Category: Security

  • Mayo Clinic Minute: Be careful when carving on Thanksgiving

    Food tends to be the focus on Thanksgiving, but preparing that food is often trickier than many people expect. Dr. Sanj Kakar, a Mayo Clinic orthopedic hand surgeon, says far too many people accidentally carve up their hands while trying to carve up the turkey. Dr. Kakar offers these tips to help keep you out of the emergency department this Thanksgiving.

    This Thanksgiving, don’t let a poke, stab or slice prevent you and your family from enjoying turkey time.

    “We see a lot of turkey-cutting injuries,” Dr. Kakar says.

    Thanksgiving is supposed to be a time dedicated to family, football and food, but too often, it turns into a day of finger and hand injuries.

    “In terms of what happens is that people who aren’t familiar with using a knife tend to do it, and their hand … slips,” Dr. Kakar says. “And if you actually think about how you’re cutting, … the knife can actually slip and puncture your hand.”

    Dr. Kakar sees patients who have injuries related to turkey carving that range from deep slices to cut tendons, and even fingers cut off.

    “Well, I think the No. 1 risk factor is alcohol,” he says.

    So if you’ve been drinking, leave the carving to someone else.

    “Another common cause for injuries is with distraction,” he says. “So the whole family is gathered around. There’s a lot of excitement. The turkey comes out, and one can be distracted when you’re doing it.”

    That’s why he recommends doing the carving in the kitchen away from distractions, then bringing the sliced turkey to the table.

    Dr. Kakar’s third tip comes from the fact that many people serve foods on Thanksgiving that they don’t eat or prepare other times of the year. He’s seen patients who tried to prepare a squash or some other vegetable but didn’t know the proper way to cut it. His recommendation is that if you don’t know the proper way to cut something, just use it as a centerpiece on the dining room table.

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    © 2023 Mayo Clinic News Network

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Forget pre-pandemic levels: Experts predict record travel for Thanksgiving, holidays

    Karla Hoefgen beat the Thanksgiving rush.

    She and her husband, who live in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, took advantage of their flexible schedules as retirees and arrived at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport on Thursday for their flight to San Francisco to see their daughter for the holiday.

    “I can get through security and get a cup of coffee,” she said that morning, when waits for printed boarding passes and TSA screenings were only five to 10 minutes.

    But for everyone else traveling for the holiday: buckle up. The airways and roadways will be congested as a record number of travelers are expected to head out for Turkey Day this year starting Friday and stretching through Tuesday, Nov. 28, as remote work has extended the holiday period for many.

    “We may see the busiest travel day in the history of aviation,” Sun Country Airlines Chief Operating Officer Greg Mays said.

    U.S. airlines are expecting an all-time high of nearly 30 million travelers through the 11-day Thanksgiving travel period from Friday through Monday, Nov. 27, according to industry group Airlines for America. That’s 9% more passengers than in 2022.

    That means longer security lines for many, as TSA anticipates a record holiday season and with MSP experiencing some of its busiest days since the pandemic for security checkpoints.

    Even more drivers will be hitting the road for trips of more than 50 miles, according to AAA. The number of drivers will also near 2019 levels of around 50 million. Meanwhile, gas prices have shifted downward in Minnesota to an average of $3.19 per gallon Thursday from $3.56 at this time last year.

    INRIX, a provider of transportation data and insights, expects Wednesday to be the busiest day on the roads nationwide and recommended leaving in the morning or after 6 p.m. to avoid the heaviest traffic, AAA reported. On the positive side, Mother Nature shouldn’t deliver any nasty weather surprises in the region.

    Mays preached the usual air travel advice: check in before heading to the airport, make sure to bring an ID and arrive three hours before departure.

    “Long lines are going to be part of the travel season. It’s just going to be that way,” Mays said. “Getting there early will help reduce the stress.”

    Plan as much as possible in advance. Other carriers advised arriving two hours early for domestic departures. For those picking up family and friends, the Metropolitan Airports Commission added a new East Cell Phone Waiting Lot on the south side of Post Road with 100 vehicle spaces less than a quarter-mile from the original 40-space lot.

    Nationwide, Airlines for America predicted the Sunday after Thanksgiving (Nov. 26) to be the busiest day of the holiday period, with a record-setting 3.2 million passengers. Wednesday (Nov. 22), Monday (Nov. 27) and Friday (Nov. 17) follow as the next busiest.

    “We expect we’ll break some passenger records throughout the holiday season,” Mays said.

    As travelers blend work and vacation time, Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines expects its peak travel days to be the Friday before Thanksgiving and the Sunday and Monday after Thanksgiving.

    Delta Air Lines anticipates 6.2 million to 6.4 million customers this Thanksgiving period between Friday and Tuesday, Nov. 28. This is a jump from last year and might surpass the 6.25 million travelers in 2019.

    Professional services firm Deloitte’s 2023 Holiday Travel Study predicted nearly half of Americans intend to travel between Thanksgiving and mid-January. It also showed spending on travel has risen year-over-year, with an average budget being $2,725.

    While more Americans are planning to travel, they will take fewer trips at just under two this holiday season. And those will likely be shorter in duration. A sizable number of remote workers — 34% — said they are likely to work during their longest trips of the holiday season.

    Travel agent Monique Delph saw many potential travelers choose not to book flights for Thanksgiving in favor of saving for Christmas trips or winter getaways to Mexico, the Dominican Republic and Jamaica.

    “I believe, due to the economy, people are making choices for one single trip,” said Delph, an A1 Travel consultant in Edina, Minnesota.

    At Sun Country, Mays said, “I don’t necessarily see that. We see our planes are full.”

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    © 2023 StarTribune

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Rights lawyer arrives in US one year after police blocked departure

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    A well-known Vietnamese human rights lawyer and his family have arrived in the United States a year after they were stopped by police from boarding a flight to New York.

    Vo An Don landed at Washington’s Dulles International Airport on Thursday with his wife and three children. He told Radio Free Asia that they were able to leave Vietnam without any obstacles.

    “Arriving in a country of freedom made me very happy,” he said. “Everything went very well as the International Organization for Migration supported and created favorable conditions for us.”

    Don represented defendants in high-profile, politically sensitive cases, including blogger Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Quynh, also known as Mother Mushroom, who was sentenced to 10 years in prison in June 2017 for “spreading propaganda against the state.”

    Last year, he told RFA that he and his family had decided to seek asylum in the United States because they were suffering harassment by authorities in his home province of Phu Yen and economic hardship since he could no longer work as a lawyer.

    The Washington-based International Organization for Migration secured funding for the family’s airfare, but authorities at Tan Son Nhat Airport in Ho Chi Minh City wouldn’t allow them to board their flight in September 2022.

    Airport police told him he would need to contact immigration authorities in Phu Yen for an explanation of why he was barred from traveling overseas.

    U.S. President Joe Biden’s visit last month to Hanoi paved the way for police to allow him to travel, Don posted on Facebook. Just before Biden arrived, police advised Don that the exit ban on him and his family had been lifted, he wrote.

    “The truth is they wanted me to stay in Vietnam as a hostage for negotiations with the U.S. until they got what they wanted,” he wrote. “Then they let me go as a human rights gift.”

    ‘Traded like a type of good’

    A decade ago, Don represented the wife of a criminal suspect who was beaten to death by police in 2012. He also defended four Vietnamese citizens who were jailed in 2017 after sailing to Australia in search of work.

    In 2017, he was stripped of his license to practice law after he posted a comment on Facebook that said lawyers in Vietnam regularly use payoffs to win cases for their clients.

    On Thursday, Don and his family flew to Charlotte, North Carolina, after arriving at Dulles. They were scheduled to board another flight to Fayetteville, Arkansas, their final destination.

    On Facebook, Don cited Vietnam’s Constitution, which says “citizens have the right to freedom of movement and residence inside and outside the country without any obstruction.” 

    Instead, authorities treat people in Vietnam “like dirt,” he wrote.

    “They’re bullied and oppressed, and when they want to leave the country, they are traded like a type of good,” he wrote. “I am a human, not a pet for them to give visitors as a gift.”



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  • Patriotic flag ceremonies at Hong Kong mosque ‘shock’ believers

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    Muslims at Hong Kong’s biggest Kowloon Mosque raised the Chinese national flag in formal ceremonies in July and October this year, to mark the city’s 1997 handover to China and China’s Oct. 1 National Day.

    The move has prompted shock and disappointment among some believers, who see it as a challenge to the Islamic doctrine of the supremacy of God, yet few feel safe enough to speak out for fear of political reprisals or community pressure, according to a Hong Kong Muslim who spoke to Radio Free Asia on condition of anonymity.

    The ceremonies come as the ruling Chinese Communist Party steps up control over religious venues across China, requiring them to support the leadership of the Communist Party of China and leader Xi Jinping’s plans for the “sinicization” of religious activity.

    Muslim leaders in Hong Kong have spoken to RFA Cantonese of “a developing relationship” with Chinese officials over the past 18 months, who have “suggested” they begin ceremonial displays of patriotism like flag-raising ceremonies.

    The ceremonies have been fairly high-profile affairs, attended by community leaders and imams, officials from Beijing’s Central Liaison Office in Hong Kong, as well as high-ranking police and local government officials.

    At a recent ceremony filmed by RFA, the officials stood impassively as mosque-goers performed the ceremonial movements designed to show the highest respect to the flag, then sang the Chinese national anthem, while plainclothes police observed from the sidelines.

    An anonymous Hong Kong Muslim said some believers are very unhappy with the move, which they say undermines the crucial Islamic principle that God is supreme, forcing them to choose between their religion and political “correctness” under the atheist ruling Chinese Communist Party. 

    “Allah is the only highest principle there is,” said the woman, who gave only the pseudonym Miriam for fear of pressure from within her own community and of prosecution under a draconian security law imposed on Hong Kong by Beijing.

    “I don’t understand how people can see room for compromise here and try to argue that it’s not an issue,” she said. “I am truly and utterly shocked by this. It’s unthinkable.”

    Miriam said she was “deeply disappointed” in particular by the attendance of the local imam.

    ‘The flag of an atheist country’

    The organizers said the events, which come after a number of gatherings between Muslim community leaders and Chinese officials, are indeed a nod to Beijing’s “sinicization of religion” program, and are likely to continue.

    “Before we didn’t have the idea to raise a flag,” Hong Kong Muslim community leader Saeed Uddin said. “Then, during the last one-and-a-half years, our relationship developed.”

    “There was a suggestion, ‘why not have [flag-raising],’” he said. “I think this is not a bad idea, to let people be more patriotic to China. They enjoy it. It’s no problem.”

    Yet, asked about dissenting voices among Hong Kong Muslims, he admitted to differences of opinion within the community.

    “We have to respect the differences of opinion,” Saeed Uddin said. But he added: “We will try to convince them.”

    While Muslims must necessarily co-exist with secular power, they are expected to keep a certain distance, never lose sight of the supremacy of God in their actions, and avoid idolatry at all costs.

    Non-Islamic images and human likenesses are avoided, particularly in sacred places like mosques.

    For Miriam, the Chinese flag represents a totalitarian and atheist state that sees its own power as supreme, and should never be seen in a mosque.

    “There’s no issue with having the flag of a Muslim country in a mosque, because that country already recognizes no higher authority than God,” she said. “The country itself will be founded on Islamic precepts.”

    “But I’ve never seen the flag of an atheist country blatantly on display in a mosque,” she said. “Perhaps they’re using people’s lack of understanding of Islam to force this on them.”

    Rizwan Ullah, honorary adviser to the Islamic Community Fund of Hong Kong, supports Beijing’s attempts to boost patriotism in the community.

    “We’re not raising the Chinese flag or singing the national anthem at a time of prayer,” he told RFA Cantonese in a recent interview. “So it has no effect on our beliefs, or our customs.”

    “History will show that this has been a correct first step,” he said, using phrasing similar to that of Chinese officials.

    ‘Two things can coexist’

    China’s “sinicization of religion” policy, which has led churches in mainland China to display portraits of Communist Party leader Xi Jinping and prompted local officials to forcibly demolish domes, minarets and other architectural features in mosques around the country, sometimes in the face of mass protests.

    The Communist Party now requires all religious believers to love their country as well as their religion, and claims that patriotism is a part of Islam.

    Riswan Ullah agreed with this view. 

    “I don’t see a conflict. I pray five times a day,” he said. “I raise the flag at different times of the day.”

    “I don’t see why being a patriot somehow makes me a bad Muslim – It’s not a zero sum equation: the two things can coexist,” he said.

    But for Hong Kong’s Muslims, loving one’s country – China – also means loving its atheist ruling Communist Party, which bars its own members from any form of religious belief.

    “A religion like Islam of course requires a very high degree of devotion,” James D. Frankel expert on Chinese Islamic Studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong said.

    “There’s no-one more powerful than the Creator, from the perspective of believers.”

    “Any claim to be more powerful than the highest power of the universe is going to cause some questions,” Frankel said.

    “When [officials] say ‘love your country, love your religion,’ loving your country comes before loving your religion [in that slogan].”

    Miriam believes that Hong Kong’s Muslim leaders have gotten it badly wrong, and she fears their stance could mislead many others into thinking that there is no fundamental conflict.

    ‘They have co-opted our voices’

    Many Hong Kong Muslims are unhappy with their leaders’ actions, yet are unwilling to speak out due to pressure to conform from within their own community, as well as the threat of prosecution under the National Security Law, she told RFA.

    “Just because we don’t speak out doesn’t mean that everything they do is right,” she said.

    “This is actually a very small community, and once people know your name, they will easily be able to find out where you live, whose son or daughter you are, who your family is – it’s an unspoken rule.”

    Miriam said she has seen the community’s tendency to self-censor before, when Hong Kong police fired a water cannon at the Kowloon Mosque during the 2019 protest movement.

    “When the mosque was hit by a water cannon in 2019, a lot of young Muslims were very critical, taking to Facebook and Instagram to make comments in English,” Miriam said. 

    “But in less than a week they had all disappeared. They had all been warned off commenting.”

    She said community leaders seem to have taken it upon themselves to cozy up to Beijing, regardless of what the rest of the community thinks.

    “These people all come from within the establishment, and they have co-opted our voices, not just in worldly matters, but also in terms of our religious identity, which is something that should not be compromised, while claiming to represent us,” Miriam said.

    “We have no choice but to put up with a string of misinterpretations and blasphemies from these people, like helpless onlookers,” she said.

    “I can predict that in future, they’ll be the ones oppressing us, the weaker ones in the community, as our so-called representatives.”



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  • ‘The terms are insane’: Elder student loan borrowers face a lifetime of hardships

    Early in 2023, Sue Snodgrass teamed up to help a friend experiencing early-stage dementia get her affairs in order. Sorting through bank statements, Snodgrass noticed a $469 monthly payment that accounted for close to 20% of the woman’s income, which came entirely from Social Security.

    Snodgrass was shocked to realize that the ongoing charge went toward paying down a student loan the 79-year-old Petaluma resident took out in 1994 to pursue a law degree. She’d served in the military and spent much of her career as a nurse but had decided to expand her education.

    She never made money off the pivot, however. And, while the original loan was for $34,000, roughly three decades later, the woman had paid more than $74,000. And she still owed more than $59,000 on the principal and $63,000 in interest. All told that would be $197,000, close to six times what she initially borrowed.

    “I didn’t realize the numbers until I sat down and figured them all out,” Snodgrass said. “I was shocked.” She noted that 80% of her friend’s monthly payments went toward interest.

    “The terms are insane. Nobody should get to loan people money and get that many times a return,” she said.

    Snodgrass’ friend is not alone. More and more, Americans are aging into rather than out of their student loans.

    Growing burden for older Americans

    While not the focus of most conversations about the country’s student debt problem, the number of elderly borrowers has grown exponentially, and experts expect the trend to continue. There are now approximately 3.5 million Americans aged 60 and older who owe more than $125 billion in student loans. Since 2004, the number of 60-year-old-plus borrowers, however, has increased sixfold, and their outstanding debt is 19-fold.

    Growth in the number of student loan borrowers since 2004. (New America, 5/31/2023)

    Many borrowers are paying off loans taken out for their own education rather than for their children. Some may have gone back to school to complete an unfinished degree, boost their skills, switch careers, or increase a chance of promotion or higher pay. Some are still chipping away at debt from degrees that never paid off, sometimes because they were from a predatory or low-quality program and sometimes because of systemic inequities and barriers in the workforce. Notably, women and Black Americans are disproportionately likely to owe college debt around retirement age.

    Along the way, declining wages and rising tuition and debt have exacerbated challenges, making it harder for some people to escape their loans, leaving senior borrowers in a particularly vulnerable position.

    “The people that you have remaining in the system are often extremely disadvantaged, and so you have a pool of borrowers who not only are struggling to repay, but when they’re in default, are being pushed further into poverty,” said Sarah Sattelmeyer, an expert on student loan debt. Sattelmeyer, project director for education, opportunity, and mobility in the higher education initiative at New America, a national public policy think tank, recently co-authored a 2023 research series looking at older student loan borrowers.

    According to New America’s research, those who continue to have outstanding loans at age 55 or older measure the same or worse than high school-educated peers by wealth and financial hardship standards. At least 61% say they don’t have enough savings to cover three months of expenses, and 28% have less than $10,000 saved for retirement. About one-third are also dealing with medical debt, while half have unpaid credit card debt.

    Unlike their peers who either didn’t take out loans or who were in a position to pay them off, elder borrowers are less likely to have seen the financial benefits hoped for with higher education. Already at that disadvantage, they face even more limited job and income opportunities in their later years, compounding their inability to offload debt and pushing them in some cases to make tough choices.

    In a 2018 AARP survey, 9% of baby boomer borrowers said their student loan debt prevented or delayed them from getting necessary health care. New America’s analysis of federal data found that almost one-third of adults over 55 who are still paying off loans for their education reported they cannot pay all of their monthly bills, including student loans.

    Rates of financial hardship among adults 55 and older (New America, 6/22/23)

    Older borrowers are twice as likely to default on student loans, and they risk getting their Social Security benefits garnisheed, reducing what can be a vital lifeline to older low-income Americans. Anything a delinquent retiree receives over $750 or 15% of the benefit, whichever is less, can be withheld and applied to debt.

    “The government is giving money to try to keep them out of poverty and then is clawing that money back,” said Sattelmeyer. “It both makes our safety net less effective, but it also results in a larger number of people who can’t make ends meet in their final years.”

    While only a small share of people face this outcome, researchers at the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College found that these beneficiaries potentially risk up to a 6% decline in household income from benefit withholding.

    For lower income households “already living paycheck to paycheck,” it’s a “nontrivial amount,” said Siyan Liu, a research economist and study co-author. Moreover, “as a greater share of younger households now have student debt, this may become a bigger problem in the future as they retire.”

    Current and potential solutions

    Like all other borrowers, older Americans saw their student loan payments resume last month after a more than three-year hiatus.

    While President Joe Biden’s previous loan forgiveness plan was thrown out by the Supreme Court in June, there are other options that can help older borrowers reduce their debt burden, with even more help potentially in the pipeline.

    This year, the White House introduced a new income-driven repayment plan, which tailors borrowers’ monthly payments to income and family size, allowing for the forgiveness of the remaining debt after a period of about 20 to 25 years.

    The new SAVE plan reduces barriers to entry as well as monthly payments and potentially interest owed compared to predecessors of the program and could reduce loan forgiveness time to as few as 10 years in certain circumstances.

    For borrowers who were in default going into the pandemic, a one-time temporary program from the Department of Education, Fresh Start, could provide a pathway to reenter repayment in good standing.

    At the same time, the Biden administration is developing a narrower student loan relief plan. While details are largely in flux, the Department of Education reportedly wants to focus on reducing student debt that exceeds the original loan amount and loans being repaid 25-plus years later. The department is also looking to broaden forgiveness efforts already underway for students who attended select predatory or low-value programs.

    The problem is that with so many moving pieces and the patchwork of private companies servicing loans, accessing information about debt relief options can be difficult, especially for those who would most benefit.

    Elderly borrowers in particular have often already been let down by the system on multiple fronts, Sattelmeyer said.

    As programs start up again and reforms are designed, there needs be a real focus “on wanting to make sure that they’re not reentering a system that didn’t serve them” again.

    In the end, Snodgrass, the Sonoma County woman, was able to get her friend’s loan discharged through an exemption for those who show total and permanent disability.

    But, without the help and initiative of her friends, the 79-year-old retiree may have gone on making payments for her remaining years.

    “The end date for her loan was 2042,” Snodgrass said, “so they were planning to continue to do this.”

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    (c) 2023 The Press Democrat

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • South Korea, US, Japan agree framework for military exercises

    The defense chiefs of South Korea, the United States and Japan on Sunday agreed to stage pre-planned trilateral military exercises from next January with a multi-year framework, marking a significant stride in enhancing trilateral security cooperation in the face of escalating North Korean threats.

    The three-way meeting was held for the first time in Seoul since South Korea’s new Defense Minister Shin Won-sik and Japan’s Defense Minister Minoru Kihara assumed office in October and September, respectively, South Korea’s Defense Ministry said Sunday. Kihara participated in the trilateral meeting virtually.

    Sunday’s meeting of Shin, Kihara and US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was the first-ever standalone trilateral defense ministerial meeting, distinguishing itself from previous ones that were held on the sidelines of multilateral events like the Shangri-La Dialogue and the ASEAN Defense Ministers’ Meeting Plus, or ADMM-Plus.

    The key objective of the meeting was to “discuss ways to strengthen security cooperation between South Korea, the United States, and Japan to deter and respond to the escalating nuclear and missile threats posed by North Korea,” the Defense Ministry in a Korean-language statement.

    Three defense chiefs particularly convened to discuss and take follow-up measures to the Camp David summit in August, where the leaders of the three countries pledged to elevate their trilateral security cooperation to new heights.

    A notable development of the trilateral meeting was the agreement to conduct trilateral exercises based on plans from January of next year — a key outcome to implementing a leader-level agreement at the Camp David summit.

    “The ministers from the three countries assessed that a multi-year trilateral exercise plan is currently being formulated through consultations among South Korea, the United States, and Japan,” South Korea’s Defense Ministry said.

    “They agreed to finalize the development of the plan by the end of the year. Starting from January of the following year, they will conduct trilateral exercises in a more systematic and efficient manner under the exercise plan.”

    The three “further committed to expanding the scope of trilateral exercises into various domains in the future.”

    At the Camp David summit, the three leaders “decided on a multi-year trilateral framework that includes annual, named, multi-domain trilateral exercises, which will constitute an unprecedented level of trilateral defense cooperation,” the White House said in August.

    The planning was accompanied by trilateral efforts to intensify defense-oriented military exercises and reinstate military and non-military drills that had been suspended due to strained relations between Seoul and Tokyo.

    For example, the three countries agreed to regularize missile defense exercises and anti-submarine drills to improve responses to North Korea’s missile threats. Additionally, they have resumed maritime interdiction exercises and anti-piracy drills this year.

    The three defense chiefs also agreed to run a real-time data-sharing system for North Korean missile launches in December, which is now in the final stages of testing.

    The system is designed to improve each country’s ability to monitor North Korean missile launches. The information shared includes data on launch location and trajectory.

    The real-time sharing system for missile warning data underwent its inaugural testing in August, preceding the Camp David summit.

    The leaders of the three countries first concurred on the information-sharing initiative at a November 2022 summit in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, to “improve each country’s ability to detect and assess the threat posed by incoming missiles, a major step for deterrence, peace and stability.”

    In the framework of the new information-sharing system, the US Indo-Pacific Command will act as an intermediary between US Forces Korea and US Forces Japan.

    The role of the US Indo-Pacific Command includes bridging the existing real-time information-sharing system between the South Korean military and US Forces Korea to the system between US Forces Japan and the Japan Self-Defense Forces.

    “The three leaders assessed that trilateral partnership between the United States, Japan, and the ROK is stronger than ever following the Camp David Summit and reviewed implementation progress for trilateral security cooperation initiatives announced at the summit,” the US Department Statement said in a separate statement issued, following the defense ministerial meeting.

    The ROK stands for the acronym of South Korea’s official name, the Republic of Korea.

    South Korea’s Defense Ministry on Sunday said that the meeting was scheduled in response to the ministry’s proposal. The trilateral defense ministerial meeting was planned to coincide with the visit of Austin to Seoul for the Security Consultative Meeting, an annual bilateral defense discussion with South Korea, scheduled for Monday.

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    (c) 2023 the Asia News Network 

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Food service ‘allows physicians to prescribe a healthy diet’

    For the past five years, Advocate Health Care has provided patients with fresh fruit, vegetables and protein out of its Calumet Heights and Hazel Crest, Illinois, hospitals as part of its Food Farmacy.

    The program, designed to improve the diets for patients who either struggle to access fresh food or have long neglected to incorporate produce in their diet, is expanding to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn.

    “Our risk for dementia goes down; our risk for hyper pressure and diabetes goes down; our risk for cancer goes down; all by simply making dietary changes,” Dr. Tony Hampton, chair-elect of the Advocate Health Midwest Medical Group, said at a kickoff news conference recently.

    Dr. Tony Hampton, chair-elect of the Advocate Health Midwest Medical Group, celebrates the rollout of th free food service for patients beginning Nov. 14, 2023. (Hank Sanders/Chicago Tribune/TNS)

    Twice a month, patients from the Oak Lawn community will be able to come to the Oak Lawn hospital campus and pick up bags and boxes of fresh fruits and vegetables, some canned foods and the occasional meat-based protein source.

    Last Tuesday marked the beginning of the program at the Oak Lawn location, and patients who signed up received a special Thanksgiving order including cauliflower, apples, leafy greens, canned soup, yams and a large turkey.

    “Eating healthy is very expensive,” said Cecile Mays, of Chicago Heights, a patient in the Advocate Health Care system. “I love the program so much I volunteer now.”

    She said when her doctor told her to participate, at first she was reluctant.

    “It changed my life. It educated me on how fruits and vegetables can alter how I feel, how I think,” Mays said. “I lost 70 pounds! I was able to do more things because you feel good about yourself. You sleep better, you think better.”

    The program has offered food to 11,000 different people in the past five years.

    Officials say the mission is to reduce health problems by facilitating healthy diets, which experts say greatly affects human health.

    “Whether these patients were dealing with diabetes or cardiovascular disease or other chronic conditions, they (need) to have a healthy diet to really see significant progress,” said Moody Chisholm, president of Advocate Christ Hospital and Advocate South Chicagoland Patient Service Area. “And that’s what this program was born out of: allowing our physicians to prescribe a healthy diet.”

    Patients must be referred by a provider with Advocate Health in order to be invited to the twice monthly food distributions. The food boxes, provided at a drive-through on the hospital’s campus, also provides patients with literature on nutrition and recipes.

    While a referral is required, Advocate Health’s news release says any patient in need who would benefit from more healthy food is eligible to join the program.

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    © 2023 Chicago Tribune

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • VA tells Marine vet to pay back over $100,000

    The Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) recently informed a Marine veteran from Sarasota County, Florida, that he would be required to pay back over $100,000 that he received in payments from the department due to the veteran collecting Social Security during the same time period he was receiving pension payments from the VA.

    71-year-old Patrick McFeely, a Marine veteran, told 10 Tampa Bay WTSP he recently received a letter from the VA, stating, “Your entitlement to compensation and pension benefits has changed. As a result, you were paid $108,094 more than you’re entitled.”

    10 Tampa Bay WTSP reported that the VA will reportedly withhold McFeely’s monthly pension funds in order to recover the $108,094 in overpaid funds.

    “My partner passed away and so I decided to move down here,” McFeely told the outlet. “And I’ve been loving it down here.”

    The Marine veteran said that between Social Security and VA payments he has been receiving roughly $2,400 a month, which he indicated was just enough to live on.

    Reading the letter he received to 10 Tampa Bay WTSP, McFeely said, “Your entitlement to compensation and pension benefits has changed. As a result, you were paid $108,094 more than you’re entitled.”

    “When I called I got the runaround and them saying that it’s because I collect Social Security and they didn’t know it,” McFeely explained.. “They said I didn’t report it, but what is documented that they know I was collecting Social Security at the time.”

    In addition to the documentation, McFeely said the VA did not notify him until almost a decade after he started receiving Social Security payments. As a result, McFeely received approximately $10,000 in overpayments each year, adding up to the current total of well over $100,000.

    “I’m hand to mouth. I’m going to be 72 in January so it’s a little bit late to try to collect $108,000 from me,” McFeely said.

    READ MORE: Navy veteran gets nearly 5 years in prison over Jan. 6

    In a statement, VA Press Secretary Terrence Hayes told 10 Tampa Bay WTSP that the department had an issue for roughly 11 years that caused the department to be unable to verify the income of U.S. veterans.

    “Between 2011 and 2022, due to discrepancies in data matching, VA was unable to reliably verify the self-reported federal income of Veterans and survivors receiving pensions,” Hayes stated. “When income verification resumed in July 2022, roughly 9,900 beneficiaries were determined to have higher income levels than self-reported. This resulted in VA pension overpayments which – in some cases – spanned many years.”

    McFeely explained that he did not report to the VA when he started collecting Social Security because he was unaware that he had to inform the department and he assumed that the department would notify him of any issues, since all of his income is distributed by federal organizations.

    McFeely also expressed his shock that the letter he received from the VA included a warning about managing financial stress.

    “At the bottom of this letter, it says how to manage financial stress,” he said. “So now they want me to contact the suicide hotline, which is crazy, they’re the ones that put me in this situation.”

    According to 10 Tampa Bay WTSP, the VA has acknowledged the difficulties that might be associated with the unexpected debt of McFeely and other veterans. As a result, the department is pausing the collection of debts until it determines “the path forward.” The department noted that it is “pursuing all available options to provide as much pension debt relief as possible.”



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  • Moscow resident reportedly kills himself after receiving subpoena for military service

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission.

    Several Telegram channels in Russia said on November 20 that a 23-year-old Muscovite shot himself to death after he received a subpoena for military service.

    The reports say the man texted his friends to say he had received the subpoena but did not want to join the army.

    According to the report, he was ordered to come to the recruitment office on November 21.

    Hundreds of thousands of Russian men have fled Russia to avoid the Moscow-launched war in Ukraine since last year. 



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  • Snoop Dogg not actually ‘giving up smoke,’ just selling smokeless fire pits

    Snoop Dogg was just blowing smoke.

    The rapper revealed Monday that his decision to “give up smoke” was just an ad campaign for a smokeless fire pit company.

    The cannabis connoisseur had fans confused last week when he posted a serious-looking tweet that read: “After much consideration & conversation with my family, I’ve decided to give up smoke. Please respect my privacy at this time.”

    But plenty of veteran internet users and Snoop Dogg observers speculated it was all a ruse for some sort of advertisement. On Monday, Snoop confirmed exactly that.

    “I know what you’re thinking: ‘Snoop, smoke is kinda your whole thing!’ But I’m done with it,” he said in a video promotion for Solo Stove. “I’m going smokeless. Solo Stove fixed fire. They took out the smoke. Clever.”

    Solo Stove formally announced its partnership with Snoop on Monday.

    “Breaking free from smoke just got cooler!” the little-known company wrote on Twitter. “Snoop Dogg’s on board, and we’ve got a special edition fire pit with your name on it. Embrace the flame, leave the smoke behind.”

    ___

    © 2023 New York Daily News

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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