high chance of becoming a storm system by next weekend and one of which has a high chance of becoming nothing in its 2 p.m. update. PureWow This Intense Gerard Butler Thriller Has Overtaken ‘Blonde’ as the #1 Movie on Netflix One of the most highly-anticipated films of 2022 was Blonde—a Netflix drama based on the Joyce Carol Oates novel of the same name, which tells a fictionalized version of Marilyn Monroe’s life and stars Ana de Armas (Knives Out) in the lead role. And although the film met a mixed reception (including from PureWow) upon its release, it still managed to sit strong at the number-one spot on Netflix’s most-watched movies list from the day it premiered. That was, until a new movie just overtook it. Th Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Legacy Harbour Marina Wrecked By Hurricane Ian In Ft. Myers Florida
Parallel Paths For Tuberville Walker Senate Bids
Parallel Paths For Tuberville Walker Senate Bids
Parallel Paths For Tuberville, Walker Senate Bids https://digitalarkansasnews.com/parallel-paths-for-tuberville-walker-senate-bids/ ATLANTA — Georgia voters will decide in five weeks whether to put a former football star in the U.S. Senate.  First-time candidates can and do parlay their careers in football into careers in the U.S. Senate. Just ask folks in the state of Alabama. When Herschel Walker seeks votes in Georgia – voters often flock to him because of his celebrity status as a star running back for the University of Georgia football team. When Tommy Tuberville sought votes in Alabama in 2020 – he drew votes from residents who remembered his successful 10 years as a football coach at Auburn University. “It’s not unusual for celebrities to parlay their success from one arena to get into success in the political arena,” said Andra Gillespie, a political scientist at Emory University. Athletes from Baseball Hall of Famer Jim Bunning to football star Jack Kemp had long, successful careers in politics. Entertainment celebrities like Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump had the same cachet with voters.   Walker’s candidacy comes on the heels of Tuberville – who won votes in Alabama while turning down debates and mostly avoiding political reporters. Walker will skip an Atlanta Press Club debate this month, as he did in the primary–  though he’s accepting one debate in Savannah with Democrat Raphael Warnock. “Tommy Tuberville avoided interviews while running,” Gillespie said. “That helps to eliminate possibilities of candidates making gaffes.”  However, Walker is straying from Tuberville’s campaign model – created for a Republican running in a red state.   Walker started engaging reporters, especially after he won the Republican primary in May. Walker has been behind or tied with Warnock in most polls – and has had to take more risks than Tuberville did. Tuberville won in Alabama with the backing of Trump. Walker is running in Georgia because Trump talked up his candidacy. Yet, it will be Walker’s race to win or lose – five weeks from now. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Parallel Paths For Tuberville Walker Senate Bids
For 2024 AP Poll Jagan Looking To Project Father YSR As Trump Card
For 2024 AP Poll Jagan Looking To Project Father YSR As Trump Card
For 2024 AP Poll, Jagan Looking To Project Father YSR As Trump Card https://digitalarkansasnews.com/for-2024-ap-poll-jagan-looking-to-project-father-ysr-as-trump-card/ Over the past three years, the image of Jagan as a messiah of the poor has begun to take a beating; hence, YSR may be the best bet for the election this time In the 2024 elections, will CM Jagan Mohan Reddy return to power with his self-image or by leaning on the legacy of his father? File photo The next Andhra Pradesh Assembly election may still be two years away, but the ruling Yuvajana Sramika Rythu Congress Party (YSRC) is already setting the pitch for the poll battle, which is in sharp contrast with the one it successfully experimented with during the last state election. Ahead of the elections due in 2024, the party seems to have planned a radical shift in its poll strategy from the current Jagan-centric political discourse to the legacy politics revolving around YS Rajasekhar Reddy (YSR), father of Chief Minister Jagan Mohan Reddy. Recent developments hint at the party’s intent to project YSR as its trump card in order to come back to power for the second term. On September 21, the Jagan government set the cat among opposition Telugu Desam Party’s (TDP) pigeons by piloting a bill in the state assembly seeking to replace the name of Dr. NTR Health University with Dr. YSR. Five days later, Dadisetti Ramalingeswara Rao alias Raja attempted to accord demigod status to late YSR, former CM of the Congress, who was killed in a chopper crash in 2009, by spurning NT Rama Rao (NTR), a charismatic figure in Tollywood and the TDP founder. Also read: Jagan’s move to drop ‘NTR’ from varsity opens bigger battles “There is no match between YSR and NTR. After all, NTR was the most incapable person, falling prey to backstabbing politics twice (once at the hands of Nadendla Bhaskara Rao, second-in-command in his government way back in August, 1984, and later at the hands of his son-in-law N. Chandrababu Naidu in the same month in 1995),” said Raja. The minister sang paeans to YSR, describing him as a towering leader of the masses, who had a humane face. Advertisement The NTR vs YSR narrative These two instances set off a raging debate centering around the two personalities from different family backgrounds representing rival political parties. YSR was a diehard Congressman, who was known as a perennial dissident within his party. He came from Rayalaseema’s notorious factions; his father Raja Reddy was killed in faction feuds in his native Kadapa district. Hailing from Nimmakuru in coastal Andhra region, NTR, however, took a plunge into politics from the film field. After the Nadendla’s coup against his government, NTR emerged as a rallying point for all the anti-Congress opposition parties, breaking the Congress monopoly in national politics. After he lost power to his son-in-law in another coup, a section of leaders from the TDP, led by Naidu, took refuge in the Congress under YSR leadership. NTR’s widow, Lakshmi Parvathi, is currently heading the Telugu Academy while another admirer, Y Lakshmipathi (YLP), was appointed Chairman of the Official Language Commission in the Jagan Mohan Reddy government. YLP quit his post a few days ago, unable to digest the dropping of NTR’s name from the health university. Assembly Speaker T Sitaram also defected from the TDP. Aided by poll strategist Prashant Kishor, the Jagan camp was at its best alienating Naidu from the admirers of NTR spread across Andhra and Telangana, holding him responsible for his mentor not being honoured with Bharat Ratna posthumously. To pursue this objective Jagan’s camp sought to see both NTR and YSR on the same page, projecting them as saviours of the poor. The move is ostensibly aimed to wean away Kammas, an affluent community which treats NTR as their icon, from the TDP fold and also his admirers. This card worked to some extent in the elections in 2019 that indicated the Jagan’s landslide victory. Also read: Jagan Mohan Reddy targets Chandrababu Naidu on latters home turf Discarding YSR in 2019 polls Jagan drew lessons from his party’s rout in 2014 elections, which he fought with a promise to deliver Rajanna Rajyam, a welfare state, replicating the one YSR delivered during his stint as the CM, with greater space for Christians and Muslim minorities. YSR himself was a converted Christian. During his regime, YSS has implemented a slew of welfare schemes such as Rajiv Aarogyasri, fee reimbursement for students of professional colleges and free power for agriculture. The YSR Congress tried to take a leaf out of YSR’s book in that election but its plans came cropper at the hustings. When Jagan was in jail for 16 months in connection with charges of money-laundering and acquisition of illicit wealth, his mother Vijayamma and sister Sharmila, presently leading YSR Congress Telangana Party inTelangana, campaigned for the party with Bible in hands. This strategy failed to work, as the majority Hindus did not vote for the YSRCP. This indicated the ignominious defeat of Vijayamma, the party honourary president then, at the hands of BJP candidate K Haribabu in Visakhapatnam Lok Sabha segment. The defeat has led Jagan to realize the fact that his father YSR was dated. Jagan as his party’s poster boy Subsequently, Jagan has got out of his father’s shadow to emerge as a self-made leader in 2019 elections through his marathon Praja Sankalpa Yatra with a catchy slogan- Jagan Kavali and Jagan Ravali, replacing his early promise of Rajanna Rajyam as per Kishor’s advice, observed an analyst with YSRC’s leanings. Consequently, Jagan has created his own brand in his three years of rule, with several schemes carrying bearing the imprint of his name. The schemes include Jagananna Amma Vodi, which extends financial assistance of Rs 15,000 to each school-going child; Jagananna Vasati Deevena; Jagananna Vidya Deevena, Jagananna Chedodu, Jagananna Thodu, Jagananna Gorumudda and Jagananna Vidya Kanuka. Change in the perception battle? Jagan has seemingly been leaning back to his father YSR now as Naidu got back to his mentor NTR after his rout in 2004. Reddy’s U-turn has left several sections disappointed, with his three-year rule triggering strong anti-incumbency, an analyst Raka Sudhakar, told The Federal. In the last three years, the image of Jaganmohan Reddy as a messiah of the poor has reportedly begun to take a beating. As a senior YSR Congress leader, considered to be a party’s think tank put it, the positive side of the government gets adversely impacted by a “lumpen” elements mobbing around Jagan Reddy. Besides, charges of corruption in the government that forced Jagan to drop a good number of ministers in his recent cabinet reshuffle also dented Reddy’s image, it is said. Faced with the cash-starved state finances, the Jagan Reddy government keeps pumping in huge amount of money into welfare schemes. But the satisfaction levels among the beneficiaries appeared to be quite disheartening. Also read: Jagan’s Mission 175 leaves Chandrababu struggling to save Kuppam turf According to official data, the government spent Rs 2.70 lakh crore on welfare schemes from June 2019 to August 2022. The YSRC government’s heavy tilt towards welfare at the cost of development apparently leaves heartburn among middle and upper middle class sections, which constitute 20 percent of the state’s populace, CPI-M leader Ch. Babu Rao told The Federal. As welfare takes top priority over the infrastructure development and industrial growth under the Jagan’s regime, youths are getting disillusioned. Besides, the eligibility criteria with lot of restrictions for availing the welfare schemes, leaves several people high and dry. Dysfunctional party leadership What is appalling is that the party top brass in the YSRC party became almost dysfunctional down the line after it came to power. The strengthening of the party is no longer the priority as Jagan wanted to run the show with one or two advisors, even keeping his cabinet ministers in the dark. The Gadapa Gadapaku Mana Prabhutvam—which means ‘our government to every doorstep’ in Telugu — a marathon programme launched on May 11, has exposed the limitations and loopholes of the party’s organization, as well as the style of functioning of its lawmakers. The programme aimed to take feedback from the people on welfare schemes through party legislators and workers. But this objective was not met because of the poor participation of party workers. Even the CM, at a review meeting a few days back, identified these shortcomings and told nearly 30 lawmakers to improve their performance in their respective assembly segments. NTR died nearly three decades ago. And the new generation is hardly aware of him. YSR, on the other hand, is still relevant as a vast number of students who benefited from the fee reimbursement scheme still remember him. As also those who received treatment under Rajiv Aarogyasri scheme. Therefore, YSR may be the best bet for the election this time, a party worker said. It is to be seen whether Jagan will return to power with his self-image or that of his father. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
For 2024 AP Poll Jagan Looking To Project Father YSR As Trump Card
Trump Hasn't Handed Over All White House Records Says National Archives | World
Trump Hasn't Handed Over All White House Records Says National Archives | World
Trump Hasn't Handed Over All White House Records, Says National Archives | World https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-hasnt-handed-over-all-white-house-records-says-national-archives-world/ Washington: Former US President Donald Trump has not handed over all the records from the White House and some remain outstanding, the National Archives has told the House Oversight Committee. “Certain presidential records from the Trump administration remain outstanding, citing information that some White House staff used non-official electronic systems to conduct official business,” it said, reported CNN. In a Friday letter to the panel’s chairwoman, New York Democrat Carolyn Maloney, the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) said it had been unable to obtain records from a number of former officials and will continue to pursue the return of similar types of Presidential records from former officials. But, “while there is no easy way to establish absolute accountability, we do know that we do not have custody of everything we should”, it said. Last month, Maloney requested in a letter that NARA seek “personal certification” from former President Trump that he has turned over all presidential records he “illegally removed” from the White House. The Archives letter is the latest development in the years-long pursuit from NARA to reclaim all records that belong to the federal government that were created during the Trump administration, CNN said. NARA’s back-and-forth with Trump and his liaisons led earlier this year to the return by former administration officials and lawyers of boxes and envelopes full of records. NARA’s findings in one of those collections prompted a Justice Department investigation into the mishandling of classified records and a search in August at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s Florida beach club. In its letter to Maloney, NARA cited a lawsuit filed last summer by the Justice Department asking a judge to order former Trump White House trade adviser Peter Navarro to return federal records the DOJ says he wrongfully kept after leaving the administration. The DOJ said Navarro used a private mail account for presidential business, “such as the need for ventilators, the creation and deployment of National-Guard based rapid response teams, and the use of hydroxychloroquine to treat Covid”, the DOJ filing said. According to the lawsuit, the National Archives learned of Navarro’s private account from the House committee investigating the government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic. “It is outrageous that these records remain unaccounted for 20 months after former President Trump left office,” Maloney said in a statement on Saturday. “Former President Trump and his senior staff have shown an utter disregard for the rule of law and our national security by failing to return presidential records as the law requires,” she said. (IANS) Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Hasn't Handed Over All White House Records Says National Archives | World
AP News Summary At 9:51 P.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 9:51 P.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 9:51 P.m. EDT https://digitalarkansasnews.com/ap-news-summary-at-951-p-m-edt/ Bolsonaro, Lula headed to runoff after tight Brazil election RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Brazil’s top two presidential candidates will face each other in a runoff vote after neither got enough support to win outright in an election to decide if the country returns a leftist to the helm of the world’s fourth-largest democracy or keeps the far-right incumbent in office. With 98.8% of he votes tallied on Sunday’s election, former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva had 48% support and incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro had 43.6% support. Brazil’s election authority said the result made a second round vote between the two candidates a mathematical certainty. . Nine other candidates were also competing. 10 torture sites in 1 town: Russia sowed pain, fear in Izium IZIUM, Ukraine (AP) — An Associated Press investigation has found that Russian torture in the Ukrainian town of Izium was arbitrary, widespread and absolutely routine for both civilians and soldiers. AP journalists located 10 torture sites in the town, including a deep sunless pit in a residential compound, a clammy underground jail that reeked of urine, a medical clinic, and a kindergarten. AP also spoke to 15 survivors of Russian torture and confirmed the deaths of eight men. All but one were civilians. The AP also found a former Ukrainian soldier who was tortured three times hiding in a monastery, and connected him with loved ones. The town has now been liberated by Ukrainian forces. Ukraine presses on with counteroffensive; Russia uses drones KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia has attacked the Ukrainian president’s hometown with suicide drones. This comes as Ukraine has pushed ahead with its counteroffensive that has embarrassed the Kremlin. Ukraine took back control of the strategic eastern city of Lyman, which Russia had been using as a transport and logistics hub. That’s a new blow to the Kremlin as it seeks to escalate the war by illegally annexing four regions of Ukraine. Photos circulating online pointed to some battlefield movement for Ukraine, showing Ukrainian soldiers entering what appeared to be newly retaken settlements in the south and east. Pope Francis, meanwhile, on Sunday decried Russia’s nuclear threats against the West and appealed to Russian President Vladimir Putin to stop “this spiral of violence and death.” 125 die as tear gas triggers crush at Indonesia soccer match MALANG, Indonesia (AP) — Police firing tear gas after an Indonesian soccer match in an attempt to stop violence triggered a disastrous crush of fans that has left at least 125 people dead. Attention immediately focused on police crowd-control measures at Saturday night’s match between host Arema FC of East Java’s Malang city and Persebaya Surabaya. Witnesses described officers beating them with sticks and shields before shooting tear gas canisters directly into the crowds. President Joko Widodo ordered an investigation of security procedures and the president of FIFA called the deaths “a dark day for all involved in football and a tragedy beyond comprehension.” While FIFA has no control over domestic games, it has advised against the use of tear gas at soccer stadiums. Feds vow major aid for Hurricane Ian victims amid rescues FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) — U.S. officials are vowing to unleash a massive amount of federal aid in response to Hurricane Ian as the death toll rises amid recovery efforts. The monster storm killed at least 68 people, including 61 in Florida. Hundreds of thousands of people and businesses remain without power. Officials warn that flooding could still worsen in parts of Florida because the rain that fell has nowhere to go. The weakened storm is still bringing havoc as it drifts north. The remnants are forming a nor’easter dumping rain on Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia and Pennsylvania. Rainfall on the already inundated Chesapeake Bay could lead to significant tidal flooding. Ian is long gone but water keeps rising in central Florida GENEVA, Fla. (AP) — Residents living in parts of central Florida donned fishing waders, boots and bug spray and canoed or kayaked their way to their homes on streets where floodwaters continued rising Sunday despite it being four days since Hurricane Ian tore through the state. The waters flooded homes and streets that had been passable just a day or two earlier. Ben Bertat found 4 inches of water in his house by Lake Harney off North Jungle street in a rural part of Seminole County north of Orlando after kayaking to it Sunday morning. Only a day earlier, there had been no water. Haiti reports cholera deaths for first time in 3 years PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Haiti’s government says at least eight people have died from cholera for the first time in three years, raising concerns about a potentially rapid spreading scenario and reviving memories of an epidemic that killed nearly 10,000 people a decade ago. The cases were reported in a community called Dekayet in southern Port-au-Prince and in the seaside slum of Cite de Soleil, where thousands of people live in cramped, unsanitary conditions. The deaths announced Sunday come as a lack of fuel and ongoing protests shut down the availability of basic services across Haiti, including medical care and clean water, which is key to helping fight cholera and keep patients alive. Ousted Burkina Faso leader leaves country for Togo OUAGADOUGOU, Burkina Faso (AP) — Diplomats say that Burkina Faso’s ousted coup leader Lt. Col. Paul Henri Sandaogo Damiba has left the country and headed to Togo. Mediators had said earlier Sunday that Damiba agreed to resign so long as his security and other conditions are met. The junta now in charge in Burkina Faso earlier in the day had declared that Capt. Ibrahim Traore was head of state. The formal announcement came after the new coup on Friday, the country’s second this year. Damiba, who came to power in a January coup, saw his popularity plummet as violence linked to Islamic extremists continued across the country. AP Top 25: Tide retakes No. 1 from UGA; Kansas snaps drought Alabama reclaimed No. 1 from Georgia in The Associated Press college football poll in one of the closest votes in the recent years. Two points separate the Crimson Tide from the Bulldogs. Six teams including Kansas made their season debut in the AP Top 25. The Jayhawks are ranked for the first time since 2009, which was the longest drought among current Power Five conference teams. The Crimson Tide received 25 first-place votes and 1,523 points. Georgia got 28 first-place votes to become the first team since Alabama in November 2019 to have the most first-place votes but not be No. 1. Trump: ‘King’ to some in Pennsylvania, but will it help GOP? MONONGAHELA, Pa. (AP) — The enthusiasm for Donald Trump’s brand of nationalist populism has cut into traditional Democratic strongholds in places such as Monongahela in western Pennsylvania. That’s where House Republicans recently outlined their election-year campaign agenda, called  “Commitment to America.” They’re hoping they can tap into the same political sentiment Trump used to attract voters. But it’s not clear whether the support that propelled Trump to the White House will be there on Election Day this November. Just as challenging for the Republican Party is whether Trump’s false claims of voter fraud will hurt the GOP if voters decide to sit out the election. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
AP News Summary At 9:51 P.m. EDT
Brazil Election: Ex-President Luiz Inácio Lula Da Silva Wins Vote But Not Outright Victory
Brazil Election: Ex-President Luiz Inácio Lula Da Silva Wins Vote But Not Outright Victory
Brazil Election: Ex-President Luiz Inácio Lula Da Silva Wins Vote But Not Outright Victory https://digitalarkansasnews.com/brazil-election-ex-president-luiz-inacio-lula-da-silva-wins-vote-but-not-outright-victory/ Brazil’s acrimonious presidential race will go to a second round after the former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva failed to secure the overall majority he needed to avoid a run-off with the far-right incumbent Jair Bolsonaro. With more than 99.5% of votes counted the leftist veteran had secured 48.3% of the vote, not enough to avoid the 30 October show down with his right-wing rival. Bolsonaro, who significantly out-performed pollsters’s predictions and will be buoyed by the result, received 43.3%. Addressing the media at a hotel in downtown São Paulo, Lula, who was president from 2003 until 2010, struck a defiant tone, declaring: “The struggle continues until our final victory.” “We are going to win these elections – this for us is simply extra time,” vowed Lula, who was barred from the 2018 election that saw Bolsonaro elected, on corruption charges that were later over-turned. Speaking on the eve of the election Lula said he was hopeful of a first round win but would redouble his efforts to reclaim power if a second round was needed. “I feel great hope that this election will be decided tomorrow, but if it isn’t we’ll have to behave like a football team when a match goes to extra time. We’ll rest for 15 minutes and then we’ll get back out onto the pitch to score the goals we didn’t score in normal time,” he told reporters. Gleisi Hoffmann, the president of Lula’s Workers’ party, told reporters the campaign was neither “sad or downcast” at the result and pointed to Lula’s more than 56 million votes. “Congratulations, president Lula, for your victory,” she declared. But the election result was a major blow to progresssive Brazilians who had been rooting for an emphatic victory over Bolsonaro, a former army captain who has repeatedly attacked the country’s democratic institutions and vandalized Brazil’s international reputation. Bolsonaro is also accused of wreaking havoc on the environment and catastrophically mishandling a Covid epidemic that killed nearly 700,000 Brazilians, by undermining vaccination and containment efforts and peddling quack cures. As she cast her vote for Lula on Sunday morning in São Paulo, restaurant host Gabriela Leoncio said of Bolsonaro’s administration: “It’s been a joke-slash-tragedy.” Despite that, Bolsonaro confounded the forecasts of pollsters in several key states, including Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo. Prominent Bolsonaristas were elected to Brazil’s congress and as state governors, including Bolsonaro’s former health minister, Eduardo Pazzuelo, who became a congressman for Rio, and his former environment minister Ricardo Salles. Pazzuelo was Bolsonaro’s Health Minister during the height of the pandemic that led to more than 685,000 deaths in Brazil. A former military general, he promoted quack cures such as hydroxychloroquine. Salles, meanwhile, was the Environment Minister who presided over a sharp rise in Amazonian deforestation. A Federal Police investigation accused the far-right ideologue of making it difficult for environmental crimes to be investigated. A separate inquiry said he was linked to illegal logging exports. He denied all the charges. Rio’s Bolsonaro-supporting governor Cláudio Castro was re-elected while one of Bolsonaro’s most controversial former ministers, the evangelical preacher Damares Alves, claimed a place in the senate. Tarcísio de Freitas, Bolsonaro’s candidate for the governorship of São Paulo, also performed better than pollsters predicted and will face Lula ally Fernando Haddad in a second round. “The far-right will be thrilled,” said the political scientist Christian Lynch. Thiago Amparo, an academic and columnist for the Folha de São Paulo newspaper, said the right’s stronger-than-forecast showing showed Bolsonaro and Bolsonarismo were “alive and kicking”. “There was a feeling among the left that Lula had a chance to win in the first round … the results show that it was wishful thinking to imagine the election would serve as a way to punish Bolsonaro for his disastrous policies during the pandemic.” “I feel exhausted,” Amparo added. “But the results show we do not have the time to rest now. It is time to go out onto the streets… otherwise we are going to have a very dark future again.” “I think Bolsonaro has the momentum,” said Thomas Traumann, a Rio de Janeiro-based political observer, although he believed Lula was still the favourite. “It’s a very disappointing night for the left.” There was determination from Lula and his allies as the right-wing successes and the need for a second round became clear. “I think this is a chance that the Brazilian people are giving me,” said Lula before heading to a celebration with his supporters on São Paulo’s Paulista avenue. “The campaign begins tomorrow.” In Rio de Janeiro’s históric city center, a massive crowd of people, mostly clad in red, drank beer and danced samba as they awaited the final tally to appear on a screen overlooking the square. But the jubilant mood dampened when results showed Lula still nearly 2 percent shy of the majority he needed to avoid a runoff duel with Bolsonaro. “I’m disappointed,” said Kharine Gil, a 23-year-old university student. “Because we saw that Bolsonaro is stronger than we thought her was.” Elaine Azevedo, a 34-year-old security systems worker, looked defeated as she stared up at the towering screen showing the results. “I feel despair, pure despair,” said Azevedo, who was clad in red from head to toe and sported a hat with Lula’s name on it. “We all thought Lula would win easily.” But at a neighborhood bar about a block away, Eudacio Queiroz Alves, a 65-year-old retired driver, was celebrating. “We expected this,” he said. “The people are with Bolsonaro. I’m confident that he will win.” Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Brazil Election: Ex-President Luiz Inácio Lula Da Silva Wins Vote But Not Outright Victory
Trump Staffers Not Returning White House Records: National Archives
Trump Staffers Not Returning White House Records: National Archives
Trump Staffers Not Returning White House Records: National Archives https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-staffers-not-returning-white-house-records-national-archives/ WASHINGTON: Former President Donald Trump’s administration has not turned over all presidential records and the National Archives will consult with the Justice Department on whether to move to get them back, the agency has told Congress. A congressional panel on Sept 13 sought an urgent review by the National Archives and Records Administration after agency staff members acknowledged that they did not know if all presidential records from Trump’s White House had been turned over. “While there is no easy way to establish absolute accountability, we do know that we do not have custody of everything we should,” acting Archivist Debra Wall said in a letter Friday to the House Committee on Oversight and Reform. The Archives knows some White House staffers conducted official business on personal electronic messaging accounts that were that were not copied or forwarded to their official accounts, in violation of the Presidential Records Act, Wall said. “NARA has been able to obtain such records from a number of former officials and will continue to pursue the return of similar types of presidential records from former officials,” Wall said in the letter, first reported by the Wall Street Journal. She said the Archives, the federal agency charged with preserving government records, would consult with the Department of Justice on “whether to initiate an action for the recovery of records unlawfully removed.” The Oversight Committee shared a copy of the letter with Reuters but has not issued a statement on it yet. Representatives for Trump did not immediately return a request for comment on the matter. Trump is facing a criminal investigation by the Justice Department for retaining government records — some marked as highly classified, including “top secret” — at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida after leaving office in January 2021. The FBI seized more than 11,000 records, including about 100 documents marked as classified, in a court-approved Aug 8 search at Mar-a-Lago. Published in Dawn, October 3rd, 2022 Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Staffers Not Returning White House Records: National Archives
Asia-Pacific Markets Fall; Oil Up More Than 2% On Reports Of A Possible OPEC Supply Cut
Asia-Pacific Markets Fall; Oil Up More Than 2% On Reports Of A Possible OPEC Supply Cut
Asia-Pacific Markets Fall; Oil Up More Than 2% On Reports Of A Possible OPEC+ Supply Cut https://digitalarkansasnews.com/asia-pacific-markets-fall-oil-up-more-than-2-on-reports-of-a-possible-opec-supply-cut/ Pedestrians cross a road in front of the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE), operated by Japan Exchange Group Inc. (JPX), in Tokyo, Japan, on Thursday, Oct. 29, 2020. Kiyoshi Ota | Bloomberg via Getty Images Shares in the Asia-Pacific mostly fell on Monday as markets enter the last quarter of the year. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index was 0.8% lower in early trade. In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 gave up early gains to fall 0.4%. The Nikkei 225 in Japan fell more than 1% in early trade, but recovered slightly and was last up 0.18%, while the Topix index was fractionally lower. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan slipped 0.32%. Brent crude futures and West Texas Intermediate futures jumped on reports of a possible OPEC+ supply cut. Later in the week, Australia’s central bank will announce its interest rate decision, while several countries in Asia will report inflation data. China markets are closed for the Golden Week holiday, and South Korea’s market is also closed. CNBC Pro: Investment pro says ETFs are a $10 trillion opportunity — and reveals areas of ‘tremendous’ value Exchange-traded funds offer the benefit of diversification, says Jon Maier, chief investment officer at Global X ETFs. He said the ETF market is “growing exponentially” and estimates it to be worth $10 trillion. He names several opportunities for ETF investors in this volatile market. Pro subscribers can read more here. — Zavier Ong Business confidence of Japan’s large manufacturers worsens Sentiment of Japan’s large manufacturers worsened in the July-to-September quarter, according to the Bank of Japan’s latest quarterly tankan business sentiment survey. The headline index for large manufacturers’ sentiment came in at 8, a decline from the previous quarter’s reading of 9. Economists polled by Reuters expected a print of 11. “Our expectation and market expectations were for the manufacturing reading to pick up — supply conditions had improved, you’ve seen fading supply impact from zero-Covid policies in China, commodity prices came down a little bit,” said Stefan Angrick, a senior economist at Moody’s Analytics. “The fact that the manufacturing side of the economy isn’t doing so well certainly isn’t great for the outlook,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia.” But the non-manufacturing index ticked up slightly, which could mean Japan’s late Covid recovery is getting underway, he added. — Abigail Ng Fri, Sep 30 20229:06 AM EDT CNBC Pro: The five global stocks experiencing the de-globalisation trend, according to HSBC New research from HSBC says supply chains, geopolitical tensions, and worsening financial conditions have forced many global companies to “substantially” turn inward in search of resilient revenue and growth. In a tough economic environment with recessionary pressures, the bank said turning inwards is “probably helpful” for these stocks. The report titled ‘A de-globalisation wave?’ said European firms’ foreign sales dipped below 50% in 2021, the lowest level in the last five years. Oil prices jump on reports of OPEC+ mulling production cut CNBC Pro: Should investors flee stocks? Strategists give their take — and reveal how to trade the volatility With monetary policy set to tighten further in the months ahead, and Wall Street mired in the depths of a bear market abyss, many investors are beginning to wonder if now’s the time to exit the stock market and put their money in other asset classes. CNBC Pro spoke to market watchers and scoured through research from investment banks to find out what the pros think. Pro subscribers can read more here. — Zavier Ong Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Asia-Pacific Markets Fall; Oil Up More Than 2% On Reports Of A Possible OPEC Supply Cut
UPDATE: Kryssy King Found Safe Person Of Interest Has Not Been Located
UPDATE: Kryssy King Found Safe Person Of Interest Has Not Been Located
UPDATE: Kryssy King Found Safe, Person Of Interest Has Not Been Located https://digitalarkansasnews.com/update-kryssy-king-found-safe-person-of-interest-has-not-been-located/ 1 of 2 Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
UPDATE: Kryssy King Found Safe Person Of Interest Has Not Been Located
Brazil Election: Lula Overtakes Bolsonaro Heads To Runoff Live Updates | DW | 02.10.2022
Brazil Election: Lula Overtakes Bolsonaro Heads To Runoff Live Updates | DW | 02.10.2022
Brazil Election: Lula Overtakes Bolsonaro, Heads To Runoff — Live Updates | DW | 02.10.2022 https://digitalarkansasnews.com/brazil-election-lula-overtakes-bolsonaro-heads-to-runoff-live-updates-dw-02-10-2022/ Brazil’s electoral authority said announced a second round. Leftist former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva pulled ahead of far-right incumbent Jair Bolsonaro. DW has the latest. The winner is expected to be announced on Sunday night This article was last updated at 00:44 GMT/UTC. Lula gets slight lead with over 95% of votes counted The leftist politician and former president  The top two presidential candidates in a highly polarized election were neck-and-neck as election officials counted 97% of the votes.  Lula, the leftist politician and former president, had 47.9% of the votes, while the right-wing incumbent President Bolsonaro had 43.7%. Chances for a second round of votes seem high as both candidates look increasingly unlikely to secure more than 50% of the votes. Polls close at 5 p.m. local time Polling stations around the country were scheduled to close at 5 p.m. local time (2000 GMT). Some polling stations will most likely stay open slightly later.  First figures on the vote after polls closed varied wildly in a matter of minutes. The first numbers published by the electoral commission had put Lula at 51% support. This was soon reduced to 47%. And then a third update around 20 minutes after polls closed gave a slight lead to Bolsonaro instead, at 47.6% to Lula’s 41%. The figures could continue to vacillate until a more meaningful share of the vote is counted. Voters not just deciding on the presidency Apart from the presidential showdown, Brazilian voters are also queuing up to elect the lower house of Congress, a third of the Senate, as well as governors and state legislators nationwide. At the race for Congress’s 513 seats, as well as the 27 seats at the Senate, Bolsonaro’s conservative coalition is expected to win a majority. If the pre-election polls prove accurate and Lula wins the presidential election, that could leave his leftist government struggling to implement policies without control of the legislature. Security tighter than usual for election A man fired at two military personnel at a polling station in Sao Paulo during the elections on Sunday. Military police in the city said in a statement on Twitter that the men were conscious and receiving medical attention. It added that the polling station remained in operation despite the incident. Security was upped during the Sunday vote, with military forces mobilized at nearly 500,000 polling stations. Bolsonaro’s term witnessed an uptick in arms ownership, as he eased gun control laws. While casting his ballot, Lula said he hoped for a “country at peace.” “We don’t want more hate, more discord,” he said. A Brazilian head of court also wished for a “peaceful and safe” vote. Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, among Bolsonaro’s staunchest foes, said in a tweet that the electoral court was hard at work. Moraes heads the federal electoral court and has led investigations into Bolsonaro. This came as Bolsonaro cast doubt on the results of Sunday’s vote, accusing the electoral authorities of conspiring against him and hinting at convening a military-supervised count in parallel. Brazil’s armed forces had limited involvement in previous elections; their presence was merely more pronounced in more violent regions and during the transport of voting machines to isolated areas. How Brazil’s electronic voting system works Authorities have set up some 477,000 polling stations around the country. More than 156 million people are eligible to vote, using electronic voting machines that allow for the swift tabulation of results. The system has been in place in 1996. The country’s election authority has reportedly acquired 224,900 new machines for this election, bringing the total number used Sunday to more than 577,000. Bolsonaro has repeatedly alleged that the electronic voting system is plagued by fraud — without evidence. His comments are similar to former US President Donald Trump’s criticism around the 2020 US presidential election. Following his criticism, the election regulator has invited a record number of foreign election observers, including first-time missions from US observers at the Carter Center and the International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES). Bolsonaro evades question on possible defeat “If we have clean elections, we will win today with at least 60% of the votes,” Bolsonaro said in a video posted to social media as he cast his vote. The far-right incumbent, who has repeatedly alleged Brazil’s electronic voting system is plagued by fraud — without evidence — did not directly answer journalists’ questions on whether he would respect the result if he loses. He said he was confident he would win despite polls showing Lula with a double-digit lead. “All the evidence we have is favorable to us. The other side has not been able to take to the streets, has not campaigned, has no acceptance, no credibility, Bolsonaro added. Lula casts vote, seeks a return to ‘normal’ Lula told supporters he is running for president “to get the country back to normal” after four years under far-right incumbent Jair Bolsonaro. “We don’t want more hate, more discord. We want a country at peace,” said the 76-year-old ex-president after casting his vote. “This country needs to recover the right to be happy,” he added. Polls open in Bolsonaro-Lula showdown Brazilians began casting ballots Sunday in a polarizing election pitting far-right President Jair Bolsonaro against leftist front-runner Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. Polling stations opened at 8 a.m. Brasilia time (1000 GMT) and will stay open until 5 p.m. After a campaign that left the South American giant deeply divided, all eyes are on whether Lula, who was president from 2003 to 2010 can win in a single round, without going to a runoff on October 30. There are also concerns over whether Bolsonaro, who has alleged fraud in Brazil’s electronic voting system, will accept the result. There’s no proven history of significant electoral fraud since Brazil moved to electronic voting in 1996, whereas the old system was notoriously prone to manipulation. mm, rmt/msh (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters) Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Brazil Election: Lula Overtakes Bolsonaro Heads To Runoff Live Updates | DW | 02.10.2022
Trump Hasn't Handed Over All White House Records Says National Archives | News Room Odisha
Trump Hasn't Handed Over All White House Records Says National Archives | News Room Odisha
Trump Hasn't Handed Over All White House Records, Says National Archives | News Room Odisha https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-hasnt-handed-over-all-white-house-records-says-national-archives-news-room-odisha/ “Certain presidential records from the Trump administration remain outstanding, citing information that some White House staff used non-official electronic systems to conduct official business,” it said, reported CNN. In a Friday letter to the panel’s chairwoman, New York Democrat Carolyn Maloney, the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) said it had been unable to obtain records from a number of former officials and will continue to pursue the return of similar types of Presidential records from former officials. But, “while there is no easy way to establish absolute accountability, we do know that we do not have custody of everything we should”, it said. Last month, Maloney requested in a letter that NARA seek “personal certification” from former President Trump that he has turned over all presidential records he “illegally removed” from the White House. The Archives letter is the latest development in the years-long pursuit from NARA to reclaim all records that belong to the federal government that were created during the Trump administration, CNN said. NARA’s back-and-forth with Trump and his liaisons led earlier this year to the return by former administration officials and lawyers of boxes and envelopes full of records. NARA’s findings in one of those collections prompted a Justice Department investigation into the mishandling of classified records and a search in August at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s Florida beach club. In its letter to Maloney, NARA cited a lawsuit filed last summer by the Justice Department asking a judge to order former Trump White House trade adviser Peter Navarro to return federal records the DOJ says he wrongfully kept after leaving the administration. The DOJ said Navarro used a private mail account for presidential business, “such as the need for ventilators, the creation and deployment of National-Guard based rapid response teams, and the use of hydroxychloroquine to treat Covid”, the DOJ filing said. According to the lawsuit, the National Archives learned of Navarro’s private account from the House committee investigating the government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic. “It is outrageous that these records remain unaccounted for 20 months after former President Trump left office,” Maloney said in a statement on Saturday. “Former President Trump and his senior staff have shown an utter disregard for the rule of law and our national security by failing to return presidential records as the law requires,” she said. –IANS Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Hasn't Handed Over All White House Records Says National Archives | News Room Odisha
Brazil Presidential Election Headed To Runoff After Surprisingly Strong Vote For Far-Right Bolsonaro
Brazil Presidential Election Headed To Runoff After Surprisingly Strong Vote For Far-Right Bolsonaro
Brazil Presidential Election Headed To Runoff After Surprisingly Strong Vote For Far-Right Bolsonaro https://digitalarkansasnews.com/brazil-presidential-election-headed-to-runoff-after-surprisingly-strong-vote-for-far-right-bolsonaro/ Right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro and leftist former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva appear headed for a second-round runoff contest to settle Brazil’s presidential election, after neither candidate scored an outright victory in Sunday’s vote. Datafolha, Brazil’s largest pollster, projected that the race would advance to a second round late Sunday night. Multiple Brazilian news outlets, including the Folha de S.Paulo and O Estado de S. Paulo newspapers, also projected that neither candidate would clear the majority threshold. Da Silva, who led Brazil from 2003 to 2010, had won nearly 48% of votes with about 96% of the count finished. Bolsonaro lagged close behind with roughly 44%, a tally that outperformed final preelection polls by nearly 8 points. Da Silva will still enter the runoff as a slight favorite to defeat Bolsonaro, but the closer-than-expected first round vote will generate concerns about the accuracy of Brazil’s major polling, which had suggested that Bolsonaro was far weaker and that da Silva’s lead would expand in a one-on-one scenario. It will also likely fuel Bolsonaro’s skepticism of polling that suggested da Silva could win the race outright Sunday with a clear majority of votes. Bolsonaro and his supporters cast doubt on those surveys throughout the race’s final weeks, and will likely see the president’s significant over-performance as a validation of their skepticism. Bolsonaro allies won gubernatorial, congressional and Senate races Sunday night, another sign of potentially underestimated strength of his right-wing movement. And what looked like it could be a runaway win for da Silva even in the event of a runoff now appears to be a competitive race. The head-to-head contest four years in the making will have massive implications for Brazil’s democracy, the fourth-largest in the world. Bolsonaro, a former Army captain who has long expressed affinity for the dictatorship that ruled Brazil from 1964 to 1985, ran for president in 2018 on a blatantly anti-democratic platform, has governed as the authoritarian-minded leader he promised to be, and has spent the last two years waging baseless attacks on the country’s electoral system. As an ally of former U.S. President Donald Trump, he has made it clear that he does not intend to accept the results of an election defeat, sparking fears that he will attempt to provoke something akin to a Brazilian version of the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol if he loses. Da Silva, his supporters and many Brazilian political experts saw a win in Sunday’s first round as a key way to blunt any electoral challenge Bolsonaro may mount, and cut off his path to a second term in which he could further threaten the country’s democracy. Instead, the campaign will head to a runoff race that will conclude on Oct. 30, a period many observers fear Bolsonaro will use to further spread conspiracies and deepen his attempts to undermine the election. “The second round will give Bolsonaro an extra month to cause as much turmoil as he can,” said Guilherme Casarões, a Brazilian political expert at the Getúlio Vargas Foundation in São Paulo. A stronger-than-expected Bolsonaro, however, could also potentially win the runoff race, a result that would grant him a second term that he could use to consolidate many of his efforts to erode basic rights and Brazil’s democratic institutions. “The odds look substantially bleaker for Brazilian democracy right now than they did 24 hours ago,” Filipe Campante, a Brazilian professor at Johns Hopkins University, tweeted as the results pointed toward a runoff. “Bolsonaro will have a real shot at winning the runoff, and in that case we are in deep trouble.” Da Silva entered Sunday optimistic that he could pull off a convincing victory this weekend, especially after the release of two new polls that suggested he could garner more than 50% of votes on the eve of the election. He also pledged, however, to celebrate the result even if he fell short, in the hopes of keeping his supporters energized for the runoff race. “We’re going to party, because we deserve it,” he said Saturday. “To be reborn from the ashes is a reason to celebrate.” The leftist is attempting to complete a stunning political turnaround 12 years after he left office as “the most popular politician in the world,” as then-U.S. President Barack Obama branded him. From 2003 to 2010, da Silva oversaw explosive growth of Brazil’s economy that lifted millions out of poverty and made Brazil a powerful player on the global stage. But he was imprisoned on a corruption conviction in 2018, as part of a wider probe that ensnared hundreds of Brazilian politicians and business leaders. That, along with the collapse of Brazil’s economy under his successor seemingly ended da Silva’s political career and tarnished his legacy. A year later, The Intercept Brazil revealed substantial judicial impropriety in the case against him. His conviction was annulled, paving the way for a matchup with Bolsonaro that he’d wanted to wage in 2018 but couldn’t because the corruption case led to his banishment from the race. Bolsonaro, who won an improbable victory in a 2018 election defined by discontent with a political establishment that da Silva had once epitomized and the Workers’ Party he’d founded, has spent his four years in office eroding Brazil’s democratic institutions and targeting the rights of its most marginalized populations. He has curbed protections for Indigenous Brazilians, sought to roll back rights for LGBTQ people, overseen record levels of deforestation in the Amazon Rainforest and unleashed Brazil’s violent police forces to kill even more indiscriminately. He has routinely attacked journalists and political critics, and has brought Brazil’s military, which had largely abstained from civilian politics since the end of its dictatorship in 1985, roaring back into politics, appointing even more officers to government positions than served in the military government. Support for Bolsonaro’s scandal-plagued and fitful government cratered during the coronavirus pandemic, which he cast as a conspiracy to bring down his presidency. He opposed lockdowns and sought to undermine faith in vaccines, even as the virus killed more than 680,000 Brazilians, the world’s second-highest official death toll. Women voters, in particular, turned against Bolsonaro according to preelection polling, thanks largely to his machismo-fueled politics and a lack of focus on the economy even as food, energy and other basic costs rose sharply this summer. A litany of Brazilian business elites, judges and lawyers ― many of whom had supported Bolsonaro four years ago ― this summer released a letter in defense of the country’s democracy that did not name Bolsonaro specifically but clearly implied that his election conspiracies had put it at risk. Senior officials and lawmakers in both the United States and Europe have also expressed major concerns about the election, warning Bolsonaro to stop threatening it and raising the possibility of sanctions if he tries to remain in power undemocratically. Bolsonaro performed far better than expected in states like São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil’s two most populous, and also bested preelection projections in other parts of the country’s south and southeast regions. A strong showing from da Silva in the Brazilian northeast, his traditional stronghold, was enough to give him the lead but not the majority he needed to win a majority of votes. In the days before Sunday’s vote, Bolsonaro continued to ramp up his attacks on Brazil’s election system: He questioned the legitimacy of polls showing him behind da Silva while his party made false claims about election officials’ ability to manipulate votes. Bolsonaro may still intensify his attacks, but the first-round results also suggest he still has a chance to win a second term legitimately ― something not even Bolsonaro seemed to believe before Sunday’s vote. That all but ensures that Brazil’s democracy is in for a tense month, and the sort of test it hasn’t faced since the end of its dictatorship nearly four decades ago. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Brazil Presidential Election Headed To Runoff After Surprisingly Strong Vote For Far-Right Bolsonaro
Surviving The Storm Northeast AR Native Shares Her Experience
Surviving The Storm Northeast AR Native Shares Her Experience
Surviving The Storm, Northeast AR Native Shares Her Experience https://digitalarkansasnews.com/surviving-the-storm-northeast-ar-native-shares-her-experience/ FORT MYERS, Fla. (KAIT) – A woman who grew up in the Jonesboro area shares the moments before she took cover from Hurricane Ian. Paradise Gibson moved from Jonesboro to Florida during her Sophomore year of high school. She is now a student at Florida Gulf Coast University in Fort Myers. As the powerful Category 4 storm barreled towards the Florida Peninsula, Paradise’s fears began to grow. “I was nervous before it hit, but I knew all I need to do was prepare,” said Gibson. Ian first made landfall near Fort Myers with sustained winds of 150 mph, some wind gusts approaching 130 mph. The storm was very close to becoming a category 5, which is the highest rating the National Hurricane Center can give to a storm. Gibson has made Fort Myers her home but after the major hurricane, it looks totally different. “Parts of Fort Myers and Naples are absolutely destroyed and some parts are still underneath the water,” said Paradise. As Ian pushed inland, it brought a 10-foot storm surge. Florida Gulf Coast University has a new arena on campus that is said to be very sturdy, giving over 200 students a place to hunker down after abandoning everything and hoping for the best. “I could hear and see it, it was like a loud whistle, and I could hear like the ceiling, there was something fell on the roof and it was like moving around on the roof,” said Gibson. She stated that some of those sounds will stay with her for a very long time. Paradise is no rookie when it comes to riding out major hurricanes, She evacuated shortly before Hurricane Irma made landfall as a Category 5 back in 2017. Gibson spoke with some friends from Estero, Florida, and they barely escaped Ian’s wraith. “I would not say a lot of them but at least three or four I know have lost their houses and a few cars,” said Gibson. Paradise said that she is very blessed to have survived the storm, and not lost all of her possessions. Others across the Sunshine were not so lucky, as the death toll rises each day. Gibson said that Pine Island is currently cut off from the mainland, eliminating access to food or fresh water. She said they were hit extremely hard as the hurricane made landfall. “I do not think it has hit me yet, the fact that I could have lost my cars, my house, and all my belongings could be gone right now,” said Gibson. Gas shortages are in full swing, Gibson said it took her over thirty minutes to fill up due to the long lines. Generators can be heard all across the Fort Myers area as power crews work tirelessly to restore power to the area. Paradise just got her power back on yesterday. “Gas stations have super long lines right now because I know a lot of people are using generators, and we were until yesterday,” said Gibson. The Red Cross and FEMA are now in the area helping victims recover. KAIT’s parent company Gray Television is teaming up with The Salvation Army to support Hurricane Ian relief efforts. You can donate to support the Sunshine State by visiting Give.HelpSalvationArmy.org, calling 1-800-SAL-ARMY (1-800-725-2769), or by texting STORM to 51555. Copyright 2022 KAIT. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Surviving The Storm Northeast AR Native Shares Her Experience
Trump Likely To Announce His 2024 Presidential Run Within Weeks
Trump Likely To Announce His 2024 Presidential Run Within Weeks
Trump Likely To Announce His 2024 Presidential Run Within Weeks https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-likely-to-announce-his-2024-presidential-run-within-weeks-2/ Stating this, Kellyanne Conway, his 2016 campaign manager and close ally, said she had advised him to wait until after the midterms in November, according to Business Insider. IANS | Washington | October 2: Former President Donald Trump “wants his old job back” and will announce within weeks his run for the presidency in 2024. Trump is eager to get back to the White House, and wants to announce his 2024 run in the coming weeks.Stating this, Kellyanne Conway, his 2016 campaign manager and close ally, said she had advised him to wait until after the midterms in November, according to Business Insider. . Speaking on Friday with CBS News, Conway was asked whether Trump would announce his candidacy after the midterm elections and before Thanksgiving. “Well, he would like to,” said Conway, as per CBS News. “He’s as active as anybody in these midterm elections. That’s important to the calculus also, Catherine, because we have the most ironic, if not unprecedented situation right now,” Conway continued. “We have a president, a current president, whose party doesn’t really want him to campaign with them.” Trump will assess the timing of his announcement after the midterms, which take place on November 8, Conway said. “I will tell you why he wants to run for president,” she said. “Donald Trump wants his old job back.” In July, Conway described Trump as “champing at the bit” to announce his third presidential bid. Speaking to CBS News, she said she advised him to wait until right after the midterms. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy also said he lobbied the former president not to announce a 2024 presidential run before the midterms. “My point to him has always (been), ‘Let’s go win ’22,’” McCarthy told reporters at the Capitol in July.That same month, a top Republican strategist told Insider that a pre-midterm announcement from Trump would be a “train wreck for the party” and “a complete mess.” Meanwhile, how Democrats, who aren’t named Joe Biden, are running for president – without running for president. Joe Biden plans to seek reelection in 2024, even though voters are souring on him.Democrats aren’t expected to primary Biden, but questions linger about a backup plan. Would-be candidates have been seeking the national spotlight. President Joe Biden has been clear that he plans to run for a second term in 2024. His political team is even getting ready for a spring reelection announcement, according to the Washington Post. But that hasn’t stopped the “will he really?” chatter, particularly after a New York Times poll found that 61 per cent of Democrats said they hoped someone other than Biden would be their nominee in 2024, largely because of his age and job performance.Democratic insiders are questioning whether Biden, 79, can mount a vigorous campaign in 2024 – especially if former President Donald Trump decides to run again.Despite the doubts, Biden is not expected to face a primary challenge given that it would alienate other people in the party as well as the donor class, said Mark Jones, Rice University (Houston, Texas) political science professor and Baker Institute fellow, the Insider said. “The norm is that you do not challenge a sitting president from your party,” Jones said. “That’s a major political faux pas. It either isn’t done, or if it is done it’s done more for political ambition – not to actually win, but to put the spotlight on yourself for other reasons.” A key factor helping Biden’s staying in power is Trump. The New York Times poll found that Biden would be favoured to win in another contest against Trump. “The belief is that if Biden beat Trump before, he can beat him again,” Jones said. If a Democrat were to try to primary Biden – and weaken him in the process – then that person would be blamed if a Republican, even Trump, were to win in 2024.But none of these factors rule out politicians’ making under-the-radar moves. If Biden somehow reverses his plans, that’ll mean the party will need to find a backup. Some ways that candidates begin to test the field through “invisible primaries” are by campaigning for other Democrats to build loyalty, particularly in swing districts. They also may appear at events in potential early voting states and offer noncommittal responses about whether they’ll support Biden in 2024, said Shawn Donahue, a University at Buffalo (New York) assistant professor of political science.Other ways are through grabbing headlines through weighing in on national debates, holding leadership roles in the party, and raising huge sums particularly from out-of-staters. In the case of governors interested in the White House, they’ll need to crush the opposition if they’re up for reelection this year, in November, the Insider said. “There will be a host of people who want to be waiting in the wings so the moment Biden says he’s not running they can sort of jump in,” Jones said. Even if Biden doesn’t change his mind, 2028 isn’t much further off. There are 15 politicians who are taking actions or gaining interest that might position them for a 2024 White House run if Biden changes his mind. And this includes the three top contenders, VP Kamala Harris, Florida Governor Gavin Newsom and senator Elizabeth. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Likely To Announce His 2024 Presidential Run Within Weeks
At Least 125 Killed In Indonesia Soccer Stadium Crush | CNN
At Least 125 Killed In Indonesia Soccer Stadium Crush | CNN
At Least 125 Killed In Indonesia Soccer Stadium Crush | CNN https://digitalarkansasnews.com/at-least-125-killed-in-indonesia-soccer-stadium-crush-cnn/ CNN  —  At least 125 people are dead after chaos and violence erupted during an Indonesian league soccer match into the early hours of Sunday, according to Indonesia’s National Police Chief in what is one of the world’s deadliest stadium disasters of all time. Supporters of Arema FC and rival Persebaya Surabaya, two of Indonesia’s biggest soccer teams, clashed in the stands after home team Arema FC was defeated 3-2 at a match in the city of Malang in East Java, police said. Supporters from the losing team then “invaded” the pitch and police fired tear gas, triggering a fan crush that led to cases of suffocation, East Java police chief Nico Afinta said during a press conference following the event. Two police officers were also among the dead, he said, adding that the crush occurred when fans fled for an exit gate. More than 300 people were injured, according to Indonesian authorities, with fears that the death toll could rise. Earlier on Sunday, the governor of the East Java province, where the incident occurred, said the death toll was at 131. National Police Chief Listyo Sigit Prabowo clarified the discrepancy of the previous higher numbers saying it was due to some casualties being recorded twice. Indonesian President Joko Widodo, also known as Jokowi, on Sunday ordered all league matches to be halted until investigations were completed. “I have specially requested the police chief to investigate and get to the bottom of this case,” Jokowi said in a televised speech. “Sportsmanship, humanity and brotherhood should be upheld in Indonesia.” “I regret this tragedy and hope that it will be the last to occur in Indonesian football. We cannot have anymore (of this) in the future.” Videos filmed from inside the stadium late into the night and shared on social media showed fans, dressed in red and blue – the home team’s colors – storming the field and clashing with Indonesian security forces, who appeared to be wearing riot gear. Video footage broadcast on local news channels also showed images of body bags, Reuters reported. Smoke, which appeared to be tear gas, was also seen later in videos, with several people shown being carried into a building. Officials said that many had been admitted to nearby hospitals, suffering from “lack of oxygen and shortness of breath.” Located in East Java, the Kanjuruhan Stadium is used mostly for soccer matches – with its full capacity estimated at 38,000 spectators. But 42,000 tickets were issued for Saturday’s game, according to ministry officials. “We had anticipated the (large) numbers and suggested that the game be held in the afternoon instead but it went on in the evening,” Indonesian Chief Security Minister Mahfud MD said in a post shared on his official social media accounts. He added that the stadium had been “filled beyond its maximum capacity.” “Our proposals were not met. I also would like to emphasize that supporters in the field were Arema FC’s.” There have been previous outbreaks of trouble at matches in Indonesia, with a strong rivalry between clubs sometimes leading to violence among supporters. “All sports clubs (in Indonesia) that compete between the cities are always intense,” Indonesian football analyst Dex Glenniza told CNN, who noted that it was “forbidden” for Arema and Persebaya supporters to visit each other’s stadiums. “(This is) in order to avoid friction and clashes between supporters,” he said. “But there are still many incidents between the supporters, most of which off the field.” Police chief Listyo said officers will look at the organization and security that was in place during the match, and that a number of specialized units have been dispatched to investigate the incident. The probe will also look into the police officers who were on duty at the time of the incident, he said. With Indonesia set to host next year’s FIFA Under-20 World Cup and staging a bid for the 2023 Asian Cup, there is now global scrutiny on the country. Observers note that the death toll from the Kanjuruhan Stadium disaster has surpassed that of other global soccer disasters like the 1989 Hillsborough Stadium tragedy in Sheffield, England, which saw 96 Liverpool supporters being crushed to death. Criticism is also growing over the police’s handling of Saturday’s event. In a statement released on Sunday, watchdog group Indonesian Police Watch (IPW) called for accountability and the “removal” of Malang Police Chief Ferli Hidayat. “This is the worst event in Indonesian soccer. The police chief should be ashamed and resign,” IPW said. “The death toll must be thoroughly investigated and President Jokowi must pay attention,” it added. Exiled Indonesia rights advocate Veronica Koman of Amnesty International condemned the police’s use of tear gas. “This instance of abuse of tear gas by police is unlawful and amounts to torture,” she said. “Tear gas is illegal in warfare – but why is it still legal for domestic use?” The Indonesian Football Association (PSSI) has suspended matches next week as a result of the deadly tragedy, and banned Arema FC from hosting games for the rest of the season. “PSSI regrets the actions of Aremania supporters at the Kanjuruhan Stadium,” the association’s chairman, Mochamad Iriawan, said in a statement issued on Sunday. He added that the incident had “tarnished the face of Indonesian football” and they were supporting official investigations into the event. “We are sorry and apologize to the families of the victims and all parties for the incident,” he said. “For that PSSI immediately formed an investigation team and immediately left for Malang,” he added. FIFA, soccer’s international governing body, extended their condolences to the families and friends of the victims, calling the incident “a dark day for all involved in football and a tragedy beyond comprehension.” “Together with FIFA and the global football community, all our thoughts and prayers are with the victims, those who have been injured, together with the people of the Republic of Indonesia, the Asian Football Confederation, the Indonesian Football Association, and the Indonesian Football League, at this difficult time,” a statement from FIFA president Gianni Infantino read. Meanwhile, the host team Arema FC apologized to all involved in the tragedy in a statement posted to its website. “As the President of Arema FC, I apologize to all residents of Malang who were affected by this incident, I am very concerned and strongly condemn the riots at the Kanjuruhan stadium which resulted in more than one hundred deaths,” the statement said, quoting club president Gilang Widya Pramana. Persebaya also released a statement expressing their condolences, saying: “Persebaya’s big family expresses their deepest condolences for the loss of life after the Arema FC vs. Persebaya match. No life is worth football.” “Alfatihah for the victims and may the family left behind be given fortitude.” Condolences poured in for victims and family, with the English Premier League also sharing a message of condolence. “The thoughts of everyone at the Premier League are with those affected by the tragic events at Kanjuruhan Stadium last night.” Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
At Least 125 Killed In Indonesia Soccer Stadium Crush | CNN
Trump Staffers Not Returning White House Records National Archives Says
Trump Staffers Not Returning White House Records National Archives Says
Trump Staffers Not Returning White House Records, National Archives Says https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-staffers-not-returning-white-house-records-national-archives-says/ WASHINGTON: Former President Donald Trump’s administration has not turned over all presidential records and the National Archives will consult with the Justice Department on whether to move to get them back, the agency has told Congress. A congressional panel on Sep 13 sought an urgent review by the National Archives and Records Administration after agency staff members acknowledged that they did not know if all presidential records from Trump’s White House had been turned over. “While there is no easy way to establish absolute accountability, we do know that we do not have custody of everything we should,” acting Archivist Debra Wall said in a letter Friday to the House Committee on Oversight and Reform. The Archives knows some White House staffers conducted official business on personal electronic messaging accounts that were that were not copied or forwarded to their official accounts, in violation of the Presidential Records Act, Wall said. “NARA has been able to obtain such records from a number of former officials and will continue to pursue the return of similar types of presidential records from former officials,” Wall said in the letter, first reported by the Wall Street Journal. She said the Archives, the federal agency charged with preserving government records, would consult with the Department of Justice on “whether to initiate an action for the recovery of records unlawfully removed”. The Oversight Committee’s chairwoman, representative Carolyn Maloney, said in a statement she would do everything in her power to ensure the return of all records and prevent future abuses. “Former President Trump and his senior staff have shown an utter disregard for the rule of law and our national security by failing to return presidential records as the law requires,” Maloney, whose committee shared a copy of the letter with Reuters, said in a statement. Representatives for Trump did not return a request for comment on the matter. Trump is facing a criminal investigation by the Justice Department for retaining government records – some marked as highly classified, including “top secret” – at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida after leaving office in January 2021. The FBI seized more than 11,000 records, including about 100 documents marked as classified, in a court-approved Aug 8 search at Mar-a-Lago. The Justice Department and Trump’s lawyers have been locked in a legal battle over how the records are handled. Government lawyers have been granted access to the classified documents but on Friday asked an appeals court to expedite its ability to access the non-classified documents seized in Florida. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Staffers Not Returning White House Records National Archives Says
Trump Staffers 'not Returning All Records'
Trump Staffers 'not Returning All Records'
Trump Staffers 'not Returning All Records' https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-staffers-not-returning-all-records/ Live Former US president Donald Trump’s administration has not turned over all presidential records and the National Archives will consult with the Justice Department on whether to move to get them back, the agency has told Congress. A congressional panel on September 13 sought an urgent review by the National Archives and Records Administration after agency staff members acknowledged that they did not know if all presidential records from Mr Trump’s White House had been turned over. “While there is no easy way to establish absolute accountability, we do know that we do not have custody of everything we should,” acting Archivist Debra Wall said in a letter on Friday to the House Committee on Oversight and Reform. The Archives knows some White House staffers conducted official business on personal electronic messaging accounts that were that were not copied or forwarded to their official accounts, in violation of the Presidential Records Act, Wall said. “NARA has been able to obtain such records from a number of former officials and will continue to pursue the return of similar types of presidential records from former officials,” Wall said in the letter, first reported by the Wall Street Journal. She said the Archives, the federal agency charged with preserving government records, would consult with the Department of Justice on “whether to initiate an action for the recovery of records unlawfully removed”. The Oversight Committee’s chairwoman, representative Carolyn Maloney, said in a statement she would do everything in her power to ensure the return of all records and prevent future abuses. “Former president Trump and his senior staff have shown an utter disregard for the rule of law and our national security by failing to return presidential records as the law requires,” Maloney, whose committee shared a copy of the letter with Reuters, said in a statement. Representatives for Mr Trump did not return a request for comment on the matter. Mr Trump is facing a criminal investigation by the Justice Department for retaining government records – some marked as highly classified, including “top secret” – at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida after leaving office in January 2021. The FBI seized more than 11,000 records, including about 100 documents marked as classified, in a court-approved August 8 search at Mar-a-Lago. The Justice Department and Mr Trump’s lawyers have been locked in a legal battle over how the records are handled. Government lawyers have been granted access to the classified documents but on Friday asked an appeals court to expedite its ability to access the non-classified documents seized in Florida. – AAP Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Staffers 'not Returning All Records'
Officials Assess Massive Hurricane Damage As Florida Begins Long Recovery
Officials Assess Massive Hurricane Damage As Florida Begins Long Recovery
Officials Assess Massive Hurricane Damage As Florida Begins Long Recovery https://digitalarkansasnews.com/officials-assess-massive-hurricane-damage-as-florida-begins-long-recovery/ “They will never look the same again, these are communities that have basically been wiped out,” said Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) on CNN’s State of the Union when discussing the damage to Fort Myers Beach and Sanibel Island in Lee County. The fury of the storm prompted a mammoth rescue effort that had resulted in saving more than 1,600 survivors, with both the Florida National Guard and U.S. Coast Guard landing helicopters on barrier islands in order to search for those left stranded. DeSantis told reporters during a late afternoon briefing on Sunday that the hurricane damaged areas were the site of the largest mobilization of search and rescue teams in the United States since the 9/11 attacks. More than 794,000 home and businesses remained without power by mid-Sunday afternoon — most of them located in the hard-hit counties of southwest Florida, where a wall of water left some communities in complete devastation. Florida Power & Light — the state’s largest utility has restored power to 1.6 million customers — but in a timeline released this weekend suggested it could take up to another week to restore power to 95 percent of those customers living in the area that took the brunt of the impact from Hurricane Ian. DeSantis, who spoke in Arcadia, a small town located in an interior Southwest Florida county, acknowledged there were places that would require a complete rebuild of electric utility infrastructure. “There’s still flooding in places they would need to go to reconnect some of the power lines,” DeSantis said Sunday. Both the Miami Herald and Sarasota Herald-Tribune reported on Sunday that some residents in places such as Pine Island and Cape Coral were pleading for help on social media. There has already been attention focused on whether Lee County officials called on residents to evacuate vulnerable areas in a timely manner. Lee County Sheriff Carmine Marceno defended their actions at a Sunday press conference. The storm made landfall Wednesday near Fort Myers in Lee County as a Category 4 hurricane. “Everyone wants to focus on a plan that might have been done differently,” Marceno said. “Well I’m going to tell you, I stand 100% with my county commissioners, my county manager — we did what we had to do. At the exact same time, I wouldn’t have changed anything. And I know being in those meetings from the very minute — this storm was very unpredictable… We weren’t even in the projected path or cone.” The vast majority of fatalities are in Lee County. Florida reported at least 30 of the 44 deaths were in Marceno’s county. The state on Saturday began distributing pallets of water, ice and food to residents at several distribution sites. State emergency officials said they had handed out more than 829,000 ready to eat meals and 3.8 million bottles of water. But a big problem remains the number of people who live in locations that are not easily accessible by car. DeSantis said that the Florida Department of Transportation plans to begin construction of temporary bridge to Pine Island, the largest barrier island on Florida’s Gulf coast, which was home to an estimated 9,000 residents before the storm. DeSantis acknowledged that this would be a stop-gap remedy, saying that cars would have to travel no faster than 5 miles per hour in order to use the temporary bridge once it’s finished. The devastation left behind by Ian has prompted both Rubio and Sen. Rick Scott to discuss the need for supplemental funding. “We do have to provide disaster aid,” Scott (R-Fla.) said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “And whether that’s for a hurricane, or whether that’s for flooding, or whether that’s for wildfires, we’ve got to do that.” Rubio, asked whether he would support a bill for relief bill including funding for seemingly unrelated projects, said on CNN’s “State of the Union” he would “fight against it having pork.” Congress is “capable” of passing a relief bill “without using it as a vehicle or a mechanism for people to load it up with stuff that’s unrelated to the storm,” Rubio said. The senator voted against relief for Northeastern states for Hurricane Sandy in 2012, but defended that vote Sunday as against provisions in the bill that were not proximate enough to disaster relief. Scott, a former governor of Florida, avoided making judgment on the actions of local officials in Lee County, which did not send an evacuation order to its residents until Tuesday; several nearby jurisdictions issued evacuation orders Monday. “It’s something we’ll have to look at,” Scott said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” DeSantis has said those officials acted appropriately. Fort Myers Mayor Kevin Anderson defended local officials’ actions Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “Warnings for hurricane season start in June, and so there’s a degree of personal responsibility here. I think the county acted appropriately,” Anderson said. Some people “will not heed the warnings regardless,” he added. Asked if the storm was made worse because of the impact of climate change, Criswell acknowledged “we’re seeing an increase” in the number and intensity of storms, as well as the rain associated with storms. But “right now, we are very focused on the impacts, regardless of what caused it,” she added. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Officials Assess Massive Hurricane Damage As Florida Begins Long Recovery
Shelby Negro Woman
Shelby Negro Woman
Shelby Negro Woman https://digitalarkansasnews.com/shelby-negro-woman/ For nearly 100 years, the Shelby Negro Woman’s Club has been making a mark on Cleveland County. The dedicated women volunteer in the school system, feed the hungry, deliver blankets to cancer patients, donate snacks to hospice and raise money for annual scholarships. The club’s motto, “Lifting as we Climb,” illustrates the goal to elevate women, improve race relations and better the community they call home. The Shelby Negro Woman’s Club, which is part of the National Association of Colored Women’s Clubs, America’s oldest Black women’s organization, celebrated its 95th anniversary in March. On a recent Friday morning at Washington Outreach Ministry, teams of volunteers prepared to distribute boxes of food to the long line of people waiting in their cars. Some of the people arrived the night before to make sure they received the boxes, which contain pasta, meat, juice, cereal and other grocery items. The Rev. Frances Webber, executive director of Washington Outreach Ministry, has been a member of the Shelby Negro Woman’s Club for several years. “The women’s club is a civic group,” she said. “We do community service work.” She said there are six or seven members who volunteer with the outreach ministry. “Every Wednesday and every Friday they’re feeding the hungry,” Webber said.  She said it’s a working group that gets out in the community and makes a difference. “We’re small in numbers, but we’re powerful in our work,” she said. Pam Todd said she got involved because of the service work the club does. “They’re all women of service,” she said. “They’re just good ladies.” The club also serves another purpose. “It helps us to know about our culture,” Todd said. Webber, who also serves as the club’s chaplain, said it is a way to honor and understand their past. “It’s important to understand our culture from which we came,” she said. “There’s a rich history with this club.” Webber said it is a legacy and one that will hopefully benefit many generations. Laura Jamerson, state president of the North Carolina Federation of Negro Women’s Clubs, one of the longest standing members joined in 1982. “We are following the trail of the ladies who paved the way for us,” said Jamerson. She said they are continuing the work of building up women and improving race relations. Jamerson said she’s seen a positive difference over the years and wants to keep that momentum. “We want to keep our community moving forward,” she said. Jamerson is the president over the southeast region and was recently inducted into the Hall of Fame in Little Rock, Arkansas.   “We have followed the footsteps of some great ladies. Mrs. Enloe was one of the charter members, Ezra Bridges, Mrs. Palmer,” she said. “We have big footsteps to follow.” Jamerson said she was attracted to the club because of all the wonderful things they were doing in the community. There are currently nine members, and they are eager to welcome new and younger women to the club. “We are one of the most renowned African American organizations in Shelby,” she said. “I am so proud of our Shelby Negro Woman’s Club.”  The original intent of the club was for largely charitable purposes, and one of the original missions was to support a girls’ home in North Carolina.  Jamerson said they promote character building, citizenship, equal rights and Black womanhood. They helped support, in various ways, the Girls Club, Hospice, cancer patients and the Kidney Foundation. They made back-to-school packets for kids and volunteer with the Washington Outreach Ministry. For more than 30 years, they have been hosting an annual fashion show with the proceeds going to scholarships for each of the four high schools in the county. They are also involved with voter registration. “We don’t endorse any candidates, we just encourage people to get out and vote,” Jamerson said. They meet once a month in different spaces, rotating among each other’s homes or other locations around the county, and recently went back to having in-person meetings after two years of Zoom meetings. She said they are continuing the work of building up women and improving race relations. Jamerson said she’s seen a positive difference over the years. “We want to keep our community moving forward,” she said. Rebecca Sitzes can be reached at rsitzes@gannett.com. Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Shelby Negro Woman
Stock Futures Turn Slightly Positive After Dow S&P 500 Cap Worst Month Since March 2020
Stock Futures Turn Slightly Positive After Dow S&P 500 Cap Worst Month Since March 2020
Stock Futures Turn Slightly Positive After Dow, S&P 500 Cap Worst Month Since March 2020 https://digitalarkansasnews.com/stock-futures-turn-slightly-positive-after-dow-sp-500-cap-worst-month-since-march-2020/ Traders on the floor of the NYSE, Sept 7, 2022. Source: NYSE Stock futures rose slightly in overnight trading Sunday after Wall Street wrapped up another negative quarter and both the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average finished their worst month since March 2020. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 100 points, or 0.35%, while S&P 500 added 0.22%. Nasdaq 100 futures traded flat. Friday capped off a negative month and quarter for all the major averages, with the Dow falling 500.10 points, or 1.71%, to close below 29,000 for the first time since November 2020. For the quarter, the Dow fell 6.66% to notch a three-quarter losing streak for the first time since the third quarter of 2015. Both the S&P and Nasdaq Composite fell 5.28% and 4.11%, respectively, to finish their third consecutive negative quarter for the first time since 2009. The Dow shed 8.8% in September, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite lost 9.3% and 10.5%, respectively. All the major averages also recorded their sixth negative week in seven. Heading into the new quarter, all S&P 500 sectors sit at least 10% off their 52-week highs. Nine sectors finished the quarter in negative territory. Consumer discretionary was the best performer, gaining more than 4.1%. In the fourth quarter, elevated inflation and a Federal Reserve intent on bringing surging prices to a halt regardless of what it means for the economy will likely continue to weigh on markets, said Truist’s Keith Lerner. Oversold conditions, however, also make the market vulnerable to a sharp short-term bounce on good news, he added. “I think we could be set up for some type of reprieve but the underlying trend at this point is still a downward trend and choppy waters to continue,” Lerner said. On the economic front, Markit PMI and ISM manufacturing data are slated for release on Monday along with construction spending. Data suggests bigger S&P 500 drawdowns offer a greater potential return, LPL Financial’s Gilbert says Markets have sold off heavily this year with the S&P 500 starting October down nearly 25%. While the outlook is murky ahead, historical data analyzed by LPL Financial’s Barry Gilbert indicates that the average one-year return on the S&P 500 improves the more significant the pullback. According to Gilbert, the one-year average return increases steadily beyond a 10% pullback in the market and as the selloff worsens. When the market is down between 20% and 25% — in line with current times — the return is 11.5% on average one year later. “When markets are down, the natural bias is to sell,” he said in a note to clients Friday. “But looking at history, the more the S&P 500 is down, the better it does in the next year, on average.” — Samantha Subin Where all the major averages stand as the fourth quarter begins The final quarter of 2022 is set to kick off Monday and cap off what’s been a brutal year for the markets. Here’s where all the major averages stand ahead of Monday’s trading session. Dow Jones Industrial Average: Down 20.95% for the year Sits 22.26% off its 52-week highs Finished its worst month since March 2020 Capped its third consecutive down quarter for the first time since the third quarter of 2015 S&P 500: Down 24.77% this year 25.59% off its 52-week high Finished its worst month since March 2020 Closed out its third negative quarter in a row for the first time since its six-quarter streak that ended the first quarter of 2009 Nasdaq Composite: Down 27.4% this year 34.77% off its 52-week highs September marked its worst month since April 2022 Finished its third consecutive negative quarter in a row for the first time since its three-quarter streak ending the first period of 2009.  — Chris Hayes, Samantha Subin Stock futures open slightly lower Stocks futures opened slightly lower in overnight trading on Sunday. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 15 points, or 0.05%, while S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures shed 0.19% and 0.42%, respectively. — Samantha Subin Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Stock Futures Turn Slightly Positive After Dow S&P 500 Cap Worst Month Since March 2020
Obituaries In Fort Smith AR | Times Record
Obituaries In Fort Smith AR | Times Record
Obituaries In Fort Smith, AR | Times Record https://digitalarkansasnews.com/obituaries-in-fort-smith-ar-times-record-59/ Larry D. Loux, 82, of Fort Smith, passed away on Friday, September 30, 2022. He was born on January 24, 1940 to the late Jeff and Rea (Bumpers) Loux. Larry was raised in Fort Smith, he attended Fort Smith Junior College and the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. He taught at Southside High School for 37 years, from the first day it opened. Larry announced the band at halftime for 14 years as well as doing football announcing at the games. He was never a member of the band, but always enjoyed them. He served as intramural director at Southside with 12 different activities. He was the first student council advisor at Southside. He was sponsor of the Interact Service Club and ran the school canteen. He served on the board for the Fort Smith Public Schools Foundation. Larry served as State Executive Director for the Southern Association of Student Councils for 16 years and ran a leadership camp on Lake Catherine for 15 years. He was a past president for the Retired Teachers Association. He loved Christmas, playing Santa to his young nieces and nephews. He loved marching music, especially Sousa. He loved folk dancing. In addition to his other activities, Larry served on the board and was a trustee for the Clearing House. He loved to talk history, volunteering at Miss Laura’s- Fort Smith Visitor’s Center as a step-on tour guide. He was a member of the Noon Civic Club. He is survived by his wife Judy, of the home, along with his nieces and nephews, cousins and good friends. Funeral Services will be 11:00 A.M. Thursday, October 6, 2022 at Goddard United Methodist Church with burial to follow at Roselawn Cemetery. Family will greet friends from 5:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. Wednesday, October 5, 2022 at Edwards Funeral Home. Pallbearers will be Roger Crow, Carl Allison, Tyler Edge, Chuck Stierwait, Tony Galier and Tom McAlister. Memorial contributions may be made to Goddard United Methodist Church, 1922 Dodson Avenue, Fort Smith, AR 72901 or go to www.goddardumc.org or the UAFS Foundation, 5210 Grand Avenue, P.O. Box 1359, Fort Smith, AR 72904 or go to www.uafs.edu To view the online guestbook, please go to www.edwardsfuneralhome.com Posted online on October 02, 2022 Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Obituaries In Fort Smith AR | Times Record
Tillerson To Be Called As Witness In Trial Of Former Trump Advisor
Tillerson To Be Called As Witness In Trial Of Former Trump Advisor
Tillerson To Be Called As Witness In Trial Of Former Trump Advisor https://digitalarkansasnews.com/tillerson-to-be-called-as-witness-in-trial-of-former-trump-advisor/ Getty Images Former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is set to testify this week in the ongoing trial of Tom Barrack, a billionaire investor who once served as a campaign adviser to former President Trump and is accused of illegally lobbying on behalf of the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Barrack’s attorneys submitted a letter to U.S. District Judge Brian Cogan in New York explaining that Tillerson could only testify on Tuesday, citing a scheduling conflict that prevents him from appearing another time this week, according to CBS News. Tillerson, a former ExxonMobil CEO, served as Trump’s secretary of state from February 2017 to March 2018. Barrack, a close friend of Trump who chaired the former president’s inauguration, was charged in July 2021 for working on behalf of the UAE as an unidentified foreign lobbyist. He and his former assistant Matthew Grimes have pleaded not guilty to the charges. Barrack’s trial began late last month in the New York court. The Department of Justice (DOJ) last year accused Barrack of acting “at the direction of UAE officials” to sway public opinion in favor of the the emirates and to influence the foreign policy positions of the Trump administration from 2016 to 2018. Barrack allegedly worked language praising the UAE into a May 2016 campaign speech from Trump on U.S. energy policy and allegedly communicated extensively with UAE national Rashid Al Malik Alshahhi, who was also charged last year, to draft policies favorable to the UAE. The indictment also charges Barrack with obstruction of justice and making false statements to federal agents. Barrack is the founder of global investment firm Colony Capital and was an informal adviser to Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign. From Nov. 2016 to Jan. 2017, Barrack chaired the Presidential Inaugural Committee for Trump. Tags Brian Cogan Donald Trump Matthew Grimes New York Rex Tillerson Rex Tillerson Tom Barrack Trump Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Tillerson To Be Called As Witness In Trial Of Former Trump Advisor
Nevada Gubernatorial Candidates Seek Distance From Trump And Biden
Nevada Gubernatorial Candidates Seek Distance From Trump And Biden
Nevada Gubernatorial Candidates Seek Distance From Trump And Biden https://digitalarkansasnews.com/nevada-gubernatorial-candidates-seek-distance-from-trump-and-biden/ Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak and his Republican challenger Joe Lombardo both sought to distance themselves from the leaders of their respective parties in a Sunday debate, as they tried to appeal to the state’s swath of independent voters, many of whom are frustrated by inflation under President Joe Biden, but also tired of hearing former President Donald Trump’s falsehoods about the 2020 election. Trump is headed to rural Nevada next Saturday for a rally with Lombardo, who is the sheriff of Clark County, and GOP Senate nominee Adam Laxalt. The two high-profile races in the Silver State, which Biden narrowly carried in 2020, are considered Toss-ups by Inside Elections with Nathan L. Gonzales. When Lombardo was asked Sunday whether Trump was a “great president,” he said he wouldn’t “use that adjective.” “I wouldn’t say great. I think he was a sound president. I think he had policies that he brought forward that were beneficial to the country and supported the country and moved the country forward versus backwards,” he said during the debate hosted by The Nevada Independent. By contrast, Lombardo said, the country is “going backwards” under Biden, citing inflation. When pressed by moderator Jon Ralston, the CEO of the Nevada Independent, about whether he agreed with Trump’s false assertions that the 2020 election was stolen and “rigged,” Lombardo said he did not and that Trump’s rhetoric “bothers me.” “It’s not a minor thing. I think there is some modicum of fraud in any election, but shouldn’t we have mechanisms in place to address even that modicum — and the confidence of the voter in the system?” Lombardo said, agreeing with Ralston that Trump has undermined the confidence of voters but noting that he supports additional safeguards against fraud. “You’re never going to agree with anybody 100% in everything they do,” he added in regards to the former President. The two gubernatorial candidates disagreed about how to conduct elections in the future, with Sisolak arguing that every registered voter should continue to receive a ballot by mail — a policy Lombardo opposes, preferring they only be sent to voters who request them. Amid a heated national debate over abortion, Lombardo tried to defuse Democratic attacks by saying that he now believes Nevada’s current law — which protects abortions up to 24 weeks — should remain in place. Sisolak called out his opponent for changing his position over the course of the year. In May, for example, Lombardo told a columnist he would support sending voters a referendum moving the 24-week limit to 13 weeks, with his campaign clarifying to The Nevada Independent that he would give voters the “ultimate decision.” Lombardo said Sunday that he had thought more about that potential change and no longer supports it. “It’s codified law. There’s nothing that the governor can do to change it. There’s nothing that I can do to change it,” Lombardo said. He confirmed that he does support parental notification laws with exceptions for rape and incest. “I don’t think any other additional legislation should go forward,” he said. The Supreme Court’s decision overturning Roe v. Wade has energized Democrats around the country and put some Republicans in a tough spot as they try to stake out positions that don’t alienate moderate voters. Lombardo also said Sisolak has been skewing his record to suggest he would prosecute women that come into Nevada to get an abortion. “That’s another campaign commercial that is out there now,” Lombardo said, that can’t be “further from the truth.” “I respect a woman’s right for their own bodies,” the sheriff said. “Am I going to nip away at legislation that changes that? I have no intention. It’s a vote of the people and if the people want to change it, I will support that.” It wasn’t just Lombardo who was working to create some separation between him and his party on Sunday. Sisolak denounced billboards erected by a pro-Lombardo super PAC — Better Nevada PAC — that feature a photo of Biden and the governor standing next to one another with the words “the Democrat Dream Team for Nevada.” The signs are “a trick by my opponent,” Sisolak said, noting that he hadn’t invited Biden to campaign with him in the final stretch. But he added that the President was welcome to visit the Silver State or any other state in the country. “Joe Biden inherited a lot of problems from Donald Trump that he’s working through,” Sisolak said. “These inflation situations are not necessarily his fault. I mean, he doesn’t control the price of gasoline, no more than I control the price of chicken and ground beef at the stores. So I think that the President has done well with what he’s been presented with.” Sisolak noted that Biden has “delivered billions of dollars to the state of Nevada to fix our roads, our bridges, our schools, our hospitals, create thousands of good paying jobs, and I’m thankful for that.” But Lombardo argued that the billions of dollars that the Biden administration has spent to try to stimulate the economy have been a major factor in driving the rise in inflation — a point of considerable debate among economists. Sisolak shot back that the sheriff hadn’t been educated on “the intricacies of what causes inflation,” noting other factors like supply chain issues that resulted from the Covid-19 pandemic and the ripple effects of Russia’s war in Ukraine. Lombardo pledged not to raise taxes if elected and accused Sisolak of being overly restrictive with school and business closures during the pandemic, which he argues have slowed the state’s economic recovery. During the debate, he claimed Sisolak “just solely relied on what (Democratic California Gov.) Gavin Newsom advised him.” Sisolak said his primary focus at the time “was to save lives, human lives,” adding, “I think we have saved lives as a result of the things we put in place.” The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Nevada Gubernatorial Candidates Seek Distance From Trump And Biden
Sen. Rubio And FEMA Chief On Recovery From Ian's Devastation: 'I Don't Think It Has A Comparison' | MyCentralOregon.com
Sen. Rubio And FEMA Chief On Recovery From Ian's Devastation: 'I Don't Think It Has A Comparison' | MyCentralOregon.com
Sen. Rubio And FEMA Chief On Recovery From Ian's Devastation: 'I Don't Think It Has A Comparison' | MyCentralOregon.com https://digitalarkansasnews.com/sen-rubio-and-fema-chief-on-recovery-from-ians-devastation-i-dont-think-it-has-a-comparison-mycentraloregon-com/ (WASHINGTON) — Sen. Marco Rubio and Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Administrator Deanne Criswell on Sunday detailed the destruction Ian wreaked in Florida as Rubio said there’s no “comparison” between the deadly hurricane and past storms. “I don’t think it has a comparison, not in Florida,” Rubio, R-Fla., told “This Week” co-anchor Jonathan Karl. “Fort Myers Beach no longer exists. It’ll have to be rebuilt. It’ll be something different. It was a slice of old Florida that you can’t recapture.” “There is a lot of devastation. Significant damage in the point of impact on the west coast of Florida,” Criswell added. Ian made landfall last week in West Florida before sweeping across the middle and upper regions of the state, leaving leveled homes and significant flooding in its wake. Search-and-rescue operations are ongoing, but the death toll in Florida stood at 72 as of Sunday morning, according to local officials. There have also been four deaths in North Carolina, where Ian hit after passing through Florida, and several deaths in Cuba, which was hit before Florida. Both Rubio and Criswell emphasized on “This Week” that federal officials have been working hand-in-glove with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. “I spent the whole day with Gov. DeSantis on Friday and wanted to really hear what his concerns were and what resources he might need to help support this,” Criswell told Karl. “I committed to him that we would continue to bring in resources to meet the needs, not just for this response and the stabilization but as they go into the recovery efforts.” Asked by Karl if the forecast models were off in projecting Ian’s path or if local officials should have called for evacuations sooner, Criswell said the hurricane had been “fairly unpredictable in the days leading up to landfall,” when Ian quickly became the deadliest hurricane in the state in 60 years. “This is going to be a long road to recovery,” Criswell acknowledged. She added: “We are accounting for everybody that was in the storm’s path and that we go through every home to make sure that we don’t leave anybody behind.” Criswell, a former emergency management chief of New York City, was confirmed as FEMA administrator last year. She took over an agency that disburses billions in relief across the country but which has also faced scrutiny and criticism over its work. “FEMA has — they’ve all been great,” Rubio said on Sunday. “The federal response from day one is very positive … and we’re grateful for that.” Karl pressed Rubio multiple times on a 2013 vote he cast against recovery funds for Hurricane Sandy, with Rubio arguing the Sandy relief included unrelated spending. Karl asked if Rubio would also insist disaster money for his state be voted on without any non-emergency additions — and, if so, if he was then prepared to vote against such funding if it was part of a larger package. “What we’re going to ask for Florida is what we supported for every other state in the country that’s been affected by natural disasters, and that’s emergency relief designed to be sent immediately to help the people affected now,” Rubio said. Karl asked Criswell about FEMA’s work in Puerto Rico, which was hit by Hurricane Fiona last month. Criswell noted that 90% of people on the island have power again since the storm. “We have not stopped our response efforts and our recovery efforts,” she said. Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved. Rick Scott responds to Trump’s ‘death wish’ attack on Mitch McConnell Eric Lee/Bloomberg via Getty Images (WASHINGTON) — Florida Sen. Rick Scott, a member of Republican leadership in the upper chamber, said Sunday that he does not “condone violence” after Donald Trump lashed out at Senate GOP leader Sen. Rubio and FEMA chief on recovery from Ian’s devastation: ‘I don’t think it has a comparison’ ABC News (WASHINGTON) — Sen. Marco Rubio and Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Administrator Deanne Criswell on Sunday detailed the destruction Ian wreaked in Florida as Rubio said there’s no “comparison” between the deadly hurricane and past Putin faces ‘irreversible’ reality in Ukraine invasion despite latest moves: Petraeus ABC News (WASHINGTON) — Russian President Vladimir Putin now faces an “irreversible” quagmire amid the country’s land grab in its ongoing invasion of Ukraine, retired Army general and former CIA chief David Petraeus said Sunday. Putin “is 7 Americans released from detention in Venezuela, Biden says Mohamad syam/500px via Getty Images (VENEZUELA) — Seven Americans detained in Venezuela have been released, the White House announced Saturday. “Today, after years of being wrongfully detained in Venezuela, we are bringing home Jorge Toledo, Tomeu Vadell, Greg Abbott, Beto O’Rourke clash in 1st and only planned gubernatorial debate Brandon Bell/Staff via Getty Images (TEXAS) — Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and his Democratic challenger Beto O’Rourke faced off in a debate on Friday less than six weeks before Election Day. The debate — the first and only Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Sen. Rubio And FEMA Chief On Recovery From Ian's Devastation: 'I Don't Think It Has A Comparison' | MyCentralOregon.com