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Trump Records Probe: Tensions Flare Over Special Master
Trump Records Probe: Tensions Flare Over Special Master
Trump Records Probe: Tensions Flare Over Special Master https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-records-probe-tensions-flare-over-special-master/ WASHINGTON (AP) — The parallel special master process spawned by the FBI search of Donald Trump’s Florida estate has slowed the Justice Department’s criminal investigation and exposed simmering tensions between department prosecutors and lawyers for the former president. As the probe into the presence of top-secret information at Mar-a-Lago continues, barbed comments in recent court filings have laid bare deep disagreements related to the special master’s work — not just among lawyers but judges, too. And the filings have made clear that a process the Trump team initially asked for has not consistently played to the ex-president’s advantage. A look at where things stand: WHO IS THE SPECIAL MASTER AND WHAT IS HIS ROLE? A federal judge in Florida appointed at the Trump team’s request an independent arbiter to inspect the thousands of documents seized from Mar-a-Lago and to weed out from the investigation any that might be protected by claims of either attorney-client privilege or executive privilege. That arbiter, formally known as a special master, is Raymond Dearie. He’s a former federal prosecutor who was appointed a U.S. District judge in Brooklyn by then-President Ronald Reagan. He also has served on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. He was initially tasked by U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump appointee, with reviewing all of the records taken from Mar-a-Lago. But a federal appeals court shrunk the scope of his duties last week, ruling that the Justice Department did not have to share with him the roughly 100 documents with classified markings that were taken during the Aug. 8 search. That leaves for his evaluation the roughly 11,000 other, unclassified documents — which a Trump lawyer said actually total roughly 200,000 pages — recovered by the FBI. WHAT HAS HAPPENED SINCE THEN REGARDING CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS? The past week has revealed stark divisions in how both sides envision the process playing out, as well as the precise role the special master should have. An early hint surfaced when the Trump team resisted Dearie’s request for any information to support the idea that the documents had been declassified, as Trump has repeatedly asserted. A lawyer for Trump, James Trusty, said that inquiry was “premature” and “a little beyond” what Cannon had in mind at the time she appointed the special master. Dearie mused aloud that “my view of it is you can’t have your cake and eat it,” by ducking that question. The following day, in a setback for the Trump team, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit overruled an order from Cannon that had temporarily halted the Justice Department’s ability to use the seized classified documents as part of its investigation. Besides restoring the department’s access, the order also lifted Cannon’s mandate that investigators give the special master those records. More conflict followed, this time related to the scanning and processing of non-classified government records that were seized. Government lawyers revealed in a letter Tuesday that none of the five document-review vendors they had recommended for the job was “willing to be engaged” by the Trump team. The Justice Department said it was confident it would be able to secure the arrangements on its own while noting that it continued to expect the Trump team to pay. But Trusty responded with his own letter Wednesday attributing the difficulty in securing a vendor to the sheer quantity of documents, which he said totaled roughly 200,000 pages. He said the department’s deadlines for the production of documents was overly “aggressive” — “It would be better to base deadlines on actual data and not wistful claims by the Government,” he noted — and scolded the department for what he said were “antagonistic” comments. “DOJ continues to mistake itself as having judicial authority. Its comments are not argument, but proclamations designed to steamroll judicial oversight and the Plaintiff’s constitutional rights,” Trusty wrote. WHAT IS LIKELY TO HAPPEN NEXT? The FBI’s investigation took a major step forward when the appeals court lifted Cannon’s hold on its ability to scrutinize the seized classified documents as it evaluates whether Trump or anyone else should face criminal charges. Dearie’s work as special master will continue alongside that probe, though there’s little chance any action he takes at this point could substantially alter the outcome of the FBI investigation or affect major decisions that lie ahead. But early disagreements between Cannon and Dearie over the scope of his duties also bear watching. For instance, Cannon on Thursday overturned a directive from the special master that would have required the Trump team to say whether it had any objections to a detailed property inventory that the FBI assembled to catalog all of the items it removed from the home. That response could have been illuminating given that Trump and some of his allies have raised unsupported suggestions that the agents who searched his home may have planted evidence. If his lawyers were to affirm the inventory’s accuracy, they would likely have contradicted their own client’s claims while also acknowledging the presence of classified materials in the home. The Justice Department this week made what it called minor revisions to the inventory, but said it was an otherwise full and accurate accounting of what was taken. Yet newly disclosed correspondence showed the Trump team balking at being forced to assess the inventory’s accuracy. Trusty said in a letter Sunday that the directive that it do so goes beyond what Cannon had envisioned when she appointed Dearie. Cannon herself agreed, canceling Dearie’s requirement Thursday and writing that her “appointment order did not contemplate that obligation.” The Justice Department, for its part, had earlier suggested that the Trump team should not be able to avoid stating its position on the record or following other of Dearie’s directives. “The Special Master needs to know that he is reviewing all of the materials seized from Mara-Lago on August 8, 2022 — and no additional materials — before he categorizes the seized documents and adjudicates privilege claims,” the department said. The letter Tuesday ended with this tart reminder to Trump and his lawyers: “Plaintiff brought this civil, equitable proceeding. He bears the burden of proof.” ____ Follow Eric Tucker on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/etuckerAP Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Records Probe: Tensions Flare Over Special Master
Suspect In Arkansas Hospital Shooting Pleads Not Guilty
Suspect In Arkansas Hospital Shooting Pleads Not Guilty
Suspect In Arkansas Hospital Shooting Pleads Not Guilty https://digitalarkansasnews.com/suspect-in-arkansas-hospital-shooting-pleads-not-guilty/ LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — An Arkansas man charged with fatally shooting a man visiting a patient at a Little Rock-area hospital pleaded not guilty Thursday to capital murder and aggravated assault. A judge set bond at $500,000 for Raymond Lovett, 24, during a brief video arraignment. Lovett was arrested Wednesday in the shooting death of Leighton Whitfield at CHI St. Vincent North in Sherwood, a city of about 33,000 people northeast of Little Rock. The hospital was placed on lockdown as authorities responded to the shooting, and Whitfield was found shot dead on the fourth floor of the facility. Lovett was arrested a little over an hour later at a gas station in Little Rock, about 15 miles away from the hospital. Police have said the men knew each other and that Whitfield was visiting a patient at the hospital. Lovett’s next court appearance is set for Nov. 8. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Suspect In Arkansas Hospital Shooting Pleads Not Guilty
Jobless Rates Decline In All Arkansas Metro Areas In August Report Talk Business & Politics
Jobless Rates Decline In All Arkansas Metro Areas In August Report Talk Business & Politics
Jobless Rates Decline In All Arkansas Metro Areas In August Report – Talk Business & Politics https://digitalarkansasnews.com/jobless-rates-decline-in-all-arkansas-metro-areas-in-august-report-talk-business-politics/ Jobless rates in all of the eight metro areas within or including parts of Arkansas were down compared with August 2021, and all areas posted year-over-year job gains. The largest job growth was in Northwest Arkansas which added an estimated 12,880 jobs since August 2021. August jobless rates ranged from 2.5% in Northwest Arkansas to 5.8% in the Pine Bluff metro, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). The August report is preliminary and subject to revisions. Arkansas’ three largest metro regions – areas with most of the workforce in the state – accounted for 81% the state’s 28,185 year-over-year job gains in August, with the Northwest Arkansas metro accounting for 45.7% of the increase. Central Arkansas – Little Rock, North Little Rock and Conway – had 343,237 employed in August, up 7,596 jobs, from the 335,641 in August 2021. The region’s jobless rate was 3.4% in August, below the 4% in August 2021. Northwest Arkansas, the state’s second largest metro area, had an estimated 290,310 jobs in August, up 12,880 jobs from the 277,430 in August 2021. The region’s jobless rate was 2.5% in August, below the 2.8% in August 2021. The Fort Smith metro, Arkansas’ third largest metro, had an estimated 113,222 jobs in August, up 2,358 jobs from 110,864 in August 2021. The region’s jobless rate was 3.4% in August, below the 3.7% in August 2021. Regional employment remains well below the peak of 124,098 in August 2006. NATIONAL NUMBERS Unemployment rates were lower in August than a year earlier in 384 of the 389 metropolitan areas and higher in 5 areas. A total of 90 areas had jobless rates of less than 3% and 2 areas had rates of at least 10%. Nonfarm payroll employment increased over the year in 101 metro areas and was essentially unchanged in 288 areas. The national unemployment rate in August was 3.8%, not seasonally adjusted, down from 5.3% a year earlier. In August, the following three areas had the lowest unemployment rates at 1.7% each: Burlington-South Burlington, Vt.; Fargo, N.D.-Minn.; and Mankato-North Mankato, Minn. Yuma, Ariz., had the highest rate at 21%. A total of 209 areas had August jobless rates below the U.S. rate of 3.8%, 161 areas had rates above it, and 19 areas had rates equal to that of the nation. METRO JOBS DATA Following are labor market data for the eight metro areas. • Northwest Arkansas Labor force August 2022: 297,673 August 2021: 285,280 Employment August 2022: 290,310 August 2021: 277,430 March 2020 (pre-pandemic): 279,486 Unemployed August 2022: 7,363 August 2021: 7,850 Jobless rate August 2022: 2.5% August 2021: 2.8% • Fort Smith metro (Arkansas-Oklahoma) Labor force August 2022: 117,262 August 2021: 115,121 Employment August 2022: 113,222 August 2021: 110,864 March 2020 (pre-pandemic): 112,650 Unemployed August 2022: 4,040 August 2021: 4,257 Jobless rate August 2022: 3.4% August 2021: 3.7% • Hot Springs Labor force August 2022: 41,318 August 2021: 40,874 Employment August 2022: 39,588 August 2021: 39,055 March 2020 (pre-pandemic): 40,128 Unemployed August 2022: 1,730 August 2021: 1,819 Jobless rate August 2022: 4.2% August 2021: 4.5% • Jonesboro Labor force August 2022: 66,125 August 2021: 64,919 Employment August 2022: 64,105 August 2021: 62,821 March 2020 (pre-pandemic): 64,348 Unemployed August 2022: 2,020 August 2021: 2,098 Jobless rate August 2022: 3.1% August 2021: 3.2% • Central Arkansas Labor force August 2022: 355,499 August 2021: 349,514 Employment August 2022: 343,237 August 2021: 335,641 March 2020 (pre-pandemic): 343,937 Unemployed August 2022: 12,262 August 2021: 13,873 Jobless rate August 2022: 3.4% August 2021: 4% • Memphis/West Memphis Labor force August 2022: 646,237 August 2021: 644,502 Employment August 2022: 615,600 August 2021: 604,084 March 2020 (pre-pandemic): 605,300 Unemployed August 2022: 30,637 August 2021: 40,418 Jobless rate August 2022: 4.7% August 2021: 6.3% • Pine Bluff Labor force August 2022: 33,165 August 2021: 32,532 Employment August 2022: 31,242 August 2021: 30,616 March 2020 (pre-pandemic): 32,283 Unemployed August 2022: 1,923 August 2021: 1,916 Jobless rate August 2022: 5.8% August 2021: 5.9% • Texarkana (Arkansas-Texas) Labor force August 2022: 63,800 August 2021: 63,072 Employment August 2022: 60,930 August 2021: 59,805 March 2020 (pre-pandemic): 60,079 Unemployed August 2022: 2,870 August 2021: 3,267 Jobless rate August 2022: 4.5% August 2021: 5.2% Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Jobless Rates Decline In All Arkansas Metro Areas In August Report Talk Business & Politics
MAP: Heres The Updated Forecast Track Of Tropical Storm Ian
MAP: Heres The Updated Forecast Track Of Tropical Storm Ian
MAP: Here’s The Updated Forecast Track Of Tropical Storm Ian https://digitalarkansasnews.com/map-heres-the-updated-forecast-track-of-tropical-storm-ian/ Tropical Storm Ian moved off the east coast of Florida near Titusville Thursday morning after leaving a trail of destruction across central portions of the state and both coasts. As of 11 a.m. Thursday, Ian was forecast to regain hurricane strength and turn north then northeast for another landfall near Charlestown, South Carolina. Tropical storm warnings remain in effect for Florida’s east coast from the Jupiter Inlet to the Palm Coast. Hurricane warnings are in effect from Savannah, Georgia, to the North Carolina border, with hurricane watches extending further north and south. Here’s the latest forecast track including the so-called “spaghetti models,” which show the range of possible tracks based on various computer models: Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
MAP: Heres The Updated Forecast Track Of Tropical Storm Ian
Finland Will Close Borders To Russian Tourists Amid Record Crossings Since Partial Mobilization Order
Finland Will Close Borders To Russian Tourists Amid Record Crossings Since Partial Mobilization Order
Finland Will Close Borders To Russian Tourists Amid Record Crossings Since Partial Mobilization Order https://digitalarkansasnews.com/finland-will-close-borders-to-russian-tourists-amid-record-crossings-since-partial-mobilization-order/ 7 hr 38 min ago Finland will close borders to Russian tourists amid record crossings since partial mobilization order From Jorge Engels and Allegra Goodwin People entering Finland queue at the passport control area at the border checkpoint crossing in Vaalimaa, Finland, on the border with the Russian Federation on September 29. (Alessandro Rampazzo/AFP/Getty Images) Finland will close its borders to Russian tourists from Friday midnight local time (5 p.m. ET) until further notice amid a record number of Russians crossing into the country following Moscow’s partial mobilization order, the government confirmed Thursday. On September 21, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the immediate “partial mobilization” of citizens for its war in Ukraine. Since then, there has been an exodus of citizens fleeing the country and thousands of Russians have entered neighboring Finland. “The Russian invasion of Ukraine and the mobilization declared by Russia have changed the security situation in Europe,” Finland’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement on Thursday. “The Government deems that the Russian mobilization and the rapidly increasing volume of tourists arriving in Finland and transiting via Finland endanger Finland’s international position and international relations.” “The resolution aims to stop tourism and related transit from Russia altogether. It will drastically limit the capacity to receive visa applications in Russia,” the ministry added. “The resolution will not prevent travelling when it is deemed necessary for humanitarian reasons, for national interests or for meeting Finland’s international obligations.” Some context: The announcement comes after Helsinki announced Wednesday it would “significantly” restrict the right of Russian tourists to enter the country or as transit when travelling to other parts of the Schengen area. Finland’s border guard also said Wednesday that more than 50,000 Russians have entered Finland via the land border since September 21. Last weekend also saw a record number of Russians entering Finland via its land border, with 16,886 Russians arriving in total over Saturday and Sunday, according to the border guard’s head of international affairs, Matti Pitkaniitty. 5 hr 32 min ago Nord Stream pipeline damage likely caused by “deliberate” acts of sabotage, says North Atlantic Council From CNN’s Eve Brennan Information gathered on the damage to the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines in the Baltic Sea suggest “the result of deliberate, reckless, and irresponsible acts of sabotage,” the North Atlantic Council said Thursday. Damage to the pipelines is of “deep concern,” the council said in a statement. “These leaks are causing risks to shipping and substantial environmental damage. We support the investigations underway to determine the origin of the damage,” the statement said. “We, as Allies, have committed to prepare for, deter and defend against the coercive use of energy and other hybrid tactics by state and non-state actors. Any deliberate attack against Allies’ critical infrastructure would be met with a united and determined response,” it added. More context: Earlier Thursday, Germany’s ambassador to the UK said there was a “very strong indication” the pipeline leaks were acts of sabotage. US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan also labelled the leaks “apparent sabotage” in a tweet Tuesday. European security officials observed Russian navy ships in the vicinity of leaks on Monday and Tuesday, according to Western intelligence officials and one other source. Senior Western officials have stopped short of attributing the attack to Russia or any nation. What the Kremlin is saying: A Russian government spokesperson said Thursday that the leaks may have been the result of a “terrorist attack.” “The unprecedented nature of this event, it seems that this is a terrorist attack, possibly at the state level,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said during a daily call with journalists.  Asked about CNN’s report on Russian submarines seen in the area of the Nord Stream disruptions, Peskov said: “This is the Baltic sea. There were far more aircraft, floating and other marine vehicles that belong to NATO countries seen there.” CNN’s Anna Chernova, Allegra Goodwin and Radina Gigova contributed reporting to this post. 1 hr 42 min ago Fourth leak in Nord Stream confirmed by Swedish coast guard From CNN’s Jorge Engels A gas leak causes bubbles to rise to the surface of the sea in Sweden, on Thursday. (Swedish Coast Guard/Handout/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) A fourth leak in the Nord Stream pipelines was confirmed by Sweden’s coast guard on Thursday. “There are currently two gas leaks in Swedish waters, a larger leak above North Stream 1, and a smaller leak above North Stream 2. Two leaks have also been reported in Danish waters,” Sweden’s coast guard said in a statement. The coast guard added that one of its vessels near the pair of leaks in its home seas was reporting a “constant flow” of gas to the surface. The confirmation comes after Germany’s ambassador to the UK, Miguel Berger, said earlier Thursday that a fourth leak had been discovered. The leaks in Swedish waters are approximately 1.8 kilometers (1 nautical mile or 1.1 miles) apart, with the distance from the smaller Swedish leak to the closest Danish leak being 4.6 kilometers (2.6 nautical miles), the coast guard said. The statement concluded by specifying that the coast guard’s vessel is in possession of a remotely operated vehicle but not a submarine, which the Swedish Coast Guard said it neither owns nor operates. 12 hr 14 min ago Pro-Russian separatist leaders involved in illegal referendums across Ukraine arrive in Moscow  From CNN’s Olga Voitovych Separatist leaders from Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions, Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics visit Moscow, Russia, on September 29. (Kirill Stremousov) Some of the separatist leaders involved in carrying out sham referendums to secede from Ukraine and join Russia landed in Moscow Thursday, according to a photograph posted by Kirill Stremousov, the Russia-appointed deputy head of the Kherson regional military administration.  The votes – which are illegal under international law – were carried out in the self-declared republics of Donetsk and Luhansk in the east and parts of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia in the south.   “The historic plane with the leaders of the liberated territories landed in Moscow. We will become new subjects of the Russian Federation very soon,” the statement read, alongside a photograph of Stremousov with Denis Pushilin, Yevgeniy Balitskiy and Vladimir Saldo, some of the other Russian-backed officials involved in the so-called “referendums.” The votes mirror the playbook used during Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, sparking fears they could become a false pretext for the Kremlin to illegally claim more territory in Ukraine and escalate its war effort.  Some context: On Wednesday, with all “votes” counted, Kremlin-backed authorities in the four Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine predictably claimed that residents had overwhelmingly agreed to become part of Russia. The UK Ministry of Defense has said that “there is a realistic possibility” that Putin will use his address to Russia’s parliament on Friday to “formally announce the accession of the occupied regions of Ukraine to the Russian Federation.” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov previously indicated that if the regions announced majorities in favor of joining Russia, the ratification process would be fast and they could become part of the Russian Federation “quite soon.”  Asked if that would mean any attempt by Ukraine to regain the territories would be regarded as an attack on Russian territory, Peskov said: “Of course.” 7 hr 29 min ago Fourth leak in Nord Stream found, “strong indication” of sabotage: Germany’s ambassador to UK From Jorge Engels Unused pipes for the Nord Stream 2 Baltic gas pipeline are stored on the site of the Port of Mukran, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany, on September 27. (Stefan Sauer/picture alliance/Getty Images) Germany’s ambassador to the United Kingdom on Thursday said a fourth leak had been discovered in the Nord Stream pipelines connecting Russia to Germany and that there was a “very strong indication” these were acts of sabotage. “It didn’t happen just like that. We think that there is a very, very strong indication these were acts of sabotage,” Miguel Berger, Germany’s ambassador to the UK, told BBC Radio 4 on Thursday. “We have two gas leakages in Danish and two in Swedish economic exclusive zones,” Berger added. CNN has reached out to Sweden’s coast guard but did not immediately receive a reply. Berger said Sweden and Denmark would lead the investigation into the leaks but that results were likely to take up to 10 days because gas is still escaping from the pipelines. Currently, it’s too dangerous to investigate,” Berger said. Berger said that in Germany’s view, “everything indicated” the leaks were not the product of natural causes and that a non-state actor could not have caused this damage. He did not blame Russia for the leaks but said it was too early to rule anything out. Some context: Swedish authorities sounded the alarm on Tuesday about leaks in the Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2 pipelines – both of which run under the Baltic Sea near Sweden and Denmark, and have been major flashpoints in the energy war between Europe and Russia. Neither pipeline was in operation at the time the leaks were found, but both still contained gas under pressure. 13 hr 24 min ago One child and at least two others dead, five injured in Russian missile strikes on Dnip...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Finland Will Close Borders To Russian Tourists Amid Record Crossings Since Partial Mobilization Order
Newly Revealed Private Texts Show Jack Dorsey Tried To Get Elon Musk Involved With Twitter At Least A Year Before The $44 Billion Deal. 'I Trust You' Dorsey Wrote.
Newly Revealed Private Texts Show Jack Dorsey Tried To Get Elon Musk Involved With Twitter At Least A Year Before The $44 Billion Deal. 'I Trust You' Dorsey Wrote.
Newly Revealed Private Texts Show Jack Dorsey Tried To Get Elon Musk Involved With Twitter At Least A Year Before The $44 Billion Deal. 'I Trust You,' Dorsey Wrote. https://digitalarkansasnews.com/newly-revealed-private-texts-show-jack-dorsey-tried-to-get-elon-musk-involved-with-twitter-at-least-a-year-before-the-44-billion-deal-i-trust-you-dorsey-wrote/ Text messages between Elon Musk and various notables in tech and business have been released. In several private exchanges, Musk and Jack Dorsey discussed the platform and Musk’s involvement.  “I trust you,” Dorsey said in one text to Musk. Loading Something is loading. Elon Musk and Jack Dorsey texted privately about Twitter several times before and after the Tesla billionaire became financially involved in the company, newly revealed court records show. Dorsey, a Twitter co-founder and former CEO, first texted Musk on March 26, according to a text log filed as part of Twitter’s ongoing lawsuit against Musk.  In his initial text to Musk about Twitter, Dorsey said “A new platform is needed. It can’t be a company. That’s why I left.” Musk quickly responded, according to the text log, asking “What should it look like?” Dorsey proceeded to explain what he has said publicly, that Twitter should become an “open-sourced protocol” that looks “a bit like what Signal has done,” referencing the encrypted messaging app. Dorsey also said that Twitter “cant have an advertising model.” Advertising is currently the central business model of social media companies. Musk told Dorsey, “I’d like to help if I’m able.” Dorsey proceeded to tell Musk that he’d actually pushed for his addition to Twitter’s board a year earlier, but Twitter’s board “said no.” He added the Twitter board saw Musk “as more risk, “Which i thought was completely stupid and backwards.” “That’s about the time I decided I needed to work to leave, as hard as it was for me,” Dorsey continued. This was also the time activist investor Elliot Management got involved in Twitter, demanding a number of changes to the company’s business toward growth and profitability. While Dorsey’s contact with Musk on March 26 was referenced in a later filing with the SEC about Musk’s eventual offer to acquire Twitter for $44 billion, the detail of the exchanges was not divulged. Subsequent texts at later dates were also not mentioned. When Musk eventually made a deal on April 5 with Twitter to join its board, the day after his more than 9% stake in the company became public, Musk texted Dorsey to set up a time to “speak confidentially.” A couple of hours later, the two texted referencing the call. Dorsey told Musk that he “couldn’t be happier you’re doing this.” “I’ve wanted it for a long time,” Dorsey added. “Got very emotional when I learned it was finally possible.” When Musk asked Dorsey to advise him if ever he was doing or not doing “something dumb,” Dorsey replied: “I trust you but def will do.” Are you a Twitter employee or someone with insight to share? Contact Kali Hays at khays@insider.com, on secure messaging app Signal at 949-280-0267, or through Twitter DM at @hayskali. Reach out using a non-work device. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Newly Revealed Private Texts Show Jack Dorsey Tried To Get Elon Musk Involved With Twitter At Least A Year Before The $44 Billion Deal. 'I Trust You' Dorsey Wrote.
Whats Going On With College Football? Look To Lawrence | Lindy's Sports
Whats Going On With College Football? Look To Lawrence | Lindy's Sports
What’s Going On With College Football? Look To Lawrence | Lindy's Sports https://digitalarkansasnews.com/whats-going-on-with-college-football-look-to-lawrence-lindys-sports/ A week or so ago, I received a simple text question from longtime friend David Scott. “What’s going on with college football?” David is a pretty astute college analyst himself, a long-suffering University of Georgia fan, 100 percent Bulldog loyalist, still basking in the glory of his team’s first national football title in over four decades. For sure, David had some answers of his own when he sent the question. It seems like a simple question, but not sure that it has a simple answer. “What’s going on with college football?” It could be a lot of things. Fallout from Name/Image/Likeness? Impact of the Transfer Portal? Evolution of scholarship limitations creating a more level playing field? Uncertainty regarding coaching and teams due to runaway salaries and conference realignments? Whatever the reasons, there have been few, if any, seasons that have started like this one. David’s question arrived in the wake of games like these that have already happened before the last Saturday of September is even here. ** Marshall of the Sun Belt went to No. 7 Notre Dame, beat the Fighting Irish, pulled away at the end, then two weeks later lost 16-7 to Troy. ** Georgia Southern of the Sun Belt won at Nebraska, put 45 on the Cornhuskers in Lincoln before losing by two touchdowns to UAB. ** Appalachian State of the Sun Belt demolished Texas A&M in College Station, kept the ball over 42 minutes, held the Aggies to 182 total yards, but lost at home to James Madison. ** Middle Tennessee State, already a 44-7 loser to that same James Madison team, demolished the Miami Hurricanes on the road in a game when the ‘Canes never had the lead. ** Syracuse, picked by Lindy’s in the preseason near the bottom of the Atlantic Coast Conference, sits at 4-0 with a win over Purdue and a 31-7 bulldozing of Louisville. ** Kansas State … a 26-point underdog, already a loser to Tulane, which lost to Southern Miss, which already had two losses … beat No. 6 Oklahoma in Norman, scoring 41 on the Sooners in a game where they took a 14-0 lead and Oklahoma could never pull even. It’s already been that kind of season. But if you want to see probably the most startling, out-of-the-blue example of what the 2022 college football season has been, look no further than Lawrence, Kansas. Jayhawk fans are no strangers to championships. After all, they are the defending national champions … in basketball!! But in college football, specifically in Power 5 college football, the Jayhawks have been the poster boys for modern era futility – until this season. Heading into Saturday afternoon’s game against Iowa State at David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium in Lawrence, Kan., the Jayhawks are 4-0 … that’s four wins and NO losses. At first glance, you may not realize the significance. After all, with two-thirds of the season still to play, there are 21 undefeated teams, including among others Alabama, Clemson, Georgia, Michigan, Ohio State, Penn State, Southern Cal – and Kansas! To understand just how exhilarating this is for Kansas fans, you need to understand where Jayhawk football has been. The last time Kansas won a conference championship was 1968. The head coach was Pepper Rogers. The last time a Jayhawk player placed in the Top 10 in Heisman Trophy voting was 1973. That was quarterback David Jaynes. The winningest head coach in Kansas history is A.R. Kennedy. He won 52 games; his last season was 1910. There have been big names and successful seasons in Lawrence. The late U.S. Senator and Republican Presidential candidate Bob Dole was a Jayhawk end (1941-1944). The late Gale Sayers, considered by many to be the greatest running back in football history, was a two-time All-American (1963, 1964). Head coach Mark Mangino was National Coach of the Year (2007) and led Kansas to three consecutive bowl wins (2005-2007). But, there haven’t been many seasons like 2022. After the season opening 56-10 win over Tennessee Tech, the Jayhawks traveled to West Virginia and defeated the Mountaineers, 55-42, in overtime. Quarterback Jalen Daniels threw three touchdown passes in the win. Nationally ranked Houston was the next victim, falling 48-30. Daniels threw for three scores and ran for two more. Then last week, the Jayhawks beat undefeated Duke, 35-27, as Daniels passed for 324 yards and four touchdowns, rushing for 83 yards and another score. The Jayhawks are college football’s seventh highest scoring team and Daniels is in the top 20 nationally in total offense. Only four quarterbacks have been responsible for more points. But for Kansas, there’s still not much respect. Associated Press doesn’t have the ‘Hawks in this week’s Top 25, but it does include in-state archrival Kansas State (3-1) despite their loss to Tulane. Even the Pittsburg State (Kan.) Gorillas are in the AFCA Division II poll Top 10 this week with the same 4-0 record. And in perhaps the most irritating slap, Las Vegas sportsbooks have Kansas as a 3.5-underdog to the Cyclones. But nothing has dampened the enthusiasm of Jayhawk fans who packed the home stadium with a sellout crowd last Saturday for just the second time in the past 13 seasons. Another longtime friend, Ty Williams, helped put this in perspective for me. Ty is Associate Director of Restoration Academy, a private Christian school in the Birmingham suburb of Fairfield which provides a solid academic foundation for underserved families. Over the years, Ty and I have talked many times about education, missions, family and sports. But until this past week, we had never talked about Kansas football. When I saw Ty’s photo posted on Facebook, proudly wearing his blue and red shirt with the Jayhawk logo, I made the call. I found out that Ty was a KU student in the early 1990s at a time when football was on the upswing. “During my last football season at Kansas in 1992, they finished the season ranked No. 22 with an 8-4 record,” he explained. “(Head coach) Glen Mason had heavyweights like future NFL stars Dana Stubberfield and Gilbert Brown. It was a time when KU basketball and football were making a run, playing competitively. Those were fun times.” But times in Lawrence changed, and Ty and his family moved to Alabama. “When I moved, I had to hide away my KU gear until the hoops season every year,” he said. “I couldn’t imagine my Jayhawks having a better record than SEC powers like Auburn and Arkansas. But, this season could still turn out like 2009 when they started hot (winning five to start the campaign) and ended on a 7-game losing streak.” He said that if the Jayhawks can continue winning and play in a postgame bowl game while the hoops seasons starts with a top-ranked basketball team, it would be “the perfect Christmas gift.” “We can dream, can’t we?” Of course, they can. Ty Williams and the Jayhawk fans. Syracuse and James Madison. And those teams that have only dreamed of going into South Bend, Lincoln or College Station and coming out with a win. Not sure what’s happening, David. And, not sure how all these changes are going to play out. But, it’s been that kind of season. So, let’s just enjoy college football while we’ve got it. Rock Chalk, Ty! Rock Chalk! Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Whats Going On With College Football? Look To Lawrence | Lindy's Sports
Weather Permitting: Fayetteville Areas Tropical Storm Ian Forecast For Friday MsnNOW
Weather Permitting: Fayetteville Areas Tropical Storm Ian Forecast For Friday MsnNOW
Weather Permitting: Fayetteville Area’s Tropical Storm Ian Forecast For Friday – MsnNOW https://digitalarkansasnews.com/weather-permitting-fayetteville-areas-tropical-storm-ian-forecast-for-friday-msnnow/ Weather Permitting: Fayetteville area’s Tropical Storm Ian forecast for Friday  msnNOW Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Weather Permitting: Fayetteville Areas Tropical Storm Ian Forecast For Friday MsnNOW
Russians Rebel As Putin Drafts More People In Battle For Ukraine
Russians Rebel As Putin Drafts More People In Battle For Ukraine
Russians Rebel As Putin Drafts More People In Battle For Ukraine https://digitalarkansasnews.com/russians-rebel-as-putin-drafts-more-people-in-battle-for-ukraine/ September 29, 2022 at 11:18 a.m. EDT President Vladimir Putin’s mobilization of Russian men to fight in Ukraine has brought home the reality of war to ordinary Russian families. For months, Russian voices of dissent were largely silent. Initial antiwar demonstrations were quickly crushed and there were only small displays of defiance in major cities like Moscow and St. Petersburg. But that all changed after Putin’s announcement on Sept. 21. Through angry protests, acts of violence and an exodus of more than 200,000 citizens, Russians are rebelling against the prospect of further escalation of the war and the steep price they will probably pay. Kremlin officials have downplayed the turmoil but the scenes coming out of Russia tell a different story, one of widespread opposition against a government known for quashing it. Dissent has been documented across the country even in areas that were previously quiet. Videos and images verified by The Washington Post show Russians are angry and afraid for their lives. Dozens of protests broke out in large cities and rural areas that have already lost many men to the war in Ukraine. Some took to violence, while others chose to escape: Miles-long lines of cars waited to cross land borders out of the country and international flights out of Moscow were full of fighting-age men. On Sunday, demonstrations erupted in Dagestan, a predominantly Muslim republic in the North Caucasus. Soldiers from the region have suffered disproportionately high casualties during the Ukraine invasion. In protests in the regional capital of Makhachkala on Sunday and Monday, women confronted, even chased, local authorities. “We are for peace,” they chanted in one widely shared video. Security forces responded harshly, violently detaining both women and men. Some 120 people were arrested in Makhachkala, according to OVD-Info, an independent group monitoring protests. The head of Dagestan, Sergei Melikov, has blamed the unrest on foreign influence “trying to escalate the situation inside the country” and has vowed that the republic will fulfill its part of the mobilization. In Endirey, a village of around 8,000 people located northwest of Makhachkala, video taken Sunday showed police firing into the air. According to local Telegram channels, 110 men had been called up there. There were more protests Monday in Makhachkala and security forces again clashed with locals. Within hours of Putin’s announcement, protesters took to the streets in several large cities including St. Petersburg, Perm, Yekaterinburg and Moscow. Police, as they did months earlier, responded with beatings and mass arrests. Protesters also came out in western Siberia. A video posted Sept. 21 showed people standing in Novosibirsk’s central square. “I don’t want to die for Putin,” one shouted before being pulled away by police. Police surrounded demonstrators in a main square of the Siberian city of Tomsk on Sept. 21. One protester was led away holding a sign that said, “give me a hug if you’re also afraid.” In the eastern cities of Siberia, protesters fought with police shortly after Putin’s announcement and continued demonstrating through the weekend. In a video posted Sunday on Telegram from the far eastern city of Yakutsk, an impoverished area where ethnic minorities have also borne the brunt of casualties in the war, women surrounded police and chanted, “Let our children live!” There have also been attacks against military recruitment offices. More than a dozen incidents of violence have been reported across the country against military commissariats since the mobilization announcement. On Monday morning at a recruitment center in Ust-Ilimsk, 25-year-old Ruslan Zinin shot and critically wounded the chief recruitment officer, Alexander Eliseev, in charge of conscription. The shooter was detained and a criminal case was opened against him, according to Russian News Agency Tass. A video posted Monday to Telegram showed a person throwing a Molotov cocktail at an enlistment office in the town of Uryupinsk, part of the oblast or province of Volgograd in southwest Russia. In a statement from the administration of Uryupinsk posted on the Russian social media channel VK, the office confirmed the enlistment building was set on fire and that “the person at fault has been detained.” The administration said that there was minimal damage and no injuries. A military recruitment office in Tomsk was evacuated following a bomb threat just hours after Putin’s announcement, media in Tomsk reported. Rather than engaging in attacks or protests, many more young men seeking to avoid the war have opted to flee the country. Social media posts and satellite imagery showed miles of cars lined up at Russian border crossings as neighboring nations reported influxes of Russian migration. Lines of cars stretched back at least nine miles from the Upper Lars checkpoint on the border with Georgia, far longer than the usual backup, according to Stephen Wood, senior director at Maxar Technologies. The traffic jams are visible both in satellite images and videos posted online. For Yana and her boyfriend, crossing into Georgia took days. The 28-year-old, who only gave her first name because she didn’t want to be identified by authorities, described a desperate scene at the border. “People had been standing there for three or four days already,” she said. “Online help chats are being created, people asking for water, food, diapers, gasoline.” “I’ve seen a lot of things at the border but never the mayhem such as this,” a tour guide said in a video posted on Sept. 22. Georgia’s interior minister said there had been a 40 to 45 percent increase in Russians crossing the border daily since the mobilization announcement. After days of waiting, the couple made it across on Tuesday. “He hadn’t received a summons yet,” Yana said of her boyfriend. “Once it arrives it’s too late to leave.” Satellite imagery captured by Maxar Technologies on Friday showed a line of vehicles nearly a half-mile long waiting to cross from the Russian republic of Buryatia into Mongolia. “There are definitely more vehicles trying to leave,” Wood said. Images from Aug. 15, which he said were typical of traffic volumes before the mobilization, contained only a handful of trucks on the Russian side of the border. Satellite imagery taken in the week since Russia’s announcement also indicated extensive delays at several land crossings into Kazakhstan. Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev estimated Tuesday some 98,000 Russians had entered the country since Sept. 21. “Most of them are forced to leave because of the current hopeless situation,” he said in a speech. “We must take care of them and ensure their safety.” Video taken at the Mashtakovo border crossing into Kazakhstan and posted Sept. 22 also showed cars lined at the checkpoint and men on foot. Footage recorded late Sunday showed large numbers of men still at the border. “There are many refugees, I feel sorry for them,” Aidos Kairzhanov, who shared the videos with the Post and said he helped transport some Russians from the border. Many also scrambled to fly out of Russia. “The decision to leave was a very hard one,” said Alexander, 27, who gave only his first name for fear of reprisals. He left behind his family, girlfriend, mortgage and job, and booked a flight to Kazakhstan when he heard of the mobilization. At first he was nervous and confused, but he made friends on the flight — young Russian men who were also escaping. “I’m happy I left and have no regrets. But the future is very unclear,” he said. Robyn Dixon and Natalia Abbakumova contributed to this report from Riga, Latvia and Atthar Mirza contributed from Washington DC. Mariya Manzhos provided translations. War in Ukraine: What you need to know The latest: Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a “partial mobilization” of troops in an address to the nation on Sept. 21, framing the move as an attempt to defend Russian sovereignty against a West that seeks to use Ukraine as a tool to “divide and destroy Russia.” Follow our live updates here. The fight: A successful Ukrainian counteroffensive has forced a major Russian retreat in the northeastern Kharkiv region in recent days, as troops fled cities and villages they had occupied since the early days of the war and abandoned large amounts of military equipment. Annexation referendums: Staged referendums, which would be illegal under international law, are set to take place from Sept. 23 to 27 in the breakaway Luhansk and Donetsk regions of eastern Ukraine, according to Russian news agencies. Another staged referendum will be held by the Moscow-appointed administration in Kherson starting Friday. Photos: Washington Post photographers have been on the ground from the beginning of the war — here’s some of their most powerful work. How you can help: Here are ways those in the U.S. can help support the Ukrainian people as well as what people around the world have been donating. Read our full coverage of the Russia-Ukraine crisis. Are you on Telegram? Subscribe to our channel for updates and exclusive video. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Russians Rebel As Putin Drafts More People In Battle For Ukraine
Five White Supremacist Gang Members Sentenced To Prison
Five White Supremacist Gang Members Sentenced To Prison
Five White Supremacist Gang Members Sentenced To Prison https://digitalarkansasnews.com/five-white-supremacist-gang-members-sentenced-to-prison/ The five people were sentenced for various crimes made on behalf of New Aryan Empire, a white supremacist gang. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Another five people were sentenced to prison for their involvement in crimes committed by the New Aryan Empire, a white supremacist gang that operated in Arkansas. According to reports, each of the defendants had previously pleaded guilty to a number of crimes that were committed under the New Aryan Empire association.  Authorities said that the following people were charged in connection to the organization’s crimes:  35-year-old Russell Robinson: 204 months in prison for racketeering, which included kidnapping and assault with a deadly weapon.  38-year-old Jeffrey Howell: 188 months in prison for intent to possess and distribute of meth.  42-year-old Richard Hampton: 96 months in prison for intent to possess and distribute of meth.  42-year-old Tiffany Parker: 96 months in prison for intent to possess and distribute of meth.  40-year-old April Teeter: 90 months in prison for intent to possess and distribute of meth. The original investigation started back in 2016, with authorities both on a local and federal level, worked to identify and stop drug trafficking organizations that were operating in Russellville.  Since then, more than 50 people have been charged in association to the meth trafficking scheme that was taking place throughout Pope County.   The investigation yielded violent findings as well, with authorities discovering that New Aryan Empire members kidnapped two people that they suspected were cooperating with law enforcement, which violated rules of the organization.  Those victims were beaten, stabbed, and held against their will. Authorities would later go on to arrest 40-year-old Amanda Rapp for her involvement in the kidnapping.  Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Five White Supremacist Gang Members Sentenced To Prison
Trump Ordered NatSec Adviser To Hunt Leaker Based On Very Trusted Source Hannity
Trump Ordered NatSec Adviser To Hunt Leaker Based On Very Trusted Source Hannity
Trump Ordered NatSec Adviser To Hunt ‘Leaker’ Based On ‘Very Trusted Source’ Hannity https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-ordered-natsec-adviser-to-hunt-leaker-based-on-very-trusted-source-hannity/ New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman’s much-anticipated book on Donald Trump’s White House tenure has already made an impact, even though it doesn’t hit shelves until next week. Multiple news outlets, including The Daily Beast, have obtained excerpts revealing Trump’s behavior was even more unhinged than previously known. In his Wednesday night newsletter, CNN’s Oliver Darcy unveiled another explosive bit that drives home just how much of an influence Fox News star Sean Hannity had on the ex-president. According to Haberman’s book, Hannity—long described as Trump’s “shadow chief of staff”—called the president “to share a rumor spreading online” started by a prominent alt-right social-media figure blaming a leak to The Washington Post on Fernando Cutz, a senior adviser to then-National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster. Trump quickly told McMaster that he had “three hours to find the leaker,” prompting the national security adviser to say “he would be unable to identify the person responsible in that time frame.” Even though Haberman noted that it was impossible for Cutz to be the leaker, she wrote that Trump insisted to McMaster that he was indeed the culprit. “I have a very trusted source telling me that,” the former president said, referencing Hannity. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Ordered NatSec Adviser To Hunt Leaker Based On Very Trusted Source Hannity
Trump Will Be Indicted. The GOP Should Cut Him Loose Now
Trump Will Be Indicted. The GOP Should Cut Him Loose Now
Trump Will Be Indicted. The GOP Should Cut Him Loose Now https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-will-be-indicted-the-gop-should-cut-him-loose-now/ Former President Donald Trump listens to applause from the crowd as he steps up to the podium at a rally Friday, Sept. 23, 2022, in Wilmington, N.C. Chris Seward AP The handwriting is now, at the least, on the wall. I know a lot of Tar Heels don’t want to hear this — but Donald Trump is, in the months ahead, going to be indicted. His lawbreaking is so habitual, so overt, so pervasive, so foundational, and so rule-of-law decimating, that it simply won’t be possible for the Department of Justice and law enforcement officials in Georgia and, likely, New York, to ignore it. Perhaps Trump couldn’t help himself. Maybe it’s like his lying — a lifelong, all-consuming practice. He can’t shake it. Or even try. Old dog. Old tricks. He’s the don, not just The Donald. And when the indictments come, what’s going to happen? Sadly, we know this too. Trump has opened his mind, or at least his mouth. He told conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt that “the people of the United States won’t stand for it.” Filing charges against him would lead to “problems in this country, the likes of which we’ve never seen before.” Gene Nichol When asked what he meant by “problems,” Trump explained in barely-coded language: “Big problems. Big problems. I don’t think they’ll stand for it.” As George Conway explained: “he’s saying ‘what a nice country you have here, too bad if something would happen to it’.” He called out the armed insurrectionists on January 6th. This’ll make that look like child’s play. Now, I’ll concede some portion of Trump’s base will welcome the summoned bloodshed. I don’t know how big. Ten percent? Twenty-five? Larger? We’ll likely see. But I wonder about the rest. A USA Today/Ipsos poll last month found that “four in five Republicans (82%) believe Trump can win the next presidential election” and “three in five believe he should be the nominee in 2024.” Liz Cheney famously reported a Republican House colleague saying, as he signed on to an attempt to overthrow the 2020 election, “the things we do for orange Jesus.” But how far will it go? Will they embrace armed revolt? Will white Christian evangelicals remain so taken with their victorious efforts to produce a sectarian, gun-lionizing, racialized Supreme Court that they’ll discard the American democratic experiment to assure their (this-worldly) political power? Will the Wall Street, wealth-worshipping, big-capital folks run the risk of economy-destroying anarchy in order to assure a government regime that brutalizes poor people and gives a “deserved” permanent ascendancy to the investor class? Will a big portion of the libertarian crowd hang onto Trump and his friends in order to press their potently-subsidized version of liberty? Will “quiet” white supremacists show their actual colors rather than accept the implementation of pluralist democracy? Or, will some, or most, disenthrall? Disenthrall now, before the onset of the nearing horizon’s violence? Perhaps you think I overstate the peril. (I get that sometimes.) But do these various folks described above actually think that the other 60% or so of Americans will simply cower in the corner, surrendering their human rights and our nation’s long-declared meaning, because the MAGA coalition may be fueled by hatred and replete with arms? I wouldn’t bet on it. There’s a lot more courage and commitment out here in the rest of the land than the Trumpists imagine. They make the same mistake Putin made about Ukraine. Democracy has its steel. Even if it’s hard to arouse. Won’t it be easier, even if unnerving, for the Republican Party to turn Trump loose now, than it will be after he again summons the gun thugs? Contributing columnist Gene Nichol is the Boyd Tinsley Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of North Carolina. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Will Be Indicted. The GOP Should Cut Him Loose Now
Bidens Brain Farts Should Scare The Hell Out Of Anyone Who Doesnt Want Trump Back In The White House
Bidens Brain Farts Should Scare The Hell Out Of Anyone Who Doesnt Want Trump Back In The White House
Biden’s Brain Farts Should Scare The Hell Out Of Anyone Who Doesn’t Want Trump Back In The White House https://digitalarkansasnews.com/bidens-brain-farts-should-scare-the-hell-out-of-anyone-who-doesnt-want-trump-back-in-the-white-house/ Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast / Getty “Where’s Jackie?” That was the question on Joe Biden’s mind (and only Joe Biden’s mind) on Wednesday, as the president searched in vain for Rep. Jackie Walorski at a White House conference on hunger and nutrition. Unfortunately, the Indiana lawmaker died in a car crash last month. So no, Jackie Walorski was not going to be walking through that door (though if she did, that would truly be newsworthy). ‘Daily Show’ Rips Biden a New One for Shouting Out Dead Congresswoman Coming on the heels of a speech at the Global Fund Conference in which Biden appeared to look “dazed and confused” afterward, this latest boner has reignited speculation about the possibility that Biden, 79, might be suffering from some form of cognitive decline. But at the very least, it’s clear that he has lost a step. The real question may be “Where’s Biden?” Of course, there are other plausible (and slightly less worrisome) excuses that might explain Biden’s behavior. After Rep. Walorski’s death, the White House put out a statement from Biden saying he was “shocked and saddened” by her death. But is it possible that Biden was never actually notified—that his staff simply put out the release without his knowledge? This seems unlikely, and a president who is that out-of-the-loop regarding the recent death of a congresswoman (whom he personally knew) that got a lot of media coverage would not be a great excuse. Of course, we all commit brain farts. Presidents give countless speeches. They are on camera all the time. And there are 535 members of Congress to keep tabs on (not to mention all the other elected officials in America). And, oh yeah, he has a lot of other things to worry about (including Russia and China). It’s also true that Biden has always had a penchant for making gaffes. The most similar example involved a 2008 campaign speech where Biden asked a paraplegic state senator in the audience to “stand up.” The problem with the comparison is that if you watch the video from 2008, Biden quickly realizes his embarrassing mistake. Indeed, his quick-witted response—“stand up for Chuck!”—was, considering the circumstances, impressive. The same could not be said for this most recent mistake. Biden seemed old and confused. Not only could this bad look have staying power, it’s coming at a bad time for the president and his party. In recent months, Biden seemed to have turned a corner. After a rough year that started in the aftermath of his ill-fated 2021 Afghanistan withdrawal, Biden was starting to get his mojo back, as evidenced by his rising approval ratings, and midterm prognostications looking increasingly optimistic for Democrats. And while the calls to replace Biden on the 2024 ticket never really subsided, this latest flub is sure to renew and accelerate the desperate search for a successor, once the midterms are over in six weeks. Making matters worse, the gaslighting put forth by Biden’s White House press secretary only angered the press corps. As The New York Times put it, “Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, refused to acknowledge that Mr. Biden had misspoken or that he had forgotten that Ms. Walorski had died.” Trump Is Making Love to QAnon and We Should All Be Terrified It was an almost Sean Spicer-esque spin from a WH press secretary, which makes me wonder what kind of attention this would be receiving if Donald Trump had made a similar mistake (and if his team refused to accept it). It would likely be the West Point ramp controversy—on steroids. But this is not a story about media bias or hypocrisy. Regardless of whether Biden is suffering from cognitive decline (that’s for the doctors to decide), it’s very clear that—putting it kindly—he is long past his prime. We should at least be willing to honestly admit that. Moreover, we should be honest about the fact that this transcends Biden. America effectively has a gerontocracy right now. Now, there’s a good (and very simple) reason why almost nobody outside of the Republican Party wants to probe too deeply here: Joe Biden is the only person standing between us and another four years of Donald Trump. Not So Fast, Democrats. Your Blue Wave Might Still Be a Mirage. Seriously, Biden was probably the only Democrat who (a) could have won the Democratic nomination in 2020, and (b) could have defeated Donald Trump. And in the intervening years, there is little reason to believe that—even with Biden’s obvious deficiencies—anyone else who is likely to run would stand a better chance in 2024. This is not a criticism of Biden. Indeed, if you view Trump as an existential threat, then you owe Biden a debt of gratitude for spending his golden years at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. But the fact that—at this point—America is still turning its lonely eyes to Joe Biden to be our savior is an indictment on the Democratic Party and modern American politics, writ large. Biden’s ostensible heir apparent, Vice President Kamala Harris, has not risen to the occasion. But pushing her aside in favor of someone like Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg would look like a slap in the face to a large portion of the Democratic Party’s base. So we are basically caught in this scary Catch-22. It’s either the confused old guy or the dangerous old guy. Welcome to modern America. Read more at The Daily Beast. Get the Daily Beast’s biggest scoops and scandals delivered right to your inbox. Sign up now. Stay informed and gain unlimited access to the Daily Beast’s unmatched reporting. Subscribe now. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Bidens Brain Farts Should Scare The Hell Out Of Anyone Who Doesnt Want Trump Back In The White House
Ginni Thomas Wife Of Supreme Court Justice Appears Before January 6 Panel
Ginni Thomas Wife Of Supreme Court Justice Appears Before January 6 Panel
Ginni Thomas, Wife Of Supreme Court Justice, Appears Before January 6 Panel https://digitalarkansasnews.com/ginni-thomas-wife-of-supreme-court-justice-appears-before-january-6-panel-2/ The conservative activist Ginni Thomas, the wife of the supreme court justice Clarence Thomas, appeared on Thursday for a voluntary interview with the House January 6 committee. The committee had for months sought the interview in an effort to know more about Thomas’s role in trying to help Donald Trump overturn his election defeat by Joe Biden. She texted Trump’s White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, and contacted lawmakers in Arizona and Wisconsin in the weeks after the election. Thomas did not answer questions when she arrived for the interview or later when she briefly left for a break. But Thomas did tell reporters she was looking forward to answering questions from the members of the committee. Testimony from Thomas was one of the remaining items for the committee as it nears completion of its work. The panel has interviewed more than 1,000 witnesses and shown some testimony in eight public hearings. Thomas’s attorney, Mark Paoletta, said last week Thomas was “eager to answer the committee’s questions to clear up any misconceptions about her work relating to the 2020 election”. The extent of her involvement in the Capitol attack is unclear. In the days after the presidential election was called for Biden, Thomas emailed two lawmakers in Arizona to urge them to choose “a clean slate of electors” and “stand strong in the face of political and media pressure”. The AP obtained the emails earlier this year under the state’s open records law. Thomas has said in interviews she attended a pro-Trump rally near the White House on the morning of 6 January 2021 but left before Trump spoke and crowds attacked the Capitol. Thomas has repeatedly maintained that her political activities posed no conflict of interest with the work of her husband. “Like so many married couples, we share many of the same ideals, principles and aspirations for America,” Thomas told the Washington Free Beacon in March. “But we have our own separate careers and our own ideas and opinions too. Clarence doesn’t discuss his work with me and I don’t involve him in my work.” Justice Thomas was the lone dissenting voice when the supreme court ruled in January to allow a congressional committee access to presidential diaries, visitor logs, speech drafts and handwritten notes relating to the events of January 6. Ginni Thomas has been openly critical of the committee’s work, including signing a letter to House Republicans calling for the expulsion of Liz Cheney of Wyoming and Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, for joining the January 6 committee. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Ginni Thomas Wife Of Supreme Court Justice Appears Before January 6 Panel
Dow Plunges And Is Back In A Bear Market | CNN Business
Dow Plunges And Is Back In A Bear Market | CNN Business
Dow Plunges And Is Back In A Bear Market | CNN Business https://digitalarkansasnews.com/dow-plunges-and-is-back-in-a-bear-market-cnn-business/ New York CNN Business  —  The third quarter is about to end – and investors are wishing the past nine months good riddance. Stocks fell Thursday, giving up much of Wednesday’s big gains. The Dow was down more than 500 points, or about 1.8%, in midday trading. The Dow is now back in bear market territory, more than 20% below the all-time high it set in January. The S&P 500, one of the broadest measures of the health of Corporate America, fell 2.3% Thursday and has plunged about 24% this year. The tech-laden Nasdaq Composite sank more than 3% Thursday and has plummeted even more than the Dow and S&P in 2022. Major stock exchanges in the UK, Europe and Asia have all dropped sharply this year as well. The stock market had a promising start to the quarter, soaring in July. But fears about inflation, rate hikes, rising bond yields and recession returned with a vengeance in August and September. A drop in weekly jobless claims spooked investors Thursday. The job market remains relatively healthy, even as the broader economy has contracted. Traders are betting that the labor market strength will keep pressure on the Federal Reserve to continue raising interest rates aggressively for the rest of this year and in 2023. But it’s not just stocks that have tumbled. It’s the bear market for just about everything. There have been few places for investors to run and hide this year. Bond yields have surged, which means that prices are down. That weighs on returns. Bonds are supposed to be safe havens during times of market and economic volatility. But two popular, widely held bond funds, the Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund ETF (BND) and iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF (AGG), are both down nearly 16% in 2022. Think gold is a good place to ride out the storm? The price of the yellow metal is down 10% this year. And forget about cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin prices have fallen off a cliff, plummeting nearly 60% in 2022. Still, there are some winners even in this brutal market environment. Oil prices are up for the year, partly due to supply concerns in Europe resulting from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Energy giant Chevron (CVX) is the best performing stock in the Dow this year while Warren Buffett-backed Occidental Petroleum (OXY) leads the S&P 500. Healthcare stocks, typically a defensive sector that holds up better during tough economic times, have done well too. Pharma giant Merck (MRK), biotech Amgen (AMGN) and insurer UnitedHealth (UNH) are all up this year and are the top stocks in the Dow after Chevron. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Dow Plunges And Is Back In A Bear Market | CNN Business
Voter Registration Offered Saturday In North Fort Smith
Voter Registration Offered Saturday In North Fort Smith
Voter Registration Offered Saturday In North Fort Smith https://digitalarkansasnews.com/voter-registration-offered-saturday-in-north-fort-smith/ Candidates in House District 49 race expected at Elm Grove Community Center forum Candidates in a north Fort Smith state house district race will have a chance to meet voters at a forum and voter registration day Saturday at the Elm Grove Community Center. A pancake breakfast starts at 9:30 a.m. and the forum ends at 11:30 a.m. Democratic incumbent Rep. Jay Richardson is challenged by Republican Max Avery in the Tuesday, Nov. 8 election. Richardson said he wants to continue to make poverty and food insecurity top issues. Avery said economic development and education are important issues to north Fort Smith. House District 49 is the only seat with a Democrat in the River Valley area of western Arkansas. Avery is the founder of the CDL Academy in Fort Smith, a commercial driver’s license training school. Richardson is seeking his third term in the House of Representatives. More:District 49 race heats up in Fort Smith Elm Grove Community Center is located at 1901 N. Greenwood Ave. at Martin Luther King Jr. Park. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Voter Registration Offered Saturday In North Fort Smith
The Bar For Competence Just Got Ten Feet Lower | National Review
The Bar For Competence Just Got Ten Feet Lower | National Review
The Bar For Competence Just Got Ten Feet Lower | National Review https://digitalarkansasnews.com/the-bar-for-competence-just-got-ten-feet-lower-national-review/ DeSantis & Hurricane Ian: Trump Lowered Statesmen Bar  National Review Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
The Bar For Competence Just Got Ten Feet Lower | National Review
Stiehm: Why Trump Talks Nonstop About Witch Hunts
Stiehm: Why Trump Talks Nonstop About Witch Hunts
Stiehm: Why Trump Talks Nonstop About Witch Hunts https://digitalarkansasnews.com/stiehm-why-trump-talks-nonstop-about-witch-hunts/ Jamie Stiehm No American president ever posed as the victim of a “witch hunt” — save former President Donald Trump. It’s his favorite metaphor for all time and place. We’ll be hearing more of that as courts and the House committee on Jan. 6 trace a long trail of crimes under investigation, up to the failed Capitol coup. Justice may bring punishment. Certainly a 2024 campaign is going out the window. But let’s focus on Trump’s obsession with “witch hunts.” The decadent Mar-a-Lago dweller has no shame in stealing a metaphor that belongs to us — women. Yet it turns out Trump does have a close connection with witch hunts. His sordid mentor, Roy Cohn, was the chief counsel to Sen. Joseph McCarthy’s committee that blacklisted “communists” in Washington, New York and Hollywood during the 1950s. For those who celebrate history, this is when it rhymes. You and I know that mostly women suffered as they were accused, tried and hanged as witches in the Old and New Worlds. Indulged all his miscreant life, Trump has nothing in common with innocent people who looked persecution in the eye. Maybe you’ve heard of the medieval ducking pond test: If the woman sank to the bottom, that proved she was innocent of witchcraft. Widows, midwives or herb healers were sometimes suspected of having unnatural powers. September was the month when the Puritan town of Salem, Massachusetts, put to death the largest number of “witches.” Nine died, witnessed by the village. The year was 1692, and here we are still talking about witch hunts and trials, exactly 330 years later. One Salem man, Giles Corey, was pressed to death with stones on Sept. 19. His wife Martha was hanged. The scenes were ugly as neighbors saw neighbors go to the gallows by the hill. Rebecca Nurse, 71, was condemned, despite an outcry. All told, 20 died in 1692, which left deep wounds in the small colonial village. All were judged by men cloaked in legal and religious power. Puritans were harsh on themselves, too. Five years later, a witch trial judge, Samuel Sewall, expressed remorse before a Boston church congregation, stating he “desires to take the blame and shame of it.” Try to imagine Trump taking “the blame and shame” of his actions. That takes courage. He would never do it, for he is always the victim. The witch hunts were chalked up to “mass hysteria.” If you ask me, what ailed the Puritans is still with us today. It just has a different name: QAnon beliefs spread rapidly among Trump supporters. They showed up in force in the deadly mob attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. QAnon is a bizarre political conspiracy theory that I don’t even want to describe in polite company. But it’s giving Trump one last gasp of hope for a strong base of support. The more desperate Trump is, the harder he’ll fall into QAnon believers. He’s warned of inciting violence again: “the likes of which perhaps we’ve never seen.” His lackey, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., chimed in that street “riots” were ahead if Trump was indicted. One of the great American playwrights, Arthur Miller spent time in Salem going over the court records of the 1692 tragedies. The drama he wrote, in the early 1950s, “The Crucible,” is a theater classic. Miller held up the McCarthy era hearings to the light of Salem’s zealous pursuit of (so-called) witches. He created characters based on what was known, with their real names. He revealed the alarm started in the Rev. Samuel Parris’ house and took flight like lightning. Telling the Salem story, Miller showed how easy it was to suggest or spread lies, even among god-fearing people. Miller witnessed it in his own time, with writers called before McCarthy’s committee to “name names.” Some did, some did not. Those named — in government, journalism, the arts — had their lives ruined. McCarthy kept pressing until the day he was stopped by an Army lawyer, Joseph Welch: “Have you no sense of decency?” The answer was no. Nor did dark Cohn have a shred of decency as he egged on McCarthy’s evil deeds. He later taught them to young Trump. Jamie Stiehm may be reached at JamieStiehm.com. Follow her on Twitter @JamieStiehm. Newsletter Join thousands already receiving our daily newsletter. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Stiehm: Why Trump Talks Nonstop About Witch Hunts
Supreme Court Dogged By Questions Of Legitimacy Is Ready To Resume
Supreme Court Dogged By Questions Of Legitimacy Is Ready To Resume
Supreme Court, Dogged By Questions Of Legitimacy, Is Ready To Resume https://digitalarkansasnews.com/supreme-court-dogged-by-questions-of-legitimacy-is-ready-to-resume/ The Supreme Court begins its new term Monday, but the nation, its leaders and the justices themselves do not appear to be over the last one. The court’s 6-to-3 conservative majority quickly moved its jurisprudence sharply to the right, and there is no reason to believe the direction or pace is likely to change. This version of the court seems steadfast on allowing more restrictions on abortion, fewer on guns, shifting a previously strict line separating church and state, and reining in government agencies. If it is the conservative legal establishment’s dream, it has come at a cost. Polls show public approval of the court plummeted to historic lows — with a record number of respondents saying the court is too conservative — after the right wing of the court overturned Roe v. Wade’s guarantee of a constitutional right to abortion. President Biden is trying to put the court in the political spotlight, hoping the abortion decision’s shock waves rocked the foundation of this fall’s midterm elections, once thought to be a boon to Republicans. And the justices themselves are openly debating what the court’s rightward turn has meant for its institutional integrity. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. defends his conservative colleagues, with whom he does not always agree, saying unpopular decisions should not call the court’s legitimacy into question. On the other side, liberal Justice Elena Kagan increasingly is sounding an alarm about the next precedents that could fall and the implications for public perception of the bench. The court’s new docket offers that potential. Justices have agreed to revisit whether universities can use race in a limited way when making admission decisions, a practice the court has endorsed since 1978. Two major cases involve voting rights. The court again will consider whether laws forbidding discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation must give way to business owners who do not want to provide wedding services to same-sex couples. And after limiting the Environmental Protection Agency’s authority in air pollution cases last term, the court will hear a challenge regarding the Clean Water Act. Liberal justices sound worried. “The court shouldn’t be wandering around just inserting itself into every hot-button issue in America, and especially it shouldn’t be doing that in a way that reflects one ideology or one set of political views over another,” Kagan said last week at Salve Regina, a Roman Catholic university in Rhode Island. She said that disregarding stare decisis — the doctrine of abiding by past decisions in the absence of compelling evidence that change is required — undermines public confidence. “It just doesn’t look like law when some new judges appointed by a new president come in and start just tossing out the old stuff,” she said. The new justice this year is a liberal — Ketanji Brown Jackson, the court’s first African American woman, was nominated by Biden to fill the seat of Stephen G. Breyer, who retired after 28 years. Jackson will not change the court’s ideological makeup. Breyer declared his last term on the court “very frustrating” in a recent interview with CNN. Breyer was known during his tenure for pragmatism and trying to reach compromise, and he seemed to warn the conservative majority about making bold moves. “You start writing too rigidly . . . the world will come around and bite you in the back,” he said. No matter what the new term brings, it is unlikely to match the drama of its predecessor — a repudiation of decades of the court’s precedents on abortion rights. The leak of Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr.’s draft opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, upholding a restrictive Mississippi abortion law, created unprecedented tension at the court, which for a time was surrounded by a high black fence to ward off protesters. The opinion, joined by Justice Clarence Thomas and the three justices chosen by President Donald Trump, achieved a decades-long conservative goal of overturning Roe. “For many, that was a cause for great celebration,” said Irv Gornstein, the executive director of the Supreme Court Institute at the Georgetown Law Center. “For many others, it shattered their faith in the Supreme Court. Inside the court, Dobbs has provoked a deeply divisive debate on what it means for the court to act with legitimacy.” Roberts voted to uphold the Mississippi law, but not to overturn Roe, calling that step too great a “jolt” to the legal system. But at a speech in Colorado last month, he defended justices who make controversial decisions. “All of our opinions are open to criticism,” Roberts said in remarks to judges and lawyers. “In fact, our members do a great job of criticizing some opinions from time to time. But simply because people disagree with an opinion is not a basis for criticizing the legitimacy of the court.” The public conversation among the justices since the Dobbs decision has been remarkable. Alito gave what liberals interpreted as a boastful address about the controversial decision this summer at a conference in Rome on religion and law. “I had the honor this term of writing, I think, the only Supreme Court decision in the history of that institution that has been lambasted by a whole string of foreign leaders who felt perfectly fine commenting on American law,” Alito said at the Notre Dame Religious Liberty Summit, sponsored by the Religious Liberty Initiative at the University of Notre Dame’s law school. He sarcastically took umbrage at criticism from Britain’s Prince Harry. “What really wounded me — what really wounded me — was when the Duke of Sussex addressed the United Nations and seemed to compare the decision whose name may not be spoken with the Russian attack on Ukraine,” Alito said. Biden, in turn, invoked Alito last week at a gathering of Democratic activists, where he said Republicans loyal to Trump “just cheered and embraced the first Supreme Court decision in our entire history — the first one in our entire history that just didn’t fail to preserve a constitutional freedom, it actually took away a fundamental right.” He added: “Justice Alito said that women can decide the outcome of this election — paraphrasing some quote in the actual decision. Well, he ain’t seen nothing yet.” As pointed as Kagan’s words have seemed in her speeches to college audiences and at a judicial conference, she noted that she, Breyer and Justice Sonia Sotomayor were even sharper in their dissents to the court’s rulings last term finding a right to carry a weapon outside the home for self-defense in a New York case, to relax the rules about public money going to religious schools and finding that Congress needed to be more explicit if the EPA was to exercise broad power in fighting climate change. The dissent of the three in the abortion case stretched for 66 pages. Gornstein said at an event at William & Mary Law School that there could be long-term damage to relationships on the court should the 6-to-3 pattern be continually repeated in the coming term. “That dissent said in no uncertain terms that that was a lawless decision, and that it was made only because five justices could make it so, and the only difference between prior law and this law is that there was a change in the composition of the court,” Gornstein said, adding, “I do think there is a potential for ill will carrying over into this term and into future terms.” At the same event, New York University law professor Melissa Murray said there is a “whole curio cabinet of weirdness” about the court. She noted that the three Trump nominees — Neil M. Gorsuch, Brett M. Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett — pledged varying degrees of allegiance to stare decisis at their confirmation hearings and then voted to overturn Roe at the first opportunity. And there is the unprecedented example of Thomas’s wife, Virginia, playing an active role in encouraging legal challenges to Trump’s defeat in the 2020 election, while such issues are coming before the Supreme Court. She has agreed to an interview with the congressional committee investigating the riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. The liberal dissents are not for the other justices but “for the rest of the country, the audience outside of One First Street,” Murray said, referring to the Supreme Court building’s address in Northeast Washington. “I don’t know that they care about collegiality, because they’re trying to alert the rest of the country.” Conservatives say it is unremarkable that new justices do not vote the same way as those they replace, and that those on the ideological left would expect the same if the circumstances were reversed. “It can’t be illegitimate just because somebody came on who thinks differently,” said Erin Murphy, a Washington lawyer who was part of the legal team in the guns case. “What if they just are reaching the result because they think it is legally correct? Just because someone appointed them in hopes they would do so, it’s political not law?” Murphy is a former clerk to Roberts, who acknowledged last month that it had been a difficult term. “I think just moving forward from things that were unfortunate is the best way to respond to it,” he said. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Supreme Court Dogged By Questions Of Legitimacy Is Ready To Resume
Ginni Thomas Wife Of Supreme Court Justice Appears Before January 6 Panel
Ginni Thomas Wife Of Supreme Court Justice Appears Before January 6 Panel
Ginni Thomas, Wife Of Supreme Court Justice, Appears Before January 6 Panel https://digitalarkansasnews.com/ginni-thomas-wife-of-supreme-court-justice-appears-before-january-6-panel/ The conservative activist Ginni Thomas, the wife of the supreme court justice Clarence Thomas, appeared on Thursday for a voluntary interview with the House January 6 committee. The committee had for months sought the interview in an effort to know more about Thomas’s role in trying to help Donald Trump overturn his election defeat by Joe Biden. She texted Trump’s White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, and contacted lawmakers in Arizona and Wisconsin in the weeks after the election. Thomas did not answer questions when she arrived for the interview or later when she briefly left for a break. But Thomas did tell reporters she was looking forward to answering questions from the members of the committee. Testimony from Thomas was one of the remaining items for the committee as it nears completion of its work. The panel has interviewed more than 1,000 witnesses and shown some testimony in eight public hearings. Thomas’ attorney, Mark Paoletta, said last week Thomas was “eager to answer the committee’s questions to clear up any misconceptions about her work relating to the 2020 election”. The extent of her involvement in the Capitol attack is unclear. In the days after the presidential election was called for Biden, Thomas emailed two lawmakers in Arizona to urge them to choose “a clean slate of electors” and “stand strong in the face of political and media pressure”. The AP obtained the emails earlier this year under the state’s open records law. Thomas has said in interviews she attended a pro-Trump rally near the White House on the morning of 6 January 2021 but left before Trump spoke and crowds attacked the Capitol. Thomas has repeatedly maintained that her political activities posed no conflict of interest with the work of her husband. “Like so many married couples, we share many of the same ideals, principles and aspirations for America,” Thomas told the Washington Free Beacon in March. “But we have our own separate careers and our own ideas and opinions too. Clarence doesn’t discuss his work with me and I don’t involve him in my work.” Justice Thomas was the lone dissenting voice when the supreme court ruled in January to allow a congressional committee access to presidential diaries, visitor logs, speech drafts and handwritten notes relating to the events of January 6. Ginni Thomas has been openly critical of the committee’s work, including signing a letter to House Republicans calling for the expulsion of Liz Cheney of Wyoming and Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, for joining the January 6 committee. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Ginni Thomas Wife Of Supreme Court Justice Appears Before January 6 Panel
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine https://digitalarkansasnews.com/live-updates-russias-war-in-ukraine-6/ 1 min ago More than 200,000 people have left Russia since Putin’s mobilization announcement, data shows From CNN’s Sharon Braithwaite, Anna Chernova, Eve Brennan and Radina Gigova More than 200,000 people have traveled from Russia into Georgia, Kazakhstan and the EU since Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the immediate “partial mobilization” of Russian citizens on Sept. 21, official data shows. Here’s a breakdown of the numbers: Approximately 100,000 Russians have crossed into Kazakhstan in the last week, Marat Kozheyev, Kazakh deputy minister of internal affairs, said Wednesday, according to Kazinform, a state-owned news agency. At least 53,136 people have crossed the Georgian-Russian border between Sept. 21-26, data released by Georgia’s Ministry of Internal Affairs Tuesday shows. Nearly 66,000 Russian citizens have entered the European Union over the past week (Sept. 19-25) — a more than 30% increase in comparison to the past week, the European Border and Coast Guard Agency Frontex said Tuesday. More on Putin’s order: Russia’s mobilization announcement for its war in Ukraine sparked protests and an exodus of Russian citizens from the country, as the Kremlin tightened rules around evading military orders. Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu announced on Sept. 21 that up to 300,000 men with previous military experience will be drafted.  The number of Russians fleeing country to avoid call-up “likely exceeds” the number of troops that invaded Ukraine in February, the UK Ministry of Defense said Thursday. Meanwhile, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Tuesday he does not know the number of people who have left the country since the announcement. Independent Russian media outlet Novaya Gazeta Europe on Tuesday cited a source in the Russian presidential administration as saying the FSB (Federal Security Service of Russia) reported 261,000 men fled Russia since the announcement of the mobilization on Sept. 21. Russian citizens have also traveled to Mongolia and Armenia, which would raise further the total number of Russians who have fled the country, including men, women and children, since the announcement of a partial mobilization. 7 min ago Analysis: Why Putin wants to annex Ukrainian territory Analysis by CNN’s Tim Lister Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during his annual press conference on December 23, in Moscow, Russia (Natalya Zamboska/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) President Vladimir Putin is set to sign agreements Friday that will absorb into Russia thousands of square miles of Ukrainian territory in what will be the largest forcible annexation of land in Europe since 1945. The agreements will be signed at a ceremony at the Kremlin, three days after hastily-conducted referendums concluded in the four areas of Ukraine that Moscow will now consider Russian territory. Putin will deliver a speech and meet with Russian-backed leaders of the four occupied regions, according to the Kremlin. Ukraine and its western allies have categorically rejected the planned annexation of the four regions – Donetsk, Luhansk and much of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, a swathe of Ukrainian land that contains heavy industry, rich farmland and a critical freshwater conduit for Crimea. Donetsk and Luhansk are home to two breakaway republics that Moscow has backed since 2014, while Kherson and parts of Zaporizhzhia have been controlled by Russian forces since shortly after the invasion began in late February. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has asserted that if the Kremlin presses ahead with annexation, any negotiation with Putin will be impossible. In all, Russia plans to raise its flag over some 100,000 square kilometers (38,600 square miles) of Ukrainian territory in what is a flagrant breach of international law and after votes dismissed by the great majority of countries, including some friends of Russia like Serbia, as null and void. While the international community will reject Russia’s plan almost in unison (expect a few outliers like Syria and North Korea), annexation does change the “facts on the ground” and diminishes the prospects for any negotiated settlement. There’s a huge difference between withdrawing from occupied land (as the Russians did in April when they pulled back from much of northern Ukraine) and giving up areas that has been formally and ceremonially absorbed into the motherland – especially for a leader like Putin who is fixated with a “greater Russia.” Keep reading here. 48 min ago Ukrainian forces are closing in on an occupied railroad hub in Donetsk, Russian-backed official says From CNN’s Tim Lister and Olga Voitovych Rail infrastructure on fire after a shelling near the Lyman station in Lyman, eastern Ukraine, on April 28. (Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/Getty Images) Ukrainian forces continue to press closer to the occupied town of Lyman in the eastern Donetsk region, according to a Russian-backed leader there. The railroad hub fell to Russian forces and their allied militia at the end of May, but the situation has grown “difficult” for the forces trying to hold the territory, said Alexander Petrikin, the pro-Russian head of the city administration. “Today, September 29. The situation in the city is difficult. Ukrainian militants keep shelling Krasny Liman [Lyman in Ukrainian] and Krasny Liman district,” Petrikin said in a short video on the vk.com social network. Ukrainian forces have made gains to the south, west and north of Lyman — with just one road to the east still under control of the pro-Russian groups. 1 hr 39 min ago EU readies new sanctions as Russia’s parliament plans to consider annexation of occupied Ukrainian regions From CNN’s Jo Shelley in London and Anna Chernova Russia’s two houses of parliament — the State Duma and Federation Council — will consider the annexation of occupied Ukrainian territories next week, as EU readies additional sanctions in retaliation for the plan. Russian President Vladimir Putin will attend a ceremony on Friday where agreements for Russia to take over four Ukrainian territories will be signed, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told journalists on Thursday. The ceremony will start a legislative process in Moscow to annex Russian-occupied Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson – a move that would be illegal under international law. Russia’s lower house of parliament, the State Duma, will meet on Oct. 3 and Oct. 4, its chairman, Vyacheslav Volodin, said according to RIA Novosti. The state news agency cited Volodin as saying that the State Duma’s schedule had been adjusted so the deputies could make legislative decisions based on the supposed results of the polls. The Federation Council, Russia’s upper house, will consider the annexation of the occupied Ukrainian territories on Oct. 4, Andrey Klishas, chairman of the Federation Council Committee on Constitutional Legislation, said in a Telegram post on Thursday. “The Federation Council can consider all issues related to the entry of new regions into Russia only after the signing of the relevant Treaties, and that is exactly what will be done at the next meeting of the Chamber on October 4,” he wrote. Remember: The declared annexation comes after so-called referendums on Ukrainian territory on joining Russia — votes that were not observed by independent monitors and have been widely condemned by western governments as a “sham.” The EU proposed a new package of sanctions against Russia on Wednesday, targeting “those involved in Russia occupation and illegal annexation of areas of Ukraine,” including “the proxy Russian authorities in Donetsk, Luhansk and Kherson and Zaporizhzhia and other Russian individuals who organized and facilitated the sham referenda in these four occupied territories of Ukraine.” 2 hr 12 min ago “Nobody knows what’s coming next”: CNN speaks with Russians trying to cross the border amid draft fears From CNN’s Vasco Cotovio, Melissa Bell, Mark Esplin and Ekaterine Kadagishvili Travellers walking on the road from Verkhni Lars customs checkpoint between Georgia and Russia on September 28, in Zemo Larsi, Georgia. (Daro Sulakauri/Getty Images) With one bag in each hand and another on his back, Denis made his way up a hill on foot after crossing the border from Russia into Georgia. “I’m just tired. That’s the only thing I feel,” the 27-year-old said as he tried to catch his breath. Denis had just spent six days on the road, most of them just waiting in line to cross the border. He is one of the hundreds of thousands of Russians enduring a grueling marathon journey to leave their country.  Though women and children are among those crossing, most are fighting-age men who fear the possibility that they will be drafted to fight the Kremlin’s war in Ukraine. According to the Georgian Interior Ministry, at least 10,000 have been coming through the Lars border crossing daily.  Denis, who did not want to reveal his last name, said he chose to leave because of the uncertainty following Russian President Vladimir Putin’s announcement last week of a “partial mobilization” of citizens – despite his earlier emphasis that the military assault would only be fought by military professionals. Russian Minister of Defense Sergei Shoigu said the military will conscript around 300,000 men with previous military experience, to go and fight in Ukraine. Though the current draft should not apply to him, Denis fears that could change. “How do I know what will happen in three years’ time? How do I know how long this will take?” he said. “It is uncertain, and nobody knows what’s coming next,” he told CNN. His feeling is shared by many crossing the border into Georgia. They are teachers, doctors, taxi drivers, lawyers and builders – ordinary Russians who have no appetite for war. And although they say they don’t agree with the government,...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine
UAMS Presents Virtual Family Medicine Conference Tobacco & Disease Symposium October 25-28 UAMS News
UAMS Presents Virtual Family Medicine Conference Tobacco & Disease Symposium October 25-28 UAMS News
UAMS Presents Virtual Family Medicine Conference, Tobacco & Disease Symposium October 25-28 – UAMS News https://digitalarkansasnews.com/uams-presents-virtual-family-medicine-conference-tobacco-disease-symposium-october-25-28-uams-news/ Sept. 29, 2022 | LITTLE ROCK — The 26th Annual Family Medicine Update with Tobacco & Disease Symposium at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) will offer up to 18 hours of online continuing education October 25–28 for primary care physicians, doctors of osteopathic medicine, advanced practice registered nurses, registered nurses, pharmacists, physician assistants, physical therapists, respiratory therapists, certified health educators and dietitians. Presented by the UAMS College of Medicine, the annual conference provides an opportunity for health care professionals to learn about the latest advances and information impacting family medicine. The conference is completely virtual. Courses are offered in two-hour blocks, twice daily, at $40 per block, with sessions on Friday, Oct. 28, at no cost. Friday’s session offers three, two-hour blocks of content. To register, visit https://cvent.me/NQ1R8x or call 501-686-6626 by Oct. 24. Roger Kathol, M.D., adjunct professor of internal medicine at the University of Minnesota, will discuss how to blend behavioral health with primary care. His book, Healing Body AND Mind: A Critical Issue for Healthcare Reform, brings to life the negative impact that segregated physical and mental health care has on the lives of patients. Susan Smyth, M.D., PhD, will join Kathol in a session called Top 10 Advances in Cardiology. She is UAMS executive vice chancellor and dean of the UAMS College of Medicine Don Teater, M.D., a nationally known expert on opioids, will offer providers the latest information on opioids. The family physician has focused on the intersection of pain, opioids and addiction since 2004 and served as the lead facilitator for the expert panel during the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines for prescribing opioids for chronic pain. Two experts will speak on obesity and associated diseases — UAMS’ Dinesh Edem, M.D., will talk on obesity, diets and diabetes, while Brook Belay, M.D., MPH, from the CDC will speak on Arkansas’ state of childhood obesity. Other topics include a stroke overview with Sanjeeva Onteddu, M.D, an assistant professor of neurology at UAMS; the future of family medicine in Arkansas with Tasha Starks, M.D., president of the Arkansas Academy of Family Physicians; pulmonary hypertension by William Atchley, M.D., assistant professor of internal medicine at UAMS; psoriasis with Pinnacle Dermatology’s Andrea Mabry, M.D; the latest on Monkeypox from Joel Tumlison, M.D., who has been at the forefront of controlling the disease as medical director for immunizations at the Arkansas Department of Health; and a multiple sclerosis update with Erika Santos Horta, M.D, assistant professor of neurology at UAMS. Lisa Richardson, M.D., MPH, the director of the Division of Cancer Prevention and Control at the CDC, will speak on colorectal cancer in Arkansas. Friday will be dedicated to the Tobacco & Disease Symposium with talks centered on tobacco cessation strategies, talking to patients about quitting tobacco and how tobacco/nicotine products are engineered to be more addictive. Symposium speakers include Sandra Brown, DNP, assistant professor in healthcare administration at Langston University; Brenna VanFrank, M.D., MSPH, senior medical officer at CDC’s Office of Smoking and Health; Linda Cullers, CTTS, tobacco cessation specialist at UAMS; and Pamela Ling M.D, director of the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education at the University of California San Francisco. UAMS is the state’s only health sciences university, with colleges of Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, Health Professions and Public Health; a graduate school; a hospital; a main campus in Little Rock; a Northwest Arkansas regional campus in Fayetteville; a statewide network of regional campuses; and seven institutes: the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute, Jackson T. Stephens Spine & Neurosciences Institute, Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute, Psychiatric Research Institute, Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging, Translational Research Institute and Institute for Digital Health & Innovation. UAMS includes UAMS Health, a statewide health system that encompasses all of UAMS’ clinical enterprise. UAMS is the only adult Level 1 trauma center in the state. UAMS has 3,047 students, 873 medical residents and fellows, and six dental residents. It is the state’s largest public employer with more than 11,000 employees, including 1,200 physicians who provide care to patients at UAMS, its regional campuses, Arkansas Children’s, the VA Medical Center and Baptist Health. Visit www.uams.edu or uamshealth.com. Find us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube or Instagram. ### Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
UAMS Presents Virtual Family Medicine Conference Tobacco & Disease Symposium October 25-28 UAMS News
The Succession Of Leadership
The Succession Of Leadership
The Succession Of Leadership https://digitalarkansasnews.com/the-succession-of-leadership/ Leadership isn’t a skill that magically develops overnight. It takes dedication, cultivation, and a forward-thinking approach. An effective leader may look different depending on the person and the circumstances involved, but one thing is for certain: collision repairers know more than a thing or two about good leadership. For Cody Key, the presence of leadership has been a throughline throughout most of his automotive industry career. Key started working at a Maaco location in Fort Smith, Arkansas, as a shop manager in January 2019. But his leadership skills started developing long before then.  “I spent nearly 10 years in the U.S. Army,” Key says. “My initial job was a bridge crewmember where I built land bridges and floating bridges over water.” Key went on to become an Army recruiter for a time, and then finished out his Army term by returning to his bridge crewmember job.  “The biggest [skill that I learned] was the discipline to make things happen and not let outside distractions deter you from what you want to do, or what you want your organization to do,” Key says.  He brought those skillsets and the mindset that he learned during his time of service directly into the automotive industry.  “I left the Army in 2010 and went straight into the car business,” Key says. “I worked my way up from a car salesman to a finance insurance manager to finance director to general manager with a few different dealerships.”  Key went on to do some consulting work for dealerships, and even served as chief operating officer for a gas station group. He had an impressive resume by the time that group sold. But then came the question of what comes next.  Decide to Do More Key says that Bill Lytle, a 10-year franchisee with Maaco body shops, noticed Key’s resume on Indeed during this time. Did Key have direct body shop experience? No. But he had a resume that showed initiative. Key says that, for Lytle, that was all he needed.  “I didn’t even apply. After the gas station group sold, Bill Lytle called me and asked if I was looking for work,” Key says. “At the time, I wasn’t. But I was also getting a little bored so I thought, ‘Why not?’ [Bill Lytle] said I was already hired before I accepted the position.”  Key’s first role with Lytle was as a shop manager for the Fort Smith, Arkansas, location. Even though he didn’t have any professional body shop experience, the atmosphere wasn’t foreign to Key.  “I grew up with my dad working in our shop. We didn’t have a commercial shop, it was just our backyard shop,” Key says. “He would buy vehicles, perform the body work, paint them, and resell them for money. I’ve been around it my whole life.”  Pair that experience with a military and automotive background, and Key was able to impress.  “After about three months [Bill Lytle] saw that I was being under-utilized,” Key says. “From there, I filled a regional manager role for Oklahoma and Arkansas, which was four shops.” But Key didn’t stop there. As a regional manager, he helped Lytle’s franchise grow from four locations to seven over the last several years.  “Going into 2020, we all know what happened that March when the whole country shut down with COVID-19. But between Bill and I as a team, we continued to grow. We saw double digit growth year over year, even with the pandemic,” Key says. “Even through the Great Resignation, we continue growing. In 2021, we increased our footprint more than 70 percent by acquiring three Tennessee shops.” For Key, the writing on the wall quickly became clear: he was successful in this business, and Bill Lytle was starting the search for a successor. It was a conversation that began rather early in Key’s Maaco career.  “We first started talking about it in mid to late 2020,” Key says in regards to the succession plan. “With everything happening, it just wasn’t the right time with COVID and a lot of the shutdowns.” Seek Greater Understanding Although the transition didn’t happen right away, the concept of becoming a Maaco franchisee proved to be quite the motivating factor for Key.  “I started seeing the potential with Maaco, being an owner, and trying to make myself more marketable,” Key says. “Trying to approach Maaco corporate was kind of the incentive to go into higher education.” Once the idea got into his head, Key decided that he wanted to make his higher education happen. Key says that Lytle was all for it, too. In fact, his support was another huge motivating factor.  “Bill and I were sitting at a hotel one night and he gave me a challenge to try to get my bachelor’s degree before I turned 40,” Key says. “When Bill made it a challenge, I took it personal and went for it.”  Fueled by an entrepreneurial spirit and a supportive mentor, Key got his bachelor’s degree at Grantham University in Kansas City, Missouri, which recently reorganized as the University of Arkansas-Grantham. Key went on to enroll in a master’s of business administration program there, and at the time of this writing is about two months away from finishing that program.  Franchise owner simply feels like the next logical step for Key, and he is in the midst of making it happen. At the time of this writing, he is in developmental planning stages with Maaco corporate to take over the franchise from Lytle. After two years of talking about it happening, it is now finally in motion.  Armed with his impressive academic achievements and a foundation of strong leadership, Key can’t help but reflect on the military background that started his journey.  “It afforded me my first formal education of leadership and how to treat people and how to lead them.” Key says.  Keep Up the Momentum Key also notes that he has always been able to rely on the constant support of his family throughout this time of professional development as well. Key appreciates the support of his wife Tiffany Key, son Caleb Fleming, and daughters Kaylee Key, Alley Key, Samantha Key and Justice Key. Key’s dedication to leadership is a perfect example of follow through. As he prepares to take on his new role as franchisee, the overall impact isn’t lost on him. Not only is he fulfilling a succession plan that he was able to develop with the person who hired him, but he is now equipped with degrees in higher education that will serve him for the rest of his life.  Key isn’t slowing down any time soon, either. He has big plans for the future and taking the Maaco franchise to the next level. Through this succession, the future looks bright.  “In the immediate future, I’d like to start looking at some additional infrastructure needs as far as personnel at more of a regional-type position so that I start working for additional unit growth, along with the same sort of sales growth,” Key says. “We have some growth opportunities in Oklahoma, huge opportunities in Tennessee, and we could potentially even branch out to other states, maybe in a couple of years.”  Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
The Succession Of Leadership
William Walter (Walt/Wooter) Bryan
William Walter (Walt/Wooter) Bryan
William Walter (Walt/“Wooter”) Bryan https://digitalarkansasnews.com/william-walter-walt-wooter-bryan/ William Walter (Walt/“Wooter”) Bryan, Colonel, USAF (Ret), formerly of Cookson, Oklahoma, and most recently of Culpeper, Virginia, went home to be with the Lord, and the love of his life, Marlene, on September 16, 2022. He was born on a large family farm to Frankie Ailee (Bird) Bryan and Roderick Olonza (Rod) Bryan, Sr. on August 23, 1936 in Forrest City, AR. He was preceded in death by his beloved wife, Frances Marlene Bryan, his mother, father, brothers Billy B. Bryan of Fayetteville AR and Roderick Olonza (Buddy) Bryan, Jr., sisters Anna Faye (Bryan) Childs and Sarah Frances (Bryan) Clark, all of Forrest City. Walt graduated Forrest City High School in May 1954, where he met the love of his life Frances Marlene Byrd. He enrolled in Texas A&M College in September, 1954, and Marlene followed him to Texas. They were wed on February 1, 1955 in Houston. While at A&M, he participated in the Fightin’ Texas Aggie Band, A.F.R.O.T.C., A.S.A.E., Alpha Zeta and Tau Beta Pi fraternies. In May 1958, he was awarded a BS in Ag Engineering, commissioned a 2nd Lt. in the US Air Force, and entered pilot training in February of 1959. He and Marlene were blessed with the birth of their son, Bill, that same week in February. He obtained his Air Force pilot rating in March 1960, and served in operational flying assignments until June of 1970, accumulated approximately 5,000 flying hours as pilot, instructor pilot, and flight examiner. He served operational deployments in Vietnam, obtained a Master’s Degree in Logistics Management from the Air Force Institute of Technology in August 1971. He retired from active military service on February 28, 1989 with the grade of Colonel, and received numerous awards including the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Legion of Merit, and the Meritorious Service Medal. Upon his AF retirement, Walt obtained a mathematics teaching certificate and taught high school math for 10 years, and in 2000 he and Marlene moved to Cookson, OK. While in Cookson, they designed their dream home overlooking beautiful Lake Tenkiller, and received family members and friends. Walt became a member of the First Methodist Church in Forrest City, AR circa 1950, and remained active in his local church (where stationed), participating in choir, adult Sunday school, Council on Ministries, Finance Committees, and Staff Parish Relations Committees throughout his days on this Earth. To quote from one of his favorite hymns, “…praise the Lord for the things He has done!” He is survived by his son William Walter (Bill) Bryan III, and wife Susan of Warrenton, VA; grandchildren Nathan Avery Bryan (wife Laura) of Falls Church, VA, Caitlin Marie (Bryan) Kirby (husband Adam) of Springfield, VA, Lauren Alane Bryan of San Diego, CA, Mallory Faith Bryan of Raleigh, NC, and great grandson William Walter (Liam) Bryan, IV of Falls Church, VA. The family will receive friends Friday, October 7, 2022 at Moser Funeral Home, 233 Broadview Ave., Warrenton, VA from 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. when the funeral service will begin. Burial will follow in Culpeper National Cemetery at 12 Noon with military honors. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in his honor to the MDS (Myelodysplastic Syndromes) Foundation, and Samaritan’s Purse Operation Heal Our Patriots. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
William Walter (Walt/Wooter) Bryan
Porsche Shares Jump In Blockbuster Market Debut
Porsche Shares Jump In Blockbuster Market Debut
Porsche Shares Jump In Blockbuster Market Debut https://digitalarkansasnews.com/porsche-shares-jump-in-blockbuster-market-debut/ DealBook|Porsche Shares Jump in Blockbuster Market Debut https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/29/business/dealbook/porsche-ipo-volkswagen.html Volkswagen spun off the German carmaker on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, where its stock began trading higher despite a broader decline in European markets. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. Oliver Blume, the chief executive of Porsche, at the Frankfurt Stock Exchange on Thursday.Credit…Michael Probst/Associated Press Sept. 29, 2022Updated 10:00 a.m. ET Amid fears of recession, tumbling stock prices and heightened market turmoil, the biggest market debut of the year is that of a carmaker whose vehicles can cost six digits. Porsche, the 91-year-old German company behind iconic models like the 911, became the breakout star of the markets when it began trading on Thursday, in one of Europe’s largest initial public offerings ever. Shares in Porsche rose 2 percent in their debut on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, to 84 euros each, valuing the company at €77 billion, or $75 billion. That defied the broader decline in European market indexes on Thursday, including in Germany’s DAX. The deal’s underwriters had priced the offering the night before at €82.50, the top end of its expected range. The stock offering is Porsche’s return to the public markets for the first time in a decade. The company had been acquired by the Volkswagen Group after a failed attempt by Porsche in 2008 to buy the much larger German automaker, and since then has become the standout in Volkswagen’s stable of brands. Porsche’s listing has also become a rare bright spot for the once-booming business of taking companies public, which has suffered from whipsawing markets as investors flee for safe assets like the United States dollar. Globally, the number of initial offerings has fallen 40 percent over the last year, according to Refinitiv. The public portion of Porsche’s stock sale raised €9.4 billion euros for Volkswagen — or double the entirety of proceeds raised by initial offerings in Europe so far this year. The offering included several nods to Porche’s best-known model, the 911: Its total share count is 911 million, and its ticker symbol is P911. At that size, Porsche’s debut trails only those of the Italian energy company Enel and Germany’s Deutsche Telekom in the rankings of European initial offerings, according to Refinitiv. And it is the largest I.P.O. to be held on the continent since the turn of the millennium. Executives at Volkswagen and their bankers have insisted that Porsche could buck the dismal trend for I.P.O.s. In recent weeks, they have tried to convince prospective investors that the sports car maker had healthy business prospects, with an operating margin of nearly 20 percent; a recognizable brand; well-heeled customers willing to spend on expensive cars regardless of economic conditions; and a strategy for moving into battery-powered vehicles, spearheaded by the Taycan sedan. Much was at stake in the initial offering. Volkswagen is planning to use about half of the proceeds from the initial offering — which raised nearly €20 billion in total — to finance its shift to electric vehicles. The remainder will be paid out to Volkswagen’s shareholders. Under the terms of the initial offering, Volkswagen sold 12.5 percent of Porsche’s stock to the public in the form of nonvoting shares. About 40 percent of that was bought by four big investors, including sovereign wealth funds associated with Qatar, Norway and Abu Dhabi and the American money manager T. Rowe Price. Another 12.5 percent of Porsche stock — consisting of voting shares — was sold to the Porsche and Piëch families, descendants of the man who designed the original Volkswagen Beetle for Adolf Hitler, and the majority shareholders of Volkswagen. That deal will give the families enough voting power to veto any business decisions at Porsche they dislike. But some aspects of the offering drew scrutiny from critics. Porsche’s multibillion-dollar valuation suggests that the business accounts for 90 percent of what Volkswagen is worth on the stock market, despite generating only 4 percent of the company’s automotive revenue. That is not a ringing endorsement of the rest of Volkswagen, which has been struggling to overcome problems with software for its line of electric vehicles. Skeptics raised other concerns about Porsche and its stock sale. Among them is the company’s corporate governance: Oliver Blume, Volkswagen’s chief executive, will also hold that title at Porsche. The offering’s own prospectus acknowledges that the interests of Volkswagen and Porsche may not always align and that Mr. Blume’s dual role could “result in conflicts of interest.” In a research note earlier this week, analysts at HSBC valued Porsche at €44.5 billion, pointing in part to questions about the company’s independence. Others questioned whether Porsche deserved a valuation that is loftier than rivals like Mercedes-Benz, whose market valuation as of Thursday was €57.5 billion despite producing more vehicles. Both command valuations lower than that of Ferrari, which shipped just 11,155 of its handmade supercars last year, compared with Porsche’s 300,000. But investors in Porsche’s initial offering appeared undeterred by those questions. The order book for the offering was oversubscribed within hours of its opening last week, according to a person with knowledge of the deal, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the process. A higher than normal percentage of prospective buyers included individual investors and Porsche fan clubs, this person added. Some investors had even sent pictures of their 911 sports cars, in an effort to convince Porsche executives and bankers to sell them more shares. Jack Ewing contributed reporting. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Porsche Shares Jump In Blockbuster Market Debut
Ukraine Live Briefing: Separatist Leaders Gather In Moscow Ahead Of Russian Annexation Ceremony
Ukraine Live Briefing: Separatist Leaders Gather In Moscow Ahead Of Russian Annexation Ceremony
Ukraine Live Briefing: Separatist Leaders Gather In Moscow Ahead Of Russian Annexation Ceremony https://digitalarkansasnews.com/ukraine-live-briefing-separatist-leaders-gather-in-moscow-ahead-of-russian-annexation-ceremony/ Russian President Vladimir Putin will sign treaties claiming to annex four areas of Ukraine on Friday, as separatist leaders from Ukraine arrived in Moscow for what they called “a historic decision” to join Russia. Staged referendums — illegal under international law and widely condemned by Western countries — concluded earlier this week in occupied parts of Ukraine’s Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions. Explosions that damaged the Nord Stream pipelines and caused natural gas to leak into the Baltic Sea this week appeared to be “the result of deliberate, reckless, and irresponsible acts of sabotage,” NATO said Thursday. It vowed to meet any attacks against its members’ infrastructure “with a united and determined response.” Here’s the latest on the war and its ripple effects across the globe. Return to menu Separatist leaders from Russian-occupied portions of Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia are in Moscow to complete the procedure of Russian annexation of Ukrainian territory, Kirill Stremousov, a Russian-installed official from Kherson, said in a Telegram post. He shared a group photo of the arrival and called it a “happy ending.” Putin will address lawmakers Friday at 3 p.m. local time (8 a.m. Eastern time). The ceremony will take place in the Grand Kremlin Palace to sign “agreements on the accession of new territories into the Russian Federation,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. The inflammatory move appears likely to slam the door on diplomacy for years to come and almost certainly assure further escalation of the war, with Kyiv vowing to fight to reclaim all of its lands. The annexation requires a number of procedural sign-offs within Russia, including votes from Russia’s State Duma parliament and Federation Assembly to approve the treaty, as happened when Moscow annexed Crimea in 2014. The United States, Canada and the European Union have all vowed never to recognize the annexed land as part of Russia. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Kyiv was working with Western allies to firm up support against annexation. The White House has said it is working with “allies and partners to impose additional economic costs on Russia,” should annexation go ahead. “You can expect additional measures from us in the coming days,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said this week. Return to menu A total of four leaks in the Nord Stream pipelines have been reported, after the Swedish coast guard confirmed Thursday that there were two leaks in Sweden’s economic zone and two in Denmark’s. Investigations into the cause of the explosions are continuing. The European Union and several nations suspect sabotage and have blamed Russia, which denies causing any damage to the underwater energy infrastructure in the Baltic Sea, which supplies gas to Western Europe. NATO said Thursday that current evidence shows the leaks were “the result of deliberate, reckless, and irresponsible acts of sabotage.” The alliance vowed it would defend against “hybrid tactics.” Russia has denied any involvement and blames the United States. Its Foreign Ministry said Thursday the leaks occurred in the trade and economic zones of “NATO-centric countries” that are completely “controlled by the U.S. intelligence services.” The Kremlin has said it was not in Russia’s economic interest to damage the pipelines and called for a U.N. Security Council meeting. A U.S. official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the United States had nothing to do with any attack, calling the idea “preposterous.” The damage to the Nord Stream pipelines could result in the largest single release of methane into the atmosphere ever recorded, experts said. The Danish Energy Agency said sections of the damaged pipe contained 778 million cubic meters of natural gas, which, if it reached the atmosphere, would be equivalent to about 1/1000th of estimated annual global methane emissions, according to calculations by scientists with the U.S. Geological Survey’s Gas Hydrates Project. Return to menu The United States will provide a $1.1 billion weapons package to Ukraine over the next few years, including 18 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) launchers, a “core component of Ukraine’s fighting force in the future,” a senior U.S. defense official told reporters Wednesday, speaking on the condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the Pentagon. Defense officials said nearly 20 other nations have also agreed to accelerate arms production to replace Ukraine’s Soviet-era equipment with modern systems used by NATO. Russian lawmakers have lashed out at those fleeing to avoid military conscription. Eligible citizens who are registered with the military are “forbidden to leave … without the permission of the military commissariats,” said speaker of the state Duma Vyacheslav Volodin on Telegram. Thousands of men are scrambling to the border or rushing for flights to avoid being conscripted to fight in Ukraine. “The better off and well educated are overrepresented among those attempting to leave Russia,” Britain’s Defense Ministry said Thursday in a daily update. At least 19 people were injured when Russian strikes hit Dnipropetrovsk, regional governor Valentyn Reznichenko said. He said the attack occurred around 8 a.m. local time and targeted industrial infrastructure and damaged homes, power lines and buildings with cluster shells. The Washington Post could not independently verify the account. Russia continues to send “newly-mobilized and undertrained recruits” to reinforce depleted units in Ukraine, according to an assessment from the Institute for the Study of War think tank. The Russian Defense Ministry also said Wednesday that training for mobilized reservists has started in multiple places across the country. But readying those new troops will be challenging for the Kremlin, a U.S. official told reporters, given the logistics necessary to supply and train them. Return to menu NATO decries pipeline ‘sabotage’ amid efforts to measure environmental impact: The NATO military alliance has become the latest international organization to sound alarms after explosions at the Nord Stream pipelines in the Baltic Sea. It said the blasts appeared to be the result of “deliberate, reckless, and irresponsible acts of sabotage.” Images released Thursday by the Swedish Coast Guard show a large mass of methane bubbles on the sea surface emanating from the leaks. Cautioning that it was a preliminary estimate, Bjorn Lund, director of the Swedish National Seismic Network told The Washington Post’s Ellen Francis and Meg Kelly that the strength of the larger second blast was equivalent to 100-200 kilograms (220-440 pounds) of TNT. With the consensus among European leaders that sabotage was involved, suspicion is increasingly falling on Russia, which has denied all responsibility. Amar Nadhir, Mary Ilyushina and Isabelle Khurshudyan contributed to this report. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Ukraine Live Briefing: Separatist Leaders Gather In Moscow Ahead Of Russian Annexation Ceremony
Dow Drops More Than 400 Points After A Big Rally The Day Before
Dow Drops More Than 400 Points After A Big Rally The Day Before
Dow Drops More Than 400 Points After A Big Rally The Day Before https://digitalarkansasnews.com/dow-drops-more-than-400-points-after-a-big-rally-the-day-before/ Stocks slumped Thursday, giving back some of the sharp gains seen in the previous session, as bond yields resumed their upward march. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 457 points, or 1.54%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite declined 1.93% and 2.56%, respectively. A stronger-than-expected jobless claims report didn’t help sentiment, building on the notion that the Federal Reserve will keep doing aggressive rate hikes to fight inflation without concern it’s going to hurt the labor market. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield rebounded to trade at about 3.79%. A day prior, it posted its biggest one-day drop since 2020 after briefly topping 4%. The moves followed a broad rally for stocks Wednesday, as the Bank of England said it would purchase bonds in an effort to help steady its financial markets and the cratering British pound. Sterling has stooped to record lows against the U.S. dollar in recent days. It marked a stark shift from the aggressive tightening campaign many global central banks have undertaken to cope with surging inflation. The Dow on Wednesday gained more than 500 points, or 1.9%, while the S&P 500 rose nearly 2% after hitting a new bear market low on Tuesday. Both indexes snapped six-day losing streaks. “We are skeptical that the calmer mood in markets on Wednesday marks an end to the recent period of elevated volatility or risk-off sentiment. For a more sustained rally, investors will need to see convincing evidence that inflation is coming under control, allowing central banks to become less hawkish,” UBS’ Mark Haefele wrote in a Thursday note. Wednesday’s rally put the major averages on pace to eke out small gains for the week, but they are still on track to cap off their worst month since June. The Nasdaq Composite is leading the monthly losses, down about 8.4%, while the Dow and S&P are on pace to close 7% and 7.5% lower, respectively. On a quarterly basis, the Nasdaq is on track to break a two-quarter losing streak, while the Dow is headed for its third consecutive quarterly loss for the first time since the third quarter of 2015. The S&P is on pace for its third negative quarter in a row for the first time since its six-quarter negative streak that ended the first quarter of 2009. Stock futures extend losses after jobless claims report Stock futures extended losses after jobless claims data hit a five-month low despite the Federal Reserve’s efforts to slow the labor market. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 324 points, or 1.09%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures declined 1.32% and 1.63%, respectively. Jobless claims for the week ended Sept. 24 totaled 193,000, according to the Labor Department on Thursday. The figure was lower than the prior week’s adjusted 209,000 and below the 215,000 Dow Jones estimate. It’s the lowest level in claims since April and the first time claims fell below 200,000 since early May. — Sarah Min, Jeff Cox Weak sentiment signals a short-term buying opportunity, AllianceBernstein says AllianceBernstein says extremely poor investor sentiment could point to a short-term buying opportunity, pointing to its Composite Sentiment Indicator (CSI) that triggered a buy signal. The signal came ahead of four positive weeks more than 70% of the time over the past 22 years, according to the firm. “We consider this signal as a potential short term tactical buying opportunity but remain cautious on equities over a medium term horizon,” the firm’s Mark Diver wrote in a Thursday note. Stocks on Wednesday bounced back from the year’s bear market lows, but the firm remains wary that the one-day rally points to a broader uptrend. “We are skeptical that the calmer mood in markets on Wednesday marks an end to the recent period of elevated volatility or risk-off sentiment,” Diver wrote. “For a more sustained rally, investors will need to see convincing evidence that inflation is coming under control, allowing central banks to become less hawkish.” — Sarah Min CarMax shares drop after second-quarter earnings come in below expectations CarMax shares tumbled 15.5% in premarket trading Thursday after the used car dealer reported declining sales volume that came in below analyst expectations. Sales were down 2.9% for the three-month period ending August 31 compared to the same timeframe a year prior. Earnings per share dropped to $0.79, a 54.1% decrease from $1.72 a year ago. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting around $1.39 in earnings per share. CarMax purchased about 8.1% fewer vehicles from consumers and dealers. But net revenue growth was 2% higher than it was a year ago, as the company pointed to increasing profit per sold vehicle despite market-wide depreciation. — Alex Harring Bank of America downgrades Apple, shares slide Apple shares dipped more than 2% after Bank of America downgraded the tech giant to neutral from buy and slashed its price target on the stock. “Shares have outperformed significantly YTD (AAPL down 16%, S15INFT down 29%) and have been perceived as a relative safe haven,” Wamsi Mohan wrote in a Thursday note. “However, we see risk to this outperformance over the next year, as we expect material negative est. revisions driven by weaker consumer demand.” CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Carmen Reinicke Wells Fargo says sell Coinbase Analysts at Wells Fargo initiated Coinbase with an underweight, citing rising macroeconomic pressures among other potential negative catalysts. “Though we believe in the value of COIN’s platform, we see its early-mover advantages gradually being eroded away as the competition increasingly mimics the COIN ecosystem,” analyst Jeff Cantwell wrote in a Thursday note. CNBC Pro subscribers can read the full story here. — Carmen Reinicke European stocks fall as Bank of England boost fades – Elliot Smith U.S. Treasury yields climb in late Asia session, 10-year recovers losses The 10-year yield inched back up to 3.848% after dropping 25 basis points, or the most since 2020 overnight in the U.S. The yields on the 5-year Treasury note and the 7-year Treasury note were up — as high as 4.085% and 3.986% respectively. The yield on the policy-sensitive 2-year Treasury touched 4.227%. Yields and prices have an inverted relationship. One basis point is equivalent to 0.01%. — Jihye Lee CNBC Pro: Oil and gas are making a comeback — and these mutual funds are jumping on the trend, says Morningstar Markets have largely fallen this year, but the S&P 500’s oil and gas sector has advanced nearly 30%. That’s attracted investors who previously shunned the sector as the clean energy push grew in the past 10 years. Morningstar named three funds that have turned positive towards the sector and pointed to one fund manager being “the most notable energy bull.” CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Ganesh Rao CNBC Pro: Analyst says this FAANG stock is an evergreen winner — and investors should buy the dip Tech stocks have had a difficult year so far but a Rosenblatt Securities analyst thinks the sell-off is an opportunity for long-term investors to buy the dip.   “Stay away from the losers,” he said, recommending “winners in the various secular battles and evolutionary battles” in tech. Pro subscribers can read more. — Zavier Ong Stocks may continue this ‘oversold bounce’ over the next few days, Wells Fargo’s Harvey says Wells Fargo’s Chris Harvey expects stocks to continue their upward move. “The spike in short interest, retail selling skew, and BOE’s action all suggest stocks will continue their oversold bounce for the next few days,” he said in a note to clients Wednesday. Stocks hit fresh lows earlier in the week, with the S&P 500 notching a new bear market. The sell-off was triggered by the Fed’s latest rate decision last week, which some investors believe steered the market into oversold conditions. As the cost of capital rises and prices hover near record highs, the consensus is increasingly coming to believe that a Fed-induced recession is unavoidable, Harvey said. “We look at a recession like a car crash,” he wrote. “You never know how bad it will be, but there is almost no ‘better-than-expected’ outcome — so policymakers need to be careful what they wish for.” — Samantha Subin Major averages on pace for a month of losses Just two trading days are left in September and all the major averages are on pace to cap off the month with losses. While Wednesday’s market comeback put the major averages on track for modest weekly gains, the Nasdaq Composite, Dow Industrial Averages and S&P 500 are slated to lose nearly 6% each in September. The end of the third quarter also comes Friday, with the Dow on pace to cap its third negative quarter in a row for the first time since the third quarter of 2015. The S&P is slated to post its third consecutive negative quarter since its six-quarter losing streak that ended the first quarter of 2009. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq is on track to snap a streak of two consecutive down quarters. Here’s where the major averages stand heading into Thursday: Dow Jones Industrial Average: Up 0.32% for the week On track to lose 5.8% this month Down 3.55% this quarter Down 18.31% this year S&P 500 Up 0.7% this week Set for a 5.97% September loss Down 1.75% for the quarter Down 21.97% this year Nasdaq Composite: Up 1.69% this week On pace for a 6.47% September loss Up 0.2% for the quarter Down 29.36% this year — Samantha Subin, Chris Hayes Futures open flat Futures opened flat following a broad market rally during Wednesday’s regular trading session. Futures tied to the Dow Jones rose 10 points, or 0.04%, while S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures were flat. — Samantha Subin Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Dow Drops More Than 400 Points After A Big Rally The Day Before
Hurricane Ian Devastates SW Florida: Sanibel Causeway Will Need To Be Rebuilt Governor Says
Hurricane Ian Devastates SW Florida: Sanibel Causeway Will Need To Be Rebuilt Governor Says
Hurricane Ian Devastates SW Florida: Sanibel Causeway Will Need To Be Rebuilt, Governor Says https://digitalarkansasnews.com/hurricane-ian-devastates-sw-florida-sanibel-causeway-will-need-to-be-rebuilt-governor-says/ Published September 29, 2022 4:21AM Updated 9:50AM Devastating flooding in Fort Myers due to Hurricane Ian Hurricane Ian made landfall Wednesday afternoon near Fort Myers as a major hurricane just shy of a Category 5. The area was somewhat caught off-guard after the storm’s projected path began to shift south a day before. Residents had little time to evacuate their homes before feet of water rushed in due to storm surge. FORT MYERS, Fla. – Hurricane Ian swamped southwest Florida, leaving behind a damaged power infrastructure in two counties, turning streets into rivers and damaging two bridges, including the Sanibel Causeway. Governor Ron DeSantis provided an update Thursday morning, saying the electric grid for Lee and Charlotte counties will likely need to be rebuilt, described Hurricane Ian’s devastation in the area a “500-year flood event.” He said the Sanibel Causeway and Pine Island Bridge are both impassable. They suffered structural damage and will need to be rebuilt. Roadway leading to the Sanibel Causeway is damaged following Hurricane Ian. Another angle showing the road damage leading up to the Sanibel Causeway Law enforcement reported that it was getting many calls from people trapped in flooded homes. Desperate people posted to Facebook and other social sites, pleading for rescue for themselves or loved ones. Some video showed debris-covered water sloshing toward homes’ eaves. While the exact figure for injuries and fatalities is not confirmed, the Lee County sheriff said the number of deaths could be in the “hundreds.”  During a phone interview with Good Morning America, Sheriff Carmine Marceno said there are thousands of people who still need to be rescued. Lee County includes Fort Myers, Sanibel Island, and Captiva Island. “I don’t have confirmed numbers, but I definitely know the fatalities are in the hundreds,” he said during the interview. “There are thousands of people that are waiting to be rescued.” MORE: Florida man, 72, dies after going outside during Hurricane Ian to drain pool, deputies say Thursday, the Sanibel Lighthouse appears to still be standing. Side by side images showing a photo of the Sanibel Lighthouse from 2016 (left) and a distant shot of it the morning after Hurricane Ian made landfall (right) It’s located on the eastern end of the island. It was built in 1884 and given to the City of Sanibel in 2004 for restoration purposes. The major hurricane pushed a wall of storm surge accumulated during its slow march over the Gulf, flooding Fort Myers roadways even before making landfall in Coya Costa. FORT MYERS FLORIDA – SEPTEMBER 29: Stedi Scuderi looks over her apartment after flood water inundated it when Hurricane Ian passed through the area on September 29, 2022 in Fort Myers, Florida. The hurricane brought high winds, storm surge and rain t In Naples, the first floor of a fire station was inundated with about 3 feet of water, and firefighters worked to salvage gear from a firetruck stuck outside the garage in even deeper water, a video posted by the Naples Fire Department showed.  Naples is in Collier County, where the sheriff’s department reported on Facebook that it was getting “a significant number of calls of people trapped by water in their homes” and that it would prioritize reaching people “reporting life-threatening medical emergencies in deep water.” In Port Charlotte, along Florida’s Gulf Coast, the storm surge flooded a lower-level emergency room in a hospital even as fierce winds ripped away part of the roof from its intensive care unit, according to a doctor who works there. Water gushed down onto the ICU, forcing staff to evacuate the hospital’s sickest patients — some of whom were on ventilators — to other floors, said Dr. Birgit Bodine of HCA Florida Fawcett Hospital. Staff members used towels and plastic bins to try to mop up the sodden mess. “As long as our patients do OK and nobody ends up dying or having a bad outcome, that’s what matters,” Bodine said. Boats floated onto flooded streets and were swept ashore. The medium-sized hospital spans four floors, but patients were forced into just two because of the damage. Bodine planned to spend the night there in case people injured from the storm arrive needing help. For WINK-TV, the wall of storm surge that Ian brought entered the newsroom set in Fort Myers. According to one of their meteorologists, Matt Devitt, they lost power and were unable to continue broadcasting. By 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, he said the worst surge was behind them and water levels were slowly lowering. “This was, without a doubt, the strongest hurricane in Southwest Florida history,” he wrote on Facebook. “Stay tough, we’re almost through it. I’m thinking of all of you. We WILL rebuild back to the community we know and love.” MORE: Tampa Bay’s rare hurricane landfalls: 1921 storm, ‘Great Gale of 1848’ Video: Hurricane Ian pushes water out of Hillsborough Bay Along Bayshore Boulevard, Hurricane Ian’s winds drained the water out of Hillsborough Bay. An eerie sight which also occurred back in 2017 during Hurricane Irma. Video shows a timelapse from a weather camera and ground video from FOX 13 crews. MORE: Hurricane Ian drains water across Tampa Bay area Brittany Hailer, a journalist in Pittsburgh, contacted rescuers about her mother in North Fort Myers, whose home was swamped by 5 feet (1.5 meters) of water. “We don’t know when the water’s going to go down. We don’t know how they’re going to leave, their cars are totaled,” Hailer said. “Her only way out is on a boat.” FORT MYERS FLORIDA – SEPTEMBER 29: Brenda Brennan sits next to a boat that pushed against her apartment when Hurricane Ian passed through the area on September 29, 2022 in Fort Myers, Florida. Mrs. Brennan said the boat floated in around 7pm. The hur President Joe Biden has since approved a disaster declaration for Sunshine State on Thursday morning following Ian’s trek across the state. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Hurricane Ian Devastates SW Florida: Sanibel Causeway Will Need To Be Rebuilt Governor Says
Obituaries From Saline County Arkansas September 29th MySaline
Obituaries From Saline County Arkansas September 29th MySaline
Obituaries From Saline County Arkansas September 29th – MySaline https://digitalarkansasnews.com/obituaries-from-saline-county-arkansas-september-29th-mysaline/ Marilyn (Ritter) Gillespie, 71, of Bryant, Arkansas passed away September 24, 2022, in Little Rock.  She was born August 11, 1951, in Evansville, Indiana to the late William Henry and Delores Mae (Peyton) Ritter. Marilyn graduated from Harrison High School in Evansville, Indiana.  She received a BS in Education from Indiana University.  Marilyn married the love of her life on July 6, 1974, in Evansville, Indiana and recently celebrated 48 years together. Marilyn taught elementary education in schools in Alabama, preschool in Pittsburgh, PA, and 25 ½ years at Angie Grant Elementary, teaching 2nd and 3rd grades. She was selected the 2011 Teacher of the Year for the Benton School District.  Her passion for teaching and love for students was exemplified in her classroom year after year.  Fellow teachers said, “She was always bringing out the best in her students with her positive comments and high expectations.”  Marilyn agreed that “Success was the only option in her classroom.”  Her favorite part of teaching was watching the moment when a student clearly understood something for the first time.  She was a lifetime member of Job’s Daughters.  Marilyn was an avid reader and enjoyed gardening and cooking, especially cooking for others.  Preceding Marilyn in death are her parents, William and Delores Ritter; and her in-laws, Fred and Irene Gillespie.  Marilyn leaves behind to cherish her memory her loving husband, Barry Monroe Gillespie; two sons:  Patrick and Ryan Gillespie; sister, Roz Bedell and husband Steve; and a host of family and friends who will miss her dearly. Visitation will be held from 4:00-6:00 PM, Thursday, September 29, at Smith-Benton Funeral Home.  Funeral service, officiated by Rev. Kim Hammer, will be held at 10:00 AM, Friday, September 30 at the funeral home with burial immediately following at Rosemont Cemetery.  Assisting as pallbearers are:  Chris Lobus, Tyler Flanigan, Levere Ruff, Max Harris, Dennis Sprawling, and Chris Grandon. In lieu of flowers, her family asks that you consider a donation in Marilyn’s name to her favorite charity, Best Friends Animal Society at www.bestfriends.org. Services entrusted to Smith-Benton Funeral Home.  Online guestbook:  www.SmithFamilyCares.com. Wesley Eugene Thurber, “Chief”, was born February 15, 1950, and left on the open road to his final destination on September 26, 2022.  He leaves behind his beloved wife, Melva Thurber; daughter, Amanda (Steven) French; daughter-in-law, Amber Daniels; mother, Lacel Thurber; brother, Chapman (Karla) Thurber; five sisters:  Wanda (Al) English, Debbie Bryant, Vicky Lockert, Diane Kelton, and Donna Thurber; along with twelve grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; many nieces, nephews, family members and cherished friends who will miss Wesley dearly. Wesley was preceded in death by his father,  Loyd Thurber and three sons:  Chris Thurber, Phillip Allen, and Jimmy Daniels. Wesley was known for his outgoing personality and sense of humor.  He spent most of his life as a truck driver which he thoroughly loved.  In his free time, he loved to spend time with family and with his buddies.  He especially loved Razorback football and Nascar, and as always, routing for #11.  Wesley had an unforgettable knack for music and loved singing silly songs to his grandchildren.  He was loved by many and will truly be missed by all.  He lived his life by his favorite song, “I Did It My Way”. Visitation will be held from 10:00-11:00 AM, Thursday, September 29, with funeral service following at 11:00 AM at Pleasant Grove Baptist Church on Kanis Road in Little Rock.  Burial will follow at Walnut Grove Cemetery. Services entrusted to Smith-Benton Funeral Home.  Online guestbook:  www.SmithFamilyCares.com. Betty Joan Schuh, 89, of Benton, Arkansas went to be with the Lord on September 27, 2022.  She was born March 13, 1933, in Leslie, Minnesota to the late Lee and Hattie Irene (Hanson) Frederick. Betty was a member of Williams Community Church in Minnesota.  She was not afraid of hard work and worked in mink pelting and window manufacturing.  Betty loved her family with all her heart.  She enjoyed company coming to her home for visits and always had coffee and goodies prepared, including coffee cakes and delicious cookies.  Betty could often be found on her riding lawn mower keeping her large yard manicured.  She and her husband, Clarence, often spent time traveling across the United States in their transformed school bus motorhome, built and designed by Clarence.  Some of their favorite spots were Baja California and Alaska.  Betty also enjoyed gardening and canning the fruits of her labors.  Preceding Betty in death are her husband, Clarence Schuh; two children:  Wayne Schuh and Cinde Ketola; parents, Lee and Hattie Frederick; four sisters:  Connie, Shirley, Delores, and Viola “Echo”; and son-in-law, J. Steve Nalley. Betty leaves behind to cherish her memory her daughter, Fern Nalley; grandchildren:  Brenda Green and husband David, David Nalley and wife Nicole, and Jean-Paul Beyak and wife Shawna; great-grandchildren:  Jaden Chorney, Shelby Talia, Austin Green, and Lauren Green; several great-great grandchildren; son-in-law, Art Ketola; sisters:  Sharron Farmer and husband Joe and Carol Olson and husband Larry; and many more family members and friends in Minnesota who love Betty and will miss her always. Services at Abundant Life Center, Bryant will be available as soon as possible.  Family will hold Celebration of Life service and inurnment at Graceton Cemetery in Minnesota. Arrangements entrusted to Smith-Benton Funeral Home. Paul David Shelby of Bryant, AR, died Tuesday, September 27, 2022. He was born in North Little Rock on February 17, 1953, to James and Pauline Shelby, who preceded him in death. Paul graduated from Little Rock Central High School and served in the U.S. Air Force. Paul is predeceased by his sister Jeanette Meyers. He is survived by his wife, Phyllis; son, Seth Shelby, of Bryant; daughter, Alison and son-in-law Dustin Suitor of Alexander; Mindy Shelby of Salem; grandchildren: Elem, Ever and Eden Shelby and Cecilia and Nate Suitor; brother, Jim Shelby (Brenda) of Bryant; sisters:  Jean McPherson of Conway, Joan Hobson (David) of Little Rock, Elaine Graves (Rick) of Springdale; and several nieces and nephews. Services held Monday, October 3rd, at 11:00am, at First Pentecostal Church of North Little Rock. Visitation will be held one hour prior to service. Flowers may be sent to the church or Smith-Benton Funeral Home. Everyone is welcomed. Services by Smith-Benton Funeral Home.  www.SmithFamilyCares.com. Click this link to see other obituaries. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Obituaries From Saline County Arkansas September 29th MySaline
Judge Warns DOJ May Have Given Trump A Shield Against Jan. 6 Lawsuits
Judge Warns DOJ May Have Given Trump A Shield Against Jan. 6 Lawsuits
Judge Warns DOJ May Have Given Trump A Shield Against Jan. 6 Lawsuits https://digitalarkansasnews.com/judge-warns-doj-may-have-given-trump-a-shield-against-jan-6-lawsuits/ By Bekah McNeel, The 74 Sept. 29, 2022 Every day after work, veteran English teacher Staci Ely pulls into the parking lot of the Spanish Trail Lodge in Fort Stockton, a small town in far West Texas. She parks right in front of her door in the motor court-style hotel and settles into a small, recently refurbished room with an en suite bathroom, Saltillo tile floors, a mini fridge and Southwest-style fixtures. The cozy motel room is home these days, and it’s one reason Ely took the job with the Fort Stockton Independent School District. That and the $80,000 salary. In order to secure a livable retirement, Ely, 54, temporarily left the spacious home 500 miles away she built with her husband, a former professional bull-rider who stayed behind. “He’s a cowboy, and he likes cowboyin’ at home,” Ely said of her husband. Staci Ely in front of her room at the district-owned Spanish Trail Lodge in Fort Stockton. Credit: Courtesy of Staci Ely She rents her room for $250 a month from the Fort Stockton school district, which purchased the motel in December for $705,000 out of its budget, part of a multifaceted plan to recruit teachers amid a chronic shortage. The plan also includes hefty salaries for the teaching positions the 2,200-student district needs the most. The district’s teacher shortage, made all the worse by the COVID-19 pandemic, mirrors a reality seen in many parts of the country. “Historically speaking, teacher shortages are nothing new to rural districts,” district Superintendent Gabriel Zamora said. “But we’re not struggling for teachers now.” Lured by higher salaries and low-cost housing, the district has filled all of its critical positions, said Ember Renteria, its head of personnel. And it’s filled them with well-qualified teachers. “Normally we were just looking for anyone who was willing to teach,” she said. “There’s been a big difference this year. If you pay them, they will come.” Zamora wasn’t in Fort Stockton when the pandemic started, but he has always worked in the kind of very small, rural district struggling to fill slots. After years of innovation and recruiting, the pandemic was a massive setback. “Whatever ground we gained, we were losing,” Zamora said. The pivot to virtual learning and then again to hybrid learning pushed many teachers past their breaking point and out of the profession. When he looked at the staffing situation in Fort Stockton in 2021, he saw that as in most other rural districts, the pandemic had made another “hole in the bucket.” He arrived in Fort Stockton in June 2021 and immediately got to work figuring out how to get more teachers into the district, and how to get the experienced teachers already on the payroll to transfer into positions like math, English and science that are hardest to fill. Instead of teachers being lured into electives by the lack of stress, as often happens, he said, he’s trying to hire experienced teachers to the core subjects with a bigger paycheck — up to $72,000 for a first-year teacher, more for experienced teachers like Ely. For the eighth grade English teacher, this was a golden opportunity to stash away the $80,000 salary. The position is usually hard to fill because subjects that are covered by state exams are typically more stressful. But the bump in pay made it worth her while. That’s exactly what Zamora was counting on. Fort Stockton ISD Superintendent Gabriel Zamora. Credit: Gabriel Zamora (FSISD.net) He’s no stranger to the disincentives facing the teaching profession. Starting salaries are too low to appeal to many college graduates, especially those carrying college debt. From there, most districts follow a set pay schedule based on years of experience. If a district follows the minimum pay scale, as many small, rural schools do, it takes a teacher 20 years to get to $54,000. He looked at the funding he had available for his 180 teacher salaries this school year and found a way to pay them according to how much the district needed to fill the position. The average salary for Fort Stockton teachers in 2021-22 was $53,000 — the state average is around $56,000 — but now, for instance, a first-year teacher in a high school math class could make around $72,500. If a veteran teacher takes that position, they’ll make even more. But even at $70,000, Zamora said, housing prices in Fort Stockton were another large hurdle. The housing stock is mostly single-family homes, many of them older. Oil companies drilling nearby offer relatively generous housing stipends to their workers. But with home appraisals on the rise, landlords are charging top dollar. The district built 12 brick duplexes, similar to what one might see in a suburban development, complete with a playground in the shared, fenced yard behind them. Teachers can rent those for $750 to $800 a month. That’s great for families, Zamora knew, but when the Spanish Trail Lodge came up for sale last December, he knew it would sweeten the deal for even more recruits. He was thinking of young teachers not ready for homeownership, as well as older teachers who aren’t necessarily looking to uproot their lives but need to be thinking about their financial future, like Ely. Ely wasn’t permanently relocating 500 miles away. Her husband, six kids and four grandchildren are still back in Emory, a tiny, rural town east of Dallas. But Ely knew she couldn’t end her career there, where the district was on the state minimum salary schedule, if she wanted to have a stable income in retirement. She could retire with a yearly stipend of 60% of about $55,000 or 60% of the $80,000 she’ll make in Fort Stockton. It was a huge raise, but the Spanish Trail Lodge gave her the opportunity to take home even more by cutting out her biggest expense — a market-rate rental. “I didn’t want all of my raise to go to housing when we own a home,” she said. In the 29 years she’s been teaching, Ely has made a lot of sacrifices. She’s driven 45 minutes to work each way. She’s worked for the state minimum teacher salary. She’s taken on extra classes when positions went unfilled. She’s been happy to do it, she said, because she loves her job and loves the middle school kids she teaches. Fort Stockton teacher Staci Ely works in her room at the Spanish Trail Lodge. Credit: Courtesy of Staci Ely But now she has to think about her future. It feels almost sacrilegious to say so, Ely said, because teachers are trained and conditioned to be all about the kids. They are praised when they are, in a way, martyrs to the profession, she said. “I’ve done 29 years for the kids, and I have to start thinking about my retirement.” She flies home to see her family when she can, but soon she’ll be able to take advantage of another perk; for the first time in her teaching career, Ely won’t have to work through the summer, either picking up summer school classes or a side gig. To house teachers recruited from across the state, Fort Stockton bought the Spanish Trail Lodge, where teachers pay $250 a month in rent. Credit: Bekah McNeel The motel is great in the meantime, she said. In the center of the horseshoe-shaped motor court, there’s a freestanding house where the proprietor lived. The district turned it into a clubhouse of sorts, with a large kitchen, two living rooms with recliners and large flat-screen TVs, a workout room with new equipment, and a laundry room with washers and dryers. One of the administrative assistants in Zamora’s office was in charge of making the clubhouse “homey,” Zamora said, nodding to the decorative vases, potted plants and other decor in the living rooms. “She really got into it.” It’s not uncommon for rural districts to provide housing for teachers and administrators, Zamora said, but the hotel with its rock-bottom rent was something new. Not everyone in town has been happy about the district’s housing plans, Zamora said. Landlords have been able to charge $1,500 or more simply because of supply and demand. In a town of 8,000 people, it doesn’t take much to disrupt the market. Fort Stockton High School Principal Ken Wallace had already paid the oil field premium once and wasn’t keen to do it again. Oil companies offer workers housing stipends high enough to drive rents well beyond what local residents are used to. He was coaching in a small Texas town when the market boomed and watched his rent triple within a year. When he moved to Fort Stockton for the principal’s job this year, he recognized what was happening with the housing market and opted for the Spanish Trail Lodge. As the only school administrator in the motel, the district offered him a double room, since he would be something of an acting resident assistant on site — a link to district administration should anything go awry. But it’s not like rowdy college kids, he said — these hard-working professionals just want some peace and quiet when they get home. “We’re all here and we see each other, but everyone kind of understands,” Wallace said. “We try not to step on each other.” Wallace’s own retirement calculations include running Airbnb properties with his wife, who stayed behind in Goliad — 400 miles away — until the house they are renovating there was ready to start earning income. He wouldn’t have been able to take on another mortgage or an equally high rent. “That’s the only reason we can swing it,” Wallace said. “It’s a total game-changer as far as being able to be housed.” The 74 is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization focused on America’s schools, education policy and 74 million children. This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2022/09/29/texas-teachers-shortage-fort-stockton-motel/. The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on st...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Judge Warns DOJ May Have Given Trump A Shield Against Jan. 6 Lawsuits